Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News Wednesday, April 12,1972
Page 10
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CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.—Two of the Apollo 18 astronauts, mission commander John W. Young (1)
and Lunar module pilot Charles H. Duke, Jr., practiced their extra vehicular activity experiments
as the countdown towards Sunday’s blastoff for the moon continued. (UPI)
Nixon doesn’t think visit
will solve Canada problems
By NORMAN KEMPSTER tie state dinner. He leaves in
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Pres- mid-morning Saturday, making
ident Nixon does not expect his Friday his only full day in the
meetings in Canada this week Canadian capital,
with Prime Minister Pierre
Elliott Trudeau to solve the Nixon will be accompanied by
economic problems that are Secretary of State William P.
straining relations between the Rogers, foreign affairs advisor
United States and its northern Henry A. Kissinger, and other
neighbor. aides, most of them specialists
“I certainly don’t anticipate in foreign policy. Neither
any agreements being reached Connally nor any other econom
on trade as a result of this ( c specialist is scheduled to
meeting,” White House Press make the trip.
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler
said Tuesday. Although relations between
Treasury Secretary John B. united States and Canada
Connally, who angered some remain basically friendly, there
Canadian officials in earlier disputes over several
trade talks, was not named to economic matters including the
the official party for Nixon’s u.S.-Canada Automobile Agree
visit to Ottawa beginning ment> u s ownership of Cana-
Thursday. dian businesses, and the
Nixon and Trudeau are American trade deficit in its
scheduled to sign a new transactions with Canada,
agreement Saturday calling for
joint efforts to control pollution j n addition, some Canadians
in the Great Lakes, just before have objected strongly to
the President boards his proposals for an oil pipeline
jetliner for the return to fr om Alaska’s North Slope to
Washington. the all-weather port of Valdez.
Nixon and Trudeau will have These Canadians fear that oil
only one full day for meetings, shipped from Valdez to U.S.
The President is scheduled to West Coast ports could produce
arrive in Ottawa Thursday beach-fouling oil spills off the
evening just in time for a white Canadian coast.
I';
There may never be a better time to start or add to your
Towle service. One-third (¥3) off on 3-piece place
settings-teaspoon, knife and fork.
This is a limited time offer so come in today and take
advantage of this money saving offer. Convenient terms
arranged
Cholera
source
sought
ATLANTA (UPI)-State agri
culture officials are having to
go through a long process to
find the source of Georgia’s
hog cholera outbreak that has
already resulted in the slaugh
ter of a herd of 560 hogs.
Jack Gilchrist, Agriculture
Department spokesman, said
Tuesday the process of finding
the source would be lengthy be
cause “we’ve got to trace the
diseased hogs and they could
have changed hands a dozen
times.”
Gilchrist said preliminary
tests on three herds in Tattnall
County, where the department
had to slaughter the 560 hogs,
did not reveal any signs of the
deadly disease that is carried
by an airborne virus.
State Agriculture Commissio
ner Tommy Irvin has put an
embargo on all hogs except
those going directly to slaugh
ter, and has cancelled feeder
pig sales, in an effort to keep
the cholera contained.
The preliminary tests on the
Tattnall County herds were
within a five mile radius of the
Vernon Dasher farm where the
diseased hogs had to be slaugh
tered last weekend.
Ells berg case
Government faces question
can secret papers be used
By JACK V. FOX
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-The
prosecution of Daniel Ellsberg
has bumped smack into what
may become an important
question in the Pentagon papers
trial:
Can the government, prose
cuting Ellsberg for allegedly
leaking secrets, introduce se
cret documents as evidence to
back up its charges—and still
keep them secret?
At a pretrial hearing Tues
day, a Justice Department
attorney asked a federal judge
to establish procedures to
maintain the secrecy of do
cuments submitted as evidence
when Ellsberg comes to trial.
The prosecutor, David Nissen,
said that about half the
Pentagon papers which had not
been published and are still
classified would be introduced
and should be kept secret.
U.S. District Court Judge
William M. Byrne Jr. expressed
bewilderment over how the
government intended to keep
secret evidence introduced in
State troopers police
Way cross in walkout
WAYCROSS, Ga. (UPI) —
Three high-ranking officers aid
ed by 15 members of the Geor
gia State Patrol are handling
law enforcement here today as
the result of a mass walkout
by most of the city’s police
force.
Only Police Chief H. E.
Bond, an assistant chief and a
captain were left Tuesday after
31 officers up to the rank of
sergeant left the force, vowing
not to return until the city gave
them a SIOO a month pay raise.
Bond admitted that the three
men left on the force alone
could not handle the law en
forcement job for this city of
Regents hike tuition
VALDOSTA, Ga. (UPI) - A
resident student at the Univer
sity of Georgia will be paying
$1 more per quarter hour be
ginning this summer as the re
sult of an eight per cent in
crease in tuition rates approved
by the State Board of Regents.
Although the rate hikes, ap
proved Tuesday, will vary from
school to school, similar rates
will be in effect at Georgia
Tech, the Medical College of
Ghostly Masterpiece
results when modern technology is ap
plied to the restoration of a medieval art
work. A series of 40 X-ray pictures
taken of an internationally famed work,
"The Annunciation,” below, carved bv
Viet Stoss (1455-1533) turned out to be
so artistically interesting that the pic
tures also went on display, below right,
with the restored masterpiece in Nuern
berg's St. Lawrence Church.
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Kleindienst nomination fight may get bigger
By ROY McGHEE
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rich
ard G. Kleindienst’s attorney
general nomination ran into
serious new trouble today that
threatened to spark a constitu-
court, which becomes public
knowledge.
The government attorney
replied that in the espionage
trial of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg, who were executed
in the 1950 s for turning over
nuclear secrets to the Russians,
the trial judge allowed top
secret documents to be shown
to the jury but not made public.
Charles Nesson, a defense
attorney for Ellsberg, attacked
the prosecution request as
“precisely what the defense has
been afraid of. The prosecution
has the choice of making
the documents public or not
prosecuting.”
The judge directed the
Justice Department to tell
Ellsberg’s lawyers what sec
tions of the Pentagon papers
the government intends to label
during the trial as affecting the
national defense.
The Justice Department at
torney offered to explain in
private session why it considers
these portions critical, but the
judge ruled against him, saying
19,000.
City Manager Aaron Johnson
told the policemen he had hiked
salaries for them from S3OB to
$391 since he took the job, and
the SIOO a month increase was
impossible under the wage-price
freeze.
The officers turned down an
offer by Johnson to hold on for
six to eight months, at which
time he would get the pay raise
for them.
Patrolman Steve Dunsmore,
head of the local branch of the
Fraternal Order of Police, said
the 2.5 per cent pay raise the
city had offered them, on a
base salary of $390 a month,
Georgia, and the University of
Georgia schools of law and vet
erinary medicine.
Regents chairman Lee Burge
of Atlanta said operating costs
in non-academic areas forced
the increase.
“In every instance private
education, as well as state, has
increased tuition rates across
the country,” Burge said. “We
only went up one half of what
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tional fight between the White
House and Congress.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C.,
revealed that he would fight the
nomination both in the Judicia
ry Committee and on the
that the issue should be
discussed in open court.
The judge did not immediate
ly rule on the request by the
defense for an explanation of
the standards used by the
government.
The trial of Ellsberg and
codefendant Anthony J. Russo
had been scheduled to begin
May 9, but the judge indicated
Tuesday it would likely be mid-
June before it gets under way.
He set May 30 for a final pre
trial hearing on a defense,
motion to dismiss all charges
against Ellsberg and Russo.
Delayed test
KENILWORTH, England
(UPl)—John Gabriel, 83, finally
passed his driver’s test Tues
day-after driving for 65 years
with a learner’s permit issued
when a driving test was not
required.
was “a shame and a disgrace.”
He said the striking police
men had widespread support
from the people of Waycross.
He added that the officers had
offered to supply “two or three
men” a day to handle emer
gencies, but the city had al
ready contacted the highway
patrol.
“If they give us a SIOO a
month raise and let all of us
come back and not just a few,
and guarantee that no one will
be busted or punished, then we
will come back,” Dunsmore
said.
prices have.”
Out-of-state students will be
given an even greater tuition
increase and will have to pay
an average of $5 more for each
quarter hour of work he takes,
than the current sls per quar
ter hour.
The regents also appointed
Dr. William H. Moretz as new
president of the medical col
lege, and named Dr. Robert A.
Liebelt as provost.
Senate floor until key aides of
President Nixon are permitted
to appear before the commit
tee.
White House spokesman Ro
nald Ziegler announced that
Nixon had invoked executive
privilege to prevent his aides
Peter Flanigan and William E.
Timmons from testifying.
It was Flanigan who procured
the services of an outside
financial consultant, Richard
Ramsden, who wrote a report
that led the Justice Department
to drop a billion dollar antitrust
suit against International Tele
phone & Telegraph (ITT).
Timmons has been identified
as the White House aide who
made inquiries about how much
money ITT would contribute to
the Republican National Con
vention and whether any of that
money would go to Nixon’s re
election campaign.
“I’m going to recommend
that the committee take no
action on the Kleindienst
nomination until White House
aides, who have had contact
with ITT and who have
communicated with McLaren,
appear to testify,” Ervin said.
He referred to Richard W.
McLaren, former head of the
antitrust division in the Justice
Department, who changed his
mind about suing ITT and
settled out of court after
Ramsden’s report
Ervin also said the adminis
tration was claiming in a
Supreme Court brief that the
constitutional right of a senator
not to have to answer for his
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WASHINGTON—CorneIius Gallagher, D-N.J., talks to
newsmen about a federal indictment against him for tax
evasion and perjury. Gallagher denied the allegations,
charging the indictment was political and perpetuated by a
secret police society in the United States. (UPI)
Moretz has been a professor
and chairman of the depart
ment of surgery and Liebelt
has been associate dean of the
medical school. Moretz suc
ceeds Dr. Harry B. O’Rear as
president and Liebelt’s job has
just been created.
In addition, the regents
named Dr. Jerry M. William
son president of Gordon Junior
College.
utterances during congressional
debates did not extend to
conversations between a sena
tor and his aides. The
Department of Justice made
that claim in prosecuting a
case against an aide to Sen.
Mike Gravel, D-Alaska, who
released the secret Pentagon
Papers.
Ervin said the administration
was showing “poor grace” now
in invoking executive privilege
for White House aides. “It’s a
double standard—one for the
executive branch and another
for Congress.
Tuesday, Henry Petersen,
assistant attorney general in
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Parole I
director I
resigns I
ATLANTA (UPI) - Til
state’s veteran director of pl
roles E. J. Calhoun Jr., hl
resigned to devote his time I
private business interests.
Calhoun said in giving hl
resignation to State Pardorfl
and Parole Board Chairma]
J.O. Partain Jr., that he wl
stepping down from his pol
after 14 years because of “pea
sonal reasons and family intea
ests.”
Calhoun served as an interin
member of the pardons anl
parole board in 1978-71 after thl
resignation of Mrs. Rebecca II
Garrett. An Albany native, hl
went to work for the state first
in 1949 and came to AtlantJ
three years later as chief invest
tigator for the board.
The pardons and parol
board’s administrative chore
have been assumed by the nev
Department of Offender Reha
bilitation, under the state gov
ernment reorganization plan.
Calhoun said he had not di:
cussed his decision to resig
after 23 years with the st'
with the head of the new
fender rehabilitation dep
ment, Ellis MacDougall.
Some joke
PETERBOROUGH, Englant
(UPl)—Mrs. Angela Underdowi
thought she had uncoveret
something when she scraped of
old wallpaper in her home an<
found a message.
It told her to dig in a certaii
spot in her garden. Th(
“treasure” turned out to be ai
old tin box containing a piece o
paper which said: “The joke’:
on you.”
charge of the criminal division,
testified that a West Coast U.S.
district attorney’s conduct was
“highly improper” during in
vestigation of possible illegal
campaign contributions to Pres
ident Nixon’s 1968 election
campaign.
But he said the decision by
Kleindienst to clear him of any
“wrongdoing” was justified in
order to maintain public
confidence in law enforcement.
Charges that the attorney
Harry Steward, ordered federa'
investigators to lay off the
contributors first were pub
lished by Life magazine.