Newspaper Page Text
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— Griffin Daily News Friday, August 25, 1972
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Nixon junks the script
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPI)—To judge by the curtain
raiser, President Nixon has
junked the script that called for
him to remain above the battle,
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UTICA, MICH. — A beaming Pres. Richard Nixon is almost
lost in the middle of a sea of hands as he greets the some
10,000 persons, mostly young people, before dedicating the
new Dwight D. Eisenhower High School in this northeastern
Detroit suburb. Inside the school in his first off-the-cuff talk
in months he called for youth involvement, saying the nation
needs young enthusiasm, vitality and idealism. (UPI)
and plunged into his last
campaign relishing the chance
to strike out at his foes.
His strategists had passed the
word for months that Nixon
would not don the politician’s
hat until Congress adjourns.
But they did not bargain on the
President, who does not like to
leave the game to chance.
than 12 hours after he
had delivered his acceptance
speech at the Republican
National Convention in Miami,
Nixon hit the road in search of
that “New American Majori
ty.”
He spoke before the Ameri
can legion in Chicago and was
applauded loudly when he
chastized those — obviously
meaning McGovern—who Nixon
said would cut the defense
budget and relegate America to
the position of a “second rate
power."
He also has made a major
campaign issue out of amnesty
for draft dodgers, challenging
McGovern’s more lenient posi
tion.
“I think we have had enough
of running down our men who
have served their country,
rather than deserting it and
running off to Canada,” he
said. “I think we ought to stand
up for those who served it.”
His campaign staff had done
their work well, drawing out
the crowds at welcoming rallies
in San Diego—which Nixon calls
his “lucky city” because he
never lost it in an election—and
on home soil in San Clemente.
GUT ISSUES??
. John Carlisle’s opponent NOW wants to talk "gut
issues".
Without exception they are either as controversial as
apple pie or positions that John Carlisle took weeks and
months before: For instance, John’s opponent was the
third man in a three man race to support no-fault
insurance, etc., etc.
But when John Carlisle offered his opponent a
chance to stand up and voice his opinions on tough
issues in a public debate, his opponent refused!!
If a man won’t stand up for himself in Griffin, he
sure won't stand up for you in Atlanta.
Elect
JOHN
CARLISLE
Qualified, Outspoken, Independent
McGovern charges ‘exile’
WASHINGTON (UPI)
George S. McGovern said today
President Nixon has sent
America’s principles of peace,
prosperity, justice and open
government into exile.
McGovern said 20,000 young
Americans have died since
Nixon promised a secret plan
for peace in Vietnam, 5 million
workers have no jobs and the
crime rate is climbing—
“boosted along by the Republi
can burglers” who are charged
with breaking into Democratic
headquarters.
In a statement reacting to
Nixon’s speech accepting the
GOP nomination for re-election,
McGovern said the President
“shrinks from debate, hides
from the press and covers up
Don t hurry back,
mayor tells GOP
MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-With
a don’t hurry back message
from the mayor, confident
Republicans are leaving Miami
Beach questioning only whether
President Nixon’s coattails can
be stretched to pull a Republi
can Congress into office.
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew flies to Minneapolis
today to address the convention
of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars, who sat on their hands
and gave Democratic presiden
tial nominee George S. Mc-
Govern a decidely cool recep
tion Thursday.
Nixon won the most begrudg
ing of endorsements from Rep.
John M. Ashbrook, the conser
vative from Ohio who had
challenged the President’s re
nomination in the early prima
ries. Ashbrook said he would
vote for Nixon “with great
reluctance” because “obviously
I’m not going to vote for
McGovern.”
At a meeting of Republican
National Committee, which re
elected Sen. Robert Dole of
Kansas as GOP national
chairman, a far-from-optimistic
assessment of Republican chan
ces in Congress came from
Clark MacGregor, Nixon’s cam
paign manager.
Only a “Fair” Chance
MacGregor said the GOP had
only a “fair” chance of taking
control of both houses of
Congress for the first time
since Dwight D. Eisenhower’s
election to a first term 20 years
ago. But he said he thought the
chances that the Republicans
would win control in 1974 were
“good.”
Despite all the damage done
to this tropical vacation city,
one Miamian was sorry to see
the radicals quit their Flamingo
Park campsite.
$lO million in secret money
from big special interest
backers.”
McGovern returned Thursday
from a four-day campaign
swing in which he got the silent
treatment from Minneapolis
conventions of Veterans of
Foreign Wars (VFW) and the
American Legion, won endorse
ment from Chicago Mayor
Richard J. Daley and ended
some differences with former
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
McGovern called a summit
meeting of his top labor
advisers today to try to win
wider support from unions and
to lure AFL-CIO President
George Meany back into the
Democratic camp.
McGovern was cheereed
“My God, you mean we’re
going to have to wait four years
for them to come back?” asked
one old man from a park
bench. “They brought a little
life to this old people’s place.”
But Mayor Chuck Hall said
four years would be too soon.
Complaining that the cost to his
city will be three times the $1
million it received from the
GOP, Hall said as far as he is
concerned Miami Beach has
hosted its last political conven
tion.
“Politicians are... Freeloaders”
“I’m going to try to get a bill
in Congress to have the federal
government pay all the costs of
these conventions,” Hall said.
“They really don’t bring much
money into the city. Politicians
are usually freeloaders. They
expect to get everything for
nothing.”
Police made more than 1,200
arrests during the convention,
most after the protesters
turned to violence Wednesday
night and stoned cars and
buses, cursing and threatening
delegates enroute to hear
Nixon’s acceptance speech.
Undercover agents posing as
protesters arrested five radical
leaders including Dana Beal,
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Douglas Hollberg Complete Financing Hugh Hester
Thursday at the Minneapolis
convention of the American
Federation of Teachers, which
gave him 25 per cent of its $1
million political fund. His
running mate, Sargent Shriver,
won the endorsement of the
75,000-member International
Moulders and Allied Workers,
who said in convention at
Cincinnati that Meany’s reluc
tance to back the Democratic
ticket was a “puzzle.”
McGovern also plans to
modify his welfare and tax
reform proposals to try to
reduce alienation of big busi
ness. The changes in his tax
and welfare programs will be
revealed Tuesday in a Wall
Street speech, his aides report
ed.
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ADM. NOEL A. M. Gayler
will take over command of
all U.S. Armed Forces in
the Pacific area Nov. 1,
succeeding the retiring
Adm. John S. McCain Jr.
leader of the “Zippies,” consi
dered disruptive even by the
other demonstrators.
An organization of homosex
uals, the National Coalition of
Gay Organizations, issued a
statement accusing the White
House of having “exerted
pressure in order to suppress
free dialogue on the issues of
homosexual civil rights” during
the convention.
Final nail poised
for Spassky coffin
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPD-
Boris Spassky ducked into his
seventh-floor suite, looking
drawn and exhausted. His chief
second Eyfim Geller followed,
chain smoking cigarettes—
always a sign the world chess
champion was in trouble.
The 18th game of the $250,000
world chess championship ad
journed Thursday on the 42nd
move with grandmasters pre
dicting “the final nail is about
to be driven into Spassky’s
coffin.”
The game resumes at 10:30
am. EDT today with German
arbiter Lothar Schmid opening
the brown envelope to play
Spassky’s sealed move. U.S.
challenger Bobby Fischer is
leading 10 points to seven and
needs another 2% to win the
title. Spassky must squeeze five
points out of the last seven
games to retain his crown.
Having successfully blocked a
strong Spassky attack earlier in
the game Thursday, the chal
lenger played his 42nd move
and leaned back confidently to
watch his opponent. For 15
minutes Spassky thought, his
back to the 800 spectators, his
hand occasionally passing over
his eyes.
Finally he grabbed the
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scoresheet and signed his
secret move under the wooden
table while Fischer stared
blandly at the board. The
American had two rooks and
five pawns to Spassky’s two
rooks and four pawns.
Grandmasters watching the
game on closed-circuit televi
sion in the corridors divided
their opinion into “poor” or
“desperate.”
Denmark’s Jens Snevoldsen
said “the nail is about to be
driven into Spassky’s coffin”
While the struggle on the
stage won muttered approval
from the masters, earlier
proceedings in the hall had the
touch of comic opera.
University professors in che
mistry tod? samples from the
players’ identical $470 black
and leather swivel chairs. They
also scraped the chess board.
Lighting engineers opened the
huge fixture over the board
while others took 36 different
X-rays of the stage.
The search was ordered by
the Icelandic organizers after a
Russian protest that the Ameri
can camp may be using
“electronic devices and chemi
cal substances” to upset
Spassky’s game.