Newspaper Page Text
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— Griffin Daily News Saturday, August 26,1972
Humphrey friend linked
to Nixon fund scramble
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
longtime friend of Sen. Hubert
Humphrey has been named as
the contributor to President
Nixon's re-election campaign of
$25,000 that wound up in the
Miami bank account of a
suspect in the break-in of
Democratic National Commit
tee offices.
The new twist to the case
that began June 17 with the
arrest of five men at Democra
tic headquarters in the Water
gate apartment-commercial
complex was reported by
Kenneth H. Dahlberg of Min
neapolis in an interview with
the Minneapolis Tribune.
Dahlberg, Midwest finance
chairman for the Nixon cam
paign, was quoted by the
Tribune as saying the source of
the $25,000 was Dwayne O.
Andreas, a Minneapolis soybean
tycoon and financial backer of
Humphrey’s unsuccessful bid
for the Democratic presidential
nomination. Andreas was not
available for comment.
Andreas was reported to have
given the money to Dahlberg
personally, and the report said
Dahlberg delivered a check for
the $25,000 to Maurice H. Stans,
chief fund raiser for the Nixon
campaign. Stans has said he
does not know how the money
No bugging found
in chess match
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)
—A two-day investigation by
chemistry professors, lighting
engineers and X-ray photogra
phers produced a piece of wood
and two dead flies at the hall
where the world championship
chess match is held.
But there were no traces of
the “electronic devices and
chemical substances” that the
Russian camp had charged the
Americans were using to upset
world champion Boris Spass
ky’s game.
After Friday’s adjourned 18th
game in the 24-inatch cham
pionship between Spassky and
U.S. challenger Bobby Fischer
ended in a draw, Icelandic
Chess Federation President
Gudmundur Thorarinsson led a.
FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Dumas Shelnutt
Minister
Rev. Harry Hawkins
Associate Minister
Morning Service 11:00 A.M.
Sermon By Pastor
"The Power of
Expectation”
Evening Service 6:00 P.M.
sermon by Harry Hawkins
"Lord, Lord, Don’t
. ~ You Know Me?
* i : f‘ Jij This district and this state are entering an era of fantastic growth. *
*T** fj £ We nee(l ( l ua, '^ ed > energetic leaders with their eyes on the future to meet the £
* *s 1 As we have seen > without farsighted leaders offering imaginative new answers our *
J | ’ 1 % current problems will only compound over the years. *
* [■ yEjV Jr" I Because most of his life is still ahead of him, John Carlisle is Keyed to the future. He *
* ? . j,' yBBESfiNP I has the qualifications, a proven record and the willingness to accept new ideas. «
* j| John Carlisle is the type of public servant this state needs. *
| nr If john Carlisle
\jf H I Tuesday, August 29th |
1 *
got to the suspect’s bank
account.
Democrats—who claim the
objective of the break-in was to
bug the headquarters — are
pressing for an early trial of a
$1 million lawsuit filed in the
case. A federal grand jury also
is investigating to determine
whether criminal indictments
are warranted.
The Democrats obviously
were working for a trial before
the Nov. 7 election with the
hope that evidence would link
Nixon’s campaign organization
to the alleged bugging.
U.S. District Court Judge
Charles R. Richey has said at a
hearing that “the integrity of
the courts may be subject to
question” if the case were
delayed until after the election.
Rep. Wright Patman, D-Tex.,
chairman of the House Banking
Committee, said the committee
would begin its own investiga
tion of the controversy.
The question of how the
$25,000 wound up in the bank
account of Bernard Barker, a
former CIA employe and
suspect in the alleged bugging,
also prompted the General
Accounting Office (GAO), con
gressional watchdog agency, to
begin a full audit of the Nixon
campaign finances.
parade of experts on stage to
complete the investigation he
called Thursday.
“Gentlemen, the search is
over,” said Thorarinsson after
technicians had dismantled
Spassky’s $470 black leather
swivel chair. “There was no
trace of electronic or chemical
devices. I hope we can get on
with the match.”
The 19th game in the $250,000
match gets under way at 1 p.m.
EDT Sunday amid disagree
ment by grandmasters over
Fischer’s latest playing tactics.
Fischer needs only two more
points to win the championship
while Spassky needs 4(4 to
retain the crown.
news
Must be accountable: Nix
MACON, Ga. (UPI) — State School Supt. Jack Nix says
Georgia must come up with some system for making its
school system accountable.
But Nix, who spoke to teachers here Friday, was quick
to add assurances that such a plan would not be aimed
solely at them.
“Public education cannot continue to go to the
taxpayers and ask for more money for ‘quality’ education
without establishing what we mean by ‘quality,’” Nix
said.
“The serious proponents of accountability in the
classroom are not saying ‘hold the teacher responsible,’”
said Nix. “On the contrary, placing the burden of
accountability on the teacher alone is simplistic and
inaccurate.”
Nix said any accountability plan should include all seg
ments of education from the State Board of Education
down.
Couple held in beating
ROCHESTER, N. Y. (UPI)- A Towns, Ga., couple is
being held in this upstate New York city on a charge of
beating their 3-year-old daughter so severely she is in
“very critical” condition in a hospital here.
Police who have charged 19-year-old John Daniels and
his 22-year-old wife Barbara in connection with the
beating of little Wendy Daniels, said the girl has a broken
neck, broken arms and a possible broken back.
The couple was arrested at the hospital when they took
the child in for treatment.
Georgia authorities are investigating the apparent
disappearance in Folkston, Ga., of the couple’s son.
Drug security said inadequate
ATLANTA (UPI) — Gov. Jimmy Carter has been told
that security and controls over the use of potentially
harmful drugs is inadequate in at least 18 of 21 county
clinics.
That was the report the governor received Friday from
the Georgia Pharmacists Advisory Council which added
that state agencies “have little or no control” over drugs
they are dispensing.
The agency added that its investigation found several
untrained persons were illegally dispensing these drugs to
patients served by the agencies in question.
According to the council, a number of the state agencies
have been violating state pharmacy laws but added that in
many cases they were unaware that they were violating
the laws.
“There is presently no single authority with
responsibility for insuring that all drugs purchased by the
Department of Human Resources be dispensed in a
professionally sound manner,” the council reported to the
governor.
More drug agents needed
ATLANTA (UPI) — The director of the State Division of
Investigation says Georgia needs twice as many narcotics
agents.
William Beardsley blames narcotics for 50 per cent of
the state’s crimes and says the way to curtail the drug
traffic is to double the number of DOI agents assigned to
this field.
There are 16 DOI agents working on narcotics cases now
and Beardlsey says he wants 16 more assigned to local
sheriffs.
“A local sheriff would call in and once we determined he
had a problem, we would assign one of these agents to
him," said Beardsley. “He would work under the sheriff,
not me.”
Beardsley estimated that the additional agents would
require a $150,000 appropriation from the state
legislature.
Cultures
clash
in Ottawa
By JACK WEBB
Copley News Service
OTTAWA, Canada - No
where is the conflict that has
divided Canada more apparent
than in Ottawa, capital of this
country of 22 million.
The rivalry between the 10
million French-Canadians of
this huge country and the re
maining English-speaking
races has not erupted into overt
violence for two years. But the
rivalry is still there.
It is especially apparent
when you talk to the everyday
people of Ottawa — such as
Pierre, a French-Canadian
waiter who one day told an
American tourist:
“Ottawa is a lot like the
states, is it not?”
“How do you mean?” asked
the American.
“The people of the states are
very tough, no? Very, what is
the word, sassy?”
“Sassy?”
“Yes. Very competitive.”
Pierre holds fond memories
for Montreal and the rest of the
province of Quebec, which is
nearly 100 per cent French
speaking. He remembers the
Swiss-style chalets of the many
small French towns that cover
the Laurentian Mountains, and
the bistros and clubs where you
will hear only French voices.
George, on the other hand, is
only partially French. A young
taxicab driver (most French
men in Canada hold low-paying
jobs, just as American Negroes
did in the Deep South a few
years ago), George is very re
sentful of the French-
Canadians.
“I do not like Quebec,” said
George. “The French people
are so self-centered.”
French people are upset be
cause the English-speaking
people of Canada — and those
who have “turned English,”
like George — generally con
sider French a second-rate lan
guage and the French culture a
second-rate culture.
There have been efforts to
separate Quebec from the rest
of Canada in order to preserve
the French culture there.
"We are 10 million French
men surrounded by 250 million
English people,” said one in
dignant French-Canadian. “It
may be impractical to sepa
rate, but it is necessary.”
A visitor to Ottawa can easily
see signs of the bitterness
which has divided Canada.
On one side of the Ottawa
River, in the city of Hull in the
province of Quebec, the tourist
finds that French is the chief
language spoken, and the
French culture is apparent in
the bistros and other buildings.
On the Ottawa side of the
river the tourist is in the prov
ince of Ontario. It is possible to
find many gourmet restaurants
there, including French ones.
But the language spoken, for
the most part, is English, and
the nightclubs and taverns of
Ottawa remind a visitor of ones
he has seen in the states.
There is the Beachcomber
Room in the Talisman Hotel,
where you can hear the latest
rock music while nearly bare
waitresses serve you. It is very
“English,” as the French
would say.
At the Chateau Laurier in the
downtown area, the atmo
sphere is also English, despite
its name.
But the culture of France is
on the other side of the Ottawa
River, and the gulf between it
and the city of Ottawa often
seems deep and wide.
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Angela Davis backs fund
ATLANTA (UPl)—Controver
aal Angela Davis has offered
her support to a committee
which was formed to aid an
Atlanta black woman charged
with murdering her white super
visor at an Internal Revenue
Service regional center in sub
urban Chamblee.
Miss Davis, heavily guarded,
spoke at a black Atlanta church
Friday on behalf of Emily But
ler.
Miss Butler is accused of
footing Mrs. Betty Davis, her
GRIM SIGNS CONTRACT
NEW YORK (UPl)—Wide
receiver Bob Grim, who was
acquired in a big off-season
trade that sent quarterback
Fran Tarkenton to the Minneso
ta Vikings, Friday signed a one
year contract with the New
York Giants of the National
Football League.
BREAKS RECORD
BERLIN (UPI) - Harmut
Briesenick of East Germany
Friday broke the European
shotput record with a throw of
70 feet \V* inches at an
international track and field
meet in Potsdam, it was
reported by the East German
News Service ADN.
MV]
U J
“Hi! We sure have missed you
around First Baptist. Welcome
back!”
These words spoken sincerely
have such a magical ring. They
work wonders.
Now that so many of our people
are returning from their
vacation, we are going to have a
special day in their honor!
It will be called “Back-to-
School Day”.
supervisor at the IRS center,
last June after the white wom
an allegedly harassed her. The
victim died a month later.
“Emily Butler has been made
a scapegoat in the truest sense
of the word,” said Miss Davis.
“She has been charged with
being a murderer ... she is a
victim.”
Security guards, some identi
fied as local Black Panthers,
ringed the area in front of the
stage and guarded the church
doors while Miss Davis spoke.
Miss Davis was acquitted in
California on a charge of con
HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH
DAY CARE & KINDERGARTEN
Offering Day Care Program And Four And Five Year Old
Kindergarten. Musical Programs, Arts, Phonics, Field
Trips, Chapel Programs, State Approved Program.
Hot Lunch & Snacks
Christian Environment
Fenced Play Yard
OOQ Ql/IQ For Enrollment
££o-01 HO information
IMBff
oWO@ff C* •
THE CHURCH THAT CARES ABOUT YOU
spiracy in a murder case there.
Two news photographers,
Alex Persons of UPI and A1
Stephenson of the Atlanta Jour
nal-Constitution, said they were
pushed and cursed by one of
the guards when they left be
fore Miss Davis arrived at the
church.
Persons said he would have
been unable to obtain photo
graphs because all news media
were ordered to stay in a cer
tain area. He said he was told
to leave by one of the guards
who pushed him several times
toward the door.
A special Youth Rally will be
held at 9:30 a.m. in the
Sanctuary.
Students, Public School
Teachers and Administrators
will be honored at our 10:30 a.m.
worship.
At this time, the pastor will
bring a message...“ The Man On
A Watchtower”.
“Knocking, But You Can’t
Come In!” will be the sermon for
our 7:00 p.m. worship.
Back-to-School...Back-to-
Church!