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Patsy Perdue, Pam Evans and Ann Snell with student Jackie
Roberts (seated) display shampoo sink the Georgia
Hairdressers, Griffin Association, donated to the Griffin
Association Training Center Workshop to teach students self
Stans agrees
to interview
on break-in
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Mau
rice H. Stans, President Nixon’s
campaign finance director,
meets with House investigators
today in connection with the
break-in of Democratic head
quarters and alleged mishandl
ing of GOP funds.
According to sources close to
the House Banking and Curren
cy Committee, Stans agreed to
be interviewed by committee
aides about his objections to the
recently released General Ac
counting Office (GAO) report
detailing the alleged mishandl
ing of $350,000 in Republican
IMPERIAL
11 1 E Solomon Street
T. lephont 227-42 1-1
Last Times Today
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Telephone 227-5549
Last Times Today
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ANGELS’ 0
INILD WOMEN
“FOR BETTER
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Also Remodeling & Room Additions
campaign funds.
The GAO began its investiga
tion as a direct result of the
break-in and alleged attempt to
bug the Democratic National
Committee headquarters at the
plush Watergate apartment
complex here.
Stans, former secretary of
commerce, and the committee
aides were expected to center
their talks on the GAO
contention that $114,000 of the
disputed $350,000 campaign fund
was traced to the Florida bank
account of Bernard L. Barker,
one of the Watergate suspects.
The GAO’s report said the
Committee to Re-elect the
President may have committed
11 “apparent and possible”
violations of the new campaign
funding law. The GAO, Con
gress’ investigative unit, re
ferred its findings to the
Justice Department for possible
criminal action.
Rep. Wright Patman, D-Tex.,
chairman of the banking panel
which is conducting its own
probe into Nixon campaign
funds, invited Stans to meet
with his aides to discuss what
Stans had labeled the “misre
presentationsand inaccuracies”
in the report.
Five men were arrested with
electronic eavesdropping equip
ment and photographic gear
inside the Democratic offices
June 17. Since then, a federal
grand jury has been meeting in
secret to hear testimony on the
case. Sources close to the grand
jury indicated Tuesday that
criminal indictments may soon
be forthcoming.
Indications of the pending
break in the case came as
Nixon made his first public
comment on the incident.
He told reporters at the
Western White House in San
Clemente that “no one on the
White House staff now or in
this administration at the
present” was involved in the
affair. He acknowledged that
his re-election committee may
have made some “technical
violations” of the campaign
finance disclosure law. But, he
added, these violations would
be corrected.
grooming. The Hairdressers equipped the training room.
They plan to schedule monthly visits to the center for
training sessions.
About people
Hope meets Duchess
By United Press International
ISRAEL IMPARTIAL
WASHINGTON
Frank Church, D-Idaho, says
his talks with Prime Minister
Golda Meir convinced him that
Israel would be impartial in the
U.S. election.
Senator r "**'■ W
■ d
Church P
ra
Church, who returned Mon
day from a five-day trip to
Israel, referred to reports that
Israel favored President Nix
on’s re-election.
“I was told that nothing could
be worse for Israel than for her
to intervene in American
politics or to favor one party
over another,” Church said
Tuesday.
SPECIAL PLANNED
PARIS (UPl)—Comedian Bob
Hope met with the Duchess of
Windsor Tuesday, a spokesman
for Hope said.
r» i ’ ***
Bob '1
A
Hope
They discussed plans for a
television special in the United
States to raise funds for the
American Hospital in Paris.
The duchess is an honorary
governor of the hospital.
STILL RIDING
SANDUSKY, Ohio (UPI)-
Radio disc jockey Mike Kelly,
new holder of a world record
for continuous riding on a ferris
wheel, won’t say when he
intends to set foot on solid
ground again.
Kelly remained inside his
specially rigged gondola at
Cedar Point amusement park
after he passed the old mark of
17 days and 19 minutes Tuesday
at 10:23 a.m. (EDT). The old
record was set by a radio
personality in Honolulu in 1966.
CELLER LOSES
NEW YORK (UPI)— Rep.
Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., who
lost to Elizabeth Holtzman in
the Democratic primary in the
16th Congressional District in
Brooklyn, lost a fight Tuesday
to invalidate the results.
Celler, a 50-year veteran of
Congress, had charged the
primary was characterized by
“such frauds or irregularities
as to render impossible” the
determination of a winner.
Justice Dominic S. Rinaldi
ruled against Celler.
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news!
Eight charged with gambling
MACON, Ga. (UPI) — Eight men arrested in 1970 for
gambling and bookmaking on the basis of an FBI wiretap,
were found guilty Tuesday by U. S. District Judge W. A.
Bootle, who returned written verdicts.
The eight face possible sentences ranging up to 43 years
in prison and-or $120,000 in fines.
Those found guilty included Frank Joseph Masterana of
Las Vegas; Darmice T. “Blackie” Malloway, Atlanta;
William E. “Billy” Baxter Jr., Augusta; Cliff Anderson,
Columbus; Billy Cecil Doolittle, William Augusta Sanders
Jr., Julian Wells Whited and Ernest Massod Union, all of
Macon.
Gerald Hay Kilgore of North Hollywood, Calif., was
granted a separate trial.
The FBI said the wiretap installed in Macon was the
first authorized federal wiretap in Georgia and “opened
the door to a series of investigations of other bookmaking
operations across the country.” The FBI said agents
seized “several millions of dollars in funds derived from
organized criminal activities in violation of state and
federal gambling laws.”
The nine defendants were charged with gambling,
conspiracy and with interstate transmission of wagering
information.
Judge Bootle, who heard the case without a jury at the
request of the defendants, found Masterana guilty on 13
counts, Doolittle on 15, and Malloway, Baxter, Anderson,
Sanders, Whited and Union on seven counts each. All eight
were found innocent on two other counts.
Atlanta schools show drop
ATLANTA (UPI) — Enrollment in Atlanta public
schools dropped 4,031 Monday compared with first-day
enrollment a year ago.
Though school officials emphasized pupils will be
enrolling for several more days—until after Labor Day —
the figures appear to reflect a continuation of white flight
from the city to the suburbs.
Area superintendents reported enrollment down in
— Gr ffin Daily News Wednesday, August 30,1972
Page 7
nearly ever predominantly white school in the city.
Predominantly black schools also lost enrollment but
gains were shown in some black schools.
Tax hike plan abandoned
ATLANTA (UPI) — A group proposing a world
congress center for Atlanta has abandoned plans to
finance the $35 million project through a one-cent sales
tax.
The Georgia General Assembly earlier this year turned
down a plan to finance the center, touted as a facility to at
tract international conventions and trade fairs, through a
1 per cent sales tax on hotel and motel rooms and
restaurants serving mixed drinks.
Charles Palmer, cochairman of the study committee,
said Tuesday the committee probably will ask the
legislature in January for $3.2 million from the present 3
per cent sales tax to underwrite the project. The $3.2
million would be used to pay off building bonds which
would be sold to finance construction.
“It would be a self-financing project,” Palmer said. He
said studies show the center would generate $5 million
annually in extra sales tax for the state.
Maddox looks for backers
ATLANTA (UPI) — Lt. Gov. Lester Maddox wants to
write his own personal newspaper column, and he wants
somebody else to pay for it.
Maddox has invited “friends and supporters” to a
dinner next week in an effort to get his new column in as
many Georgia newspapers as possible.
Maddox said Tuesday the supporters will be asked to
help finance the cost of running the column, as a paid
political advertisement, in certain newspapers which
refuse to publish it “as a public service.”
The column, which Maddox said he is offering to the
Georgia press without charge, first appeared in several
newspapers in the state last week.
The dinner will be held Sept. 6 at Atlanta’s American
Motor Hotel.
Maddox is also trying to syndicate a television talk show
known as “Lester Maddox U.S.A.”