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29.77 29.77
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LOWEST TEMPERATURES V/4'/z\ jt U ' Z
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UPI WE Al HE R F OTOC AST O •:•
■:• FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Clear and cool tonight with low in upper 40s. Sunny and mild ;>
:•: tomorrow with high again near 70s. •:•
Second Homes
Out of America’s 58.8 mil
lion households, 1.7 million
householders own a second
or vacation home. Persons
between the ages of 35 and
64 years account for 71 per
cent of those second homes.
CHIROPRACTIC
Aa ; Bets Sick
1 People Weil
Without
Drugs
■( or Surgery
Dr. John S. Arnold
Closed Wednesday and
Saturday afternoons.
Office 227-3343
Residence 227-3054
Dr. John S. Arnold
434 South Bth Street
r Jl
'
__*T— •
c■» -■- ■~=’ =3? “ -
iL—-— r
„ i 1 i ■ ' — "RIGHT-ON"
GAS RANGE
• continuous cleaning oven provides
continuous cleaning at normal baking
temperature.
• unitized cooktop lifts up/lifts off.
• removable oven door and oven bottom.
► • roll-out broiler.
• operates on natural or LP-Gas.
Model 1423 (30-inch size)
Regularly NOW
$21729 S IBB OO
Low cost installation available.
Sale ends June 22. 1973
Headquarters for LP-Gas.
equipment, and appliances.
Amoco Oil Company
123 W. Solomon St.
jUflUfek Farm & Griffin, Georgia
Servfoe (404) 227-1430
y Amoco Oil Company
I Cato- Spring Things J
Odle— 20-30% off
includes: Dresses, Pant-Suite
Formate, Sportswear |
and more-
from Reg. Stock
\AmOmU •“ I
& IBS. Ml
Griffin, Ga.
Abernathy released
ATLANTA (UPI)-The Rev.
Ralph Abernathy, a new leader
in the protest against Rich’s De
triment Store, was released on
31,000 bond Sunday after his ar
rest at the home of the Rich’s
board chairman.
Abernathy, president of the
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference (SCLC), took over
leadership in the Rich’s strike
after after the Rev. Hosea Wil
liams was jailed.
Abernathy and the Rev. Joe
Boone were arrested Saturday
night at the home of board
Watergate
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
matter of the mysterious “Dean
chairman Harold Brockey and
charged with criminal trespass.
Black persons have been pro
testing against Rich’s becauseof
alleged racial discrimination
and unfair business practices.
Abernathy led 150 persons to
Brockey’s home where they
sang hymns in front. When he
attempted to walk up to the
house, Abernathy was arrested.
“This was part of the ha-ass
ment and strike mat s Deen go
ing on for about a month,’’
Capt. Charles V. Forrester, of
the Atlanta Police Department,
said.
papers” and their role in the
Watergate scandal went before
a federal judge today with the
White House, a Senate commit
tee and the court all in the
running to take control of them.
Chief U.S. District Judge
John J. Sirica, who conducted
the Watergate trial in January,
called a morning hearing to try
to unravel the competing
claims.
Meanwhile, Senate hearings
resumed on the nomination of
Elliot L. Richardson to be
attorney general, and the fast
spreading scandal apparently
claimed another casualty as a
Treasury Department law en
forcement official went on
“administrative leave” follow
ing a published report linking
him to the affair.
The papers at issue before
Sirica were slipped out of White
House files by presidential
counsel John W. Dean 111
diortly before President Nixon
fired him April 30. Dean stored
them in a safe deposit box in
the Alexandria, Va., National
Bank near where he lives.
No One Knows but Dean
Apparently no one but Dean
knows exactly what is in the
documents, and he has let it be
known only that they are
“classified” papers relating
somehow to the investigation of
the Watergate case now under
way by a special Senate
committee.
The committee opens public
hearings Thursday, and its
ranking Republican member,
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of
Tennessee, said Sunday Nixon
himself might be invited to
“state his side of the case” at
some point.
Dean, saying he had taken
the secret papers and locked
them away because he feared
they might be stolen or
destroyed if left at the White
House, asked the court May 4
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WASHINGTON—The sign tells the story. This pony was among several horses and their riders
that joined in a protest, at the Capitol Sunday, of the slaughter of riding horses. The “ride” was
sponsored by the American Horse Protection Association. (UPI)
Mysterious Dean papers
in hands of federal judge
to take possession of the safe
deposit box keys. He attached
the keys to his petition.
The Justice Department, re
sponding on behalf of the White
House, said Dean had no
business taking the papers and
that the administration wants
them back.
The Senate committee
weighed in last Friday, asking
the court for the keys. It said
its investigators have evidence
that unnamed White House
aides have “illegally and
improperly removed and de
stroyed records and docu
ments” in the past pertaining
to the Senate probe.
Caulfield Goes on Leave
Meanwhile, John J. Caulfield,
44, voluntarily went on “ad
ministrative leave” from his
Treasury Department job Sun
day following a published
report he offered a Watergate
conspirator executive clemency
in return for silence.
The Los Angeles Times said
Sunday that Caulfield held two
secret meetings last January
with James W. McCord Jr.,
then on trial in the Watergate
case, and told McCord he could
expect executive clemency in 10
or 11 months if he remained
slent at the trial and accepted
imprisonmait. McCord was
later convicted.
Caulfield was a White House
aide at the time of the alleged
meetings. He moved to the
Treasury Department a year
ago and, since July 1, has been
assistant director for criminal
enforcement in the depart
ment’s Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms Bureau. A Treasury
spokesman said he asked for
the leave on his own initiative.
Sen. Baker’s reference to a
possible invitation to Nixon to
provide information to Senators
came during an interview on
Meet the Press (NBC-TV).
“I would not exclude the
possibility that the President
might be offered an opportunity
to state his side of the case
through counsel, by statement
or otherwise,” Baker said.
He Doubts Subpoena
He said he doubted a
president could be subpoenaed
for anything but a full-fledged
impeachment proceeding, heard
by the Senate after initiation by
the House. The Constitution
provides such proceedings for
“high crimes and mis
demeanors.”
Asked whether the Senate
committee has Nixon under
investigation, Baker replied:
“That is indeed the heart of
the matter, and I’m going to
reply this way: There is no
person in the United States who
is not potentially to be
investigated in conjunction with
this matter if it relates in a
logical way to the scope of the
jurisdiction of this committee.
“We are going to examine
every lead. We are going to
i examine every suggestion, and
I we are going to check out every
statement, wherever that leads
■ us.”
In other developments:
—Newseek magazine quoted
Dean Sunday as denying in an
i interview that he wrote a
report, attributed to him by
President Nixon Aug. 29,
clearing top administration
I aides of wrongdoing in the
Watergate affair. The magazine
quoted Dean as saying he was
I “flabbergasted” at Nixon’s
version —“Here was the
President of the United States
reassuring the American people
ai the basis of a report that
didn’t exist.”
Quotes “Reliable Sources”
—The Washington Post quot
ed “two reliable sources” as
saying FBI officials warned
Gov. Carter
has talk
with Llyod’s
LONDON (UPI) - Gov. Jim
my Carter met today with offi
cials,of Lloyd’s of London, one
of the world’s foremost financi
al institutions, on the first day
of a 16-day goodwill tour.
Carter, his wife, two aides,
and Gen. Louis W. Truman, di
rector of the state Department
of Community Development, are
visiting five countries in Europe
and the Middle East in an ef
fort to stir up interest for for
eign trade with Georgia busi
nesses.
The Georgia delegation will be
honored tonight at a formal re
ception and dinner then contin
ue their official meetings Tues
day.
The remainder of the week
Carter will be in Germany,
meeting with business and gov
ernment leaders in Bonn and
touring Berlin.
In his second week of tour
ing, Carter will be in Brussels,
Paris, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.
The whirlwind tour marks the
second foreign trip Carter has
made. He visited South Ameri
ca last year to promote Atlanta
as an international trade capi
tal.
Hikers steal food
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) —
A woman complained to police
Sunday that about 100 of 12,000
walkers in a hunger hike stole
SIOO worth of food off her
catering wagon.
Mrs. Lory Harrison, 23, of
Oak Creek, said the hikers, who
marched to raise money for 20
local, national and international
projects, grabbed the food from
the open displays.
former acting FBI director L.
Patrick Gray HI “several
weeks” after the June 17
Watergate break-in that there
appeared to be a cover-up
going on and urged him to tell
the President, but that Gray
did not do so. Gray, however, is
said to have expressed fears to
the President July 6 about
actions of White House aides
concerning Watergate. It was
not dear whether this was
before or after Gray was
allegedly warned by FBI
officials.
—A White House spokesman
Sunday confirmed ptfclished
reports the President is consid
ering asking Congress to set up
a bipartisan commission to
study ways of deaning up
American election politics.
—Sen. George S. McGovern,
D-S.D., according to sources
dose to him, has asked the
Senate committee to investigate
ananti-McGovern letter-writing
campaign in 1972. They said
McGovern would give the
committee a file linking the
letters to “Democrats for
Nixon,” the organization set up
by former Treasury Secretary
John B. Connally, who recently
joined the GOP.
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Page 5
— Griffin Daily News Monday, May 14,1973
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They were happy
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
bomb squad went to Cleveland
Hopkins International Airport
because Urban, the bomb
sniffing German shepherd,
muffled at a foam-wrapped
package then sat down and
refused to move—indicating an
explosive inside.
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Frank Mumpower, Mgr. Phone 228-1337
About 100 persons in a
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