Newspaper Page Text
Page 6
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, June 7,1973
McCloskey’s
impeach talk
stopped cold
By HOWARD FIELDS
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep.
Paul N. McCloskey Jr., R-
Calif., who tried without much
success to start a House
discussion on impeachment of
the President Wednesday, says
he will probably try again “in a
week or two when things are
better understood.”
McCloskey reserved an hour
at the end of Wednesday’s
House session “to initiate an
exchange of views” on im
peachment. But when he was
only five minutes into his
speech late in the evening he
was cut off by a parliamentary
move by a fellow Republican.
Meanwhile, Sen. Barry Gold
water, R-Ariz., told 800 gra
duating cadets at the Air Force
Academy in Colorado Wednes
day that: “Our President will
not resign nor will he be
impeached. Our government is
too strong.”
Goldwater said the presiden
cy is “being attacked” by
people trying “not just to get
the captain of the ship but to
sink the ship as well.” But he
said, “I am not defending those
men who should be attacked.”
McCloskey, a lawyer who
unsuccessfully challenged
Nixon for the GOP presidential
nomination in 1972, said he did
not want to initiate actual
impeachment proceedings in
the House without first giving
the President a chance to
present all the facts about
W i M
■V //
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Kansas City Police Chief Clarence M.
Kelley was named by White House sources Wednesday as
President Nixon’s choice to be FBI director. Kelley returned
to Kansas City after three days of interviews in Washington.
(UPI)
K.C. police chief
is FBI nominee
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Nixon has decided to
nominate Clarence M. Kelley,
the police chief of Kansas City,
Mo., who claims to have
sharply cut crime there, to be
permanent director of the FBI,
informed sources report.
Kelley, formerly an FBI
agent for 21 years, met with the
President at the White House
Wednesday, it was learned.
If confirmed by the Senate,
the 61-year-old Kelley would
take command of a law
enforcement agency which has
been without a permanent head
since the death of J. Edgar
Hoover May 2, 1973, and which
has been shaken and demoral
ized in the Watergate scandal.
L. Patrick Gray was the
President’s first choice to
succeed Hoover, but his nomi
nation was withdrawn when it
became clear the Senate
Judiciary Committee would not
approve his confirmation. Gray
resigned as acting director
April 27 after it was reported
he had destroyed documents
taken from the White House
safe of Watergate conspirator
E. Howard Hunt Jr.
William D. Ruckelshaus, for
mer head of the Environmental
Protection Agency, was then
named acting director but
made clear he would serve only
temporarily.
Born in Kansas City, Kelley
joined the FBI in 1940 after
receiving a law degree from
Kansas City University. He
became an inspector and
special agent in charge of FBI
offices in Birmingham, Ala.,
and Memphis, Tenn. He retired
in 1961 to become police chief
ll* *1 1
Rep. Paul McCloskey Jr.
Watergate.
But he said the House has a
duty parallel to that of a
prosecuting attorney to consid
er whether the President was
guilty of the obstruction of
justice or committing a felony.
Under the Constitution the
House can vote to bring
impeachment charges, which
are then heard by the Senate.
Five minutes into McClos
key’s speech, Rep. Earl Land
grebe, R-Ind., objected that a
quorum of 213 was not present.
Only 141 showed up in a
quorum call. After some more
maneuvering, McCloskey him
self said he would not try to
resume his speech since it
would all appear in the
Congressional Record anyway.
“My whole purpose in asking
for the hour for the speech was
merely to initiate debate on the
matter,” McCloskey said. “I’ve
accomplished a lot more than I
thought I would.”
in his home town.
According to a city press
release, Kelley and his force
have reduced Kansas City’s
crime rate by 24.3 per cent
since 1969.
He also was credited with
introducing a round-the-clock
helicopter patrol, a joint city
suburban investigative team
and “Operation Barrier,” a
system of roadblocks to prevent
criminal suspects from fleeing
across the Kansas-Missouri
border.
He is married and the father
of two grown children and is
one of half a dozen candidates
for the FBI job, among them
William A. Sullivan of the
FBl’s field office in Phila
delphia and James B. Adams, a
career agent in San Antonio,
Tex.
Brief outing
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (UPI)
— “Guinevere,” a 350-pound
female tiger, was returned to
her cage after a brief outing in
the Washington Park Zoo here
Wednesday. A spokesman said
the cage had been accidentally
left unlatched.
As it turned out, the tiger
didn’t bother anyone, but zoo
officials carefully escorted visi
tors from the grounds and
summoned police.
Ten cars of armed policemen
showed up, but the only shots
fired were from a tranquilizer
gun handled by veterinarian
Dr. Donald Puhlman.
With the cat subdued, han
dlers carried her back into the
cage.
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