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KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Judge William Becker (r)
administers the oath of office to Clarence M. Kelley, as
Nixon’s Phase IV
Tighter controls expected
on some food, gasoline
.By CHARLES S. TAYLOR .
ATLANTA (UPI)-Southeast
business and industrial leaders
were warned Monday that
President Nixon’s Phase IV
plan against inflation would
probably bring tighter controls
on food and gasoline.
Dr. John T. Dunlop, chairman
of the Cost of Living Council,
said “we would like to move
out of the freeze into a plan
for stricter controls on food
than existed in Phase II or
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’III.”
The main concern of the
council, Dunlop said, was how
to adequately control food
prices.
He said the key to lower food
prices and cooling the economy
rested almost entirely with the
amount of supply. Food prices,
he said, would probably contin
ue to rise, and the question of
supply and prices could not be
focused on until the Agriculture
President Richard Nixon watches. Kelley becomes the
second director of the FBI. (UPI)
Department had an idea of the
size of the crops coming in
September and October.
He said one very real reason
for rising food prices was the
fact that less food was raised
in this country in the first six
months of 1973 than during the
same period of 1972. He denied
that the controversial Russian
wheat deal in 1972 had any
thing to do with the higher
prices of bread products.
Dunlop pointed to the recent
soybean embargo and said it
has already pushed the cost of
this animal food product down
from a high of $lO-sll a bushel
to $6 a bushel. He said if the
price continues to fall, it will
Young GOP thinks Watergate overplayed
ATLANTA (UPI)-Young Re
publicans meeting here for their
national convention believe that
the Watergate incident has been
overplayed and pushed out of
focus, according to their na
tional chairman.
Don Sundquist said that the
delegates feel Watergate is re
ceiving much more exposure
than Massachusetts Democratic
Sen. Ted Kennedy’s auto acci
dent in which a young woman
drowned several years ago.
“Nobody drowned at Water-
again be profitable for farmers
to convert soybeans into chick
en feed.
The export controls on com
modities such as soybeans,
Dunlop said, virtually discount
ed the need for controlling food
prices at the farm level.
The CLC chairman also
strongly indicated there would
be no change in Phase IV con
cerning wages. “I do not expect
to see any change in existing
wage regulations.”
He said he had no knowledge
of a report that Phase IV would
include a rollback in the price
of gasoline but he did not deny
such action might be in the
works.
gate” is one of the blunt slog
ans the young GOP members
are displaying, and chairman
Sundquist said “I think it’s
beautiful.”
The 37-year -old Sundquist,
from Memphis, Tenn, said he
thinks the Young Republicans
will adopt a resolution calling
on the President to state his
views on Watergate “at the ap
propriate time in an appropri
ate way.”
But he said he believes the
mood of the 1,500 members at-
M Jlct tiwfl pff EK EB I
PTE ETE fRS
Hospital Report
The following persons were
dismissed from the Griffin-
Spalding Hospital yesterday:
Edwin Lamar Miller, Melissa
Drake, Thomas Gardner, Erica
Little, Mrs. Helen Chestnut and
baby, Clifford Lee Goodrum,
Clarence Chastain, Annie Mae
Foster, Cleva Jackson, Arthur
Pryor, John Pierce, Mrs. Marie
Smith and baby, Nellie Putman,
Marie Drose.
Stork Club
LITTLE MISS COCHRAN
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy T.
Chochran of 1209 Winona
avenue, Griffin, announce the
birth of a daughter on July 9 at
the Griffin-Spalding County
Hospital.
MASTER ROSSER
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin E.
Rosser of Route Five, Jackson,
announce the birth of a son on
July 9 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
LITTLE MISS MCGILL
Mr. and Mrs. John R. McGill
of Zebulon announce the birth of
a daughter on July 9 at the
Griffin-Spalding County
Hospital.
LITTLE MISS STODGHILL
Mr. and Mrs. R. 0. Stodghill
of 209 Walker street, Jackson,
announce the birth of a
daughter on July 9 at the
Griffin-Spalding County
Hospital.
Child injured
A 16-months-old baby escaped
serious injury late yesterday
afternoon when struck by a car
in front of her home at the Town
and Country Trailer Court.
Sheriff’s officers said that
Sharon Denise McKinzie,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Danny McKinzie, had wandered
into the road and was hit by the
car driven by Mrs. Janice
Groce, a neighbor. She was
treated in the Griffin-Spalding
emergency room for extensive
bruises and dismissed.
They said the auto came over
a hillcrest and the driver did not
see the child in time to stop.
The accident was termed
unavoidable.
tending the convention is over
whelmingly in favor of Presi
dent Nixon.
"I think John Dean is a liar.
I think the President should re
spond to his testimony,” Sund
quist said.
Sundquist said he didn’t think
the President was involved in
Watergate or the coverup, nor
was the Republican party, he
added.
“Who was involved were a
few people who did not come
up through the party ranks,” he
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FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Partly cloudy and warm tonight with low around 70. x
Partly sunny and warm tomorrow with chance of afternoon and evening thundershowers. :$
•S High tomorrow near 90. g
Military trying to reduce
drinking by service men
By WARREN L. NELSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Pentagon’s chief doctor is
trying to curtail “happy hours”
to battle military drinking
which is much heavier than
among civilians, according to a
new study.
Despite all the publicity given
drug use, the study by a
civilian firm operating on an
Army contract found that
drinking was heaviest among
the young and then trailed off
with increasing age—except for
enlisted men.
Dr. Richard S. Wilbur,
assistant defense secretary for
health, told a news conference
Monday that to curb drunken
ness among men in uniform he
was trying to curtail the
temptations. Liquor prices have
been raised in military stores,
“happy hours” cut back in
Europe, and bar hours short
ened during working hours.
said.
“I find that people here are
disappointed that Watergate oc
curred but optimistic about the
future of the party.” He added
most of the delegates he had
talked to were anixous to prove
“that the Republican party is
not the party of the Watergate.”
On Wednesday the members
will elect new national officers
and hear from Sen. Barry Gold
water of Arizona at their closing
session on Thursday.
Page 3
— Griffin Daily News Tuesday, July 10, 1973
Military rites that emphasize
drinking have also been
dropped including the “Prop
Blast” parties that used to
accompany graduations from
parachute school.
The study charged that the
Army is “an environment that
is tolerant of heavy drinking
and drunkenness.”
The survey showed that binge
drinking among civilians
dropped from 19 per cent of
men in their early twenties to
only 6 per cent of civilians over
50. For officers in the same age
groups, binge drinking fell from
24 per cent to 14 per cent. But
for enlisted men it rose from 29
per cent to 37 per cent.
The study then asked—but
could not answer the question—
“ Are heavy drinkers staying in
the Army, or is the Army
making men who stay in heavy
YOU GET
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drinkers?”
Wilbur said his big problem
was that few men in uniform
seek help for their drinking
problems for fear they will lose
security clearances or chances
for promotion.
“And that feeling is pretty
soundly based,” he said.
“We’re trying to make the
commands understand they
shouldn’t take adverse action.”
You can tell
SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) —
You can tell gas is getting
scarcer and more valuable
because, criminals are starting
to steal it.
A southside service station
operator told police Monday
that someone had pumped more
than 1,000 gallons of gasoline
out of an underground storage
tank during the weekend.