Newspaper Page Text
Page 10
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, July 11,1973
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ANAHEIM, Calif.—“ Sammy” a five year-old, 1,800 pound
elephant attends city council meeting with his owner,
Howard Johnson, Santa Ana Canyon Road, Anaheim in a
bid to keep him in the city. The animal, whose nose was
partially lost in an accident when ten months old when he
Phase IV details
expected soon
By GENE CARLSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) —
President Nixon is expected to
reveal his phase IV wage-price
control program in a matter of
days, administration sources
said today.
The President called his
Cabinet to the White House
today for a briefing on the plan,
which will replace the price
freeze imposed June 13.
The President has not given
the go-ahead on any part of the
new program, according to
administration officials close to
Phase IV planning. However, a
series of meetings in the past
two weeks between stabilization
officials and business, labor
and consumer representatives
in Washington and around the
country has produced ideas and
helped narrow the range of
options.
Friday marks the halfway
point in the maximum 60-day
freeze. Officials have been
hoping to get at least some of
the Phase IV machinery in
place by the 30-day mark in an
attempt to keep the freeze as
short as possible, because it
has caused hardships in some
food producing industries.
A select group of business
and union leaders Tuesday
offered Nixon some especially
succinct advice—get rid of all
controls by the end of the year.
The suggestion came from
the I-abor-Management Adviso
ry Committee, an arm of the
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Cost of Living Council, whose
10 members include AFL-CIO
President George Meany, Unit
ed Auto Workers President
IConard Woodcock and James
Roach, former chairman of the
board of General Motors Corp.
“Continuing wage and price
controls are incompatible with
the best interests of the people
of the United States,” the
committee said in a statement.
“They impede responsible col
lective bargaining ... they are
not responsive to the needs of
our citizens...
“We believe all wage and
price controls should be elimi
nated as soon as possible this
year in the belief that all
segments of the economy will
cooperate in such away as to
make the further extension of
the Economic Stabilization Act
unnecessary.” (
Other clues to the President’s
thinking came after a meeting
Monday between Nixon and 18
Republican congressional lea
ders. Senate GOP leader Hugh
Scott told reporters after the
session that “Phase IV will
have the means of keeping
adequate supplies of food;
putting the housewife first
ahead of exporting f00d...”
Agriculture Secretary Earl L.
Butz told the National Associa
tion of Farm Broadcasters
Tuesday that “we are in a
tough battle right now to
prevent Phase IV from leading
this nation into serious food
shortages.”
Meanwhile, CLC Deputy Di
rector James W. McLane
predicted that “food prices are
going to go up and they will go
up at a moderate rate” in
Phase IV.
★★★★★★★★
They were ready
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A
patrol car raced through the
central section of the city on an
emergency mission Tuesday
and two officers dashed into
City Hall. A police helicopter
hovered over the building’s
spire, ready to save the mayor.
The officers were responding
to a special alert signaling
trouble in the mayor’s office.
A receptionist explained that
police supervisors were testing
the “hot line" that flashes the
trouble signal to headquarters,
and apparently forgot to tell the
officer on the receiving end it
was only a test.
got too close to a lion’s cage, was given permission to stay
with his owner indefinitely, pending further study of a city
ordinance keeping wild, exotic, and non domesticated
animals within the city. (UPI)
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Permanent washable filter. Built-in installation system ' W ° Speed ° n ' DeC
Slide out chassis bpaot orative wood-grained grille.
89
IL>J IiIA^ J 113 East Taylor Street iTmiwJ
Bank executive gets new heart
RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) —
Surgeons at the Medical College
of Virginia Hospital ended an
operation early today to give a
41-year-old bank executive a
new heart.
The delicate transplant opera
tion on George V. Cavich of
Melfa, Va., began at 7:40 p.m.
Tuesday, an MCV spokesman
said. Cavich was in satisfactory
condition following the five-hour
operation.
The heart donor was uniden
tified, in accordance with
hospital policy.
Dr. Richard Lower of MCV
headed the surgical team
conducting the operation, the
seventh in the history of the
medical college.
The transplant was the
second this year at MCV.
Honor conferred
BRIGHSTONE, Isle of Wight
(UPI) — The citizens of
Brighstone decided to honor
three village clergymen who
became bishops—by renaming
the village’s only pub The
Three Bishops.
Arthur F. Gay of Washington,
D.C., received a new heart in
January and is still living.
The longest surviving recipi
ent of a transplanted heart—
Lewis B. Russell of In-
July CLEARANCE
SAVE to 50%
On All Summer Goods
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... Griffin, Ga.
dianapolis, Ind.—received his
transplant Aug. 24, 1968, at
MCV.
Cavich, a bachelor, is an
executive of the United Vir
ginia-Seaboard National Bank
branch at Keller. He is a native
of Akron, Ohio, but has lived in
Melfa 26 years.
Cavich, a bachelor, was
admitted to McGuire Veterans
Hospital in Richmond April 26.