Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Monday, January 14,1974
Page 8
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ZAHALA, Israel — U. S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger (1) and Israeli Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan share joke with guests during reception for Kissinger given by
Dayan here. Kissinger won Egyptian and Israeli acceptance in principle of a plan for
disengagement of troops from the explosive Suez Canal front, diplomatic sources said in
Aswan, Egypt. (UPI)
Jury selection starts
in 3rd Donalsonville trial
DONALSONVILLE, Ga. (UPI)
—Jury selection for confessed
killer Wayne Carl Coleman, 26,
the last of three men to be tried
for the mass murder of a quiet
south Georgia farm family, be
gan Monday in the aging Semi
nole County courthouse.
Attorneys for the Parkville,
Md., prison escapee planned to
question each juror at length
about his knowledge of the first
two trials in which Carl Isaacs,
19, and George Dungee, 35,
each were convicted and sen
tenced to death.
“I think it will be more diffi
cult to get a jury now than it
was for the other two trials,”
one defense lawyer said. “They
already have two jury verdicts
behind them. If a jury turned
this man loose, they would
come in for criticism from their
own community.”
Coleman confessed last May
to the murder of a Pennsylvan
ia youth, killed several days be
fore the five men and a woman
were found shot in the back
near this tiny community only
a few miles from the Georgia-
Florida line.
Sources close to the defense
said Coleman signed a confes
sion admitting he alone killed
all of the Georgia victims, but
they promised to fight any pros
cution attempts to introduce
the confession as evidence.
Isaacs, Coleman and Dungee
all escaped from a Maryland
prison camp last May. They
picked up 16-year-old Billy
Isaacs, a runaway from a re
formatory, before allegedly driv
ing south in a stolen car and
ending up here.
Billy, Carl’s brother and a
half-brother to Coleman, turned
state’s evidence after murder
charges against him were
dropped. He testified in the first
two trials that he watched last
CHIROPRACTIC
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Closed Wednesday and
Saturday afternoons.
Office 227-3343
Residence 227-3654
Dr. John S. Arnold
434 South Bth Street
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NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
May 15 while Carl Isaacs and
Coleman systematically shot
Ned Alday, 62, his brother, Aub-
Hit-run
escapee
captured
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)-A police
dragnet in the Tampa area paid
off when convicted hit-and-run
killer Raymond McMahon was
recaptured Sunday night a day
after escaping from a state men
tal hospital in Chattahoochee.
McMahon, who once begged
to be executed rather than sent
to jail, was arrested by Hills
borough County deputies at 9:45
p. m. while making a phone call
fromUniversityCommunity Hos
pital.
He was taken to Tampa and
offered no resistance, said po
police.
The Florida and Georgia alert
for the scaper centered in the
Tampa Bay area where police
said McMahon might attempt to
visit one of his two wives.
McMahon, 32, was convicted
of last summer’s hit-and - run
deaths of two young Tampa sis
ters. He was in the prison ward
at the north Florida Mental
Hospital in Chattahoochee until
his escape Saturday night.
Police said he staged a fight to
expedite his escape.
BRRRRrrr
WEST IAFAYETTE, Ind.
(UPI) — Six of 43 hardy
Purdue University men braved
7 degree below zero tempera
tures during the weekend to
win the Fourth Annual Cary
Quadrangle Nude Winter Olym
pics here. They were clad only
in tennis shoes and hats.
Forty three runners entered
the three-mile contest—which
began in 1970 as a prank
between residence halls on the
men’s quadrangle. The winners
completed the race this year in
59 minutes, compared to one
hour and 15 minutes last year.
The wind may have proven a
factor in the small number of
finishers. The wind chill index
at the time of the race was 36
degrees below zero.
The six winners shared a
total purse of $52.
rey, 57, and his three sons, Jer
ry, 35, Chester, 32, and Jimmy,
25. Billy said all three men tor
tured and raped Jerry’s petite
young wife, Mary, 25, before
Dungee shot her in the back
and left her nude body in a
woods.
Sources said Coleman con
fessed to all six murders to
“save his brother and half
brother.”
The four men were captured
May 18 near Welch, W.Va., The
FBI agent who questioned Cole
man, Robert D. Warden of Blue
field, W.Va., aid he was a “cool
customer who showed no emo
tion” as he admitted killing
Richard W. Miller, 19, of Mc-
Connellsburg, Pa.
Miller disappeared after he
jumped into his car to chase
the “strangers” who stole a
neighbor’s truck. His car was
found next to Mary Alday’s
body.
Coleman went with police to
Hancock, Md., to show them
where he left Miller’s body, but
it was not until several weeks
later that the body finally was
found.
Ask IRS
This column of questions and answers on federal
tax matters is provided by the local office of the U.S.
Internal Revenue Service and is published as a public
service to taxpayers. The column answers questions
most frequently asked by taxpayers.
Q. Has the IRS made any
changes in the 1973 income tax
returns?
A. Yes, the following major
improvements to the 1973
forms have been made:
Elimination of Schedule B
for reporting details of divi
dends and interest;
Elimination of the require
ment to list contributions for
which the taxpayer has can
celled checks or receipts;
Elimination of the require
ment to list names and dates
for claiming payments to doc
tors, dentists and hospitals;
Reduction in the number of
revenue sharing questions to a
single item;
Placement of two items re
lating to the 1976 Presidential
Election Campaign Fund check
off; one giving taxpayers an
opportunity to check off for
1973 and the other providing
taxpayers who failed to check
Medvedevs vs. Solzhenitsyn
Which way to freer Russia?
(EDITOR s NOTE: The handful of
Soviet dissidents who still remain
at liberty are arguing bitterly with
each other about the right way to
struggle for the freer Russian they
all say they want Some, like
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, whose
indictment of the Soviet labor
camp system was published re
cently, see head-on confrontation
with the Soviet system as the only
way Others want to go about it
more circumspectly This is the
first of two articles prepared by
The Economist)
By NEA/London Economist News Service
LONDON - (LENS) - The
civil war among the Soviet
Union's dissidents was
touched off by an appeal
which the physicist Professor
Andrei Sakharov addressed
to western governments in
August. At a press
conference in his Moscow
flat he urged the west to use
economic pressure to compel
the Soviet government to
allow free emigration for
any of its citizens who want
to leave the country.
Sakharov specifically en
dorsed Senator Henry
Jackson's campaign to make
American trade concessions
to Russia conditional on
Leonid Brezhnev’s allowing
more emigration. He said
that detente could be very
dangerous to the west unless
it opened Russia’s gates: it
would amount to the “the
west’s surrender to Russia’s
real or imaginary might’’.
And it would mean the per
petuation of the Soviet peo
ple’s subjugation.
Predictably, the Soviet
press took sharp exception to
Sakharov’s remarks. It also
attacked Alexander
Solzhenitsyn’s observation
Auto color of year: blue
By NEA/London Economist News Service
DETROIT - (LENS) -
America's assembly lines
churned out 9,668,164 cars
last year. That is not a figure
that will be repeated in 1974,
1975 or any year as far as can
be seen through the gloom
that has descended on
Detroit.
Things got off to a
wretched start this year
when the American motor in
dustry announced that it was
laying off 290,000 workers, or
almost 40 percent of its
labor force. The original
estimates that production
this year would drop by only
off on their 1972 returns a
chance to do so; and
Elimination of limitations on
amount of dividend or interest
NEED TAX HELP.’
CALL IRS
TOLL FREE
IN METRO ATLANTA
CALL 522-0050
ALL OTHERS IN GEORGIA
CALL 1-SOO-222-1010
income received for filing the
1040A short form.
Q. I’ve hired a private nurse
to take care of my sick wife,
and I’ll have to pay social secu
rity taxes on the wages I pay
her. Can I deduct the social
security taxes I pay on the
nurse’s wages as a medical ex
pense?
A. Yes. Under such circum
stances, the social security
taxes may be deducted as a
medical expense.
Q. I’m thinking of becoming a
tenant-stockholder in a coop
erative apartment. If I do, does
this mean I’ll be able to deduct
my mortgage interest and real
estate taxes?
A. Yes. A tenant-stockholder
in a cooperative apartment
may deduct his portion of the
interest payments on the co
operative housing corporation’s
indebtedness and his share of
the real estate taxes on the co
operative. However, this is
only the case when no more
than 20 percent of the gross
income of the cooperative
comes from sources other than
tenant-stockholders.
Q. Is it true that I can make a
no-charge long distance call to
that liberal opinion in the
west was too preoccupied
with petty tyrannies in the
non-communist world to
notice the bigger one in
Russia.
Rather less predictably,
Sakharov and to a lesser ex
tent Solzhenitsyn came
under fire from some of their
fellow-dissidents. Roy Med
vedev, whose book on Stalin
ism appeared in the under
ground publication network
two years before it reached
the west in 1971, was one of
the critics. Medvedev, unlike
Sakharov, says he is a Marx
ist-Leninist, and he voiced
his misgivings about the
Sakharov thesis in Novem
ber in the Hamburg weekly
Die Zeit.
They were closely echoed
in a lecture his geneticist
twin brother, Zhores, gave in
London in November. Zhores
Medvedev was allowed to
travel to Britain last Janu
ary for a research appoint
ment. but was deprived of his
Soviet passport on August 7
and banned from reentering
Russia.
The Medvedevs' case
against Sakharov and
Solzhenitsyn rests on the
charge that they have ig
nored one of the basic
realities of the Soviet situa
tion: the fact that the liberals
in Russia are too weak to
bring about liberalization by
their own efforts. The mass
of ordinary people — in
dustrial workers, collective
farmers, and the rest of the
rank and file of Soviet life —
are passive and apathetic. So
any move towards liberaliza
tion. say the Medvedevs,
around 8 per cent are al
ready looking absurdly op
timistic.
The fall from 1973’s pinna
cle will be sharp. More than
20 assembly plants have al
ready been shut around the
country. Few of the big 1974
models are selling, and these
are the staple fare of Detroit;
more popular, but less prof
itable. small cars are mainly
manufactured outside the
city.
The men now laid off can
expect no more than two
weeks' work this month or in
February, and more than
50,000 men have already
King center drive opens
ATLANTA (UPl)—Civic lead
ers began their drive today to
raise $1.5 million for a down
town office and recreation com
plex dedicated to slain civil
rights leader Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr.
Mayor Maynard Jackson, At
lanta’s first black mayor, pre
sided at a luncheon where the
money goals were outlined. The
luncheon kicked off a two-day
observance of King’s birthday.
King, who led the civil rights
movement in the South in the
1960 s and founded the Southern
Christian leadership Confer -
ence, was assassinated in 1968.
IRS for tax information? I live
in Douglas which is several
miles from an IRS office.
I
A. Yes. The IRS has a new toll
free telephone tax assistance 1
service which makes it possible j
for you to call in your tax ]
questions no matter where you
live in Georgia. Taxpayers in
the Atlanta dialing area should
call 522-0050. All others in
Georgia should call 1-800-222-
1040.
LOSE A POUND A DAY AND MORE
New Vitamin “E” Plus “C”
Diet Gives Fast Weight Loss
LOS ANGELES (SpeciaD-
New scientific discoveries have
now produced a Vitamin E
Plus “C” diet that quickly
works wonders on overweight
people, and reportedly is gain
ing great popularity across the
country with glowing reports
of easy weight loss “while still
eating almost as much as you
want.”
Those who follow the simple
Vitamin E diet report an aver
age loss of at least a pound a
day and even more without
exercise or starvation. Nutri
tionists files are bulging with
happy testimonials from for
merly overweight people who
are now trim and slim again.
Best of all. you can still eat
almost as much as you want
of the "forbidden foods” like
steak, chicken, fish, sauces,
gravies, bacon and eggs and
still lose weight.
Very Hi-Potency vitamin
“E” Plus “C” tablets, as used
in the diet plan, contain a new
NORIKO YAMADA AGENCY
309 N. Kings Rd. • Los Angeles, CA 90048
must come from the top:
from the Russian leaders
themselves. Pressure from
the outside world can help,
but only up to a point.
The argument for caution
and restraint by the west is
spelled out. Brezhnev, for ex
ample, is keen to get econom
ic help from the west, and
appears to be ready to make
some concessions to western
opinion in order to get it. But
too much foreign pressure,
and especially anything that
looks like an ultimatum,
would in the Medvedevs'
view only upset the ap
plecart.
Roy Medvedev specifically
claims in his Die Zeit article
that Senator Jackson’s suc
cess in attaching political
strings to the trade bill
before Congress would make
emigration from the Soviet
Union more difficult, not less.
He also argues that
Sakharov and Solzhenitsyn
are unwise to accept the sup
port of western anti-commu
nists whose main concern is
not to encourage “socialism
with a human face’’ but to
undermine the whole Marx
ist idea.
The history of Russia
before and after 1917 pro
vides a good many examples
to back the Medvedev thesis
that moves towards
liberalization in Russia have
to come from the man at the
top, whether he is the cxar or
the Communist party’s gen
eral secretary.
One of the most recent ex
amples of this was
Khrushchev’s personal deci
sion in 1962 to allow’ the
publication of Solzhenitsyn’s
been sacked outright. Since
Detroit ranks among
America's most violent cities
even when the motor indus
try is thriving, as last year,
the social cost of the slump
and widespread unemploy
ment is likely to be high.
Much of the blame for this
reversal must be aimed at
Detroit's motor bosses, who
created for the 1974 year
many new models that were
heavier and consumed more
fuel than ever before. These
cars are now failing to sell
despite the massive dis
counts offered by traders. To
add to its troubles General
He would have been 45 Tues
day.
The proposed $lO million King
Center for Social Change will
cover two city blocks near the
community where King preach
ed. It will include an office
building, community center,
auditorium, and park.
The cost has been divided
evenly, with Georgia providing
$5 million and outside sources
contributing the other half. On
ly $1.5 million of Georgia’s
share has not been raised.
Columbia records is sponsor
ing a rock concert tonight and
donating proceeds to the fund
drive. Cesar Chavez, outspoken
leader of the United Farm
Workers of America, will re -
ceive the Martin Luther King
Jr. Peace Award during the
concert for his effort in bring
ing bargaining power to mig
rant laborers.
King’s widow, Mrs. Coretta
Scott King, and his children
will lay a wreath Tuesday
morning at King’s grave near
scientific combination of ingre
dients that quickly curbs and
controls the appetite, while
also giving the wondrous bene
fits of Vitamin E which is so
essential to good health.
The use of the new Vitamin
"E” Plus “C” Diet tablets and
foods prescribed in the plan
will, through natural action,
act to help your body use up
excess fat. According to recent
clinical tests, a person who is
deficient in Vitamin E or Pro
tein “will double the speed of
fat utilization" with the use of
Vitamin “E” Plus “C”.
“E”+“C” DIET AVAILABLE
To get a copy of this highly
successful diet and “E” Plus
“C” Tablets, send $5.00 for 10
day supply (or $7.00 for 20 day
supply or SIO.OO for 30 day
supply) to: “Diet"3o9.NJiings
Rd., Los Angeles, CA 90048
money-back guarantee if not
satisfied). In Calif, add 5%
tax.
account of life in Stalin's
camps, “One Day in the Life
of Ivan Denisovich". The
publication of that book had
a profound impact on public
opinion in Russia and subse
quently helped to stiffen
resistance to the neo-stalinist
methods adopted by
Khrushchev's successors.
The trouble is not just that
it is hard to get a Russian
leader into a mood of want
ing to be liberal; it is even
harder to keep him there.
There is also some validity
in the Medvedevs' argument
that the vast majority of Rus
sians have remained aloof
from the dissidents’ civil
rights campaign. They have
not enrolled themselves in
the struggle for more
freedom of expression. Even
the manager class, which
some people in the west re
garded in the 1960 s as the
likeliest engine of a push to
wards liberalization, has re
mained relatively passive.
So far the dissidents have
failed to find the Soviet
equivalent of that slogan,
“No taxation without repre
sentat-onl”, which the Amer
ican revolutionaries
launched in the eighteenth
century to rally their people
against British power.
Os course, it is desperately
hard for the dissidents to get
their argument across inside
the Soviet Union when the
Communist party keeps its
monopoly of control over ev
ery form of legal com
munication in Russia.
Next: Working from the Top
(Copyright c 1974 by Economist Newspaper.
Ltd >
Motors recently had to recell
more than 800,000 of its latest
models, all big or above av
erage-sized cars, after hav
ing a design fault pointed out
by its inveterate enemy,
Ralph Nader.
Small cars have begun to
command premium prices
and America’s fourth car
manufacturer, American
Motors, which makes mainly
smaller cars and is regarded
by the industry as an unsuc
cessful sibling, has alone
managed to keep all its as
sembly lines working with
only 200 lay offs.
(Copyright c 1974 by Economist Newspaper.
the Ebenezer Baptist Church
where he preached. They then
will lead a “symbolic celebra
tion march” to the Atlanta
Municipal Auditorium for a
birthday celebration.
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342 West Solomon Street Griffin, Ga.
Phone 227-9441
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OAKLAND, Calif. — Nancy
Devoto, 26, said to be a former
topless black-jack dealer was
sought in connection with the
assassination of Oakland
schools superintendent Marcus
Foster on Nov. 6. Published
reports said the suspect is
really Nancy Ling, a former
cheerleader and political
conservative who worked ac
tively in the presidential
campaign of Sen. Barry
Goldwater, R-Ariz. (UPI)
Winder
woman
missing
WINDER, Ga. (UPI) - Civil
Defense volunteers and sheriff’s
deputies called off their search
for a missing Winder woman
Sunday night after exhausting
all their leads.
“We’ll try again Monday, I
guess,” a spokesman said, “but
we just don’t have anything to
go on.”
Mrs. Mae Segars, 67, disap
peared Thursday. She was last
seen north of the city dressed
in a beige raincoat and a black
felt hat.
A Civil Defense helicopter
based here was used in the
search Sunday afternoon, but
nothing was turned up.
Mrs. Segars has gray hair, is
five feet six inches tall and
weights 210 pounds.
CARD OF THANKS
I have just been released
from the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital, and want
to thank Dr. Lamar King,
Dr. Lucian Tatum and Dr.
Jorge Alonso; the nursing
staff on the Fourth Floor
and all the orderlies who
were so nice to me during
my stay there.
With deep appreciation,
Mr. and Mrs. Riley Allen
and Family