Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, March 29, 1975
Page 8
Patty
FBI questions former Olympic stars
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The FBI has questioned three
former Olympic stars, including
one under subpoena, to track
down a missing figure in the
case of newspaper heiress
turned-revolutionary Patricia
Hearst.
Phillip K. Shinnick, a 1964
Olympics competitor in the long
jump, was subpoenaed to
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appear before a federal grand
jury in San Francisco to
discuss his association with
former Oberlin, Ohio, College
Athletic Director Jack Scott.
Agents had questioned him
twice.
It was reported the FBI also
has questioned Olympic gold
medal winners Harold Connolly
and his former wife, Olga, who
were friends of both Scott and
Shinnick.
Scott disappeared shortly
after it was learned the FBI
wanted to question him about a
Pennsylvania farmhouse he
rented last summer. The
farmhouse, near South Canaan,
Pa., is believed to have been
the summer hideout of Miss
Hearst and three other fugitives
following a Symbionese Libera
tion Army shootout last May.
Shinnick recently told UPI
that the FBI questioned him
twice about his friendship with
Scott. He said he last saw Scott
during the Christmas holidays
at the home of basketball star
Bill Walton in Portland, Ore.
Miss Hearst and SLA mem-
Kidnap
Diplomats like soldiers
PARIS(UPI)- “This is the
new form of diplomacy,”
French Ambassador Jean Gu
eury said. “Diplomats have
now become like soldiers at the
front.”
Haggard but smiling, Guery
talked with reporters after
African nationalist gunmen
bers William and Emily Harris
have not been heard from since
last June when they left a tape
recording outside a Hollywood
radio station.
Scott once headed an institute
based in Berkeley, Calif., which
made a short-lived study of the
spectrum of sports. He later
moved to Oberlin, and took
with him as track and field
coach Tommie Smith, an
Olympic sprinter who was sent
home from the 1968 Olympic
team in Mexico City when he
and fellow athlete John Carlos
raised their clenched fists
during victory ceremonies.
In both 1968 and 1972 Scott
and Shinnick were active
released him Friday in ex
change for two freed prisoners
and SIOO,OOO in gold.
“That’s the way the game is
played now,” he said. “But it’s
hardly any more pleasant.”
After his release, Gueury, 57,
the French ambassador to
Somalia, flew to Djibouti in the
among track and field athletes
trying to make the Olympic
team. In 1972, at the final
Olympic trials in Eugene, Ore.,
they spent much time in the
athletes’ dormitories unsuccess
fully trying to get signatures
for a position paper calling for
the dismantling of the national
Amateur Athletic Union and the
U.S. Olympic Committee.
Miss Hearst was kidnaped
Feb. 4, 1974, by the SLA from
her Berkeley, Calif., apartment.
She subsequently announced in
a tape recorded message that
she would stay with her captors
and was photographed taking
part in a San Francisco bank
robbery.
French-run Territory of the
Afars and the Issas in northern
Africa to be reunited with his
wife.
He was abducted in the
Somalian capital of Mogadishu
Sunday as he left church. He
was held for six days at a
secluded villa outside the city.
The exchange was made in
Aden Friday after the govern
ment of South Yemen twice
refused and twice agreed to
allow the switch to take place
there.
The kidnapers, members of a
group called the Front for the
Liberation of the Somali Coast,
originally vowed to kill Gueury
if France did not pay SIOO,OOO
and free the prisoners by
Tuesday.
They said their colleagues,
serving life terms in French
jails for political assassination
attempts in the Territory of the
Afars and the Issas, were
“unjusts victim of French
colonialism.”
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No extension
WASHINGTON—Chairman Charles Goodell of the Presidential Clemency Board said the
deadline for application to the President’s Conditional Amnesty Program for Vietnam war
opponents would not be extended beyond the midnight March 31 deadline. (UPI)
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7AM EST 3 -SO-75
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FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Cloudy and turning cooler tonight with chance of
showers. Lows in the upper 40s. Tomorrow continued cloudy and cool with a slight chance of
showers. Highs in the upper 50s.
Georgians
killed
in wreck
BECKLEY, W.Va. (UPI) — A
young man and woman from
Georgia, headed here to visit
relatives, were killed Friday
afternoon in the fiery collision
of a car and tractor-trailer on
the West Virginia Turnpike.
The victims were Ray L.
Jessup, 25, of Marietta, Ga.,
and his first cousin, Karla
Murray, 24, of Atlanta. Both
their parents lived in Beckley.
State Police said the victims
were alone in the car, which
swerved on the rain-slick toll
road 12 miles south of the
Beckley interchange and struck
the tractor-trailer head-on.
Both vehicles caught fire and
burned and both lanes of the
turnpike were blocked until the
wreckage could be cleared
away.
The tractor-trailer driver
escaped injury.
Sen. Bond
wants more
control
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) —
State Sen. Julian Bond of
Georgia said Friday he support
ed increased government con
trol of the economy, including
possible nationalization of
strategic industries.
“I think this country needs
very badly more government
intervention and control of the
economy,” Bond said. “Had I
the power to do so, I would
order an immediate cut in the
military budget of about 35 to
40 per cent and begin to re
funnel that money into health
care, education and human
services here in the United
States.
“I’d try to put a clamp on
rising prices, would seriously
consider nationalising energy,
transportation and communica
tions industries and begin a
series of initiatives that I don’t
think any of the other
(presidential) candidates are
talking about.”
Bond, in New Orleans to
address the Student National
Medical Association, said he
would not try to enter every
state primary if he decided to
run for the Democratic presi
dential nomination.