Newspaper Page Text
Page 10
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, November 12,1975
Music fans
help Carter
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) -
Young New England music fans
indirectly are helping Demo
cratic presidential aspirant
Jimmy Carter expand his
campaign team for the early
1976 primary elections.
The former Georgia governor
returns to Rhode Island Nov. 25
for a fundraiser that promoters
hope will raise more than
$60,000 for his effort to make
his name a household word in
the North.
The Allman Brothers, a
nationally known rock group
based in Macon, Ga., are giving
Stresses
values
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPIS -
Former Georgia Gov. Jimmy
Carter says America should
reaffirm its committment to its
rural areas and “the values
which have made this country
great.”
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~ STORE PHONE 228-5590 - AUTOMOTIVE PHONE 227-5111
a benefit performance at the
Providence Civic Center that
night. An estimated $30,000
worth of tickets, at $6.50 per
person, have already been
bought and Carter supporters
are trying to attract busloads of
students from college campuses
in four states.
“We wanted to do it in New
England because the early
primaries are up here. The
reason it is being done in
Providence instead of Boston is
because the Allman Brothers
were in Boston sometime in
September,” said Ellis Wood
ward, Carter campaign aide in
Concord, N.H.
“The Allman Brothers live
about 20 miles from Plains,
Ga., where Jimmy lives. They
are very good friends with his
three sons,” Woodward said.
The money will be banked for
the New England and Florida
primaries. Extra staff and
campaigning will also be
bolstered by a SIOO-a-plate
“New Hampshire” dinner
planned for Atlanta in the near
future, he said.
It will be the first Allman
Brothers benefit for Carter, but
not the first concert fundraiser
for the former Navy submarine
officer and farmer.
The Marshall Tucker Band
put on a sellout performance in
a 4,000-seat Atlanta theater
which netted about SB,OOO for
the campaign, plus extra
proceeds through sales of
Carter T-shirts.
It will be Carter’s second
visit to Rhode Island as an
official candidate. He spent a
full day here in September,
meeting with top Democrats
and making campaign stops in
several cities.
The concert will be preceded
by a $25-per-person cocktail
reception.
“The Allman Brothers pro
moter is doing all the heavy
work,” Woodward said. “He is
renting the Civic Center, selling
the tickets and giving us the
proceeds.”
* ILR| Bk
MONTGOMERY, Ala.—With his wife Cornelia at his side, Alabama Governor George C.
Wallace greets well-wishers at a campaign dinner last night. (UPI)
Wallace raps
exotic left
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI)
— Accusing the Democratic
party of surrendering to the
“exotic left” in the past and
saying he is “the people’s
choice,” Gov. George C. Wal
lace today announced his
candidacy for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
“I will be a candidate for the
Democratic nomination for
president of the United States,”
Wallace told a news conference.
“It is time we offer the great
middle class someone they can
vote for and not against,” he
said. “Let’s win the presidency
in 1976 by offering the people’s
choice as the nominee of the
Democratic party.”
Wallace, who said his slogan
would be “Trust in the People,”
said he would run in “the great
majority” of the primaries.
The Alabama governor, par
alyzed from the waist down
since he was almost killed by
an assassin in 1972, made the
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<zai ■ t 5" 1433 GEORGIfI HIGHWfIY 16 ' WESL GRIFFIN ' GA '
sto rr PHONE 228-5590 - AUTOMOTIVE PHONE 22T-51H
announcement from his wheel
chair. He is the tenth Democrat
to seek the party’s nomination.
“In the past, the national
Democratic party has allowed
itself to be taken over by the
exotic left, which consists of
those who made the noise but
did not have the votes,” he
said, adding that the “average
citizen is fed up and has been
voting against the far left
positions of the national party
nominees and platforms.
He said he was “the leading
candidate for this nomination,”
a position only partly supported
by the polls. The most recent
Gallup Poll said he led all
announced Democratic can
didates, but trailed two other
Democrats — Sen. Huberl
Humphrey of Minnesota and
Sen. Edward Kennedy oi
Massachusetts.
Personality spotlight
Fourth run
for president
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) — George Corley Wallace,
the “fightin’ li’l judge” from Clio, Ala. who rose to
national fame by standing in a schoolhouse door more
than a decade ago, is off and running again.
Claiming to represent the middle class, the 56-year old
Alabama governor and former golden gloves champ is
making his fourth bid for the presidency.
The campaign will be a far cry from Wallace campagns
of old, when he went from morning to night making
speeches and shaking every hand in sight.
As a concession to the fact he is paralyzed from the
waist down, Wallace plans to make only one or two
appearances a day, and will depend heavily on television.
In many respects, Wallace’s 1972 campaign never
stopped, although it was interrupted when he was gunned
down in a Maryland shopping center. His campaign office
here never closed; it just gave up P.O. Box 1972 and got
Box 1976 instead.
Wallace insists his health should not be an issue,
although he concedes it will be and his aides angrily decry
“whispering campaigns” about it “The only thing wrong
with my health is that I’m paralyzed,” he likes to say,
adding that some of his opponents are “paralyzed from
the neck up.”
He got his political start by winning a seat in the state
legislature in 1947, and gained his nickname as a circuit
court judge from 1953 to 1959 when he frequently decried
federal court orders to integrate the schools.
Wallace was beaten for governor in 1958, but came back
to win four years later. In 1963 he stood at the door of the
University of Alabama to block the court-ordered
admission of two black students. He now claims he was
not opposed to integration, just to the federal government
trying to boss the states around.
He has served as governor since 1962, except for the .
fouryear term to which his first wife Lurleen was elected
when Wallace was unable to get the legislature to amend
the constitution to let him run again. He ran the state for
the first two years of that term, until she died of cancer.
In 1970 he won a second term and, with the constitution
amended, won a third term in 1974.
Wallace seems to have toned down some of his rhetoric
about “pointy-headed liberal intellectuals” recently, and
last month even said he was not necessarily opposed to
federal aid to keep New York City from defaulting.
He insists he has not changed, that other politicians are
just catching up with him. When Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., criticized federal
government bureaucracy at a Southern Governor’s
Conference this year, Wallace smiled broadly.
“I wanted to ask him where he’d been all these years
when the bureaucracy was being created,” he said when
he got back to Montgomery. “But you don’t say those kind
of things so I just kept quiet.”
Wrong note
spelled
trouble
HONOLULU (UPI) - Kwi
Nan Chong tried to withdraw
some of his savings from a
bank and wound up under
arrest.
He rushed into the Hawaii-
Kai branch of the First
Hawaiian Bank just before
closing time and hurriedly
filled out a withdrawal slip that
he pulled from the counter.
However, he did not look on
the back of the slip, on which
someone had written, “This is a
stickup.”
The teller got the message
and sneaked word to her
supervisor who called police.
Chong was still waiting at the
window when police walked up
behind him and arrested him.
Police later released Chong,
but said they are not sure
whether he ever got the money
he sought to withdraw.
COMING!
Starts THURSDAY!
CAME j
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SPACE! j
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STEVE BRODIE • BARBARA HALE
LESLIE PARRISH »« ALAN HALE
» group i RELEASE • BLAZING COLOR ro«»
I The scream ■
you hear will H
be your own/ ra
CD rr SPIDER w
- N I
ris drive-in
AGON HIGHWAY/227 5549.