Newspaper Page Text
Candidate faces trial
or not filing reports
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Phone 227-3678 Phone 228-2432
ATLANTA State
Ethics Commission Executive
Secretary Kipling Louise
McVay Monday successfully
urged a Fulton County civil
court to prosecute an unsuc
cessful East Point candidate for
the House for failing to file
campaign reports.
Charles C. Cloud, who ran for
the 40th district House seat,
pleaded innocent and was
bound over to superior court for
trial. He could face one year in
prison and a SI,OOO fine if
convicted.
Commission chairman Irving
Kaier said his group was “duty
bound” to press the case even
though Cloud filed the required
five reports before he surren
dered to the Fulton County
sheriff’s office Monday mor
ning.
Cloud, defeated by incumbent
Republican Rep. Dick Lane on
Nov. 2, listed a single contribu
tion of SSO in his reports.
Although Commissioner Lilli
an Lewis of Atlanta warned
prosecution of Cloud would be
“punitive,” she joined in the
Economist discounts
crude oil increase
ATLANTA (UPI) - A New
York economist Monday dis
counted reports of another
increase of crude oil prices by
Arabian countries and told the
American Council of Life
Insurance the Middle East
doesn’t need more money to
finance their spending plans.
Dr. A. Gary Shilling, chief
economist and senior vice
president of White, Weld and
Company, a consulting firm,
unanimous decision to press the
case.
Miss McVay told the group
Gov. George Busbee's Office of
Planning and Budget had cut
the commission’s proposed
budget for fiscal 1977-78 from
$141,305 to $95,900. Trimmed
was SIO,BOO for a S9OO per
month investigator. Miss
McVay presently investigates
complaints against candidates.
She said she asked the OPB
to reconsider its decision not to
recommend funding the inves
tigator, but Kaier said “the
chances of it being included are
sort of iffy.”
The group also voted to make
the same public disclosures of
their “economic interests”
which the commission wants
state officials to make as part
of new conflict of interest
legislation.
Kaier was the first commis
sioner to make the voluntary
disclosure to the Secretary of
State’s office, but the state
ments will not include esti
mates of the commissioners’
net worth.
said one reason is Saudia
Arabia, which leads the oil
cartel, is concerned a price
hike may push the developed
world into a renewed recession.
“I don’t know why everyone
is saying it’s going to be a 10
per cent increase — possibly
because they all have 10
fingers,” Shilling said. “But the
increase could be less than that
and it could even be delayed
beyond December.”
★★★★★★★★
Launch tower
coming down
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) — A demolition team
worked today to topple the
rusting launch tower used in
the first four manned U.S
orbital missions, including John
Glenn’s flight on Feb. 20, 1962.
The 110-foot-tall, 250-ton steel
gantry at Complex 14 — from
which technicians worked on
the Mercury flights of Glenn,
Scott Carpenter, Walter Schirra
and Gordon Cooper — has
rusted. Air Force officials said
it would be put up for sale as
scrap metal.
★★★★★★★★
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Dies
HOLLYWOOD, Calif.—Judith
Lowry (‘76 (koto), the can
tankerous but charming old
actress who played Mother
Baxter on the “Phyllis” CBS
TV series, died of an apparent
heart attack in New York
yesterday. (UPI)
Page 7
Court refuses to hear
death sentence appeals
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
U.S. Supreme Court has de
clined to hear the appeals of
four Georgians condemned to
death in various murder cases,
but an attorney for one of the
men said his client will not get
a “hurried death.”
The court refused to review
the appeals of Carl Issacs and
George Elder Dungee, both
convicted for the murders of
six members of the Ned Alday
family in Seminole County;
Alphana Otis O’Daniel Ste
phens, convicted in the 1974
killing of Roy Asbell in
— Griffin Daily News Tuesday, November 30,1976
Bleckley County, and Samuel
Gibson 111, who faces death for
the murder and rape of a Gray
woman.
“In our arsenal against the
death penalty is another step
which includes, but is not
limited to, an application for a
habeas corpus raising some
additional issues addressing the
death penalty,” State Sen.
Bobby Hill said.
“I am not at liberty to say
what those issues are, but I am
confident that Carl Issacs will
not receive a hurried death.”
Issacs and Dungee had
appealed on grounds the
Georgia death penalty, upheld
by the Supreme Court last
year, was applied to them in
procedurally improper ways.
The two men were convicted
of the 1973 deaths of Ned Alday
and his sons, Jerry Alday,
Jimmy C. Alday, Aubrey Alday
and Chester Alday, all of whom
were shot in the head.
Authorities also said Jerry
Alday’s wife, Mary Campbell
Alday, was raped repeatedly,
taken to a wooded area in her
own car, raped again and then
shot in the spinal cord.