Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, March 31, 1977, Page Page 10, Image 10
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, March 31,1977 Page 10 ■ HSr v ■ Li - — Mrs. Lillian Carter, left, mother of President Jimmy Carter was guest speaker at the Auburn University Campus Club on Wednesday. (AP) ‘Miss Lillian’ thinks Jimmy’s election ‘screwed’ Plains, Ga. AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - “Miss Lillian” Carter says she doesn’t' think “Jimmy intended it to be that way,” but his election to the Presidency has “screwed” the Carter hometown of Plains, Ga. The First Mother, here Wednesday to address the Campus Club at Auburn Uni versity, told reporters that Plains “is screwed" by the hor des of tourists streaming through the “Home of Our President,” as a storefront sign declares. She said her other son, Billy, is moving to Marion County about 19 miles north of Plains because his children have been bothered by tourists. PFFn MARCH SPECIAL i- SAVE eno/ WM? w /O ON ANY NORMAL PRESCRIPTION Throughout Tho Month of March Members of REED’S Senior Citixens ”60” Club Save on Additional 10% I Rely on Reed's The Discount Drug Store! MARKET Square, Ga. Hwy. 16 Across From K-Mart Telephone 227-7910 BLAZERS By Calvin for dress-up or casual wear- It’s the way of Life - This Dacron- Wool Blazer make it easy to come and go in perfect style ... colors: Tan, Light Green, Light Blue, Navy | .. . Sizes 35 to 42. Regulars & 1 Longs. S7QOO Use Your Morrow Powell - Smith Roberts Charge Account \ ‘! H H|Ul! I!; I ; \ \ ». i J-Lll_/ CAREER SHOP" Lower Level Store Honrs: Monday Thru Saturday 9:30-5:45 President Carter is report edly disturbed by the com mercialization of Plains since his election. His mother said Wednesday, “I don’t think Jim my intended it to be that way.” Mrs. Carter told reporters that the only regret she has about her son being elected President “is about our church being tom up. I don’t have a church to go to.” She said, however, that the racial turmoil at the Plains Baptist Church which culmi nated in the recent resignation of the Rev. Bruce Edwards be gan long before her son was elected. She disclosed that she no longer attends church, “and I don’t know when I’ll go back,” she added. About the $2 million school bond issue voted down in Plains this week, Mrs. Carter said the President would consider it a personal defeat. Her remarks to the Campus Club included anecdotes from her two years in India with the Peace Corps. In sometimes earthy language, she described how she taught Indians about birth control, “but, honey, they didn’t care a thing about that.” She said that while in India she attended a huge wedding where most of the guests “came because they heard they were going to give away Coca Colas.” Offering a bit of parting ad vice before she left Auburn where she once served as a fra ternity housemother, Mrs. Lil lian said, “Just do your thing and if you get criticism, stay with it. That’s what I’ve always taught my children." FRONT ROW KISS HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - While going from a rebounding basketball, Connecticut’s Tony Hanson was pushed out of bounds and into the lap of a little woman sitting in the front row at the end of the court. The team’s leading scorer and re bounder got up quickly but be fore he did he took time to kiss the little lady on the cheek. The lady he kissed was his mother. iOP / A ■kufi / vC-d If r \ if pX/z( f J H U-t Tji . I / Ilf / |R: I / />■ Carter says he’ll ‘hang tough’ on talks WASHINGTON (AP)- President Carter says he’ll “hang tough” when arms limitation negotiations with the Russians begin again in May and that he has no intention of dropping his human rights crusade. The President’s reaction to Wednesday’s breakdown of Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty negotiations in Moscow was relaxed and he said he was not surprised. But he expressed his determi nation to pursue a major reduc tion in nuclear weapons and de clared: “I will not modify my human rights statements.” And, despite his expressed desire to end the arms race, he pointedly warned Moscow that he will consider intensifying de velopment of U.S. weapons if he decides after negotiations in May that the Soviets are not acting “in good faith.” The next round of arms talks is set for Geneva in May with Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance and Soviet Foreign Min ister Andrei A. Gromyko head ing the two delegations. Carter will be in Europe that month, attending an economic summit meeting with NATO leaders and conferring with Syrian President Hafez Assad about prospects for a negotiated Arab-Israeli settlement. He said he has no intention “at this time” of meeting with Soviet officials then. After learning of the break down in the Moscow talks, Car ter told congressional leaders of his plans to “hang tough” for a comprehensive accord that substantially reduces the two superpowers’ arsenals. And, in an impromptu news conference, he told reporters “there was no linkage” between his advocacy of human rights in the Soviet Union and Kremlin rejection of the SALT proposals taken to Moscow by Vance. “But I can’t certify there is no linkage in the Soviets’ minds,” IF YOU’RE NOT GETTING THE CREDIT YOU DESERVE, SEE THE LOAN PEOPLE AT COMMERCIAL ■ Our loan officers know Ihow to give credit where B I ■ A credit is due. They’re easy to talk to, iHk4hb wJmBL V and they’ll help you plan a loan that’s just right for your needs. If you’ve got plans for improving your personal property, for expanding your business, or if you want to make a major purchase, come in and talk to us. We’ll give your plans the fair hearing they deserve. COMMERCIAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY Chartered in 1889 Member FDIC Downtown/Mclntosh Road/Spalding Square Carter said. Regardless, he said he would not modify his statements on human rights, which “are com patible with the consciousness of this country.” The President said he intends to “remain very strong in my position” that the two super powers this year negotiate not just a superficial agreement al lowing them to continue the Assassination Committee to lay rumors to rest WASHINGTON (AP) - The House assassinations com mittee, granted two years to do its work, will “lay to rest all the rumors and rumors of rumors” about the murders of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., its chairman promises. A sharply divided House ex tended the committee’s life through 1978 by a vote of 230 to 181 on Wednesday after its con troversial chief counsel, Rich ard A. Sprague, resigned. Chairman Louis Stokes, D- Ohio, said an unofficial count had indicated that if Sprague had not resigned, the committee might have been killed by some 20 votes. He and other panel members praised Sprague and said he had been unfairly maligned by the committee’s former chairman, Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Tex. Gonzalez quit the panel last month when its members and the House leadership refused to back his attempt to fire Sprague. Stokes said he expects to ob tain a $2.7 million budget this year. At one point, the panel had asked for $6.5 million. Stokes told the House the committee is pursuing new arms race but to freeze devel opment of new missiles and re duce launchers and multiple warheads substantially. “I am not in any hurry," Carter said. “It is important enough to proceed methodically and carefully.” He made no mention of the expiration in mid-October of an interim weapons agreement. Asked why the Soviets turned leads and talking to new wit nesses. But critics demanding proof tried to force the first se cret House session since the 1880 s to make the panel spell out its evidence. That effort was defeated 226 to 185 on Stokes’ argument that leaks of the witnesses’ names could put some of their lives in danger. Rep. B.F. Sisk, D-Calif., com plained that at a closed briefing on the evidence, “the only thing I heard was that you have evi dence that X overheard Y and Z say something.” Stokes cut short a news con ference when he was asked re peatedly about his contention that a man who reportedly committed suicide in Florida on Tuesday would have been “a crucial witness.” George de Mohrenschildt, 65, a Russian-born geologist who was a friend of Lee Harvey Os wald, was found dead of a shot gun wound at his daughter’s home in Manalapan, Fla., a few hours after a House assas sinations committee investiga tor tried to see him. A Dutch journalist, Willem Oltmans, who had interviewed de Mohrenschildt, told the panel last month that the geologist felt down the comprehensive pro posal, Carter said he knew of no “specific reasons” but guessed that it was so substantive and such a “radical departure” from earlier goals “the Soviets simply need more time to consider it.” Democratic congressional leaders backed the President on the negotiations and said Carter is respected for refusing to some responsibility for the Kennedy assassination, appar ently because he had an in dication of what Oswald might do and did not act to stop it. I “If Block makes an "xJwm error on my taxes, Block pays the interest. And the penalty.” H&R Block doesn’t make many mistakes. Their people are trained not to. But if they should make an error that costs me additional tax, I’d pay only the additional tax. Block pays any interest and penalty. H&R Block stands behind its work. 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