Newspaper Page Text
LSD raid
HOPLAND, Calif. (UPI)-
Narcotics agents uncovered
what they said was probably
the biggest LSD factory in the
nation Thursday when they
raided two lonely farm houses,
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Mendocino County Sheriff Reno
Bartolomei reported.
Bartolomei said seven per
sons were arrested in the
predawn raid and officers
seized chemical apparatus ca
pable of turning out “billions”
of LSD tablets.
Youngest Senator
Rush Dew Holt of West
Virginia was the youngest
man ever elected to the U.S.
Senate. He was elected in
1934 at the age of 29 but
could not take office until
his 30th birthday.
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WASHINGTON—IsraeIi Prime Minister Golda Meir meets with President Nixon at the White
House on the Mideast situation and Israel’s long standing request for more jet aircraft. (UPI)
Nixon discourages
planes for Israel
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Nixon told Premier
Golda Meir that he believes
early resumption of shipments
of U.S. F 4 Phantom jet
warplanes to Israel would be
both unnecessary and unwise,
high administration officials
I said today.
I But the officials said the
President also assured Mrs.
Meir that Israel will receive
I ample military equipment to
defend herself over the long
run.
Nixon and Secretary of State
I William P. Rogers met sepa
rately with Mrs. Meir Thurs
day. Officials said they told her
I any immediate U.S. decision on
shipping a large new increment
of the fighter-bombers to Israel
I would destroy the possibility of
persuading Egypt to undertake
peace talks.
Nixon and Rogers argued an
1 early shipment would give the
Soviet Union an excuse to
resume large scale movement
of supersonic Soviet warplanes
I and other military equipment to
Egypt, officials said.
Nixon and Rogers, officials
I said, made it clear they did not •
believe Israel was in an j
unfavorable military position in ;
the Middle East. They pro- (
Imised emphatically that the i
United States would hasten to ‘
rush warplanes to Israel at a !
I later date if it appeared that '
Israel was in peril. ’
Mrs. Meir scheduled meet- ’
| Bennett recovering j
(WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. <
Wallace F. Bennett, R-Utah, ;
was reported in excellent 1
■ condition after four hours of ■
surgery during which two '
bleeding ulcers were removed.
I Doctors at Bethesda Naval '
Hospital described Thursday’s i
surgery as completely success- ’
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ings today with U.S. Senators
who are highly sympathetic to
Israel’s demands for immediate
and large scale resumption of
warplane shipments. The Sena
tors successfully sponsored an
amendment increasing U.S.
military aid to Israel by SSOO
million.
The senators include a
Democratic presidential can
didate, Sen. Henry M. Jackson,
Wash., and a potential presi
dential candidate, Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
Some congressional sources
predicted increasing political
pressure connected with the
beginning of the presidential
campaign year would force
Nixon to abandon his “even
handed” approach to Middle
East problems. White House
officials, however, expressed
confidence the President would
resist all attempts to agree to a
massive and early infusion of
American aircraft to Israel.
Administration officials had
nothing to say about Mrs.
Meir’s “lobbying” on Capitol
Hill. They obviously thought
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her actions were in better taste
than those of her foreign
minister, Abba Eban, who last
year met with 40 U.S. senators
to press Israel’s case before he
had even called at the White
House and State Department.
Mrs. Meir gave no indication
as to whether she had been
persuaded by the Nixon and
Rogers arguments. A State
Department official said both
governments had agreed they
should not allow the question of
F 4 shipments to lead to a
“confrontation” between them.
Rogers has said publicly the
issue of Phantom shipments
has been blown up in the press
beyond its true importance and
is hurting efforts to obtain
agreement on an interim peace
plan and permit reopening of
the Suez Canal.
High administration officials
stated clearly there was no
question but that Israel would
get more Phantoms sometime
next year. But they said the
planes would be sent only a few
at a time unless there is some
big new Arab buildup.
Page 9
— Griffin Daily News Friday, Dec. 3, 1971
Roadblocks thrown up
in Florida kidnap
NICEVILLE, Fia. (UPI)-
Police stopped cars at road
blocks throughout the northwest
Florida panhandle today in a
search for six men who
kidnaped a convict from a
prison farm and threatened to
kill him.
The six men, all wearing
masks, broke into the State
Prison Camp near Niceville,
overpowered its guards and
dragged away Bryan Peter
Walker, 37, with the words,
“the big man wants to see
you.” Inamtes at the camp said
Walker was screaming for help
when he was marched out of
camp and the masked men said
they intended to kill him.
But Okaloosa County Sheriff
Ray Wilson said, “I think that
killing talk was a bunch of
hogwash.” There were reports
that Walker, serving 10 years
for breaking and entering, was
an expert safecracker.
Capt. A. C. Coursey, in
charge of the camp, said the
men took Walker to a waiting
car near the camp, 40 miles
west of Pensacola on the Eglin
Air Force Base Reservation.
“We’ve got some tire tracks,”
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Coursey said.
But Coursey said the investi
gation so far has turned up
nothing. “We don’t have any
new leads,” he said.
The abduction was engi
neered with military precision.
The six men creeped into the
unfenced camp from the woods
that border it, overpowered,
gagged and bound the two
guards on duty. A third guard
slept through the incident.
On their way out, the men
robbed the arsenal of two
shotguns and eight revolvers,
and took about S4OO from the
canteen.
After binding the guards with
tape, three of the men—their
faces masked with tape—took
their keys and went to an
“open bay” dormitory housing
35 of the road camp’s 65
convicts.
Coursey said one of the three
men appeared to know the
exact layout of the camp. They
found Walker’s bed, shook him
awake and told him to dress.
A convict friend of Walker’s,
Perry Green, said he was sure
Walker had been abducted
against his will.