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SANTA FE SPRINGS, Calif .—FBI agents seized a valuable
archaeological find, a stone pillar valued at 1350,000 that was
stolen from a jungle riverbank in Guatemala. “The
“Machaquila Stela” a relic of ancient Mayan Indian
civilization, was recovered from an unoccupied home in this
n Gov. Wallace to take
Politics t .
campaign to north
By United Press International
Alabama Gov. George C.
Wallace plans to take his
campaign for the Democratic
presidential nomination to the
North and predicts he will
“shock” both the Democrats
and Republicans when he runs
in the Pennsylvania primary.
Wallace said he was giving
“high consideration” to enter
ing primaries in four other
ststes
“Os course, I don’t have the
money to run the kind of
campaign that the other
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candidates have, but I feel that
I will get an excellent vote in
Pennsylvania—enough to shock
the National Democratic party
and the Republican party,”
Wallace said.
Wallace was interviewed by
CBS News.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-
Wash., one of Wallace’s op
ponents in the Florida primary,
said Wednesday at Oklahoma
City that a vote for Wallace
would be a vote wasted,
because Wallace could never
Los Angeles suburb. Although Latin governments have in the
past requested help from U.S. Law enforcement in
recovering archaeological material, ir was the first time a
recovery has been made. (UPI)
win the Democratic nomination
for president.
“Why thrown away your
vote?” Jackson said. “Every
one knows he’s not going to get
the nomination.”
In other political develop
ments:
—Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
D-Minn., flew to Detroit in an
apparent attempt to head off
early endorsement by the
United Auto Workers of Sen.
Edmund Muskie, D-Maine,
Humphrey’s chief rival for the
nomination.
—Muskie, who has been
orchestrating a bandwagon
effect by spacing out the
endorsements of prominent
Democrats, accepted the en
dorsement of Jerry Wurf,
president of the 500,000-
member American Federation
of State, County and Municioa,
Employes. Muskie then dedicat
ed his eight-story campaign
headquarters in Washington
and announced creation of a
youth coalition.
—Democratic convention
Opponents
of Market
push fight
By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
LONDON (UPl)—Opponents
of British entry into the
European Common Market
tried parliament today to
prevent Prime Minister Ed
ward Heath from signing the
membership treaty in Brussels
Saturday.
Government officials said
Heath was confident of defeat
ing the attempt, although by
less than the 112-vote majority
by which the House of
Commons on Oct. 28, 1971,
endorsed his decision to take
Britain into the six-nation
European economic community.
Parliamentary sources said
Heath would be lucky with a 20-
vote margin this time.
Heath told parliament Tues
day that he would sign the
treaty as scheduled Saturday no
matter what the outcome of
today’s vote. He said this is a
government prerogative and
needs no parliamentary appro
val.
The actual signing will take
place in Brussels, and will put
Britain into the Common
Market on Jan. 1, 1973.
The prime ministers of
Denmark and the Irish Repub
lic will also sign on behalf of
their countries while Norway
will be represented by its
foreign minister, Andreas Cap
pelen. The six member nations
—France, West Germany, Italy,
Belgium, the Netherlands and
Luxembourg—will be represent
ed by their foreign ministers.
In a last-ditch bid to block
Britain’s signature, or at least
to embarrass Heath, the
opposition British Labor party
placed a motion before parli
ament calling on the govern
ment not to sign until the full
text of the treaty has been
published.
This would be technically
impossible because final details
of the agreement were only
completed by British and
market officials early Tuesday
after almost 19 months of hard
bargaining.
planners, hewing to a policy of
neutrality in the party’s
presidential nomination race,
allowed 10 candidates to pick
hotel headquarters space at
Miami Beach.
—Mayor Sam Yorty, of Los
Angeles, campaigning for the
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Dockers withdraw
ban on military
By RICHARD M. HARNETT
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—
West Coast shippers, saying an
embargo on moving military
cargo during the dock strike
was not intended “to imperil
the national interests,” have
withdrawn the ban after an
appeal from the Defense
Department.
Ed Flynn, president of the
Pacific Maritime Association,
said Wednesday that the sole
purpose of the ban had been to
deny striking longshoremen an
income, since their union has
no strike benefits.
“At the time it made its
decision, the PMA was of the
opinion that military controlled
vessels and Atlantic and Gulf
Coast ports could be used for
the shipment of military cargo
normally moving through West
Coast ports,” Flynn said in a
telegram to the Defense De
partment.
“Therefore, the PMA decision
was not intended to imperil the
national interests.”
The embargo lifting came
after Flynn and Harry Bridges,
president of the International
Longshoremen’s and Ware-
New Hampshire primary, said
the federal government shout
provide a guaranteed annual
income for all of America’s 20
million retired citizens.
housemen’s Union, agreed to
resume negotiations Jan. 31 “or
earlier if possible.”
The renewed strike against 24
West Coast ports entered its
fourth day today and economic
repercussions already were felt.
In Los Angeles, the Harbor
Commission said it would lay
off 16 employes to save $27,000
a month salary costs while the
strike lasted. Supplies began
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— Griffin Daily News Thursday, Jan. 20, 1972
building up on other docks and
importers were again facing a
financial squeeze.
Bridges, meanwhile, said he
was taking steps to make the
current walkout more effective
than last year’s 100-day strike
halted by the Taft-Hartley Act
Oct. 6. They included:
—Asking longshoremen in the
non-struck port of Vancouver,
8.C., to refuse to handle cargo
diverted from ports in Califor
nia, Oregon and Washington.
About 81 ships already have
been counted at the Canadian
facility.
—A plea for “support” from
maritime unions in other
Pacific nations.
—Some picketing on the East
Coast where ships of companies
involved in the West Coast
dispute were berthed.