Newspaper Page Text
! —Griffin Daily News Friday, November 17,1972
. . .
Page 12
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Kissinger, Tho
plan meetmg
By United Press International
A Hanoi spokesmen in Paris
said Thursday that North
Vietnamese Politburo member
Due Tho intends to meet
either this weekend or early
next week with presidential
adviser Henry A. Kissinger on
final peace negotiations al
though “we really don’t see any
reason for it.”
Nguyen Thanh of the
North Vietnamese mission in
Paris said the private meeting
would be held in response to
what he said were insistant
requests for another such
meeting from the United
States. Tho was due in Paris
today from Hanoi after stops in
Peking and Moscow.
“It would be incomprehensi
ble if Mr. Kissinger asked for
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more meetings after the one to
be held shortly,” Le said. “If
the United States, after the
coming meeting, refuses to
sign the agreement, it will have
to bear the responsibility for
the consequences.”
The United States had asked
the additional meeting to make
some changes in the proposed
agreement to end the fighting
in Vietnam. The North Vietna
mese said they could see no
reason for any alterations in
the agreement. They said they
already had the United States’
verbal agreement.
“President Nixon himself has
informed us he considered the
treaty as completed and Mr.
Kissinger on Oct. 26 said only
one more meeting was needed
to settle some minor prob
lems,” Le said.
“There is no argument which
militates in favor of a
modification of the agreement,”
1 Hanoi chief negotiator Xuan
Thuy said Thursday at the
167th session of the regular
weekly peace talks at the
former Hotel Majestic.
White House sources said
Kissinger would return to Paris
soon, perhaps as early as this
weekend.
At the latest session of the
formal talks, U.S. chief negotia-
tor William J. Porter appealed
to the Communists not to
employ what he termed invec
tive, exaggerated rhetoric, re
criminations and unfounded
charges of bad faith. He said it
could endanger prospects for
peace.
“Our statements here should
enhance the development of
mutual respect in preparation
for supplanting long-held anta
gonisms by new responsibilities
toward peace, reconstruction
and reconciliation,” Porter
said.
The North Vietnamese
Foreign Ministry said Thursday
the United States had poured
huge shipments of arms and
materiel into South Vietnam in
the first half of November.
About people
Johnsons
mark 38th
anniversary
By United Press International
38TH ANNIVERSARY
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -
Former President and Mrs.
Lyndon B. Johnson today
quietly celebrate their 38th
wedding anniversary.
The Johnsons will dine with
their grandchildren and some
close friends at their apartment
atop the downtown offices of
Mrs. Johnson’s television sta
tion.
Johnson’s office issued a rare
public statement Thursday,
saying Johnson’s doctors indi
cate he is making substantial
progress in recovering from the
heart ailment which struck him
last April. “I believe I am going
to be as good as new by the new
year,” he said.
PAROLE CONSIDERED
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)
—The California Adult Authori
ty next week will consider the
possibility of parole for Sirhan
B. Sirhan, 28, convicted assas
sin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
A spokesman for the state
Department of Corrections said
Thursday the hearing is “rou
tine” and the chances of the
board setting a date for parole
were “virtually nil.”
“They might discuss with him
(Sirhan) the things they want
him to do for a possible parole
date in the future,” said San
Quentin Prison associate
Warden James Park. “But what
can you tell an assassin?”
MEETING SET UP
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The
Pentagon Papers trial of Daniel
Ellsberg, repeatedly delayed,
should get under way again
early in December, says U.S.
District Judge Matt Byrne.
The judge met briefly Thurs
day with attorneys involved in
the case and set next Tuesday
for a meeting to decide the day.
Ellsberg’s attorneys said they
intend to ask the judge to
discharge the jury and select a
new one. The jury picked in July
heard no testimony because
Ellsberg appealed to the
Supreme Court, which this week
declined to consider the appeal.
Drug bureau asks
barbiturates clamp
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs has proposed
restricting sales of nine “highly
addictive” barbiturates linked
to 1,771 suicides and deaths in 17
months.
The bureau said the barbitu
rates are more dangerous than
heroin.
“Withdrawal from the use of
these drugs can be fatal and, in
many instances, withdrawal
symptoms are more severe
from a barbiturate habit than
from heroin addiction,” BNDD
Director John E. Ingersoll told
a news conference Thursday.
Ingersoll identified the barbi
turates as amobarbital, buta
barbital, cyclobarbital, hepta
barbital, pentobarbital, probar
bital, secobarbital, talbutal and
vinbarbital.
These are the so-called
generic or chemical names of
the compounds, not the names
under which they usually are
prescribed or sold. The chemi
cal name might appear in a
listing of ingredients, Ingersoll
said.
Ingersoll listed only five
brand-name drugs which con
tain compounds from the list:
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Seconal (secobarbital), Tuinal
(amobarbital and
secobarbital), Amytol
(amobarbital), Nembutal
(pentobarbital) and Butisol
(butabarbital).
BNDD said the barbiturates
cited by Ingersoll fell in the
category of “sedative-hypno
tics” and were used frequently
as general anesthetics or in
treatment of acute convulsions,
tension and insomnia.
“They are highly addictive
and create a high psychic and
physical dependency,”
Ingersoll said.
The BNDD director asked the
Food and Drug Administration
to place the nine barbiturates
under the same controls for
cocaine, morphine, codeine,
methadone and amphetamine.
These controls permit BNDD to
set manufacturing quotas, pro
hibit issuance of refillable
prescriptions, prohibit export or
import and ban public sale
without federal authorization.
In a 101-page report to the
FDA, Ingersoll said the nine
barbiturates were involved in
1,771 suicides and deaths plus
3,475 overdose and injury cases
in 32 states in a 17-month period
ending May 1.
Peron
Rebel navy men surrender
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -
About 60 non-commissioned
navy officers rebelled early
today, but surrrendered two
hours later in what some
sources called the first outbreak
of trouble since exiled former
dictator Juan D. Peron said he
was coming home.
Officials said Buenos Aires
itself was quiet with 30,000
troops on the alert with shoot-to
kill orders in order to deal with
any disorders inspired by
Peron’s return later today.
The sources said the rebellion
—officially described as an
“internal problem”—occurred
when the non-commissioned
officers overpowered four offi
cers after a brief gunfight, took
them as hostages and fled in
four vehicles from a navy
mechanics school.
This correspondent heard
what sounded like gunfire at the
school, located in the Nunez
district of the capital, but
officials did not comment on
whatever happened. A spokes
man said only that naval
commanders met in emergency
session to deal with it.
Navy sources said infantry
and marine units surrounded
and captured the 60 noncom
missioned officers after about
two hours.
They said the 60, described as
"leftwing Peronists,” put up no
resistance.
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The incident occurred as
Buenos Aires awaited the
return of Peron after 17 years—
and in an atmosphere made
jittery by a dispute over the
number of his followers allowed
to go to the airport to greet him.