Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Monday, July 9,1973
Page 8
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SEATTLE—Curiosity prompted little Leora Kyle, 3, to place her right arm in a building
hydrant here. Firemen were called but a police sergeant armed with liquid soap freed her
before they arrived. Her stuck arm was a little dirty but uninjured. (UPI)
Cong admits holding
2 Canadian officers
SAIGON (UPI) - The Viet
Cong admitted today it is
holding two Canadian officers
who disappeared 10 days ago,
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JIM PRIDGEN HDWE.
110 South sth Street Griffin, Ga.
and the Canadian truce delega
tion said “we will not be
satisfied until they are returned
to us.”
A press officer for the
Provisional Revolutionary Gov
ernment (PRG, the formal
name for the Viet Cong) said
Capts. lan Patten of Toronto
and Fletcher Thomson are alive
and well.
The PRG accused the South
Vietnamese government of or
dering all-day artillery fire on
areas where the two Canadians
were being searched for.
Officials in Saigon termed this
a slander.
But the painstaking 10-day
negotiations over the release of
the two officers appeared to be
about to succeed.
Canadians concerned for the
safety of the two officers have
been close-mouthed about the
delicate negotiations with the
PRG.
The agonizing slowness of the
release negotiations, as corre
spondents have pieced the story
together since June 28 when
Patten and Thomson disap
peared, seemed to be caused
by:
—Disagreement over who
was responsible. Canadian au
thorities have maintained the
two officers were simply
touring their area of respon
sibility; the Viet Cong com
munique said today the two
“went along with two Viet
namese, infiltrating into the
liberated area without a PRG
liaison officer...!and without)
advance notification.”
Isn’t
this the
day?
for your
Carpet
Cleaning
CALL CARPETS
OF GRIFFIN
1137 Meriwether St.
Columnist says:
Nixon aide kept
‘secret blacklist’
WASHINGTON (UPI) - For
mer White House aide H. R.
Haldeman kept a list of
Republican senators who dis
pleased President Nixon, ac
cording to columnist Jack
Anderson.
Anderson, in his syndicated
column for release in newspa
pers today, said a “secret
blacklist” of GOP senators was
in addition to the enemies’ list
disclosed by ousted White
House counsel John W. Dean
111 in his testimony before the
Senate Watergate committee.
“This was no mere informa
tional list... but an ‘action’ list
of Republican recalcitrants to
be punished. Those on the list
were subjected to retaliation,
which ranged from petty
humilitations to political re-
30 killed
in storm
GUADALAJARA, Mexico
(UPI) — Authorities said today
a predawn thunderstorm Sun
day killed at least 30 persons in
villages around this tourist city.
Another three persons were
listed as missing.
A state government spokes
man said 25 persons were
injured, several of them criti
cally, when buildings collapsed
on them.
The flood also left an
estimated 1,500 persons home
less.
Authorities sent emergency
relief to the villages, where a
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NEWBERRY, Fla.—Rancher Joel Bridges shows his 14 pound, 14 inch tall foal, Gumba,
that he claims is the world’s smallest perfect horse. Bridges, 50, a retired mortician, has a
herd of 141 American miniature horses on his 400 acre ranch. Gumba was born on June 3rd
and weighed 11 and % pounds. Bridges thinks Gumba will weight about 20 pounds when
mature. (UPI) -———
Man charged
ATLANTA (UPI)-Robert C.
Jones, 27, of Sparta, Ga., has
been charged with forcing four
teen-aged girls into prostitution
in Florida, Georgia and Tennes
see, police said today.
Jones, who was arrested at a
local hotel Friday after two of
the girls ran for help when he
was threatening to beat one of
them with a whip, was charged
with kidnaping, pimping, pan
dering by compulsion, simple
assault and defrauding an inn
keeper.
Detective D. E. Genson of the
police department’s prostitution
squad, said all four girls, aged
17 and 18, had gotten intoJones’
car voluntarily at different
times since June 3.
Genson said the girls were al
legedly forced by threats of bod-
prisals,” Anderson said.
According to the columnist,
Haldeman’s list included GOP
Sens. Jacob Javits, N.Y.; Mark
Hatfield, Ore.; Clifford Case,
N.J.; Charles Mathias, Md.;
Richard Schweiker, Pa.;
Charles Percy, Hl.; Lowell
Weicker, Conn., and former
Sen. Charles Goodell, N.Y.
Anderson said recrimination
against the senators ranged
from not giving their constitu
ents special passes for White
House visits to cutting of
campaign assistance.
The list ranged from six to 12
names and was changed every
three to five months, Anderson
reported. Anderson said White
House sources told him about
the list, which Haldeman
purportedly allowed to be
copied only by hand.
mass burial was scheduled for
the flood victims.
Drug industry sales
come under attack
By MIKE FEINSILBER
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.
Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., said
today he finds unsatisfactory
the drug industry’s “glib
explanations” as to why it sells
some drugs overseas for half
the price charged Americans.
Nelson said his view is
ily harm to work as prostitutes.
He said they told of being driv
en to Daytona Beach, Fla., sev
eral times and were also alleg
ed to have been taken to Augus
ta, Ga., Chattanooga, Tenn., and
Jacksonville, Fla.
Police confiscated a 9-mm pis
tol in a violen case, an automat
ic BB gun and a hunting knife
which the girls said Jones had
used to threaten them.
Genson said the girls were all
“runaway types.” He identified
them as Katherinda Knight. 17,
Chattanooga; Elizabeth A. Dlu
bac, 17, Daytona Beach; Diane
Louise Phessons, 18, Atlanta,
and Karen Putnam, 18, of near
by Hapeville.
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NEW YORK—Blind John Diakakis and sighted Valery Mates, a student at the Professional
Children’s School, undertake joint project at the Lighthouse, the N.Y. Association for the
Blind, in a program designed to help ease the blind children’s transition to public school
next fall and to introduce sighted children to handicapped children so they can appreciate
them simply as other children. (UPI)
supported by a decision by U.S.
District Court Judge Sylvester
E. Ryan finding the practice of
the drug firms in enforcing its
two-price system a violation of
the antitrust laws.
As chairman of the monopoly
subcommittee of the Senate
Select Committee on Small
Summer Mark Downs
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Business, Nelson has conducted
hearings on drug pricing
practices over a period of five
years.
When on Sept. 29, 1972, he
attacked the two-price system,
he said, Eli Lilly & Co., issued
a statement which cited varia
tions in “wage rates, distribu
tion costs, price and wage
controls, taxes, import duties,
revaluations of currency and
sources of raw materials” as
justifying different prices
“from one marketplace to
another.”
But that explanation does not
hold up in light of a Justice
Department study, Nelson said.
It found that “many Ameri
can drug companies sell drugs
to domestic wholesalers at
different prices depending on
where the drug is to be used,”
he said. “If the domestic
wholesaler states that the drug
will be shipped overseas, his
price may be a third to a half
lower than if he were to sell it
to domestic users.”
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