Newspaper Page Text
Page 6
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, April 20, 1974
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tomorrow with high near 80s.
News Summary
•:•: By United Press Intrnational •:•
Another Liddy trial
£ WASHINGTON (UPI) — A federal judge Friday •:•
:•: ordered Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy, already •:•
:•: sentenced in two other cases, to stand trial May 10 on :$
X contempt of Congress charges. x
Another judge ordered Special Watergate Prosecutor
I>eon Jaworski to provide him and the six defendants in g
:•: the Ellsberg break-in case, including Liddy, any evidence g:
:•: Jaworski has about President Nixon’s possible x
involvement in the case. >:■
Cost of living up again
••• WASHINGTON (UPI) — Increases in postal, gasoline, x
x vegetable and fruit costs pushed the cost of living up
faster in one year than at any time since January, 1948. :j:. :
One measure of the impact of inflation, according to J;!;
figures released by the government Friday, is that the X
products and services that cost you $lO in 1967 now cost X
$ $14.31. £
Conciliation note offered
TEL AVIV (UPI) — Israeli Defense Minister Moshe
X Dayan offered a note of conciliation to Syria today only
hours after his warning that continued fighting on the x
Golan Heights could lead to all out war. x
| Kissinger makes major talk |
X ATLANTA (UPI) — Secretary of State Henry A. #
Kissinger makes a major address today as delegates to $:
g the Organization of American States (OAS) get down to *:
g business with a heavy agenda of mutual problems. §
Ss:<tx ;
Kidnap victim
swims to safety
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(UPI) — A bank executive who
said he was held for at least 16
hours by kidnapers demanding
$60,000 ransom was found alive
early today after swimming for
his life in the choppy Atlantic
Ocean.
Fort Lauderdale detective Wil
liam Mix said Albert L. Dantz
ler was either pushed into the
water or allowed to jump in
from a boat off the coast. He
said Dantzler swam ashore
nearly exhausted at 1:18 a.m.
EDT.
“I don’t know, and I don’t
know if he knows, whether he
was given a chance to swin for
it or was going to be killed,”
said Mix, who escorted Dantz
ler to the Broward General Hos
pital where he was admitted for
observation.
“He had been in the water
quite awhile but he honestly
did not know how long — he
just had no idea,” said Mix.
Dantzler was barefoot and wear
ing a knit shirt and green walk
ing shorts when he came
ashore.
Dantzler, 43, telephoned the
City National Bank of Hallan
dale about 9:05 a.m. Friday and
said he had been kidnaped by
“some bastards” who wanted
$60,000 in small bills for his re
lease. Dantzler is an assistant
vice president of the bank.
FBI officials said bank of
ficials quickly assembled the
ransom money and left the
package as instructed in a trash
container. An investigator said
today the ransom was never
picked up.
Mix said Dantzler, “soaking
and near exhaustion,” knocked
on an apartment house door af
ter swimming to safety and a
woman notified police. Mix said
Dantzler uttered “I’m cold”
when he arrived at the apart
ment.
Dantzler, a boy scout and
church leader, was admitted to
the hospital for observation and
FBI agents spent the predawn
hours trying to piece together
what had happened to him.
Mix said Dantzler was blind
folded aboard the boat but ap
parently had the blindfold re
moved before he entered the wa
ter.
He said the banking executive
could not say how far he was
from shore when he entered the
water, but he could “see the
lights” of Fort Lauderdale
Beach. Depending on visibility,
that could be five miles or
more.
“He seemed all right and is
in pretty good shape for a mid
dle-aged man,” said Mix.
Dantzler was described as a
quiet man who lived alone in an
apartment. He was believed to
be the father of two boys.
Thomas Snellgrove, president
and comptroller of the bank,
was reluctant to discuss Dantz
ler or the ransom while he was
still being held by the kidnap
ers.
Police kept other bank execu
tives and their homes and fam
ilies under surveillance as a se
curity measure.
U.S., Egypt, mend relations
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Trumpets blared at the White
House Friday and relations
between the United States and
Egypt, broken off during the
1967 Mideast war, were
resumed in an air of cordiality.
Egyptian Ambassador Ashraf
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Ghorbal presented his creden
tials to President Nixon and
was told, “This is a day I have
looked forward to since the day
I came into this office.”
The U.S. ambassador, Her
man Eilts, will be welcomed
formally in Cairo today.
Usually, presentation of new
credentials is a routine func
tion, but Nixon and Ghorbal
talked at length in the Oval
Office after the envoy’s limou
sine arrived at the White House
to the ceremonial trumpet
calls.
Ghorbal responded that the
Egyptian government saw the
occasion as part of “the
beginning and we hope the
continuing process” of peace in
the Middle East. Praising the
President’s contribution to eas
ing of Middle East tensions,
Ghorbal told him: “You have
done tremendously.”
“Together our two nations
have worked out problems” in
the search for peace, Nixon
said, and he added a hope “we
can move forward.”
Ghorbal said he was “deeply
honored ... overwhelmed” by
his reception and said he hopes
Nixon could visit Egypt “very
soon.”
In chatting with Ghorbal,
Nixon recalled he had visited
Egypt in 1963 as a private
citizen and that he received a
great show of friendship while
there.
“We look forward someday to
coming again,” Nixon told the
Egyptian diplomat.
Ghorbal replied that “it is
high time we welcome you
back, Mr. President, and we
look forward to your visiting
Egypt very soon.”