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RICHMOND, Calif. -Police Monday
disclosed a raid on a radical headquarters
and seizure of arms, explosives and
communcations equipment, including a
typewriter stolen from the office of
Defense Secretary Melvin Laird.
Four persons were arrested in the raid
and held on suspicion of conspiracy and
possession of explosives and stolen goods.
The radical nest, plastered with posters
of Mao Tse-tung, was uncovered last week
by officers, attempting to track down 152
sticks of dynamite which had been sold in
the Richmond area by two teenagers.
Police were able to locate only 17,
sticks of 152 reportedly sold by the two
teen-agers. Ten were found on a roadside
near Berkeley and others were recovered
from two young persons at another
location.
Officers said the house raided last
Friday was a headquarters and-
distribution point for subversive literature
and materials.
They found "carefully catalogued"
inventories of "underground literature,
posters, and other materials. Weapons
seized included two U.S. guns and an
Oirentoal rifle, according to police.
Also seized was ammunition,
blackjacks, brass knuckles and clubs.
There was duplicating equipmenfand the
electric typewriter, which police said was
one of three stolen in a burglary of
Laird's Washington office earlier this
year. 1
Those arrested were Gale King, 21,
Margaret Walter, 20, Elizabeth Tomkins,
and Susan Garrett, 20, all of Richmond.
They identified themselves as students.
Disclosure of the raid was withheld
until Monday because of police fears that
publicity would drive . the missing
explosives farther underground.
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Wednesday, April 7 8: 1 5
Page Auditorium, Duke University
Tickets on sale now -Page Box Office
$2.00 Reserved r $i:50 General Admission J "
Phone: 684-4059 Mail Orders: Box KM, Duke Station
Page Box Office Durham, N.C. 27706
WASHINGTON Sen. Adlai E.
Stevenson, D-IIL, charged Monday that
U.S. officials were acting behind the
scenes to keep South Vietnam's Thieu-Ky
regime in power in next October's
elections.
Stevenson, backed by Senate
Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield,
introduced legislation to create a :
10-member congressional commission to 1
make sure the United States stays out of ,
the campaign. Republican Leader Hugh
Scott said the measure amounted to a
"repudiation of the government of South
Vietnam." .
Stevenson said a U.S. civilian agency
responsible for pacification in South
Vietnam had conducted a survey of
political attitudes in the nation's 44
provinces, and turned over the results to
President Nguyen Van Thieu. He said the
U.S. Information Agency also was using
its facilities to help the current regime
communicate with the electorate.
"The United States," he said, "cannot
be true to -its commitment to
self-determination in the world and also
Lottery ceiling
raised to 125
WASHINGTON-The Selective Service
System advised local .draft boards
Monday they may call up men with
lottery numbers through No. 125 to meet
their draft quotas for the month of May.
The lottery "ceiling" number had been
100 for the first four months of this year.
Despite the increase, the ceiling still is
running lower than last year. It stood at
145 for the month of May in 1970. ,
Selective Service Director Curtis W.
Tarr also told local boards they may
summon men up through lottery No. 175
for preinduction physical examinations.
The process ceiling for preinduction
physicals had been No. 150.
The draft call for May previously was
announced at 15,000. Draft calls for the
first five months of this year total
83,000, compared with 84,500 last year.
support the election of one candidate or
another, however covertly, in Vietnam,"
Stevenson told the Senate. .
.Mansfield agreed. Blasting the war as a
"corrosive cancer on the American body
politic," he said, "we have preached
self-determination since the time of
Woodrow Wilson and I think it is about
time to put that principle into practice."
South Vietnam will elect a new House
of Representatives in -August and a
president and vice president in October..
Under Stevenson's resolution, five
members from the Hous and five from
the Senate would be appc isted to oversee
the elections. A commission staff would
be sent to Vietnam to keep an eye on
U.S. officials and monitor government
activities to make sure complete
neutrality is respected.
Scott, however, contended the
presence of such a commission would be
a more direct intervention in Vietnamese
affairs than now exists. Depending on
who is appointed to serve on it, Scott
said, the commission would either
"undermine the present government or
maintain it."
three weeks. All had recurrent cancers
after surgery and radiation treatments
and were in the terminal stage. So far two
tumors of the head and neck were
reduced to such small size they were
completely removed by surgery. A
massive cancer of the skin shrunk into
small remnants which were gently pulled
off by hand. A fourth tumor is now half
its former size.
One of four lung cancers is
Researchers encouraged
Cancer drii
CAREFREE, Ariz. A new drug which
wrecks cigarette tar cancers on the backs
of mice is being tested in men with lung
cancers, the testing scientist revealed
Tuesday.
He is Dr. Takao Ohnuma of the
RosweU Park Memorial Institute, Buffalo,
N.Y., and his preliminary results in
patients with advanced cancers in other
body sites are, in his word,
"encouraging."
The drug is "unique" in that its major
effectiveness is in squamous cell
carcinoma, a cancer type which has been
highly resistant to treatments, he told the
annual Science Writers seminar of the
American Cancer Society.
The drug is an antibiotic called
bleomycin isolated from a Japanese mold
six years ago. Japanese and European
physicians began testing it ahead of
Americans because of the restrictive
regulations of the federal Food and Drug
Administration. Their results likewise are
"encouraging," Ohnuma said.
Its mode of action is to disrupt the
molecules of deoxyribonucleic acid
(DNA) in cancer cells which carry the
instructions for the making of more
cancer cells. Yet it seems largely to spread
the DNA of normal cells since the side
effects of patients so far tested have not
been severe.
Ohnuma reported on 24 patients who
have been getting the drug for at least
lug tested.
demonstrably shrinking but Ohnuma was
not ready to report results because, he
said in an interview, drug treatment of
lung cancers "are extremely hard to
evaluate."
He and his associates are
experimenting with dose size and
frequencies of administration by
injecting. The drug is so new there is no
established knowledge of the most
effective way of using it.
CI
All 1
wini Chilean election
SANTIAGO, Chile-Chile's
Marxist-oriented government parties led
by President Salvador Allende's Socialists
came within a hair of capturing 50 per
cent of the vote in nationwide municipal
elections, final returns showed Monday.
Political analysts agreed the strong
showing of the government now gives
Allende a priority to move ahead quickly
with his sweeping nationalization and
radical agrarian reform programs.
The government parties received an
impressive 49.73 per cent of the
2,823,884 votes cast and emerged with a
1.69 .per cent lead over the combined
opposition.
Results were released shortly after
noon (1 p.m. EST) by the Interior
Ministry.
An hour later, however, the same
ministry issued new figures which
omitted the independent, blank and
voided votes. Under this new calculation,
the government claimed it had indeed
captured 50.86 of the vote.
It said the opposition had won 49.14
per cent of the vote.
Thus, the election returns and the
outcome depended on what set of figures
were considered acceptable.
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