Monday, December 5,1983/The Battalion/Page 11 OUR 6% eineken kidnappers still dodging police R.I. by Paul Dirmeyer Finals WkeK in Aggieiand... Geophysics Z01 Review for lab Final Identification of Earth Hinerals United Press International MSTERDAM, Netherlands - Police arrested a female sus pect Sunday but the search con- itREM tinued for three other persons thought to be keys to cracking 3 ° oA «i j^g kidnapping of beer baron Freddie Heineken and his uffeur. A police spokesman said de- jtives had “certain suspicions” ut the 31-year-old woman, a Ifriend of alleged ringleader Ibbie Grifhorst, who was ested Wednesday when he . flew into Amsterdam from \AAvr //° c B Officials did not release the loan’s name. Heineken, 60, and his driver. Ab Doderer, were rescued in a pre-dawn police raid Wednes day, 40 hours after an unarmed police volunteer delivered a $11-million ransom. Heineken was kidnapped as he left his office Nov. 9 and was held in a remote timberyard warehouse until an anonymous tip put police on the abductors’ trail. Heineken and Doderer were held shackled to the walls Of cold, soundproof cells for three weeks and a police spokesman said it still was not clear whether the kidnappers had planned ever to release them. Police have arrested 26 people in a wave of arrests throughout the country, but only seven re mained in custody Sunday. Two Dutch detectives are helping police in Spain, where three key suspects are thought to be hiding out, the spokesman said. Grifhorst maintains a holiday home in the Spanish resort of Fuengirola and detectives sus pect the bulk of the ransom, paid in dollars, German marks, French francs and Dutch guil ders, could be hidden there, he said. Police have already recovered about $2.5 million of the money. ...Cmnabar (Mercury5u/Fc/eJ... . ( A e /* iXxI l * «=t ^ 0 ... l_eadArsenic, SiylFide, n /A--J5 Warped by Scott McCullar ebate over subsidies eld by market leaders * I United Press International |THENS, Greece — Com- 'C Jnon Market leaders Sunday jened a crucial summit by de lating the 10-nation trading roup’s agricultural subsidies, i failedtoii ^ swallow up most of its re- OilendnjHtces and have caused a bitter loiakearlternal dispute. eadoflflpThe summit comes as the ted 30 Common Market, the world’s -yard ru® e st single trading group, fal- isonam: ters at the brink of bankruptcy on a ontJjp disintegration. ■“The resolution of these is got oifipblems is necessary and ur- if we are to avoid an un- jely crisis which might jeopar- the cohesion of the com- Imty,” Greek President Con- tin Karamanlis told govern- t heads in a welcoming eh. aramanlis said the breakup after ij jtttie Common Market, a group first half 3f|0 nations with a total popula- downsirM 1 of 270 million people, >ainstati* ould “plunge Europe into with 15(1 I 1305 anc ! further stagnation ■Id “lead to decay and frustra- everal hundred yards from historical Zappion Building 14 • :re the three-day summit is 3 H-Rig held, more than 15,000 wing protesters defied a one-yanll lin, cultniij -’ard drive [ terierenctj ebacker 8 tin tighteoil zone kevdl police ban and demonstrated against deployment of U.S. medium-range nuclear missiles and the declaration of inde pendence by Turkish Cypriots. Police said there were no arrests or incidents. British Prime Minister Mar garet Thatcher tried to open the summit with a discussion of the community’s budget imbalance, Britain’s main concern because it pays millions of dollars more into the community than it re ceives as subsidies or other pay ments. The nations rejected Britain’s bid, plunging into discussions on runaway spending for agri cultural subsidies. The policy swallows up more than two thirds of the Common Market’s budget by guaran teeing western Europe’s 8 mil lion farmers high prices for un wanted food and excluding cheap imports. The community has 50 mil lion non-agricultural workers. After detailed debate, a Brit ish spokesman said it had been “a disappointing afternoon” be cause no decisions were made on vtideast Smith 51 npf kick), iton Campl .); Miami Ft ichamannli ton Kemp: imi VonS „ continued from page 1 uMoorea i s * Von SchaE ^' llte House spokesman Lar- LhanSmnf ^peakes reported the Penta- had obtained pictures show- ig that the two — Lt. Mark age and Lt. Robert Good- Statistics Bn ’ a b orn t ,arc b er ' nav ig ator ‘ Miami* e in Syrian hands 15-66, Sins We have S 0116 , to Syrian o 1 4 Hons rernment at H 16 diplomatic ° Moriartl el ia Damascus during the t j ^ ||y anc ‘ ma de diplomatic repre- "tations asking for informa- and indicating to them that ey are in Syrian hands, we t them treated properly and ;urned,” he said, yria reported holding only man and a Lebanese radio ion said one of the two fliers jumped behind Syrian lines dead. he air strike, involving what Defense Secretary Caspar Wein- ■ger said were “some 28 pes,” marked a sharp escala- )n in U.S. involvement in cause of vast surpluses of dairy products. Responding to charges that Britain was being too rigid, the spokesman said, “We never mind being rigid if we are right.” Britain has said it will veto any increase in community spend ing, unless agricultural subsidies — which increased 30 percent this year — are controlled and an equitable and durable solu tion to the budget problem is found. Diplomats said summit lead ers appeared to lack workable answers despite hundreds of " hours of lower-level discussions on issues confronting the Com mon Market. While some countries, includ-. ing the host nation, Greece, __ want to expand the community’s resources by increasing taxes, Britain is demanding a radical budget reform before any spending increases. Britain says it pays $800 million more into the Common Market than it receives in subsidies. Bri- the vast overproduction of milk, _ tain and West Germany pay at the heart of the problem be- more than they receive. Holiday DWIs take toll .ami-Marii an-Luck - Miami' [2, Duper ose 1-22,J| on-Camp® McCloskP wards 1-tf DAY PECIAL >d Steal 3ravy itoes ard ie other ole id and Bu Tea anon. iUSl2l;f'' es ident Reagan said in lashington he ordered the sftlke in retaliation for a barrage ofjunprovoked” Syrian missile and antiaircraft fire at American bnnaissance planes Saturday, agan, arriving at the White se from a weekend at Camp id, told reporters the United es does not desire a military [flict with Syria — the Soviet on’s closest Arab ally, ut, he added, “If our forces attacked we’re going to re nd. We’re going to defend personnel that are there.” ne Syrian command post two sites from which fire was cted at U.S. reconnaissance hts Saturday were “taken t in Sunday’s air strike, ersecretary of State Lawr- n k:e Eagleburger said in shington. yrian Foreign Minister el Halim Khaddam said two ian soldiers were killed and vounded by the U.S. strike, registered a strong protest h U.N. Secretary-General jer Perez de Cuellar, he raid was conducted with Corsairs and A-6 Intruders, h subsonic attack planes that y a heavy payload of bombs it do not have the speed of the |yy’s F-14 Tomcats, he planes from the nuclear aft carriers of the 6th fleet a string of targets between 10 es and 15 miles southeast of rut in areas near the Beirut- [mascus highway containing ian, Druze and Palestinian iters. eavy Syrian fire met the erican planes as they swept om the sea. ne damaged American jet, an A-7 Corsair, smashed into a house just north of Beirut after the pilot. Navy Cmdr. Edward T. Andrews of Virgina Beach, Va., parachuted into the Mediterranean. The other downed jet was an A-6 Intruder. Andrews was rescued by a Lebanese naval boat and later taken back to the nuclear air craft carrier USS Independ ence, where he was reported in “good condition” with only “minor” injuries. His disabled plane de molished the walls of the house and engulfed it in a fire that burned six members of one family, including a mother and son seriously. Two neighbors also were injured. “This is insane,” said a neigh bor outside the wreckage of the stone house. “We’re forced to stay indoors because of the shell ing. Now even indoors is not safe.” The crew members of the In truder, meanwhile, were forced to bail out over the Syrian-held mountains. “The pilot of the plane downed in Kfar Selwan was kil led by gunfire as he parachuted to the ground,” the private radio station of the Lebanese Christ ian Phalange Party said in an un confirmed report. United Press International CHICAGO — The age group most vulnerable to that deadly mix of the holiday season, drink ing and driving, is between 16 and 24, the National Safety Council says. “Drinking is probably more heavily involved in fatal acci dents during holidays than at other times of the year,” A1 Lauersdorf, the council’s High way Safety Services administra tor, said in an interview. An extra day of free time and the festivity of the season leads to more parties and more drink ing, he said. “And obviously if you’ve got more people drinking, you’re going to have more drivers who will be drinking. And that, as we all know, will lead to accidents.” Traffic fatalities haVe drop ped to new lows the past several years, he said. Statistics show they fell to 46,000 in 1982, com pared with 51,500 in 1981 and 53,800 in 1980. Still, he said: “The percentage of alcohol-related accidents dur ing the holidays has probably not decreased too mucn.” At least 50 percent of traffic fatalities are alcohol-related, he said. But that does not necessari ly mean a drunk driver is in volved — it could be a drunk pedestrian or bicyclist. Most states have since changed drunken driving legis lation, he said, and the council “strongly” supports a nation wide increase in the minimum legal purchasing and drinking age to 21 for alcoholic bever ages. “The one age group that is most vulnerable We proudly present the gift of lasting pleasure. The pleasure of wearing and owning gold never fades. And we can provide that lasting pleasure with the exquisitely beautiful Krugerrand gold coin pendant.Containing one- quarter ounce of pure gold, it’s as much a joy to give as it is to receive. Stop in today and see our full line of men’s and PPjAm. women’s Krugerrand jewelry. 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