Banner Graphic, Volume 12, Number 93, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 December 1981 — Page 5

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Mrs. Judith Dozier is joined by her son, Scott, as she leaves her Verona, Italy, apartment tor weekend church services. Mrs. Dozier's husband, U.S. Brig. Gen.

Terrorists show photo of kidnapped general

MILAN. Italy (AP) - Red Brigades terrorists released a gift-wrapped communique, branding kidnapped U.S. Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier a “hero of American massacres in Vietnam” and saying he would be interrogated about the NATO forces under his command. However, the terrorists set no conditions for the release of the 50-year-old general, who was - kidnapped 11 days ago from his • Verona apartment by four gunmen posing as plumbers. Breaking an eight-day silence, the Red Brigades com- • munique. found here Sunday, announced plans for Dozier’s “proletarian trial.” It also included a black and white photograph showing the general in front of a banner bearing the five-pointed star symbol of the leftist urban guerrilla gang. A small dark mark, possibly a bruise, was visible under Dozier’s left eye. Police said the photo appeared to be authentic, but a spokesman at Dozier’s NATO command in Verona withheld

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James L. Dozier remains the captive of Red Brigade terrorists. He was kidnapped 11 days ago.

comment. “1 am waiting to see if it’s a true photograph,” said Col. Luciano Dalcheggio. Dozier appeared to be holding a sign, which was printed in Italian and read in part, “The crisis of capitalism breeds imperialistic war. Only antiimperialist civil war can bury war.” An unidentified man called the Italian news agency ANSA in Milan on Sunday and said the photo and Red Bridgades document were in a trash can in a downtown square. The brown package, gift-wrapped with a yellow ribbon, also contained a hefty ideological statement. The communique, stenciled on the front and back of three pages, did not make clear if Dozier’s “proletarian trial” had started. It listed figures on the numbers of men and weapons under the Verona NATO command information police sources said was available to the public and declared: “On the use and function of this apparatus, Dozier will have to answer to

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the proletarian international.” The Red Brigades communique said of Dozier: “This pig, this killer is a hero of American massacres in Vietnam. where for his ‘merits’ he earned various decorations.” Dozier fought in the armored cavalry in Vietnam and won the Silver Star. The communique attacked American “imperialism” and hailed the birth of a antinuclear missile movement in Europe. Italy and other countries in Western Europe have seen large demonstrations in recent months by groups protesting American and Soviet missiles in Europe. The communique came as police continued their massive search for Dozier in northern Italy. Police reported Saturday that they had discovered “useful new elements” in the search for the highest-ranking American Army officer at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization headquarters in Verona. But they gave no details.

Girl satisfactory after arm is reattached

CINCINNATI (AP) - A 12-year-old Sunman, Ind., girl, whose arm was reattached following a tractor accident, is scheduled for more surgery Tuesday. Fawn Stephens, whose left arm was severed in the farm accident last Tuesday, was

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reported in satisfactory condition Sunday at Cincinnati Children's Hospital. Mae Welch, the girl’s grandmother, said Fawn had been with her father on the tractor while gathering fire wood Tuesday. The child’s snowsuit caught in the tractor’s drive

12 E. Washington St.

shaft, severing her left arm and breaking the right arm at the shoulder, Mrs. Welch said. The girl’s father, Frank Stephens, had a flat tire while driving her to Margaret Mary Hospital at Batesville, Ind. An unidentified man at a restaurant in Penntown, Ind.,

Mon.-Fri. 9-8 Sat. 9-5

December 28,1981, The Putnam County Banner-Graphic

about a mile from the house - drove them to the hospital. Meanwhile, Julie Roberts, a nurse who lives in Beech Grove, Ind , heard the father telling about the accident at the restaurant. When she learned the severed arm was still at the farm, she drove there, packed it

Closed Sundays

in ice, and took it to the hospital, Mrs. Welch said. Fawn was Children’s Hospital, where underwent surgery on Tues<©y m Doctors inserted a vein fiSm her leg into tht arm, to her sister, Tammy HoffmM

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