Kidnap plot warning to cricket club

Item

Title
Kidnap plot warning to cricket club
Excerpt
[Full Text]: "A warning of an alleged plot by anti-apartheid demonstrators to kidnap Mr. Jack Baddiley, chairman of Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, was telephoned to Mr. Ron Poulton, the club secretary, yesterday. He treated it as a joke but his caller, a man with an educated voice, told him: "It's no laughing matter." The police, however, took the threat seriously, and set out to find Mr. Baddiley, who was working on his 1,000-acre farm at Worksop. A police spokesman said later that special precautions were being taken. Wilson in race complaint. The Prime Minister and six other men were named in a complaint laid at Bow Street police station yesterday under the 1965 Race Relations Act. Mr. Peter Tombs, of Evans Road, Eynsham. Oxfordshire, a writer, said statements inciting unlawful race discrimination had been made on the B.B.C.'s Panorama programme by Mr. Wilson, Mr. John Arlott, Mr. Peter Hain, Mr. Jeffrey Crawford, the Bishop of Woolwich, the Right Rev. David Sheppard, Mr. Denis Brutus and Mr John Darragh."
Bibliographic Citation
"Kidnap plot warning to cricket club (1970-04-30)", The Times, 1970-04-30, p. 2.
Accessed 2019-12-17. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CS34697886/GDCS?u=linc74325&sid=GDCS&xid=5d36ad3e.
News Item Type
News Report
Publisher
The Times
Date
30 April 1970
Identifier
apdp.news.000209
People referenced
Darragh, John
Sheppard, David
Baddiley, Jack
Tombs, Peter
Crawford, Jeffrey
Poulton, Ron
Hain, Peter Gerald
Arlott, John
Brutus, Dennis Vincent