Tuesday, June 11, 1974 sain t r President seeks 'lasting peace9 TTO ' ' 0 TA, O A" Ths Ter Hat I WASHINGTON President Nixon embarked on an historic tour of five Middle East nations Monday in hopes of firming up a troubled peace abroad and shoring up his public standing at home. "We believe this trip, like the other journeys we have taken, will contribute to that lasting peace which we as Americans are so deeply dedicated," he said in a brief speech" on the White House lawn. Recalling his 1972 visits to Peking and Moscow, Nixon said, "Both of those journeys were ones that had a profound impact not only the relations of the nations involved but also on building a structure of peace for the whole world." After a two-day rest stop in Salzburg, Austria, the President and his party will head for Cairo, Egypt, where an anticipated tumultous welcome awaits him Wednesday morning. He also will visit Jiddah, Saudi Arabia; Damascus, Syria; Tel Aviv, Israel; and Amman, Jordan, before returning to Washington next week. Former President Franklin D. Roosevelt visited Cairo for a summit conference in 1943. Nixon noted that no other American president has visited the four other countries on his schedule, and said the trip would "take us to a part of the world that has known nothing but war over the past 30 to 40 years." "We realize that one trip is not going to solve differences that are very deep, that go back some cases many years, and in some cases centuries," he said. "But we also realize that a beginning must be made." Nixon's remarks were addressed to a group of diplomats and officials gathered at the White House to wish him well before he boarded the helicopter which ferried him and his party to his "Spirit of 76" jet liner, Air Force 1, at nearby Andrews Air Force Base. Referring to cease-fire agreements that Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger who accompanied him on the trip negotiated recently between Israel and Egypt and between Israel and Syria, Nixon said he was taking the opportunity to "reaffirm our support for these initiatives." He also wanted, he said, "to explore ways that we can have new and better relations between the U nited S tates and each nation in the area. . .and also explore ways in which those nations in the area may have better relations with each other and build toward the permanent and lasting and just equitable peace that all of them, we know, want and certainly that we want." The day was hot, sunny and humid. Nixon wore a blue suit, and the First Lady wore a powder blue suit with white trim. .The rest stop in Austria was scheduled to help overcome the so-called "jet lag" involved in the seven-hour time zone difference between Washington and the Arab world. A similar overnight stay at the Azores Islands in the Atlantic was listed on the return itenerary. nun Mouse FeSnsed tapes despite its wamipgs Goteim wntMrawal comttouiies A spokesman for the United Nations observer force on the Golan Heights cease fire lines reported Monday that the separation of Syrian and Israeli troops is "proceeding smoothly." Military sources in Tel Aviv said Israel was withdrawing troops and weapons on schedule in preparation for turning over m:c VAC Hi SID. ( i All Sizes o Soft & Comfortable ( Jeans $5.99 Cut-Offs 04.50 Cut-off Overalls 07.99 Mini-Skirts 09.99 113 N. Columbia "In the attic above Soundhaus" Mon.-Sat. 11-5 942-1020 w v 'A i occupied, territory to Syria beginning on Friday. Virtually the entire 1,260-man complement of the U.N. Disengagement Observation Force has taken up positions in the buffer zone between the two armies under the terms of a disengagement agreement engineered by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. Nixon will arrive in Cairo Wednesday for a three-day visit followed by stops in Saudi Arabia, Syria, Israel and Jordan. In a Damascus press briefing, U.N. spokesman Rudolf Stajduhar said, "All reports received so far indicate that the WANTED One or two (or team of 2) people to sell to dorms & fraternities during regular school year. Chance for excellent income from loss than 15 hours a week work. Contact: Joel Meyers Student Stores Univ. of N.C. 9k i t V I . V ! i i 1 f i 1 ' mm IK i Si ip-J MX I: n S i lit FiTVJTnTU 1 1 77T r ; A A The only place in Chapel Hill where your rent dollar buys so many features: i 1 O Clubhouse O 3 Swimming Pools O Tennis Courts O Platform Tonnio O Sauna Oaths O Billiard Room O Ping Pong O Foos Ball O Sunday morning Continental breakfast O TV Lounge O Hourly Bus transportation to UNC; Special service to sporting events, and shopping centers. 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WASHINGTON Defying warnings that he risked both impeachment and contempt of court, President NLxon refused M onday to comply with subpoenas issued by a House committee for tapes and by a judge for criminal evidence. Acting through aides while a plane carried him abroad on a mission he hoped would offset his deepening troubles at home, the President: Refused to surrender 45 subpoenaed tapes on post-Watergate conversations despite the House Judiciary Committee's warnings that further defiance of its subpoenas "might constitute grounds for impeachment. Told U.S. District Judge Gerhard Senate approves missile WASHINGTON After a rare secret session Monday, the Senate refused to stop the Pentagon from developing a "silo killer" missile warhead. Sen. Thomas J. Mclnty re, D-N.H., forced the secret session so he could quote classified documents in an effort to prove American missiles were already so accurate that any improvement could lead the Russians to believe the United S tates was seeking a "first strike" capability. Guards locked and blocked the doors to the Senate chamber after Mclntyre, chairman of the armed services research subcommittee, strode in carrying a fat file from which protruded Defense Department documents stamped "Secret" in large red letters. Mclntyre argued that more accurate American missiles make the Soviet 1CBM force more vulnerable and this "gives the Soviets an incentive to strike first" in a crisis. KB mi Slllfiail SPECIALS LUNCHEON SPECIALS 11:45-2:30 Mon.-Fri. . Mon. Roast Beef Platter. Turnip Greens, Boiled Potatoes, fresh tossed salad, hot soup, buttered rolls. With soud & salad $1.50 Without $1.17 Tues.: 14 Bar-B-Q Chicken, Peas, Macaroni w Cheese, fresh tossed salad, hot soup, rol!s! With soup 8 salad$1.50 Without $1.17 Wed.: Chopped Sirloin wZoom ' Potatoes, Cabbage, fresh tossed salad, hot soup, rolls. With soup & salad $1.50 Without f$ 1,1 7 Thurs.: Veal Parmigiana wSpaghetti. fresh tossed salad, hot soup, buttered rolls. $1.50 Fri.: 1) Hot Pastrami on Rye 2) Fish Filet w two vegetables, fresh tossed salad, hot soup, buttered rolls. 3) Shrimp Salad Bowl, Hot souo & crackers. M JFO LI, EARLY BIRD SPECIALS 4:45-7:00 p.m. Tuesday Spaghetti All You Can Eat $1.55 Wednesday 12 Bar-B-Que Chicken French Fries, Tossed Salad, Bread $1.60 Thursday Pizza Plain Or Pepperoni 12 Price Monday Chopped Sirloin Two Vegetables, Tossed Salad, Bread $1.55 Gesell that he would not turn over all documents subpoenaed by the judge on behalf of John D. Ehrlichman, who wanted them for his defense in the forthcoming conspiracy trial which grew out of the Ellsberg break-in. Nixon also told U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica that a portion of a Sept. 15, 1972 tape should not be turned over to a grand jury investigating alleged White House attempts to use the Internal Revenue Service for political purposes. Sirica originally said 17'2 minutes of the tape, which was first subpoenaed by Archibald Cox and surrendered last November, was unrelated to Watergate. But on Friday Sirica said he was mistaken and he would give the prosecutors that portion of the tape. In each case, NLxon invoked executive privilege, the doctrine that a President has an unalterable right to keep certain confidential documents secret. In the House, Rep. Robert McClory, R 111., a member of the House Judiciary Committee, said he was expecting to introduce a resolution on the floor Tuesday that would direct Nixon to surrender all 98 tapes subpoenaed by the committee so far. Such a resolution could be voted upon within a week and "could lay the basis" of a House vote to hold the President in contempt of Congress, McClory said. 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