O 7 ,T1. H 4im liih ATI i n v( (TT) i Nun E v v 5 1 1 M fill ill )j ! I f t) J I I ! . Anwar Sadat r 1 mmmm,mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmamammmmimm xiUfi?' afar .-2IM v liiilLiUuliLilJ from th wires of United Press International Counsel Buzhardt suffers coronary WASHINGTON White House counsel J. Fred Buzhardt, who has been responsible for a large portion of President Nixon's Watergate legal defense, was hospitalized in serious condition early Thursday after suffering an apparent heart attack. Cuzhardt, 50, was admitted to Fairfax Hospital in suburban Falls Church, Va., at 1223 a.m. EDT with severe chest pains. Although there was no firm prognosis, a spokesman characterized it as a "mild coronary." The White House said that Nixon, currently In Egypt on the first leg of his Middle C3t tour; wss informed of Duzhardt's IHness end asked to be alerted to his progress. "Doctors list hb condition as serious but stable and he i3 resting comfortably," a White House statement said. Duzhardt, a tall, mild mannered lawyer from Greenwood, S.C., was stricken at his home in Fairfax, Va., about 15 miles outside of Washington. Regarded as the No. 2 msn on Nixon's defense team, he had been maintaining what sources described as an "horrendous schedule" In recent weeks. Senate approves ceiling on spending WASHINGTON The Senate overwhelmingly approved legislation Thursday to put a $225 billion celling on federal spending In fiscal 1S75, The proposal, offered by Sen. William Proxmlre, D-Wls., would cut $10 billion from the administration's budget The vote was 74 to 12. The ceiling was attached as a rider to a bill which would Increase federal Insurance on deposits in banks, saving and loans institutions, and credit unions from $20,CC0 to $25,CC3. The vote on final passage was S3 to 0. The Senate also adopted by voice vote another rider which would prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex or marital status in granting of credit. The same measure passed the Senate previously but failed to get House approval. Negotiations to recover lUIAs fail SAIGON Negotiations to recover bodies of 1,100 American servicemen missing in action in Indochina resumed Thursday after a two-week break but failed to get off the ground because of a technicality. "The Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese wanted a signed document that they be considered as a diplomatic delegation" South Vietnamese Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien said. "This is nonsense. We have restored diplomatic privileges to them already." North Vietnam has so far allowed recovery of 23 bodies of Americans who were killed in air raids or died in prison camps. The fate of 1 ,100 others missing In action is unknown, although American officials hold out little hope that any of them are alive: Former assistant sues Kissinger WASHINGTON A former special assistant to Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger has filed a suit against his ex-boss, President Nixon and the telephone company for illegally wiretapping his phone. William A.K. Lake, who was a member of the National Security Council staff from June, 1229 to June, 1970, is the second former Kissinger aide to file a suit against the government for snooping. He was one of Kissinger's subordinates whose calls were monitored as one of the 17 so-called national security wiretaps conducted without court approval. He and another former staff member, Richard M. Moose, the council's staff secretary, filed suit in U.S. District Court Wednesday, but Moose later withdrew the second suit because he had Joined the staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. by Ellen Horowitz Staff Writer Chapel Hill and Carrboro rejected two separate UNC requests this week for zoning exceptions to permit non-residential use of University-owned land in residential neighborhoods. University spokesmen have indicated they will look for alternative sites for the proposed facilities. The Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen Monday unanimously rejected a UNC plan to use the house at 425 W. Cameron Ave. as office space for the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Center. The town Planning Board recommended the denial, based on citizen testimony that the proposed ( offices would damage the residential character of the neighborhood and endanger Weather Partly cloudy today through fcn?;M wIUi hl-hs In the 7C3. The cft-nce of rein Is 23 per cent through CiturJ-y end the humidity is 43 per cent. C 2sch weather outlook Is for highs in the CCs aH weekend wI'Ji a chance of shov.'-rs through Csiurdsy. ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (UPI) M illions of cheering Egyptians again poured out to welcome President Nixon Thursday as he whistle-stopped up the Nile valley on a triumphal trip to the city of Alexander the Great. There he hosted President Anwar Sadat at an all-American dinner served by U.S. sailors. Crowds estimated by Egyptian security officials at 3.5 million rode camels, donkeys and came by foot to wave flags, cheer, and give Nixon a second welcome similar to the Cairo arrival which he called the most memorable of his life. Related story, Pg. 2 Nixon, describing himself as "overwhelmed" by the turnout, rode with Sadat on the back platform, his head turning from side to side in amazement as the crowds continued to grow. He continually waved and smiled, and frequently threw both arms upward with his fingers forming the "V" sign so familiar to U.S. voters. At times he seemed almost dazed, like a proton einni nearby property values. The house is one of several University properties on Cameron Avenue between campus and the University power plant. The school is apparently considering additional land acquisition in the area, according to a state real estate official appraising a lot there Monday. Claiborne S. Jones, assistant to the chancellor, said Wednesday there were no further University plans for expansion in the Cameron Avenue neighborhood. "We will just have to look elsewhere for an office site," he said. The Carrboro Planning Board voted 5-2. Tuesday to recommend denial of a conditional use permit requested by University Service Plants, which seeks to construct an electrical substation on a UNC owned tract in the James Street area. Carrboro residents at the Planning Board hearing claimed the substation would be noisy and unsightly, and that the vacant lot provided needed open space in the area. The electrical distribution substation would reduce voltage on main power lines so that its power could be utilized by residential customers. The James Street site was the University's choice, based on the technical and economic considerations of power distribution, according to William S. Billingsley, Superintendent of the University Service Plants. man in a trance. The chant "Nix -on. Nix -on" followed him everywhere he went, and at times even drowned out the clatter of the train. He and his aides had counted on a warm reception abroad to give the President a boost in his continuing woes with the impeachment investigation, the court trials and the economic ills besetting him at home. But they could not have visualized the kind of spectacle now unfolding in the ancient land of the Pharoahs. The throng in Cairo Wednesday was estimated at two million, and by all gauges Thursday's was larger. "It's unbelievable," Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said. "My God, it's really unbelievable." At Alexandria, more thousands filled the sidewalks and overflowed into the streets. There, for the first time, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger got his own separate cheer from the crowd which remembered him from his efforts to disengage Arab and Israeli armies. The two Presidents held another private Vol. 81, No. 8 liCDim by Ellen Horowitz Staff Writer The framed portrait of Dag Hammerskjold was taken down from the wall, the stacks of foreign newspapers and magazines were bundled and carted off, and the bulletin board stripped of all its posters -and announcements: "Study Portuguese. Check out Czech. Come to Washington with the Foreign Students Association. Please return the card with your passport status." The International Student Center was evicted. The six rooms on the first floor of Carr Building, which had served the International Student Center (ISC) for years as offices, lounges and meeting rooms, was usurped Thursday by the Department of University Housing, to consolidate its offices now scattered in Bynum, Spencer and Steele Buildings. Local policeman acquitted Manley Dawson, the Chapel Hill police officer charged with assaulting the boyfriend of Alderman Sid Rancer's daughter, was declared not guilty yesterday by Judge C.C. Cates. Dawson, who was suspended from the police force when the assault case was filed, will be reinstated pending a hearing by his superiors. Kenneth Ashworth of Brevard, the young man who filed the suit, testified that on the night of May 9, Dawson hit him five times on the face with a flashlight for resisting arrest. Dawson denied the charge, saying he struck Ashworth only once after Ashworth used profanity and punched him in the chest. Dawson's testimony was corroborated by three of his fellow policemen. Ashworth testified that he was in the passenger seat of Miss Rancer's van and they were driving down Hillsborough .y. by Sandra Millers Staff Writer DURHAM Multimillionaire Edwin C. Whitehead of Tarrytown, N.Y. announced Thursday that he will establish a multi-million dollar biomedical research institute on the campus of Duke University. Whitehead is chairman of the board of directors and major stockholder of the Technicon Corporation of Tarrytown, a medical supply manufacturer. Whitehead emphasized that the institute will be purpose-oriented with the long-range goal of reaching "the definitive solution to a major problem area in medicine." He said no specific area of research has been chosen yet, but that the areas of neurobiology, genetics, aging and. cardiovascular research are being considered. Whitehead said research will begin in one area and hopefully expand to three areas. To be known as the Whitehead Institute for Medical Research, the center will be affiliated with Duke University Hospital and the Duke School of Medicine, providing co operation among the organizations. The research center, however, will be an independent institute with its own board of directors. Whitehead will provide funds for an annual Operating budget of $ 1 million as meeting which White House press secretary Ronald Ziegler called "very productive," before the American state dinner. Sailors from the helicopter carrier U.S.S. Inchon served the 69 guests, including a number of U.S. businessmen. The U.S. Air Force Strolling Strings, a violin group which regularly plays during dessert at White House dinners, was flown to Egypt to entertain. The menu included Alaskan snow crab, prime sirloin of American beef and California wine, all flown in for the occasion. Shortly after their arrival in Alexandria and buoyed by the joyous outpouring of an estimated 3.5 million cheering Arabs along the way. President and Mrs. Nixon and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger helicoptered to the Maamoura rest house where Sadat is staying. Mrs. Sadat provided a full table of Egyptian delicacies which Kissinger quipped had "put five pounds on me" during a previous trip. In an after-dinner toast at the ancient palace of Ras El Tin, Nixon promised to do 1 I II II 1 13 I III Wet SV S 82nd Year Of Editorial Freedom Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Friday, June 14, 1974 mxi And the ISC was relocated temporarily in two small rooms on the third floor of Bynum Hall. "There is no doubt about it this will definitely hurt our foreign student program at UNC," International Student Advisor Marylou Foley said Thursday. "We think this is much more serious than what happened to 2nd floor Winston," ISC President Eddie Furr insisted. "They at least were able to maintain the essence of their experimental program, but we seem to be losing everything." The loss of physical facilities and the occupation of part of their dorm by office workers are only a small part of the damage done the ISC program, according to Furr. "Next year we'll have a case of the blind leading the blind in Carr," he said. "Foreign students in the U.S. for the first time will be placed with freshmen as roommates, who can't possibly provide the help foreign well as future capital for the construction of facilities for the institute and further endowments as needed. In expressing appreciation to the. Whiteheads for the endowment, Duke President Terry Sanford said, "This is a major commitment for a tremendous undertaking and we are delighted to be a part of something which will be of such service to humanity." Whitehead and his advisors, headed by Dr. James A. Shannon, former director of the National Institute of Health, searched for more than a year before selecting Duke as the site for the research center. "Duke is the ideal environment for the institute," Whitehead said. Whitehead said he hopes a director will be chosen by fall so that a program area can be decided and research can begin within the next year. Duke will provide temporary facilities for the institute. Duke's vice president for health affairs, Dr. William G. Anlyan, also thanked Whitehead and commented on the potential significance of the research center. "With the institute located on the same campus as a hospital and medical school, the fruits of its research can be transferred as quickly as possible to better patient care, not only in this community but in the nation and the world," he said. his best to see that Americans demonstrated the sam; affection as shown him by the Egyptians. "We cannot match the antiquities we have seen here," he told his Egyptian counterpart, "but I can assure you we will do our best to demonstrate to you as you have demonstrated to us the American people in their hearts have nothing but the greatest affection for the people of Egypt." Then the two Presidents met for 90 minutes to work on a joint communique. "They had another very productive meeting," Ziegler said later. "The President feels his conversations are most worthwhile and productive." Kissinger said later the latest Palestinian attack in which four Palestinian guerrillas and three Israeli women were killed "would not harm" the rest of the President's "journey for peace" to the Middle East. Nixon was again exuberant from the "overwhelming" display of warmth and affection from villagers and peasants all alongthe Nile Valley. ' 1 ... G students need with orientation and adjustment to a new culture. "Besides, most of the foreign students at UNC are graduate students, and they shouldn't be stuck in with freshman roommates." Dean of Student Affairs Donald Boulton said Thursday that "of course, assigning freshmen to Carr is a step backwards. But it's only a temporary step, until the general housing problem on campus can be met. "Eventually, we hope to take three steps forward and meet our commitment to a really solid and expanded ISC program." "All we ever hear from Dean Boulton is talk about long-range promises. Master 5 Year Plans, things like that," Furr said. "Meanwhile, they're dismantling everything the ISC is. trying to do, everything that makes us special." Carr, the smallest dorm on campus, will house 50 students next year, including 1 8 Street. "Miss Rancer and I had a little spat, and I got out of the moving van. A few seconds later, a police officer stopped Miss Rancer's van, so I decided to find out what was going on. The officer Mr. Dawson and Miss Rancerwere havinga conversation about her identification. When I asked, 'What seems to be the problem?' Officer Dawson told me to 'keep moving down the street.' I refused and he asked for an identification. I wanted to know why and he told me I was under arrest for public drunkenness. Another policeman came onto the scene. All of a sudden, Dawson grabbed me. " 'Hold on just a second,' I shouted, 'I'm not drunk.' The other officer took hold of my right arm and Dawson hit me five times in the face with a flashlight. I was struck so many times, I fell on the ground. ". . . When they finally took me to the hospital, I was treated for three scalp wounds, two of which required three stttches each." v.yv 5 - Terry Sanford (right) introduces Richard M. Nixon Founded February 23, 1893 returning Americans who lived there last year and 1 1 American freshmen. The remaining spaces will be reserved until July 15 for foreign students who have signed contracts and paid rental deposits. But after that date, the spaces could be filled with Americans assigned to Carr by the Housing Department. Furr stressed the provision of a "supportive atmosphere" for foreign newcomers as one of the ISC's more serious roles, and claimed the new University policies were interfering with that function. "Since 1972, three foreign students at UNC have committed suicide," he said. "It's no good when foreign students have to be isolated off-campus or down at Craige, and our Center at Carr was a real focus for foreign students. By taking away our lounge and other facilities, they're completely defeating this purpose." "We submitted five pages of detailed memoranda about ISC needs and goals to the Housing Department," Furr claimed. "But they were like a brick wall. They'd already made their decisions in private, and we were still thinking they were commitfd to a strong program here." Boulton said the ISC would have additional office space in the basement of Bynum next fall. Furr said the ISC had been promised "maybe we'd have some space in the basement. But they keep telling us one thing and then doing just the opposite," He cited a March 6 memorandum from Dr. James Condie, . director of housing, pledging a commitment to develop an ISC program with "no place to place people (in Carr) who have not been interviewed by the (ISC) committee." A March 20 Housing Department memorandum outlining next year's program modified this stand. It said. "Carr will definitely have freshmen living within the hall. A minimum number of eleven freshmen is being considered currently." K.. .rv v.vv;-'' Staff photo by BHI Wrnn industrialist Edwin C. Vhitshead J

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view