Newspapers / The Tar Heel. / June 21, 1974, edition 1 / Page 2
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- - . - ' .... - , ' i - The Tar Hsel Friday, June 21, 1S74 news from Several problems still remain ME) TX TO H Tl csiii lip iL- nciiD IS n o ' ; ; If if BEIRUT Israel said its warp lanes attacked Arab guerrilla bases in Lebanon Thursday in their biggest air strikes in more than a month. Lebanese reports said the targets included Palestinian refugee camps and "dozens" of civilians were killed. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society the Arab equivalent of the Red Cross said the victims included old people, women and children as well as rescue workers. It appealed for help. Palestinian guerrilla sources said at least IS persons were killed and 45 wounded. There was not immediate report from Lebanese authorities. The Israeli military command said the air strikes were ordered because of increased guerrilla activity in the region. It was the third consecutive day of raids in retaliation for last Thursday's guerrilla attack on the border village of Shamir in which three women were killed. The four guerrillas, who also died in the attack, were identified as members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command which said the attack was "our reaction to President Nixon's visit to the Arab world." A guerrilla spokesman said the Israeli warplane raiders hit and destroyed the Late Show Fri.-Sat. 11:15 CATCH n D u CLiviJJLiisj U MF"9 jfS , 'GM CAMPUS' UMER HOURS 8 a.m. -5 p.m. Monday - Friday The Summer Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Student Pub'lcsllcns Coard twice a week, Tuesdays end Fridays, during the UrIC Summer School sessions. Offices ere et the Student Union building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chupei H;:t, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: Nsws, Sports S33-1 011, S33-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising CS3-1 163. The Summer Tar Keel will not consider eijustments or payments for any typographies! errors cr erroneous iissrt'on ur.:-S3 notice is given to the Cuslness Manzer wlihln (1) one day tl": r tha advertisement eppesrs, or wKhln one day of the receiving of tsar .:.: at3 or subscription of the paper. Th3 Summer Tar Hsel will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement schadu!-3d to run several times. Notice for such correction must be given before the next insertion. 1 : 4' f.f. '""1 IT" nans Front's offices in Rashidiyeh during Thursday's raids. He said they also hit a guerrilla police post at Ain al Helweh. Both were among four targets listed by the Israeli military command which said only military objectives were attacked. The airstrikes extended over a period of 75 minutes, the command said, and were directed at guerrilla bases near the Mediterranean coastal towns of Sidon and Tyre. It said all Israeli planes returned safely to base. The Lebanese Defense Ministry said Lebanese antiaircraft gunners opened fire on the raiders but made no immediate claims of hits. The Palestinian guerrilla news agency WAFA said two Israeli planes were shot down by the guerrilla air defense systems. Israeli military sources said the Israeli planes struck in waves and encountered several Soviet-made SAM 7 shoulder-fired missiles but none of them hit. Guerrilla sources said the Palestinians had equipped camps in the south with the heat-seeking missiles during recent weeks. The missiles are particularly effective against low flying aircraft. n Map mm peace J ERUSALEM Prime M inister Yitzhak Rabin said Thursday Israel cannot enter peace negotiations with the Arab states now. He spoke as Israeli warplanes struck at Palestinian guerrilla bases in southern Lebanon for the third straight day. "The concept of the Arab leaders of what constitutes a political settlement falls very far from what we mean by peace and j NOW SHOWING SHOWS at 1:20-3:15 5:10-7:05 9:00 re - t Still Another Mel Brooks Movie TWELVE CHAIRS Starts Sunday Shows at . 1:20-3:15-5:10 7:05-9:00 jo:j vgichi ( ' j j " PG PANA VISION COLOR BYDCLUXE : w: ... --J4 fJMOfJ COUiJTV HHP - " - i 1 ''Yr ' - T-T- 1 -i 2 Shows Daily 2 and 8 p.m. ji i iciurr !. i . - Ba NOWII ?C v V"" ; J ) 1;, T -i . I r i ,1 . . J.-V-.-V Mel Brooks'? i ;. A n I 3 WASHINGTON President Nixon told congressional leaders Thursday that no agreements have been negotiated in advance of his summit meeting next week with Soviet Party Leader Leonid I. Brezhnev. Nixon, who briefed congressional leaders, the Cabinet and the National Security Council in a day-long series of meetings following his return from the Middle East, also repeated what the Arab leaders told him that a lasting peace in that area of the world still depends on solving the problems of the West Bank, the Palestinian refugees and the Holy City. Abandoning plans to spend a long weekend in Key Biscayne, Fla., the President announced he would stay at the White House or possibly go to his retreat in Camp David, Md., prior to his departure Tuesday Gran WASHINGTON The grand jury considered a "vast amount" of evidence including White House tapes and testimony from witnesses when it named President N ixon as an unindicted co-conspirator in the Watergate cover-up case.Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski said Thursday. Jaworski, in papers filed in the Supreme Court, countered arguments by White House lawyer James D. St. Clair that the grand jury named N ixon only on the basis of one taped conversation on March 21, 1972. Nixon was named an unindicted co conspirator in March by a grand jury that indicted seven of his former aides in the Watergate cover-up. hopes security," Rabin told 500 Jewish leaders at a Jewish Agency gathering here. He said the responsibility for peace rests with the Arabs. "Israel endeavors to continue this gradual progress towards peace which started with the separation of forces between Israel, Egypt and Syria. Even as her fight against the murderers continues, Israel will continue its wholehearted efforts for speeding the peace-making process in our region," Rabin said. But he said the time had not yet come for peace talks. ttailhDbsGt CONDOMS (30 leading brands) FOAM, GELS, CREAMS (our prices are lower!) BEST SELLING BOOKS (on sex & birth control) POSTERS (those hard-to-get ones) BUMPER STICKERS f Franklin & Columbia 4 tV'Wsr (over Zoom-Zoom) Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 10-4 949-0170 WILLIAM C JIA for another round of summitry in Europe and the Soviet Union. He will begin two days of talks Tuesday with NATO heads of state in Brussels and then go to Moscow Thursday. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said Nixon assured the congressional leaders that "no agreements have been entered into" prior to the M oscow summit. He added that the Pjesident "hopes to make progress toward agreements later" and will "discuss these matters at the summit." These assurances apparently were designed to allay fears raised Wednesday by Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., who accused Nixon of arranging agreements in advance of the trip without telling Congress. Jackson and other congressmen also have rv: evidence Jaworski made the comments in a brief opposing St. Clair's attempt to obtain all grand jury material relating to Nixon's role in the cover-up. St. Clair's motion is part of the forthcoming Supreme Court battle over whether Jaworskfs subpoenas of further White House tapes can be enforced. "The President's present contention seems based on an attack upon the significance of one tape-recorded conversation he was ordered ' to produce," Jaworski said. "Of course, the grand jury's decision was not based on any particular item, and . . . the grand jury transmitted to the House Judiciary Committee a vast amount of evidence it considered 'material to the "Obviously, we can wish for nothing better than to move forward to negotiations that will lead to peace and security. But, regrettably, there are signs that this is not possible at the present time. "If Egypt and Syria will concentrate their efforts on reconstruction and peaceful development, the message will not be lost on us. The onus is on them." Rabin said the Arabs had told Israel through declarations that they are intent on mobilizing all resources to impose their will on Israel. "We have got the message," he said. If you're pregnant and scared, we can help. There is an alternative to abortion. BIRTHCHOICE. Birthchoice can help, you from the moment you think you're pregnant until well after the birth of your child. Were here to give you confidential help. Call us today. BIRTHCHOICE 942-3030 (from Durham WX 3030 toll free) 7 p.m.-10-.m. Monday-Friday 2:20 4:00 5:40 Through Tuesday 7:20 9:00 A 1 . .j " HU mimi WJ ii III I ' Il n I I llll I .mummm IMWW-IW.,. , r . 'frrr m H" "I.I II ll ll III 'Tpj- 1 f ... : v STARRING SHATTER RUTH ROr.lAN criticized Nixon for plunging into foreign diplomacy at a time when his leadership at home has been threatened by the possibility of impeachment. But Rep. Les Arends, R-I1L, told reporters after the briefing that the results of the M iddle East tour "should put to rest once and for all the question of whether the President is leading the nation or not. Arends said the mood of the briefing was "very good" and Nixon "was very convincing." Assistant Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd said Nixon indicated he hoped to make some progress in Moscow toward an eventual agreement limiting strategic arms, bu t d id not expect a full pact to emerge from the summit. Brezhnev has said however that he would be willing to negotiate a ban 'vast9 President's role in Watergate. "That decision to name Nixon as an unindicted co-conspirator was reached by a randomly selected panel of citizens." GSA of data 'Ib&nnk network WASHINGTON The head of the General Services Administration denied Thursday that his agency secretly tried to set up a government-wide computerized data bank network. Arthur F. Sampson said the computer project his agency planned was far less ambitious and has since been "drastically" curtailed because of widespread fears thatjt represented a threat to individual privacy. Sampson told the Senate constitutional rights subcommittee that its report, which charged that GSA tried to hide the computer project from Congress, was "simply not true." Citing several instances in which GSA publicly discussed the project in reports, letters and congressional testimony, Sampson said if the computer program "was a secret, it was the worst kept secret in government" CAMS IN ST Ao COPY THE KIND OF SERVICE YOU NEED AT A TIME LIKE THIS!!! Service while you wait Quality work guaranteed Overnight rush service for large orders Sorting and Stapling m 3 hole punched paper (no extra charge) Colored paper and legal paper Transparencies 5C-2C IWSTACOPY 929-0170 Franklin t Columbia St. 9-6 Mon.-Fri. 'over the Zorrn 4 J A C C "T'""'i'".is Li ! J x X I . J r-ra i b I PS I I h 1 I I on underground nuclear testing. Both Mansfield and Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott said the President continued to warn that it will not be easy to achieve a lasting peace in the Middle East. Mansfield said "he emphasized that while great progress has been made in the first two steps, the more difficult lie ahead the West Bank, the Palestinian refugees and the Holy City." Repeating what Nixon was told in Egypt, Saudi Arabia. Syria and Jordan. Scott said the question of Palestinian refugees is "one of the greatest problems..." But he added that what Nixon's Middle East trip "was all about" was that"both sides concluded they could not reach their objectives through war." Scott and Mansfield both said that Nixon assured them there were ample safeguards written into the agreements prov iding Egypt and Israel with nuclear power plants safeguards limiting the use of nuclear power for peaceful purposes. But Byrd added: "I sometimes wonder why we provide these nuclear reactors which are for the purpose of developing peaceful uses of atomic when we ourselves have not been very successful in this area." The subcommittee report on "Federal Data Banks and Constitutional Rights" charged that GSA was"preparing to set up a massive computerized data bank known as FEDNET" in mid-1972. But Sampson said the "New Equipment Project" involved only GSA the government's chief procurement and building services agency and the Agriculture Department. Its aim was to pool the use of computer services between the agencies and thus "get the most for the taxpayers' dollars," he said. Sampson said he found "the concerns so deep and the misunderstandings ... so widespread that we decided to drastically curtail the procurement" of the computer systems. He said that if Congress does not approve legislation imposing guidelines on the use and purposes of government data systems. GSA would not proceed with its project. r -' " ' voe the G0PJ2PLETE iTUBERSTT Su "ON CAMPUS" SUMMER HOURS: 0 a.m. -5 p.m. Closed Saturday i I MOVVr,-3:1 55:1 57:1 r-n-t1 Rn 1
June 21, 1974, edition 1
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