Page 6
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Tuesday, Mayjsg;
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1 aUfcs
PARIS (UPD The United
States and North Vietnam
agreed Monday to hold
preliminary Vietnam peace
contacts in the former Nazi
Gestapo headquarters in Paris,
diplomatic sources reported.
The reported agreement was
reached after several days of
wrangling which threatened to
further delay the start of the
discussions tentatively schedul
ed for Friday.
Charge d'Affaires Woodruff
Wallner of the U.S. Embassy
and Mai Van Bo, North Viet
namese general-delegate in
Paris, called separately at the
French Foreign Ministry dur
ing the dav.
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Diplomatic sources said ten
tative agreement was reached
during the conversations to
hold the meetings in the
International Conference
Center, near the Arc de Triovn
phe in the heart of Paris.
Both Wallner and Bo visited
the center at different times
during, the afternoon, then
went back to their missions
to report their findings to their
capitals and await approval
or rejection.
The center, which was built
originally in 1908, is about one
mile from the UJS. Embassy
and about two miles from the
North Vietnamese legation.
The former Hotel Majestic,
the blackest spot in its history
was its preemption by the
feared Gestapo during the Nazi
occupation of France from 1940
to 1944.
It presumably was suggested
by the French over several
frequently mentioned suburban
chateaux because it already
is equipped for international
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While there was no im
mediate official confirmation
that the center had been
selected, police sealed off the
building to all but official
personnel.
Even before the site was
selected, the United States
Committee OK s Tax Increase
WASHINGTON (UPD
House taxwriters, who block
ed President Johnson's propos
ed tax surcharge for nine
months, changed their minds
Monday and approved a
$10 billion income tax in
crease coupled with a $4 billion
spending cut.
The surprise action by the
House Ways and Means Com
mittee could provide the
momentum to speed a com
promise tax increase bill, now
under consideration by House
and Senate negotiators, to
President Johnson for his
signature nine months after
he first proposed it.
The vote was 17 to 6 in
favor of an increase either
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began moving into Paris the
vanguard of its negotiating
team. John O'Brien, deputy
assistant secretary of state for
public affairs, arrived -with a
planeload of equipment and
several aides during the
weekend.
The Hanoi mission said Col.
Ha Van Lau, reported to have
been designated official press
spokesman for North Vietnam.
through Johnson's proposed 10
per cent surcharge or by rais
ing the various tax rates for
both individuals and cor
porations. One of those favoring it was
Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D
Ark., who reversed his role
as the foremost House op
ponent of a tax increase. He
did not immediately explain
has change in thinking.
The committee acted after
tiie President wrote Senate
Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield and Speaker John
W. McCormack, appealing for
a tax increase. Lack of action,
he told them, "would be a
ticket to disaster."
warn V
RECORDS II S
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From Former List Prico
Pulitzer Prizes Awarded
NEW YORK (UPD The
Knight newspapers Monday
were awarded an unprecedent
ed three Putilizer prizes for
journalistic achievement. The
prizes covered editorial
writing, local reporting and
editorial cartooning.
The Pulitzer Prize for fiction
went to author William Styron
for "The Confessions of Nat
Turner," an account of a Ne
gro slave uprising.
The plan adopted by the
committee, written by Rep.
S. Herlong, D-Fla., called for
a tax increase to total $10
billion, either through
Johnson's proposed 10 per cent
tax surcharge or through a
raise in the basic income tax
rates, in the fiscal year begin
ning July 1. Tied to this tax
increase was the stipulation
that federal spending be cut
by $4 billion during the same
period.
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For the 10th time in the
52-year history of the Pulitzer
Prizes, there was no award
given for drama, apparently
reflecting the opinion of the
Pulitzer board feat no outstan
ding play was produced during
1967.
Toshio Sakai, 26, a combat
photographer for United Press
International in Vietnam, won
the award for feature
photography, a new category
introduced this year. Sakai was
cited for the picture "Dreams
of Better Times," showing a
weary GI asleep in the rain
while a buddy keeps watch.
The awards to the Knight
newspaper group went to John
S. Knight, editorial chairman
of the papers, for editorial
writing; the staff of the Detroit
Free Press for coverage of
last summer's riots; and to
Eugene Gray Payne of the
Charlotte N.C. Observer, for
editorial cartooning.
Precedent Set
It was the first time since
the Putlizer Prizes were first
issued in 1917 that one
newspaper organization won
three in the same year.
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George F. Kennan. former
U.S. ambassador to the Soviet
Union and now a professor
at Princeton University, won
his second Pulitzer Prize. He
was cited for biography for
bis book, "Memoirs, 1925-50."
There were these other
journalism awards presented
by the trustees of Columbia
University on recommendation
of the Pulitzer Prize advisory
board:
The Riverside Calif. Press
Enterprises, meritorious public
. service. The paper won
a gold medal for disinterested
and meritorious public service
for an expose of corruption
in the courts in connection
with the handling of estates
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and successful efforts to
punish guilty parties.
J. Anthony Luxas of the
New York Times, local report
ing award for "the social docu
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vestigation of the life and
murder of Linda FitzPatrick."
Miss FitzPatrick, daughter of
a wealthy Connecticut ad
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Aflred Friendly of the
Washington Post, international
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