Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 18, 1970, edition 1 / Page 5
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October 18, 1970 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pa;3 Five Gaeada CoMimiies Crackdown In Face Of More Terrorism i N 0 T7- 1X00 Gainnipaige Drive TETERBORO, N.J.-President Nixon took personal command of the closing Republican campaign drive Saturday, and amid minor rock-throwing and heckling episodes, urged America to answer J a. r aavocaies 01 violence with votes election day. on At Burlington, Vt.-first stop on a . one-day barnstorming tour into four states-a few small rocks were thrown in the direction of the President's party at the airport. None landed close to Nixon and apparently no one was hit. Setting a tempo reminiscent of his own presidential campaign, Nixon flew from Vermont to New Jersey where he hopped by helicopter from Newark to GOP rallies in Teterboro and at Ocean Grove, N.J., with another stop ahead at Lancaster, Pa. After the swing through New Jersey and Pennsylvania, it was on to Wisconsin where Nixon participates in a motorcade ijat Green Bay for Republican senate and -Gubernatorial candidates. The President on his first major 1970 campaign effort, covering 3,000 miles in ; 13 and a half hours, asked his audiences -to give him a new GOP Congress that Duke Planning: Peace Dept. ; DURHAM, N.C.-Duke University has 'instituted an academic course on "The iiProblems and Techniques of Peace" as a "corollary" to the Reserve Officers Training Corps. University President Terry Sanford announced the course in a letter to members of the university community. He said the move toward a Peace ..Department was suggested by Student Government President Hutch Travers last spring. RATHSKELLER LUNCHEON SPECIALS Mon. thru Thurs. Louise's Veg. Soup and BEEFBURGER with tea or coffee $1.19 Nearly bird0 specials MONDAY BBQ Chicken $1.39 TUESDAY Chopped Sirloin . . $l-39 WEDNESDAY Spaghetti wsouce $1.10 THURSDAY Early Bird Steak ... $l-39 p-m. moIj-tues-Vm0 1 Price PLAIN t PSPREflONI Sorry! No Take-Outs. AMBER ALLEY i eadle would support his anti-inflation, efforts for peace, and progressive government. His four state swing was the first of a series in which Nixon is expected to visit as many as 18 to 20 states, using his personal prestige to tip the scales for GOP candidates in the off-year election battles for control of the House and Senate and state government. Nixon will take off again on Monday for two days of barnstorming in six other key states Ohio, North Dakota, Missouri, Tennessee, Indiana and North Carolina. FBI Adds Coeds To Wanted List WASHINGTON The FBI added to its growing most wanted list of fugitives Saturday two coed revolutionaries wanted in the fatal shooting of a policeman during a $26,585 holdup of a Boston bank. The FBI identified the women, both white and 21 years of age, as Susan Edith Saxe, a magna cum laude 1970 graduate of Brandeis University, Waltham, Mass., and later a graduate student there, and Katherine Ann Power, a former Brandeis senior this year. The coeds were said to belong to "a small revolutionary -type organization which, in addition to attacking military and police forces, reportedly advocated violent attacks against established society and robberies to further aims and provide financial contributions to such organizations as the Black Panther Dartv." . .. . , . The - women are charged in federal Trains Collide SEOUL A tram carrying about 600 high school students on an excursion Saturday collided head-on with a freight train inside a tunnel about 55 miles southeast of Seoul. Fourteen persons, including 10 students, were killed and 59 were injured, 41 of them seriously, police reported. It was the second major tragedy this week involving students from Seoul. Forty-five boys died in a train-bus collision on Wednesday. The Intimate proudly presents The Special Collection Original works of art by Picasso, Dufy, Miro, Friedlaender, Chagall, Matisse, Magritte, Buffet, Dali, Vlaminck, Shahn, Kent, Calder, Man Ray, Cocteau, Soyer and others. More than two years in the collecting, this exhibition is now being shown for. the first time. Most pieces signed and framed. The Intimate's continuing show of original etchings, lithographs, woodcuts and serigraphs will also be available for viewing. The entire special collection will be on display through October 31. The Intimate Open daily 10 to 10; Sundays 2 to 10 Second floor. The Intimate Bookshop, Chapel Hill -.-1 c-.-: -x J- -1 MONTREAL-With more than 250 terronst leaders and sympathizers in JjjI. the government Saturday pressed .lts crackdown on the Quebec Liberation Front FLQ which it said had plotted further kidnaps, bombings and assassinations of public officials to back demands for separation of Quebec from Canada. Parliament met in extraordinary Saturday session to debate the controversial abridgement of many of the nation's civil liberties. There still was no word on the fate of British diplomat James R. Cross or Quebec Labor Minister Pierre LaPorte, whose kidnaping by the FLQ plunged the nation into crisis. The police crackdown on the outlawed FLQ appeared to slacken Saturday. No new arrests were reported for several hours and it appeared the government was waiting for word from the kidnapers of Cross and LaPorte of what their next move might be. Invocation of the emergency War Measures Act Friday by Prime Minister Pieire Elliott Trudeau suspended the Canadian Bill of Rights and outlawed the FLQ. It broadened police powers, permitting arrest without specific charges and prisoners to be held without bond. warrants with unlawful interstate flight to avoid prosecution for murder and with theft of government property from a National Guard armory at Newburyport, Mass., on Sept. 20, three days before the bank robbery. With Saturday's additions, the FBI's "10 most wanted list" has grown to 16 persons, including four women. Of the total, at least half of them also including radical Bernardine Dohrn and four young men sought in the Aug. 24 bombing at the University of Wisconsin are wanted in connection with a wave of terrorist activities sweeping the country. Miss Dohrn is a leader of the militant Weatherman which advocates terrorist bombings to further domestic revolution. She was added to the most wanted list earlier this week when Angela Davis, a black, brilliant, self-proclaimed Communist revolutionary, was captured in New York City. MONDAY NIGHT'S SPECIAL 7:30-9:00 p.m. only Eye of Round Steak 2 Veg., Salad, Bread Sl-45 Y I "-t - 4 w s s ' . .Hk, - ciiuuly in Quebec rj.;re were necesjititfj the extreme by information from Quebec provincial officials that the FLQ wjs ready to intensity its terrorism campaign The government said these measures included further kidrupir.zs of p::M;c oilicials. assassinations and stepped-u bombings of public buildings. The government said thousands of sticks of dynamite had been stolen in recent months. leading to its speculation the FLQ had we2ried of its tactics and verr:rrren! Sadat Inaugurated Miii Heavy fighting erupted Saturday in several areas of northern Jordan between Palestinian guerrillas and Jordanian army forces. It was the first report of major clashes since the nine-day civil war in Jordan last month. The fighting flared as Anwar Sadat was sworn in as president of Fgypt to succeed Gamal Abdel Nasser whose foreign and domestic policies he has pledged to follow until Arab territory occupied by Israel in the 1967 War has been recovered. Nasser died Sept. 28 of a heart attack which some sources attributed in part to the fighting between the Palestinian guerrillas and the Jordanian army. UPI correspondent W. G. Kirolos witnessed some of the new fighting near Torra on the border with Syria. He said fighting was still going on when he and other newsmen were ordered to leave during the afternoon because the guerrillas feared the town itself would come under attack. C5 Plane MARIETTA, Ga.-FBI agents and a hastily summoned Air Force board of inquiry labored Saturday to uncover the cause of fire and explosion that killed one man and destroyed the 523-million master model of the C5, the world's largest airplane. Doug Wheeler, C5 program director for Lockhead-Georgia Col, which prqducesthe"C5, said the blasfr could have TPS Jr Ig NOW SHOWING Lf Marvin Jack Palanca Jeanne Moreau A REAL WESTERN GP Technicolor Monty Walsh is what the West is all about S .,;-. m racj t The Latest in Design and Decor 000 ACHES OF FREE PARKING "Avarmovls lUl uuujJiy who hate war movies!" -Rex Reed, Holiday Magazine TEirMsIhi Ddiate Step right up and meet Salvatori's Turkish Tapestry. We've got belts. We've got braces. At fine stores 440 Englewood Ave..S. was prejunr. a nea. mere extreme round of" terrorism to tarn sparamm for French-peakm-g Quebec from the ret of Erdih-re,skirtg Canada lo rack up txis use ot emergency powers -the t:rst tsme the extrem .... j- .. . j, . i. . c a u 2 c u4u I'cca useu in peacetime-Trudeau mohshzed 4.000 federal troops to aid the .000 pohce officers in Quebec province. The police dragnets Friday nabbed 255 FLQ members and caches of weapons. The army troops guarded buildmgs and public J - II II XL Kirolos reported that 50 to 40 tanks were advancing in the area when the newsmen left for Amman. He quoted a guerrilla spokesman as saying the fighting started at daybreak when the army opened fire with tanks, artillery and machine guns. The guerrilla spokesman said the battles raged around Blukos, El Al, Lemghiw and Al-Shajara near the Syrian border. He said the army was attacking Palestinian guerrilla positions. A guerrilla spokesman in Amman earlier had accused Jordan of violating the agreement by holding 1 ,000 captured guerrillas in a secret prison camp in the southern desert. The truce terms had called for the release of all prisoners by both sides. Sadat, 5 1 , vice president under Nasser and acting president since his death of a heart attack on Sept. 28, was nominated by the ruling Arab Socialist Union (ASU), Egypt's only legal political party, and the National Assembly. He was the only Explodes been touched off by a stray spark, or static electricity, but added no specific cause had yet been determined. An FBI spokesman said no sign of sabotage had been found. Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., chief critic of the C5 program, immediately callea fc' the grounding , of all C5s until cause oFthe , explosion has been deterrmnetr.',, sim The Plaza Twin Theatre is located at East Frank lin St. and Elliott Road V1 near Kroger Family Center. Chapel USD Gsorgs C. Sec tt Karl Maldtn & f V rOv s. V "T GP We've got watchstraps. So sensational, theyTl give you the wiggles. everywhere or write: E.,At!on.a. Ga.30315 A OMfn of S-ort Frodwct, Ciruipics no ooroae it L JIT it official in nuor cine in the province, treesng the pol.ce to search for the terrorists and their sympathizers. The FLQ has been silent since its comn.unuu-e Wednesday morn in j which reiterated it demands for the release of 23 political prisoner in Quebec jail. Among those arrested were seerj! well-known names in Quehev. tncfudir.? FLQ !awer RoNcrt Lemvux. Michel Chart rand, the sharp-tongued Montreal labor leader, and smcer Pauline Juhen. 1 candidate in a njtional referendum Friday by ASU members in which he obtained 90.04 per cent of the vote. Speaker labib Shukair opened the assembly session by announcing the official results of the referendum after which Sadat took the oath of office for a full six-year term. The ceremony Was broadcast live to the nation. Before attending the session, Arab sources said Sadat conferred with other Egyptian leaders on matters of policy and on the formation of a new government. He is scheduled to make a major policy statement Sunday. ...-,-WVV.""-VSS..".-AN".,.N.".,.V.V,.,.,.,.,..".".,..".SS, .'.V .w'MMrf.vMAA.... I Classified Lost on W. Franklin St. Sunday Sept. 21, J adult cats - 2 blacks, 1 orange. If inyont has seen them, please call Maggie Dent 929 345 7. Sony 26-0 Taperecordcr, $150. Pair of Scott S-9 wide range speakers, $70. Both $200. 967-4284. For rent: large 2 bedroom furnished trailer with washer. 10 miles from campus. Write P.O. Box 1246 Chapel Hill. Wanted: Waiters or waitresses, full time or part time. Will fit our schedule to yours. Apply in person. HONEY'S, Chapel Hill. Clean up work. Two hours a day. six days a week. Call 9 6 7 -3 8 3 8 In the afternoon. rir- the BACCHAE Below the Zoom Zoom Entrance: Behind Zoom off Columbia St. Monday thru Saturday 3:00-11:30 p.m. Happy Hour Every Day 3:00-6:00 p.m. 8:00-9:00 p.m. MONDAY Bcked Chicken 2 Vtg.i Stiad $1.19 TUESDAY RosjtBssf 2 Veg., Salad $1.23 WEDNESDAY Bresdsd Ve&l Cutlst . with Vg.-, Sa!d $r.i9 THURSDAY Beaf on a Bun with Veg.. Salad $1.19 FRIDAY Chicken Chow Mein on bed of rica 2 Veg., Salad $1.19 or Shrimp Plata 2 Veg., Salad $1.19 SATURDAY Fist Stcdc 2 Veg.. Salad $1.19 I I 4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 18, 1970, edition 1
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