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October 23, 1970
THE DAilV TAR HEEL
, Pace Five
i
I " ' ! ! UI.I1L II IHU....H.I. III .I,, i, I I I " ' 1
It H
l uiiue iiunt
Clues With
Tarot Deck
SANTA CRUZ, Ca!if.-lo!,Ce stUf!i ,
tune-telling Tarot cards
their search for the mountain mansion
Killers who declared "World War III'' on
those "who misuse the environment "
A typewritten note, predicting the
penalty of death" to others, was found
by Berrien Monday night tucked undr
the windshield of one of Dr Victor M
-Ohta's cars outside his hilltop mansion ' '
Ohta was one of five persons found
murdered Monday night.
Police are searching for three
long-haired young people, one a girl
They are the only suspects.
Police kept the note secret for two
days to avoid further alarming the
Northern California coastal community
which has reported near panic after the
killings.
The note read: "Today World War III
will begin as brought to you by the
people of the universe. From this day
forward anyone and-or company of
persons who misuses the natural
environment or destroys same will suffer
the penalty of death by the people of the
tree universe... Materialism must die or
mankind will."
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Canada Kidnaper
Manhunt Stymied
UAVTn r i .-
' 1 ' ' rvcAL roiice expressing
concern over the four-day silence from
British diplomat James R. Cross and his
FLQ kidnapers, said Thursday their
manhunt had run out of leads.
Not since the British trade
commissioner was seized from his home
Oct. 5 has so long a period passed
without word either from Cross-via
messages in his own handwriting-or
communiques from the Quebec
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CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Chinese pagoda
4-Parent (colloq.)
6 Propagate
11-ln slumber
13-Looked
condescendingly
15Above
16-Toil
18-River in
Italy
19 Exists
21 -Allowance for '
waste "" '
22-Anon
24-Malay canoe
26-Snare
28- Before
29- Weird
31 -Ox of Celebes
33- Symbol for
tellurium
34- ln addition
36-Fee
38-A continent
(abbr.)
40-Projecting tooth
42-Shore birds
45-Number
47Periodsof time
49- Transaction
50- War god
52-Edible fish
54- Sun god
55- Note of scale
56- Shade tree
59-Parent (colloq.)
61-Spanish-
American court
game
63 Man's name
65- Style of
automobile
66- Exclamation
67- Worm
DOWN
1- Greek letter
2- Desire with
eagerness
3- Man's nickname
4- Saucy
5- Separate
6- Clamorous
7 Unit of
Portuguese
currency
8 Lampreys
9-Teutonic deity
10 Expel from
country
12Latin
conjunction
14-Recipient of
gift
17 Girl's name
20-Rail bird
23Fa roe Js la nds w
' "whirlwind "
24-Hebrew letter
25 Is ill
27-lndigent
30Slave
32 Word of
sorrow
35-Rower
37- Falsifier
38- Brand
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Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
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Liberation Front, whose demand for
freedom for 23 "political" prisoners has
been rejected by the government.
"We're getting a bit anxious."
Inspector J. R. M clan eon of the Quebec
provincial police told a reporter.
The last word from Cross-a "to the
authorities" letter-was discovered in a
telephone booth Sunday, about 12 hours
after the strangled body of Quebec Labor
and Immigration Minister Pierre Laporte.
49, was found in an automobile trunk
about a mile from the bungalow where he
had been held hostace for a week.
Scopes Dies
SHREVEPORT, La.-John T. Scopes,
the teacher defendant in the 1925
evolution "Monkey Trial," died of cancer
in a Shreveport hospitai Wednesday night.
He was 75.
Scopes' trial receivJ national
attention, because he was defended by
famed lawyer Clarence Darrow and
prosecuted by three-time presidential
candidate, William Jennings Bryan.
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39 Eagles' nests
41-British
prison
43-South American
animals
44Compass
point
46'Compass
point
48-Laziness
51-Having shoes
53 Reverberation
57- Greek letter
58- Knockout (abbr.)
60-Beast of burden
62-French article
64-Pronoun
I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 jgg
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l'20 lZZZizZZ
24 25 27 53? 28
'xV 222-
29 30 j31 32 33
11 "IZZZII
38 39 41 42 43 44
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55 51 W7 M54 M
33 Z
61 ST 63 64
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Car s ft
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Nixon Actdire
0
Meets With Gromyko
W ASHINGTON -President Njxon
conferred with Soviet Foreign M;n:ler
Andrew Gromyko for : hours ThursJjv
"nelpiul in laying the groundwork tor
improving Soviet-American relations no
chilled over the Middle East.
The importance of those relations in
maintaining world peace will be stressed
by Nixon in his address Friday before the
L'.N. General Assembly in New York.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said.
Despite Gromyko's charges the day
before that the United States was
misrepresenting Soviet actions in Cuba
and the Middle East, the White House
said his lengthy discussions with Nixon
Thursday were '"conducted in a friendly
atmosphere throughout."
The subject of Cuba, and the U.S.
concern that the Russians might be
building a submarine base there, was not
discussed.
Ziegler said without elaboration that
the two discussed European security,
including guarantees of Allied access to
Um Berlin, the M;dd:e t:. V.cinjn;
jnd The Strattfpc Ar:r, L:m;:jtu-n Tj.xv
hich resume in two uc-.-k in Helsinki.
3:5
Ziesrler Jid the version u
for laying the bjs; of !i : proved relations
between the United States and the Sovsct
Union. We also believe the meeting ujs
useful from the standpoint thai it allowed
the President to cie h:s personal and
direct expressions on the subjects
discussed."
A possible summit meeting with Soviet
Premier Alexei Kosvgin at the United
Nations aborted, so Nixon sent word
through diplomatic channels that he
would welcome a chance to talk to
Gromyko. the highest-ranking Soviet
Oi iiCUi
o; ice.
The two conferred for two hour and
15 minutes m Ntxon's Whjtc Houv
office, accompanied by Secrefarv of State
W'lllianj P. Rogers, who escorted
Gronnko here from New York: Pr.
Henry . ksssmger. Nixon's national
security .ittasrs advi;er. Soviet
Ambassador na!ol F. Dobrynm. .md
interpreters.
Then Nixon took Gronnko to has
hideaway office m the adsacent executive
office building for a 15-tr.inufe chat
alone. On tfieir way back to the White
House afterwards, they were preceded by
Ziegler who told newsmen. "There will he
no questions."
Next to Old Book Corner
137 E. Rosemary Street
2
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611 South Cculevtrd Evanstcn, 111. 6C2C2 Tel. 312E69-C330
This week at the
V . Intimate
The
cia
I
Collection
Original works of art by
world-famous artists; etchings,
lithographs and wood engravings by
Picasso, Chagall, Miro, Dali, Buffet
and others. In the Art Gallery,
second floor.
And-
Round 4
of the
Fall
Bargain
Sale
of low-priced
overflow of
reduced to about
The biggest batch
treasure yet! An
handsome books
half the original price! New titles
added in daily!
Come visiting!
The Intimate
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119 E. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill
Open evenings 'til 10
if Career Clothing Is An Important Segment At Milton's
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-ouo ;
1 11
1970. Daily Mirror Nrmspaprrs LU1-""" ' I
TM H I'ul'lisfwrs-Hall Symliratr 1 I
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