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The Daily Tar Heel
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WASHINGTON-Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird said Friday the United
States would remain in Vietnam until
VS. prisoners of war are freed.
"Viet namizat ion cannot be completed
as far as I'm concerned until these
prisoners are freed," Laird told the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Laird testified on a proposal to pump
$255 million in foreign aid into
Cambodia, acknowledging that "a
commitment haa aircady been made to
Vietnam's embattled neighbor. But most
of the two-hour hearing was devoted to
the prisoner-of-war issue and the abortive
Nov. 21 commando mission to rescue
some of them from a camp neaf Hanoi.
Laird denied Chairman J. William
Fulbright's charge that the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) had not been
consulted about the issue. He bitterly
assailed Fulbright for spreading
Blast injures 45,
jars NY. mayor
NEW YORK-An explosion destroyed
a safe building opposite historic City Hall
Friday, injuring most of the 50
lunch-hour patrons and jarring the office
of Mayor John V. Lindsay.
First police reports said at least 45
persons were injured in the blast, 10 of
them seriously.
The mayor jumped from his desk and
ran to the scene. The explosion caused a
massive traffic jam that made it difficult
for firefighfing equipment and
ambulances to move in.
The blast at Ryan's Cafe on Park Row
sent patrons reeling into the street where
they collapsed covered with blood.
Ambulances from nearby
Beekman-Downtown Hospital raced to
the scene to aid the injured.
The entire front of the building was
blown away and the street was covered
with shattered glass. , '
The explosion set the cafe on fire and
flames 30 feet into the air from the
two-story building. Three alarms were
issued for firefighters and equipment!
People fled from adjoining buildings in
panic.
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"innuendo"' that the administration knew
in advance no prisoners would be found.
It was left to Sen. Claiborne Pell,
D-R.L, to raise the question about overall
policy regarding the prisoners. He
reasoned that, since the Vietnamization
program is the alternative to a negotiated "
settlement, he could not see how it would
ever lead to the release of prisoners-since
Hanoi refuses to let them go until the
fighting ends.
"This is one of the major concerns we
have," Laird said. "The Vietnamization
program cannot be completed as far as
I'm concerned until these prisoners are
freed." He said if other opportunities
present themselves for rescue missions, "I
will approve them again."
Laird, who was late for a luncheon
engagement, declined to talk afterwards
about how large a force would be left in
Vietnam while the prisoners are there.
Fulbright earlier said that CIA
Director Richard Helms told him his :
agency was not even consulted prior to -the
Nov. 21 raid on the Son Tay prison -camp,
21 miles from Hanoi.
"I don't believe that can quite be the
case," Laird said.
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MOSCOW-The Soviet Government
Friday canceled a scheduled U.S. tour of
the Boishoi theater and threatened to
break off cultural relations with the
United States in retaliation for "Zionist
provocations."
The decision to cancel U.S.
appearances of the famed opera and
ballet company was personally delivered
to U.S. Ambassador Jacob E. Beam by
earned to UN
WASHINGTON-President Nixon
Friday nominated George H.W. Bush of
Texas, who gave up a safe House seat u
with Nixon's support to make an
unsuccessful bid for the Senate, to be .?
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, f
Nixon introduced Bush, a 46-year-old r
1969, to serve
in the United
retirement in January,
with "ereat distinction'
Nations.
c : Nixon's first choice for the job was
..Daniel P. Moynihan, a White House
r counselor and top urban affairs adviser,
who declined the offer and decided to
.return to Harvard University. Moynihan
Massachusetts native turned oil
millionaire, to White House newsmen as a;;,' was reported to have felt badly about a
man with "enormous interest in the . tnews leak of the offer and Yost's
United Nations." j suspected embarrassment.
Pending Senate confirmation early-.; ri The President himself said Friday that
next vear. Bush would succeed Charles W. -. after Yost had made it known last
Yost, a career foreign service
officer who the President said had left
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summer that he wanted to leave the
United Nations at the end of the current
t- i a 1.1.. . i .u..i. l-:
consultations about a successor were "off
the record."
Nixon told Bush he would have "big
, 7 shoes to fill, but I'm sure you will meet
' f. the challenge."
v Bush, a Republican congressman since
J 1967, said he was facing "a great and
awesome responsibility."
Bush's father, Prescott Bush, was a
Republican senator from Connecticut.
First Deputy Foreign Minister Vasili V.
Kuznetzov in a Foreign Ministry
interview. Kuzenetzov gave Beam a note
that accused American authorities of
failing to take necessary measures to halt
the "criminal acts of Zionists, thereby
encouraging them."
The newspaper Izvestia said Kuznetzov
protested "the various provocations
perpetrated by Zionist extremists against
Soviet institutions in the United States
and against artistic groups sent to the
United States pursuant to the
inter-governmental cultural exchange
agreement."
Kuznetzov presumable referred to
demonstrations against Russian
performers in the United States and
attacks on installations by members of
the Jewish Defense League of America.
The small Jewish organization has raided
the U.S. offices of Soviet agencies such as
the Tass News bureau and Intourist, the
Soviet travel agency.
These acts, Kuznetzov said, "not only
create obstacles for the Soviet institutions
in America in the fulfillment of their
functions and threaten the break-up of
activities connected with cultural
exchanges, but threaten the personal
security of Soviet citizens."
Izvestia said Kuznetzov also told Beam
that despite repeated Soviet protests U.S.
authorities have not taken steps to curb
"continuing sallies of the unrestrained
Zionists."
The Boishoi was to have toured the
United States in the spring of 1971 with
its company of several hundred singers,
actors, dancers and musicians, many of
whom are world famous.
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At your wit's end because of those folks who have every thin
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WASHINGTON --A trains rUcU a -ram
wr IVp-jrfiruTtf
ISid the civunJttork
cptscd hjv would rcsi.-'t in ajrcw'mcnt
avert tr.; another strike threat Mareh 1.
"There u ne specific agreement vi
issues today, but the tenor of the nee tin?
was tfxodlent." Assistant LiNr Secretary
WJ. Vty Jr. sa!wl after an hour-Kv
meet in 2 with re presonla fives ot rait
management and four unions.
i hope that e can reach j untjry
airreer.unt. 1 don't thtr.k either party
wants to go back to what they went
through these last few days. In that cne,
I think you can say the strike has turnevl
out to tv a plus."
I'sery said the negotiators will deciuV
early next week when to resume serious
bargaining in their dispute over wages and
work rules change that led to an IS4iour
union walkout shutting down the I'.S.
railroad system for the third time smee
World War II.
At Friday's meeting at the National
Railway Labor Conference
management's negotiation
headquarters-was C.L. Dennis, president
of the holdout Brotherhood of Railway
and Airline Clerks who ordered his men
back to work Thursday night under
pressure from congress and the federal
courts.
Dennis said he would respect the
congressional order of a strike delay until
March 1 as long as there was progress in
the new talks. Usery said the "attitude
and spirit was good on both sides" at the
initial session, and that "the parties are
willing to work together to overcome the
past and reach agreement."
By midafternoon, a spokesman for the
Association of Railroads said operations
had been resumed on all lines. The U.S.
postal service ordered its regional centers
wherever possible to lift an embargo on
movement on all but first class and air
mail beyond 300 miles.
Many industries, however, will feel the
pinch of the brief strike for several days,
as shipments arrive late or damaged by
the delay in transit.
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CONCERNED COLLEGIANS
AGAINST ABORTION ABUSE
Due to the difficulties people are experiencing in trying to obtain a legal abortion
many profit making ventures have been founded to act as booking agents. These
groups charge substantially for these services and naturally this results in higher
costs to the patient. Often these services are mail order houses or travel agencies
with no medical staff.
As a public service we list the following out-patient clinics, staffed by licensed
OB GYN personnel and meeting all medical guidelines issued by N.Y.S.
To obtain an abortion a patient need only call any of the following listed facilities
and speak directly to personnel able to give pertinent information with regard to
that clinic. IN HO CASE SHOULD YOU SEND ANY MONEY IN ADVANCE IT
IS NOT NECESSARY.
MICHAEL BERGMAN CLINIC
Irving Place
New York, New York
(212)989-3707
10 weeks - $100 - $1 50
WRITE OR CALL
MONSEY MEDICAL CENTER
29 Main Street
Monsey, New York
(314) 356-6437
10 weeks $200
NEW YORK INFIRMARY
321 East 15:h Street
New York, New York
(212) CA E-EO0O
10 weeks $200
If you would like to assist us in our work call
(212) LO 2S726
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