Tuesday, January 5, 1971
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The Daily Tar Heel
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WASHINGTON -President Nixon
promised Monday night to follow policies
to pep up the sagging economy and
predicted that "1971 will be a good year
and 1972 will be a very good year."
President Nixon also said he did not
intend to resume bombing of strategic
targets in North Vietnam and would
confine retaliatory air strikes to military
targets.
Nixon, in
interview with
a nationally '
four television
televised
network
Terrorists char
io Laporfe
MONTREAL Four suspected
terrorists of the Quebec Liberation Front
(FLQ) were declared "criminally
responsible" for the killing of provincial
Labor Minister Pierre Laporte Monday
and ordered held for trial.
Judge Jacques Trahan handed down
his decision against Paul Rose, 27, his
brother Jacques Rose, 23, Francis
Simard, and Bernard Lortie, 19.
Appearing in the final session of the
inquest Monday morning, Simard and the
Rose brothers-objects of the most
intensive manhunt in Canadian history
until they were captured a week
ago-refused to testify, defiantly
shouting, "long live the FLQ."
But police read into the record a
confession they said was made by Simard,
in which he admitted the three of them
killed Laporte after Lortie had left the
hideaway where they held the labor
minister hostage.
On Oct. 17 "at 5:20 p.m., Jacques,
Paul and me, we strangled him. We used
the chain of his religious medal. We are
responsible, the three of us," the
statement said.
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correspondents, once again warned that if
North Vietnamese troops begin massing
to strike remaining Americans in
Vietnam, he would order U.S. planes to
bomb-"but only in those military targets
and only as necessary."
He said he will not ask Congress for
any new taxes in the coming year, but
said he would propose an unbalanced
budget -he called it an "expansionary
budget"-to try to pump more money
into the economy.
Nixon was closely questioned about
munrder
Before he was killed, Laporte wept in
pain from the cuts inflicted as he tried to
escape through a broken window, and
begged his captors to take him to a
hospital, the statement said.
, According to the statement, Simard
and the Rose brothers, with Lortie,
kidnaped Laporte Oct. 10.
Attacker believes
ged
Only lee
MANILA The first witness in the trial
of Bolivian painter Benjamin Mendoza
told the court Monday he saw Pope Paul
VI struck twice in the chest by a dagger
during the attempt on the pontiff's life
last Nov. 27. He said he was surprised
that the Pope was not wounded.
Mendoza has been charged with
attempted murder in the attack during
the Pope's visit to the Philippines.
;oa!ar!
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111 Jtl
103 E. Franklin St
Chapel Hilt. N. C.
the nation's economic woes continued
inflation and rising unemployment
-during an hour-long live "conversation"
from the White House Library that was
broadcast nationally on radio and
television.
Nixon said his greatest achievement
has been to start the United States "on
the way out" of the Vietnam War and his
greatest disappointment was Congress'
failure to approve his welfare proposals
last year.
Asked to assess the first two years of
his term, Nixon said, "the primary
achievement is in the field of foreign
policy. We now see the end of America's
combat role in Vietnam in sight. . .we're
on the way out, and we're on the way out
in a way that will bring a just peace."
Nixon also cited college violence as
among his greatest disappointments. "I
think the greatest disappointment was in
the terms of the tragedies at Kent State,
Jackson State and the University of
Wisconsin," he said.
Four television network reporters
questioned the President, John
Chancellor of NBC, Eric Sevareid of CBS,
Howard K. Smith of ABC and Nancy
Dickerson of Public Broadcasting Service.
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Mendoza told the newsmen before the
trial opened that he meant to kill Pope
Paul. He said luck, not God, saved the
73-year-old spiritual leader of the Roman
Catholic Church.
Did he feel any remorse, a newsman
asked? "I guess not," Mendoza replied.
Asked how close he got to the Pope in
the attack at the Manila International
Airport, Mendoza said, "I saw his
eyes 80 per cent lies and perhaps 20 per
cent kindness. I was just a short
distance..."
Mendoza, 35, left Bolivia in 1961 to
begin a vagabond life as a surrealist
painter in the United States, Hong Kong,
Japan and finally the Philippines. He
previously had admitted a burning hatred
of religion. .. . ...-.. '. .-.
Mendoza said he lunged twice at the
Pope with a foot-long dagger and believed
he made a "couple of scratches" on the
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A killer winter storm Monday left
thousands of holiday travelers stranded
and whole states all but paralyzed under
knee-deep snows and drifts up to 12 feet
tall along a 1,000-mile belt of the Plains
and Midwest.
The sotrm, which reached blizzard
intensity in many areas, flailed Minnesota
and upper Michigan with high winds and
up to 16 inches of snow before heading
across the upper Great Lakes toward
Canada.
A cold wave swept southeast across
ooe
pontiff's "very thick, very fancy and
expensive" clothing before being
subdued.
The first witness was Jolly Bugarin,
director of the Philippine National
Bureau of Investigation (NBI) who
testified that the attack "was so fast I just
saw the action of a knife striking twice on
the left portion of the breast of the
Pope.". . .
The attack the first serious attempt
on the life of a Roman Catholic pontiff in
modern times came minutes after Pope
Paul came down the ramp of his plane for
the first major stop on his pilgrimage to
Asia and the Pacific.
The opening session of the trial lasted
2 hours with only Bugarin testifying.
Judge Pedro Bautista scheduled the next
session for Jan. 13 or Jan. 18.
If convicted, Mendoza could receive a
maximum sentence of six years
imprisonment.
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Minnesota and Wisconsin toward Illinois
in the wake of the storm. Blizzard
warnings remained up In hard-hit eastern
Iowa. Travelers warnings were in effect
across much of the snow-bogged storm
zone.
Iowa and Nebraska appeared hardest
hi!. In Iowa the storm was described as
the worst in nearly 30 years. Des Moines,
the state capital, was virtually paralyzed.
The Nebraska state patrol asked the
Kansas highway patrol to close all roads
leading into Nebraska because of a
"serious backup of traffic, severe weather
and road conditions." Deep snows
blocked Interstate 80 across Nebraska
and Dodge Street, the main thoroughfare
in Omaha.
The toll of deaths attributed at least in
part to the weather mounted to 20 as
isolated communities began to
re-establish communications with the rest
of the world. Iowa counted 12, Nebraska
4, Kansas 2, and Minnesota and New
Mexico 1 each.
Many of the victims were persons who
succumbed to heart attacks while
shoveling snow or pushing cars in the
snow. Others died of carbon monoxide
poisoning in stalled cars or in accidents
on icy roads.
leacineF lacei
NEW YORK-Mrs. GeneUa Barton
Allison of Hickory, N.C., is one of five
outstanding teachers chosen as finalists to
compete for the i971 National Teacher
of the Year award.
Mrs. Allison, a teacher for 34 years,
teaches journalism and English at
Claremont Central High School. She won
the Terry Sanford Award for creativity
and innovation in education for 1969-70.
300 W. ROSEMARY ST.
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U.N. . 2ip!oKUts conferred at U.N.
htjdquirtm en the resumption of th
aucul MUdls tiit race talfci expected
by midweek.
" In Egypt, Presiisnt Anwar SaJi!
warned of the rvi-ssiMIity of a new war if
the U.N.-supervised talks break down
spin and said "we ire now stronger than
ever before."
Sadat disda$d that- the massive
bufldup of Soviet-made anti-aircraft
missiles along the Suez Canal front cost
Egypt $100 million and stressed his
government would not withdraw then.
Israel withdrew from the talks under the
auspices of U.N. mediator Gur.nar V.
Jarring on Sept. 6 in protest against the
introduction of the new missiles in
violation of the original U.S.-sponsorcd
cease-fire agreement last Aug, 7.
The Egyptian president reiterated the
Cairo government would not agree to
another extension of the cease-fire, now
scheduled to expire on Feb. 5, unless a
timetable for Israeli withdrawal from
occupied Arab territory had been set and
serious progress made towards a peace
settlement.
Israeli officials already have made clear
that extension of the truce is an essential
condition to continuation of the
negotiations. Observers in Tel Aviv said
this is one of the first subjects expected
to come up at the talks which sources at
the United Nations said could reopen
Tuesday or Wednesday.
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
went to New York from Washington
Sunday night for meetings with Jarring
and U.N. Secretary General Thant. He
was accompanied by U.S. Ambassador
Charles W. Yost and Joseph P. Sisco,
Assistant Secretary of State for Near
Eastern Affairs.
Jordan, also a party to the peace talks,
was in the midst of another crisis
involving the Palestinian guerrillas and
there was some confusion over who
would represent King Hussein's
government in New York.
Dr. Craig Phillips, N.C. Superintendent
of Public Instruction, nominated Mrs.
Allison for the honor.
The Teacher of the Year Award, now
in its 20th year, is the world's oldest
national awards project honoring
classroom teachers. It is co-sponsored by
Look Magazine and the Council of Chief
State School Officers in Washington.
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The Daily Tar Heel Is published by
the University of North Carolina Student
Publications Board, daily except Sunday,
examination periods, vacations and
summer periods.
Offices are at the Student Union
building, Univ. of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone
numbers: News, Sports 9 33-101 1,
933-1012; Business, Circulation,
Advertising- 933-1163.
Subscription rates: $10 per year; $5
per semester.
Second class postage paid at U. Post
Office In Chapel Hill, N.C.
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