THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 66-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, August 21, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages Nixon attacks critics; assassin plot reported NEW ORLEANS, La. M-- President Nixon lash- ed out at critics of his Indochina policies yester- day and acknowledged for the first time that he had ordered secret bombing of Cambodia in 1969. The President spoke before the national conven- tion of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) after a planned motorcade through the city was called off because of reports of a possible assassination plot. IN ADDITION to the reported conspiracy, details of which were not disclosed, a federal warrant was issued during the day for a former policeman who allegedly spoke of killing the President. Nixon arrived at the Rivergate Convention Center with- out incident, however, and shook hands with members of a friendly crowd awaiting him outside. Inside, his ring- ing defense of his Indochina and national security policies drew cheers from the auddience of about 4,500. At about the time Nixon departed the city for the Western White House in California, a federal warrant was issued for Edwin Gaudet, a onetime policeman ar- rested three years earlier during Nixon's last visit to the city. THE WARRANT charged that Gaudet "knowingly, will- fully, unlawfully, made a threat to take the life of the President." The warrant said that Gaudet, arrested in 1970 for throwing a burning American flag on Nixon's car, "stated that if he had a gun, he would kill President Nixon and made specific references to doing this during President Nixon's visit to New Orleans on Aug. 20." The motorcade through downtown New Orleans was called off at the advice of the Secret Service, which said it had uncovered a "possible conspiracy to assassinate the President." AT A NEWS conference later in the day, police said they had been investigating the possibility of a plot for about a week. They said Gaudet was not part of the alleged conspiracy. "For about a week we have been working on a report of an attempt to assassinate the President," said Police Supt. Clarence Giarrusso. "As of now, we do not have sufficient evidence to put this in perspective." Consideration was given to calling off the entire appear- ance, the White House said. But the Secret Service did not say it was necessary. The speech to the VFW was Nixon's first public appearance since early July. It fol-- lowed by four days his televised Watergate address in which he urged Americans to join him in moving ahead with the "urgent business of the nation." IN THE VFW ADDRESS, Nixon criticized "unilateral disarmers" in Congress, defended his Vietnam policies and said he would press ahead in the search for lasting world peace. The President said he ordered the secret 1969 air attacks after 40,000 North Vietnamese regulars overran a ten mile wide strip on the Cambodian-South Vietnamese border. "The Communists had made a mockery of the neu- trality of those border regions," he said. "The United States was under no moral obligation to respect the sham." "THERE IS TODAY great anguish and loud protest from the usual critics that this was an attack against tiny Cam- bodia. That is absurd," he said. Nixon said the Cambodian government "did not object See NIXON, Page 5 AP Photos President Nixon barks vehemently at his Indochina policy critics in a New Orleans speech yesterday as nearby demonstrators suggest imprisonment for Nixon and friends.