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Show WORLD BRIEFS wife Joan, boarded an Air Lingus Flight at Dublin Airport, and stopped over briefly, in Shannon Airport, where he waved to newsmen news-men to "drop in and see me back home." He was sped on his way by a crowd of Shannon wellwishers, waving shamrocks and shouting, "Come back again, Ted," and "The Kennedys still live in Ireland." Their shouts drowned jeers and anti-America l"'1 a small band of eftwi s who had dogged t f8y throughout Kenned ! visit to hi, ancestrall y The youths chanted "u Kennedy-U.S. Imperi fj Don t come back Terf p ' 1 Ireland." A strong S?'' he boarded his U.S. bound nL repeatedly in editoriaJs in recent weeks that the government was cooperating with communist elements ele-ments within the newspaper to promote its downfall. The official government newspaper El Peruano repeatedly had printed statements on its front page from communist-controlled unions in Expresso asking that it be turned over to them as a cooperative. Seizure of Expresso, which also publishes an afternoon edition, Extra, was the most drastic action yet taken by the government against the press. Last Dec. 31 and on Feb. 6, the government passed laws giving it more control of the press and limiting the power of publishers. But despite decrees prohibiting stories endangering "state security" secur-ity" or offending the "dignity and honor" of the state or its officials the government had allowed the newspapers to print dozens of critical editorials and columns. SHANNON, IRELAND (UPI)-Sen. (UPI)-Sen. Edward M. Kennedy flew back to Boston Wednesday, cheered cheer-ed off by a shamrock-waving crowd, after a visit to Ireland marked by hostile student outbursts out-bursts and counter-demonstrations by Kennedy supporters. Kennedy, accompanied by his DENVER, (UPI)-Secret Service Agents Wednesday questioned an informant who told police two men had threatened to kill First Lady Pat Nixon. Mrs. Nixon arrived in Colorado as part of her five-state tour of college volunteer projects. She met antiwar protesters face-to-face at Stapleton International Airport in Denver for the first time on her trip. "I don't know where it (the threat) came from," a police dispatcher said. "We're looking for a red Volkswagen supposedly with two white males. Supposedly they had a gun in the car and they were going to kill Mrs. Nixon. But the reception from the 500 persons gathered at the airport was warm. About 35 members of the Antiwar Student Mobilization committee were present. One sign read "Make Noise, Not War" and another said "Killing "Kill-ing For Peace Is Like Raping For Chastity." But the demonstrators were quiet and peaceful. "Mrs. Nixon, are you going to give peace a chance?" asked one youth as the First Lady walked along a roped-off area at the airport, air-port, smiling and shaking hands. The question obviously startled her. He repeated the question and Mrs. Nixon looked squarely at him, her expression tensed and she moved on without saying a word. At another point in the crowd, John Grezulis, a student at Denver Community College, asked Mrs. Nixon whether draft age youths should not "be allowed to join volunteer projects"-such as those she is touring-instead of being drafted. Again she ignored the question. LIMA, PERU (UPI)-Peru's military mil-itary government silenced its most vocal critic Wednesday-The Lima Daily Newspaper Expresso. About 40 government police seized the newspaper building at dawn Wednesday and prevented anyone from entering. The newspaper had charged |