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The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 22

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 i wi "wuiiwtii i a nuvtf Woof Spviet leadership calls for fight against rising crime, corruption Angefet Timet Service The new Soviet mm a mwimmmw, is steadily decreasing in the Soviet Union under the Communist Party's guidance. On the contrary, Pravda said that letters from Soviet citizens to party organizations and the government, complaining about violations of law and order, "are increasing especially sharply" in cities and rural areas alike, and that these problems "seriously worry" the public. The report said the Politburo drew the attention of the Soviet procurator roughly the equivalent of the U.S. attorney general's office and the MVD police to "the need for measures to strengthen the protection of law and order in cities and rural population points." of his leadership. Pravda departed from the usual practice under the late Leonid Brezhnev of attributing policy statements to the party's 470-member Center Committee, nominally the center of political power.

In reporting details of a meeting of the 12-man Politburo, the real center of authority, Pravda seemed intent on conveying the image of an active and decisive leadership, one more in touch with popular concerns, and more determined to act on them, than was the Brezhnev regime. The newspaper's prominently displayed report also veered from the longstanding Soviet claim that crime said to be a vestigal remnant of bourgeois, czarist times leadership, saying that letters from thepublic reflect rising concern abptit crime and economic mismanagement, has called on police, prosecutors and party workers to step up efforts to combat social disorder, official corruption and Jinc6mpetent managers. The call for new attention to law anI in the Soviet Union ap-Ipeared yesterday in the mam Communist Party newspaper, in an unusual front-page report on a I meeting of the ruling party Politburo The report reinforced expectations that the new party chief, Yuri lArjdjopov, would make an attack on crime and corruption a major theme rn mm UHi iH Peace prize winners blast nuke weapons yfiy Chris Lund 'Qiited Preit International OSLO, Norway A Nobel prize winner yesterday the escalation of weapons and warned the superpowers that a -'Jhughty protest wave" is IK, -building. A checking account that pays a money market fund rate, with all of the safety and convenience of a bank account. It's tuiiy-msured, and pays the same rates as Shultz claims unanimous accord on Europe missiles United Prett International ROME Secretary of State George Shultz arrived in Italy yesterday after meeting with NATO officials in Holland and winning what he called unanimous agreement to deploy new nuclear missiles in Western Europe if arms reduction talks with the Soviets fail.

Shultz is to discuss the issue of new intermediate-range missiles with Italian officials tomorrow. He arrived in the Italian capital following a five-hour visit to The Hague where, he said, there was no disagreement between the United States and Holland on nuclear arms "I understand that preparations for deployment are going forward," he "When you have an adversary who has them (nuclear missiles), and has them installed, and has them pointed at you, you'd better take notice of that." Shultz said he was not aware of any doubts about Dutch commitment to deployment a statement in sharp contrast to an earlier news conference by Dutch Foreign Minister Hans van den Broek, who said the Netherlands has not decided on deployment. The Netherlands in 1979 endorsed the NATO decision to station 572 intermediate-range nuclear missiles in Western Europe in response to Soviet deployment of SS-20 missiles. However, parliamentary approval for deployment has never been given and the new Dutch government has said a decision on deployment will depend largely on the outcome of the Geneva arms if Mi ca, agreed "those terrible instruments of mass destruction should forever be proscribed." The Mexican diplomat suggested Friday there should be two peace prizes one for disarmament and one for human rights. While Myrdal's speech aimed at promoting the understanding for disarmament, the 71-year-old Mexican sought to explain how to achieve it by using the Tlatelolco treaty as example.

Garcia Robles noted that Latin America's nuclear-free zone was the only one in existence that covers densely populated areas. "Outside it, only in Antarctica, outer space and the seabed are similar prohibitions in force," he said. The treaty, he said, "provides profitable, lessons for all states wishing to contribute to the broadening of the areas of the world from which those terrible instruments mass destruction that are the nuclear weapons should forever be proscribed," he said. The awards were presented Friday in Stockholm, at a ceremony at the city's concert hall. ,1 the average of Merrill-Lynch's and E.

F. Hutton's money market funds. For details, see our ad in today's Financial Section. INTERNATIONAL SAVINGS Banking for an International Hawaii. War is murder, said Alva Myrdal, Sweden's chief delegate to the U.N.

peace ne-- gotiations in Geneva who for-, mally received the $157,000 "-'prize Friday along with diplomat Alfonso Garcia Robles. "Preparations for a possible large-scale war aims at collective murder," Myrdal, 80, said in her Nobel lecture a day after receiving the i award. She said the world was experiencing "a time of bar-. bary. Our civilization is not only being militarized, but also brutalized.

Against these militarizing forces, a mighty i protest wave is mounting, a voice of sense in many coun-tries." Garcia Robles, also his na-tion's chief delegate to the Geneva talks and father of the Tlatelolco treaty banning nuclear arms in Latin Ameri Member FSUC To Place a Classified Ad Dial 521-9111 To Place a Legal For Advertising Agency Sales -525 -7651 fltffcflmkso: in Lisbon Jewellery Watches Co. (Hawaii) Inc. fir FREE FANTASTIC SALE Fine Jewelry and Watches at affordable prices. Our entire Inventory 20 -50 OFF Digital Watch Pen 50 purchase ft? I I 8f Now 76.95 Why not select from an expert's comprehensive collection of diamonds, rubles, sapphires. Jades, emeralds and opals in exquisite design and craftsmanship in 14K, 18K and Platinum.

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About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

Pages Available:
2,262,631
Years Available:
1856-2010