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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 1

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Homo tata Cm The Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with sunshine over coastal areas and beaches. Tradewinds 15 to 20 m.p.h. during days with higher gusts. High 85, low 71. Details on Page 2 Vol.

61, No. 150 Hawaii 's Greatest Newspaper HONOLULU, HAWAII Monday, May 29, 1 972 15' 54 Pages Four Sections ft 'J ruz Tina, 1 SO dent ress liilpllliiiiliiiill emorial Day Weekend, 1972 On Hies Kiev fO LiiL, 4fm jxt ffaJFzD i. .1 f. 14 I rt II- Ln. -r .1 fc Tl" 4 JL x.Wv5S.:.-i:v.v:i BEACH SCENE Thousands of persons converge on Ala Moana Beach and Park over the Memorial Day weekend.

Photos by Terry Luke. I i ll --t i aft 4 4.. i i 1 flT XKtf IT e- iff, MOSCOW (AP) President Nixon ended his summit conference in Moscow today and took off for Kiev after signing with Leonid I. Brezhnev a joint declaration of long-range principles in which the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to avoid military confrontations and envisioned total world disarmament. Nixon and his party made the 500 mile trip to the Ukrainian capital in a little more than an hour.

They flew in a stand-by four-engine jet after an hour's delay at Moscow when their original Ilyushin 62 jet developed engine trouble after taxiing out for takeoff and was kept on the ground. NIXON SIGNED the declaration of principles in the Kremlin before going to the airport. Nixon and the Communist party leader also agreed in a companion communique to hold a joint European security conference quite soon. This is something the Kremlin has wanted for a long time. That conference will aim first at providing for an East-West cutback in military forces in central Europe, notably those in East and West Germany.

A light rain was falling at the airport when President and Mrs. Nixon boarded the plane for Kiev. They leave from there tomorrow for Iran. The Nixons were seen off by President Nikolai V. Pod-gorny and Premier Alexei N.

Kosygin. Brezhnev, who did not greet Nixon at the airport last Monday, was not present at the airport farewell today. Nixon concluded his seven days of summit talks at the Kremlin by inviting the three top Soviet leaders to visit the United States "at a mutually convenient time." HENRY A. KISSINGER, the President's assistant for national security affairs, said the return summit would not take place until after the U.S. elections in November.

The communique recited the opposing views of American and Soviet negotiators on Vietnam. However, Kissinger said the war was the subject of "long, sometimes difficult and detailed discussions" which left in doubt the vital question of whether the two governments understand each other on the issue and will cooperate to seek peace. As for the prospects, "only the future can say, and I wouldn't want to speculate," Kissinger said. It presumably was significant that the Soviets, in reciting their attitude toward the war, made no mention of N'xon's May 8 act of mining North ports. Neither was there mention of Soviet arms shipments to North Vietnam, which prompted the mining.

Soviet spokesman Leonid Zamyatin declared "our assistance will continue to be given" to the North Vietnamese. Both Zamyatin and Ronald Ziegler, Nixon's press aide, said no secret agreements or arrangements concerning Vietnam were reached at the summit. THE COMMUNIQUE also dealt with Middle East tensions and said the United States and the Soviet Union "declare their readiness to play their part in bringing about a peaceful settlement." Of the two summit documents, the statement of principles signed by Nixon and Brezhnev at a televised Kremlin ceremony was the more sweeping. Kissinger cautioned, however, that it represented "an aspiration and attitude" and that either side can ignore it at will. The presidential adviser added that Nixon assumes the Soviet leaders take the document seriously or they wouldn't have signed it.

In noting that each government has an out, Kissinger volunteered for the benefit of those back home who may take a dim view of the accord that Nixon has "not suddenly gone soft-minded." The first basic principle affirmed by Nixon and Brezhnev is that the Soviet and U.S. governments "will proceed from the common determination that in the nuclear age there is no alternative to conducting their relations on the basis of peaceful coexistence." Differences in ideology and social systems, the document said, "are not obstacles to the bilateral development of normal relations based on the principles of sovereignty, equality, noninterference in internal affairs and mutual advantage." THE SECOND principle declared that the two countries "attach major importance to preventing the development of situations capable of causing a dangerous exacerbation of their relations Nixon and Brezhnev agreed ''they will do their utmost Turn to Page A-9, Col. 2 1 '7' "ant 1 VvV' i i I FISHING A boy combed the debris-filled canal at Ala Moana Park hoping to come up with a fish or crab in the muddy water. ANTICIPATION Linda Kitahara, attending McCully Japanese Language School picnic, tugged on her ribbon as she waited for her ice cone. 31 Rules and Administration Committee, police expressed doubt.

tween him and the parking lot when the gunfire began. The killer, armed with a rifle and a revolver, was "real calm and took at a Laurel, shopping center. Jordan was standing inside a massive plate glass door and the crowd was be DON'T want to make "I assumptions, but I have any doubts about that," said my C. H. Haswell.

"It's Capt. hard to say what a person's Inside theJ RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) A sniper crouched between parked cars calmly killed three persons and wounded five more today at the entrance to a shopping center mall where Sen. B. Everett Jordan, was campaigning for re-election.

The tall, neatly dressed black gunman, identified by police as Harvey Glenn McCloud, 23, of Raleigh, then shot himself to death. Jordan, 75, was unharmed and police said they doubted that McCloud was trying to assassinate him. The shooting came two weeks to the day after Alabama Gov. George C. Wal inside the door of a nearby store.

"He would crouch down and each time ha would raise up and shoot." The body of the unidentified gunman was found between two cars about 75 feet from the entrance to the shopping center with a bullet wound in his head. The rifle and pistol lay on the pave-, ment beside him. The victims were identified as Mrs. Jackie Wharton, 47, of Raleigh; James G. Henry, 31, Woodstock, and Melvin D.

Harrison New Bern, N.C. Asked whether it appeared the. shooting was an attempt to assassinate Jordan, a 15-year Senate veteran and chairman of the Senate real good aim when he shot one fellow," said a witness who had just driven up. THE FIRST three victims were standing near Jordan and the plate glass doors at the Northhills shopping center were shattered by the bullets. Jordan, badly shaken, was taken to Wake County Memorial Hospital and went into the chapel to pray and await word on the wounded.

Among them was one of his aides. "This man who was doing the shooting was in the parking lot crouched down between cars," said Mrs. William Law, who was standing Letter from Kahuku motives are, though. Two of the wounded were children 3-year-old Carol Lynn Sutton and Terri Sue Henry, 6. Jordan is fighting for his political future against Rep.

Nick Y. Galifianakis, North Carolina congressman. Galifianakis ran ahead of Jordan in the state's May 6 Democratic primary and they face each other in a runoff Saturday for the Democratic nomination to the Senate. DEAR MR. EDITOR: I wonder if Mr.

Nixon learned to like caviar with his Editorials A-18 Entertainment B-4-5 Family Today Kokua Line A-3 Obituaries OTlaherty Pulse D-5 Sports D-l-4 TV Logs B-6 Astrology B-6 Bridge B-7 Business A-12-13 Classified D-6-15 Comics B-6-7 Crossword B-7 Daily Magazine B-6-7 Dave Donnelly A4 Dear Abby B-3 cottage cheese and catsup. lace was shot and critically wounded while campaigning 'JL.

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About Honolulu Star-Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
1,993,314
Years Available:
1912-2010