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Nashua Telegraph from Nashua, New Hampshire • Page 16

Publication:
Nashua Telegraphi
Location:
Nashua, New Hampshire
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Nashua Telegraph, Wednesday, June 13, 1973 Summit Shaping Up As Meeting Between Frustrated Giants KYAN I T1 I flnri TlPVnlovino rmnrl 3 -11 i -TT r. i i By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent This will be a strange summit It shapes up like a meet- of frustrated giants, with bewildering imponderables to confound platoons of experts, and the peace it promises is a strange sort of peace. President Nixon and General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev head the most powerful nations la history, each weakened by i and perplexin trouble.

When they meet in Washington beginning June 18, each, be acutely aware of both his own and his adversary's -vulnerability. Brezhnev is familiar with the current deep embarrassment of the President, although the Soviet press has been uncharacteristically polite about Wat a e. Undoubtedly the mind that the, scandal has show for his efforts and the weakened the President and made him the more eager for something suggesting brilliant success in the cause of peace. But while Moscow might see disarray in Washington as a windfall and an opportunity to tailor prices accordingly, it must also consider its own problems. President Nixon is aware that the Soviet, Commu- thought has crossed Brezhnev's nist chief, too, needs success to risks he has taken.

Indeed, Brezhnev- could be regarded as the more vulnerable. He has the supplicant. He wants many things involving his hopes for the Soviet consumer economy. He is just as committed as "the to a measure of 'agreement on there and give him elbow room in dealing with the vexatious problem of China. In addition to all that, he has the problem, of squaring ideology with his policy of detente.

Brezhnev must rationalize his dealings with the leader of what the Kremlin calls "the citadel of imperialism." He Lawyer Fitzgerald Begins Tale of Bombing CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) happened, lawyer John Fitzgerald has told a jury how he lost his right leg below the knee and suffered other critical injuries when a bomb connected to the ignition system of his car exploded In Everett Jan. 30, 1968. Fitzgerald has been under heavy guard since he returned to Massachusetts to testify at the trial of Francis Salemme, 40, of Sharon, who is charged with conspiracy to kill and as- People in the News WASHINGTON (AP) ident Nixon will fly to Pekin, BL, Friday to unveil the cor- the Everett McKinley Dirksen Congression- al Leadership Research Center. The center, -named for the late Republican Senate leader, ivill be a repository for reference material on Congress and congressional leaders.

It is scheduled for completion in the of 1974. Pekin -was Dirks en's home town. CHICAGO (AP) "This is not A June-December wed- said Avery Brundage, former president of the Inter' national Olympic Committee, in announcing he -would -marry a German princess. He is 85, she is 37. "The princess and I have common interests," the multimillionaire Chicago hotel owner said this week.

Brundage met Mariahn Princess Reuss when she served as a hostess at the 1972 Munich.Olympic The bride-to-be" is a descend- r-ant of royal family that once ruled a little- kingdom known as Heuss is related to most of the. royal houses of Europe. The family was stripped of all its possessions by the Communists when East Germany was established after World War H. Brucdage, whosa wife, Eliza. beth, died almost sault with a dangerous weapon, dynamite.

Though temperatures were in the 90s, window shades in the Middlesex Superior Court room were fully drawn to prevent observation of the proceedings from the roof of a building across the street. Officials said they feared new ago, said no date had been set for the wedding. LONDON (AP) Swedish actress Britt Eklund is the mother of a baby boy, Nicholai Eklund Adler, born over 'the weekend. The baby's father is record and film producer Lou Adler. He has been the movie star's constant companion for two years.

Miss Eklund has a daughter by her former-husband, British actor Peter WASHINGTON (AP) A convalescence period -of a month or six weeks is predicted for Sen. John C. following removal of 2 bullet from his The Mississippi Democrat was shot twice in a robbery in front of his home -here last criminal lawyer whose clients included underworld informer (Barboza) Baron, walked slowly to the witness stand, limping slightly and using a cane. Fitzgerald said that at the time of the bombing he was winding up a partnershio with- Afred Farese and spent Jan. 30 in his Everett law office collecting personal papers.

Afterward, he told the 13 men and three women of the jury, he went to his car arid put the key in the ignition. He could not recall whether he turned it One bullet was removed after the shooting. The second-" was removed this'week. Doctors at the Walter Reed Army Medical Cehter. said: "The-senator tolerated the surgery satisfac-.

torily," Stennis, who will be 72 in An "gust, was in critical condition for days after the shooting but a been regaining his strength. Three young men have been arrested in the robbery-shooting, and one has pleaded guilty No sentencing date has been on but thought he did and also pressed down on the accelera- "I heard this noise and a tremendous pressure came up at me and I thought 'Oh my God, they have put a bomb in the he said. The witness said he pulled up his legs and cials said they feared new shoved himself out of the car, gangland attempts on Fitz- landing on his back and elbows! gerald's life. Then second bomb wnt Fitzgerald, a former Boston off and I saw wire and debris fly into the air," he adding that he remembered crying out, "Someone help me." He said a man came running and soon police were at the scene and an ambulance. Fitzgerald was cross-examined briefly by attorney F.

Lee Bailey, counsel for Salemme. The two lawyers were class? mates in the Boston University Law School class of 1960. Autopsy Ordered In Me. Drowning BERWICK, Maine (AP)--An autopsy will be performed hi Biddeford today on the body of Michael Lambert of Somersworth, N. who drowned in the Salmon Falls River.

Police said Lambert, 16, was swimming across the river with two friends when he called for help. His companions, Steven Gaunthier, 18, and Lynch, 17, both of Somersworth, attempted to rescue him, but failed because of the swift current. Divers from Berwick and South Berwick, Maine, and Rochester and Dover, N. aided in recovering the body strategic arms. He probably must assure his colleagues and wants relaxed tension in the Communists elsewhere that he West to relieve him of pressure W0 n't let peace go too far.

On the other hand, while Washington publicly welcomes detente, the United States se-i riously warns its Atlantic allies i that the new look could evapor-'j rae overnight, that a Soviet military threat remains and a high level of defense readiness remains essential. The obligatory jargon that accompanies. -Kremlin thrusts makes appraisal of this summit's prospects difficult. The question arises whether or how much Moscow believes what it says publicly. The Soviet press frequently recalls that the present policy of peace was approved by the 1969 international Communist meeting in Moscow and the 24th Soviet Communist Congress in 1971.

Thereafter Moscow has repeatedly insisted the policy would insure "favorable external conditions for Communist building in our country." That seems to mean detente is necessary while the Soviet builds its economy. Recently Izvestia, the organ of the Soviet government, told world Communists the policy "helps to a large extent to create a situation leading to intensification of revolutionary processes in various parts of the world and radicalization of the masses." That seems to tell the movement: "Be patient, your turn is coming." The Soviet press makes It apparent that clouds of illusion about U.S. capitalism have not been dispelled by the sunshine of summitry. While Soviet businessmen charge ahead making deals with. Americans, the from such U.S.

troubles as Watergate, the sagging dollar, inflation and economic competition with Japan and West Europe. Brezhnev himself makes many a pronouncement about the historic inevitability of "socialism." Only recently he assured the party "the class struggle between the two systems, capitalist and socialist, in the economic, political, and, of course, ideological domains, will continue." It's just that he wants to avoid "the perils of war." Brezhnev seemed strong and confident sallying forth into West Germany last month, a venture some of his colleagues still view with a measure of misgiving. He seemed strong in April when his party publicly endorsed his foreign policy. But The party welcomed "positive changes" achieved by tht policy insofar as the Soviet bloc might benefit. The same endorsement demanded, however, "constant vigilance and preparedness to give a rebuff to any machinations by the reaction ary circles of Place that alongside the U.S.

warnings to NATO, and the re- there was a caveat in the en- suit seems far from a con- dorsement, suggesting that the vincing picture of mutual trust skeptics are watching carefully, at the Washington summit. MARC P. BELLAND, son Mr. and Mrs. Jean-Paul Belland of 44 Bell ias been accepted at N.H.

Vocational-Technical Institute, where he will major in A graduate" of Bishop Guertin High School, he was a member of the tennis team ant intramural hockey team. bi press continues picturing American capitalism as being in dread 9f mass revolution: undertaking reforms only as camouflage to retain control of "the masses," using technology to increase efficiency and profits while "exploiting and oppressing the toilers." Moscow clings to its dogma of an inevitable crisis capitalism;" and now derives support for the notion SOUCY RIB END 5 RIB CUT BB ROAST OF PORK 73 CHINE END Ib. AVG. ffe ROAST OF PORK 89 ib Ib FRESH GROUND A EXTRA LEAN CENTER CUT PORK BUTTS PORK CHOPS FROZEN FOODS WEAVERS PARTY PACK 28 or. PKG.

FRIED CHICKEN VFKCCn VlMra i PEAS 3 ONE POUND PKG. BOSTON BONNIE ONION RINGS BIG 59 PEPPERIDGE FARM APPLE TURNOVERS SNOWY BLEACH 39 HUNTS 14 ox. BOTTLE CATSUP 27 MOUNTAIN DEW PKft OF 8 BEVERAGE 89; KELLOGG'S POP TARTS ASSORTED FLAVORS 39 PACKAGE SUNSHINE CHIP-A-ROQS CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES SUNBEAM GIANT SANDWICH BREAD 43 LOAF CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE I. I) CHICKEN OF THE bfcA OX. UA Ravioli W.A Beef TUNA FISH 49 37' 15 oz.

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About Nashua Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
177,371
Years Available:
1946-1977