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GARNER, N.C.—Brad Hornick, 7-years-old hoists a gallon
full of pennies to a teller at the Bank of North Carolina while
his brother Trevor, 4-years-old holds another. The boys
brought the 15-gallons of pennies which they and their
Revival
Mt. Gilead Baptist Church
Services 7:30 P.M. Each
Night Through Friday.
With
Evangelist Richard & Judy
Lee.
Special Singing
Each Night
Nursery Provided
Clifford Chandler -
Pastor
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parents have saved over the past 11-years. The bank
estimated that each gallon contained about S6O, and that the
boys would receive approximately S9OO after they were
counted. (UPI)
Kissinger heads for Paris
By K.C.THALER
LONDON (UPI) - Presiden
tial adviser Henry A. Kissinger
ended wide-ranging policy talks
with British leaders today and
prepared to go to Paris for
expected secret talks with the
North Vietnamese.
The departure was scheduled
for today, but no firm time was
available. In Paris, Kissinger
was to meet President Georges
Pompidou.
But there was growing
speculation among diplomatic
sources that Kissinger would
meet Hanoi’s special envoy, Le
Due Tho, for important talks on
the further course of the stalled
peace talks.
Officially no indication was
given that the meeting would
take place.
Kissinger, who arrived in
London Thursday from Mos
cow, briefed British leaders on
his far-reaching discussions
with Kremlin leaders.
In lengthy meetings with
Prime Minister Edward Heath
and Foreign Secretary Sir Alec
Douglas-Home, he discussed
Senate wants changes
in Russian arms pact
By JOHN HALL
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The
Senate ratified President Nix
cn’s new arms control agree
ment with the Soviet Union
Thursday but demanded fun
damental revisions before it
will accept the plan as a
permanent treaty.
The temporary five-year pact
won overwhelming but condi
tional support in a resolution
approved 87 to 2 and returned
to the House with an amend
ment adopted 56 to 35 which
critics said would hamstring
efforts to achieve a permanent
and more comprehensive agree
ment when talks resume this
fall in Geneva.
The amendment, sponsored
by Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-
Wash., and backed by the White
House, serves notice that the
Senate will accept nothing less
than “equality” in the size and
numbers of offensive missiles
when it is asked to ratify a
permanent treaty.
The interim agreement
makes no attempt to achieve
simple equality. It permits the
Soviets to deploy 1,618 intercon
tinental ballistic missiles to
1,054 for the United States and
950 submarine-launched mis-
outstanding European problems
including the projected 35-
nation European Security Con
ference with U.S. participation
and the issue of balanced East-
West armed force cuts in
Central Europe.
They also discussed the
Middle East, Vietnam and the
expulsion of Asians from
Uganda. The British asked the
United States to admit some of
the new group of refugees,
diplomatic sources said.
The talks were held in a
friendly atmosphere.
Page 5
siles to 710 for the United
States.
But that imbalance is offset
by U.S. technological superiori
ty and a decisive advantage in
the number of nuclear war
heads. In addition, many
strategic planners feel that any
slight numerical advantage
achieved by either side under
the agreement would be insigni
ficant, since each still retains
the capacity to wreak nuclear
havoc on the other.
But the Senate—as well as
the White House—apparently
now feels otherwise.
The White House helped write
the Jackson amendment, publi
cly embraced it and held
together a coalition in the
Senate through a series of
rollcall votes Thursday in which
arms control advocates desper
ately sought to modify the
Jackson proposal.
The amendment could be
Everybody knows Leonards |
is a Dress Shop
But - - - remember Leonards for
BAGS-HATS-SLIPS-GOWNS I
ROBES-RAIN COATS CAPES I
JleMandA Too! I
119 S. Hill
— Griffin Daily News Friday, September 15,1972
killed in a Senate-House confer
ence before it is sent to
President Nixon. But Jackson
said it would make no
difference.
“The important thing is that
the Senate has expressed its
will,” Jackson said. “Only the
Senate acts on treaties.”
Efforts to change the Jackson
amendment were doomed when
the Senate, with 15 votes to
s>are, imposed cloture to end
the month-long debate on the
treaty.
Within three hours, the
Senate rejected a string of
substitute proposals, including
an amendment by Sen. J.
William Fulbright, D-Ark., call
ing for “overall equality, parity
and sufficiency” in the SALT
treaty, rather than numerical
equality in each category of
strategic weapons as Jackson
proposed.
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HOLLYWOOD—Groucho
Marx, 81, was hospitalized at
Century City Hospital here for a
routine checkup. Doctors
recommended he remain there
for a two-week rest. Marx was
emotionally shaken by the
Israeli Olympic team
massacre. (UPI)