Newspaper Page Text
Nixon, Brezhnev
fly to California
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Nixon and Soviet
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev fly to
California today for the final
phase of their 1973 summit
conference. They pledged in
toasts of Russian champagne
Thursday night to meet again
in Moscow next year.
Their agreement to hold a
third summit conference in as
many years was announced at
a lavish banquet at the opulent
Soviet Embassy a few blocks
from the White House. They
dined and toasted each other
after signing pacts earlier in
the day to speed nuclear arms
negotiations and cooperate in
research on peaceful uses of
nuclear energy.
Today, they planned to sign
still another agreement—a pact
expanding civil aviation be
tween their nations. Before they
boarded Nixon’s jet for a late
afternoon flight to the Western
White House at San Clemente,
Calif., Brezhnev also was to
meet with 40 American busi
nessmen in an effort to
encourage expanded trade.
Raising their glasses in a red
and gold trimmed banquet
room Thursday night, Nixon
and Brezhnev pledged a con
tinued effort to expand Soviet-
American friendship.
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“... The Soviet Union’s line at
improving relations with the
United States is not some
temporary phenomenon,” the
stocky Brezhnev said. “It is a
firm and consistent line reflect
ing the permanent principles of
Soviet foreign policy ... It is a
line that rests on the full
support of our people.”
Nixon replied he hoped the
third summit meeting could be
held next June. He indicated he
wished the meetings to become
annual affairs.
“These summit meetings
have brought us closer toge
ther, have brought greater
understanding of our differ
ences and greater determina
tion to reduce those
differences,” Nixon said.
Brezhnev will be a guest at
Nixon’s home in San Clement,
La Casa Pacifica, from this
evening until Sunday morning
when he flies back to Washing
ton. He will pre-tape a
television address which will be
broadcast to the American
people Sunday evening.
Brezhnev leaves the United
States Monday for Paris.
An agreement to accelerate
the Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks (SALT) in Geneva was
the high point of the summit so
far. Nixon and Brezhnev signed
a statement of seven principles
that will lead negotiators
toward the goal of concluding a
permanent offensive nuclear
arms control agreement by the
end of 1974.
It is possible that agreement
will be signed at the third
summit in Moscow next year.
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WASHINGTON — Soviet Leader Leonid Brezhnev proposes a toast, during a banquet at the
Russian Embassy, as President Nixon listens. Nixon accepted an invitation from Brezhnev to pay
another visit to Moscow next year, possibly to sign a permanent treaty intended to utlimately
reduce the two nations’ stocks of nuclear offensive weapons. (UPI)
Nixon homes improved for security
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
federal government says it has
spent nearly $2 million improv
ing President Nixon’s homes in
Florida and California, all of it
relating to “security.”
The White House also dis
closed that businessman Robert
H. Abplanalp, who helped the
President buy his San Clemen
te, Calif., retreat, has been
getting some money back in the
form of rent associated with
Nixon’s Key Biscayne, Fla.,
place.
A month ago the White House
had listed $39,000 in federal
funds for improving the West
ern White House at San
Clemente since Nixon bought it
in 1969.
Last week, after a further
search of record, it raised this
figure to $460,302.
On Thursday, General Ser
vices Administration (GSA),
the government’s housekeeping
agency, said a still more
extensive audit put the total
federal expenditure at San
Clemente at $703,367 over four
fiscal years beginning July 1,
1969. This included only the
residence there, not the White
House office space.
GSA listed for the first time
the federal expenditure for
improvements, equipment, op
eration and maintenance at the
White House complex at Key
Biscayne, including both resi-
dence and office space—
sl,lßo,s22, spread over five
fiscal years beginning July 1,
1968.
Included in the Key Biscayne
figure was $161,463 for renting
two houses in the complex for
the Secret Service and White
House communications staff.
The White House said all of
the taxpayers’ money spent in
San Clemente and Key Bis
cayne was for security-related
improvements and that all
work was done at the request of
the Secret Service, not the
President.
The GSA data showed items
such as $53,644 in fiscal 1970 for
interior security and communi
cations at San Clemente.
Hal Suit
reluctant
to announce
ATLANTA (UPI)-The “whis
pers, rumors and lies” that
sparked an FBI investigation of
his 1970 gubernatorial campaign
have caused Georgia Republi
can Hal Suit to shrink from an
nouncing immediate plans for
running for political office next
year.
“This is one of the few times
I’ve been subjected to this kind
of publicity and it hurts when
you know you’ve done nothing
wrong ... it has been an or
deal,” he said.
Suit’s “ordeal” began in May
when he told a civic group that
a friend of his, a radio repair
man, had monitored mobile
phone conversations of GOP
rival Jimmy Bentley during the
1970 gubernatorial primary.
U.S. Attorney John Stokes put
an end to the FBI probe
Wednesday when he said there
was not enough evidence.
Suit said he would have to do
some thinking before commit
ting himself to trying for politi
cal office next year.
“If we get into the 1974 gov
ernor’s race, we’ll run the same
kind of open and honest cam
paign we did before,” he said.
“But something like this does
cause you to have ‘second
thoughts’ about staying in the
political arena. You wonder if
being the target of whispers,
rumors and lies are worth the
blood, sweat and tears that go
into trying to win public of
fice,” he said.
Page 3
Griffin Daily News Friday, June 22,1973
State salary hikes
placed in limbo
By JACK WILKINSON
ATLANTA (UPI) - Despite
his insistence that state officials
and legislators need pay in
creases, Gov. Jimmy Carter
Thursday placed the controver
sial salary package in limbo,
pending the outcome of an in
vestigation by the federal Cost
of Living Council.
Carter said he was eager to
comply with inquiries from the
federal council but added, “I’m
not sure what more we can tell
them. However, there will be
no increases until our differ
ences are resolved and the Cost
of Living Council is satisfied.”
The pay raises, totalling just
under $2 million and already
approved by the General As
sembly and signed into law by
Carter, were to have gone into
effect July 1.
But the Cost of Living Council
objected to the raises, calling
them “inconsistent and unrea
sonable” in light of the Presi
dent’s economic policy.
Carter insisted that despite
the refusal to approve the raises
he felt the council actually
wanted more information before
acting.
“I doubt if anyone in the
United States understands the
policy,” Carter said, adding
that the controversy may well
go beyond July 1.
The major problem in the pay
raise bill is the provision for a
71 per cent pay raise the Gen
eral Assembly voted itself.
Carter’s salary would have
jumped from $42,500 to $50,000
under the new bill, but he has
said he would not accept the
increase.
The governor also told news
men he had formed an Office of
Pharmaceutical Services to
tighten up legal control of pur
chases and distribution of drugs
to state health institutions.
Carter said a series of opera
tional audits being conducted
had indicated the need for the
drug control office, to be estab
lished in the Human Resources
Department.
He said the new office would
also begin a study of possible
changes in state law to permit
pharmacists to administer “pre
liminary emergency treatment”
in those Georgia counties with
out doctors.
Thirteen counties in the state
have no physician and 13 others
have one each.
When asked about Tuesday
afternoon’s shootout in down
town Atlanta that claimed two
lives, one policeman and a
Black Muslim, Carter said he
thought the “Muslims were
wrong.”
“The presumption of right in
the moment of crisis ought to
be with the policeman,” the
governor said. “He is only try
ing to preserve peace. If an in
dividual feels he is being mis
treated, he should take his dif
ferences to court. Muslims or
anyone else wought to show def
erence to policemen in a mo
ment of crisis.”
The shooting incident began
when police tried to restrain
some reported Black Muslims
from harrassing passersby as
they tried to sell a Muslim pa
per, “Muhammad Speaks.”