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Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 12-29-1970 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News Follow this and additional works at: https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1970). Winona Daily News. 1050. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1050 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Will Germany s new liberal policy im WASHINGTON (AP) - For- the West German leader for cow. There appear to be some of Czechoslovakia in 1968 A. Our government's attitude cation it feels diffident about ap- create the impression Chat , the mer Undersecretary of State failing to get "serious conces- fears in Washington that Brandt showed how illusory is a non- toward the treaty is not so much pearing to oppose a normaliza- situation between East and George W. Ball .says he fears The Nixon Administration may find it difficult Jo hold to aggression pact with the Soviet Germany sions" from Moscow in recent publicly approves Brandt's poll- Union, my concerns- one of support as one of benign tion of relations based on recog- West has been materially ini\ West 's new liberal out his price for ratification in his relate ... policy toward the Soviet Union negotiations on a nonaggression cy^But Ball spelled reserva- eagerness to accomplish his to the speed with which he has noninterference. My impression nition of the status quo that proved. might lead to "diplomatic ad- treaty. He also called for a tions and fears held privately by Russian policy. proceeded and the failure to in- is that the government received might ease or give hope of eas- Q. How do you assess Ger- some influential government ventures" between the two na- slowdown in Brandt's whole ¦¦ " ¦;¦ sist on serious concessions from support at the December NATO ing the lot of the German peo- many's role in Europe? .men. ; . Here are questions and an- ple.' - tions, thus imperiling the West- drive to work' out other agree- the Soviet Union. meeting from Britain and . A. Germany's best chance to ern Alliance. ments with Moscow; These officials insist they are swers from the Ball interview: The critical test will he wheth- Q. -Do you object to Brandt's Ball, who is in touch with for- Ball, undersecretary of state not implacably opposed to Q. Are you an opponent of er the chancellor's government France for its effort to slow line of action because you be- play a constructive role in Eu- eign policy leaders in and out of in the Kennedy and Johnson ad- Brandt's policy but want it car- Chancellor Brandt's efforts to withholds final ratification until down the momentum of the So- lieve he may be entrapped,by rope is most likely to occur if the Nixon administration, ex- ministrations and a long-time ried out very cautiously without conclude a nonaggression treaty something significant is viet timetable which envisages the Russians? Great Britain joins the Euro- pressed general confidence in champion of-Western European giving the Soviet Union undue with Russia? achieved in the four-power a European security conference A. America has confidence in pean Common Market. Britain Chancellor; Willy Brandt, but union and alliance with the advantage. A. I do not oppose Chancellor (U.S., Soviet, British, French) as the obvious next step after him. 1 do not think he will be en- as a counterweight to increasing questioned Bonn's future course United States, made clear in an Brandt has pinned final ratifi- Brandt's wish to conclude treat- talks on Berlin. the Bonn-Moscow agreement. trapped by the Russians. German power within the Euro- when Brandt is >no longer in Associated Press interview he is cation of the nonaggression pact ies with the Soviet Union or with Q. Do you think the U.S. sup- America feels under restraint At the same time it is only pean community should produce power. worried about a potential West —the foundation piece of his Poland that may eaSrtbe lot of port for Brandt's policy toward in expressing its cautionary re- prudent to make sure that the a balance of forces that should In spite of overall support of Germany swing away from the new policy—to a Soviet-Western the peoples concerned. : ' Russia is contrary to U.S. inter- servations. Since it cannot offer signing of treaties with little assure the community's stabili- Brandt's ability, Ball criticized Atlantic alliance toward Mos- agreement Berlin. Although the Soviet invasion ests in Europe? the realistic prospect of reunifi- substantive content does not ty and effectiveness. 7 Mostly cloudy Boys' ski ' ¦ ' with chance of ¦se t; snow Wednesday classified section Winona draft office raiders Senate approves aid are sentenced ST. PAUL. Minn. (AP) - A federal judge Monday sentenced three of five young men con- victed of breaking into Minneso- , ta draft offices to for maximum, Cambodia Israel WASHINGTON (AP) - The policy dispute stalling the $66.6- and trade legislation in an at- lion aged; blind and disabled five-year prison terms. Senate passed early today a billion defense appropriations tempt to beat the calendar and Americans. The other two defendants $l.8-billion appropriations bill bill. salvage a $6.5-billion-a-year in- But, -with the 91st Congress were judged youthful offenders, providing $255 million in assist- In a scant 10 minutes, the Sen- crease in Social Security bene- expirhig at noon Sunday, little) which could mean immediate ance for Cambodia and $500 mil- ate dealt with two issues that fits. ' - time is _ left for a House-Senata parole or up to six years in lion to help bolster the armed have been among the legislative cemference on Social Security. custody. forces of Israel. tangles blocking the path to ad- the Social Security measure, The supplemental appropria- The five, who were among 'That bill was sent to Presi- journment of the 91st Congress. on which a final vote could tions bill includes mpre than $1 eight young men arrested by dent Nixon amid a burst of mid- Another controversy was un- come late today, also would pro- Billion /worth of. foreign aid for FBI agents July 10 at Selective night speed that also produced raveled earlier Monday as the vide a $l-billioh increase in wel- Asia and the Middle East. Its Service Offices in Winona, Alex- an effort to settle the foreip Senate dropped welfare reform fare payments for some 3 mil- course -was prepared before tha andria and Little Falls, Minn., Christmas recess, when Con- were free on bond pending an gress approved legislation au- appeal of the convictions. thorizing the spending,, but for- U.S. District Judge Edward bidding use of ground combat Devitt sentenced Charles L. forces or military advisers in Turchick, 23, St. Louis Park, Basque nationalists Cambodia. Minn.; William L. Tilton Jr., The big defense money bill 22, Minneapolis; and Donald H. has been blocked by controver- Olson, Minneapolis, to five years sy about restrictions on the use each in a federal penitentiary. of U.S. forces in Southeast Asia swear venaeanee outside of South Vietnam. ~ Sentenced for "treatment and , In that one, the Senate had supervision" as youth offenders BURGOS, Spam (AP) - ing squad. of state and of Basque origin prohibited use of ground combat were Brad K. Beneke, 21, Min- Basque nationalists swore Franco, facing his worst crisis himself, said the State Depart- troops in Cambodia, ILaos and neapolis, and Peter A. Simmons, vengeance today against the since the Spanish civil war, met ment told him it would "do Thailand. But , in cenference with his Cabinet to discuss something" if the' death sen- 19, Brooklyn Center. Minn. military judges who sentenced with the House a waiver Was whether he should commute the tences are not commuted. At- added, declaring the bah would All five are from the Minne- six Basques to death and nine death sentences. tention in Washington was di- apolis-St. Paul area. not prevent President Nixon others.to a total of 351 years in Announcement t of Phe sen- rected to the sentencing of two irom taking any steps he The-sentenciUg in St. Paul was prison. tences brought new appeals for Jews to death in the Soviet Un- twice interrupted when demon- clemency from the Vatican and deemed necessary to promote "There will be retaliatidn," ion for plotting to hijack an air- safe and orderly withdrawal pi strators who .applauded the de- one member of the Basque ter- the governments of Italy, liner.: . American forces from South fendants were dragged from the rorist organization ETA warned France, Australia, Denmark, Denunciations of the Spanish Vietnam, or to win release oi courtroom. after the court handed down the Norway and Belgium. death sentences came from the U.S .prisoners of war. Tilton, a former vice president sentences Monday. He singled There was no word from World Council of Churches, the HE HAS THE SAME GOALS ... Rep. F. decessor. Rivers died Monday in Birming- of the University of Minnesota out Capt. Antonio Troncoso de Washington of any intercession International Commission of Ju- A bloc led by Sen.T. W. Ful- Student Association by the U.S. government, a ma- rists in Geneva, the Spanish bright, D-Ark., oppo-sed that Edward Hebert, who is in line to succeed L. ham, Ala., following heart surgery. Hebert, a , looked di- Castro, the legal adviser to the y rectly at U.S.