Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 12-7-1964 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" (1964). Winona Daily News. 541. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/541 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]. Partly Cloudy lsmssm vK^^tf ln) ALWAYS REM) r J > Tonight, Tuesday; mmmpaV* t* Warmer Tuesday _h ^J52_L_V__, l Gromyko Asks Disarmament Parley Proposal First New Viet Ta lks May Lead Declaration of To Bombing of Red Routes New Leadership UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. SAIGON, South Viet Nara U.S.-Vietnamese planning ses- * As ," war against the Communists an outcome of my visit (AP)— Soviet Foreign Minister (AP) — U.S. Ambassador Max- would be broadened. It was be- sions. Taylor said, "the President has well D. Taylor and South Viet- lieved that President Johnson "I think as time goes on the instructed me to consult urgent- Andrei A. Gromyko today namese Premier Tran Van had ruled out attacks against results of the decisions will be- ly with the government of Pre- called for a world summit con- Huong today opened planning North Viet Nam, but the Red come apparent," one official mier Tran Van Huong as to the ference on disarmament. talks expected to lead to bomb- supply routes through southern said. measures to be taken to im- The Soviet proposal was mad* ing of Viet Cong supply lines in Laos were considered likely tar- Taylor on his return said new prove the situation here in all before the TJ.N. General Assem- Xaos. gets. measures by both the United its aspects." bly in the first major policy de* Taylor returned to Saigon States and the South Vietnam- The ambassador said Johnson Officials said no announce- claration of the new Soviet lead- Sunday from Washington amid ese would be discussed. He re- had "reaffirmed the basic U.S. Increasing speculation that the ership. ments were expected from the fused to say what they were. policy of providing all possible useful assistance to the South Gromyko also submitted a Viet Nam people and the Huong detailed memorandum on disar- government in their struggle to mament, outlining measures to defeat the externally supported Mother Kills 3 Children be considered at the proposed , insurgency and aggression being conducted against them.' conference. Thousands of police were The Soviet foreign minister Hangs Herself in St. Paul strung out along Taylor's route declared that the present inter- from the airport into town. national situation was ripe for There had been rumors that 3CE-TORN LIMBS ... The damage to gathered on power lines and tree limbs and progress on such measures as a Buddhists planned demonstra- a these trees on a residential street in Sche- tugged -wires to the ground, tion against the Huong govern- leaving a total complete ban on nuclear weap- nectady, N.Y., is typ ment. None materialized. ical of the destruction of 75,000 homes and businesses without elec- ons, the liquidation of foreign ) The South Vietnamese forces wrought by the weekend 's combination rain- tricity. (AP Photofax bases and the reduction of mili- scored a major victory against sleet-snow storm in New York state. Ice tary budgets. the Viet Cong in a fierce nine U.S. Delegate Adlai E. Ste- hour battle Saturday on the Ca venson listened intently as Gro- Mau Peninsula, at the southern myko spoke in quiet, concilia- tip of South Viet Nam. The gov- Ice Storm tory words. ernment said 115 Communists The Soviet delegate specifi- were killed in the encounter at Wilson Offers cally endorsed Red China's Tan Lac village, about 150 miles Hits New Proposal for a meeting of the southwest of Saigon. eads of state of all countries South Vietnamese officials to consider a ban on all nuclear said their side suffered 86 casu- NATO Plan weapons. He also backed the alties, but the battle was re- York Area WASHINGTON (AP)-Prime organizing a nuclear weapons recommendation of the nona- Minister Harold Wilson was to I force within the North Atlantic ligted nations at Cairo for a garded as a psychological boost SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) for the government's war effort, present to President Johnson to- Treaty Organization. world disarmament conference. which had been sagging badly. — Cold and hardship continued day new British proposals for i U.S. and British officials were He said: Six U.S. airmen were wound- today for thousands, of families hopeful for early agreement on "The Soviet government lg to participate in furUh Jeffrey, 7 Timothy. 4 Susan, 2 ed in the attack as U.S. helicop- in an ice-crippled eastern por- the rough outlines of a com- !prepareder discussions in any . forum ters raked the Communist bat- tion of New York. Power crews mand and control system, ST. PAUL (AP)-A 29-year- [ which would then be negotiated and at any level, including tits talion with rockets and light sought to restore heat and light 4 Teen-agers * highest one, of the problem ot old woman described as a "good bombers dropped 500-pound with West Germany and othwr , interested Allies. general and complete disarma- mother" in a "happy family" bombs. Communist fire dam- for nearly 40 000 customers. stranded her three The sun glistened this morn- nent, of banning and destroy- children and aged 14 helicopters. The Johnson-Wilson confer- Burch May Not then took her ing on a winter wonderland ence will continue through Tues- ing nuclear weapons, and of Killed as Car measures for the curtailment own life by created by ice-laden trees and day. hanging in the power lines. Temperatures of the arms drive." family's home ranged down to 10 below zero in The President will then meet Stem GOP Attack Sunday. Thompson the wake of one of the state's Leaves Highway with Soviet Foreign Minister Gerald E. worst storms. Andrei Gromyko on Wednesday. By JACK JHSLL to step out. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS That meeting will afford John- Neubauer, 31, a The bitter cold added the Florida Law WASHINGTON (AP) - Re- This was based in part on re- welder for son an opportunity to stress to ports given the governors In threat of frozen water pipes for Four rural West DePere teen- the new government in Moscow publican governors have started Northern States Starts Second agers — a boy and three girls- ¦a tire within their party that closed session that as many as Power Co., stricken residents, most of his view that the projected 70 of the 138-member Republi- whom were in an area bounded were killed Sunday night when NATO nuclear force — opposed •could make it difficult for Na- found the bod- a car left the road and wrap- Held tional Chairman Dean Burch to can National Committee may ies when he generally by Albany on the by the Soviet Union — will not WW •command the broad-base sup- favor replacement of Burch. returned from Prison Year south. Glens Palls on the north ped itself around a tree. lead to the spreading of nuclear Burch's own canvass of his and Amsterdam-Gloversville on Their deaths , plus five other weapons. port he needs to hold his job. Mrs. Neubauer work about 4:15 (AP) - Today strength within the committee p.m. ST. PAUL the west. fatalities in separate weekend Althoughlhey stopped short in marked the start of the second Wilson arrived from London By High Court was said to have been some- Three deaths were attributed accidents, and one resulting a declaration at Denver, Colo. , The victims were Mrs. Irene year in Stillwater Prison for T. Sunday night. Obviously con- what disappointing to him. to the weekend onslaught of from an Oct. 1 crash, added 10 WASHINGTON (AP) - Th* Saturday of calling collectively Neubauer; Jeffrey, 7; Timothy, Eugene Thompson, St. Paul scious ot the danger that other for Burch's resignation, there Sen. Thruston B. Morton of 4 , and Susan, 2. snow, sleet and freezing rain. names to the state's record- Allies might think Johnson and Supreme Court struck down to- Kentucky, former head of the attorney convicted of first , day a Florida law making it a appeared to be majority belief "They were a normal, happy degree murder in the slaying of Many schools closed Friday breaking highway toll for 1964 he were "ganging up" to decide among the 18 who attended that committee, made the point on a couple getting along fine," remained closed today. Others now rapidly approaching the 1,- the nuclear organization issue, crime for a Negro man and television broadcast Sunday — his wife a year and nine months white woman, or a white man after Burch canvasses the situa- neighbors said, "She was ago. served as emergency centers 000 mark. he told newsmen "we don't ex- ABC "Issues and Answers" — for those driven from their pect to finalize anything." and Negro woman, habitually to tion thoroughly he may decide always good with the children." The slaying, one of the more The total fatalities for the that the chairman has to have homes Churches, fire houses occupy the same room at night. Police said no note was left. bizarre in Minnesota murder . year reached 986—156 ahead of The head of the British LaboT broad support within the com- and other public places also Justice Byron R.
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