Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 9-18-1969 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" (1969). Winona Daily News. 914. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/914 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; News in Print: Chance of You Can See It, Showers Friday Reread It, Keep It US. Set to Negotiate End WASHINGTON (*) - The President Nixon suspended suspension Was7 military. directed toward the enemy to de-escalate the war as tions, Nixon administration is pre- B52 raids for 36 hours last Nixon felt that if the enemy for which the U.S. expected much as possible by action White House and State pared to negotiate an end week at the «nd of a cease- intended to prolong the a response. Tuesday, how- not requiring agree ment Department sources report to B52 raids in South Viet- fire called by enemy to me- cease - fire indefinitely he ever, in explaining Presi- with the enemy. the Paris peace talks are nam in return for enemy morialize the late President wanted to encourage them dent Nixon's latest troop At present, only his troop totally deadlocked. While steps to de-escalate the war, Ho Chi Minh of North Viet- rather than take the initia- withdrawal decision, White withdrawal program seems there is some speculation U.S. officials report. nam. tive with new bombing raids House sources said the B52 the post - Ho Chi Mslnh re- The eight-engine, high-fly- White House sources said which could quickly wreck suspension definitely was a to offer any immediate hope gime in Hanoi might be ing bombers are the most this week a major reason any such attempt at de- signal, one to which the for progressively extricating more peacefully inclined, dreaded and least costly of for the suspension was to escalation. new leadership in Hanoi the U.S. from the war, but top policy makers here are American weapons being make clear to the new lead- But Nixon's hopes, how- might be slow in reacting. the possibility of working deeply skeptical. used in the war, officials ership in Hanoi that every- ever slender, were quickly President Nixon has indi- out a de-escalation arrange- "We have to realize that say, and some believe the thing in the war is negoti- blasted as enemy troops re- the dead hand of , their de- cated for months that if he ment actively interests North Vietnamese and Viet able except the right of self- sumed operations when the Washington policy makers. parted leader is likely to Cong might be willing to determination for the South cease-fire ended. could not negotiate a mutual Such an arragement could paralyze their policy for pay a price to get the at- Vietnamese people. Last week officials here withdrawal of troops and a be negotiated or might be quite some time, one offi- tacks stopped. t The primary cause of the denied any signal had been peace settlement he wanted arrived at by parallel ac- cial said. SPEAKS TO UNITED NATIONS Nixon Asks All Work for Peace UNITED NATIONS, N;Y. ble for the long stalemate in isters, and to entertain U.N . dip- (AP) — President Nixon, mak- Paris negotiations. lomats at an evening reception. ing his first appearance before The President urged all 126 No formal conference with So- viet Foreign Minister Andrei N. STRIKE EPIDEMIC HITS ITALY . Thousands of a global forum, urgently ap- member countries of the United . pealed to all members of the Nations to use your best diplo- construction workers display posters as they walk in down- " Gromyko was scheduled. United Nations today to "take matic efforts " to break down Vietnam Nixon Rome Wednesday after they walked off their jobs In discussing , town an active hand" in promoting a what he pictured as the intransi- once again said "our. one limit- for a 48-hour strike. More than a million workers were on Vietnam peace. gence of Hanoi. ed but fundamental objective " * country s labor unrest continued. WALKING AND TALKING . President Force Base. The group was walking from a strike Wednesday as the ' In an address for the U.N. Springing no. surprises in his there is to ensure South Viet- . Wednesday's strike adds to a series of walkouts involving General Assembly, and for live first speech to the world organi- nam's right of self-determina- Nixon gestures with both hands as he walks presidential helicopter to Air Force One be- 2.5 million workers which have affected the country in the television-radio broadcast, Nix- zation, Nixon again went on tion without outside interfer- with his wife, Pat, and talks with Brig. Gen. fore a flight to New York City, where Nixon past ll) days. (AP Photofax) on held Hanoi wholly responsi- record as favoring sober and se- ence. Richard A. Knoblock today at Andrews Air addressed the United Nations. (AP Photofax)) rious negotiations with the So- viet Union on the Middle East, arms race curbs and other top- 58 WOUNDED ALONG DM2 ics... Scot! Says He in Mid-East: And, he said, "Whenever the Question leaders of Communist China choose to abandon their self-im- posed isolation, we are ready to HasVotesfor talk with them in the same 2 Units Due to Leav^ V^c>:;l$'Ruiim0S£gyptt frank and serious spirit." Looking toward broad interna- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS able to meet with Nasser dur- man of the National Assembly, tional cooperation in areas GQP Viclpry President Gamal Abdel Nas- ing an official visit to Cairo this receive a letter King Hussein ranging ser is reported out of action in- week because the president was had written to Nasser. But there from population control WASHINGTON. (AP) - Sen. Mietnam Lose 23 Men 7 . (AP) _ Two U.S. The battle began shortly after iment were hit two miles to the definitely due to illness, but it ill and "under constant medical was no other indication; that Sa- and space exploration to a7coun- SAIGON tersittack;; jrgaijjst . aircraft ' hi- Hugh .Scott ol rPennsytyania Marine regiments to be with- midnight Tuesday when North north by North Vietnamese in isn't clear who!s7i?Hniiing Egypt. care." Talhouni said Nasser had dat was;taking over' thei '• r$ns; the votes to fortified positions. In 25 min- delegate Anwar Sadat chair- jaQkings; Nutoiai asserted: claims he^s^ot be- drawn from Vietnam before Vietnamese troops attacked The semiofficial Cairo news- The Beirujknewspaper Al Jaffc ' ' - Christmas-today reported 23 of from the north and east. An utes, seven Marines died and 24 . .. " :. ... Let us press toward an come Senate Republican leader paper Al Ahram reported today da said Nasser had postponed a their men killed and 58 wounded hour later mortars slammed in were wounded. trip to the Soviet Union open world—a world of open and his campaign forces now that the 51-year-old president that was ; in close-range fighting along the from the east and another as- North Vietnamese losses were came down with an "acute in- scheduled "for Sept. 23 because doors, open hearts, open minds are speculating on who might ' WEATHER —a world open to the exchange demilitarized zone. ; . sault: wave poured in from that not known. fluenza infection" following the he feared that a Soviet-engi- become his deputy. ' ¦ direction. American ' artillery 7 Aiother barrage of rocket of ideas and of people, and open Marines from -the. 3rd and 4th ¦ Arab: sumbit meeting in Cairo FEDERAL FORECAST neered plot to overthrow him aid fighter-bombers '. •¦ tielped grenades and mortar shells was being planned. to'the reach of the human spirit Two rival candidates for GOP regiinents: of the 3rd Division two weeks ago and is now under INONA AND VICINITY drive the enemy back 'after two smashed into the Marines as the care of three doctors. W . - —a world open in its search for leadership—to be decided next were attacked twice Wednesday Partly cloudy to cloudy with The report said Nasser had Wednesday -^- denied Scott's by North Vietnamese troops hours of fighting. - they were attempting to evacu- truth, and unconcerned with the ate their casualties. Al Ahram said Nasser's ill- chance of light showers through Surged several of his top pro- fate of old dogmas claim of majority backing. near the craggy peak called the An hour later, fresh North and isms—a Vietnamese troops attacked A few hours after the fighting, ness became more serious as he Friday. Little temperature iussian colleagues, headed by world open at last to the light of But there was general agree- Rockpile, ¦ four miles south of the change tonight warmer Fri- DMZ. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦: from the northwest, touching off the men got the news that their "persisted in ids work because , former Prime Minister Ali Sa- justice, and reason, and to the ment the Pennsylvanian, now regiments are being pulled out day. Low tonight 45-54; high bry, for many years one Nas- an hour-long fight. After the en- of the importance of the summit of achievement of that true peace acting Republican leader,' is Some of the fighting was of Vietnam by Dec. 15 in the and the military revolution in Friday upper 70s. Outlook Satur- ser's closest aides. emy withdrew, the Marines con- which the people of every land ahead.

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