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Green Bay Press-Gazette from Green Bay, Wisconsin • Page 1

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Green Bay, Wisconsin
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Green Bay Press -Gazette VOLUME LIV, No. 132 30 PAGES s1 ASSOCIATED PRESS GREEN BAY, FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 8, 1968 GAZETTE ESTABLISHED IN FEBRUARY. IB66 FREE PRFSS FSTABI ISHFD IN VAV. PRICE 10 IONS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL To Yield Thieu Uraes U.S Key Role in Talks to Saigon The Thieu plan was quickly iclined to make any immediate comment on the South Vietna as a new version of plans for di- without specificying the status rect Hanoi-Saigon talks put for- they would be accorded. ward in the past by the Thieu Jhieu refused bf h4e said this was opening the door to rec- (Mff -4 vrv vi ti suvmmiem.

opAtim of the NLF, and he Thieu's proposal was made in fcared this would be the first mese proposal and there were indications that officials regarded it with some trepidation. President Johnson on Oct. 31 in announcing a bomb halt for North Vietnam, said the ex rejected by North Vietnam as "an absurdity." Allied officials expressed strong misgivings over the Thieu plan and said it ran coun-; ter to the accords negotiated in secret talks by U.S. and Hanoi diplomats last month in hopes of an attempt to counter the ad- step toward a coalition govern' vwsp rpartinn in th iTnitPrtiment which the Communists in SAIGON (AP) President Nguyen Van Thieu proposed today that his South Vietnamese government replace the United States as the leader of the anti-Communist negotiating team at the Paris peace talks. Thieu proposed a new formula for organization of the Paris conference under which the Communist side would be led by the North Vietnamese.

He said It could also include the Nation-! 1 Liberation Front, the political arm of the Viet Cong. I panded talks would be attended States and elsewhere to his refusal to join the Paris peace eventually would take over. There is a widespread belief in the U.S. government that talks this week. President John launching expanded peace nego-by Hanoi, the Viet Cong and tiations.

the United States with Saigon In Washington, U.S. officials being free to join, would say only that Thieu's "The Thieu plan is an absurd- son, in halting the bombing ofjThieu hardened his position on Knrth viotnam nrnnnswi thatineeotiatins with the enemy in- proposal was receiving careful a North Vietnamese spokes- the Saigon regime and the NLFj eluding his boycott of the Paris study. The State Department said. He shrugged it representatives to the talksj TURN TO PAGE A COLUMN 1 Czech Troops Halt Anti-Soviet Rioting PRAGUE (AP) Thousands! Dubcek, grabbed him and shout of anti-Soviet demonstrators ed, "We're for the Soviet Un- marched through Prague Thurs-; ion shouting "Russians Dubcek, who was with Pre- day night, go home" and burning Soviet mier Oldrich Cernik, managed a flags in the biggest demonstra- smile as several persons in the Hons since the Russian invasion cr0Vd shook their fists at the In August. hvo leaders and shouted pro-So- AP Wirephot smoky fire in her home.

The resuscitation was given her and her brother Jerry, 1, all the way to the hospital where both later were reported in good condition. Breath of Life A Boston fireman, William Carroll, gives mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to four-month-old Angeline Harper after earning her from a Large numbers of slogans. vaK troops ana police, under or- But in contrast to the thou- ders to crack down hard on the sands of anti-Soviets who turned demonstrators, used water can- out Thursday night, only about iarly Nixon-LBJ Kohler Defends CCHE Guides For University non, tear gas and clubs to breaK 500 pro-Soviets attended the me-up the rioting. morial ceremony. Many persons were knocked Soviet Banners Removed down by police clubs, and many first si of anti.Soviet appeared to have been arrested.

L. in PraKUC occurred be. Ambulances carried amy un- forp dawn when So. known numbers of wounded. Ljet lagS) raised on pul)Hc Riots Last Six Hours buildings during the night, were The six hours of rioting cli-1 torn down, maxed a tense, uneasy observ- police moved in during the leeting Expected villi Mm, Mk lj ill w-Jtwy '4 from press dispatches end work and relaxation, has KEY BISCAYNE, begUn talking in general terms for an earlv meetine of Presi- tho nmhiom ct sookinw ance of the 51st anniversary of morninE to disperse several MADISON Former Gov.

the Bolshevik Revolution, nor-; hundred persons who massed in mally a day dedicated to Czech- front 0f the Foreign Trade Ad- Walter J. Kohler, chairman of Richard M. Nixon (aient for his administra-the Coordinating Council for.President Johnson are expected' U(J as Qne aide 1he Higher Education, today re-itn hp annmmppd In the next oslovak-boviet friendship. ministration building and chant The tough police reaction con-ed, "Tear it down! Tear it jeeted claims the state agency is rav. specific names for specific posl Nixon, it was learned today uooicu awmiJi mui me icmnuciown: unui cusioaians re-uowiigia(iuig uie quamy 01 euu-mantier''in which anti-Soviet Amoved two large Hammer andcation offered at the University demonstrations were handled on 'sickle flags hung from the'of Wisconsin-Green Bay.

also plans an early conference with his running mate, Gov. Oct. 28, the 50th birthday of the building. Replying to letters criticizing Spiro T. Agnew of Maryland.

uzecnosiovaK repunuc. ueai After one Soviet flag was CCHE standards for the newiApnew misrht ioin Nixon for the tions. The President-elect is considering how to maintain liaison with the Budget Bureau, which will fashion a federal spending program. Johnson To Offer Budget Johnson will present a new budget to Congress before Nix leaders apparently were afraid burned on the end of a stick, po- school KO llor Said. "It IS mV cosdnn with that unchecked demonstrations ijce swinging clubs cleared the 'contention that there is no suchj Nomine has been said about a wnnld hrinp Snvipt tanks rnllinp nr, nnc i.innhir 'iu: reunion of Nixon and Vice Pres- 0 aiua.

ucvaai eiouiu ncic iai- uiJIJ da lllll'llUI truuidllUil ell back into Prague. I en away by the police. Earlier, during a wreath-laying ceremony honoring Soviet soldiers killed during World War II, hard-line opponents of Czechoslovakia's liberal Communist party leader, Alexander AP Wirepholo Today's Chuckle Success is the ability to get along with some people and ahead of others. Soviet Flag Burns in Prague Czechoslovak demonstrators protest Soviet occupation both Green Cay and Parkside'jdent Hubert H. Humphrey, the and we shall comply with the Democrat he narrowly defeated statutes" which created the jn Tuesday's balloting, but it's schools, he said.

expected they'll get together Keerived Complaints (too, as a gesture of friendship. Kohler spoke after receiving a Awaits OK on Vict Visit barrage of complaints from Although President Nguyen Northeastern and Southeastern; Van Thieu has invited Nixnn to Wisconsin education groups and'g0 to South Vietnam-one thing residents about proposed CCHE the president-elect said hej standards governing faculty 'would do should Johnson desire on's inauguration. One member of the Nixon camp summed up the situation that will face the new President, "You can't come in with the meat ax and start cutting," thus it becomes doubly important for him to be in on the budgetmaking process. The current debate here is whether to name a task force of Massing Reds Bombed Near Cambodia Zrr 3. mon at the Budget Bu- schools Vietnamese spokesmen said I jiMxoii i i Irean: to ewe the assignment to R.

E. Small of Green Bay, suggests it would help lurtlier, rnilivHHlial Ki. T- n. amau or urren tiay, suggesis umu ia sinde individual such as Ei mree monar rounas nit a ponce: SAIGON (AP) Waves of; The B52s bombed about 60 explosions, indicating massive! tempt to occupy some of the B52 bombers raided enemy base'miles north-northwest of Saigon, I destruction of enemy munitions provinces in the border area, camps along the Cambodian five miles from the Cambodian Oilier Action Light border today hitting area border The area is War Zoe Gpn 1 There was no immediate com- station in Loc Ninh, a district chairman of the Northeastern the peace cause. last budget director, headquarters 72 miles north of i i University Com- The Preside Stans-who wants no Cao Tri.

commander of the 3rd men' U.S. intelligence on mjnec. a an excnange rsaay a future federal appointment, or noriliwesi 01 oaigUII wneie me i-, a juiigumc nci -ung auuii- South Vietnamese commander uultu liia-i mf inrinrs u' ifi nr a i-k i iJt .1 i luiuuiam 1 nt nrc in Kn i pn aftark ntr IP PP nnn am Dili Jltl'ms said the enemy has massed 'Total Attack Predicted torps area that stretches eci. Vocife-'ior federal offices, including the1 lu 0 IT a Miii, Jthroueh Saigon to the Cambo-lenomy trooPs in border areai th- 1... 11 'ould be Nlxon 8 budeet some 60,000 troops for a "total attack." hnrr rnmmJWi to conflict with recentl T' f.u".

d'8ueu chief. uiimiuyincii luuuwuiK up dj4, ctimatpc: nf ahnnt 1 nun "1Lnl "enounceu me sneuing standards. luxon, nere ior a iui i- strikes Tuesday 35 miles west command was preparing rlSunday of My Tho, the chief cityl Small in Fifty of the eight-jet bombers dropped 1,500 tons of explosives Saigon found about 200 enemy launch an all-out attack In his 111 uic iifiuiif; uuiid, aui'i uil' u'linn Vrhor maHf Iik cfntn-' area. m. a IT' on troop concentrations, base fortifications were destroyed by area U.S.

Command had halted thement as the coordinating council bombing of the North. Five sol- hp.n on thp statp.s! infiltratinn rnrrMnrs' fhP Srratn nrtrpssps. Tn tnlr Plnam Press, ip ic ouuui vicumiurat-uvl-iii- camps, I a Illfrii MM iivs; l11 1 I killed and 3G other hnAnnt fnr tho' and suddIv depots in eight mis- Lrews returning irom two government news agency, mat -v dlPrs were Bureau Told Farm Vote Put Nixon In Kohvnon nnnn Thnrsitavraids alnnf thP Cambodian hnr-'aernrrlincr tn infpllirwtrP enemy OOCUment Captured pi. i 3uii.i i 17 viuuuut Jin. iuu" UClV.i- Com-'der Thursday night reported ments, the enemy is planning a by American troops contained ing 23 civilians.

and noon today, the U.S. mand said. their bombs set off 49 secondary; "total attack" instead of an Hanoi to step up milifarv nA nnlitiral artivitv! 1,1 a ul 10 ln all over South Vietnam after the tprnalional Control Commission, tne bouth Vietnamese govern coming two years. Replied lo Letters Kohler was replying to letters from the Brown County chapter of the UW Alumni Association and Southeastern Wisconsin lawmakers as well as from Small. State Sen.

Henry Dorman, D-Racine, had written to ask the United States stopped bombing North Vietnam a week ago. Meanwhile both the U.S. and South Vietnamese commands reported only light action across the country. ment said the 38-round mortar attack proved North Vietnamese authorities "did not show any good will for (U.S.) de-escalation of the war, but on Teacher Shortage 'a Myth Wisconsin Educators Told The whole subject of appointments is being approached with apparent caution by Nixon because, it is said, he believes this will be the first way in which he can help unify the country. Not Just Token Democrat Nixon has talked often about incorporating Democrats into his team of appointees.

One source insisted that the results would fulfill the promise, "We won't have just a token Democrat." In the same sense, the source said, the problem of giving Negroes a voice in the Nixon administration would not be handled with "flamboyant gestures of tokenism." Ron Ziegler, traveling press secretary, said Nixon had a number of invitations to visit government heads in Western Europe. Other sources said that some of these European leaders might find it convenient to visit New York and Nixon before inauguration day. The President-elect attended a victory partv Thursday night CCHE to give a free hand to; the contrary continued to mur innocent civilians, thus 1 a ne of Parkside u.i. neaaquarters reported a from press dispatches the opening session of the con-, teachers he plans a statewide U.S. Marine patrol base south of latino the Geneva Agreement on campus in Kenosha County, ineie i iiuivention.

camnamn to torce revision or Farm vote did the trick or Nixon, Farm Bureau told. Page A-3. New ejjorts to change the way of picking presidents have started in Con-press. Page A-2. A senior U.

S. officer expresses concern tiiat troop morale may drop once full-fledged peace talks start. Page A-3. Pioneer rocketed info Solar orbit. Page B-16.

OTHER 1 KATIKES Classified Ads Page B- 8 the demilitarized zone was the Vietnam." Clem J. Crowley, Racine sci-jthe system. target of a rocket barrage "Parkside is not ready to dial-1 lenge the University of Wiscon-i sin at Madison with a Nobel: prize-winning faculty. Parkside; ence teacher who had been first Calls for Changes I Thursday, and Marines on pa- Today's Weather Changes are needed to enable trol ahout a mile away were cities to obtain the funds neces- also hit. Marine casualties were Furnished by The s.

weather Bureau merely wants to plan, to grow vice president, defeated Beloit high school teacher Gary K. Johnson in the race for president elect. teacher shortage, the Wisconsin Education Association (WE A) convention was told Thursday. National figures show there were 233,000 unfilled teaching jobs this fall, said WEA President John Hafemann of West Bend, but there are six million Mostly cloudy tonight be- and to develop to its own capabi sary to solve the problems that.light, with no fatalities, the give rise to civil disorder, Maier command said. coming partly cloudy on Sat- jiitios without the imposition of urday.

Little change in tern- artificial limitations," Dorman perature. Low tonight near 27 (wrote. Incoming WEA president is i said. Rocket Sites Snotted Jerome N. Strupp of Fond du Lac, who will take office in The property tax was never intended to support governmental functions such as education, A spotter plane located thei rocket launchers inside South! Vietnam, a mile south of the! trained teachers not employed, December.

degrees. High Saturday near 40 degrees. Light and variable winds tonight becoming southwesterly on Saturday. Precipi- I Angus Rothwell, CCHE diree- Comics Page B- 6 tor, in reply to Dorman, wrote; Deaths. Funerals B- 8 the state agency is performing Editorials Page A- 4 its legal duties in overseeing the Entertainment Paee A-10 ln sch00lS- 'Others Elected police, health and welfare, he DMZ, and Marine counterfire1 said.

These must be financed insulted in six secondary pvnln-! Other officers elected were tation probability, near zero were James Gluckenberg, the income tax and the sions, indicating hits on ammu 9 at a Key BLscayne restaurant. 8 After a top aide, Lt. Gov. Rob He said the reason tne jods were not filled was that the teaching profession is "inadequately attractive financially." Not all teachers leave the growth of the two new schools. parm Features A-He rejected the argument that.

Financial News Page B-turn to page a-2. column I Women's Section A- tonight and Saturday. Temperature List: Page B-8 Allis, first vice president; the latter is neces- nition, the Marines said. Niemier, Kenosha, second viceisaryi he said. The location of the launching 5 TURN TO PAGE A-J, COLUMN 1 profession because Of money, ne.p voc rihVi7fH Wo Vnrth Viptnam has saiH thp Collision Sidelines School Safety Trophy Car said, "But out of six million, jFrank Vlegel, Wisconsin Dells, 'by Hafemann.

I bombing halt was unconditional, there are Wt te-j Hafpmann said jn U.S. sources in Saigon say it is nnT60 in nation if we' Donald B. Williams of Wau-'education "SOUnd 'heir understanding that the 000 positions our nation it was dected tQ the executive iand noted its irnp0rtance in the North Vietnamese would stop were to pay enough for the tasks and John Mattke society i military activity in the DMZ as The 19G9 model car that serves as a roving traffic safety trophy for Green Bay high schools is in the repair shop, the victim of a collision. It was wrecked Wednesday night about eight hours after police announced the car was we asK teacners 10 piuu.i. of Sheboygan and Mrs.

Myrtle lone form of reciprocity. Reported Shortage jjacobson of Kenosha were re- -v lncrease Two other shellings were re-1 In Wisconsin, the Department elected. Cost-cutting attacks on educa- ported i cf Public Instruction last Au-I The delegates approved a uni-; 110031 programs, common 0ne targpt was Camp aQ gust reported 1,041 teaching dues structure for the state tliroughout the state, prompted headquarters of the U.S. 101st jobs unfilled for this school association and local affiliates, jhis comments. He was especial-Airborne Division two miles the property of West High School students for one month.

"Just yesterday I announced over the school's public address system that West High was the winner," Police Capt. Harold Brisk said Thursday. The "trophy" won't be out of the body shop for more thi one week. Damage was estimated at S350. The collision occurred at Deckner Avenue and Main Street with Diane J.

Bier-steker, 16, 222 13th Avenue, driving the school car through a red light into the path of the other car driven by John Pressor, 34, 1575 Foeller Dr. Brisk said the car will be returned to West High after it is repaired. He said the school, which also won the car last month, has a good traffic safety record and West High could win the trophy again in No-vembej if the students don't have more accidents. Anotner speaKer, south ot Hue. No casualties year.

About 22, told the turn to page a-2, column 4 'were reported. fpayiers attended Mayor Henry Maier,.

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