4t THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three T h u r d a y M a c h 2 , 1 6 8 H E M C H I A N A I L PageThree ARAB BACKLASH: " Israel Awaits Major Conflict With Guerrillas from Jordan Senate Delays Tax Bill, Adopts Textile Provision By The Associated Press, TEL AVIV - Israel is steeling itself for an all out offensive by Arab guerrillas in an apparent backlash from the massive assault on their bases in Jordan last week. Officials here seem in no mood to take any more raids without hitting back. Top level discussions are be- lieved to be already under way to plan how to meet any threat. Sources predict action may reach its peak around Israel's independ- ence day, May 2. Although any large scale action similar to the massive punch against guerrilla bases in Jordan last Thursday could plunge the Middle East into another war, such action is considered unlikely at present. It has not been entire- ly ruled out, however. The guerrillas, though mauled in the attack last week on their bases at Karameh and Safe, are raiding and firing mortars at set- tlements again to show the Arab w o r l d they have not been crushed. Sources here said one possibility is the formation of small Israeli commando units to meet the guerrillas at their own game, try- ing to hit them in their bases and curb their attacks. Similar tactics were used by the semi- secret 101st Battalion 12 -years ago against Egyptian commandos. According to the best available information, Israel is unlikely to endanger its diplomatic cam- paign at this time with another "police action" invasion of Jordan. It still supports the flagging peace mission of U.N. envoy Gun- nar V. Jarring, but some circles here hold out little hope it will achieve any progress in breaking the Middle East deadlock. Some legislators have questioned why the government limited last week's strike to the guerrilla bases and held the assault force back from deeper penetration into Jor- dan in a punishing show of force. Intelligence reports indicate the build up of guerrilla groups, which last Thursday's raid was aimed at smashing, is continuing at a fast pace as young Arabs clamor to join them. Reports from Amman, Jordan's capital, indicate the guerrillas now control most of the east bank of the Jordan River, the springboard for their attacks. Israeli sources say Egyptian commandos of the 141st Battalion, volunteers from the Iraqui 421st Palestinian Commando Battalion, and Syrian irregulars are known to be in the east bank. They are said to total 1,500 trained men. As seen here, King Hussein apparently has committed-or re- signed-himself to at least allow- ing the guerrillas to operate from Jordan. So long as he makes no attempt to halt their operation he is a marked man in Israeli eyes. Jordan informed members of3 the U.N. Security Council yester- day it cannot be held responsible for the safety of Israeli occupa- tion forces in Arab areas. In a letter to the president of the U.N. Security Council, Am-I bassador Muhammed H. El Far- ra of Jordan rejected a warning by Israeli Prime Minister, Levi Eshkol that new attacks by ArabI guerillas would meet with Israeli counteraction. -Associated Press ROBERT KENNEDY spoke at Portland, Oregon International Airport Tuesday. Rep. Edith Green appeared with him. RFKProbable Entry; InIndiana Primary WASHINGTON (P) - Despite a rapidly approaching deadline, the Senate again put off final action yesterday on a bill combining President Johnson's proposed 10 per cent income tax surcharge with a $6 billion spending cut. The tax and cut riders have been hooked onto a measure con- tinuing excise levies on automo- biles and telephone service at their present levels. Unless the bill is passed and signed by Johnson by this week- end, the excise rates will drop sharply on Monday, with a re- sultant loss in revenue. The cur- rent rates could be made retro- active, however, if restored later. The Senate spent most of the day on a series of amendments. Textile Quota It adopted a textile import quota proposed by Sen. Ernest F. Hollings (D-S.C.) who said Ame- rican jobs in the industry are being threatened by "a rising tide of imports." The amendment would apply chiefly to woolen and man-made fibers. It would give the admin- istration six months to work out agreements covering all textiles, and if there wasno action in that time it would impose quotas based on the average level of im- ports in the 1961-66 period. The White House is against im- port quotas and Sens. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich.) and Charles H. Percy (R-Ill.) tried unsuccessfully to head off the proposal. 1967 Treasury Department ruling that commercial advertising in publications of nonprofit organi- zations, such as National Geo- graphic, is taxable. This was an amendment by Sen. George Mur- phy (R-Calif.). " Rejected 74 to 18 an effort to substitute an excess profits tax on corporations for the 10 per cent income tax surcharge spend- ing cut provision. Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) who co-spon- sored this unsuccessful amend-! ment with Sen. Frank Church (D- Idaho) said corporation profits have skyrocketed "since escala- tion of the war in Vietnam." 0 Defeated 86 to 5 an amend- ment by Sen. Vance Hartke (D- Ind.) to give a substantial tax break to small businessmen whose trade or business earns less than $25,000 a year. Pending when the Senate re- cessed overnight was a proposal by Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R-S.D.) which would levy a special 20 per cent tax on the taxable income of any American company doing business with a Communist nation that supplied material to North Vietnam. Mundt cited the International Business Machines Corp. as an example of a firm which would be affected. He said it supplies computers to Russia. If the amendment became law and these sales continued, IBM would be forced to pay an extra 20 per cent levy on its entire in- come, he explained. Sen. Walter F. Mondale (D- Minn.) said the effect might be to kill off $300 million to $400 million worth of U.S. trade with Eastern Europe in nonstrategic items, trade which he said is helping to fragmentize the Com- munist bloc. The House Ways and Means Committee cleared for floor action a 5 per cent tax on airplane tickets to foreign destinations and a reduction in the amount of goods returning travelers may bring in duty free. The duty free quota would be cut from $100 to $10. By The Associated Press Sen. Robert F. Kennedy has all but decided to enter Indiana's May 7 presidential primary, setting up a potential three-way race with Sen. Eugene McCarthy and a stand-in for President Johnson. sin, Nebraska, Oregon, California and South Dakota. In none of these is the President currently! looked upon as the favorite. These states will have 1,382 votes at the Democratic conven- tion in Chicago next August, 70 more than needed for the nomi- nation, In Nebraska, where McCarthy will be a challenger, the White House induced former Gov. Frank Czech Minister Hits 15. German Speech, I Morrison, as well as the state!Voice vote chairman and national commit- The Senate adopted the amend- teeman, to come out publicly for ment by a tentative vote of 55 to Johnson. 31 and then nailed it in on a voice But the delegation's 30 votes will vote. go to the winner of the primary. Hart and Percy argued in vain Kennedy has booked himself into that the proposal would open the Lincoln, Neb., today for a uni- gate to a series of import quota versity speech and a meeting with amendments which could set off Democratic officials. McCarthy retaliatory moves by other coun- will be going in as soon as he tries. completes his Wisconsin campaign The Senate also: this week. " Voted 57 to 35 to overturn a Cost of Living, Priee Index Continue To Rise Sharply, PRAGUE ,) - Czechoslovakia's foreign minister summoned East' Germany's ambassador last night to protest an attack that was liken- ed here to calling him an "im- perialist agent." The attack and the official com- plaint were believed unprecedent- ed in Soviet block diplomacy. The Czech news agency CTK reported that Foreign Minister' Vaclav David notified Ambassa- dor Peter Florin of an "official objection" to statements that "re- flected on Czechoslovakia and a member of the Czechoslovak gov- ernment." He referred to a speech in East Germany by Kurt Hager, secre- tary of the East German party Central Committee. He singled out Forestry Minister Josef Smrkovsky, a leading Czech liberal and can- didate for the vacant post of pres- ident, as one of those who are "filling the West with hope that Czechoslovakia will be pulled into the maelstrom." Reformers The incident, reflecting new tension between the orthodox Com- munist nations of East Europe and the reform leadership in Czecho- slovakia, came as party sources reported the reformers readying a program to shed Iron Curtain restrictions on individual liberty and permit "no confidence" votes against the government. The proposals for further lib- eralization in Czechoslovakia are part of an "action program" party informants said the leadership would submit today. The proposals that will be sub- mitted to a plenary session of the party's Central Committee include no provision for a genuine opposit- ion party to the Communists, how- ever. 11 I The party's view is that the press freedom restored since liber- als removed the old line regime of Antonin Novotny guarantees suf- ficient control of government and party. Enunciated in the blueprint is the position of reformers headed by party chief Alexander Dubcek that the party and government must function separately - un- like anywhere else in Communist Europe - and that the govern- ment is to serve as the supreme executive power. Political Ties Emphasized at the same time is Czechoslovakia's intention to main- tain military, economic and polit- ical ties with the Soviet Union. In the area of economics, the new program implements a plan drawn up three years ago that couples a Western concept of supply and demand with incentive. A new ec- onomic council will coordinate po- licy with world prices, rather than Soviet bloc prices, becoming a main yardstick. "Socialist" enterprises will be independent and no longer a part of the state apparatus. Troops Fight VC Battalions SAIGON (P)--U.S. troops called in artillery fire and air strikes of napalm only 50 yards from their positions yesterday in a raging battle for a hamlet northwest of Saigon near Cambodia's border. The Viet Cong fought back with automatic weapons and rocket- propelled grenades from trenches and sniper holes in Ap Long Muc. By nightfall, the Americans were reported to have seized only one- fourth of the hamlet. Heavy fight- ing continued. The bitter opposition 'indicated that U.S. forces in Operation Quyet Thang--Resolve to Wipt- had caught up with some of the main Viet Cong battalions that fell back toward Cambodia when this biggest drive of the war opened March 11. U.S. 25th Infantry Division troops moved in on the hamlet Tuesday and ran into heavy fire from enemy entrenchments. Tanks and armored personnel carriers came up in support. By morning, U.S. artillery fire was bursting 85 yards in front of American positions, reported AP photographer Al Chang, who was slightly wounded in the chest by shrapnel. Ap Long Muc is a kidney shaped hamlet about 890 yards long and 200 yards wide 30 miles northwest of Saigon. I Vaclav David Chili OUILD "Marlene Dietrich! your name at first the sound of a caress, becomes the crack of a whip. When you wear feathers, and furs, and plumes, you wear them as the birds and animals wear them, as though they belong to your body.. . THERE comes to us (all sails flying) a frigate, a figurehead, a Chinese fish, a lyre-bird, a legend, a wonder: a friend of France MARLENE DIETRICH!" --from Jean Cocteau's Saluation-to Marlene against phoniness which is now the play's greatest virtue would not have existed had Mr. Gelber chosen to write his play in a more audience-satisfying I