i THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGEIPMB THURSDAY, JULY 2,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAIW W VIr A 4MA" 1'1"iY 3 SS NG RED C H INA -a- KABUL '\ --'J"e Srinagar - PROPOSED RAWALPINDI KAH,;,tR :ai .BACK-UP SUPPLY ROUTE"RAllROAD -WEST- p - S* AKISAROKZ1Am.. - MAIN TRUCK ROUTE -t .Quetta .-,= --LHASA h+ ' t - *E-0N -NEW DELHI : -_r -.' - f :v A -KATMANDUj -HUTAN- Jodhpur lucknow tI ; NOA/FAT/ ' r . Puma tn- - -. KARACHI --.A-STA Bhopal - - - * '.1 uiDACCA'LEDO ROAD aCALCUTTA."D POSSIBLE:THRUSTS * UTPOSTS - -'.. . .1--_ .' fCuttack ,-.' - r ndalny'..... ...- - - APNewsfeatures THE MAP shows possible routes for a Communist Chinese penetration of India, either directly or through Tibet. With stepped up efforts the Chinese now seem to be in a position to move troops and supplies up to the border very rapidly, and along a number of different paths. Thus Indians fear that there may potentially be as many as a dozen jumpoff spots for a guerrilla war against their territory. While a few Indians maintain that the Chinese efforts are little more than an attempt to consolidate a hold on Tibet, many aides of the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru have insisted that the bloody frontier war of 1962 is due to be repeated. Reds Push Roads To India Border For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786 from 1:00 to 2:30 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'ti 11:30 A.M. FOR RENT GIRL WANTS ROOMMATE to share campus apt. for fall. NO 2-7075 after 5. C19 FURNISHED ROOMS For men students, near campus. Lobby with TV and snack facilities. $6 and $8. 8-9593. 06 CAMPUS-Three-room furnished apart- ment-reduced for summer, $65; fal $95. NO 3-4322. C12 FURNISHED 4-bedroom house, Parkard near Wells. Two baths. Male grad students preferred. $220/month, avail- able Aug. 15. NO 3 .6528. 017 ON CAMPUS--SUMMER & FALL or SUMMER ONLY-Efficiency. Call 5- 8330 after 1 p.m. 05 ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS EXCLUSIVE CAMPUS LOCATION 721 S. FOREST Fall occupancy-1 and 2 bedroom fur- nished and unfurnished apartments. Free parking. Apply manager,,9 a .m. to 8 p.m. only. NO 3-6052. 010 410 Observatory SUMMER OR FALL Two bedroom modern furnished apart- ment. Covered parkin.-. Also other one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished m o d e r n apartments available for the fall. Some air-condi- tioned. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .70 .85 1.00 SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE 3.45 4.20 4.95 BIKES AND SCOOTERS YOU meet the nicest people on a HONDA! Join the fun at HONDA of Ann Arbor. 1906 Packard Rd. 665- 9281. 2 NICHOLSON MOTORCYCLE SALES Triumph, Yamaha, BMW Scooter Repairs 224 S. First St. 662-7409 PERSONAL You must establish credit sooner or later Why not start with a charge account at: THE VILLAGE APOTHECARY 1112 So. University Open 9 to 9 Figure 5 average words to a line Call Classified between 1 :00 and 2:30 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 Campus Management 662-7787 days eves. 663-9064 09 By CONRAD FINK Associated Press Staff Writer NEW DELHI - This capital is haunted by the sound of Com- munist Chinese picks and shovels clanking on the rocky Himalayan terrain of the Tibetan-Indian frontier. Chinese roadbuilders, working night and day, have made as- tonishing progress in pushing through desolate southern Tibet and up to the Indian border. Indian intelligence experts say rapid movement of troops and supplies by truck convoys now is possible much of the year east and west through Tibet and south to India. Pose Threats The Indians fear the Chinese intend to expand their road net- work until attacks could be launched on the Indian border from a dozen junpoff spots. Exist- ing or proposed roads pose threats on India's right and left flanks. The minority view in the In- dian government seems to be that all this, Chinese activity is aimed only at consolidating Peking's hold on Tibet by importing Chinese settlers and troops to combat reb- el Tibetans. However, some of the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's clos- est aides have said publicly that the Chinese are warming up for more trouble on the scale of 1962, when a bloody frontier war broke out in three sectors. Chinese Invasion Finance Minister T. T. Krish- namachari told a press confer- ence 1966 will be a dangerous year for India because the Chinese by that time will have their logistic problems straightened out. In 1962, the Chinese offensives broke through India's defenses and Red troops literally ran down the Himalayas into India's terri- tory. Then the Chinese stopped and pulled back. One of India's top soldiers told D, newsman he thinks the Chinese stopped because their roads and supply dumps in Tibet could not support further advances. Getting Supplies Roads now being built and a 2roposed Lhasa-to-China railroad would go a long way toward solv- ing the supply problem. The primary Chinese supply .oad runs south of out Sinkiang province through Aksai Chin in India's Ladakh region, then turns southeast and skirts the Hima- layas until it reaches Lhasa. The 1962 Chinese attack in La- dakh was believed aimed primar- ily at protecting, this road by gaining and holding ground well south of it. Establish Outposts Indian officials say the road is graveled and heavily travelled by trucks. It is impossible to tell, '1owever, whether the Chinese have licked the problem of keep- ing the road open in mountain passes during the bitter Tibetan winter. The most disquieting recent de- velopment, officials say, is Chi- nese construction of "feeder roads" south from this main east- west road to outposts on the In- dian border. There are 26 established Chinese outposts on the border-16 on the Northeast Frontier Agency border, 7 in Ladakh and 3 in the central sector. Indian Troops In Indian eyes, each1 outpost and mation is available in New Delhi on this route. Approach Routes ,Indian officials say one of China's most dangerous roads is me that was blasted through the mountains from the Tibetan bor- der to Katmandu, capital of Ne- pal. The Indian Army long has con- sidered routes of approach leading south from Nepal, and its neigh- bors of Sikkim and Bhutan, to be a primary source of concern. The Chinese also have agreed to build a portion of a proposed east-west road within Nepal. The Soviet Union has expressed inter- est in constructing a sector of the same road farther west. This road's proximity to the In- dian border gives it obvious-and to India, dangerous - military value. Thinking years ahead, some In- dian officials see the threat of flanking movements by Chinese roadbuilders-and possibly troops -through neighboring Pakistan and Burma. Pakistan is building a road from Gilgit in the north to its capital, Rawalpindi. It will link with other roads and railways running south to the Arabian Sea. In view of Pakistan's increasing friendliness with Communist Chi- na, some Indian officials say the Chinese are bound to attempt a linkup between their Sinkiang roads and Pakistan's Gilgit's-to- Rawalpindi route. Such a road, if one could be built through the Karagoran other source of concern in New Delhi. Some officials hold the view that Gen. Ne Win's regime has all but: pulled out of many sections of northern Burma under pressure from "White flag" Communists and rebellious Karen and Kachin tribesmen. The question in New Delhi is, "who controls the Ledo road?" This road, built through North- ern Burma by U.S. and National- ist Chinese forces in World War II, links China's Yunnan province' with northeastern India. Whether Communist Chinese forces could move along it today is anybody's guess. Guess work plays a large role in Indian estimates of Chinese in- tentions. But one thing is known: The roads are there. ROOM AND BOARD BOARDING FOR MEN-Friends Center Intn'l. Co-op, 1416 Hill St. Summer $70. 4 hrs. work required. Call 3-3856 or 2-9890 El LOST AND FOUND LOST: SUMMER DAILY STAFF MEMBER Can be easily identified by rapturous look and swinging gait. Reward: An interesting summer Please Return to 420 Maynard Street ' PHOTO SUPPLIES SPEED GRAPHIC - W/Holders, Nikor tank rollback, pack adpt., accs., case. $85. NO 3-1163. D MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS GUITARS, ETC. Make Repairs, Buy and Sell Private and Group Instruction Hoots Daily Herb David Guitar Studio NO 5-8001 209 S. STATE x A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 110 W. Washington USED CARS '61 OR '56 RAMBLER Classic, 4 door sedans. Both excel. cond. Best offer. Call Debora at Univ. X 86-461 or HA 6-8171. N9 MERCURY station wagon, 1957, in ex- cellent condition. Reasonable. 'rade considered. NO 3-9478. N8 '60 MG 449-5211 SPORTS CAR SALE 1960 Alpha-Romeo '2000 Road. 1960 TR-3 Roadster, BRG, nice 1961 Austin-Healey Sprite, Red 1960 MG-A '1600 Roadster, Blue 1960 Karmann Ghia Coupe, Black 1962 Renault Dauphine, 4-speed 1963 Jaguar 3.8 Sedan, Auto. All Cars Guaranteed FINANCING AVAILABLE OVERSEAS IMPORTED CARSINC. 331 S. Fourth Ave. Ann Arbor, Mich. N7 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING 7T YOURSELF? Grad. students inquire about penny master and our offset process. Pro- fessional Service Associates, 665-8184. 665-8184 MANUSCRIPT typing,- transcription, medical, legal, technical conferences, mimeographing, offset. Quick, Accurate, Experienced ANN ARBOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ASSOCIATES 334 Catherine MISCELLANEOUS LATE, LATE SNACKS? RALPH'S MARKET IS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL MIDNIGHT anything your little stomach desires 709 Packard CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington ANNOUNCING Whit's Truck Rental 202 W. Washington St. Ann Arbor Cali NO 5-6875 Pick-ups Panels Small Vans RENT-A-CAR $8 For 24 Hours Plus 8c per mile ' All rates include gas, oil and necessary insurance SPECIAL Week-End Rate From Friday Noon Until Monday Noon $3.50 Per Day Plus 8c per mile RENT-a-CAR Call NO 3-41356 514 E. Washington St. RELEIVE SUMMER School boredom (among other things), join the GAR- GOYLE staff and spend many fun filled days. No talent necessary (we don't want the rest of the staff to feel inferior). Apply at the Student Publications Building, or call NO 3- 7604. F Meet the Right People The purpose of our organization, using established techniques of personality appraisal and an IBM system, is to introduce unmarried persons to others whose background and ideals are congenial with their own. Interviews by appointment. Phone after 9 am., NO 2-4867. MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE TRANSPORTATION NOTICE! For Airport Limousine Service call 663- 8300. To Metropolitan $4.00. To Willow Run $2.50. Metro round trip $7.00. 01 ECON-O-CAR RENT A COMPACT CAR $3.99 per 12 hr. period plus pennies per mile ECON-O-CAR of ANN ARBOR 341 E. Huron NO 3-2033 BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! "WHITE LEVI'S" SLIM FITS 4.49 FOR "GUYS AND DOLLS" Black, brown, loden, white," cactus, light blue SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington mountain range, would open dia's left flank. Burma Concern The right flank-Burma-is In- an- SOUTHEAST ASIA Diplomaucy Promises Crisis In Southeast Asia, the diplo- matic jungle is often as dense as the real one. Through it dimly can be seen recurrent crises, and the only thing that seems certain is that one crisis will follow another, for a long time to come. There is, of course, real war and real dying. The scale, for those who lived through two world wars, is minute. But what fright- ens the world is the sight of great powers-the Soviet Union, Red China and the United States- hovering around the edges of the conflict, all able, indeed pledged, to commit powerful forces if one side goes too far. China: Dangerous Protagonist Of the three protagonists, the most to be feared is Red China. The Soviet Union, for once, is playing an equivocal role. Khrush- chev, having renounced nuclear war, for the obvious reason that the United States can also play that game, is in the peculiar po- sition of wishing to stir up trouble wherever possible, but yet having to appear less belligerent than Communist China. This is causing him loss of face in Hanoi, headquarters for the Communist drive against South Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia. Ho Chi Minh, the bearded old revo- lutionary leader in North Viet Nam, was schooled in Moscow. When needing help, he used to knock first on that door. Now he looks to Peping, because the Red Chinese have seized from the Rus- sians the banner of violent revolu- tion. Mao Tze-tung, who may have gotten a bellyful in Korea, is fight- ing this war by proxy, and his proxy is Ho Chi Minh. No Chinese forces have been found in South Viet Nam or Laos, but Ho is well- supplied with Chinese, Russian and Czech arms. He has about 250,000 men in his People's Army, but his strongest arm is the guer- rillas. In South Viet Nam they are called Viet Cong, and in Laos the Pathet Lao. The hard-core men in both these forces were trained in North Viet Nam. Together with volunteers, the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam is estimated at more than 100,000. They control per- haps two-thirds of the country, including the virtual suburbs of Saigon. Laos on the Brink take sanctuary behind his border with South Viet Nam, and by charging South Viet Nam and the United States with border incur- sions when they chase the Viet Cong. Such charges come easy along a frontier so badly marked that nobody knows where the line is. And when the prince makes charges, Khrushchev and Mao ap- plaud him, with Mao making the louder noise. Mao is busy elsewhere, too. He is making threatening noises and gestures along his long border with India, and is not adverse to growl- ing at Khrushchev where their claims conflict in the wilds of Sinkiang. Pledges by Sukarno Along the great arc of the South China Sea, where Indonesia and Malaysia come together on the island of Borneo, President Su- karno vows that the Indonesians will crush the British, who stand behind the new state. Khrushchev is in the stands, cheering him on. Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rah- man summons 12,000 more men to the Malaysian colors and then goes to consult his astrologer. The seer tells him the present crisis will continue for 18 months. That certainly seems a safe bet. Into this boiling pot, stir a little French dressing. The French, openly wooing Cambodia, suggest that Laos, Cambodia and South Viet Nam should be "neutralized." To some, this brings to mind the posters in the streets of Saigon : "Red Plan-First Neutralize, then Communize." Some even suggest the French were rather hoping the United States would fail in Southeast Asia, as the French had done. The United States had other ideas. From President Lyndon B. Johnson down the policy was firm: Stand fast in Southeast Asia, with whatever it takes. 'U' Personnel Hold 'Park-I' (Continued from Page 1) eral reasons for their dissatisfac- tion with paid parking on North Campus: -That there is no necessity to build expensive parking structures on North Campus as there is on the less roomy Central Campus. -There are far fewer free parking spaces now left on North Campus than there are on the Central Campus. -Students who use North Cam- pus research facilities cannot ob- tain the necessary parking per- mits but must still commute over distances too far for walking. -Researchers and faculty mem- bers on North Campus travel back and forth between the various campuses frequently in their work and permit parking hinders their commuting. w, i J,8. ..........5. .... , . v:%' ''" ..; 'I :r ..:.. : , Z' 4. l (S Ao 1 N B for juniors and petites.. . THE BLOUSON LOOK in trans-season KODIV polyester fiber and avron rayon.. .a marvelous no-cars blend that looks smart and fresh in our new mid-summer toile prints. A. 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