iDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAIIIV PAGE THREE ~DAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE our American " ie I~n Helicopht Soldiers] 'rCrash Heavy Viet $3 MILLION BRIBE: Rusk Admits Apology to Singapore SINGAPORE ,)--Secretary of State Dean Rusk admitted yes- terday that he sent an official letter of apology to the Singapore government after the U.S. gov- ernment offered Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew a $3 million dollar bribe, in 1961. The bribe to the Sinapore prime minister was made so that he would not reveal that a Central ties of these officials for disciplin- ary action." The State Department's about- face came after Lee, warned that he would disclose top-secret in- formation which would embarrass "very high circles" if Washington continued to deny his story. "If the Americans go on denying this I will have to disclose further details which may James Bond-lurid tesque," he said. sound like and gro- Lee said he finally released the CIA operative because "it would have damaged our relations with Kuala Lumpur and we wanted merger with them." The Singa- pore-Malaya merger went through, but was dissolved last month. He said that if the Washington denials continued, he would name the intermediary who made the bribe offer, as he described it. The State Department confir- mation of the Rvsk letter came a few hours later. McCloskey de- clined to say what, if , any, dis- ciplinary action resulted from the review Rusk promised. MILITARY PUZZLED:{ Viet Cong Monsoon Offensive Cong Fire Fails to Materialize: Rain Ends Downs Craft 84 Wounded in Week. Intelligence Agency operative had GREE ONR N E been caught trying to buy secret 1~7 ~ ~ information here. Prime Minister Yew produced- the letter and the State Depart- content. The department "*ithg drew a blanket denial it had made earlier to the prime minister's L1 charges of an attempt to bribe d e rs ntine Meets with Resolve Impasse By PETER ARNETT Associated Press Special Correspondent SAIGON-The monsoon season is almost over in the southern part of Viet Nam, and for the. third year in a row the widely heralded Viet Cong offensive that is expected to accompany it has not developed.. Military analysts are asking themselves if the Viet Cong ever planned such an offensive in the first place. As in other years, forebodings of torrential rain slicing onto the battlefields and preventing the use of preventive air power led U.S. military authorities to assume that the monsoon period would be an ideal time for the Viet Cong to try for solid military gains. Series A series of Viet Cong actions against Son Be and Dong Xoai, north of Saigon, and other places, around May raised fears that the offensive had started. In fact, both the Song Be and Dong Xoai battles were fought un- der the hot sun. Much of the thinking about the Vietnamese monsoon is fallacious. First of all, it covers only the southern part of the country. Da Naig The highly populated central coastal area, and the region that includes Da Nang, are dry now. And the southern monsoon does not bring a six-month endless sheet of rain. There are weeks of sunshine sprinkled through it, and the showers don't usually last more than an hour. During the height of the ac- tion around the beleaguered out- post of Duc Co near Pleiku, there were three weeks of sunshine. Monsoon The monsoon in the central highlands in particular is fickle. Rain tends to come sweeping through the high mountain passes even in the dry season, and fog hangs low in the valleys. Any time is the bad time in the mountains. If the presumption is accepted that the Viet Cong were plan- ning a major offensive in the monsoon season, then it failed. No Plan If the Viet Cong were not plan- ning such an offensive, but were just steadily escalating their ef- fort, then this monsoon period has been an illuminating one. For example, the Viet - Cong have slackened off their small.unit actions considerably. Last year and in 1963 alnost every night brought attacks in all four military corps areas on isolated outposts and hamlets. Now a week can go by in a corps without one Viet Cong at- tack. Stay Put What the Viet Gong are doing is to mass in large groups in one area, and then attack in force. They may stay around one area for months, as at Duc Co and Binh Gia. These seem like campaigns to destroy district towns and isolate provincial capitals. Vietnamese units which moved in to ,destroy these Viet Cong con- centraions have been battered Report U.S. Death Toll badly. These Vietnamese units Now.Stands at 629 move under cover of heavy air strikes, and head back to base afte a ew weksSAIGON (A")-United States Air after a few weeks. Force B-52 jet bombers today High Casualties pounded a suspected Viet Cong Viet Cong casualties are presum- :area 20 {miles north-northwest of ed to be heavy, too. Saigon, a U.S. military spokes- The Viet Cong have been able man reported. to retain their grip on the areas: The area hit was in the Ho Bo where they are campaigning, com- woods in Binh Duong Province. muniques issued in Saigon show. Under current security restric- Duc Co camp still comes under tions, the spokesman said only nightly Viet Cong harassment. that "a number" of the big Stra- Binh Gia has been cut off by tegic Air Command bombers car- road since January.,!ied out the d. American troops in Viet Nam,' In ground action, Vietnamese sent here initially to guard stra- troops clashed with a Viet Cong tegic bases and permit Vietnamese company 12 miles south of Quant units to get out and fight, are Ngai city early today. him. 33 Million Offer Lee said the $3-million offer was made after he told the U.S. government he would keep quiet about the alleged CIA incident if it supplied $33 million for eco- nomic development. "I will say. this for President John F. Kennedy," Lee comment- ed. "He said no, his government would give me the money if I ATHENS (MP)-King Constantine last night met with leading poli- ticians at a rare crown council and appealed to them to aid in resolving Greece's dangerous poli- tical impasse. The king told 11 party leaders and former premiers that seven weeks of crisis was causing seri- ous danger to the Greek economy, wanted it, publicly, but not be- its international position cause I had him by the throat." internal situation. Lee said Tuesday the Sinapore The meeting, in Athe government had arrested a CIA palace, lasted three and agent, that Lee offered to keep the hours and then a recess thing quiet if given the $33 mil- en until this evening. Ni lion, and that Washington had politicians present gave th replied through an intermediary to the king, and the .o it would give Lee and his People's will speak up today. Action party $3 million to keep Three Failures" and its ns' royal one-half was tak- ne of the heir views ther two for seven years until 1963, went into self-imposed exile resigning in a dispute with another king - Constantine's father, the late King Paul. Caramanlis is in Italy. Passalides Uninvited to the meeting was John Passalides, 80, Moscow-edu- cated physician who heads the Communist-line United Democrat- ic Left party. The 11 politicians present aver- aged 70 years of age, almost three times that of the king. - The king opened the council with a statement that implied he was opposed to elections before the four-year term of the present Parliament expires in February, 1968. Crowd While the council meeting was in progress a boisterous crowd of about 3000 students demonstrated in support of Papandreou at Ath- ens University. Strong police ele- ments were posted in the area but did not interfere with the demonstration. A speaker drew loud cheers from the crowd when he shouted that "only the people can bring down the government-not the palace." And in the crowd a student wav- ed a placard declaring "Only one leader-the people." Another placard read: "Out with the Americans."1 Read and Use Daily Classifieds quickly expanding their role to meet the Viet Cong strategy. .Chu Lai The U.S. Marine battle at Chu Lai was one example. U.S. Army elements now in Viet Nam, and those scheduled to arrive soon, can be expected to take a greater combat role this year.. The American strategy could lead to some major battles,ilike none before in South Viet Nam. The U.S. forces have mobility that the French lacked in the '50's. Future actions are expected to feature far more Vietnamese, pos- sibly regular units. The Vietna- mese high command was report- edly miffed at being left out of planning for the Chu Lai action until the last minute. And U.S. authorities reason that this is still a' Vietnamese war, and that Americans are here only to help. SPaistan Defeats Indian Forces In T Bttles over Kashmir KARACHI, Pakistan (A)-Pakis- tan's forces swept into Indian- held Kashmir Wednesday and captured two posts while the air force shot down four Indian planes, a government spokesman said. The fight centered around the Bhimbar sector in southwest Kashmir. The spokesman said the attackers were Pakistani Kashmir forces backed by Pakistan troops. He said they seized the Indian posts of Devaa and Chhamb. The air force claimed its vic- tory over the Indian planes in the Chhamb area, saying they were trying to cover the retreat of the Indian army. 3,000 In New Delhi, a government, spokesman said at least 3,000 Pak- istani regulars, supported by from 45 to 70 U.S.-made. Patton tanks, attacked after the artillery bar- rage. He reported, Indian war- planes struck at the advancing forces, but made no mention of any being shot down. Ten 'Pakistani 'tanks, were de- stroyed and a number of guns and vehicles were hit, the spokesman claimed. He denied the loss of Devaa and Chhamb. It appeared that the tivo feud- ing nations were on the verge of full-fledged war after 18 years of quarreling over the Himalayan state, which is divided by a 'UN cease-fire line into Indian and Pakistani sections. U Thant At the United Nations in New York, UN Seci-etary-General U Thant went into hurried confer- ences with members of the Secur- ity Council on the fighting. He saw U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg and Soviet Ambassa- dor Planton D. Morozov in quick succession. Fight Continues A U.S. military spokesman said that at 8 a.m. fighting still was goinghon and that U.S. air sup- port had been called into aid the government troops. There was no immediate report on casualties. It also was reported that a one- day operation 12 miles southeast of Quang, Ngai ended yesterday with three Viet Cong killed, 15 persons picked up as suspects and several weapons seized. U.S. ad-. visors confirmed the three Viet Cong killed. A U.S. helicopter crashed yes- terday 25 miles northwest of Sai- gon, apparently under heavy Viet Cong fire, and four Americans and one Vietnamese were killed. A U.S. spokesman, in announc- ing the crash, said a Vietnamese army unit recovered the bodies. Combat losses among U.S. serv- icemen in the week ending Aug. 28 were officially announced as. nine dead, 84 wounded and seven either missing or captured. This brought the roll of Americans killed in action so far to 629. Disclose Loss There was belated disclosure of the loss of a U.S. Navy Skyhawk and its pilot in a raid on North Viet Nam Aug. 24. The spokes- man said American rescuecrews have given up a hunt for the pilot, who 'was seen parachuting into an area about 120 miles south of Hanoi after the Sky- hawk caught fire. The New China News Agency broadcast a Hanoi claim that four jets were shot down Tuesday dur- ing widespread raids on North Viet Nam. American authorities said they lost one. This was a U.S. Air Force F-105 Thunderchief, shot down during the destruction of a bridge about 95 miles west of Hanoi. The pilot parachuted and was rescued by helicopter. Quiet on Ground No major activity was reported on the ground. However, the Viet Cong seemed to be back in the vicinity of the Duc Co Special Forces camp, 215 miles north of Saigon, where a Red siege was lifted last month by a government relief force back- ed by U.S. infantrymen and para- troopers. Briefing officers said the camp came under small arms and mor- tar fire late Tuesday. There was no report of casualties. 700 Captured Briefing officers said 700 Viet Cong were killed or captured last week against government casual- ties of 710, including wounded. There were no estimates of the guerrilla wounded. August was reported to have been the busiest month of the U.S. Air Force over North Viet Nam since the raids were launched Feb. 7. Officials said the Air Force flew 1,172 strike sorties, an aver- age of more than 37 a day. U.S. Navy pilots flying from 7th Fleet carriers handled hundreds of their sorties and South Viet- namese pilots 38. A sortie is the flight mission of a single plane. Raids Targets in raids Tuesday that closed out the month included the . Ban Non Luc barracks, 60 miles east of Dien Bien Phu; and the Ban Lau storage facilities, in the same general area. Eight F-105's attacked the bar- racks, and the pilots said they left them in flames. Four F-105's made the Ban Lau strike. They were reported to have damaged 14 buildings. Foreign Minister Tran Van Do wound up a visit to Malaysia, across the Gulf of Siam, with a I declaration that a Communist vic- The Rusk letter, as quoted by Lee, was dated April 15, 1961, and said: "I am deeply distressed to learn that certain officials of the Unit- ed States government have been found by your government to have been engaged in improper activi- ties in Singapore. "I want you to know that I re- gret very much that this un- fortunate incident has occurred to mar the friendly relations that exist between our governments. The new administration takes a very serious view of this matter and intends to review the activi- quiet. Constantine called the crown Links council after three moves to end He linked President Kennedy the crisis failed. Two men he with this, but later said the offer named as premiers. were voted took place just before Kennedy down by the 300-member Parlia- assumed. office in January 1961. ment. A third man the king asked The State Department issued to form ay government declined a denial Tuesday, and. expressed even to try. regret that Lee had brought up Former, Premier George Papan- the matter at this time. Then dreou, whose ouster July 15 touch- Wednesday, Press officer Robert ed off the crisis, said he had, out- J. McCloskey told Washington re- lined "the well- known. views of porters that the denial was in the Center Union party" for solu- error. tion of the crisis-a caretaker. "Those who were consulted government with elections in 45 within the government on this days. mattei' were- not fully aware of Papandreou was fired in a dis- the background," he said. pute with the king over politics Letter in the armed forces. Avant Garde Documentary on VIET=NAM DAY Followed by a meeting to discuss plans for notional and local/ activities concerning the war in Viet-Nam. Sponsored by The Faculty-Student Committee To Stop the War in Viet-Nam THURSDAY. .. 9:00 P.M.... Aud. B, Angel Hall Caretaker Elias Tsirimokos, currently care- taker premier, told reporters after the meeting that he believed it had been fruitful, and that it. should help the king decide on his future action. Spyrop Markezinis, leader of the small Progressive party, said he had proposed a government of na- tional unity composed of repre- sentatives of all parties. Four invited former premiers did not attend. Two were ill and were out of Athens. One of them, Constantine Caramanlis, premier scholarly editions in the humanities literature-history-philosophy modern poetry-literary criticism livres francais-deutsche buecher I SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION for Upper Classmen highest prices paid for all USED QUALITY PAPERBACKS ann arbor's largest selection always on sale at 30-50% off the centicore bookshop 1321 South University between Forest & Washtenaw All Day on the Diag Thurs., Sept.,2 i I LAL BAHADUR SHASTRI The attack hit Indian forces in their most vulnerable spot-a nar- row neck in southern Kashmir through which runs the only road linking India proper with Kash- mir. Cease-Fire India attacked across the cease- fire line in August and occupied several army posts in Pakistan- held parts of Kashmir but this was the first Pakistani attack into the Indian-held sector of the di- vided Himalayan state. As the Pakistani forces struck, President Mohammed Ayub Khan went on the radio to tell his people that there is "a threat of war in Kashmir -Which is being forced on us by India." MOHAMMED AYUB KHAN Referring to the Indian attacks across the UN cease-fire line, he declared that "these blatant acts of aggression from India cannot and shall not be allowed to go unchallenged." Trial "In this supreme hour of their trial," he said, "the people of Pakistan will rise as one man and give a fitting reply to aggression." In New Delhi, Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri was reported to have decided to pursue India's course in Kashmir regardless of whether he gets international sup- port. There has been growing anger because the United States, Britain and other powers have not publicly condemned Pakistan. LENOY IMPORTS DISTINCTIVE GIFTS Mexican Goods Woolen Goods Sweaters Sara pes Pottery Gifts MAYNARD HOUSE 524 E. WILLIAM 11 Open until Midnight all week RENT YOUR TV Trom NEJA TVRENTALS FR 1. 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Govern- ment sources said he was suffer- ing from general fatigue. * * ' * BOGALUSA--After a summer of violent racial turmoil, public schools in this troubled south- east Louisiana milltown were in- tegrated peacefully yesterday. Two1 Negro boys and a girl, arrivipg WASHINGTON-John Chancel- lor took charge at the Voice of America yesterday with a pledge to broadcast news fast and accur- ately, to include criticism of U.S. policy and to present a lively pic- ture of modern America. "It is my intent that we swing a little," Chancellor said in be- coming head of the U.S. govern- ment's overseas radio. * . * N EJAC TV RENTALS CALL 662-5671 TV Set on Display at Follett's Bookstore .1 1 ATTENTION... ALL GIRLS I RUBBERIZED RAIN PARKAS ALL SIZES AND COLORS tm I I 11 11 1 11 i c i