WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y' PAGE THRES WEDNESDAY, MARCH Z3, 1966 THE MIChIGAN DAILY PAGE THREU IF Future May Bring Change in Chinese Foreign Policy By The Associated Press There is substantial evidence that Red China is worried about recent setbacks and that it is tak- ing a searching new look at its relations with both the Commun- ist and non-Communist worlds. Despite the mounting signs of nervousness, however, many West- ern and Communist diplomats agree that Peking is not yet ready to unveil any significant foreign policy changes. For that reason, the Soviet- Chinese breach is expected to dominate the 23rd congress of the Soviet Communist party opening in Moscow next Tuesday. Some Eastern European observers be- lieve the split may even become deeper because of differences fver Viet Nam. The Communist congress has fo- cused attention on China policy at a time when China experts every- where are watching developments with growing interest. This would be a likely occasion for a policy shift to come into play-if there was one. Some diplomatic observers be- lieve that any changes in the im- mediate future may be subtle and perhaps even involuntary. They may not be easily detectable. Top U.S. experts on China, in testimony before the Senate For- eign Relations Committee, have suggested that the Peking gov- ernment was being forced to pur- sue a somewhat more cautious foreign policy because of internal economic problems. And some British experts say that successive Chinese foreign policy reverses in Asia, Africa and Latin America may have the ef- fect of compelling Peking tem- porarily to slow down its program of promoting world revolution. Such changes still are not ap- parent. It-is known, however, that most top Chinese diplomats have been called to Peking in recent weeks for what analysts consider to be a major foreign policy review. ' One of these was Wang Kuo- chuang, Peking's envoy to Poland. After his return, U.S. Ambassador John A. Gronouski had a three- hour talk with him in Warsaw last week. Gronouski obviously was seeking clues to any possible change of policy, but indications are that he found none. Secretary of State Dean Rusk said this week that all attempts by the United States to narrow its differences with Red China had met intransigence. This seems to fit Peking's re- action to a recent feeler by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. He suggested that the United States must maintain its present policy of containment, but must not try to isolate the Chinese people. The reply of the Peking paper Jenmin Jihpoa was that such a statement cannot fail to disgust the Chinese people and make them maintain the utmost vigilance. Officially, there has been no change of U.S. policy toward Peking but the Humphrey gesture and other less obvious moves have indicated that the United States may be ready for unbending to some extent if any signs appear of a shift in Red China's policy. One of the main factors which has given rise to reports of pos- sible China policy changes has been a series of recent articles in the Communist party paper show- ing clear signs of worry and in- dulging in unusually frank self- criticism. Some statements have stressed that setbacks on the road to revo- lution must be expected. Some even hinted at poor leadership as a possible reason for losses suffered by Red China in Cuba, Ghana and Indonesia-all of which were major reverses in its program for world revolution. One article said "sometimes the leadership of the revolution itself may make a mistake of one kind or another." Taken in context with other articles, this statement could be interpreted as a hint of a change in China's leadership itself. No names were mentioned but the two most prominent figures in China's foreign policy dealings have been Premier Chou En-lai and Foreign Minister Chen Yi. Some of the experts believe that no major changes will come in, foreign policy until the leadership' in the Peking government is changed. Because of the age of the top leaders, including Chairman Mao Tze-tung, this cannot be far, off. Harvard Prof. John M. H. Lind-' beck, one of the China experts who appeared before the Foreign Re- lations Committee, said Peking's aging leaders may have been stun- ned by the failures of their ambi- tious undertakings and that they now "seem to be uncertain of the direction in which they should move." . The theory is that new leader- ship, like that which followed the death of Stalin in the Soviet Union, may be more flexible and more ready to patch up relations with the rest of the world. That is in part, at least, the reasoning behind the wave of pressure from U.S. China experts for the United States to end its isolation of China, accord it diplo- matic recognition, agree to its admission to the United Nations and otherwise indicate a readiness to get along. The feeling is that this may have its effect eventually, when new leadership comes. if not immediately. r Political Unrest Increases Indonesia Russia Rejects Treaty Banning Strengthens 'Spread of Nuclear Weapons I. Buddhists Recoil at Ky DalaiSpeech U.S. Forces Score On Trucks, Junks And Gunboats by Air SAIGON (A)-Fresh antigovern- ment demonstrations in Saigon, Da Nang and Hue though peaceful in nature, have added to the pol= tical ferment touched off March 10 by the government's dismissal of a Buddhist favorite, Lt. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Tri, as commander of South Viet Nam's 1st Corps' Area. Buddhists took umbrage at a weekend speech by Ky in Dalat, charging he had accused them of being traitors, unreasonable and generally suspect. Ky denied the charge. He said he had never accused the Buddhists of any- thing. Reforms The Buddhist Institute-cam- Spaigning for a new constitution, a national election and a speedup in social and economic reforms- issued a communique complaining about these quotes: "Any form of disturbance, street demonstration, strike or walkout will have no influence on the government. The armed forces and the administration will notj yield to unjustified claims which are'contrary to the interest of the nation and the people. This is a warning." Ky declared in a widely publi- cized denial that he had "never 'i0 thought the Buddhist wishes were illogical and unpatriotic." He said] his Dalat speech was aimed at: "feudalists, colonialists and Com- munists" who were seeking to1 disrupt national unity and weaken South Viet Nam's fighting spirit. Fighting Meanwhile, U.S. Marines have killed at least 204 Communists in expanding ground operations in1 South Viet Nam's northern pro- vinces, a spokesman reported. Their own losses were reported light. However, 10 Marines were killed in the crash of a helicopter flying in support of Operation Texas in Quang Ngal Province, 330 miles1 northeast of Saigon. The only sur-1 vivor, the pilot, was thrown clear1 of the flaming wreckage. He was critically injured. k . Targets of the day included a convoy of 50 trucks stalled by un- repaired bomb craters on Route 15 near Mugia Pass, 60 miles south of Vinh. U.S. jet pilots said they destroyed or damaged 27 of the canvas-topped vehicles. Subjected I to heavy flack, they said they also knocked out 14 antiaircraft guns. Gunboats Five gunboats and three junks were reported destroyed or dam- aged in waters between Dong Hoi and Vinh by Navy fliers from the carriers Ranger and Enterprise. A spokesman said that, among other strikes in 38 missions, they wrecked two bridges and a ferry crossing. Other military highlights: --Elements of the U.S. 25th In- * fantry Division ambushed a squad of 10 or 12 Viet Cong in the cen- tral highlands 35 miles north of Ban Me Thuot and killed four. They captured two automatic rifles of Red Chinese make. -A patrol of the U.S. 101st Airborne Division's 1st Brigade, a .rn a f taO1evae 19 mies < 'Senate Votes Added Funds M A-k wi T u ,h-t XTL1 1l1 War With Malaysia May Be Ended To Increase Needed Trade SINGAPORE (A) - Indonesia's military regime may call off Presi- dent Sukarno's undeclared war against Malaysia and Singapore for economic reasons, diplomats reported yesterday. GENEVA (AP)-A new U.S. bid for a world-wide treaty banning the spread of nuclear weapons was rejected out of hand by the Soviet Union yesterday. Soviet delegates Semyon K. Tsarapkin turned thumbs down on a revised American draft treaty presented to the 17-nation disarm- ament conference by U.S. negotia- tor Adrian S. Fisher. The new American plan was de- signed mainly to allay Soviet fears that West Germany may gain con- trol over atomic weapons in the envisaged Western nuclear force. The new draft treaty text does not provide any substantial change from the previous American plan/ repeatedly rejected by Tsarapkin as unacceptable. It is reworded to include some of the expressions contained in the rival Soviet draft treaty and spell out in greater de- I I. r orv 1V leiINan Indonesian tin and rubber ship- ments to Singapore and Malaysia Senate Hopes To were a main source of foreign ex- Senat Hops Tochange until Sukarno began his End War Through policy of confrontation about three years ago. This source then Spending Step-Up was cut off. During this time, both tin and WASHINGTON (gP)-The Senate rubber plantations-the main for- voted yesterday to give the ad- eign exchange producers-have ministration an extra $13.1 billion been allowed to run down. But now to fight the war in Viet Nam. Jakarta radio says rubber plan- tations have been directed to step Passage of the appropriation up production. bill was accomplished by demands from Sen. Richard B. Russell (D- New Strongman Ga) for a stepping up of power Lt. Gen. Suharto, the new strongj to "bring this war to a close." man of Indonesia, has said Su-j Johnson Turns Downi France's NATO Plan tail the nuclear powers' under- taking to retain full control over their nuclear arms within a mili- tary alliance. Tsarapkin said the revised American proposal "is nothing new and does not advance our negotiations here by one inch." The American plan "changes nothing," he said. "It is a little closer to the wording of our own draft agreement, but it still leaves a loophole to permit sharing" of Western nuclear weapons with Bonn. The revised draft agreement spells out more clearly than the previous text that no single non- nuclear nation or group of nations would be allowed to use atomic weapons without the agreement of the state which owns them. It also lays more stress on a nuclear weapon state's :obligation not to encourage or assist a state without such weapons to make or acquire its own atomic arms. Andy it would pledge the nuclear pow- ers ''not to take any other action which would cause an increase in the number of states and associa- tions of states having control of nuclear weapons." --Associated Press MICHAEL RAMSEY, Archbishop of Canterbury, arrives in Rome. Anglican Archbishop Confers with Pope ROME (P-Dr. Michael Ramsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, arrived from London yesterday "full of hope" for his historic meeting with Pope Paul VI. The trip was marred at both ends by denun- ciations of the Anglican leader as a traitor to British Protestantism. On the jetliner that brought Dr. Ramsey to the first official meeting between an Anglican pri- mate and a Pope since 1534, were four protestant ministers who called the visit an act of "treach- ery., Two of the ministers were bar- red from entering Italy. Three hours after their arrival, the Rev. John Wylie and the Rev. Ian Pais- ley, both Free Presbyterians from Northern Ireland, were bundled onto another plane by Italian police and flown back to England. Shouts of "Traitor!" had risen at London Airport at Dr. Ramsey's departure. The four ministers then boarded the same plane. During the flight, British security men blocked the entrance to the first- class compartment, preventing the protesting ministers from addres- sing the archbishop. The archbishop meets today with Pope Paul in the Sistine Chapel, where Paul was elected spiritual leader of the world's Creative Arts Festival presents UBU CORNUTATUS by Alfred Jarry Starring DONALD HALL THOMAS i. GARBATY I :ia T rr*i- .: ltn r. half-billion Catholics . three years ago. On Thursday, the Pope and Dr. Ramsey, who represents the world's 45 million Anglicans, will pray together and embrace in a symbolic kiss of peace. The dissenting ministers called the kiss of peace "an insult to the glorious stand of the Reformers." Dr. Ramsey requested the meet- ing with the Pope in November. No startling results are expected from the talks, but the archbishop has said he wants to discuss "practical matters which can hurt feelings." These are e'xpected to include mixed marriages, priestly orders and doctrine. Russell, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said present tactics may require 10 orI 12 years to bring the Viet Cong to their knees and "the American people are going to be very un- happy about it" unless the Com- munists are forced to the peace table soon. Close Haiphong Sens. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) and Hug Scott (R-Pa) joined Russell in demanding that the North Viet Nam port of Haiphong be closed by bombing, mining or blockading. Voting against the bill on the final roll call were Sen. Ernest, Gruening (D-Ala), who protested against an escalating war and "the increasing slaughter" of Americans and South Vietnamese, and Sen.j Wayne Morse (D-Ore) who fre- quently joins Gruening in criticiz- ing U.S. foreign policy. The measure won House passage' by a 389-3 vote last week but it must be returned there for action on Senate amendments limiting the defense secretary's authority to transfer funds in support of South Vietnamese and other allied forces. There was no argument between the House and Senate over the amount of funds. karno's confrontation policy will be continued, but diplomats say the general is a realist. Suharto knows his regime can head off trouble only by improving living conditions. Diplomats noted that one of the quickest ways to improve the economy would be to reopen trade with Singapore and Malaysia. One diplomat notd that one reason for the anti-Communist student demonstrations that broke Sukarno's power was the economic chaos in the country and added: "The people of Indonesia are tired of going hungry." Progress Radio Jakarta also announced that Suharto was making progress in his campaign to bring down prices. The broadcast said mer- chants in Indonesia were obeying Suharto's orded to lower prices on some commodities as much as 10 per cent. The radio also reported Sukarno had met with the new anti- Communist Cabinet presidium at Merdeka Palace for three hours during the morning to discuss var- ious problems. Previously, however, Sukarno had been reported taken under heavy guard to his summer palace at Bogor, south of Jakarta. I WASHINGTON (A) - President Johnson sent a personal message to President Charles de Gaulle yes- terday spelling out U.S. rejection of France's plan for dismantling the North Atlantic Treaty Organi- zation's integrated defense struc- ture. In reporting this, informed sources said Undersecretary of State George W. Ball handed Johnson's message to French Am- bassador Charles Lucet at the State Department. It was reported also that John- son will speak on the NATO ques- tion in what was termed a major ~address today to a meeting of sen- ior U.S. Foreign Service officers.' The 9:30 a.m. EST speech is slated' for national radio -, television broadcast. At a news conference late yes- terday, the President affirmed that he may comment on De Gaul- le's proposals. Johnson's message' to De Gaulle was a second, more detailed reply to a March 7 letter from the French leader stating France's intent to withdraw her forces from NATO and expel NATO bases from her soil if they are not placed under her sover- eignity. 5hAn earlier Johnson reply was in the nature of a short acknowledg- ment pending consultation with the other 13 NATO allies. The 14 publicly reaffirmed last Friday their belief in the need for a uni- fied military system. In his message yesterday John- son is understood to have empha- sized to De Gaulle a U.S. deter- mination to stand with the other allies in carrying on an integrated NATO structure even if France pulls out of it. World ZNew By The Associated Press STORRS, Conn.-Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark) suggested last night that the United States with- draw its forces. from Southeast Asia if China will agree to refrain from military intervention and respect the political independence of countries in that area. He said a lasting peace in South- east Asia depends far more on a setlement between the United States and China than on who is to participate in a South Viet- namese government and how it is to be formed. "It seems to me possible that the crisis in Southeast Asia can be resolved on a lasting basis by the withdrawal of American mili- tary power to the islands and waters around the coast of Asia coupled with a political arrange- ment for the neutralization of the small countries of the Southeast Asian mainland-Thailand, Ma- laysia and Burma." * * * TOKYO-Four eadthquakes, one Lucet was in to see Ball in com- pany with Maurice Schumann, chairman of the French National Assembly's Foreign Relations Com- mittee, who is currently on a Washington visit, the informants said. Lucet and Schumann also paid a call at the White House and talked with the President, it was added. Roundup' of great intensity, shook north China yesterday apparently not far from the city of Singtai, hit hard by two earth shocks this month. The shock waves rolled north- ward to Peking, sending people fleeing into the streets, Japanese cordespondents in the Red Chinese capital reported SUEZ, Egypt-President Gamal Abdel Nasser last night pledged new support for Republican forces in Yemen and threatened destruc- tion for anyone who tries to thwart the Yemeni revolution. * * * PRETORIA, South Africa-U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) has been granted a visa to visit South Africa, long a focal point of the struggle between white su- premacists and African nation- alists. Kennedy had previously ac- cepted an invitation by the Na- tional Union of South African Students to address a mass multi- racial rally in Cape Town in May. BENJAMIN SCIENCE PAPERBACKS For serious students of chemistry, physics and biology here is a new Benjamin series of elementary, topical paperbacks which deal with the fundamental ideas in science. Impressive two color illustrations have been used to clarify basic concepts. Ii~ ~i1 v THE STRUCTURE OF MOLECULES G. Barrow (Case) HOW CHEMICAL REACTIONS OCCUR E. King (Colorado) MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE J. Watson (Harvard) NUCLEI AND RADIOACTIVITY G. Choppin (Florida St.) COORDINATION CHEMISTRY F. Basolo, R. Johnson THE SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY D. Bohm (London) ORGANIC REACTION MECHANISMS R. Breslow (Columbia) INTRODUCTION TO STEREOCHEMISTRY K. MisloW (Princeton) LECTURES ON MATTER & EQUILIBRIUM Hill (Oregon) CALCULUS OF CHEMISTRY J. Butler, D. Bobrow MATHEMATICS FOR INTRODUCTORY SCIENCE COURSES D. Greenberg (Columbia) ELECTRONS AND CHEMICAL BONDING H. Gray (Columbia) THE MOLECULES OF NATURE J. Hendrickson (Brandeis) THE SHAPE OF CARBON COMPOUNDS W. Ferz (Florida St.) TRACKING DOWN PARTICLES R. Hill (Illinois) INTRODUCTION TO SPECIAL RELATIVITY J. Smith (Illinois) BEHAVIOR OF ELECTRONS IN ATOMS R. Hochstrasser (Penn.) BIOSYNTHESIS OF MACROMOLECULES V. Ingram (MIT) CHEMICAL THERMODYNAMICS 1. Klotz (Northwestern) THE TRANSITIONAL ELEMENTS E. 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