TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T Doubts Linger Over B-52 Bomber Strike WASHINGTON (P-A Pentagon reconnaissance expert said yesterday high altitude photographs show that at least 470 bombs dropped by a fleet of B52's sowed craters across a Viet Cong strong- hold in South Viet Nam. "This was a very good strike," he told a news conference. The expert, who asked that his name not be used, was presented to reporters in an evident attempt to fortify the government's position that the B52 strike last Thursday was successful. However... Reports from Saigon, however, have indicated the guerrillas " were dealt something less than a Viet Nam Korean Precedent wommommommom JUAN D. BOSCH Labor Strike May Assist Rebel Cause SANTO ,DOMINGO (P) - Labor unions called a 72-hour nation- wide strike yesterday as a show Qf support for the Dominican rebels but got only a partial response. At least two of the approxi- mately 40 factories in Santo Domingo shut down. Others work- ed with partial staffs and some said there had been no employe walkout. Elsewhere in the country, there were no reports of support for the strike call. The rebel leaders said thgeir regime was playing no part in the strike.: But a successful walkout might strengthen the rebels' bar- gaining position. The rebels have physical control of about a one square mile area of downtown Santo' Domingo, but claim wide support in the junta-held coun- tryside. The junta and the rebels are studying an inter-American peace formula placed before them Fri- day. The proposal, accepted by both sides as a basis for nego-, tiations, calls for a compromise provisional government now and elections in six to nine months. Virgilio Meynardi Reina, rebel secretary of labor, said "we in- terpret this strike as a demonstra- tion of support of the constitu- tion." The rebels are demanding a re- turn to the constitution of 1963, under which Juan D. Bosch served as president before his overthrow in September, 1963. The strike was called by the Autonomous Confederation of Christian Unions. It and affiliated organizations claim to represent more than 100,000 workers, or most of the nation's organized labor. crushing blow. Among other things, three spe- cial forces officers who led South Vietnamese teams into the target zone said they saw no physical damage in the 10 per cent of the two-square-mile area they cover- ed. Asst. Secretary of Defense Arthur Sylvester, who was present during the conference, said he was unable to state whether the, estimated four battalions of Viet Cong supposed to have been con- centrated in the target area still are there. Declines Sylvester declined to go beyond what official briefers had said in South Viet Nam as to the real effect of the bombing. However, when pressed, he said the Pentagon is pleased with the results of the strike-based on the reconnaissance photographs and what has been said officially in Saigon. The reconnaissance expert lim- ited himself to discussing before- and-after, photographs taken by the reconnaissance planes. He said he was unable to give any information on the practical damage inflicted, other than the fact the photos showed the cra- ters, and they measured 20 to 40' feet in diameter and six to eight feet deep. Saturation The expert said "very intense saturation" was accomplished in the target area, with 470 craters dug in straight lines across the zone. In addition, he said high and low altitude photographs showed 300 craters, 200 to 300,yards south of the outside of the target zone. There were still others in another area about' two-thirds of a' mile north of the target area. These areas, too, were suspected of being infested with guerrillas, he said. He described the whole area as a, "complex of intense Viet Cong activity." When reporters quoted Saigon dispatches which said the special forces officers claimed to have seen no physical damage, the re- connaissance expert pointed out that the field check had encom- passed only 43 of I the craters- less than 10 per cent of the hits. In Saigon, Brig. Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky yesterday formally took over the premiership from the re- tiring civilian government chief, Phan Huy Quat. And Chief of State Phan Khac Suu formally turned over his post to Maj. Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu, former defense minister. The return of political powers to the military followed the resig- nation of Quat and Suu 10 days ago in the face of mounting op- position. The two had stayed on as caretakers. Austerity Ky outlined a tough austerity program in announcing Saturday his acceptance of the premiership. He has commanded South Viet Nam's airmfomace. NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV World News Roundup MOSCOW OP)-Marshal Georgi K. Zhukov, the Red Army's com- mander in World War II, de- nounced yesterday criticism voic- ed during the Khrushchev era' that he had delayed the final strike against Berlin. Zhukov, former Soviet defense minister, defended himself in the first installment of his wartime memoirs. , Former Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev purged Zhukov in 1957, but the Kremlin's new lead- ers have encouraged the public rehabilitation of the World War II hero. , 3 . * * TOKYO' ()-Japan and South Korea are set to formally sign today a basic treaty and various agreements that will restore nor- mal diplomatic relations for the first time in 60 years. ., * UNITED NATIONS (R) - Six countries of Europe and North America started the ball rolling yesterday for a voluntary fund to pay off the United Nations' $108 million peacekeeping deficit and get the General Assembly back to voting. Britain, Denmark, Iceland, Nor- way, Sweden and Canada spon- taneously pledged unconditional voluntary contributions of $17,- 780,000 to the United Nations for the stated purpose of resolving the "financial difficulties." In concerted moves, Britain pledged $10 million, Canada $4 million, Sweden $2 million, Den- mark $1 million, Norway $700,000 and Iceland $80,000. Their chief UN delegates made the promisees to Secretary-General U Thant. The pledges expressed hope that their pledges would help break the Assembly's voting deadlock. By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Ana'yst WASTINGTON - Any time the# United States gets into an unde- clared war-as it is in Viet Nam- it faces divided opinion at home and criticism of the President. The result is confusion about what is being done or should be done. It happened to President Truman with Korea; it's happen-, ing now to President Johnson with Viet Nam. In both cases the Presidents sought discussions but the prob- lem in Korea and in Viet Nam was and is how to persuade the enemy to agree to such talks. Not Enough Just proposing wasn't and isn't enough. The task for both men was how to hit the enemy hard enough to convince him it's wiser to talk peace without hitting so hard that the United States finds itself in a huge land war in Asia. Truman fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur for wanting to extend the war in Korea and China whose "volunteers" were the main foe in Korea. And now there is fear if the Vietnamese war is broadened too much China will come in. Before this country was in the Korean war six months-Truman sent the troops in and they be- came part of a United Nations operation under American leader- ship-Sen. Robert A. Taft, Repub- lican leader from Ohio, was on Truman's back. Violation? He accused the President of violating the Constitution by not getting advance congressional ap- proval for use of troops and he suggested the United States pull out of Europe. (There is less ground for this complaint against Johnson for us- ing troops in South Viet Nam and bombing North Viet Nam because Congress last August gave him a go-ahead to do what he thought necessary.) But Taft, who wanted to pull out of Korea, later backed Mac- Arthur and wanted to use U.S. planes a n d warships against China. Another Republican leader, Sen. Styles Bridges of New Hampshire, called the Truman policy in Korea an "immoral course of kill, kill, kill and hope somebody will be willing to negotiate." More Than Ever- But then Truman got drowned in more criticism than ever for dismissing MacArthur, whose att.i- tude was a lot more belligerent than Truman's. In the end, North. Korea agreed to an armistice. In Viet Nam Johnson has sought to induce the North Vietnamese to negotiate a settlement. To per- suade them, he's been bombing them since February but they have ignored him and in South Viet Nam the Viet Cong is fight- ing harder than ever. By a twist in politics most of the congressional criticism of Johnson comes from inside the ranks of his own Democrats. The Republicans so far have been supporting him although there are signs this may change. Harsh Critic Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon, one-time Republican who became a Democrat and friend of John- son when the latter was Senate leader, is perhaps the harshest critic of his Viet Nam policies. Two other Democratic senators -Ernest Gruening of Alaska and A. Willis Robertson of Virginia- have appealed for this country to submit the conflict to the United Nations. And a Republican, Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York, asked for a thorough fact-finding inquiry into the Vietnamese war, such as the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is going to make into the U.S. role in the Dominican Republic. Fulbright In the midst of all this, Sen. J. W. Fulbright of Arkansas, chairman of the Foreign Relations only Committee, made a long Senate speech which didn't pretend to have solutions but illustrated the unhappy American condition. He's against pulling out the American forces in Viet Nam-he thinks the consequences would be disastrous. He hopes for a negoti- ated settlement, doesn't want to see the war broadened. He said he's afraid broadening it would get the United States into a long drawn-out jungle war where the other side would have the advantages. Fulbright made his speech after a White House conference with Johnson. for $11 (Ct" 4 great dresses NEW ALGERIAN STRONGMAN Houari B'ouinedienne, left, who overthrew President Ahmed Ben Bella, may initiate more revolutionary policies than his predecessor as Algerian leader, He has a Marxist background and is a veteran of the Algerian revolution. NewUD Algerian Boss Leans Left By ANDREW BOROWIEC\ Associated Press Staff Writer NEW YORK - Houari Boume- dienne, secretive and taciturn Algerian army chief, waited near- ly three years to strike at Ahmed Ben Bella. He and his army: backed Ben Bella's quest for power in the tur- bulent days that followed Algeria's hard-won independence in the summer of 1962. They supported Ben Bella dur- ing his tough, uncompromising efforts to consolidate power over 12 million Algerians. Precarious Alliance It was a tense and precarious alliance and seasoned observers of the Algerian scene predicted that one day it would disintegrate. pn - 1dim nAd giers. It was Ben Bella who set the stage for the meeting as a self-styled champion of the "third world's revolutionary movements. Emerging as the new head of Algeria-a much shaken country, strategically located in the Medi- terranean and still groping in a maze of economic and political problems-Boumedienne is a vir- tually unknown figure. Rose Swiftly His real name is Mohamed Boukharouba. He rose swiftly in the ranks of Algerian guerrillas fighting for independence from France, emerging a -much-feared and followed commander. In 1961 a report of the French m i1i t a r y intelligence described Boumedienne as a rising star and a man to watch. training was said Czechoslovakia. to have been in Signifncantly, Bfoumemenne anu- his military followers struck vir- The report described Boume- tually on the eve of the much- dienne as having a strong Moslem publicized summit conference of background, but leaning toward the Asian-African nations in Al- Marxism. Part of Bouedienne's The colonel showed his face to the world for the first time in April 1962 in an Algerian army camp near Le Kef in Western Tunisia. Irony Ironically, he was there to in- troduce Ben Bella to the ranks of Algeria's elite battalion. It was Boumedienne who back- ed Ben Bella in a subsequent quar- rel pitting him against the Alger- ian government in exile. Without Boumedienne's 45,'000-man army, Ben. Bella's rise to power would have been thwarted. Boumedienne's view has been' that the army should have an active role in forging Algerian socialism. He envisaged some sort of popular militia' which would hold a rifle in one hand and workers' tools in the other. lie has often been described as an idealist, a pure revolutionary to whom even Ben Bella's social- ism was too moderate. Too Early It is much too early to say whether the takeover will graph- ically change Algeria's internal situation or its role among the world's undeveloped nations. The country's problems, rafter the departure of most of one mil- lion European settlers, are over- whelming. No single coup d'etat or change in government would be able to solve them. Nevertheless, Algeria is regard- ed as a barometer of the trends and tensions gripping the third world. 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Jd".".>:::: k<::r:: i.'v. k" .>.>:"r.:>{ :v::'r:{".."'::":"rf :":.f i>y>+'{"w:ti4Ji {v::..."."::::.>{..?,{J"i:. DIAL 2-6264 WALTDISNEY S The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which Tlhe Michigan Daily assumes no editor- tal responsibility. Notices should be l sent in TVPE'Ii'IT'l'IN form to Room 3564 Administration UBdg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the Pay preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday 9 for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be nublished a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day 7 Calendar items appear once only. Student organiration notices are nots accepted for publication. TUESDAY, JUNE 22 Day Calendar j American Guild of Organists Regional Convention-Hill Aud., 8:15 a.mn. Center for Programmed Learning for Business Training systems Institute-, Geary A. Rummier, director, "Using the Systems Approach to Direct Train- ing and Manpower Activities": Mich- igan Union, 8:30 a.m.] American Guild of Organists Conven- tion Recital-Jerald Hamilton, Univer- sity of Illinois: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m.' Doctoral Examination for Charles, Martin Wy n n, Chemistry; thesis: "Stereochemistry of Pyrrolidine Addi- tion to Cicyclo 1:2.2 cot-n-ene-2-car- bonitrile," Tues., June 22, 3400 Chem istry Bldg., 2 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Ernest; John Travis, Education & Psychology;i thesis: "An Investigation of the Ra- tional Decision Making, Cooperation, Greed, Punishment, and Withdrawal Manifested by Schizophrenics in Sev- eral Experimental Conflict Situations," Tues., June 22, 2006 Mental Health Research Inst. Any persons interested in ushering for the Summer Series of 4 concerts in Rackham Aud, in July may sign up for Lhese concerts and pick up their Usher Tickets at the Box Office at Hill Aud. on Wednesday, June 23, 7 p.m. See Mr. Warner. This will prob- ably be your only opportunity to sign so please be prompt. Doctoral Examination for David Bruce Lellinger, Botany; theisis: "A Quantitative Study of Generic Delimi- tation in the Adiantoid Ferns," Tues., June 22, 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg., 2 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Joseph Norman Silvernale, Jr., Microbiology; thesis: "Mode of Antibacterial Action of Texachlorophene," Tues., June 22, 1570 E. Medical Bldg., 10 a.m. NSF Advanced Science Education Program Instructions for applying to NSF for support of Advanced Science Seminars, Graduate Development Pro- jects, and Public Understanding of Science Projects are contained in a booklet which, may be consulted in the Office of Associate Dean Freeman D. Miller, Room 118 Rackham Bldg. Foreign Visitors Following are the foreign visitors programmed through the International Center who will, be on campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements are being made by Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, International Center, 764-2148. Mr. and Mrs. P. Jayachandra June 21-23 - Deputy Director, Production Management, Small Industries Exten- sion Training Institute. Hyderabad, India. Mrs. Irma Alicia Gigena de Rankin: June, 22-27-Director of Courses, Eng- lish Teaching Program, Aricana, Bina- tional Center, Mendoza, Argentina. Miss Olga Penaranda: June 22-27 - Registrar, Binational Center, La Paz, Bolivia. Mrs. Susana Paternain Carozzo: June 22-27 - English Teacher, Binational Center, Montevideo, Uruguay. i Mrs. Elena Watt Barroso: June 22-27 -Head Librarian, Binational Center, Santiago. Chile. Miss Maria Evangelina Arca Bielich: June 22-27-Assistant to the Director. Callao Branch, Binational Center, Lima, Peru. Miss Lucia Valencia Arango: June 22- 27 - Administrative Secretary, Centro Colombo-Americano, El Palo No. 53-30, Medellin, Colombia. Mr. O.M.A. Kheiri: June 22-Aug. 18- Lecturer in English, Higher Teacher Training Institute, Omdurman, Sudan. Mr. Maurice Calvet: June 23-Aug. 18 -Director, Laboratory of Experimental Phonetics, Centre de Linguistique Applique, University of Dakar, Dakar- Fann, Senegal. tions Trainee. Immed opening for re- cent grad. Bus. or econ. helpful. No exper. req. Trng. in merchandising, leases, etc. Career opportunity. Local Firm - Sales Repres. Immed. oening for business machines sales. Dgree or some college. Exper. helpful, will train. Age 22-30. Wilson and Co., Inc., Chicago-Var- ious openings including 1. Mkts. Mer- chandising Manager, recent grad. in mktg. or advtg. 6 mos. trng. 2. Jr. Accountant, acctg. major, exper. desir- able for corp. tax dept. 3. Chemist, B.S. plus a few years exper. in analyt chem. desirable. For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. 0 w 14 1 TECHNICOLOR' RENT YOUR TV From NEJAC TV RENTALS ~ Rent this 19" GE or Zenith Portable For only $10 per month FREE SERVICE & DELIVERY N EJAC TV RENTALS Call 662-5671 TV Set on Display at Follett's Bookstore Ain't that somethIn'! These are Miss Pat's Dacron and cotton oxford cloth shirt dresses with stretch straw belts. Top: blue, green or pink pin stripes on white. Sizes 5-6 to 13-14 Bottom. solid colors in faded denim-like colors. Celery, red, It. blue, and med. blue Sizes 5-6 to 15-16 EVERYDAY IS PLAYDAY FOR THIS HAPPY GO-LUCKY CLOWNI SLIVE .ACTION F.PA J R And on the same a// Wat Disney progam/ WALT DISNEY'S the teern-ae TECHNICOLOR'-*OMCMLxI Waltomisft idudtnm Placement 1 POSITION OPENINGS: Ohio Agric. Experiment Station, Wooster - Asst. Electron Microscopy Trainee. B.S. or M.S. in Biol. Sci., Bichem. or Chem. or equiv exper. In- terest in bioi ultrastructure related to function. International Labor Office -Spanish and French translators. Degree or equiv. Perfect command of Engl. and French plus Spanish, German or Russian. Age 23-45. Translate mat'1. on labor related subjects. Applic. deadline Aug. 31. Detroit Company -- Business Opera- v 1 b CII-WNIMIAMY DIAL 8-6416 ENDING WEDNESDAY I LOWER LEVEL AS n cw0 r 6 n THE ROMANOFFS GERMAN-AMERICAN CUISINE HOME MADE LENTIL SOUP, Hungarian goulash buttered noodles, roll & butter ..........$.95 "YOU'LL HOLD YOUR SIDES LAUGHING!"-Newsweek THAT WHOOP-IT-UP coeum alp I -). FUNNY WESTERNI uT...- in COLUMBIA COR UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER presents STREET DANCE .r... . . . Collin Shows at 1:00-3:30-6:15-8:50 FREE I iV9 1 , i -, t I