THlE MICHIGAN DAITY. aeillan Supports New summit Talks In Spring Conferene Would Meet IUEMOY, MATSU: U.S. To Defend Islands. In Attack on Formosa .. ! WASHINGTON (A)--The Eisen- hower administration reasserted yesterday its determination to de- fend the Chinese islands of Que- moy and Matsu against any Chin- ese Communist attack directed, beyond them at the island of For- mosa. In speaking out through the presidential press secretary, James' C. Hagerty, the White House thus apparently sought to give a do- mestic political boost to Vice-Pres- ident Richard M. Nixon in his campaign dispute with Sen. John F. Kennedy. At the same time, the action served as a reminder to Red China that despite the argument be- tween the Republican and Demo- cratic presidential nominees, bas- ic United States policy on Que- moy and Matsu stand so far with- out change. Affirms Policy The, policy affirmation is good until the Eisenhower administra- tion leaves office next January. Nixon says that if elected he will continue the same line; Kerq- nedy has sharply assailed the. present United States commit- ment on Quemoy and Matsu and declared-it should be revised. Diplomatic officials said yester- day that whatever the outcome of the election, the Kennedy-Nixon clash will aliost Inevit.bly lead to a review of the whole Quemoy- Matsu problem by the new presi- dent. This in turn may lead into a re-examination- of the whole state of United States relations with Formosa. and Red China be- cause there are pressures other than those of domestic politics which bear on the situation. State Department officials who are strongly opposed to admitting Red China to the United Nations, for example, are beginning to wonder how long the United States can hold the line now that so many African and Asian nations are UN members. Focuses Disagreement The Quemoy-Matsu argument has developed the only sharply defined foreign policy- disagree- ment between the Republican and Democratic contenders so far in the campalgn. The White House stepped into the Nixon-Kennedy debate over Quemoy and Matsu after the con- tenders for the presidency had stated clashing views'in their tele- vision-radio debates and in cam- paign speeches. PRIME MINISTER MACMILLAN ... asks parley LEAVE USSR: Tourists M 0 VIENNA (-)-The whereabouts of two Americans who had been held incommunicado by Soviet authorities for seven weeks was still shrouded in mystery last night, The Soviet foreign office had told the United States embassy in Moscow that Harvey C. Ben- nett, of Bath, Me., and Mark I. Kaminsky, of Cass County, Mich., who taught Russian at Ann Arbor High School last year, had been expelled to Czechoslovakia at the Uzhgorod crossing point. The United States embassy in Prague said the two Americans have not yet contacted American officials there. "We do not even know whether they have actually crossed the border," an embassy spokesman said. Officials at the United States embassy in Vienna and the lega- tion in Budapest said they had not heard from Bennett and Ka- minsky. There was some speculation here On Germany Prime Minister Tells Need to Party Group SCARBOROUGH, England (M)-- Prime Minister Macmillan called yesterday for a summit conference in the Spring to remove the sput- tering fuse from the German and Berlin problem. The British leader implied that he and Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev already have agreed on the need for such top-level negotia- tions, to be held after a new president has taken over direction of the American government, Addressing a meeting of 5,000 enthusiastic Conservative party workers, Macmillan declared Bri- tain had a key role in improving the international climate. He said the world situation. "has sub- Sstantially worsened" since Khrush- chev torpedoed the summit talks in Paris last May. Carefully selecting his words, Macmillan declared+ big power negotiations on Germany and Ber- lin must be resumed, as this con- stitutes "a potentially dangerous problem, from the point of view of East and West alike." The Prime Minister also called for a resumption of disarmament negotiations. In his wide-ranging speech, Macmillan also made it plain Bri- tain hopes now to come to terms with the French-led common mar- ket and thus end the present com- mercial division of free Europe. He promised that his govern- ment - in dealing with the re- maining dependent British terri- tories in Africa -- will seek to meet the legitimate aspirations for self- government of native Africans while also protecting legitimate rights of while settlers in those areas. 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U.S. Military Aid Withdrawal Prompts Red Action in Laos[ .I 11 VIENTIANE P) - The Com- munists are expcted to start exert- ing fresh .pressure against Premier Prince Souvana Phouma next week to capitalize on his rapidly de- teriorating. relations with the United States. The pressure is expected to come from two directions, Alexander Nikitch Abramov, the first Soviet ambassador to Laos who arrived Wednesday, will sur- prise everyone in town if he does not offer expansive ruble credits to Souvanna to fill the void left by the suspension of American military assistance here, To Give Toehold Russian aid, and the technicians to administer it, would give the Soviet Union its first toehold in this hitherto pro-American South-, east Asian kingdom. Communist-directed Pathet Lao negotiators are also expected to push their advantage at peace talks here by pressing demands for positions of power in a new coalition government. Relations between the United States and Souvanna's neutralist I II~ :1 government hit a new low last week after delicate and poten- tially explosive discussions con- ducted here by J. Graham Parsons, Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs and the United States government's top expert on this part of the world. Lists Two Conditions A responsible western diplomat said yesterday Parsons demanded that Souvanna break off peace talks with the pro-Communist Pathet Lao and come to terms with the rival right-wing regime of rebel Gen. Phoumi Nosavan. This source said these were two United States conditions for resumption of sorely needed American mili- tary aid to Laos. Prime Minister Sarit Thanarat of neighboring Thailand said in Bangkok Thursday suspension of peace talks with the Pathet Lao was one of four demands handed to Souvanna by Parson. Parsons did not deny the report when newsmen questioned him. 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