THE MICHIGAN DAILY European Algerians Riot Tour BLOODLESS COUP: Leftists Recapture Laos City As De Gaulle Starts 4Vientiane (A')-- Leftist Capt. Kong Le and his troops recaptured military control of Vientiane in a bloodless coup yesterday, ousting anti-Communist soldiers who un- seated him 24 hours earlier. As the two forces observed an unofficial and uneasy truce in their struggle for control of the World News Roundup., By The Associated Press capital's garrison, two more plane- loads of paratroopers from the command of rightist rebel Gen. Phoumi Nosavan dropped eight miles from the capital. The Phoumi paratroopers rein- forced two other planeloads drop- ped Thursday, giving the rebel general about 180 well trained men in easy striking distance of the capital. t Choice Seen Frenh Fear F or Safety Of President Crowds Driven Off By Rain, Tear Gas ALGIERS VP)-Rebellious Eu- ropean Algerians rioted angrily yesterday d e f y i n g President Charles de Gaulle. as he started touring this revolt-torn land to drum up support for his plan of self-determination for Algeria. At least 100 persons were hurt in a day of stone-throwing and head-cracking. About 400 were ar- rested. In Algiers, army tanks flattened barricades erected in an effort to recreate the perilous siege of last January. returns To Algeria De Gaulle, back on Algerian soil but far from the violence here, scorned it, saying in the town of Ain Temouchent: "Shouts, noise-that signifies nothing. Facts, clarity, good sense are what we should show and not a devotion to outdated slogans and formulas." Nevertheless, there was fear that yesterday's demonstrations were only a start. De Gaulle's tour has five days to go and some French- men expressed fear for his safety. Last January the Europeans at their barricade almost overthrew de Gaulle. They want Algeria to remain a French territory. At the other end of the political spec- trum, Moslem nationalists want to make Algeria an independent na- tlion. De Gaulle seems hopeful of obtaining a solution somewhere between the extremes. Battle Scene At nightfall, Algiers looked as if it had been the scene of a full- scale battle. The fighting still rag- ed after dark, with riot troopers lobbing tear gas grenades into groups of demonstrators and even into overhanging balconies where: screaming Europeans gathered. Finally, a torrential rain and a 14-minute tear gas bombardment drove the demonstrators away and relative quiet settled over the city. Heavy police patrols remained on duty.F Clearly, authorities did not in- tend to let the situation get out of hand as has happened so often before in this troubled North Afri- can territory. Some 400 people were herded off to Jail and au- thorities announced most of these would be taken off to internment camps in the hot southern area of Algeria. Need Army Aid There is general agreement that unless the army sides with riot- ers, the rioting cannot succeed in no sympathy yesterday. its purpose and the army showed While the Europeans rioted bloodily in Algiers and Oran, the towering French president cooly faced down a shouting hostile throng at Ain Temouchent, in Western Algeria. De Gaulle began his six-day Al- gerian inspection trip by seeking Out Moslems in the packed public square. While his aides looked on in helpless awe, the icy French leader pushed through his own se- curity guard to shake hands with clutching Moslems who beamed and cried "Vive de Gaulle." Around him howled angry Eu- ropeans-some 5,000 of them- shouting "Algeria is French." Only minutes before his arrival the same men were shouting "De Gaulle to the stake" and had bad- ly mauled several Moslems who dared raise signs reading "Vive Ade Gaulle." --AP Wirephoto PROTEST IN ORAN-Stone throwing crowds filled the streets of this Algerian city in demonstra- tions touched off by the visit of French President Charles de Gaulle. SOVIET-CHINA AGREEMENT: U.S. Waryl of Newff, Red Pact CABINET: More Posts Considered By Kennedy. WASHINGTON (M)-President- elect John F. Kennedy gathered his personal family yesterday and left by air for a long weekend in Palm Beach, Fla., where he will continue the job of assembling an official family to take office with him in six weeks. A few hours before the takeoff, Kennedy brought home from Georgetown University Hospital Mrs. Kennedy and their two- weeks-old son, John F. Kennedy, Jr. He apparently discussed an ad- ministration post with at least one of a stream of callers who filed through his Georgetown house during the morning and early afternoon. This one was Walt W. Rostow, a Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology economist who has built a reputation as an authority on the relative strength of United States and Iron Curtain economies and who was a key member of Ken- nedy's campaign brain trust. Rostow after his conference turned away questions about job offers, but inadvertently hinted at one when he said he might make a decision next week. Kennedy has indicated opti- mism that the coming week will see major offices in his adminis- trati6n filled. He told reporters Thursday he hopes to talk again about midweek with Adlai E. Stevenson, to whom he has of- fered the cabinet-rank post of ambassador to the United Nations. Stevenson withheld an immedi- ate decision, leading to specula- tion he may want to see who would be the Secretary of State with whom he would be associat- ed. Kennedy talked at breakfast with Rep. Hale Boggs (D-La) about the social-security financed health plan for the aged Kennedy wants Congress to approve. Boggs is the third member of the House Ways and M ans Com- mittee whom Kennedy hs seen in two days. UNITED NATIONS-An Asian- African group yesterday readied a proposal for a United Nations con- ducted referendum to allow Al- gerians to decide their own politi- cal future. The resolution is a rival to President Charles de Gaulle's proposed French-sponsored ref- erendum on Algerian self-deter- mination. * * 0 WASHINGTON - The much talked about foreign threat to the American g o 1 d supply comes mainly from Japan and five European countries. The latest figures of the federal reserve board showed yesterday that the countries with the biggest potential claims against United States gold are West Germany, the United Kingdom, Japan, Italy, Switzerland and,.France, in that order. CODY, Wyo., - United States Rep. and Senator-elect Keith Thomson (R-Wyo), died of an apparent heart attack yesterday afternoon. He was 41. Thomson's death will 'allow Gov. Joe Hickey, a Democrat, to appoint a successor. The appoin- tee will serve for two years until a qualified successor is elected at a general election. Thomson was at the home of Ken Bailey, a public accountant and a long-time personal friend. Two physicians, Dr. Cedric J. Jones, Thomson's personal doc- tor, and Dr. Deweitt Dominick said Thomson died at about 2:30 p.m. * * * CHARLESTON -- A special grass-roots committee of business and labor representatives will give to President-elect John F. Ken- nedy by New Year's Day its re- commendations for a vast area redevelopment program. Sen. Paul Douglas (D-Ill) head- ing the 21-man task force, said yesterday the group would meet by subcommittees Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in Washing- ton, then convene again Dec. 27 to formalize the over-all recom- mendations. The Phoumi paratroopers could4 either support the anti-Communist soldiers of Vientiane-who favor a truce with Phoumi-or act as a spearhead for the general's main force, now reported only 50 miles away from the capital. Premier Prince Souvanna Phou- ma, unmolested by the rival mili- tary factions maneuvering in Vien- tiane, called his cabinet into ur- gent session. It reaffirmed his policy of neutrality in the cold war, a policy established after a coup led by Kong Le put Souvanna in power last August. But Western diplomats, who re- Joiced when the anti-Communist garrison officers routed leftist elements from Vientiane,,noted STUDENT that Laos' white flag of neu now has a reddish tinge. Kouprasith Troops Col. Kouprasith Aphay, of the movement that to Kong Le as garrison commf was surrounded with some soldiers in Chinaimo Army on the capital's outskirts. of his forces faced those of Le's across a tense 100-yard no-man's-land'near the city: The colonel sent out wor soldiers will not shoot unle tacked. "We are seeking any pc solution to prevent the ou1 of fighting," Souvanna tol porters. "The Kong Le forces agreed not to shoot if Ph( paratroopers leave." Both the Kong Le forces ir Red arm bands and Koupr soldiers in their white ones loyalty to Souvanna and his of neutrality. But there agre ended. The anti-Red forces ci Kong Le tolerated Communi filtration. Kong Le's lieute accused Kouprasith of tryi set up a regime headed by Ph GOVERNMENT COUNCIL announces WASHINGTON (A -- United States officials reported yesterday that the new Soviet-Communist China agreement published in Moscow this week contains some dangerous storm signals for the West. Russia and Red China failed, however, to reconcile their basic differences over a major Com- munist strategy in ideological is- sues. They did succeed in "paper- ing over" their differences for the moment. Their dispute is expected to erupt again some time in the fu- ture into open ideological conflict. But meanwhile the agreement they have been able to achieve un- doubtedly means much more ag- gressive Communist operations against the rest of the world and' could thus lead to serious trouble. These views of the meaning and importance of the statement is- sued Monday at the conclusion of a month's long Communist party Algeria Rebels Criticize U.S. - WASHINGTON (iP--A spokes- man for the Algerian rebel gov- ernment yesterday sharply criti- cized the United States for its position on Algeria. M'hammed Yazid, minister of information of the Algerian Front for National Liberation, said the United States expresses "anti- colonial sentiments one day a week, followed by specific actions which in effect support French colonialism the other six days of the week." He said the United States can- not hope to profit from such a policy. "I believe," he said in a speech to the National Press Club, "that the time has now come for the United States to make its choice- not only in Algeria but in Africa as a whole-between the dying forces of colonial rule and the new, independent spirit which is sweeping our continent." Yazid charged that "French Ar- my divisions now fighting in Al- geria have been equipped with. NATO material. Not only is prac- tically all material utilized by the French Army of NATO origin, but spare parts and repairs are Amer- ican." summit meeting in Moscow were; reached by American government authorities after several days of intense study of the document. These authorities expect Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev to' press ahead with his plan for seek- ing a summit conference with the' new United States President, John F. Kennedy, next spring or sum- mer. But to get Chinese support and cooperation-in the sense of not undercutting his position - Khrushchev has had to agree to a tougher statement of Red aimsr and tactics and a generally tough-1 er policy line toward the WestI than he had been following. I Some of the sessions are re-# ported to have been full of bitter dispute between Russian delegates arguing for a peaceful world vic- tory of Communism through co- existence - the Khrushchev line -- and Chinese arguing that war was inescapable in a world where{ imperialism was still so powerful. In the end, officials said, the agreement made covered these main points at issue: 1) The nature of the world at this period of history -- Khrush- chev and company have argued this is a period of transition from capitalism to socialism. The Chi-' nese contended it is an epoch of.I imperialist wars and of revolu- tion. The statement, or marifesto as itghas been called, says both things are true - that this is a period of struggle and revolution and of the decline of imperialism. 2) On the inevitability of war-- Khrushchev has insisted that war is not inevitable and that a great nuclear conflict could be devas- tating for all. The compromise be- tween his view and Red China's nievitability theory is that the threat of war has increased. 3)h The means of Communist conquest of the world. The Reds all agree that the world is going Communist.aThe confident tone of their statement is one of its outstanding characteristics. The Russians have said they can take over the world peacefully; the Chinese Reds said the process would be violent. The compromise statement said a peaceful transition is possible but sometimes a changeover may be violent. 4) Peaceful coexistence - For years Khrushchev has sought to persuade the world that he re- garded peaceful coexistence as a means of relaxing tension and getting better East-West relations through agreements on Berlin, dis- armament and other issues. The compromise statement provides for negotiation, but defines peaceful coexistence as just another form of class struggle; that is, a policy of continuing the cold war. 5) Communist Leadership -The statement which came out of a Moscow conference explicitly re- affirmed the leading and dominant role of the Soviet Communist party in the world Communist movement. But before that affir- mation was set out in three para- graphs came three other para- graphs which stressed the right of national party independence and the need for collective decisions. This appeared to represent a concession by Khrushchev to the Chinese Reds so that the Soviets can no longer dictate Communist Party policy and plans. PETITIONING for EARLY REGISTRATION PASS COMMITTEE . . . is active during registration week . . . hears requests from students who are working, in athletics, in campus organizations, and others for out of order registration. Three one-year terms open. HUMAN RELATIONS BOARD * * . considers cases and areas involving discrimination against students . . . works in a positive manner to encour- age better human relations in the University and Ann Arbor communities. I Ii CINEMA GUILD of Hi-Fl &TY CENTER .. . is the board which chooses the movies shown at Cinema Guild . , . receives petitions from student organizations who wish to sponsor the showings. Members of the board are guests of the sponsoring organization at any movie. Five one-year ter'ms and three one-semester terms are open. STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE MANAGER . . . receives $100 per semester for running the Student Book Exchange in the Student Activities Building. Has two assistant manageis and staff. One semester term, STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE ASSISTANT MANAGERS . . . assist in operation of SBX . $50 compensation per semester. Two one-semester terms open. ELECTIONS DIRECTOR . ~. runs the campus elections March 2,1st and 22nd includ-" ing petitioning, polls, open houses, publicity, and count rite. A member of Student Government Council's Execu- tive Council. A one-semester position. Ii I GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY G. W. Pabst's THE LAST TEN, DAYS OF HITLER (Austria, 1955) INVASION (Nazi propaganda newsreel, 1944) BRIEF EXCERPT from evidence at Nuremberg War Crimes Trial, 1946 (films of Ausch- witz extermination camp, by Nazi cameramen) i S.G.C. TONIGHT and SUNDAY at 7 and 9 Mary Chase's Pulitzer Prize winning comedy "HARVEY" with JAMES STEWART DISCOUNTS on all Records Save up to 50%/( Big savings on TV, Phonographs, Components Radio PETITIONING CLOSES JANUARY 4, 1961 Petitions available at Student Government Council Offices First floorStudent Activities Building FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: DICK NOHL. Administrative Vice-President NO 3-0553 or NO 2-3256 II