Fr .uay, May 3, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WORST SINCE TET: Heavy fighting around base at I SAIGON R) - U.S. and South The South Vietnamese have Vietnamese troops slugged it out been in steady contact with the with strong North Vietnamese enemy since Monday and the fight forces last night in the northeast was continuing late last night. corner of. South Vietnam in the The sustained fighting along heaviest fighting since the ene- the DMZ indicated the North my's Tet offensive in February. Vietnamese had moved in troops Casualty reports i n d i c a t e d to threaten the Dong Ha base, American and South Vietnamese headquarters of the 3rd Marine forces were killing 12 enemy sol- Division and the anchor for al- diers for every allied soldier lied outposts along the eastern killed in the four days of bitter flank of the demilitarized zone. fighting near Dong Ha and Hue. There were no fresh reports on The allies said enemy casualties the fighting around Hue, the since Monday were 1,139 and U.S. imperial capital 40 miles south- and South Vietnamese reported 93 east of Dong Ha, where allied of their men killed and 449 forces had been battling enemy wounded. units for three successive days. Savage fighting was also report- The fighting around Dong Ha ed yesterday just north of the U.S. overshadowed the allied drive into Marine base at Dong Ha, 11 miles the A Shau Valley southwest of south of the demilitarized zone Hue. Marine Lt. Gen. Robert E. between the Vietnams. A North Cushman, commander of U.S. Vietnamese counterattack pushed forces in the northern provinces, back Marines assaulting a bunk- said the 15,000-man allied force er complex two miles northeast of operating in the valley had cut the sprawling American base. one of the enemy's main supply South Vietnamese troops were and infiltration routes from North reported heavily engaged 2% Vietnam, but "there are still a lot miles north of Dong Ha. Soldiers of nooks and crannies we have of the 1st South Vietnamese Divi- not looked into." sion ran into enemy forces dug in U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division on both sides of Route 1, Viet- troops pushed into one pocket of nam's major highway. the valley called the Punchbowl. erupts Hanoi rejec parley on shi long a against scattered enemy resis ance. They uncovered big each of Communist arms and suppli In the first major report newsmen since Operation Del ware began April 19, Cushmf said that up to Tuesday the alli force in the valley had killed 5 North Vietnamese. He said most of the North Vie namese in the valley were eng neers, security forces and an' aircraft crews. He also noted contact with t enemy had been light for t most part. But he said paratroo ers in the northeast sections ha found "organized enemy infant units," and "have had some ha action because this is very tou territory and the enemy is ve well dug in." The 1st Air Cavalry Divisi had 30 helicopters destroyed damaged in the first 24 hours the operation' and since then more have been destroyed damaged by anti-aircraft fir Enemy guns also downed a $2. million C130 cargo plane and twin-engine observation plane. In other, action around t] country, helicopter gunships ar tactical aircraft carried out strik last night only a few miles nor of Saigon. Flares lighted the sky and tra er bullets could be seen clear from the downtown heart of tJ city. The action v'as believed have been near Bien Hoa or Lor Binh, both major allied bas about 15 miles north of Saigo but headquarters, reported at mi night it had no information. st- ies es. to a- an ed 51 t- gi- ti- he he p- we ry rd gh ry on or of 201 or re. 5- a he nd es WASHINGTON (P-An Indo- 'sponse so far to the Indonesian nesian offer of a shipboard site for offer, and declared that Johnson preliminary talks on Vietnam was still "hopes that a suitable site reportedly rejected yesterday by can be agreed to." North Vietnam, leaving unbroken There was no suggestion from a month-old stalemate between 'ffi;ial Washington quarters, Hanoi and Washington. however, that what they regard In Vientiane, reports indicated as a formal Hanoi reply to In- that a North Vietnamese embassy donesia will not be a turndown spokesman refused Indonesia's of- when it comes. fer to send a cruiser to the Ton- -Associated Press 'Tell your parents' Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-Minn) campaigns among school children in Jasper, Ind. The candidate for the presidential nomination told the children to take his message home to their parents. MEKONG DELTA TROOPS: S. VietnamTese army improves TONIGHT 1421 H il SARA MELTON-returning original, contemporary, and SATURDAY-- CUS.TER'S .AST I BAND I $1.00 includes free food _ - - - 3- Street 8:3C 0 P.M. OPENS with by popular request to traditional folk music. sing Popular, versatile, fun-loving Jug Band from Monroe. HELD OVER. FROM THE COMPANY THAT GAVE YOU THE YEAR'S MOST TALKED-ABOUT MOTION PICTURE, "I, A WOMAN." 5th OX EASTERN T GREAT FOHI WEEK 375,No.MAP SAT.-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:20 WINNER TWO AC4 BEST ACTRESS-K BEST SCREEN PLA COLUMBIA PICTURES vresewat Stanley Kramer Spencer Sidney TRACY POWER Katharine HEPBURN th WASHINGTON (A) - The per- significant increase in U.S. ground formance of three South Viet- forces in the delta. But they do c- namese Army divisions under a foresee more operations by the ly new commander in the Mekong American infantry brigade al- he Delta apparently has convinced ready there. to top U.S. military officials they These high-ranking officers said ng can dispense with any sizable U.S. adviser reports out of the es American troop increases in that delta speak highly of the per- n, key region. formance of the South Vietnam- d- Senior U.S. officers told an in- ese 7th, 9th and 21st divisions.t terviewer they do not expect any The reports highlighted im- - proved aggressiveness, combat ef- ficiency and morale. .EATREinII One U.S. officer, recently back Mon -Fri. from an inspection of South Viet- 7 00-9:20 namese commands in the delta, LE RD.-769.1300 said Saigon's army has three "basically good divisions" in the SUN.-] :00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:20 rice-producing area which con- tains about 40 per cent of South Vietnam's population. The sources said that while ADEMY AWARDS senior U.S. advisors really run op- erations in the delta with the tacit approval of the previous ATHAR I N E H E PBU R N South Vietnamese corps com- mander, the new chief of the Y delta is now running them by himself. This man, who took over March 1, is 35-year-old Maj. Gen. Nguyen guoss Due Thang, rated one of South Vietnam's brightest and most ag- gressive military leaders. SC( Mig "South Vietnamese units have had success in operations against t dinrsneP Viet Cong units," one general TECHNICOLOR said. "They are out in the field and they have taken a lot of weapons and food from the ene- my." Top U.S. military men evident- ly feel the South Vietnamese Army can deal with the enemy in the delta even though North Viet- namese are now appearing in that area. Officials theorize the Viet Cong have had to accept North Viet- namese cadres because of heavy losses among VC leaders. For more than r, year, the Unit- ed States has battle tested three battalions of South Vietnam's 9th Infantry Division-the delta's first mobile warfare force. Then-Secretary of Defense Rob- ert S. McNamara told Congress three months ago, "We now plan to increase the size of this force." The remarks of senior U.S. offi- cers recently returned from Viet- nam inspection tours indicate such increase will be held to a mini- mum or possibly omitted in light of the improvemet of South Viet- namese troops. " But there is no indication of any cancellation of planned increases in various kinds of support for delta-based South Vietnamese troops. The Pentagon has notified Con- gress that its river patrols - so important in operating along the delta's many streams - will be boosted from about 159 vessels to 250 by next December. kin Gulf to serve as a meeting place for U.S. and North Vietnam- ese envoys charged with determin- ing whether serious peace nego- tiations are possible. The word from the Laotian capital killed still another of the fleeting hopes for agreement that have arisen sporadically since Hanoi accepted on April 3 a U.S. suggestion that preliminary talks be held. The White House had agreed to the Indonesian proposal Wed- nesday. Tie State Department made plain that the U.S. government still objects to the site pushed hardest by the Communists- Warsaw. It reaffirmed an April 11 U.S. statement preferring a neutral site over the capital of Po- land, a backer of North Vietnam in the war. Secretary of State Dean Ruskj said it did not help for "people to push us to take Warsaw." The U.S. foreign affairs chief, during foreign aid testimony be- fore the House Foreign Affairs Committee, reported a steplup in North Vietnamese infiltration against the South since Johnson curtailed U.S. bombing of',the North in his March 31 peace bid. Accusing the Communists of failing to reciprocate by scaling down their fighting in South Viet- nam, Rusk added that if Hanoi persists in efforts to pressure the United States into accepting an unsuitable site, it can only delay the serious business of agreeing, on a suitable location which is fair to both sides. The secretary of state did not specify who besides the Commu- nists may be pressing for US. ac- ceptance of Warsaw as the site. But some administration critics in the Senate had urged this in a Foreign Relations Committee ses- sion on Wednesday Committee chairman J. W. Ful- bright (D-Ark), was among those who said the United States should agree on Warsaw. The North Vietnamese embassy spokesman in Vientiane was, quoted as saying that Hanoi still is insisting on either Warsaw or Phnom Penh, the Cambodian cap- ital. The spokesman contended that an Indonesian site-Hanoi has al- ready spurned the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, as a meeting place-does not even fill John- son's own;stipulation because "In- donesian relations with the Com- munists have been generally bad since the removal of the left-wing Sukarno regime. The Ntrth Vietnamese said also that contacts held on a ship would exclude representatives of other countries and of the press and would not permit what Presi- dent Johnson called "adequate communications" - conditions set by Johnson himself. Presidential p r e s s secretary George Christian said he knew of no official North Vietnamese re- Israelis shlow off weapons JERUSALEM (A') - The migh. of Zion - Soviet made arms seized from the Arabs and planes and guns bought in the United States and France - sped across captured Jerusalem yesterday in an Israeli celebration of 20 years of statehood that defied the Unit- ed Nations and the Arab world. A total of 4,500 troops and 450 vehicles moved along a five mile parade route that led through an ! Arab quarter held by Jordan un- til the Middle East war last June and into a traditionally Jewish area of the once divided city. Some 250,000 Israelis and visit- ors cheered as 300 planes screamed overhead. American- built Skyhawk fighter bombers led a formation that included a Soviet MIG21, delivered to Is- rael by an Iraqi defector. DEMONSTRATIONS The parade denounced last week by the United Nations Se- curity Council as a blow to Middle East peace, caused angry dem- onstrations in Lebanon and Syria. But Jerusalem's Arabs were quiet and threat of terrorism by the Al Fatah guerrilla organization did not materialize. Four Egyptian El Walid class armored troop carriers led off the parade of spoils followed by sim- ilar Jordanian and Syrian car- riers. The Soviet-built PT76 amphib- ious tanks snatched from Egypt were followed by Egyptian self- propelled artillery and eight So- viet-made T55 tanks armed with a 100mm gun, also taken from the Egyptian army. Probably, the most interesting were the four British made "Long Tom" 155mm guns which were used by the Jordanians to shell Tel Aviv. AVOID ARABS The parade steered clear of the ancient walled Arab sector of the city. There, Arabs stayed indoors and closed their shops in protest, but in newer neighborhoods they crowded onto apartment house balconies to watch. Some Arab peddlers were on the streets, push- ing soda pop and souvenirs. Israeli security was rigid. Jeru- salem itself had been sealed off and Arab residents of the west bank of the Jordan were forbid- den to enter before and after the parade. Visitors' autos and baggage were searched as they neared the re- viewing stand, tickets scrutinized and traffic kept from the city's center. Police and troops with ma- chine guns patrolled rooftops. Barbed wire separated the crowd from the paraders in some areas. l ~i1 "The eye-catcher is *Uta Leyka, the hip Carmen in modern undress. Carmen Baby', obviously is a filn for a very special clientele-opera lovers, who want to see what They've been missing all these years, - -NEW YORK TIMES k "Carmen herself, Uta Levka, plays the sexpot temptress for all she's worth-and that's quite something. She has a let's-have-fun look in her eyes that recalls' Melina Mercouri in "Never on Sunday." With "La Dolce Vita" parties thrown in for good measure, the movie will give you your money's worth." -N.Y. POST this 1 1~ RADLEY METZGER presents a 4 tr TH M 'j m deud tar ThelotalFemale Animall UTA LEVKA-CLAUDE RINGER- CARL MOHNER BARBARA VALENTINE - WALTER WILTZ - CHRISTIANE RUCKER Screenplay by Jesse Vogel- From a story by Prosper Merime an Amsterdam Film Corporain ProducionProduced and Drected by RAEY METGER FARTMANlfln nD. 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