THE MICHIGAN DAILY Viet Nam Begins Offense At Viet Cong US. History t Supports Aid TOs . ToFar East By The Associated Press There is ample precedent and a considerable backlog of successful experience to support an Ameri- can decision to deploy sone mili- tary force in Southeast Asia as a deterrent against "stepped-up Communist attack. One question in Washington is whether such a deterrent, under all the circumstances,- can be made believable, without suffer- ing the political disadvantages of a direct, advance nuclear commit- ment.1 Years ago the United States agreed to keep American forces in Europe in order to make it clear that direct aggression there would mean the immediate in- volvement of the United States. That was before the United States became so heavily extended. Lack- ing knowledge of enemy intent, it can only be said that during the life of < this American presence there has been no attack. Similar Group The case of Lebanon has sim- ilarities, but also differences. There was a rebellion in Lebanon at a time when the Middle East was in ferment following the death of King Faisal of Iraq and during a critical passage between Jordan and Egypt. Vital . America and Britain considered it vital to shore up these govern- ments lest there be produced a pro- gressive fall of stable governments with . Communists taking over. Britain sent paratroopers to Jor- dan and the U.S. Marines in Leb- anon established an American military presence in the whole Middle East. No critical trouble developed. COMMON MARKET: Ball Asks Si For Open-"1 WASHINGTON (P)-The John F. Kenn itself last night to a foreign economic p trading" for the -whole non-Communist w States business and industrial leaders to action and economic changes necessary tor In a speech reported approved by Pre retary of State George W. Ball proposed a ism-"to open the doors and windows of ou tion we must face in world markets." And he forecast: Two Great Marke "What we may well see emerge is the per cent of the total free world exports of Riot Marks Anniversary ALGIERS (') - Scores of dem- onstrators were killed and wounded yesterday as Algerians rallied by the thousands in wild demon- strations on the seventh anniver- sary of the outbreak of the re- bellion against France. By official count, 86 were dead and more than 130 hurt.rUnoffi- cial reports said the final toll might be much higher. The war, which has claimed at least 200,000 lives, thus entered its Eighth year with peace hopes marred by terrorism, racial hatred, revolutionary passion and fresh bloodshed. Most of the dead and wounded were counted in clashes with po-. lice and troops at small towns and in raids by uniformed nationalist. commandos on army posts, mostly in eastern Algeria. Authorities said casualties on the French side were three dead and 16 wounded. 'great c mon Md of over as yet states, the Un 180 mil Ball, nomicE prepare trade c He a busines foreign in com] Commo three pi evident session 1)7 "should assistan tate" t capital cannot petition tection 2) T authori and re the Eu nity to more a of Unit Offic ministi enact a ing au when agreemi 1962. 3) T tion ' for co world" those i Ball' as "mi U.S. p said he spell o' of the dent'wi Stronghold Laos Claims, rip ortMeos Block Srading Rebel Capital Red China Says Asia' iedy administration pledged O olicy of "open competitive O Verge of War , world. It called on United SAIGON, South Viet Nam (O)- support the congressional Government troops were reported make the policy work. on the offensive yesterday in the sident Kennedy, Undersec- Communist stronghold where they, repudiation of protection- suffered a sharp setback last Sep-; ir economy to the competi- tember. Informed sources said 100 Com- munist Viet Cong rebels were kill- 90 ed in the new fighting. concentration of nearly 90 (In neighboring Laos, anti- industrial products in two Communist Meo tribesmen loyal 'inustialprouct intwoto the right-wing Vientiane gov- kommon markets-the Coi- ement were reported to have cut larket of Europe consisting off the pro-Communist rebel head- 300 million people and an quarters town of Xieng Khouang undetermined number of from the Plaine Des Jarres air- and the common market of field. Reports of new Laos fighting' nited States consisting of came as representatives of east Ilion people and 50 states." and west declaied the peace of all undersecretary for Eco- southeast Asia is threatened.) Affairs, spoke in an address Jungle Base ed for the national foreign The new South Vietnamese gov- lonvention in New York. ernment operation is in the jungle ssailed "defeatism" among and rubberland province of Phuoc smen about competing with Thanh, about 60 miles north of producers. To assist them Saigon, informants said. Com- )png rthheturopean munist guerrilla forces raided and n Mrket headlinisrtese occupied the Phuoc Thanh pro- roposals theentatn, vincial capital in September in ly will present to the next an action that demoralized the of Congress: forces of pro-Western President Assist Transfer Ngo Dinh Diem. The federal government In London, Ambassador Ngo I be empowered to provide Dinh Luyen of South Viet Nam nce to sustain and facili- told British Foreign Secretary the transfer of labor and Lord Home Communist pressures from industries "which against his country are mounting, stand up to foreign com- but that the government is still a" into other areas of pro- in control of the situation. In Geneva, Chang Han-Fu, the the President should have Red Chinese delegate, told the ity to negotiate tariff cuts 14-nation Laos conference the duce trade restrictions with whole Southeast Asia area is on ropean Economic Commu- the verge of erupting into war. achieve "much broader and He said the situation has been mbitious bargains on behalf worsened in Laos and Southeast ted States industry." Asia as a whole by what he termed ials said Ball meant the ad- "the stepped-up intervention of ation wants Congress to certain members" of the Southeast a much broader tariff cut- Asia 'Treaty Organization. thority for the President the United States trade Accuses U.S. ents act expires in mid- Chang said there would be no sense in concluding an agreement the proposed new legisla- on Laos if the United States sends must also establish a basis troops to South Viet Nam. The ntinuing an open trading United States, however, is under- with nations other than stood not be contemplating such in the Common Market. a move at this time. 'described the three points Chang Han-Fu also assailed inimum specifications" for Thailand, a SEATO member, olicy in foreign trade. He which has accused Cambodia of would not for the moment allowing Communist guerrillas to ut "the form and substance use Cambodia as a base for opera- authority which the Presi- tions against neighboring coun- ill require, tries. May End UN Head Deadlock UNITED NATIONS (P) - The United States and the Soviet Un- ion voiced optimism yesterday that they were near agreement on naming an acting UN secretary- general in place of the late Dag Hammarskjold. UN diplomats believed the six- weeks-old deadlock would be re- solved before the end of the week. The optimism centered in a new compromise plan set forth by the United States and Britain to break the stalemate over how many prin- cipal advisers the new chief should have. The plan was to leave it to him. U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stev- enson and British Minister of State Joseph B. Godder issued statements on it through spokes- men, after Stevenson had told Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin about it. Emerging froip a 1 -hour con- ference with Stevenson, Zorin told reporters "I think we are near an agreement-on a very reasonable basis." Stevenson's spokesman de- lared "we are optimistic." Diplomatic sources said the Se- curity Council might meet Friday morning to recommend U Thant of Burma for interim secretary- general up to April 1963, the end of Hammarskjold's five-year term. They said the General Assembly then might meet that afternoon to appoint U Thant to the post- and hear his statement as to how many under secretaries he would name as principal advisers, which regions he would pick them from and how he aimed to work with tpem "in a spirit of mutual un- derstanding." Viet Nai Asks For Troops NEW YORK () - U.S. Gen. Maxwell Taylor is bringing back to Washington a request from South Viet Nam President Ngo Dinh Diem that American combat units be sent to his country, New York Herald Tribune Columnist Joseph Alsop reported from Sai- gon yesterday. The request for U.S. troops "was made with the utmost re- luctance," Alsop wrote., "Both President Ngo Dinh Diem and his brother and chief adviser, state councillor Ngo Dinh Niu, are personally convinced that the dis- advantages of the arrival of American combat units on Viet- namese soil at least balance the advantages. -AP wirephoto BOMB FALLOUT-The map traces the path of the radioactive fallout from Russia's Oct. 30 nuclear bomb. The Weather Bureau said the debris-laden cloud went over the Kamchatka Peninsula in Si- beria yesterday. Today it will be over the Aleutian Islands and Alaska. The U.S. is considering ex- ploding a nuclear bomb underground in Nevada in the near future. UNDERGROUND: Neutron Bomb Trial Set for Nevada WASHINGTON 0P) - The first tentative experiments to try out the theory of a neutron bomb, to kill men but leave everything else U.S., Soviets Re'ect A-Ban untouched, may be made in Neva- da underground test caverns. When preliminary field research might start or whether it had be- gun was a tightly held official government secret yesterday. But the theory of an "N-bomb" seemed to suggest strongly that the first effort would be to find out whether the nuclear reaction, in actual test, would be like that worked out by slide rule, com- UNITED NATIONS (R) - Both puters and the projection of nu- the United States and the Soviet clear physics facts. bloc yesterday rejected a strong- No Shock ly-supported proposal calling for The idea is that a precisely a new United._ Nations voluntary harnessed nuclear detonation can moratorium on nuclear bomb test- be made to produce a burst of ing. intense radiation by high-speed, U.S. Delegate Arthur Dean told deep-penetration lethal neutrons the General Assembly's main 103- -without also creating the in- nation political committee that thet United States cannot support the Bo r oSzd resolution sponsored by India and J five other non-aligned countries Threatened Strike because such a moratorium "is bound to be ineffective." WASHINGTON (R) - President Dean declared that in event of John F. Kennedy yesterday order- its approval the United States re- ed creation of an emergency board serves the rights to take whatever to investigate a dispute between, steps it "deems necessary or ap- Trans World Airlines and the Air' propriate in its own defense and Line Pilots Association. the defense of the free world." His action automatically delay- Without a treaty setting up in- ed for 60 days a strike which had spection machinery, he said, there been scheduled for 11:59 p.m. to- would be no assurance that the day. moratorium was being observed. The dispute involves principal- He pointed to the current Soviet ly working rules and conditions on tests which he said were planned' Jet flights. The airline serves 53 in violation of the previous volun- cities in 23 states, plus 18 cities tary ban. in Europe, Asia and Africa. tense shock, heat effects and ra- dioactive contamination of pres-. ent bombs. Various papers and comments by non-governmental and former government, experts during the past several years have suggested that such neutrons could pene- trate steel armor and even several feet of concrete. Soviet nuclear physicists have speculated simi- larly. Officials from the White House down declined to comment on reports published by the New York Daily News and the New York Journal-American that the neutron bomb project has high priority in the current United States tests. Saying that work on the project had gone as far as it could go without testing when the mora- torium on tests began in late 1958, Dodd said in a statement: "The neutron bomb would not only be a far more effective battle- field weapon than any now avail- able to .us, it would provide us with the most effective anti- missile warhead nuclear technol- ogy is today capable of producing." Should Explore In a statement issued in Provi- dence, R. I., Sen. John O. Pastore (D-R) said the United States should explore fully development of the neutron bomb and an anti- missile. He said both operations would require tests in the atmos- ,phere. [World News Roundup' By The Associated Press of the huge tomb in Red Square HAKONA, Japan-Secretary of testify that the old Bolshevik, State Dean Rusk opened the first now reviled as a murderer of thou- conference'of the United States- sands, had shared the hallowed Japan Committee on Trade and mausoleum with V. I. Lenin, Economic Affairs yesterday with founder of the modern Soviet a call for cooperation in aiding state. underdeveloped nations. * *' - NEW YORK-The stock mar- CAPE CANAVERAL9 - A blue ket yesterday began November Scout Rocket zig-zagged out of with a continuation of cross-cur- control and was blown uprby the rents, resulting in a mifed pattern *range safety officer yesterday 30 of' trading. Standard and Poor's seconds after it blasted off in an 500 Index closed up .11, with 425 attempt to orbit a satellite to test industrials up .12, 25 rails off .01, the United States' worldwide and 50 utilities up .15. man-in-space tracking network. An official of the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis- - tration said the failure will not delay plans to orbit a chimpanzee later this month. The chimp shot is the last scheduled Project Mer- cury launching before an effort to orbit an astronaut, hopefully in December or January. GUATEMALA-Hurricane Hat- tie, with roaring top winds of 200 m.p.h., ruined 40 per cent of Be- lize, capital of British Honduras, and killed at {least 11 persons in LUCKY STRIKE presents, ................** . . . . ........ srr;"r:{'r { !"t.{.a..""v t: : " r::".r {" ."",:::4a{rv{ i4::i"" ::4{v}fi:::rr,}Y.a: .*}::{:{ iv "'.}." :141{":$N : .Y.':N w.I ....w...~wr. that colony and in the neighbor- Gibbs-trained college women are first ing republics of Honduras and in line in the job market and for future Guatemala, rescue workers re- advancement. Special Course for Col- ported yesterday. lege women-8 months. Write College * * * Dean for GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK. MOSCOW-Josef Stalin, once the unchallenged leader of world K AT H A RINME G[IBBS Communism, was relegated to the SECRETARIAL ranks yesterday in a simple grave BOSTON 16, MASS. . 21 Marlborough Street with the bare epitaph: J. V. Stal- NEW YORK 17, N. Y. . . 230 Park Avenue in,187-293.MONTCL.AIR, N. 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If you could peek into an average campus on Saturday night you would see students planning a hunger ')Tastrike and smoking Luckies, ironing their Sunday suits and smoking Luckies, OVERBLOUSE $7.98 "I JIMAPDD tIA CR