FRIDAY, JUNE 17,1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FRIDA, JUE 17 196 T~i MICIGANDA----AG 1 Y - Soviets May Leave from Germany Speculate Move May Be Precipitated by French Withdrawal BERLIN (P)--Speculation arose yesterday that the French pull- out from the Atlantic alliance mil- itary command may be accom- panied by a withdrawal of some Soviet troops from Communist East Germany. The question of Soviet inten- tions is being discussed against the background of President Charles de Gaulle's 11-day visit to the Soyiet Union starting Monday. The West German papers Die Welt and Bild Zeitung carried re- ports Wednesday quoting informed sources that the Soviets would pull out five divisions from East Germany. Die Welt said the pow- er gap would be filled with great- er firepower in the form of more missiles. Western military observers say Soviet forces in East Germany now total up to 400,000 men with amout 22 divisions. The rash of published and other speculative reports concerning So- viet military intentions in East Germany gained impetus with the disclosure last Sunday by the East Germans of the gathering of the Soviet, Polish, Czechoslovakian' and East German defense minis- ters in East Berlin. Also present were a number of ranking Soviet officers, including Soviet Marshal Andrei Grechko, supreme commander of the War- saw Pact alliance. Die Welt said 'that the planned Soviet withdrawal from East Ger- many was financial, not strategic. The East Germans long have ar- gued with Moscow for lower costs in the maintenance of Soviet troops. Independent-minded Romania also has been reported seeking a lower financial contribution to the Warsaw Pact. Romanian Commu- nist party leader Nicolai Ceaucescu has even called for the abolish- ment of both the Warsaw Pact and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The French will withdraw their forces from under NATO com- I North Viet Political Shakeup Ma Contribute Force to Peace Moves By The Associated Press A behind-scenes struggle ap- pears to have broken out anew within the Politburo of the North Vietnamese Communist par- ty, possibly revolving about re- ported new approaches, to peace negotiations. For the first time in three years, the controlled party press in Hanoi has re-entered the arena of the world Communist feud, and has by implication assailed Soviet policy. If, as is generally suspected, a hard-line last-ditch element is in control of the Hanoi Politburo, the development this week might reflect sharp suspicion of Soviet motives with regard to the Viet Nam conflict. It might also sig- nify fear on the part of the dominant faction that it could lose its slim margin of control. Fence Straddling For some time, the Hanoi par- ty and government carefully strad- dled the fence between the belli- cose Chinese Communists who seemed to want to fight to the' last Vietnamese, and the cautious Russians, appearing anxious to defuse a potential general war situation in Southeast Asia. Now, for the first time since 1963, the Hanoi press has turned again to indirect castigation of the Soviet Communists. The leading newspaper, Nhan Dan, and the newspaper Quan Doi Nhan Dan, carried articles this week de- nouncing President Tito of Yugo- slavia. This one way of express- ing annoyance with Moscow. One of them accused Tito of "sinking into the quagmire of modern revisionism" and collabor- ating with the United States in a search for a route to peace.- "Modern revisionism," in the Com- munist lexicon, means the policy not of Tito but of the Soviet Communist party. Peace Plot The Chinese, who no longer bother to be indirect about their attacks, constantly accuse the modern revisionists of collaborat- ing in a Viet Nam "peace plot" with the United States. The Hanoi articles accused Yu- goslavia of "praising the United States and criticizing Viet Nam and China," and of blaming "Viet Nam and China for provoking the United States." Tito is accused of "a shameful role" and of proving "an out-and-out henchman of the United States." Substitute Rus- sians for Yugoslavs in these state- ments, and they faithfully echo Peking. Mild Discussions Recently, Soviet leaders have been remarkably mild in discuss- ing Viet Nam. They have spoken of "sober" U.S. leaders, as if sug- gesting there might be some in Washington with whom the Krem- lin might profitably talk. They have stressed that necessary aid would go to the Viet Nam Com- munists, which sounded less than enthusiastic. What may bother the domi: group in Hanoi's Politburo is there may be a means of gel tp Ho Chi Minh, aging N Vietnamese president and h figure who often has seemec much nationalist as Commu Now again, in the West, the: talk of new approaches direct] Ho. Direct Appeals There is in all this distinct sibility of appeals directly o ident Ho, over the heads of Politburo members. Suspicion this and of Soviet conmplicit the maneuvering 'could pro, the Politburo's currently doml faction to fire broadsides age "modern revisionism" once aE despite Hanoi's need for s economic and: military aid. It could be that the divisia opinion in the Hanoi Politbu: close enough to throw a scare the pro-Peking element, and Ho Chi Minh's influence migb enough to tip the balance. AT WEEKLY CONFERENCE Senate Republican Leader Everett Dirksen of Illinois contended at the news conference he and GOP Leader Gerald Ford of Michigan hold weekly that farmers and housewives are incensed at the ad- minitration's holding down farm prices and trying to blame inflation on the nation's food producers. FOR VIET NAM TALKS: Manasfield Proposes Meeti ng OfRush, Chinese Minister DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI-N J'"::t.l.:M .. wt::.M:. ".t.w. rJ-.Y...}.. l ~rHN. :A CY.r."ft.Vh1:rY r ".r..".':."J " WASHINGTON (M--Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana proposed yesterday that Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Chinese Foreign Minister Chen Yi meet to explore peace for Viet Nam. The State Department cautiously encouraged the idea but expressed doubt Pe- king would agree. Mansfield said in a speech at' YeshivaUniversity the war in Southeast Asia is threatening to wind up as a war between the United States and Communist China as the Korean conflict did 15 years ago. For this reason, he said, there is need for efforts to establish a direct contact be- tween Washington and Peking on the problem of peace in Viet Nam and Southeast Asia. Press Officer Robert McCloskey commented on the proposal: "The secretary has read Sen. Mans- field's statement with interest. As always the President and the secretary of state will give careful consideration to the views of Sen. Mansfield." Mansfield spoke a day after a flurry of new peace probe reports, the most intriguing of which in- volves a new Canadian mission to Hanoi, capital of North Viet Nam. It was confirmed in Ottawa on Wednesday that Chester Ronning, a special envoy and expert in Far Eastern matters, had arrived in the North Vietnamese capital on his second mission this year. In Paris, meanwhile, reports were published that there is a swelling interest in peace in Hanoi and a feeling on the part of at least some North Vietnamese lead- ers that the time for negotiation is ripening. U.S. authorities, though deeply interested in such reports, privately profess deep skepticism. Well-informed officials, how- ever, do not rule out such a devel- opment in North Vietnamese thinking at present or in the foreseeable future. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. FRIDAY, JUNE 17 ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to official- ly recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. * * * Baha'i Student Group, Open discus- sion: "'The New Word Order," Fri., June 17, 7:30 p.m., 2nd floor confer- ence room,.Michigan Union. Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance with instruction, open to everyone, Fri., June 17, 8-11 p.m., Barbour Gym. Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Work- shop-"Advanced Employment Inter- viewing": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. Cinema Guild-"The Sea Wolf": Ar- chitecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Corning Glass Works, Corning, N.Y. -Experienced personnel for Trades En- gineering. BS in Industrial Engrg. and some exper. In any -of the following: plant layout, materials handling, sys- tems engrg., job evaluation, methods analysis, work measurement, PERT/ CPM. Thomas M. Lowe, Jr. & Associates, Inc., Atlanta, Ga.-Positions for new grads in Civil, Mechanical and Electri- cal Engineering. Also considering non- grads with some college plus practi- cal exper. Opening for an experienced Highway Design Engineer for Charles- ton, W. Va. office, requires registered Civil Engr. Detroit Country Day School, Birming- ham, Mich.-Seek Business Manager, well versed in business methods ac- counting, and purchasing for schools, prefer independent school or college mgmt. bkgd. Will be required to teach one small class in economics, a private school, lower, grades Kindergarten- 6th, upper, boys only. Rohmi and Haas Co., Philadelphia, Pa.-Main office. Positions in Bris- tol and Phila., Pa. and Columbus, Ohio. Engineering-varied degrees and re- quirements, including marketing, chem- ical ,electrical, mechanical and textile fields. Bus. Ad.-BS/MS Systems Anal. 1-5 yrs. "exper. Pharmacology-PhD, 0-8l yrs. exper. MS/PhD 5-8 yrs. exper. One MD position. Biological Sci.-BS. 0-5 yrs. Sales. training and interna- tional division. Africultural Sci.-BS. 3-8 yrs. exper. sales rep. State of Michigan-Various counties throughout the state. Open exami- nation for institution Social Worker. Applicationstavailable at the Bureau are due at the Dept. of Civil Service no later than ,July 11, 1966. BA with major in social science. Central Region of Federal Aviation Agency-North Central U.S. Aviatl Safety Officer and airline pilot po Lions. Flight time required for 1 latter, the former can accept deg in aeronautical, production, or indu trial engineering ror all but two ye of experience, Apply for FSEE, fo at Bureau. Full descriptive brochu at Bureau. For further information please c 764-7460, General Division, Bureau Appointments, 3200 SAB. PH. 482-2056 NO hM ENGTER RD NOW SHOWING SHOWS START AT 1:30-4:00-6:30 & 9:00 The motion picture the whole world wants to see AGAIN AND AGAIN! v mand July 1. This decision by de "This problem is of such tran- Gaulle has left in doubt the fu- scendent importance that it is a ture of some 72,000 Frenchmen fit question for face-to-face dis- stationed in West Germany. cussion between China and the Said one Western source: "In United States at the highest prac- return for what de Gaulle has tcbelvl done to NATO, the Russians will want to give him something to go "Our secretary of state, Dean home with when he leaves the Rusk, confronted the Chinese Kremlin. They may feel the with-'I foreign minister, Chen Yi, across; drawing of some of their forces the conference table at Geneva in from East Germany as a gesture ! 1961-62 and it may be that a toward easing tensions in Europe similar meeting now would be use- might be just the thing." ful in this critical situation." House, Senate Approve Foreign Aid Program rworld News Roundup By The Associated Press sissippi civil rights march yester- NEW YORK-Two tankers col- day when they attempted to pitch lided in New York Harbor yester- the marchers' tents on a school I L 0 I day, bursting into flames that grounds. towered as high as a 10-story Those building and spreading a sea of Carmicha fire that engulfed and destroyed Nonviole two tugboats. tee; Bob and Binc The Coast Guard said it had the Con confirmed at least 17 persons died in the holocaust at the narrow They w entrance to Newark Bay between to jail, c New Jersey and Staten Island, where the British tanker Alva WASH Cape and the American oiler Tex- clary su aco Massachusetts came together. administ * * Republic GREENWOOD, Miss. - Police housingl arrested three leaders of the Mis- test vote arrested were Stokely ael, head of the Student nt Coordinating Commit- bSmith, a SNCC worker ce Baines, an officialkof gress of Racial Equality. were handcuffed and taken harged with trespassing. * * * INGTON-A House Judi- bcommittee, unhappy at ration negotiations with ans on a proposed open law, yesterday ducked a on the issue. ! WASHINGTON (M' - President Johnson's foreign aid program was approved by House and Sen- ate committees with only minor money cuts yesterday, but in such widely varying form as to assure a long struggle ahead. Johnson asked that Congress au- thorize the program for five years, saying this would make for more intellilgent planning. The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted for a two-year authorization; the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee for one. The Senate committee approved two bills-economic assistance in one, military aid in the other. The House group wrapped upboth types of aid in one bill. The ad- ministration had asked for sep- arate bills. Both committees voted to au- thorize more than $3.3 billion a year, compared with the approxi- mately $3.4 billion Johnson sought. Chairman J. W. Fulbright (D- Ark) of the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee said he is not certain he will support his group's twobills in the final show- down, although he said he thinks he will handle them on the Sen- ate floor. He said his position will depend on how the program is amended by the Senate and presumably on the outcome of a Senate-House conference to iron out differences between the varying versions. Chairman Thomas E. Morgan (D-Pa) of the House Foreign Af- fairs Committee conceded the pro- posed two-year authorization faces a tough fight in the House, but that: "I think we have a good chance of holding it on the floor." Morgan said he hopes to bring up the bill in the House before the start of a 10-dayrecess on June 30. The only cut made by the House committee was $700,000 in sup- port of the United Nations' Pales- tine refugees relief fund. The committee completed action on the bill, but put off until Monday a formal vote to send it to the House. 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