SDA"Y', .16 MARCH 1965, THE MICH16AN DAILY PAnE TYMPIR SDAY, 16 MARCH 1965 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY r :IW IrIi r m arABONN EMBASSY PACKS: L. .Navy, Air Force omre Egpia Gra Tet C n untnDupFre'sh Get Egyptian German iet Cong Munition Dump Vote Results' Relations Weaken : r 5 f 'redict Chinese o Send Troops Lo Aid Hanoi k1GON -A powerful armada Jnited States Navy and Air e planes blasted the Phu ammunition depot only 100 ssouth of Hlanoi yesterday. tas the sixth and possibly punishing raid of a series ched a g a i n s t Communist h Viet Nam, ap defense officials told Pres- t Lyndon B. Johnson that the :e was a success. most at the same time, South1 Nam's ambassador predicted China will react to the bomb- raids by sending in strong unteer ground forces as it in Korea.j ore than lou Navy and Air e planes joined in the rai' nst Viet Cong guerrilla sup- White House Meeting ! a two-hour White House ting Army Chief of Staff Har- K. Johnson reported on his9 nt trip to Viet Nam. He toldt rters "I think the air striker; given the North Vietnamese e to pause and think a little ae prediction that Red Chi troops could be expected tr1 sent by Peking to aid the rillas came from Tran Thier :, By The Associated Press CAIRO (/PV-West Germany embassy officials started packing Supporters of former Argentine yesterday and said it was possible they would haul down their flag dictator Juan Peron tripled their and end diplomatic activities ii Egypt by tomorrow because of the tina elections yesterday while pending establishment of Israeli-German diplomatic relations. the Gaullist party held its posi- At the same time, the Egypitian foreign ministry announced its tion in elections in France. ambassador to West Germany will not return to Bonn, in line with The voting in Argentina, yes- the decision of Arab foreigne--- - terday, was a showdown between ministers meeting here to with- the supporters of the exiled Per- draw their chief envoys from Bonn os cow Calls f on and the government party of immediately -Associated Press While air force and navy planes hit the Viet Cong ammunition dump, marines guarded the important Danang air base. The raid was based from Danang. President Arturo U. Illis. The Arab meeting, at the Undaunted by their leader's beckoning of President Gamal failure to return from Spain, the Abdel Nasser of Egypt, voted early Peronists polled about 35 per cent yesterday to break off diplomatic of the total vote. relations with Bonn when the French government figures West Germans and Israelis offi- showed last night that the Gaul- cially seal their diplomatic ties. list Party Feld its own but failed Israel's parliament is scheduled to attract any marked new grass to vote in Jerusalem today on the roots support in the first round of decision of Prime Minister Levi municipal elections. Eshkol's cabinet to accept Bonn's At the same time, it was clear offer for diplomatic ties. that at least on the local level the In Bonn, a West German gov- French political party system is ernient spokesman said the gov- as splintered as when Charles de ernment welcomed relations with Gaulle became president more Israel but said it would greatly than six years ago as head of regret a break in relations by the France's Fifth Republic. Tradi- Arab countries, tional parties were then ousted But the shape of Bonn's actual from power on the national level, future relations with Cairo and Efforts of the Communists and especially with the rest of the Socialists to win more seats Arab world remained clouded through "popular front" coali- after the Arab foreign ministers' tions met with no apparent suc- conference. cess. West German officials and One of de Gaulle's main fights Western diplomats in Cairo said since he returned to power has they still were confused about the been against the old parties and degree of unanimity--or the lack formations which led France in- of it-with which the Arab states to a near political impasse. voted the sanctions against Bonn. war-like moves or troops and air deployment in the south of China. The Chinese Communists have an estimated 200,000 to 300,000 troops assigned to the south China area bordering North Viet Nam. "We can predict now," Khiem said, in an interview, "that Red Chinese volunteers will be enter- ing Viet Nam." He did not give the source of his information. 'Prepare for Reaction' Khiem said American and Viet- namese forces should expect something so that when the Chi- nese Communists react "we will not be caught by surprise." He asserted Communist China has ground forces of more than 2 million men and "we have 10 divisions." "Their tactics are those of the human waves," he said. "Now it would be a good idea for the United States to send an army division and to increase the size of the South Vietnamese forces." For Students To Stop Riots MOSCOW .'P)-Soviet authori- ties have ordered some foreign students in Moscow not to take part in any further street dem- onstrations, student sources said yesterday. The prohibition appeared aimed at students who joined in a riot- ous anti-American demonstration at the U.S. Embassy March 4. Unarmed Red army soldiers had to be called to restore order. The demonstrators used American ai raids on North Viet Nam as their pretext. Informants said some students at Patrice Lumumba University which mainly attracts youths from underdeveloped n a t i o n s, have been warned against parti- cipation in any more demonstra- tions. The Soviet Union has rejected Chinese charges of brutality and inadequate medical care for Chi- nese students injured March 4. It has countered that the Chinese students provoked the disorder. In the past, Soviet authorities have used demonstrations at for- eign embassies to support their foreign policy. DANCE to, WASHBOARD WILI LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Tues. &Wed. 9 p.m.-1 :45 at the SCHWABEN INN 215 S. Ashley i MUSKET PETITIONING FOR GENERAL CO-CHAIRMEN Pick up petitions at League Undergrad Office TUESDAY MARCH 16- SUNDAY, MARCH 21 Due back Mon., Mar.22 I* * 0 by 500 p1m courtixi, On your way to the action, here's the { . sweater to wear. And if you're clever, you won't limit it to tennis dates -- all wr outdoors is your excuse M to slip it on. Read and Use .Daily Classifieds hiem, a former commander in HITS AMERICAN POLICY: f of the South Viet Nam Ar- and minister of defense, said United States should antici- this by building up both the Favors Bargaining with North Viet Nam ve army and its own support- forces. e advocated sending a U.S. y division to South Viet Nam, Iling that the Chinese leader' Tse-tung has declared Red1 ia and North Viet Nam "are; the mouth and the teeth." iTo Indication of Movements .S. officials, told of Khiem's k iction, said they have seen reports indicating any new By MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH A top French expert on Viet Nam favors direct talks with the North Vietnamese as a possible solution to the Southeast Asia crisis. Speaking in the Union Ball- room in Sunday's Challenge lec- ture, Prof. Bernard Fall of How- ard University, pointed to a March LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, March 16, 12:00 Noon U. M. International Center SUBJECT: "PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES" Speaker: MR. A. 0 0ODELEYE Development Officer, Univ. of Ife, ibadan, Nigeria For reservations, Sponsored by the call 668-6076 Ecumenical Campus Center CGamp ToHo-Ne for Boys Great Barrington, Mass. 10 North Vietnamese offer to negotiate after United States bombardment f North Viet Nam and military operations in South Viet Nam had ceased. "They did not ask for immedi- ate withdrawal of United States troops, which is a change in their position," he said. He charged that the U.S. had ignored the offer. A New Deal? "We're throwing our best cards away," Fall said. He declared that the U.S. would have several ad- vantages in negotiations with the North Vietnamese government: -The North Vietnamese lead- ership "is far more sophisticated and far less intransigent than the Chinese," --"The North has achieved eco- nomic progress only at the price of forced labor, low living stand- ards, and regimentation and has a horror of U.S. bombing, which it knows would be an incalculable setback." -The North Vietnamese want to raise their standard of living and, in particular, needs the rice of the fertile South Vietnamese Mekong Delta. "But even though the 1954 agreements call for unrestricted trade, and even though other di- vided nations such as East and West Germany trade with each other, we've ignored this avenue." Were North Viet Nam to get the trade, he declared, "they would' become dependent on the South for much of her standard of liv- ing-and that would be a con-j siderable regulatory device for! Titoism Possible3 Fall also declared that, given its traditional animosity to China. the North might become a South- east Asian Yugoslavia, a view he has held for several years. "I don't know whether the North could become 'Titoist' or not. I do know it will not fight for the joy of being dominated by China," he said, "The Chinese ruled Viet Nam from 111 B.C. to 938 A.D.," Fall pointed out. "The Viet Cong want to be Vietnamese, not Chinese,, even if they say so in a language military and political successors for "the mythology that the war should be fought on battle lines." Revolutionary Warfare "This warfare is revolutionary warfare-and the winning for- muia is control of the people plus guerrilla action," he said. Demonstrating the large nun- ber of incidents, assassinations, and tax collections by regularized Viet Cong "shadow governments" in hamlets and even provinces- all behind battle lines-Fall main- tained that "things were out of control years before anyone dis- covered that President Ngo Dinh Diem was unpopular and cor- rupt." I~~~~~~~~~~ }---7-_ _ _-_ _ _ ____ similar to Chinese." The guerrillas, Fall explained Attacking the "mythology of "seek to cut the key links of the the Peking-Hanoi axis," Fall said government --- in this case, the "It no more exists than the Mos- elected village chieftains." In cow-Peking axis." what Fall called "a monumental President and Mrs. Hatcher invite the students of the University of Michigan to an Olen House Whither the War? Fall, who has spent years in the country and interviewedj North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh in 1961, also discussed the conduct of the war in Viet Nam. "The Viet Minh won in 1954 without ever controlling a city," he noted. "Bombing the Viet Cong now will only be useful for pur- poses of negotiation." He noted that the recent State Department' White Paper admitted that only 179 weapons had been "infiltrat- ed" from the North in 18 months. He also criticized French ad- ministrators and their American piece of stupidity," the late Pres- ident Diem replaced them with chiefs whom he appointed him- self. 16- mwm 5 )PENINGS FOR COUNSELORS: General; some key -- --.......-- For the best in BOOKS Browse at FOL L ETT'S State Street at N.U. March 17, front 4#00-6:00 P.M. ersonnel: tennis, archery, photography. Aquatics, in- luding experienced competent Waterfront director to fandle staff of 8, WSI's, smallcraft, waterskiing. Wood hop. Age 20+. Excellent facilities for field and aquatics ictivities. Rich cultural program. ALARIES: General: $300-$400. Key personnel and pecial activity heads; $500 and up, contingent on age, xperience, competence. Single men only. Will consider amily set-up for WF director. Camp established 1921, ompotible with good job. Interviews end of March or arly in April. Write Peter Menaker, 507 W. 113 St. 4YC. TO-HO-NE application forms available in SPB. I it THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PLAYERS and The Opera Department, SCHOOL OF MUSIC present IIoune d' arns I A WEEK 10 OR MORE THIIIS SUMMER ee cream specliies manufacturer/ will hold on-campus Interviews on this date. REGIST ER NOW! Your Summer Piacement Director or Student Aid Officer will set up an interview schedule for you. sI you're selected your job is reserved until school closes. Ud you may start work as early as April 1st. E ARNINGS AR E BIG WIT H GOOD HUMOR Of the students working six or more weeks last Summer - - j 1 WED.-SAT., MARCH 17-20 8:00 P.M. MATINEE, SUNDAY, MARCH 21 9.*- U1 PM_