Friday, December 7, 197. THE MICHIGA"'t C,%ILY Page Three i EXPRESSES OPTIMISM ON MID-EAST i*.. %Kissinge vows no Viet bombing By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Henry Kissinger told a news conference yesterday that a war powers bill which allows President Nixon to order U.S. troops into action for up to 90 days does not open the way to renewed American military in- tervention in Indochina. Kissinger also said the U.S. would consider, though extreme- ly reluctantly, the permanent stationing of U.S. and Soviet troops to enforce a Middle East peace. Speaking in Washington, he said State Department legal ad- visers had undertaken the study to determine whether the War Powers Bill might have super- seded earlier legislation which prohibited all direct U.S. mili- tary activity in North and SGuth Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. SINCE THE WAR Powers Bill was passed after the so-called Cooper-Church law, which pra- hibits all U.S. military activity in Indochina, the State Depart- ment started the study to see whether a loophole had been created for renewed U.S. mili- tary involvement. Kissinger said the State De- partment's legal adviser n a d concluded the War Powers Bill did not supersede any existing laws. tA He said the Nixon Administra- tion would have to seek congre- sional approval if it decided that renewed American involvement in Vietnam was warranted by continuing violations of the cease- fire. ADDRESSING THE news con- ference held at the State De- partment, Kissinger said, when asked about the possibility of a joint U.S.-Soviet force; "We do not rule it out :otaily but we are reluctant to get into this. "We are prepared to consider the question of guarantees ;n its broadest sense and we are willing to examine any of the ideas that the parties may put forward as to adequate guar antees. "As to the permanent station- ing of U.S. and Soviet forces in the Middle East, we are some- what dubious," he said, "we do not rule it out totally but we are reluctant to get into this." THE UNITED STATES h a s previously rejected participa- tion by U.S. and Soviet mili- tary forces in the Middle East Peace-Keeping Force. Some State Department offic- ials have hinted recent; that the current U.S. position is zo consider any means or enforc- ing a ceasefire that might be acceptable to the Arabs and Israel. Kissinger said he was setting out for crucial negotiations on U.S. relations with Europe and peace in the Middle Eas? and is hopeful of success in both areas. IN SPITE OF recent flare- ups in the Middle East, "the fact is that we consider i: extreme- ly probable that the (Geneva peace) conference will begin on December 18," he said. Although difficulties exist in U.S. relations with its Euro- pean partners, he will be attend- ing a NATO ministerial meeting in Brussels next week "not . . in an attitude of confrontation and acrimony." Of the Middle East situation, Kissinger said: "We do not be- lieve that the ceasefire will come apart and that the conference wi1l be jeopardised. u4acb Lunch Forum MELBOURNE STEWART, Associate Provost, Wayne State University, and MAX MARK, Acting Presi- dent, Wayne State AAUP Chapter "FACULTY COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AT WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY" Tuesday, December 1-1 2 noon Michigan League Rms. 1-2 AP Photo SECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kissinger addresses a news conference in Washington yesterday to announce that a State Department study has determined that the recently passed War Powers Bill does not allow renewed military intervention in Indochina. NUMEROUS CEASEFIRE VIOLATIONS Tensions rise along Suez front as Egyptian, Israeli jets clash cq&:27 "It's true that money can't buy happiness, CAIRO (Reuter) - Egyptian and Israeli jet planes clashed over the Suez Front yesterday as the Egyptian government re- ported new tensions building up in the area. The Egyptians claimed that one Israeli Phantom was shot down in the battle over El Sok- hna on the Gulf of Suez close to the southern end of the canal, and that all Egyptian planes re- turned safely to base. But despite a record number of ceasefire violations reported by the U.N. Emergency Force - 27 ground incidents Tuesday - the U. N. command said yester- day it considered the ceasefire was holding. N. Viets rout outpost as thousands flee attach A GOVERNMENT spokesman told journalists in Cairo yester- day there were "marked ten- sions" along the canal front and the Cairo press reported the sit- uation there had seriously deter- iorated. Talk of a worsening situation along the front, where Israelis and Egyptians face each other across the desert, coincided with Egypt's decision not to go back -for the present - to the U.N. sponsored Kilometer 101 talks on implementing the ceasefire. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 76 Friday, December 7, 1973 is edited and managed by students at. the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 48106. Published' daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session publishe Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- Lion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area) $6.50 local mail (Michigan and, Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail ;other; st ates and foreign). but it certainly £'Y featuring original works of graphic art-etchings, lithographs,-by leading 20th century artists: Picasso Dali Miro, Calder Chagall Friedlaender Searle Rouault Vasarely and others. Presented by Meridian Gallery ,i, T - U/7 pay for the i l usion. it COME DELUDE US KERRYTOWN ndI 415 N. 5th AVENUE (corner of 5th and Kingsley) helps GIA NGHIA, South Vietnam (P) - North Vietnamese troops yesterday routed a government outpost near the overrun town of Kien Duc, field reports said. Kien Duc residents have fled by the thousands to this pro- vincial capital. The Communists threatened new and heavier attacks in the lowercentral highlands, where the earlier attacks took place. But they denied charges by gov- ernment officials that they in- tend to launch an offensive to seize control of South Vietnam. Field reports said two platoons of government militiamen - eabout Otroopst-pulled out after the attack by tank-led Commun- ist troops at the post, less than five miles southwest of Kien Duc. SOUTH VIETNAMESE Al Sky- raider bombers and FS jets pounded North Vietnamese posi- tions around Kien Duc, which was overrun Tuesday. Gia Nghia is 15 miles east of Kien Duc and 90 miles northeast of Saigon. By Thursday, the population of Gia Nghia had expanded to more than 10,000, double its nor- mal size, because of the influx of refugees from Kien Duc, most of them Montagnard tribesmen. Officials estimated 2,000 more refugees were still on the road or in the jungles. MANY OF the Montagnards are refugees twice over. They fled earlier fighting at Dak Song a month ago, streaming southward to Kien Due. Reports said a division of South Vietnamese infantrymen, up to 10,000 troops, faced a North Vietnamese division at a point about three miles east of Kien Duc. give and-pla 1st Show of Season! 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