Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 23, 1976 Cambodia calms down 0+£ PARIS P) -- Cambodia, after country they took over in April, well for the Communist govern- a reign of terror that Western ,1975. ments who have diplomatic mis- NOW SHOWING analysts believe may have caus- ed 500,000 deaths, is growing1 SHOW TIMES: 7:30 & 9:30 daly calmer internally and starting 1,3, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Sat. & Sure. ony to reach out abroad, two senior specialists in Indochina affairs report. Following a year and a half of nearly total isolation, the4 country's leaders have begun a timid campaign of increased contact with the outside world,I the specialists said. ON THE BASIS of these de- velopments they conclude that the Cambodian Communists, known as Khmers Rouges, now finally feel they have the me- chanism for controlling the V9INTAGE WINES at Retail Prices, ', a. S. University near Washtenaw 769-1744 - 1 -! The two analysts, Western diplomats with close ties to Southeast Asia, requested that; they not be identified. The sources said that execu- tions have almost come to a halt after a systematic purge aimed at elimination of all po-; tential dissidents. The execu- tions, famine, a malaria epi- demic, the deliberate breakup of families, and great move- ments of people from the cities to rural areas have led 'West- ern intelligence organizations to estimate up to a half million deaths in a population of around seven million. MORE FOOD is now available, and marriages are being per- mitted, an indication of in- creasing stabilization, the sources said.l "All the signs of change should be seen in relative terms," one of the informantsI cautioned. "Cambodia is still a paranoid situation, one of the strangest on the globe." The analysts confirmed re- ports that nothing was known of the whereabouts of Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the former1 chief of state whose resignationj was announced last April. Oust- ed by a -pro-West coup in 1970,I he was returned to office, if only in figurehead capacity by the Communists last year.- SIHANOUK WAS last seen in July, and a Chinese official re- -ported in August that he wasj alive, but there has been noI i s i j I ' sions in the Phnom Penh. The few diplomats in the country are restricted in travel and nor- mally forced to stay in the capital. Information comes through refugees, aerial photography, and talks with diplomats with diplomats who have been inside +he country. A HELICOPTER PILOT woh flew out of Cambodia and was questioned by Western intelli- gence experts brought some in- dications the country's rulers were not those in the govern ment but members of an un- known 'group. "Six or seven days later we began to get some contradictory information," one of the ana- lysts said. "Sometimes figur- ing out what's going on in! China seems simple compared to-looking at Cambodia." The indications of Cambodia's interest in widening its foreign contacts include the visit this week of Ieng Sary, the vice; prime minister for foreign af- fairs, to Romania on his first official trip to Europe. He was also expected to be traveling to the United Nations in New; York. F U RTHE R EVIDENCE of interest in foreign contacts were recent invitations to the Egyptian, Sengalese and Tuni- sian ambassAdors in Peking to visit Phnom Penh. There has; .AP Photo PD POL. ADV. CARTER ON H E'A L T H CARE: "The quality of health care in this nation depends largely on eco- nomic status . . . We need a national health care system that is sufficiet, workable and fair." CARTER SUPPORTS mandatory national health Sinsurance to make adequate health care a right for all Americans. FORD OPPOSES any comprehensive national health system (He even vote~d against Medicare while in Congress) VOTE FOR CARTER-For Health Care Available To All Americans word on him since. also been a low key' attempt at One of the informants said he ' trade negotiations with Japan felt there- was little reason to in Tokyo. expect that any harm had come The most unusual - gesture Cat o aremains avastabroad was a Cambodian stand mystery for the West, which at the annual fair of the French! has no representatives in the Communist party newspaper country, and probably one as l'Humanite last month. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN WASHINGTON SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM in WASHINGTON, D.C.j MASS MEETING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27 7:30 PM. NAT. SC. AUD. I Ronnister Johnson can afford to take his time getting to work amid surroundings like these. The 200-year-old oak trees, covered with Spanish moss, grow on Sapelo Island in Georgia. 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It just may change the course of ph tg a h/___ your photography' - Canon HALIFAX, Canada ui - The ment - owned Christian Radich three-masted sailing ship Era- agreed to make the trip. wan, one of the tall ships seen BUT THE ERAWAN ran up in New York harbor on July 4, $15,000 in unforseen pilotage has broken up on rocks in the fees through the Great Lakes, Canso Strait of Nova Scotia, the St. Lawrence Seaway and Can- Transport Ministry said yester- soStrait, Havermansaid. day. Haverman said 'it was be- "She's gone," said a minis- lieved that these and other de- try spokesman following a tails h!id been ironed out with storm that swept the , area the host cities on the Great Thursday with winds up to 40 Lakes by Operation Sail author- miles an hour. He said only a ities in New York which organ- small part of the hull of the ized the international sailpast 150-foot vessel was still visible. for July 4. "But we found when we got Thesship, built in Sweden in there that these cities had not 1947 as a Baltic trader and one: paid the pilotage fees and had of the last wooden ships de-, no intention of doing so. signed for commercial use, ran "The captain would never, aground in a gale Tuesday, have taken her into the Great night as Captain Phillip Esnos .Lakes if he'd know there was and his crew of eight neared the no written agreement." open Atlantic. Esnos is the "WE RAN into all kinds of owner of the Panamanian - reg- other trouble, too," Haverman -istered ship and used her as a ote rulIoHvra charter vessel out of New York.said, including rigid Greatj Lakes and seaway navigation The ship had just comnleted regulations and one 'other a tour of U. S. Great Lakes grounding. In Sturgeon Bay, ports which a crewman Bob anear Algoma, Wis., he said, a Haverman of Centerport, N.Y., local pilot "put us aground. We said had been marred by a had to be towed off and the "sea of red tape." Erawan sustained considerable The Erawan and other tall damage." ships were invited by about 15 He said the damage, 60 to 80 U. S. cities 6n the Great Lakes feet of wood torn from the keel, to pay courtesy visits. The Era- might have contributed to the wan and the Norwegian govern- Erawan's trouble at Canso.j "She leaked in places she nev- er leaked before." After spending several weeks in Menominee, Mich., while lawyers for the ship and Oper- ation Sail argled with the Great Lakes cities about pilotage fees, the Erawan was bailed out by her skipper, cancelled visits to several Canadian cities and headed o t of the lakes for Mar- .immnirie where Esnos had a con- tract to charter the vessel, Hav- erman said. Esnos was in Montreal on Friday to discuss his claim for insurrance which Haverman said might cover about 60 per cent of the Erawan's value. He added Esnos had told him the Erawan was worth about $400,000. 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