Page 10-Saturday, May 6, 1978-The Michigan Daily You know what to wear Moro's fate still in doubt ROME (AP) - Four identical messages attributed to the Red Brigades said yesterday the terrorists were "carrying out" the death sentence against kidnapped former Premier Aldo Moro because the government has refused to bargain for his life. But "Communique No. 9" did not say specifically that the 61-year-old Moro had been killed. JUSTICE MINISTER Paolo Bonifacio said he regarded the statement as authentic but speculated it might be a ploy by the ultra-leftist terrorists to heighten tension in the country. "However, everything is possible," he added. Police said they had an anonymous telephone tip about the location of Moro's body and sent investigators to the seaside resort community of Terracina, 60 miles south of Rome where the Moro family has a summer home. They said the search was fruitless and they believed the tip was a hoax, adding that the massive search for the kidnapped politician would con- tinue. The method of releasing the latest messages simultaneously in-four cities and the kind of typewriter used were the same as for previous Red Brigades' messages that were judged authentic. "WE CONCLUDE the battle which began March 16 by carrying out the verdict to which Aldo Moro has been sentenced," the statement said. Moro, president of Italy's ruling Christian Democrat Party, was kidnapped March 16 by a dozen terrorists who killed his five police body guards, and the terrorists later said, "a people's trial" had "sentenced" him to death. The latest statement, carrying yesterday's date, did not use the past tense - to say Morohad already been killed. It was in the present tense, opening the way to different inter- pretations. *A purported terrorist announcement April 18 of Moro's "execution" later was disowned by the Red Brigades, who then made publica photograph showing him alive. That "communique" said the body had been dumped in a moun- tain lake, but a massive search of the area by authorities proved fruitless. THE LATEST message said the Marxist revolutionary guerrillas had given the ruling Christian Democrat Party "a possibility, the only one prac- ticable . . . for the freeing of Aldo Moro" - to release 13 jailed terrorists. China: 'US out TOKYO(AP)-The United States "must withdraw from South Korea all its aggressive troops, arms and equip-j ment," Hua Kuo-feng was quoted as saying yesterday in North Korea during his first trip abroad as chairman of China's Communist Party. President Carter announced plans last year to pull all 32,000 American ground troops out of South Korea over four or five years. But facing congressional opposition, he said last month the initial stage of the withdrawal would be delayed. Carter's national security adviser, Zbigniev Br- zezinski, is to visit China later this month. Hua, who also holds the post of premier, reiterated China's position that it "firmly supports" the "independent and peaceful reunification" of Korea, the North's official Korean Central News Agency reported in a dispatch monitored here. HUA, 57, arrived in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang by train on an oficial visit, held talks with President Kim Il-sung and spoke at an evening banquet at which Kim, 66, was the host. Kim also heads the Korean Workers Party, the Communist Party of South Korea. "All schemes to create two Koreas and perpetuate the division of Korea are doomed to failure," Hua was quoted of S. Korea' as saying. "We firmly believe that, through staunch struggle waged by the Korean people under the correct leadership of President Kim Il-sung, an integral, unified Korea will emerge in the world." Rua also said the U.S.-dominated United Nations com- mand must be "promptly disbanded," the Korean news agency reported. Troops under the U.N. command have policed the Korean cease-fire since a truce ended the fighting on the peninsula in 1953. THE SOUTH KOREAN government in Seoul, which engaged in preliminary contacts with North Korea that Kim broke off in 1973, acquiesced to Carter's withdrawal plan after the United States proposed providing an arms package that would include the transfer of U.S. weaponry and equipment to South Korea. South Korean President Park Chung-hee has said North Korea is holding to a policy of "military unification of the peninsula," but that South Korea has "enough power to crush such an invasion." 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The internal protection more waren trust *M MA j fiY 4 AMA CROAE AMRM U.N. and PLO commanders confer on renegade guerrilas TYRE, Lebanon (AP) - Security units of the Palestine Liberation Organization searched this port city yesterday for radical ringleaders of the ambush of French soldiers of the U.N. southern Lebanon peacekeeping force. U.N. and PLO commanders con- ferred in Beirut on how to avoid further bloodshed between the U.N. forces and PLO guerrillas and their Lebanese Moslem allies. A PLO SPOKESMAN said Maj. Azpi Zghayar, identified as one of the organization's toughest law- enforcement officers, was leading the hunt for extremists who opened fire on the French paratroopers Tuesday, killing two and wounding 12. A Senegalese U.N. soldier also was slain in a separate incident. The spokesman said a number of arrests had been made but gave no details. Among the wounded was Col. Jean Germain Salvan, commander of the 1,223-man French contingent. His replacement, 43-year-old Lt. Col. Dominique Viard, said yesterday, "Our mission has not changed." He said his men would continue to prevent infiltration through U.N. lines and would return any fire directed at them. MAJ. GEN. Emmanuel Erskine of Ghana, who commands the 3,992 soldiers of the U.N. force, met for more than two hours with PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat at Beirut's Sabra refugee camp. "We had very extensive and useful discussions on the best way to avoid the sort of incidents we had May 2," Er- skine said. He reported Arafat again pledged to honor the cease-fire declared a week after Israel's March 15 invasion of southern Lebanon to eliminate PLO bases. Israel attacked four days after PLO guerrillas killed 35 Israelis aboard two buses on the Haifa-Tel Aviv highway. ISRAELI FORCES so far have pulled out of about 65 per cent of the 500 square miles of Lebanon they occupied. PLO Maj. Mohammed Tamraz, credited with saving Salvan's life, con- ferred at the U.N. garrison here with Viard on ways to enforce the cease-fire. Tamraz, Arafat's liaison officer with the French, drove with Salvan to the outskirts of Tyre on Tuesday night, af- I Mixed League Gowling SIGN UP NOW. MICHIGAN UNION LANES Wednesday Night-50C per game OPEN 11 AM Mon-Fri, 1 PM Sat and Sun 11