Doge Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 25, 1975 0oge Six THE MiCHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 25, 1975 Thai, Cambodian troops clash South Korea on alert for BANGKOK, Thailand (P) - Thai officials said a 40-man Cambodian patrol crossed into Thailand early yesterday and exchanged shots with border police. U. S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said Cambo- dia may also have had recent border clashes with Vietnam, its neighbor on the other side. Thai officers at Surin, 200 miles northeast of Bangkok, re- ported no casualties in the shooting. They indicated there had been several other small border clashes between Thai- land and Cambodia in the two months since the Khmer Rouge took power in Phnom Penh. T H A I L A N D was a U. S. ally during the Vietnam War, which spilled over into Cambo- dia five years ago, but the Bangkok government is now trying to develop peaceful re- lations with its Communist neighbors. Kissinger told a news confer- ence in Atlanta, Ga., the U. S. government had "rather firm reports" of fighting between Cambodia and Vietnam along their border and off the Wai islands. He said the information was either "second hand" or came from intelligence sources. Kissinger said, however, there is "no evidence" of fight- ing within Cambodia i t s e i f. Bangkok newspapers have been playing up reports of clashes between rival groups in Cambo- dia. A U. S. analyst in Bangkok also expressed doubt at the re- ports of internal fighting, say- ing: "I would be very skepti- cal of these reports. I don't think there is an effective coun- ter force." Meanwhile, 16 more Cambo- dians and 22 Pakistanis fled to Thailand from Cambodia. The Cambodians crossed the border at Surin, where several thous- and Cambodians already had taken refuge, and the Paki- stanis arrived at Aranyapratet. Recent refugee arrivals from Cambodia tell stories of mass executions and of millions of people being uprooted from ci- ties and forced into labor to build a society of primitive rur- al communes. D O Z E N S of refugees - interviewed at several border camps and in Bangkok - said they fled Cambodia out of fear, lack of food and because they could not stand to see still more death and suffering. Refugees told of seeing for- mer military men beaten to death with shovels and clubs, people lashed together and shot. They said they came upon corpses during their 40- to SO- day treks to Thailand. Kissinger told the Atlanta news conference that second- hand information and intelli- gence reports indicate the "death toll has been very great" in Cambodia since the Khmer Rouge victory., In Vientiane, Laos, three Pathet Lao soldiers armed withesubmachine guns were e- ported withdrawn Monday night from the grounds of the resi- dence of U. S. Charge d'Affaires Christian Chapman. The three Pathet Lao invaded the resi- dence grounds Friday without explanation, and the embassy protested to the Foreign Min- istry. renewed war. with North IG-" This Week's Feature Attraction FREE ART FAIR JUNE 26, 27, 28 Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on the Mall THundreds of exhibits . 1 BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY iI La l[ SEOUL, South Korea (A') -- South Korea intensified its alert yesterday on the eve of the 25th anniversary of the out- break of the Korean War, and a North Korean general warned that "war may break out at any moment."- All employes of the South Ko- rean government and state-run corporations were ordered on "second - degree emergency duty," one degree short of an all - out war footing. THE government last Satur- day ordered a 'third - degree alert - the first since the Ko- rean War - canceling all leaves and requiring that all government offices and factor- ies be manned 24 hours a day. Under the second degree alert, the number of workers required to stay at their posts around the clock is increased from one-tenth to one-fifth of all employes. The government gave no spe- cific reason for the alert and some observers said it may have been ordered to dramatize the anniversary of the 1950 war. A U.S. military spokesman declined to say if any unusual Communist movements had been reported along the de- militarized zone (DMZ). The daily routine of Seoul appeared unaffected and radio stations followed regular broadcast pro- grams. Pyongyang's official news ag- ency broadcast an article by Col. Gen. Kim Chol Man of the North Korean People's Army in which he said that "owing to the frantic war provocation maneuvers of the, U. S. imper- ialists and the Shung Hee Park puppet clique, their lackeys, peace in Korea is now gravely jeopardized and a dangerous situation has been created in our country, in whicha war may break out at any mo- ment." Kim said that if the South "dare ignite a war . . . our people . . . will answer it with a decisive counteraction and crush the aggressors to the last one." TWENTY-FIVE years ago to- day, on June 25, 1950, North K o r e a n soldiers crossed the 38th parallel and touched off a war that brought U. S. and other United Nations troops to the South's side and Chinese troops on the side of the North. The three-year war claimed six million civilian and military casualties and laid waste to the cities and economies in both Koreas. A total of 5,720,000 Americans served in the Korean war; 54,- 246 were killed and 103,284 were wounded. Despite sporadic shooting and infiltration incidents, the Ko- rean DMZ .has remained quiet since the end of the war. But tensions have mounted in the divided halves of Korea ever since the Communist victories and U. S. setbacks in Indochina. President Park has voiced in- creasing concern that the North may soon try to test U. S. will- ingness to support its South Ko- rean ally. THE NORTH has dismissed the charges of an impending invasion as "nonsense" and has retorted with its own accusa- tions that the U. S. and South Korea are building up their forces along the DMZ. The latest series of angry. outbursts out of Pyongyong werersparked when U. S. De- fense Secretary James Schle- singershinted last weekend that the use of nuclear weapons "would be carefully consider- ed" if the North invaded the South. North Korea's Communist party newspaper yesterday ac- cused' the U. S. of "nuclear blackmail." A commentary broadcast by Pyongyang's offic- ial news agency said that if Washington and Seoul persist- ed "in their maneuvers of ag- gression and war they will sus- tain a more ignominious defeat than that in the past Korean war and Indochina." Each of the 12 Sundays of racing at Delaware Park will feature a stake race in the meeting which runs until Aug. 10. DON'T SIGN YOUR LIFE AWAY! 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