The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 13, 1983-Page 5 Salvadoran campaign reminiscent of Vietnam SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Government troops will soon launch a new campaign, in many ways similar to one used in Vietnam, that will combine a large- scale military operation with a major effort to woo civilians away from leftist guerrillas, informed sources say. The plan involves technical help from the U.S. Agency for International Development officials, some of them slated Tfor full-time assignment to villages, according to the sour- ces, most of whom spoke on condition they not be identified. SOME COMPARED the plan to the Civil Operations and Rural Development Support Agency known as CORDS - that provided medical care and economic relief to war vic- tims in Vietnam in the late 1960s. It was coordinated with Operation Phoenix, aimed at liquidating the Viet Cong un- derground in villages. "CORDS is probably the best analogy I can think of, although this plan has their (the Salvadorans) own concep- tions in it," said a U.S. military adviser. The plan, said to be contingent on the Salvadoran gover- nment getting an additional $110 million in U.S. aid, calls for about 10,000 soldiers to sweep through a key province in east-central El Salvador, Western and Salvadoran sources said. ONE AIM of the month-long sweep will be to destroy guerrilla strongholds; another would be to cut off routes through which the rebels receive military supplies, prin- cipally northern regions near the Honduran border. This, in itself, would be the biggest operation since the civil war started 41 months ago, with a toll to date of 42,000 people killed. The largest previous operation, lasting three weeks in February in northeastern Morazan province, in- volved 6,000 troops and was widely viewed as only a limited success. Once the shooting subsides in the new operation, soldiers and government officers arerto spread outinto the coun- tryside in a coordinated program to rebuild war-torn villages and provide social services. THE PLAN is intended to reclaim at least some of the key agricultural areas currently dominated by the guerrillas in their fight for power here. Western sources said no exact date has been decided yet, but the operation will probably begin at the end of summer. Speculation is that either San Vicente or Usulutan will be chosen. Both are centers for sugar and cotton production, and are the sites of large camps from which guerrillas raid traffic on the Pan-American and the coastal highways, the two main east-west roads traversing El Salvador. Therebels also have sabotaged electrical installations frequently in the two provinces and used them to smuggle weapons by overland and sea routes. "The guerrilla actions have militarized these areas. We are going to convince them to be civilized," Co. Luis Alonso Amaya, an army commander involved in the plan, said in an interview. Reagan urges schools to get back to basics (Continued from Page 1) science and math. And many U.S. high schools do not offer sufficient math to prepare graduates for engineering schools." However, according to a report of the College Board last year, students in record numbers are taking math and science courses in high schools across the country. SPEAKING FROM his weekend retreat at Camp David atop Catoctin Mountain in Maryland, Reagan said, "We must move forward again by returning to the sound principles that never failed us when we lived 'up to them. Can we not begin by welcoming God back in our schools and by setting an example for children by striving to abide by his Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule?" Reagan also urged Congress to ap- prove a school prayer constitutional amendment and enact tax credits for private and parochial school students. Reagan said permitting prayer in public classrooms would be "welcoming God back in our schools." "We must do a better job of teaching the basics, insisting on discipline and results, encouraging competition and - above all - remembering that education does not begin with Washington of- ficials or even state and local officials. It begins in the home, where it is the right and responsibility of every American." Rep. Harold Washington (D-Ill.), who was catapulted to national prominence two weeks ago when he won his party's nomination for mayor of Chicago, delivered the Democrats' official response to Reagan. IMPROVING THE quality of education is "obviously an important national priority," Washington said. But he said Reagan's call for action "is misleading when compared to the ac- tual record of the Republican ad- ministration," which he pointed out had cut federal funds for education in each of the last two years. Reagan has outlined plans to reduce the department to a foundation, but he never formally proposed legislation. WHILE HE announced no new ograms in the address, the president d outline several measures taken by is administration which he said would nprove the education of today's ,udents. He said the proposed legislation to rovide tuition tax credits for parents rho send their children to private chools would help low income families. *~ EgEE pM l! s Sw pal EEK pN -.0000 I INDIViDUAL THEATRES 5* Ave. oftiLbety 75149700 I $200SAOUNshw or $2.00 SAT SUN shows before 6:00 PM A ROMANTIC COMEDY FOR THE INCURABLY ROMANTIC! DUDLEY MOORE LOVE (PG)' FRI MON - 6:45, 8:30, 10:15 SAT SUN - 1:20, 3:05, 4:50, 6:45, 8:30, 10:15 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCL. BEST ACTRESS MERYL STREEP "MAGNIFICENTI!" It gets down to what you want to do and what you have to do. 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