Friday, August 30, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, August 30, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three MASKED TROOPS: Shots fired at Mexican school I as violence continues MEXICO CITY (IP)-Sounds of gunfire echoed again yesterday in Mexico City, troubled by stu- dent unrest since July 26. Residents near the Foreign Min- istry reported a predawn assault' on a preparatory school occupied by students. From throughout the city came #reports of students holding their schools, awaiting fulfillment of a rumor government troops would try to occupy the schools and de- prive students of a place to as- semble. Noone could confirm the af- filiation of a group of masked men who drove up to Preparatory School No. 7, about 200 yards from the Foreign Ministry, at 4:20 a.m. and loosed a hail of gun- fire at the school, which had been guarded through the night by about 20 students. Spent cartridges from M1 rifles and .45-caliber pistols littered the street. Newsmen who arrived min- utes later saw-.student? angrily dismiss ambulances. They told the newsmen two per- sons had been wounded in the MSU students win court, fi L ,t LANSING W) - The trespass convictions of four youths who joined an antiwar demonstration at a Michigan State University "Career Carnival" have been over- turned by a split decision of the state Court of Appeals. The four demonstrated near a U.S. Marine Corps booth in the, MSU student union in 1967, hand- ing out literature and displaying signs opposing the Vietnam war and seeking contributions for "medical aid for the Viet Cong." Trial testimony showed the youths were told by the director of MSU's placement office that they were welcome to stay at the carni- val, but that they would have to take their signs and handbills outside the building, in Capital neighborhood had taken them to a private doctor for treatment. Residents of nearby apartments said they saw about 15 vehicles pull up before the school and men, some with white helmets, others with handkerchiefs or masks on their faces, begin firing. Windows were shattered and the building was pocked with bullets. President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, who personally has become the target of demonstrators original- i protesting generally against government policy and police, made several public appearances Wednesday. At a National Farm Confeder-, attack, but a resident of the ation meeting he, characterized" the demonstrators as "irrational" and said "at times some enemies cause confusion, but they cannot alter the course of our history." The slogan} "death to Diaz Or- daz" is seen and heard more and more in the city, where the dem- onstrators have been demanding resignation of the police chief and release of 86 persons they say are political prisoners.4 'Shooting, which had been, heard only once before briefly in early August, broke out again Wednesday' in Zocalo, or main government square, when snipers started firing on troops who had occupied 'it. Heavy battles resume in war SAIGON {M)- Spiraling casualty tolls coupled with new battles northwest of Saigon and below the demilitarized zone and a dozen Communist barrages against military posts and towns have dashed hopes among military men of any de-esca- lation of the ground war in the. near future. Fresh fighting erupted in Vietnam yesterday and U.S. lleadquarters said the number of Americans, South Vietna- mese and Communists killed in combat last week soared to the highest total so far this summer. The Viet Cong high command appealed to its troops and sym- pathizers in the central part of the country to "hit, destroy, an- nihilate the enemy in the new general offensive now under way. In a Vietnamese-1 a n g u a g e broadcast beamed over Radio Hanoi, the enemy also told South Vietnamese officials and soldiers this was their last chance to "make retribution.' The broad- cast urged them to seize allied: military posts, weapons and "an- nihilate your criminal leaders." Presents INGMAR BERGMAN'S TH.E SEVENT SEAL' (1956) "God is dead or death is God" 7:Q00& 9:05 Thursday and Friday ARCHITECTURE AUD. GUATEMALA'S DEFENSE MINISTER, Col. Pola'ndo Chinchilla, center, confers with police of- ficers by the covered body of slain U.S. ambassador John Gordon Mein. SECRET MEETING: CzechS discuss- troops Hunt for assass-ins ~ beginls GUATEMALA (R) - A left- wing extremist group claimed yes- terday its agents tried to kidnap U.S. Ambassador John Gordon Mein and gunned him down when he tried to flee. The group ap- parently wanted to take Mein hostage for a prisoner swap. Guatemalan authorities yesterday launched a search for at least six I i - - - - - -- -- - - - - 1 UNION-LEAGUE r' i t i ;; ,_ I - You need the UAC Calendar Notebook Buy it on the Diag NOW Freshman Rosters also on sale on Diag and at Ulrich's PRAGUE VP) - Liberal and pro-Moscow communist leaders argued in secret yesterday over a party line that might get the Soviet block occupation for- ces out of Czechoslovakia. But there was little hope the troops would leave soon and gloom spread over the country. Josef Smrkovsky, liberal pres- ident of the National Assembly, told the nation in a radio ad- dress that radio and newspapers will be restricted in ,their free- dom, as indicated by party chief Alexander Dubcek earlier this week. He also said that, in re- sponse to Soviet demands, polit- ical clubs will be banned. Smrkovsky said these meas- ures will be temporary and will be discused by the National As- sembly in the next few days. Also under Soviet pressure, claidestine radios were going off the air. They had sprung up since the Soviet, Polish, East German, Hungarian and Bul- garian troops marched in last week. The radios had been under Soviet attack ever since Presi- dent Ludvik Svoboda, Dubcek and other leaders returned this week from Moscow, where they were forced to sign an agree- ment accepting the occupation. The Russians were irritated be- cause the Czechoslovak leaders had not ordered the radios off the air. The Communist party meet- ing was not held at headquar- ters, which remained unguarded by Soviet tanks. It probably was being held at some factory in Prague's grimy industrial dis- trict. At least once since the Soviet bloc invasion, party leaders put on overalls and drifted into and out of a factory when the shifts changed, to hold secret session. Soviet tanks stayed off' the, main thoroughfares, but were still lined up on side streets. The Soviet guard was lifted at the U.S. Embassy, but troops still guarded such key points' as radio and newspaper build-, ings. Soviet jeeps and armored cars Patrolled the city's streets. Dubcek was reported under medical care, mentally and physically exhausted. He had been forcibly taken to Moscow, where he signed the accord that accepted the occupation. Delegates from Slovalk1a were reported arriving in Prague for what promised to be a full dress. meeting of the Czechoslovak Communist congress, the high-. est party assembly. It would have two tasks before' it: To accept or reject the Mos- cow agreement and to agree on the membership of a new party central committee that would carry out the new policy. The. Slovak delegates were fresh from a party congress at Bratislava, their regional capi- tal. Deputy Premier Gustav Husak, known as a liberal, had told them: "There were two possibilities. Those who make tough radical faces say we should 'not talk with the oc- cupying power. What then? We do not know. "Other have looked at the matter soberly and decided that you can not beat your head against a wall, This is the only realistic way out in our situ- ation. In beating back Communist of- fensives lastmweek, headquarters said, 308 Americans were killed in action, the highest toll since June 15. and another 1,144 were wounded. South Vietnamese casualties were put at 495 government troops slain, their heaviest loss for any week since May 11. U.S. headquarters claimed 4,755 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong killed last week, the biggest weekly total since May 18. The rising casualty tolls were linked directly tovthe resumption of a series of heavy enemy in- fantry attacks and shellings that. began Aug. 18, snapping a two- month lull in the ground war. "The offensive efforts of the enemy were blunted just about every place he tried to do any- thing," a U.S spokesman said of last week's action. He attributed a large number of Communist deaths to allied artillery and air attacks. The biggest of the new clashes raged 32 miles northwest of the capital where U.S. jets and ar- tillery raked a North Vietnamese battalion cornered by troops of; the U.S. 101st Air Cavalry Divi- sion: men reported involved in am- bushing Mein's limousine Wednes- day on a tree-lined boulevard in a diplomatic district of the capi- tal. No arrests were reported. President Julio Cesar Mendez Montenegro declared' a state of siege, suspending some constitu- tional rights so that police could make arrests without warrants. The president also called for three days of national mournipg. Fl.gs at all embassies and public buildings flew at half staff. The U.S. Embassy was closed. It was guarded by a Guatemalan soldier. Memorials services for ,Mein, 54, were scheduled for today at the Union Presbyterian church here. Authorities said the b o d y probably would be flown to the United States later for burial at Arlington National Cemetery. ,' , M w l,: t'1 l ,' r': "ANOTHER BERGMAN SMASH FOR STRONG TASTES-AND STRONGER INTELLECTS! An emotional clobbering. In a dream-like sequence, love7 rmaking begins before assembled erotically posed onlookers. The imagery builds, the visual pace surges violently. THIS IS A OAZZLER." -Cue Magazine hit; ; s , I 11WT TdAI 1IATE 'Ik 1l IVI IVVLM I to get a great job at the "As memorable as anything from Bergman's earlier films. Von Sydow running his hand over a naked body he believes to be a corpse, Ingrid Sheraton Ann Arbor 100 S. Fourth Thulin's legs gradually appearin~g down from the upper left edge of the screen as she runs to meet him. It takes great power for an artist ' I ( WAITRESSES to win through." .IU.S. casualties mount -N. Y. Times BUSBOYS i t KITCHEN HELP III PEACE-FREEDOM 4:00 P.M.-Rm. 3B, Michigan Union FRiDAY, AUGUST 30 FIRST ORGANIZING MEETINGS GARSKOF FOR CONGRESS NEW POLITICS PARTY Sponsored by Friends of CNP CA LL 769-0395 or come to restaurant office _; ___________ ' II a T I' I I Welcome Back TRYOUT! to the good life UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN OMEGA PIZZA MEN'S GLEE CLUB "The Hour Of The Wolf"'is the hour between night and dawn. It is the hour when most people die, when sleep is deepest, when nightmares are most real. It is the hour when the sleepless are haunted by their deepest fear, when ghosts and demons are most powerful. "The Hour Of The Wolf" is also the hour when most children are born. U_ makes it a little better ,# GENERAL MEETING I Tues., Sept. 3, 7:00 P.M. MAY \l gVllnnAW . I IlIl IMANM 7Ln fAnIAA CI a N