THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vmf" THE M1CHtC~AN flAtly 'W~A~1W t 9JE1v 1" 4 Peking Says . Army Revolt In Progress , Radio Affirms Rising In Wuhan Province. F Broadcasts Ultinatum HONG KONG (R) - A military revolt against Mao Tse-tung in the big central Chinese industrial complex of Wuhan was confirmed , k yesterday by Radio Peking. It broadcast an ultimatum for the rebels to surrender or be wiped out by the army. Serious trouble for the party chairman also was reported in the south China province of Kwang- J tung next door to Hong Kong. 4 Chinese arrivals from Canton, Kwangtung's capital, said railway 4 workers had fought for three days x with Mao's Red Guards and about 100 Chinese were killed. DE GAULLE FLIES OUT from I Serious Concern PE GAUise LES Pearon' But the most serious concern Prime Minister Lester Pearsn's for Mao obviously was Wuhan, a successiosts. complex of the three adjacent Yangtze River cities of Hankow, ' P1 Wuchang and Hanyang. In con- trol there is a rebellious general, Chen Tsai tao, and some sources 4 report he has 80,000 good troops as his command. Addressing a warning to Chen, Radio Peking said "counter revo- lutionary forces must surrender MONTREAL () - Matching a or be destroyed by the Peopie's snub for a rebuke, Gen. Charles Liberation Army." De Gaulle flew home yesterday, It added: "You have been com- cutting short by one day a visit pletely isolated and your schemes designed to honor Canada on its are doomed to failure." 100th birthday. First Confirmation He left Canadian officials to There have been recurring re- stew among themselves in the ports that backers of President diplomatic crisis he set off by Liu Shao Chi, Mao's main enemy, voicing fighting words in Quebec were in revolt in Wuhan, but this Province. None of the Canadian was the first official confirma- Cabinet came to the airport to tion of its dimensions. see his DC8 take off. The ultimatum was seconded The French President in effect by Liberation Army Daily, the or- delivered a snub to Prime Minister gan of Mao's heir apparent, De- Lester B. Pearson, who had fense Minister Lin Piao. The. mounted a wave of protest against newspaper said the " army will De Gaulle's remarks by issuing a "resolutely support" the struggle statement holding De Gaulle's of Maoists in Wuhan. views were "unacceptable." Liberation Army Daily insisted This referred to various De the cultural revolution - Mao's Gaulle exclamations in Quebec name for the purge-was making Province, where he said "French headway in Wuhan and said the Canada is a country which wants uprising was "the final agony of to be its own master" and voiced the handful of evil leaders within a separatist war cry: "Long Live the party and the military." Free Quebec!" Serious Trouble "The word 'unacceptable' itself First intimation of serious trou- is unacceptable," said a spokes- ble in Wuhan came when Mao man for the French Foreign Of- sent Deputy Premier Hsieh Fu fice who accompanied De Gaulle.' chih, who also is minister of se- He meant that in diplomatic lan-' curity, and Wang Li, director of guage this adjective was almost the party's propaganda depart- as far as any nation could go. ment, to Wuhan to try to put Pearson's statement was issued down the dissidents. They return- Tuesday night after hours of care- ed empty handed to Peking Satur- ful study by members of the day. Canadian Cabinet. Japanese press reports from It sought to soften the rebuke Peking at the. time said they were by citing the long history seized by Chen's troops and we're of French-Canadian friendship. released only at the intervention Pearson then expressed the hope of Premier Chou En lai, who de- that his talks with the general in spite his siding with Mao still Ottawa yesterday and today may have some influence with could advance this amity. Chen After the French Embassy had DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN W.'.'.t°?:',' $':iti:^v" VY::, 4"v'F:"7iggyp:,v.'v; Y.°-%vsi::}S:'7 ?:: n;+ -Asseriated Press Montreal airport yesterday, cutting short his visit to Canada following rebuke to the French President's remarks in support of Quebec Ends Canada Visit, reeting Wth Pearon s ': 5 ! t' .', 1' t 4 i t i Ir l " notified the government of De libre!" statement that principally Gaulle's decision, the Canadian brought. down the Canadian gov- Cabinet met again-for 3%/ hours. ement's wrath. Pearson then issued a new state- ment saying: ; Quebec nationalists--those who "Gen. De Gaulle's decision to favor sperating Quebec from Can- cut short his visit is understand- ada - are a comparatively small able under the circumstances, but minority, so far as all reliable those circumstances, which are measurements go. not of the government's making,: are greatly to be regretted." The whole episode was spillingN over into Canadian politics and o idNr was likely to have an influence as well in 'France, where several newspapers have criticized De TOKYO-The Yomiuri Shim- Gaulle's expressions in Quebec. bun, a major Tokyo newspaper, But De Gaulle himself has a term said today Soviet Premier Alexei running until 1972. N. Kosygin had said his country John G. Diefenbaker, chief of was ready to bring peace to Viet- the leading opposition Conserva- nam even at the risk of breaking tive party here, was getting in ties with Red China. licks already at the government's The paper said in a dispatch handling of the situation. Canada from Warsaw that Kosygin had is likely to have an election next made this known to Japanese For- year. eign Minister Takeo Miki when The trip that was supposed to they met in Moscow last Satur- honor Canada on its centennial day. as a nation-result of conflict be- Kosygin, however, conditioned tween French and English speak- the Kremlin's planned move to ing citizens-wound up as strictly peace efforts on the side of the a tour of largely French speaking United States, the paper said. The Quebec Province, premier indicated the conditions De Gaulle landed at Quebec included an unconditional and in- City Sunday, steaming in on a definite halt to the U.S. bombing French cruiser. He then drove to of North Vietnam. Montreal, the province's largest# city, with acclaim along the way, WASHINGTON - A State De- and visited Expo 67. partment spokesman said yester-E Cheered at the Montreal Ci ty day "consideration will be given" Hall, he made the "Vive le Quebec to revoking'Stokely Carmichael's U~ SNCC Head Bound Over To Maryland Seized in Courthouse After Defying Arrest On Federal Property WASHINGTON ()-Alexandria, Va., police dragged H. Rap Brown from the steps of the federal courthouse yesterday, arrested him, and said they will hold him for Maryland authorities who have charged him with incitement to riot and to arson. The 23-year-old director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was pulled from the steps of the courthouse in the midst of a harangue to newsmen in which Brown pro- claimed that local officials could not arrest him on federal proper- ty. Surrounded by nearly a score of followers, he had taken a stand in the federal building and threat- ened "to make war right here just like in Detroit" if efforts were made to arrest him. Alexandria Police Captain Les Saunders said Brown would be booked and held for Maryland authorities, although a fairly com- plicated legal procedure of extra- dition presumably would have to take place before Brown could be removed to Maryland.' The FBI arrested Brown yester- day morning on a federal warrant charging unlawful flight to avoid prosecution on the Maryland charges of in citing to riot and encouraging the burning of a school in Cambridge, Md. vRoundup passport for his reported trip to Cuba in violation of the depart- ment's travel ban. Press officer Robert J. Mc- Closkey said Carmichael did not apply for the special travel per- mission required by the State De- partment for travel to Cuba and "it would appear" that the black power advocate flew to Havana from Prague. Carmichael's passport "is sub- ject to revocation as has been the case with any and all who have traveled to areas which have been proscribed," McCloskey said. The- Cuban news agency, Pren- sa Latina, quoted Carmichael as saying Negroes in American ci- ties would wage a guerrilla "fight to the death." Phone 434-0130 0 . ceOrCARPENTER RA FIRST OPEN 8:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUNI when you've gtit made... ' Tony Curtis Shownat 9:35 Only inpanavision- and metrocolor ALSO ... M GM PRESENT AN ALVIN GANZER PRODUCTION David Mraum Shown at 1 11:20 Only"r r ' PANAVIIoN and METROeCOLOR PLUS . "GRANDAD OF RACING" COLOR CARTOON ASKED CRISIS AID: Pontiff Returns From Turkey; Visited Shrines in Asia Minor SAIGON (Pi - B52 squadrons churned up nearly four square miles of North Vietnamese terri- tory just above the demilitarized zone with tons of bombs yesterday in an effort to knock out the guns and wreck the bunkers of Hanoi's 341st Division. The high flying, eight jet Stra- tofortresses struck in waves two hours apart at enemy positions ranging from seven to nine miles north of Con Thien, one of the U.S. Marine outposts below the zone that has been hit hard and often by Communist barrages. The 341st is among three North Vietnamese divisions that intelli- gence officers consider are poised for an attempt to invade the bor- der province of Quant Tri with the help of local Viet Cong and in- filtrated northern regulars. A few hours after the B52 raids, Communist gunners elsewhere laid harassing fire on the U.S. Marine base at Dong Ha, 10 miles south- east of Con Thien. AP corespondent John Lengel reported from the field that about half a dozen shells were lobbed at Dong Ha, the biggest of four out- posts delineating a sector that the Marines call "Leatherneck Square." There was no immediate word about casualties or damage there. Nor was there specific informa- tion about what the Stratofort- resses' saturation bombing had ac- complished. The U.S. Command declined to disclose how many took part. , The Stratofortresses have struck only a few times in the Communist north since their first raid on the Mu Gia pass, an outlet to the Ho Chi Minh trail through, eastern Laos, in April, 1966, They have staged more than 40 raids within the zone, though there wasta long interval this year when they avoided the entire bor- der "region because of the threat of Soviet made surface to air SAM missiles the North Vietnamese trucked in. U.S. fighter bombers and artil- lery have worked over the SAM sites, however, and ,it evidentially was felt the danger of missiles had been eliminated, at least for the time being in the area of the 341st Division. ROME 03)-Pope Paul VT re- from Istanbul to Izmir and cov-I turned last night from Turkey ered the final 60 miles to Ephesus where he issued a new call for, by limousine with four motor- Christian unity. Before leaving he cycle escorts, over snaking m:un- made a pilgrimage in the hot sun tain roads. to Ephesus where his namesake, It was the fulfillment of a St. Paul, once preached to pagans. dream for the Pope. He wanted The Roman Catholic pontiff to visit ancient Ephesus, now an returned in the Pan-American unpopulated clump of ruins near World Airways jet "Clipper St. the Turkish town of Selcuk, to! Paul" that landed him at Istan- see the site of the Third Ecunen- bul Tuesday for talks to promote ical Council in 431. That councilC Christian unity and to solicit the proclaimed that Mary was the help of Turkish officials in set- mother of God. tling the Middle East crisis, The trip to Ephesus, on a hill-! His presence and prayers at the side baked in 100 degrees heat, so-called House of Mary under- was a high point of his pilgrim- scored his support for devotion to age. He was visibly moved by Christ's mother. emotion as he walked through the Pope Paul flew the 600 miles ruins. 13-Strike--. Vietnam Positions at Buffer Zone Before 2.000 persons at t council site, the modern day Pa quoted from St. Paul's letter the Ephesians--Eph. 4, 5, 6-- the unity of all Christians in o Lord, faith and baptism. At the place where traditi says the apostle St. John v.as p to death by Roman Emperor Tr jan, he prayed that all of Chr: tianity would one day again united. In a message to all noni-Cath lic Christians, the pontiff point out that he had exchanged t kiss of peace in Istanbul wi Patriarch Athenagoras, spiritu leader of 150 million Orthodoxi 'To you also, dear brothers Christ, we desire to express o esteem and our fraternal lovi the Pope said. "With full respect for ye customs and legitimate tradition we would wish on our part to d clare our will to make the di logue of truth in love go forward The Pope said he wanted t1- message to go to the Archbish of Canterbury and leader of t world Anglican Communion, 3 Michael Ramsey, and to the pa tors of all other Christi churches. A Turkish airliner carried t Pope on his pilgrimage to t shrines yesterday. Turkish Pres dent Cevdet Sunay, Premier S leyman Demirel and a 21-gun s lute saw the pontiff off at ; tanbul. Athenagoras headed the relii ous leaders who came to see t Pope depart. CINEMA II PRESENTS TO DIE IN BACK AT THE MADRID' (1965) "Masterpiecer!"t --Crist, N.Y. Herald Tribu. TOWN BAR -"M'sterpiece!" ---0' Doherty, 'I ii the eastern michigan ,university summer theatre presents I The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibiilty* Notices should be sent, in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. .General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items ap'pear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. THURSDAY, JULY 27 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"The Use and Validation of Per- sonnel Tests": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Preview - "No Reason to Stay" and "Journals of Lewis and Clark": Multi- purpose Room, Undergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. International Center Tea-603 East Madison, 4:30 p.m. Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture - Prof. William G. Moulton, Princeton University, "Phonemic Systems in Time and Space": Rackham Lecture Hall, 7:30 p.m. Dept. of Speech University Players Production-William Wycherly's "The Country Wife": Lydia, Mendelssohn The- atre, 8 p.m. - Nineteenth Annual National Band Conductors' Conference-The Universi- ty of Michigan Summer Session Band -William D. Revelli, conductor, Harold' Bachman, guest conductor: Hill Aud.. 8:30 p.m. BY OSCAR WILDE Thursday-Saturday-July 27-29 / T H U RSDAY-F R I DAY-SATURDAY 1l12 W. Washington _I - DIAL 5-6290 STARTS FRIDAY E FRIDAY and SATURDAY Audiforium A Angell Hall 7 and 9:15 P.M. 50c QUIRK AMPHITHEATRE 8:00 P.M. TONIGHT "Snow White and the 7 Dwa rfs" ONE OF THE FUNNIEST films out of Hollywood in a long time." -IEWSWEEK MAGAZ#NE All seats unreserved at $1.50 Telephone HU 2-3453 for reservations _I . *..v::::: .22.:.}}::{" . ........:w::: }^:}i r.:.L"}}}:v}.}}}::;}}}}?:;:i.2.2.if.2.2 .2.2.": ...2::::2..2::22;:... -kv::: : 2.222: . 2 . , }. . ..t^}: vr"rt"::t..{ : :::..: .:+:::...:r:..-. . { : TODAY.11:00-3:05-5:10 Dept. of Speech Conference-"Sum- GeneralNotices mer SpeechConference": Registration, Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture - Lobby,.Rackham Bldg., 9 a.m. Prof. Ronald Crossland, University of Dept. of Linguistics and Linguistic Society of America Meeting-Lingustic Society of America Summer Meeting" Registration, TLobby, Rackham Bldg., 12:30 p.m. 'Audio-Visual Education Center Film presents THAT INCOMPARABLE . PAIR, HUMPHREY BOGART and LAUREN BACALL in KE TLARGO I Featuring r. I (Continued on Page 4) IT'S THE BIG ONE WITH THE BIG TWO! DIAL 8-6416' 2 Except ional Films. ROMAN POLANSKI'S bIN An Absolute Knockout E -5.ostey Crowther. NewYork Times "' A ROYAL FILMS INTERNATIONAL PRESENTATION Emil.i vam IS THE GF IGHFr~TER IS THE SHERIFF "A GAG-ASECONOCOMEY. I laughed almost continuously throughout s the picture." UE~AAI f: r, '% Po- HELD OVER }4th & Final Week "In the tradition of 'Dear John' makes 'Dear John" look like a fairy tale. Would you believe 'Virginia Woolf' looking like a Sunday go-to-meetin?" -World Journal Tribune "la man... enjoyed!" IA Woman" 1U A hilarious comedy. The kind of picture that fills the Music Hall with happy customers for weeks and weeks. Comes off better on the screen than on the stage. Each perfor is a gem!"-N .o "AS HARD TO RESIST AS POTATO CHIPS...p~o* Jane Fonda's performance is the best of her career." A&L -77ME MAGAZINE_- - mT1 ace .VNEAWm * and * SHOW TIMES: Mon. thru Thurs. 7-9 Sat. -8-1 1; Sun. 6-8-10 STARTS THURSDAY VERY HANDY MAN with- ANOUK AIMEE GIOUANNA RAZZI II #%e I~f1IlJl 17rfJ7r j~7j~' ,~g'~ I m ~ 2. ~~'2' '. I