WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1965 THE MICHIGAN4>. SWAS[IX .. A .r ....,,........ 11 V l 111!"1\ ,A11f i J.ly PAGE THREE r, Burundian Premier Shot As African Revolt Crushed, <4 Rebels Kill Dominican EX-Minister Carcia-Godoy Closes All Radio Stations To Stop Public Disorder SANTO DOMINGO (M)-A battle raged yesterday between rebel snipers and Dominican troops in the heart of Santo Domingo. At least two persons were killed and five wounded. Wounded Among the wounded was Rober- to Mitchell Daniel, 30, a Domini- can cameraman working for the American Broadcasting Co. Doc- tdrs described his shoulder wound as serious. Angel Severo Cabral, who serv- ed as interior minister of the junta which ousted President Jaun D. Bosch in 1963, was shot to the formerly rebel-held sector to the formely rebel-held sector to remove furniture from his home there. His wife and their daughter Ada, 26, were wounded. Emergency Session ' President Hector Garcia-Godoy went into an emergency session with his cabinet. He quickly de- creed the shutdown of all radio stations in the city except the government outlet and another operated by the Organization of American States. Rebel civilian partisans firing from rooftops and doorways open- ed up early yesterday on Domini- can troops in Ozama fortress in the eastern end of the downtown district near the harbor. A bat- talion of tank-led anti-guerrilla specialists moved into the fortress Source of Rebel Force ,Unidentified Rifles, Mortars Shell Royal Palace, Army Barracks in Capital LEOPOLDVILLE (P)-A sudden flash revolt against the king of the new central African nation of Burundi apparently has been crushed, reports from its capital said last night, but its premier was reported near death from wounds. The predawn quiet of the na- tion's capital, Bujumbura, was shattered by rifle and mortar fire in the area of the royal palace and the Burundi army barracks, the reports said, in an attempt by still unidentified rebels to seize the nation. Six Burundians were reported killed in the palace grounds. Mwambutsa Hiding At that moment, according to messages from an aide, the con- stitutional monarch, King Mwam- butsa IV, was in hiding. The aide said that two hours later loyalist forces encircled the palace and the king was under loyalist pro- tection. The premier, Leopold Biha, was reported wounded in the head and chest by gunfire as he left his home in an attempt to reach the palace. The messages said that he was taken to a hospital where he was reported in a coma and in grave condition. The secretary of state for de- fense, Michael Micomboro, was reported missing. -Associated Press THE BODY OF A VIET CONG lies on the ground near a river after he was killed during a battle with U.S. Marines in the Due Bo village complex in South Viet Nam. Bombs, PropaLanda Released In Sporadic Viet Nvam Activity Protest Absences Lowe red Milwaukee Pupils Continue Racial Planned Boycott MILWAUKEE (P)-Absenteeism in Milwaukee public schools drop- ped substantially yesterday on the second day of a civil rights boy- cott that leaders said would run at least two more days. In a related development a Ro- man Catholic priest who had play- ed a leading role in the protest movement was ordered by his su- periors to cease the activity. He said he would obey. Absences Decrease School officials said a total of 10,074 pupils of a total city en- rollment of 122,495 were absent yesterday, compared with 12,673 Monday-a decrease of 2,563. The number absent was about 4,756 above normal. In the city's "inner core" where the boycott was concentrated, a total of 5,777 were absent, 5,419 over the daily average for Sep- tember. State Assemblyman Lloyd A. Barbee, head of the Milwaukee United School Integration Com- mittee, sponsoring the boycott to dramatize racial imbalance in the schools, had already stamped the demonstration a success. Freedom "Freedom" schools, set up by the boycott committee as substi- tute classrooms for participating pupils, settled into routine yes- terday, but side issues, religious and otherwise continued to seethe. The Rev. Groppi, assistant pas- tor of St. Boniface Roman Catho- lic church and vice-chairman of the boycott committee, said he had been ordered by his superiors to cease his activity in the pro- test. St. Boniface is about 75 per cent Negro. "I have been told to desist from boycott activities," he told news- men. "Of course, I am going to obey." Facilities Banned Auxiliary Bishop Roman R. At- kielski had banned use of Cath- olic Church facilities for "free- dom" schools, citing the ruling of Dist. Atty. Hugh R. O'Connell that the boycott was illegal. But Father Groppi led chil- dren in "freedom" songs and out- side his church lectured at "free- dom" schools. Monday night he led a group of approximately 300 youngsters and teenagers in a march to the home of the school board presi- dent, John S. Foley, where a noisy, but orderly, demonstration was held. The picketing at the Foley home provoked an angry blast from Mil- waukee Mayor Henry Maier who called it "a kind of bigotry" and said it "almost smacks of Ku Klux Klanism in reverse." "In my opinion," the mayor said in a statement, "the Milwau- kee civil rights movement com- mitted a self-defeating mistake. I can never condone the organized harassment of a man and his family in his home-regardless of whether the family is white or Negro. -As Little card. Big convenience. There's one reserved for you. Pick it up today. 1112 South University hT late yesterddy to protect guarding the docks. This is believed to have ed rebel partisans who capture the fortress early revolution in April. The dead apparently caught in the crossfire. U U troops arous- helped in the were SAIGON VP) - U.S. B52 jet bombers from Guam struck yes- terday a suspected Viet Cong in- stallation in the Ho Bo woods, 30 miles northwest of Saigon. Other sporadic action was going on throughout Viet Nam. A military spokesman announc- ed North Vietnamese gunners shot down an F4C Phantom fighter- bomber over a bridge 40 miles west of Vinh on Monday and its two crewmen were presumed cap- tured. Phantom Lost Five American raiders had been lost over the weekend in accelerat- ed strikes against Red targets in the North. The Phantom was the 115th plane to be officially writ- ten off in the 8-month-old cam- paign against North Viet Nam. South of the border, a search was ordered for two craft. A U.S. Air Force observation plane carry- ing two Americans; and a South Vietnamese helicopter with an un- determined number of men aboard -overdue at the Da Nang airbase. They had taken off from the Kham Duc area of the central highlands for Da Nang, 380 miles northwest of Saigon. Propaganda Raid. Strikes against North Viet Nam included a propaganda raid over the Red River delta southeast of Hanoi. Four U.S. Air Force F105 Thunderchiefs dropped 850,000 leaflets intended to undermine the people's support of Ho Chi Minh's Communist regime. Two planes from the carrier In- dependence hit a railway facility about 60 miles north of the fron- tier. Pilots said they sank a barge and damaged three buildings. Fourteen planes from the car- rier Midway were among others aloft. The pilots said they pounded bridges and smashed 13 railroad cars. Ground Operations In operations aground, soldiers of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division rounded up 115 suspects during a sweep 25 miles north of Saigon. A spokesman said five of these, were identified as Viet Cong and one. was killed when he tried to escape. Vietnamese government troops operating in the northern coastal provinces were reported to have killed 53 Viet Cong and captured 23. Others, staging a raid in the Mekong River delta, said they killed 11 guerrillas. A military spokesman said, how- ever, the Viet Cong ambushed a government squad in the North and inflicted heavy casualties. The phrasing suggested that the squad, perhaps a dozen men, was virtual- ly wiped out. Hanoi Speaks Hanoi continued to play up an- tiwar demonstrations in the Unit- ed States. North Viet Nam's of- ficial paper Nhan Dan said in a broadcast commentary they re- flect "the high tide of the struggle of the American people against the Johnson administration's ag- gression in Viet Nam." Forces Undetermined The palace aide said he not determine whether the neers were from police or could muti- army Stations Shut Closing the radio stations was necessary, the presidential decree said, to prevent "the incitation to public disorder." Some of the stations, particularly the San Isid- ro outlet of the Dominican armed forces, have been caustic in their comments on national political developments. WORLD NEWS ROUND-UP: Jailed Destroyer of Draft Card Released forces. White families-Bujumbura has a small European and Asian popu- lation--were urged to stay off the streets. Burundi has been in a state of unrest since May, when elections resulted in increased strength for forces opposed to the king. His choice of Biha for premier was re- garded as a compromise. Political Rivalry There has been intense political rivalry between feudal leaders of the Tutsi tribe, who have been in- fluenced by Chinese Communists; and the Western-educated "Young Turks" of the Huto tribe in Bur- undi, a former Belgian trust ter- ritory which became independent in July 1962. Burundi once was considered a hub of Red Chinese subversion operations in central and east Africa. Red China maintained a greatly oversized embassy in the little nation until lastsJanuary, when King Mwambutsa expelled the Chinese diplomats, accusing them of using Burundi as a base to export rebellion in the neigh- boring Congo with arms, money and propaganda. First Reports The first fragmentary reports of the uprising had come from the Brussels radio in Belgium which had said that the king fled to the neighboring Congo and urged the Congolese air force to attack reb- els who already had beaten their way into the palace. Apparently, however, the king remained in his capital. MECHANICAL ENGINEERS CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR GRADUATE ENGINEERS IN THE GRAPHIC ARTS FIELD * PRODUCT DESIGN * CUSTOMER SERVICE * SALES * MANUFACTURING We offer challenging positions in the above areas to qualified technically trained men who desire a future with a well established progress-orientated organization. Miehle - Goss - Dexter, Inc., is the world's largest manufacturer - distributor of printing presses and associated graphic arts machinery. The Miehle Division is the world's leading producer of sheet fed presses for commercial printers and lithograph- ers, book and magazine printers, label printers, carton plants and printing departments of large businesses. Our representative will be on your campus Thursday, October 21. Arrange an inter- view through the Placement Office or mail your resume to: MR. WILLIAM L. KEOGH Assistant Personnel Manager THE MIEHLE COMPANY DIV. OF MIEHLE-GOSS-DEXTER, INC. 2011 W.AHASTINGS STREET CHICAGO 8, ILLINOIS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER By The Associated Press MANCHESTER, N.H.--David J. Miller, 22, of Syracuse, N.Y., charged with destroying his draft card 'as a protest against U.S. military involvement in Viet Nam, was released in $500 bail from Hillsboro County Jail yesterday. A federal grand jury in New York City indicted Miller for knowingly mutilating and destroy- ing a Selective Service card. ** * BOGOTA, Colombia-Antiguer. rilla troops killed eight Commun- ist bandits and wounded four others yesterday in a battle still continuing in the soaring Colom- bian Andes, 350 miles southwest of Bogota, an army spokesman mk said. He added that three soldiers were killed in the fierce fight that broke out when the troops caught up with the guerrilla band led by "Sureshot" Tirofijo. The army said 26 of Tirofijo's guerrillas have been killed and 15 captured in a series of run- ning engagements that began Sa- turday between the pursuing army units and the bandits. It was estimated that Tirofijo's band includes about 120 guerrillas. FORT WORTH-A member of the Atomic Energy Commission said yesterday it will be several months before the current list of 86 proposed sites for a $300-, million atomic reactor will be re- duced. Commissioner James T. Ramey said a National Academy of Sciences committee screening the 86 sites has not indicated when its recommendations will be sent to the AEC. ,' * ' WASHINGTON - P r e s i d e n t Johnson spent his busiest day since his operation yesterday- walking more than a mile, work- ing on official business, including signing 22 bills, going to his den- tist and reporting he felt "pretty good." * * * CELINA, Ohio-A judge ruled yesterday that it is all right for Roman Catholic nuns to teach in Ohio public schools, but that it is unconstitutional to release students during school of religious instruction. The ruling by Common Pleas Judge Fred Cramer came in a suit filed two years ago by Jesse C. Moore of nearby Fort Recovery against the Southwest Local School District in that predomi- nantly Catholic area near the In- diana state line. BERLIN-The Warsaw Pact na- tions officially opened joint mili- tary maneuvers in East Germany yesterday with a political demon- stration at the Buchenwald con- centration camp memorial near Weimar in Thuringia. WASHINGTON - The State Department confirmed yesterday that Laszlo Szabo, 42, a Hungar- ian diplomat stationed in London, has asked for political asylum in the United States. HAYNEVILLE, Ala. - State- ments by pr ospective jurors that they regard white civil rights workers as inferior broughtan- other delay yesterday in a Ku Klux Klansman's murder trial. The trial of Collie Leroy Wilk- ins Jr. for the slaying of a white Detroit housewife who had taken part in a civil rights struggle, was recessed for 24 hours to give state's attorneys time to appeal to the State Supreme Court, Atty. Gen. Richmond Flowers, prosecutor, planned to ask the Su- preme Court for an immediate hearing to decide whether the jurors' statements can be used to disqualify them. I THIS WEEK WED.-TH U RS.-FRI. "Sex spells for the student more than glandu- lar release. It signifies being with a person as a person, naked in the psychological sense more than the physical sense. The gentleman student of yesteryear may not have needed such rock-bottom experience and assurance that it is possible to be human. But today's student does if he is to stand up to 'the pres- sures and demands of his academic life." -Hans Hofmann, "Sex & Students: A Plea for Honesty," article in THE CHURCH REVIEW, Vol XXII, No. 2/3. WEDNESDAY NOON LUNCHEON BOOK DISCUSSION: Hofmann will discuss the above article. 12:00 Noon, Michigan League, Rm. 2 HANS HOFMANN, Th.D. Writer and Lecturer in Theology and Psy- chology of Religion; Sometime Professor of Harvard Divinity School; presently Executive Director, Center for the Study of Personality and Culture, Inc., Cambridge, Mass. 44 CAMPUS-PAC DISTRIBUTION THIS WEEK AT THDE ANN ARBOR VIETNAM DAY COMMITTEE is conducting a campaign to aid in paying the fines of those demonstrators who con- ducted civil disobedience as their expres- sion of protest against our government's policies in Vietnam. DONATIONS OF ANY SIZE WILL BE GRATEFULLY WELCOMED. PLEASE MAKE CHECKS OUT TO CASH OR A. JEROME DUPONT (FOR FINES) WEDNESDAY EVENING: 8 P.M. Hofmann will meet on an informal basis with any and all interested students at The Canterbury House, 218 North Division St. 51 SERIES of 4 UNIVERSITY LECTURES: "Religion-Forward or Backward" State Street at North University Wed., 4:15 P.M. -rY -- A - G M l "Religion as a Worldview" /t~ w f -0 V 0 . 0 i