TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THRETI TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREP Rebels Take Over Stanleyville; Fear Remaining Hostages Lost By The Associated Press; LEOPOLDVILLE - R e p o r t s} reaching here yesterday indicated' that the rebels have gained vir- tually complete control of Stan- leyville. Hope for rescuing an estimated, 500-1000 whites in rebel territory elsewhere grew dim. Maj. Michael Hoare', commander of the Congo white mercenary force, told re- porters: "We must face facts. I don't think we will find many of them alive." Refugees report the 'rebels are on a rampage to kill any whites they can find., Meanwhile, sharp fighting broke out around the Stanleyville air- port where a Belgian plane crash- ed Sunday night amid heavy rebel sniper fire, killing 7 of 15 per- sons on board. Unclear It was not clear whether the Belgian plane, chartered to trans- port refugees, was hit by rebel, fire or had mechanical difficul- ties during takebff. It crashed into jungle at the end of the runway, closing the airport to all incom- ing flights. Rebel snipers have been shoot- Ing at planes in Stanleyville ever since government and Belgian forces moved into the former rebel capital. The Congolese troops remained after the pullout of the Belgians over the weekend. United States Air Force planes dropped Belgian paratroopers on Stanleyville last Tuesday. The , troops and planes were pulled outi Sunday. Farther to the north, about 200 Congolese army troops led by 30 white mercenaries captured the' town of Bunia where several hun- dred white hostages were believed to have been held. The troops re- ported, no sign of the hostages and diplomats in Leopoldville ex- pressed belief that they had been taken to Watsa, north of Bunia. Diplomats had reported earlier, the Belgians had scheduled a jump on Bunia but called it off because of reports that the whites had been moved out. Meanwhile, Premier M o 1s e Tshombe flew to Paris for talks with President Charles de Gaulle. Tshombe told Paris reporters his government had the situation in hand and that the rebellion led by Christophe Gbenye would soon be ended. Tshombe left Leopoldville with plans to continue on from Paris to New York to attend the United Nations General Assembly session. An aide said, however, that Tshombe would return to Leo- poldville tomorrow and go to the United Nations at a later date. No reason was given for the change in'plans. Rejecting criticism of the U.S.- Belgian military operations by the Congo Commissionofithe Organi- zation of African Unity, Tshombe said the Belgians and Americans were "emergency troops whose ac- tions were authorized by us for humanitarian purposes." Tshombe was asked if there was evidence that the Chinese Com- munists were supporting the reb- els. He said only: U.S., Russian Race To Get' Mars Shots By The Associated Press MOSCOW - The Soviet Union lanuched a heavy earth satellite yesterday and from it sent a rocket speeding towar~d Mars in a race with thetUnited States rocket Mariner 4. United States scientists report- ed no trouble with Mariner's flight. Mariner 4 already is heading for a rendezvous with Mars. The official Soviet news agency i'ass announced the launching of the Soviet rocket. The announcement said "the last stage of the carrier rocket placed the heavy artificial earth. satellite on an intermediate orbit. F AMA Chief Blasts Medicare I MIAMI BEACH (P)-The pres- I Committee, through which the ident of the American Medical Medicare bill must pass, were de- Association urged doctors yester- feated in the past election." day to stand firm against Medi- But, in spite of this, he said, care-even in the face of new Democratic strength in Congress strength in Congress for the meas- has not meant Medicare passage ure. in the past, and he cautioned' "The hurricane that is about to against counting the votes of the hit us will be more furious than new congressmen before they are any we have weathered in the cast.+ past," Dr. Donovan F. Ward told "We know of several recently the house of delegates of the AMA elected representatives who have here. had second thoughts already on Ward pointed to what he called the health care issue," Ward said. "certain grim realities in the poli- "Out of respect for the safety tical arena. of their arms when they come, "The possibility that a federal within reach of White House lob- health care program is financed byists, I think I will not mention$ from increased Social Security their names today. taxe l esrejecd is cn- "I am convinced that we have taxe wil be ejeced i con i ot reached a point where the erably less than it was a few rno rc a point her the weeks ago." minds of our newly chosen of fi- ard cited a number of polls cials are frozen in concrete before indicating that the nation was, at they eve take the oath, he said. best, divided on the issue. He said battle tested allies from the past one poll, taken during the presi- grea national organations dential campaign, showed a ma- which have carried their full share jority of citizens opposed further of the burden and have unhesi- welfare programs. tatingly declared their itnentions Immediately after Ward's speech, to do so again." the house of delegates was asked It was an apparent reference to agree to an expensive public to the alliance of organizations educational program costing an which joined to lobby against Med- unspecified amount but involving icare in Congress. all media of mass communications. The house of delegates, inter- The delegates will vote on the rupting Ward's speech time after' measure tomorrow. time with applause, gave the AMA Ward outlined the changes president a standing ovation of nearly a minute when he had fin- ished. Ward emphasized that the AMA was for medical care for every- one but against the intervention of the federal government in a way which might tend to inter- fere or control medical practice. "We are opposed to this in- vasion of the voluntary relation- ship between the patient and the physician," Ward said. At least three state delegations are offering resolutions for action by the legislative group that would offer some manner of com- promise in the approach to health care for the elderly. The delega- tions are from Michigan, Cali- fornia a nd th e District of Columbia. HELP WANTED Student coordinator for scho- lastic employment program. Must be about to receive de- gree in 1965 and in upper fifth of class. Requires 3 hours per week. Very remunerative position. Personnel Director General Academic Placement 101 South Brood Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 "A cosmic rocket then started on its course from the satellite, "We have found Chinese arms accelerating for the speed neces- among their stocks." sary to place it on the trajectory; ,f movemen t wU Vrd thY l U 1t. Oppose Intervention New China News Agency dis- patches from Peking to Tokyo re- ported that massive demonstra- tions continued for the second day in the. Chinese capital in protest of United States and Belgian in- tervention in the Congo. In Brussels, the Belgian gov- ernment denied last night that its Congo rescue mission was cut short because of a United States re- luctance to become further em- broiled. A spokesman for the foreign ministry said in reply to questions at a news conference that there was positively no United States pressure to call off the operation. ul iive ielL owaa iePianleL .I Scientists say they hope to make the midcourse correction on Mariner sometime this week by tiggering a small rocket on board the 575-pound craft which will drive it closer to Mars. Still to be decided are the precise time and duration of firing the direction-, changing rockets. At noon yesterday Mariner 4 was 425,685 miles from earth, trav- eling 7,315 miles an hour, a speed that will slowly lessen as it coasts through space toward a rendezvous that could help explain such an- cient mysteries as the "canals" on Mars and solve the question of whether life can exist on the des- ert-dry planet. 17.- PREMIERE MOISE TSHOMBE, right, yesterday confered with President Charles de Gaulle, left, over the present uprising in the Congo. Tshombe may continue on to the United Nations later in the week, sources Rin the Congo indicated yesterday, but he will first return to Leopoldville. brought in Congress by the last election: -"The Johnson administration won a margin of control of both houses of Congress unequaled since President Franklin D. Roosevelt's re-election victory in 1936." -"The Democrats hold a House majority of 295 to 140 and a Sen- ate majority of 68 to 32." -"Three Republican members of the House Ways and Means world News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz reported yesterday that the railroad industry and three shop craft unions remain deadlocked in a wage dispute that led to a strike threat last week. Wirtz said however no new strike date has been set since the unions called off last Tuesday's scheduled walkout at his request. Wirtz said the only issue in the present dispute is salaries, not seniority or working conditions. He said the railroads and the three unions are about 10 cents apart on a proposed three-year contract. * * * * LONDON-Sir Winston Churchill was 90 yesterday. World states- men sent greetings. Among the greetings were messages from Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle, President Lyndon B. oJhnson and Ex-Presi- dents Dwight D. Eisenhower and friends. See our TWO LECTURES _ I j '1 i i _ r a { i) . by1 DR. J. E DWIN ORB International Christian Leadership; Northern Baptist Theological S e m i n a r y; Northwestern University (M.A.); Oxford (D. Phil.); author of The Second Evangelical Awakening, Full Surrender, Can God - ? and Faith that Makes Sense. "It is not my purpose to marshall for anyone the profoundest apologies of Christian philosophers, but rather to recount in simple narrative some adven- tures in thinking which put my own faith to the test and confirm it." J. EDWIN OaR (Faith that Makes Sense) Dr. Thuma discusses the RESIDENCE COLLEGE Its Purposes and Prospects z FREE GIFT WRAPPING FOR KODAK Open me firstLGIFTS av I- - - --- -- BROWNIE ±UAVSOJJA&O Movie Camera Fun-filled way to enjoy personal home movies! New Brownie Fun Saver Movie Camera makes it easy and, inexpensive to take bright, sharp movies you'll treasurel Cam- era is precision-made by Kodak to give years of dependable service. Comes complete with a roll of Kodachrome It Movie Film and a fun-filled book of movie-making ideas. All at our low price CAMERA SHOP Ann Arbor's Only Exclusive Camera Shop 1116 S. UNIVERSITY 665-6101 E at 7:30 LONDON-The British ambas- sador in Cairo has been directed to ask the government of the United Arab Republic to help halt a recent series of bomb attacks in Aden, the House of Commons was told yesterday. Mrs Eirene White, Parliamen- tary Undersecretary for Colonies, told the House there have been 11 bomb incidents in Aden in the past six weeks, several of them since Colonial Secretary Anthony Greenwood reached there last Thursday for constitutional talks with leaders of the south Arabian federation. NEW YORK - The leaders of wto prominent civil rights groups denied reports yesterday that they had pulled out of a united Negro rights drive in Mississippi, run by the Council of Federated Organi- zations. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., head of the Southern Chris- tian Leadership Conference, said in Chicago when told of the re- ports: "SCLC has not withdrawn its support from COFO and has no intentionof doing so." 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