Tuesday, August 7, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three U.S. bombers blast Cambodian base accidently; death tol 100 Astronauts walk Two spacewalking astronauts finally left their orbitting cabin yesterday to do some repair work on their vehicle. The skylab space walk was postponed four times because of illness among the astronauts. Wonder hurt Singer Stevie Wonder received head in- juries yesterday in Salisbury, N.C. after a car in which he was riding collided with a logging truck. The blind musician is in satisfactory condition at Rowan Memorial hospital. Esch visits Vietnam Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Mich.) an Ann Arbor congressman sponsoring two bills to aid Vietnamese children, left for Viet Nam yesterday to determine ways to assist war 'rphans and illegitimate chil- dren fathered by U.S. servicemen. One of his bills would grant American citizenship to illegitimate children, and the other would establish a special Peace Corps project to assist orphans and refugees. Batista dies Fulgencio Batista, whose Cuban dictator- ship was toppled by Fidel Castro, died yesterday in exile in Spain. Batista rose to power as an army sergeant behind the scenes in the overthrow of President Gerardo Machado in 1933. He later became a colonel, general and finally president. Eight years after bin first presidential term expired he seized power again and held that post until the guerrilla revolt led by Castro forced him to flee in 1919. Happenings .. . . . . include the premier of the Univer- sity Player's production of Anthony New- ley's Roar of the Greasepaint, Smell of the Crowd, 8 p.m. at Power Center . . . Truffaut's Wild Child will be shown in Aud. A of Angell Hall at 7, 8:45 and 10:30 R p.m. . . . an organ recitation by Richard McPherson at Hill Aud. 8 p.m.... and an Audio-Visual film, Dr. Heidegger's Experi- ment, Aud. 3, MLB, 7 p.m. A2-s weather Today's weather will be hot and humid with a chance of afternoon thundershowers. The high will be around 90. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (P) - An American B52 mistakenly bombed an Cam- bodian naval base yesterday, killing or wounding hundreds of Cambodian service- men and their families, military sources said. Military figures from Phnom Penh hos- pitals and reports from the bombed Me- kong River garrison town of Neak Luong indicated that as many as 100 men, women and children were killed and up to 300 werd wounded. SEASONED -OBSERVERS in Indochina could not recall, any previous bombing accidents in which so many persons were killed and wounded. Pentagon spokesman Jerry Friedheim said in Washington the base was hit when part of the bomb load from an eight-jet B52 fell short of its targeet "into an area where there were some Cambodian mili- tary and dependents." He declined to speculate on the cause of the accident, saying the Defense De- partment was still gathering information. A DOZEN CIVILIANS were killed Sun- day in another off-base U.S. bombing at- tack at a village along Highway 1 south of Phnom Penh, according to field reports. U.S. military advisers faced with an Aug. 15 deadline for ending the bombing in Cambodia, have been directing Cambo- dian-requested air strikes d a itl y against insurgent forces in an effort to help the struggling army of President Lon Nol and his American-backed government. Neak Luong, a garrison of about 3,000 soldiers and marines who live there with their families, is 32 miles southeast of Phnom Penh. Sunday is lifted into an ambulance. Government troops were attempting to re- open Route 1. Ozone and Drug Help seek new quarters on Arbor St. By DAVID STOLL Ozone House, Drug Help, and the Com- munity Switchboard may be on the move again in their continuing odyssey from storefront to storefront in search of a permanent home. Burned out of the Fisher Cadillac Build- ing on Washington St. by an arsonist last December, the three youth-oriented Com- munity Center agencies have entered a crash effort to raise enough money by September for a down payment on a new home. THE THREE organizations have focused their hopes on moving from cramped temporary quarters .at 603 E. William to a sizeable frame house at 719 Arbor St. close to the intersection of Packard and State. Although the fundraising effort has al- ready produced $1800 from a bucket drive and private contributions, Community Cen- ter spokesman Bob Davies says a full $10,000 is needed to cover a down pay- ment, plus another $5,000 to open and operate the new premises. Davies said yesterday that according to the original purchasing agareement, the a: Renken hit By DEBORAH GOOD The Human Rights Party (HRP) sponsored a demonstration at the home a - ,of School Board President Duane Ren- ken yesterday. The move was to pro. l..as test his support of the proposed school for disruptive students, and his tardi- - ness paying his own school taxes. But only fifteen people showed up, all of them members of the HRP and the Ann Arbor Tenants Union. THE RENKENS were not at home x . at the time of the demonstration. The protest centered on Renken's backing of a proposed alternative school, which would segregate so- s' called "trouble-makers" from the rest ----------of Ann Arbor's high school student 4 population and rehabilitate the dis- ruptive students. .:...>.:,- r.h... See HRP, Page S Community Center organizations must ful- fill their end of the financial deal by the end of the month. HE ADDED that community donors will have to supply the balance of the down payment since no more governmental funding is expected. The three agencies currently receive financial support from the city and the National Institute of Men- tal Health. Ozone, Drug Help, and the switchboard have also petitioned the city's Zoning Com- mission to rezone the property from resi- dential to office use. The three groups would share the space in the house-which is about three times the size of the E. William location-with the Creative Arts Workshop, which cur- rently offers free classes at 302 N. Fifth Ave. THE FREE People's Medical Clinic, which has temporary space on Liberty St., is lookng for a home of its own. While Drug Help functions as a drug crisis and education center, Ozone House concentrates on the problems of runaways by temporary housing, extensive counsel- ing, and when necessary, placement in foster homes. The switchboard handles re- ferrals of all kinds. From November 1971 to December 1972, the three agencies shared quarters with the People's Ballroom, Tribal Network, and the free clinic in the Fisher Cadillac building. . THE FIRE WHICH destroyed most of that structure last December brought about yet another housing problem for Ozone and Drug Help, two groups that have traveled together since the winter of 1970 when they joined forces in a store- front on S. State. For a time they operated from a minister's living room, and spent a year in a house on Liberty St. before moving to the Fisher building.