Daily Globe (Newspaper) - May 17, 1967, Ironwood, Michigan 24 hr. period to 12 65; 4L Previous 24 hr. 60; 35. Year High 66; Low 46. year to 15.12 in. IRONWOOD DAILY GLOBE FORECASTS Considerable cloudiness with chance of brief showers late tonight or A little warmer tonight with low mostly in the 40s. Mild Thursday with high in low 70s. 48th NUMBER 151. ASSOCIATED PRESS LEASED WIRE NEWS SERVICE MAY 17, 1967. TWENTY PAGES SINGLE COPY 10 Reds Unleash Huge Rockets By GEORGE MCARTHUR SAIGON Communist forces unleashed their 140 mm rockets tonight in the battle against U.S. Marines below the demilitarized The big projectiles exploded at Gio an artillery post two miles south of the No details of the attack were immediately Fresh fighting was reported in the area of Con seven miles west of Gio aced by elements of three North Vietnamese perhaps There are U.S. Marines in the hotspot though all were not actively en- gaged at Con American warplanes Tuesday night raided two surface-to-air missile sites the North Vietnamese were setting up within the The U S. Command said the antiaircraft missile sites which Marine jets bombed were ed almost exactly on the 17th Parallel dividing North and South Vietnam and about eight miles in from the There was no immediate re- port of and a quarters spokesman did not say whether any of the big built missiles were on the These were the first SAM sites reported inside the Newsmen last weekend saw a Skyhawk jet downed by one of the telephone in the but the missile was believed to have been launched from er site which was ly raided just north of the SAM sites along the 17th allel could menace the flying U.S. which regularly raid areas of Quang Tri ince just below the A military spokesman said intensified Communist artillery and rocket fire ued along the line by occasional sharp ground The battle began when a Marine company supported by tanks ran into about 150 Com- in a complex of tunnels and bunkers about a mile from the Marine camp More Marines were called and the Reds kept up a fighting retreat for four hours before breaking off. Film of Attack On Hiroshima Is Suppressed U.S. Refuses to Lift Restrictions WASHINGTON United States has suppressed for nearly 22 years confiscated Japanese films showing ghastly of the 1945 atomic bombing of U.S. of- revealed The Japanese government has asked at least twice that tions on the film be but the U.S. government has re- fused on grounds it might age said the Called in Japan Film of because it wasn't posed to the film was en by Tokyo University rushed to Hiroshima soon after the the sources One Person Is Three Wounded in Riot in Texas The who declined Students Riot In Wisconsin PLATTEVILLE For the second consecutive several thousand Platteville State University students against the city's 21- year minimum beer drinking The estimated at about swarmed through Platteville's downtown business section and pelted police squad cars with bottles and The demonstration began when students gathered at a dormitory and marched into sat in the main street and when police tried to disperse they pelted the police with bottles and Two fire engines were called in and sprayed the students with fire Police and firemen used tear gas in an attempt to break up the but many of the gas cannisters were thrown Windows and equipment on the fire trucks were smashed they were forced to leave Four Fire Chief Corwin hospitalized with minor cuts and The demonstrators moved from the business section to a main highway intersection on the south side of There they started a bonfire of old tires and highway signs and burned an effigy of Platteville tires and highway signs and University President Bjarne When four students were ar- rested the mob moved back through town and clustered menacingly around the front of the demanding the release of jailed Several police car windows were in- Grant County Sheriff Roy A flag with printed on was hoisted on the flag pole in front of the police gunners poured 61 rounds of artillery and rocket shells on the Con Thien There was also some sharp ighting about 27 miles west of Saigon Tuesday when a Special Forces team operating with irregulars lushed a guerrilla force which broke and ran under artillery Within soldiers of the U.S. 25th Division aboard gle helicopters popped down in the area and again flushed the Pursuit continued throughout the day said the Japanese scientists still were at work filming in the devastated city when U.S. officials arrived in Hiroshima and confiscated the But the American authorities determined to finish the mentary and used the same Japanese professional men who had taken the initial For many officials U.S. flatly opposed any distribution of the tary because it showed iti stark and gruesome detail blast and the impact hi a densely populated But some authorities with the Reds losing at least 14 edly now favor letting Japan decide what if any restrictions should be imposed on the film's This appeared to leave the president Ullsvik students that University warned the ther arrests would mean diate expulsion from school for those The students headed back to their campus four hours after the demonstration began and in time to make the 11 p.m. curfew at the Shortly after the tors left the downtown about fifteen Platteville dents began cleaning up the de- bris on the city's main Rules Okayed LANSING Rules and regulations for the control of air pollution in the state have been approved by a joint ad- ministrative committee and filed in the secretary of state's will become effective after the next printing of the state administrative which is expected to be issued after Aug. 15, said Dr. Albert E. director of the igan Department of Public Health and chairman of the State Aid Pollution Control The rules provide guidelines under which permits will be granted for installation of anti- pollution Paratroopers of the 101st borne Brigade supporting the southern flank in Quang Ngai Province killed 13 North Vietnamese regulars near Due Six of the ers were Despite spotty American airmen flew 123 sions over North Vietnam One raid reached about 30 miles northwest of up the Red River supply line from Red but many of the strikes were against suspected SAM sites in the area just north of the demilitarized U.S. Air Force Phantoms also went after some of the big Com- munist guns attacking the and pilots reported destruction of two and damage to a The guns were in North Vietnam hi positions 11 and 16 miles north of the A fifth battalion of Marines pushed through from Cam eight miles to the to join the sweep at Con Thirty Marine bulldozers cleared a 300- yard strip around the camp and began extending it another 216 The outpost was threatened from three directions by two regiments the 90th and of the North Vietnamese 324th Division plus another at full strength these units would total want Con Thien for Ho Chi but we're not going to let them have said Maj. Bruno commander of the 3rd Marine The North Vietnamese president will be 77 Enemy units have infiltrated in strength to the west and south of Con Thien and the neighboring Marine outpost at Gio The two outposts and Dong Ha and Camp Carroll to the south were under constant mortar and rocket The whole region is boiling over with North Vietnamese and Viet Cong and bright with the flash of tery fire from dozens of U.S. Marine and Army guns blazes back at enemy muzzle flashes and U.S. Navy ships offshore boom in more Casualties in the action are approaching those the Marines took in their 12-day battle for three key hilltops in the Khe Sanh area to the After taking the hills May 5, the Marines announced 167 cans killed and 436 wounded but said they killed more than North A battalion of the 9th Marine Regiment that has borne the brunt of the fighting at Con men killed in the last door open for reconsideration if Japan should renew its request for the Hiroshima was the target of the first atomic bomb ever 6, 1945. The bomb of the city of The U.S. government has esti mated the death toll between and It set the mortality rate per square mile at with wounded per square There was one not de that a total of feet of film was taken by Nippon Eig asha movie company camera Some feet of this was taken under the origina Japanese auspices and the re maining dis taken under U.S Several copies of the Hiroshi ma film according to U.S One copy is in Japan but a hold has been placed over the portion filmed after U.S scientists entered the 1st Catholic Synod to Be Launched Saturday DETROIT The firs Roman Catholic Synod on the Vatican Council call fo increased participation by lay men will be launched Saturday by Archbishop John F Dearden at Sacred Heart Semi Police Halt Snipers On College Campus LAWRENCE LEE I las Wayne 21, HOUSTON Tex police had a caliber firing as revoler in a shoulder holster stormed a men's Blaylock summoned another at Texas Southern ice which to versity today and halted student M The f Portf and as J the car cruised past cers and a student Police took 488 men students TIRED OF WAITING The Rev. James Governor's Committee for Service to Minority a Roman Catholic priest Groups at They demanded immediate advises Negro youths in Milwaukee's inner core action to curb alleged police brutality against is flanked by part of the group that with him Tuesday before the Wisconsin 2 Men Are 4 Burned In Mishap at Ford Co. Plant Senators Tell Hanoi They Oppose U. S. Pullout in Viet By JACK BELL WASHINGTON teen of the Senate's leading dropped on -an war policy banded together today to tell Hanoi that they will fastly any American pullout in Vietnam short of an honorable Without criticisms moderating of President their son's 14 Democrats and 2 Republicans prepared to make public a declaration aimed at convincing the North ese that no amount of dissent at home will result in U.S. from the They are saying that the of negotiations is intensified Their statement was approved in advance by Secretary of State Dean School Children Being Asked to Contribute DETROIT school children in the state will be asked to contribute three cents a day during Michigan week to build a hospital and in South The children's facility will be dedicated to the memory of Michigan men who have died in The campaign is being con- ducted by Michigan Jaycees and has the endorsement of state and school Spending of Educational Funds Delayed by Romney LANSING Saying j shall be a mandate to going to tighten down Anison Green hatches until the Legislature for a ruling from gives us tax Gov. Geo- j attorney but said Romney has acted to delay that if Polley decided jio approve the advances his office would This is notice to the school have to pay them Sen. Frank sponsor of the planned to make it public at an afternoon news The declaration was being held open for possible additional The list already includes such vigorous critics of Johnson's conduct of the war as J.W. chairman of the Foreign Relations and Sen. Robert F. Besides these and other Democrats who have signed include Joseph S. Clark of George S. McGovern of South Frank E. Moss of Bartlett of Lee Metcalf of Vance Hartke of Gaylord Nelson of Quentin N. Burdick of North Stephen M. Young of Wayne Morse of Oregon and Claiborne Pell of Rhode Republican signers are John Sherman Cooper of tucky and Mark 0. Hatfield of Church said in an interview that the situation is so he submitted the statement in advance to He said Rusk felt a statement of this nature by critics of the President might have more chance of being accepted as truth by Hanoi than all the dec- by the administration and its supporters that there will be no American Church made it clear the ers believe the war has reached a critical where DEARBORN A pile driver ruptured a gas line near an underground storage trapping seven men in a flaming pit at Ford Motor giant River Rouge complex Two men were killed and four others were three A seventh man escaped Wilbur 24, of died of burns shortly after the blaze broke He was trapped in the cab of the pile Hugh 57, of 111., died of extensive burns at Detroit's Henry Ford Listed in critical condition extremely extensive at the same hospital were Harold 43, Estelle 43, and Robert 38, A hospital spokesman said Charles 49, of was less badly His condition was described as j gathered to hear a talk by heard a pop and felt heat a student recruiting others for mw en T tn candlelight demonstration at a city dump which resident gores want During the someone hurled a watermelon at his police Blaylock When the officers got all of the students melted away except He was identified as which had fired the shot killed Lewis R. 25, who graduated from the police emy a month Kuba was shot between the eyes in the first assault wave against the dormitory which sheltered the Kuba died about 7% hours after he was Four hours and police bullets after the first peppering of gunfire and the explosion of four crudely made fire officers secured the They smashed down doors in their search for weapons and found one one shotgun and one Mayor Louie Welch met this morning with the district attorney and officials of the pre- dominantly Negro where the administration ordered classes as Welch said he believes there is a complete breakdown be- tween the administration of Texas Southern and the student body of more than that you have and that's what we had last the mayor It was the second riot in a week at a predominantly Negro Students seized rary control of the campus at Jackson State College at last dents pelted police and drove them back with a barrage of rocks and bottles and burned barricades and looted at least one Jackson The Jackson outbreak was set off by the at- tempt of a Negro officer to ar- rest a Negro driver on charges of speeding through a campus The Houston riot began about p.m. Tuesday when trolman Robert 25, and his partner joined two criminal intelligence officers in surveillance duty at a rally on Some 125 students on my back so I started to said 47, of De- a construction I turned the flames were 30 feet in the The five men who survived managed to scramble to up the 20-foot embankment of the future site of a Ford steel looked up and the whole pit was said Gottfried 27, a construction neer for Raymond Concrete Pile Co. of The ruptured gas line led to a cavern with a capacity equal to barrels of liquid The gas was stored in an under- ground once a salt Marathon Oil Co leased Tuesday to contact Milwaukee Negro Youths Give Warning Wis. Gov. Warren P Rnowles promised officers parked their car its headlights shining toward the The policemen crouched De- hind their Blaylock said he saw a muzzle poking out of a second-floor window of the He heard a shot and dis- covered that he was wounded in the Blaylock and his companions returned about 15 His companions radioed for an bulance and Blaylock walked a block to meet it. By this tune police had moned all available units to the scene to halt traffic into the At 30 units stood and trol cars carrying some 100 of- with The four fire filled with tossed during the first half hour of the police Students stayed inside their dormitories and those returning to them congregated at the intersection where the police force was growing to its final total of 600. A token force of officers stayed close to the dormitory from which shots had Police sealed the campus and pulled their main force back to an intersection a block from the range of fire while F. D. a leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee chapter on sought to negotiate a The effort to start talks Men from the dormitory began erecting a barricade of gated appropriated from a campus construction It blocked Wheeler the major When the students set fire to barrels of Police Chief man acting on shouted to his men to get this damned mess cleaned The first assault force bered about 100 and started its action with a burst of shots into the air which echoed through the quiet neighborhood and brought wails and shouts from the women's Moving into darkness the police crept past the women's dorm and onto the terrace of the student union between the women's and men's housing units It was there that a shot caught Kuba in the A force of 30 Negro sheriff's deputies followed Exchanges of fire continued until when Short declared the tion under By that time Patrolman Alan Dale 32, had been wounded in the face and a JL jj i. I All O the failure of Hanoi to Iand from and this 1 about Morns English 22, shot and several other nearby charges by Negro youths of the Their the taking of bids for nearly million in construction at four state But the governor was rebuffed in his attempt to control advance school aid Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley h th IU to negotiation has hardened Johnson's determination to calate the U.S. military They believe any substantial expansion of the fighting and bombing will make it more ly that Communist China will If that they F 1 O L i I II J. feel the Union also will neath the 1.200-acre Ford Knowles become thus ushering one of the largest should all be in World War industrial said isn't just a to lie on the With that in Clark firemen stood by problem of the chief hands behind their until urged Johnson in a Senate the blaze through the night as a Eight youths from the buses and vans them eras to store the highly lice harassment in the city's mable used chiefly for fuel inner and the manufacture of The governor listened to a j second-hand summary of the A Marathon official said protests after the youths fore- pipeline was sealed off from case a summer of riots in a stored eliminating the stormy appearance before a ger of the blaze spreading rights committee named by were not considered serious Police swarmed into the men's dormitory flushing out most clad in pajamas or Police shots had shattered the north wall of the men's and the students were made advance speech Tuesday to order an in- precautionary measure The school district could get I definite American The construction site was waukee Youth Council of the National Association for the Ad- reported 30 and 173 wounded three Hanoi radio announced that a seaman from the U.S. cruiser Canberra is a prisoner in North The broadcast said he was Douglas Rent Hegdahl of and that he fell over- board as the Canberra shelled a coastal area in early dahl was picked up by Hanoi tied an issue over advance aid iast year totaled some funds by ruling that Ira ijon state superintendent of public j Polley said he would discuss away Every jail cell in Houston was Border him I beyond the one-day truce about 700 yards from the closest ancement of Colored People filled Until the battle ton protests haa remained free of violence The arrests of 64 if you don't get persons in demonstrations ing of North Vietnam and Firefighters said the blaze tie Hitler off our Watts day at the dump and at a public produce the Kelley Green said school aid advance the matter with members of the Board of Education at a has power to vance the Romney said he sidetracked j meeting next uled for Buddha's May 23. The Pennsylvania I Ford plant and company centered their com- I said none of the buildings plaints on Milwaukee Police senator was The facility Chief Harold E Breier suggested suspending the employs 50.000 upon w two hours after it Humphrey 21 He said these moves should be shortly after the afternoon shift Humphrey made accompanied by efforts to enlist came to work at the plant The mention of threats of ti e- f if f TnH c: ri i Tl ft over the advance funds because the treasury surplus is dling and the Legislature has not adopted his tax reform Romney warned more de- lays in proposed college con- struction could In the tug of war with Polley over advance Romney quoted the State section which look at this matter from the and Prime Minister fit t 1 point of view of the schools as well as the best interests of the Romney contends that ad- vances from the general fund of million of school aid already million in the would be financially sible unless the Legislature takes affirmative action on cal ing U.S. troops not to fire unless was brought under control will be a jaid Forthune high school had been the T biggest action taken specific against protesters here The dump was tne scene of a f demonstration Tuesday bv 01 dents of fhe neighborhood They complained the dump was a health with the construction plans for the I haven't made an U.N. Secretary-General U fire was expected to burn itself and shooting state colleges and wanted power ble he Soviet Premier Alexei JosePh chairman f. from the fire was the governor s committee on Harold Wilson of Britain in attempt to get Hanoi to the negotiating There was no to While firemen fought the gas Knowles had called out the a second blaze broke out National Guard to shield the Fort nearly 300 miles ill Ci UL w TTT that Johnson would be a paper mill section of the For J same civil rights group from north of here Earl H. willing to undertake any The jeering white crowds and to en- 26. shot and killed caused by an overheated motor force peace at bayonet point scuffling witn a policeman who But Senate Democratic was quickly extinguished No during demonstrations last had answered a false burglar er Mike Mansfield said he had one was injured and mer in the Milwaukee suburb of and a Negro woman was See 2. I was plant firemen i Wauwatosa j