PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. AUGUST 27, 1965 WAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. AUGUST 27. 1965 .... ... ,..a . .. .. ..a ,.. ., v.. ., owndes county HAYNEVILLE, Ala. -Lowndes County, Ala., the farming county where one civil rights worker was killed and another critically wounded a week ago, will be made a target for intensified civil rights action, the New York Times re- ported recently. A Student Nonviolent Coordi- nating Committee official said Sunday that ten of SNCC's most experienced field secretaries will be sent to Lowndes County and added that some civil rights work- ers are discussing the possibility of filing a law suit to remove all county officials on the ground that they were illegally ellected, since Negroes had been disenfranchised. The field secretaries will con- centrate on voter registration, Stokeley Carmichael, the SNCC field secretary in charge of the Lowndes County movement. Shooting the Cause He explained that the intensi- fied action is in part due to the shotgun shootings Friday of an Episcopal seminarian, Johnathan M. Daniels and a Roman Catholic priest, Rev. Richard Morrisroe, that left Daniels dead and Mor- risroe near death. "We want to show the people that we are not afraid of Lowndes County and that they can't run us out. We want them to know that if this is the price that has to be paid, there are people will- ing to pay it," Carmichael said. Carmichael said the field sec- retaries would make a special effort to round up support for Negro candidates in a Nov. 9 election of the Lowndes County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee, an arm of the Federal Department of Agriculture that shapes farm poli- cies. No Negro Members He said no Negro had ever served on the committee, whose members are elected not by regis- tered voters but by farmers. Mr. Carmichael also said he hoped to see at least 4,000 Ne- groes registered in Lowndes County by the time the ten ad- ditional field secretaries are ready to leave. About 1,000 are already registered, compared with 2,000 whites, he noted. VeextI An Alabama Highway Depart- ment engineer who serves as an unpaid special sheriff's deputy, Tom L. Coleman, 52, has been charged with the murder. The priest was last reported still in critical condition. New Party Carmichael also said that there was talk of forming a new politi- cal party in the county modeled after Mississippi's predominantly Negro Freedom Democratic Party. But the main emphasis will be on voter registration, he said. Lowndes County was one of the first nine Southern counties to be designated for a Federal exam- iner under the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Negroes outnumber whites four-to-one in the county, but, as recently as March, no Negro was registered to vote. The ten new field secretaries would be brought, Carmichael said, from "some of the toughest counties in the South." They in- clude workers from Philadelphia, Miss., where three civil rights workers were slain last summer, and southwestern parts of the' same state where the Ku Klux Klan has bitterly resisted the civil rights movement. Suspect Freed In other Lowndes County ac- tion, Coleman, the murder suspect, was freed on $12,500 bond. Attorney General Richmond Flowers, a political opponent of arget Gov. George C. Wallace, charged that the killing of the seminarian was "another Ku Klux Klan mur- der." He said the accused was "strongly believed to be a Ku Klux Klan member." No official comment by Wallace was reported. Added Charges Flowers also accused Col. Al Lingo, Alabama Public Safety Commissioner, of refusing to co- operate with his office in investi- gating the crime and of trying to "whitewash" the case. He said that Lingo had refused to share in- formation on the killing with either his office or the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The SNCC intensification of its civil rights program bore out a prediction by the Montgomery Advertiser and Alabama Journal. In a recent lead editorial, the paper said: "There will not now be fewer agitators in Lowndes, there will be more." "A killing such as that at Hayneville," the editorial said, "is indefensible in the mind of any- one who truly subscribes to our moral law and our statutory law. "This is true despite the folly and fanaticism of the provocation by priestly incendiaries." "They knowingly entered a dan- gerous situation," the editorial continued, "and did what they could to make it more dangerous. .4 WELCOME STUDENTS 6 STROH S TOcc "A funny thing happened on my way to the voter registration office ... vothing ! !" Mil~i Large-Scale Effects Seen for Negro Vote oAMONIN G N generation NOW ACCEPTING FOR PUBLICATION Fiction, poetry, essays, photography, art. Mail to/or leave at 420 Maynard St., Room 104 .............mmmm...--...............mm.................... FIRST MEETING, Wednesday, September 8, 8:00 P.M. WASHINGTON-All 14 of the Deep South counties into which federal examiners have been sent voted by more than 3 to 1 for Barry Goldwater, the 1964 Re- publican presidential candidate. The percentages ranged from 93.6 for Mr. Goldwater inLeflore County, Miss., to 77.6 in Hale; County, Ala. That is not surprising because in 12 of the 14 counties, less than wanted PAID SUBJECTS with mild ACNE, for study of topical therapy NOT A DRUG STUDY Involves treatment of one side of face for a 4-8 week period with the object of finding out how valuable several time-hon- ored treatments really are.. If comparison shows treatment to be effective, will then treat other side of face. Liberal lump payment at end of period. As this is an experimental study, we do not wantsubjects with severe acne. Subjects with acne of "blackhead type" are especially suitable. If interested, write name, phone, address, and age on a card and mail to: E. D. Lowney, M.D., 5548 Kresge Medical Research Bldg., U of M Med- ical Center. If suitable, we will contact you shortly. 10 per cent of the Negro voting- age population was on the regis- tration books at the time of the election. In the other two, about 11 and 20 per cent of eligible Ne- groes were registered. Thus,in these 14 counties alone, Snore than 75,000 voting-age Ne- groes were not registered and could not vote at the time of the presi- dential election. But wherever they did vote, 94 out of every 100 Ne- groes cast a ballot for President Johnson. New Votes Thus, it is safe to suggest that in those counties alone, Mr. John- son lost perhaps 70,000 votes that would have beenhis;had the Ne- gro voting-age population - been able to go to the polls in.some- thing like its full strength. Projected throughout the South, where about 3 million voting-age Negroes were not registered In 1964, such gains would have given him an impressive victory in that region-instead of the slim' na- jority of the Southern popular vote and the six Confederate states that he did carry. The gains from a full-strength Negro vote would have given Mr. Johnson a greater victory, that is, unless full-strength Negro vot- ing. had produced an even larger white voter turnout and goaded even more white voters into cast- ing their ballots for Mr. Gold- water, whom they considered friendlier to the Southern racial view. Worry, That is the imponderable that See EFFECTS, Page 5 Great for the going season Stroh's six packs go where you go. 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