TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Viet Voter Turn-out Large RIGHTS ROUNDUP: Filibuster Hit, Atlanta Quieted, Granada Integrated WASHINGTON .r( - Senate met with Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr., Carmichael has been in jail on Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield yesterday to discuss how to end $10,000 bond four days on charges "Despite Terror Campaign i . Communists Not Allowed On Ballots Only 20 Military Candidates Elected; Some Ky Critics Wii SAIGON, South Viet Nam - Elated Premier Nguyen Cao Ky reported yesterday an 80 percent turnout in South Viet Nam's elec- tions for a constitution-drafting assembly and said this presages "a brighter, more beautiful future" for his nation, torn by war for 20 years. The returns showed the election of only 20 military men and 97 civilians, somne of them critical of military rule. Ky called the outpouring of vo- ters in the face" of Communist threats and terrorism a stunning defeat for the Viet Cong. The clandestine Viet Cong radio ang- rily branded the elections a fraud built upon "concocted phony fig- ures." Ky Critics While some of the civilians elec- ted to the Constituent Assembly, due to meet Sept. 26, are critical of Ky and his regime, all are anti- Communists. All candidates had been screened and those deemed to harbor Communist or neutralist sympathies were barred from run- ning.I Officials recognized that the turnout was partly the result of the drive by Ky's regime to ob- tain a big vote. However, the size of the vote surprised some prev- iously pessimistic U.S. officials who had felt Ky would be lucky to obtain a majority or perhaps a 60 percent turnout. ! Foremost among the elected as-. semblymen is a former chief of state, Phan Khuc Suu, 61, an inde- pendent who was jailed by the regime of President Ngo Dinh Di- em before it was overthrown Nov. 1, 1963. Suu became civilian chief. of state in October 1964. He bowed 4 out in July 1965, after a coup that brought Ky to power. Separatists Also in the assembly are two mountain tribesmen who once led separatist movement, and such outspoken critics as former Eco- nomics Minister Tran Van Van. The task of the assembly is to draw up, by March, a constitution to replace the one thrown out with the overthrow of Diem. Other elections will be held la- ter to fill the offices the constitu- tion provides. These most likely will include a president and a bal- ancing Congress. Ky says he then will turn power over to the elected officials. This is expected to take a year or so. 4.2 Million In the voting Sunday, 4-2 mil- lion of South Viet Nam's 5,288,512 registered voters balloted for 108 assembly seats, the government re- ported. The other nine seats went to mountain tribesmen who used their own traditional methods to select their representatives. of Montana - with the odds outbreaks of violence andt against him - moved yesterday for the release of severa to end the Senate's shadow fili- Negroes. buster and force a vote on civil "Our chief concern is c rights, for those arrested, those v Republican Leader Everett M. in the areas of the disturt Dirksen of Illinois said he has no said the Rev. Samuel V doubt that Mansfield's move will head of the Atlanta chapte fail when it comes to a vote late National Association fort Wednesday. vancement of Colored Peo It would take two-thirds of the "Some innocent peopl senators voting to halt debate on caught up and jailed," V a motion by Sen. Philip A. Hart, told a news conference a D-Mich., to put before the Senate meeting with the mayor. the broad civil rights bill passed Asked if Stokely Car by the House Aug. 9. national chairman of the Mansfield indicated that if the Nonviolent Coordinating C bill's supporters can get majority tee, was included in the pl backing for their debate-ending liams replied: "We're inter move, he may file a second peti- those residents of Summer tion for cloture. Mechanicsville," p r e don Atlanta Meetings Negro areas in which rec In Atlanta, Ga., Negro leaders breaks have occurred. GOP Blasts Presidential Anti-Inflation Proposals to plead of inciting a riot and creating a 1 jailed disturbance. Many of the chants during Sunday night's outbreak lemency were, "Get Stokely out!" who live Grenada Integration bances," In Grenada. Miss., a throng of Williams, angry whites wielding ax handles, er of the pipes and chains surrounded two the Ad- public schools that were integrat- ple. ed yesterday and attacked Negroes .e were who attempted to leave when Williams classes were over. fter the An estimated 150 Negroes dese- gregated the city's two all-white -michaelschools, one elementary, the other Student a high school. They are situated Commit- side-by-side. ea, Wil- The 150 students entered un- f fi h i [ , , a - rested in challenged, but late comers en- hill and countered white antagonists. Two minantly young girls tried to pass through ent out- the whites and were pushed to the ground. They flea to a church. Sound Truck A truck equipped with two-way radios cruised the area to alert the whites to head off the Negroes. Classes were held for only half the day Monday. When the session was over, white students left with their parents, one by one. The THIS DOUBLE-EXPOSED SHOD the Atlas-Agena missile that sen CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. ( ) - Skillfully guiding their tiny space- ship across the skies yesterday, the Gemini 11 astronauts, command pilot Charles Conrad, Jr., and Na- vy Lt. Cmdr. Richard Gordon sighted and closed in on the Age- na satellite for a record first-orbit rendezvous and linkup. They accomplished all they had planned the first day aloft. At about 5:40 p.m., they called it a day, cutting power in their tiny vehicle to a minimum and going to sleep. "Thank you very much," Conrad told a tracking station when sign- ing off. "Good night." And, a good night to you," tre station replied. Above Pacific The rendezvous 'occurred ap- proximately 185 miles above the Pacific and the word was relayed by the pilots when they passed ov- er a tracking station at Point Ar- guello, Calif. Conrad and Gordon accomlish- ed the quick first-orbit rendezvous nearly three hours and two orbits faster than any previous Gemini flight. They steered their tiny space- ship through a series of maneu- vers as they pursued the Agena over an 18,000-mile course, catch- ing it above the Pacific some 80 minutes after they rode a thunder- ing Titan 2 rocket from Cape Ken- nedy. Docking About 10 minutes later, at 12:15 p.m. EDT, high over the United States, Conrad slipped the Gemini nose into a docking collar on one end of the Agena. Mechanical latches gripped the r h k ,* WASHINGTON Aj - President; 7 per cent of their equipment Negroes stayed. ;; .. jJohnson's anti-inflation proposals spending-and of especially fav- Shortly before the Negroes left ran into critical Republican ques- orable depreciation rules. the schools, the whites left to con- tioning on Capitol Hill yesterday Decrease Pressure gregate around the town square, -Associated Press as administration spokesmen in- The administration wants the their ax handles still in thei T SHOWS THE LAUNCH OF bot h rockets involved in yesterday's Gemini II mission. At the right is sisted the proposals' main purpose special incentives to business sus- hands. t the target vehicle up. On the lef t is the Titan that carried the astronauts' spacecraft. is not to raise tax money. pended so that there will be less About two hours after the white At the same time the stock mar- pressure on industries making children left, the Negro children ket surged ahead to its best gain equipment and on the money mar- were taken out In groups of 25, in more than 14 months. ket to finance it. led by the sheriff. leet Upw iarget Trading was active.,ds Some Wall Streeters said theyW o de su d felt "the air was cleared" by the e governmental proposals to ease ~i? il inU t s /I ter li~if ofMeantime, the effects of the suspension of the 7 ect fbu By The Associated Press If convicted, Shelton could be - .. ness investment tax credit appar- TOKYO - Red China hinted sentenced to a year In jail andn two as they sailed as one rigid ve- nally was launched at 8:05 a.m. ground, has two important impli- ently was seen as less severe than yesterday at new and important fined $1,000. hile. EST when the Atlas hurled the cations for America's man to the originally supposed changes at the top of its political Conrad called out as Gemini 11 26-foot-long Agena into an orbit moon program. The Dow-Jones average of 30 ladder and cast vague doubts on RENO, Nev. - A jarring earth- approached for the record rendez- ranging from 180 to 191 miles. -It simulated an emergency industrial stocks closed up 15.04 the status of some of party chair- quake shook the backbone of the vous: Maneuvers To Come liftoff from the moon by two ae- points at 790.59, the largest gain man Mao Tze-tung's oldest com-.High Sierra country yesterday 'Would you believe an M equal These other flight highlights tronauts who might have to make since June 30, 1965, when it gain- rades. with minor damage to area pro- one?" the 36-year-old Conrad ex- were planned: a hasty rendezvous with an Apollo 3ed 16.63. A listing of leaders indicated per ty. claimed as he neared the agena -Two space excursions by Gor- ship in lunar orbit. Tax Increase that such high figures as Presi- The quake was felt up and down target. ,don: a 107-minute stroll outside -It demonstrated the ability of The possibility of future direct dent Liu Shao-chi, aged marshal California's Central Valley, west "M equal one" is the astronaut's and a 140-minute standup through the astronauts to use their com- tax hike requests was left open Chu Teh and Chen Yun are no toiSan Francisco, east to Salt Lake term for a first-orbit rendezvous. an open hatch. puter, inertial guidance system when Secretary of the Treasury longer members of the Politburo's -City The launch ran into a final -Firing the Agena's engine and radar to calculate all their Henry H. Fowler told the House prestigious seven-man standing A T problem just two minutes before while docked to shoot to an alti- maneuvers on board instead of re- Ways and Means Committee: committee. En C ission announced the the liftoff of the Atlas-Agena tar- tude of 863 miles, nearly 400 miles ceiving help from ground stations "We cannot offer blueprints for-Eery-yisi dnunde , get. Technicians could not seal the higher than the Gemini 10 record as earlier Gemini hunters did. future programs. The only prudent WASHINGTON - A jury was cho- firing of a low-yield underground spacecraft hatch over command of 476 miles. Shortly after docking, Conrad course is to maintain a flexible, sen Monday to try Ku Klux Klan nuclear test at Its Nevada test pilot Conrad. -Linking the Agena and Gem- fired the Gemini thruster rockets step-by-step approach." leader Robert M. Shelton, 37, on ge Monday. A low-yield test is They reopened it, then closed it ini together on opposite ends of to push the Agena forward. The A past step, Fowler said, was contempt-of-Congress charges, then equTvTlet o as tha20,000 again and finally pronounced it a 100 foot cord to see if this is an purpose of this experiment is to the restoration of some excise tax- The charges against the imper- tons of TNT. It was the 28th weak ready for flight. But the count- effective fuel saving flying forma- test the technique and accuracy of es early this year. And the next ial wizard of the United Klans of pons-related test announcedthis down had to be pushed back so tion. a direct contact method of deter-|step, he went on. is Jonhson's re- America stem from his failure to year. there was a delay of 16 minutes.' The fast maneuvering, achieved mining the weight of an orbiting quest for a 16-month suspension produce Klan records subpoenaed READ AND USE The 11th in the Gemini series fi- with almost no help from the object-in this case, the Agena. ( of the investment credit-which by the House Committee on Un- --.-.now allows businesses to recover American Activities. DAILY CLASSI EDS ______________ -i- -_-_---_--_-_----- f Out-of-stock Books Arriving Daily NEW and USED UAC AN INTELLECTUAL EXPERIENCE LAST CHANCE LECTURE PROF. ORGANSKI-Political Science Dept. SEPT. 15... 4:15 P.M. MULTIPURPOSE ROOM, UGLI at UL RICH'Fs Ann Arbor's Busy Book Store Young- Democrats OPEN MEETING TODAY WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MNUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION & RETENTION EASE PRESSURE-SAVE TIME-IMPROVE CONCENTRATION You can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to comprehend at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute-3 to 6 times as fast as you read now. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish - in your required reading and in the additional reading you want to do. You'll save many hundreds of hours. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used while learning the ACCELERATED READING method. Thus you avoid developing ANY dependence upon external equipment in reading rapidly. The new reading skill is permanently retained for this reason. Afternoon classes and Evening classes in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY, at the BELL TOWER INN, adjacent to the U. of M. campus, beginning on October 4. The semester ends on December 6. 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