rr WWrr ne wvYVwyxarl r ra xw tiriwrio. ___ ___ __. _. _ __ - _.._ SUNDA, iSEPTEMBER 1, 1IU6 Peking Army To Protect, Canton Area Ask Soldiers To End ' Violence Caused By Red Guard Youths HONG KONG (P)-Red Chinese army troops have moved into Can- ton to curb a violent group of youthful Red Guards reported to have mistreated the aged and in- firm in the drive to forge a new China. Signs from Peking, however, were that the purge of so-called rightists from the Chinese Com- munist party continued, with in- dications that new heads might roll from the top echelons. Travelers from Canton reported that regular army troops had be- gun patroling Canton's streets Wednesday night and early Thurs- day. Cantonese Red Guards had resisted efforts from Red Guards sent from Peking to hold down violence against persons accused of bourgeois habits and customs, the travelers said. They added there had been clashes between the Canton Red Guards and those sent from Pe- king. ' "The Peking Guards we'e much better disciplined and reasonable," one traveler said. "They tried to talk the Canton Guards .out of using too much physical force and violence. But they failed. There was a lot of shoving around and quite a few fist fights' between the opposing groups. "Then the Peking group moved out, and the regular army soldiers began patrolling the streets." Others said the army patrols apparently had come from Peking because Canton military leaders had kept hands off the Red Guards. . The Red Guards, compared by some to the Hitler youth in Ger- many before World War II, were formed to protect Chairman Mao Tze-tung and his leadership and to help carry out the great pro- letariat cultural revolution - a purge decreed by the Communist Party Central Committee in Pe- king last month. Leaders of that revolution or- dered yesterday that the full force of the purge be brought to bear on "the handful of bourgeois rightists who have sneaked into the Communist party and are still clinging to power." The order, which presages the removal and disgrace of more party leaders, appeared as an edi- torial in the theoretical organ Red Flag edited by Chen Po-ta, chief of the cultural revolution. Apparently written by Chen himself,, the editorial reiterated that the No. 1 problem of the purge was to distinguish the identities of the friends and ene- mies of the movement. It quoted Defense Minister Lin Piao, the new strong man, on this subject and repeated his call "to concen- trate the power of the masses and the great majority to deal a blow to the handful of bourgeois right- ists who have sneaked into the party and are still clinging to power." The editorial appeared two days after Mao and Lin had reviewed the third mass Peking rally in a month. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wilson Sends Mansfield Endorses Escalation Top Officials Of Military Forces in Thailand 1 U 11E.i111(.. csia To Of In Seek Acceptance African Majority Colony Decisions WASHINGTON l.'T-Sen. Mike he had little official knowledge of tions .as they actually exist, there Mansfield (D-Mont), the Senate U.S. military operations in the probably is a need for these bases," majority leader who has opposed little country bordering Viet Nam. he said. expansion of the war in Viet Nam, But he said he accepted news re- The Senate Foreign Relations gave a qualified endorsement yes- ports that two new large military Committee, of which Mansfield is terday to the American military bases were under construction a member, starts closer hearings build-up in Thailand. there. Tuesday on the U.S. role in Thai- 'Ilt~" -Associated Press THIS IS A VIEW OF THE EARTH from the 851-mile altitude reached by Gemini 11 Astro- nauts Charles Conrad and Richard Gordon who recorded the scene at this record space height. Pictures from Gemini Flight Show Smooth Curve of Earth HOUSTON E1') - Vivid color pictures snapped by the Gemini 11 pilots from man's record alti- tude dramatically captured the earth's curve from horizon-to-hor- izon bearing out their awed de- scription: "Boy, it's really round!" However, officials revealed yes- terday that smudged windows and exposure problems cut into the quality of most of the movie film that Navy Cmdr. Charles Pete Conrad Jr. and Lt. Cmdr. Richard F. Gordon Jr. took during their three historic. days in space. Gemini 11 used a captured Agena rocket to soar to a lofty orbit ranging upwards to 851 miles Wednesday, farther from earth than any man has ever ventured. Yet pictures taken from the high- flying outpost showed earth's smooth, sweeping curve clearer than on any other man-made photograph. There were breathtaking pic- tures of Australia, the Indian Ocean, the. Bay of Bengal, the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, Ethiopia and So- mali-all with amazing clarity de- spite Gemini 11's dirty windows. Movies again emerged as a prob- lem area for a Gemini mission, although technicians processed over 1,000 feet of movies brought back when Gemini 11 splashed home Thursday. A spokesman said: "We got a lot of very badly underexposed film that required a special development job. You've got to remember that it's very difficult to take pictures up there. And, remember, Pete had that stuff on his windows." One brief color movie sequence did show, with striking sharpness, Gordon astride the nose of his spaceship as he tied Gemini 11 to an Agena rocket during his shortened 44-minute walk in space. His companion aptly described the scene when he barked to Gor- don during last Tuesday's stroll: "Ride 'em, Cowboy!" Officials said a second 80-foot roll of Gordon's excursion was so badly exposed it could not be printed. And, on a third, the camera, mounted on the spacecraft hatch, was aimed in the wrong direction, missing Gordon com- pletely. Similar problems struck the last two missions. On Gemini 9, Navy Cmdr. Eugene A. Cernan ended up with only a few poorly exposed frames of his long walk. Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Collins' stroll outside Gemini 10 failed to show on a single piece of film mainly because one roll was lost in orbit. Meanwhile, the two astronauts continued telling the story of their exciting flight to officials at Cape Kennedy, Fla. A spokesman said the two would fly to Houston to- morrow morning for more discus- sions and a reunion with their families. Gemini 11, lauded as one of the nation's most successful manned spaceflights, was the next-to-last in the Gemini series, forerunner of Appolo man - to - the - Moon flights. Gemini 12, a four-day mis- sion to begin Oct. 31, will be the last. LONDON () - Prime Minister lvuansiied said in an interview In view of the present condi- land. Harold Wilson announced last Chairman J. W. Fulbright (D- night he was sending two top men FArk) has raised the issue that the to Rhodesia. They are expected to WAmerican build-up might convert seek some way of bringing that re- + F B I I Thailand into "another Viet Nam." bellious white-ruled colony to ac- He said Congress ought to know ceptance of eventual African ma- ' " "what we are getting into." jority rule. u 'gregationiss But Mansfield said he doubted An announcement from Wilson's inquiring senators, who will hear office said Herbert Bowden, new Asst. Secretary of State William secretary for Commonwealth af- OXFORD, Miss. (P) - The FBI lence Monday and Tuesday in P. Bundy as the first witness, fairs, and Sir Elwyn Jones, attor- arrested 12 white men and alerted Grenada, 45 miles to the south, would learn much that is new. ney general, would fly to Salis- its agents for another arrest in was "the shame of all who occupy "I doubt that we will find out bury tonight. yesterday's crackdown on leaders leadership, both official and civic, any more in the hearings than we The announcement added that of segregationist attacks on Negro in the county and city of Gre- already know from credible news they would "visit Rhodesia for children and newsmen in Gre- nada." reports," he said. purposes indicated in the com- nada. The ruling came after two days Mansfield said Thailand opera- munique on Rhodesia issued by the Still being sought was Justice of testimony in which witnesses fan tad"ringd'"ite. Commonwealth prime ministers' of the Peace James Richard Ayers had said that in many instances House briefings on Viet Nam. He meeting." of the first district of Grenada police had taken no action while added that so farVa he knew, That communique stipulated County. A ranking federal source white men beat Negro children Congress was Informed about ac- that "all sections" of Rhodesian said authorities did not believe with ax handles and chairs out- Cingtes th s fom a it ai opinion - four million Africans Ayers was trying to evade arrest, side the n e w 1 y desegregated theipati there from what it read in against 200,000 whites-should be but thought he was out hunting. schools.IThe aor tynly. consulted on a majority rule Eight of those arrested were Failure by Grenada officials to chief factor behind the American agreement. arraigned here before U.S. Com- obey the injunction would expose build-up seed te for ad Prime Minister Ian Smith seized sionr e n the them to contempt of court action. fense against the threat of Chi- indpnec o Roei atote orwr'bigbog~ Judge Clayton emphasized the nese subversion of northeast Thai- Nov. 11 and since then has scorn- from Grenada for a second ar- gravity of such action by sentenc- land." He noted that this area ed diplomatic and economic pres- raignment. ing Grenada Constable Grady had a large population of North sure to bring the African colony None of the arrested men en- Carroll to four months in prison Vietnamese. back into the fold. The problem tered pleas. Mansfield said he was not pre- is that Britain and African mem- Special agent Roy K. Moore,. bers of the Commonwealth want head of the Mississippi office of The judge signed an order Fri- pared to challenge published re- Rhodesia's black Africans to have the Federal Bureau of Investiga- day night requiring Carroll to sur- ports that the United States had a say in the colony according to tion, said the 13 men would be render to the U.S. Marshall here 25,000 troops in Thailand and was their numbers, in other words, charged with conspiracy to violate before noon next Saturday, Sept. building big bases at Sattahip, on power; and th~e white minority the civil rights of the Negroes who 24. In court Friday the judge said the Gulf of Siam ,and at Nam says the majority is not ready to were attacked Monday during the Carroll would have to begin his Phong. rule. first day of desegregated public term at noon yesterday. But the He noted, however, that Thai- After this week's Commonwealth schools in Grenada. later date was stipulated when he land would retain title to these session ended here, Wilson called Among those arrested were: signed the order. and other bases built there if hos- on Smith to mend his ways and Doyle Cleveland Vance, Gre- Carroll remained free under his tilities ended and the United States return to British control before nada, truck driver; original $3,000 appearance bond. withdrew its troops. the end of 1966 or face the warth Donald Bain, Grenada, factory The case against him had been He declined any comment on and compulsory sanctions of the worker; pending since he pleaded guilty whether U.S. air strikes from United Nations. Many black Afri-- Leland McBride Belk, Grenada, at a hearing last month involving Thailand against North Viet Nam can nations want Britain to use service station operator; Negro claims that law officers and Communist-contolled areas in the force of arms to bring Smith Archie Larry Campbell. were ignoring the court's orders Laos could be classified as opera- to heel. This Wilson has- refused The arrests followed a U.S. Dist. to protect legal civil rights demon- tions to defend Thailand from at- to do. Court order that Grenada offi- strations. tack. He announced the Bowden- cials protect Negro children from- -- Jones mission to Salisbury after "savage and senseless" attacks by having rejected a demand by white men. Conservative Opposition Leader Judge Claude Clayton issued the GUILD HOUSE Edward Heath to recall parlia- order Friday night, saying the vio- ment from its summer recess for -02 Monro an emergency debate on the ex- plosive Rhodesian issue. Wilson!O rder Monday, Sept. 19 Noon Luncheon claimed this wasn't necessary. He congratulated himself and BUFFET 25c the country, in a television broad- r cast, on saving the Commonwealth Y 0ur from blowing up over African- Prof. Frthjof Bergman: Asian demands that Smith's re- SubTHof.GRiThjof B erien gime be toppled by tighter eco- Subscription "THE GREAT SOCIETY" (c series) nomic sanctions or military force. World News Roundup By Tihe Associated Press SANA, Yemen-President Abdul- lah Sallal once again took over full control of Yemen's govern- ment yesterday after spending 10 months in virtual exile and nearly four years after his revolution un- seated the Arab nation's mon- archy. WASHINGTON - The State Department announced yesterday, that Secretary Dean Rusk will fly, to New York tomorrow for a week of meetings with foreign ministers attending the opening of the U.N. General Assembly's fall session. Rusk slated an important ses- sion Thursday with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, the first such high-level U.S.-Soviet parley this year. MONTPELIER, Vt. - The na- tion's director of Selective Serv- ice indicated yesterday that draft regulations should have a defer- ment provision for part-time col- lege students. Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey said the number of full-time students who have been inducted is small and "I feel badly our law makes no provision for part-time stu- dents." More of What You Want to Wear CORDUROY JEANS LARGE SELECTION 3 99 to $599 POOR BOYS SHORT and LONG SLEEVES Cotton, Orlon, Wool-Solids, Prints, Stripes from $399 " FANTASTIC COLLECTION. Sweaters-Skirts-Pants from $6.00-all sizes including petite and tall NOW PRESENTING FIR~iT OF TAE [IL~ DELUXE STOCKINGS ' A wardrobe of hosiery fashions to select from AND ONLY OOE A PAIR UP Ay I- {. Traditionals by CountrySet Love the casual elegance of well-mannered separates? 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