THE MICHIGAN DAILY ATLANTA SIT-IN Negro sit-in demonstrators carried on the in1 of lunch counters for the second straight day in Atlanta yester ordinating Committee, a Negro student organization indicated1 spread to other cities in the "hard core South" soon. T v k~ c Ot9 o ~ o(~\ ~o t j0 TV DEBATE: roes Stae Kennedy, Proposal, inter ProtestRbfe NEW YORK M)-The fourth and probably the last rado-tele- u i. il/r 1 - vision debate between the two **t Eb *Ia Ik major presidential candidates to- night will be limited to one hour. 2"This was announced late yester- A rrests of 2day after a conference between agents of the candidates and the networks. The question grew out of Dem- ocratic nominee Sen. John F. Kennedy's proposal to hold a fifth debate as close to possible to the Anti-Trespass Law Nov. 8 election. Violations Charged Proposal Rebuffed Vice-President Richard M. Nix- ATLANTA (M-Negroes intensi- on, his Republican opponent, fled their campaign to desegre- turned Kennedy's proposal down, gate this Deep South city yester- suggesting instead that today's day and 22 more of them went final debate be extended by one to jail to back up their demands. hour, and that viewers be allowed Among the Negroes arrested to telephone in questions. was the Rev. A. D. Williams King, After yesterday's conference, it brother of Rev. Marton Luther was announced: t King, Jr., who is in jail awaiting "It became clear that, in the trial on charges of violating Geor- time involved, an acceptable pro- 4:gia's anti-trespass law. M. L. gram with public participation in King and 50 other Negroes and a the questioning of the candidates [ white man were arrested Wednes- could not be developed. It was fn rK 4.: day when the Negroes opened agreed that on Friday night the --AP wirephoto their current campaign for inte- program should be the one-hour tensified campaign for desegration grated lunch counters, program on foreign affairs as orig- rday. The Student Nonviolent Co- Sixteen Released inally planned in August." that such demonstrations would Sixteen of those arrested at that To Be Broadcast time \ were released later. The The debate will be broadcast C O R E other 36, including M. L. King, on Detroit television channels at wEerejailed and bound over to 10 p.m. and on radio at 9 p.m. Fulton Criminal Court for trial Press Secretary Pierre Salinger, 0on charges of violating the anti- speaking for Kennedy, added that M ore A ctoio trespass law, a misdemeanor. the Massachusetts senator will Maximum sentence is 18 months make a final effort, probably to- imprisonment and $1,000 fine. day, to get Nixon to acced1e to a The Congress on Racial Equal- They declined to make bond. fifth debate, by telegraphing the ity, an influential participant in The Southern Christian Leader- Vice-President a formal challenge. the Southern sit-in movement,. ship Conference, a Negro organi- Today's appearance will be Nix- has planned continued protests zation, asked Mayor William B. on's first telecast from the ABC of lunch-counter segregation. Hartsfield to appoint a bi-racial studio. Ke'nnedy, however, ap- CORE made this promise in a committee to deal with the situa- peared there last week when he reply to a statement by four na- tion- debated Nixon, while the Vice- tional variety store chains, which artsfield. out of the city and President was in a California stu- pointed to progress in integration rejected previous pleas for a cosi- of their Southern lunch-counters. mittee. The organization congratulated Counters Closed Plan now foyour the chain stores on the progress, Yesterday's demonstrators found which cincludesn 1ntegrtio n of anylunch counters closedOth- ;, QE R M UDA lunch counters in 112 Southern ci- ers were shut down as fast as Bp ,KIV ties, but it emphasized that "this the Negroes appeared. WAA is only the beginning and not the Two variety stores, F. W. Wool- end. worth Co. and Newberry Co., "No progress has yet been made closed for an hour and re-opened1 In the 'hard core' states of the with their lunch counters ropedb resistant South. Within the past off to all customers. few weeks, 23 CORE members A Negro student organization, have been arrested during at- the Student Nonviolent Coordinat- b tempts to eat at Woolworth, Kress ing Committee, said the demon- . Informal wekoming dance to start and McCrory lunch counters in strations not only would continue the fun. New Orleans and Sumter. S.C.," in Atlanta, but that they would * College Day at the Beach... the CORE said, intensify. biggest beach party of the year. It pledged to continue to pro- Edward B. King, administrative * All-day cruise to historic St. George. Luncheon, Calypso momsi, test discrimination in eating secretary of the student group, Gombey Dancers. places in the South, both those said the movement "will spread . Round Robin Tennis Tournament. connected with the chain stores to other cities in the hard core * College Week Golf Competition. and those that are not. It urged South soon." King said the Negro " College Talent Revue. persons in the North to cooperate students would concentrate their * Fun Festival with jas concerts, in its action when the discrimina- efforts on lunch counters and res- cral groups, dance contests, a Barbecue Luncheon. tory policies involve the national taurants. * Sightseeing chains. Detective J. C. McEntire said , Special Golf and Tennis Trophiya The statement was contained in three Negroes were charged with ALL YOURS AT NO CHARGE a letter from CORE field director violation of the anti-trespassing Gordon R. Carey to the Ann Arbor law after refusing to leave the e BERM U DA Direct Action Committee; a railroad station restaurant when Trade Development Board spokesman said AADAC will con- asked to do so by the manage- 420Mfth Ave., N w York 20 N. Y. tinue ,its picketing of local branch- ment. es of the national chains. McEntire said the other 19 Ne- The local group will meet Fri- groes were blocking the doorway day to discuss possible affiliation refused to move when direct- dayh tOdscsE osed to do so by police. withAn estimated 200 young Negroes bearing anti-segregation placardsP l i ewere in the downtown area for s the second straight day. The arrests brought to 75 the Brng Results number taken into custody in the two days. IN POLITICAL COMMITTEE: Western Disarm UNITED NATIONS ()--Com- munist. nations kept up their fire to stop bu in the United Nations yesterday and rock on Western disarmament propos- on territ als, echoing Soviet Premier Niki- posed th ta S. Khrushchev's renewed no rock charges that the United States building and its allies are trying to stall already s progress toward East-West agree- bring itt ment. Foreign Ministers Adam Ra- packi of Poland, Vaclav David of .U s Czechoslovakia, the two main speakers of the day in the 99-na- tion United Nations political com- mittee, both accused the West of stepping up the arms race. Fro Proposes Session Rapacki proposed a special ses- WASH sion of the United Nations Gen- ed States eral Assembly next spring if there bassador is no agreement by then on a Havana treaty to end tests of nuclear Havana weapons, of consul Rapacki's proposal appeared to It said reflect a feeling among the Com- for his r munists that prospect of. agree- The S mient in Geneva was growing dim. nounceme He said if agreement is not reach- ed States ed by April of next year the As- most U lembly must bedconvened to "take Cuba, u the necessary decisions 4 I States-Cu He called also on all countries1 new low. REMEh You Can S Until 8:30 State Stre 4 MadE' r Maril Mart jM Rai Willard' illding new military bases, t launching installations ories of others. He pro- at countries which have et bases refrain from them, and any who have tarted such construction to an immediate halt. Recalls 5'assador n Cuba Both Rapacki. and David pealed for. unanimous suppo a Soviet resolution conta Khrushchev's latest proposal an international treaty on plete and general disarmamr David accused' United S delegate James J. Wadsworl using cold war tactics Wedne in opposing the Soviet prop Wadsworth declared the pro was intended to forestall re than speed disarmament, Reiterates Threat The Czechoslovak delegat iterated Communist threat boycott the political committe bate. He said if the Western ers use tactics of obstructior procrastination his country not find it possible to take in the committee's deliberatic There was speculation tha nine Soviet bloc delegates r walk out when all have deliv their main speeches to the,( mittee. But Valerian A. Zorin,, S deputy foreign minister, gav indication of this in a brie: tervention at the end of ye day's committee session. INGTON (M)-The Unit- yesterday recalled Am- Philip W. Bonsai from "for an extended period tation." "no date has been fixed, eturn to Cuba." State Department an- ent, a day after the Unit- slapped an embargo on rited States exports to rnderlined that United ban relations are at a . .{?Y :f'k'4, yns.:4 ..,. s4rdy' d"r'rs commit~ S + te sessin.f I ' ABER 0 0 ament Plans At hop Friday NIghts at the following aet Area SHOPS ~moise 1l1e 'n Shoppe I Walker BARNARD'S Campus Casuals 1111 So. University Ave. I GoI b OZg 164 s ,Footwear' ndall's Immammmom _...... Informal mode.Ing by our college board Saturday -morning 9:30 to 12.30. I ~iORS 3bOUB~q ~O 11 1 p ""b8 1eets /Ied ("I' hhei! Those simply styled WOOL JERSEYS and KNITS Priced from Junior sizes from 7 to 1 5 Tall 10-18 Average 8-20 There's striking sim- plicity in this cowl col- lared Italian wool flat knit sheath to under- state or dramatize as you choose at,,, 195 h II Oq/II O 1w e Tlhem! 44 COLORS --purple, plum, lilac, blues, reds, greens, black, s, white, ,. two days. " N46,\ /' ^a. ' 4 ,.*7 Ad S ' ' V ' ' (. _. ' u T+ + n'T T a y S y VS: Y >' $i: v , 9 ;a ",.w .9 ..c~'. ." ,,.ucwe". 3,,97 .. ,Fyy...aa ::ib O r J \U iv fir, c i/-d' ref SOP -s. f -YY.... a JUMP ahead in fashion A: : / Our wool plaid bandstand jumper leads the fashion parade of knee-skimming news notes! Self-belted with soft, unpressed pleated skirt. . .bright colors with gold, green or blue predominant. Sizes 8-14, . s '' . . / // 10.98 . r _. _ y F Te.