THE MICHIGAN DAILY .ool Integration Rioting ALGERIAN SELF-GOVERNMENT: French To Vote on P 4~ Continues in New Orleans CENSUS State Gains Extra Seat In House Michigan will gain a new seat{ in the United States House of Representatives-its nineteenth- as a result of population increases disclosed Tuesday by the Com- merce Department's 1960 census report. Sometime before mid-1963 it must redistrict the state to make room for the new congressman. Who gets it-Republicans or Democrats-may well be deter- mined by how the geographic lines are drawn. Both parties realize this and are expected to seek to gerrymander district boundaries to their own advantage. The only certainty is that the southeastern section of the state, whose population has most great- ly increased, will gain the added representation. But if an attempt is made to decrease present inequalities in representation, it could involve re- drawing many or most of the state's current 18 districts. If the governor and Legislature can reach no agreement, the state's 19th congressman would be elected at large. CAFE PROMETHEAN 508 E. William, -AP Wirephoto NEW ORLEANS VIOLENCE--Segregationists protest the forced integration of two New Orleans schools. Teenagers were forced back by police acid firemen with clubs and hoses. DELEGATE SEATS:x UN Nears COngo ShowdQwn UNITED NATIONS (A) - The United Nations General Assem- bly yesterday headed for a show- down on the seating of Congo President Joseph Kasavubu with the Western powers increasingly hopeful he would win. A session of the 99-nation As- sembly appeared likely tomorrow to consider the recommendation of its credentials committee that a delegation headed by Kasavubu be given the Congo's vacant seat. Western diplomats expected that delegates among the Asian-Afri- can nations who oppose Kasavubu WLLIAM STREET LOCKERS 331 E.William Folk Song= -- Fri., Sat. Featuring AL YOUNG MIKE SHERKER CAROLE WERNER 8:30 P.M. til ? Sunday, Nov. 20-8:00 P.M. JAZZ Featuring the New Music of the OMAR CLAY-BOB JAMES TRIO FROZEN FOOD LOCKERS AVAILABLE MEAT - Cut and wrapped for your locker ;;;; LABORATORY PLAYBILL TODAY 4:10 P.M. Dept. of Speech "THE THEATRE OF THE SOUL" ' i 1'_ by N. Yevreinov Arena Theatre and favor deposed Premier Pa- trice Lumumba would try to block Assembly action by moving ad- Journment. Defeat Chances But these diplomats said chanc- es for defeating the adjournment move and winning a seat for Kas- avubu were increasing, due main- ly to the good impression he had made hereon African delegates in Iprivate talks. Fulbert Youlou, president of the neighboring Congo Republic, Braz- zaville, was flying to New York to help Kasavubu in his campaign. Last Wednesday the Assembly Kennedy Flies To Meetings With Johnson JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (') President-elect John F. Kennedy flew to Texas yesterday to con-! fer with Vice - President-elect Lyndon B. Johnson on the massive problems facing their administra- tion. Kennedy was greeted by Gov. Price Daniel and United States' Sen. Ralph Yarborough at Berg - strom Air Force Base,. six miles from Austin. Kennedy immediate- ly hopped into a small plane and flew to Johnson's ranch 65 miles; west of Austin. Kennedy broke into a Florida vacation to fly here by jet plane.' Some 35 newsmen and Kenne- dy's staffers got off the plane be- fore the President-elect. The public was barred from see- ing the senator by secret security agents. But several hundred air- men and their families lined up behind a wire guard to welcome him. Last night and through today, in the seclusion of Johnson's i ranch house, the two men were expected to try to chart not only a smooth changeover from a Re- publican to a Democratic regime but also a far ranging legislative program to which they commit- ted themselves during the cam- paign. Army Launches Pershing Missile CAPE CANAVERAL ) - The Army successfully fired both stages of its Pershing Missile for the first time yesterday, sending the rocket on a 160-mile trip down the Atlantic missile range. The Army announced all test objectives were achieved. voted 48-30 with 18 abstentions to postpone Congo debate pending the outcome of efforts by a 15- member Asian-African concilia- tion mission to achieve an on- the-spot reconciliation among rival Congolese political factions. Ask Postponement Ghana, supported by Guinea, Nigeria and the entire Soviet bloc, asked for the postponement. The IUnited States opposed it. But on the next day the United States succeeded in pushing through the nine-nation credentials commit- tee a recommendation that Kasa- vubu be seated. Meanwhile, Kasavubu sent a letter to Rajeshwar Dayal, In- dian ambassador who is Secre- tary-General Dag Hammarsk- jold's special representative in the Congo,, objevting strenuously to dispatch of the conciliation mis- sion. Dayal Is in New York consult- ing with Hammarskjold and his Congotadvisory committee, which named the 15-nation conciliation group but has not yet reached# agreement on just when it should7 leave for the Congo. "The sending of a commission to the territory ofra member state without its prior accord would constitute a precedent the scope anddanger of which can- not escape. the Secretary-Gener- al," Kasavubu informed Dayal. Satellite Falls Over Pacifite HANSCOM FIELD, Mass. (A) - The Air Force National Space Surveillance Center reported yes- terday the satellite Discoverer 13 burned up in the earth's atmos- phere Monday afternoon. Estimates placed the burnup somewhere over the South Pa- cific about 3 p.m. Decay of Discoverer 13 reduced the satellite population to 16. Discoverer 13 was launched Aug. 10, 1960 at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. '~ TeensAgers Demonstrate At City Hall Long Vows Support To State Legislature NEW ORLEANS W) - Riotous demonstrations against race mix- ing in New Orleans schools broke up again and again yesterday un- der the pressure of clubbing po- lice and arching fire hoses. More than 1,000 demonstrators -most of them truants from the high schools-failed to reach the school board offices in the center of downtown New Orleans. Three hundred turbulent teen- agers reformed after hoses and clubs drove them from the streets and tried to charge into, City Hall a few blocks away. Many Injured Arrests mounted to 58 by mid- afternoon. Many were injured. Meanwhile, Sen. Russell Long (D-La) stood before an infuriated Louisiana Legislature in Baton Rouge and said, "I would be per- sonally willing to impeach the en- tire Supreme Court if my vote would do it. "The situation in Washington," he said, "is likely to get worse. We simply do not have the votes." Private Schools He suggested the Legislature abandon public schools and turn to a segregated private school sys- tem. Almost forgotten in the tumul- tuous sequence of violence were the four little Negro first-grade girls whose entry into white pub- lic elementary schools for the first time in more than 80 years began the see-saw of strength in the deep south's largest city. One of the four entered William Frantz School quietly for the third day with a silent crowd of under 100 persons watching. At McDon- ogh No. 19, three others marched into the school before a silent. crowd of about the same size. Downtown, tension grew by the hour as police repelled the ad- vances of teenagers and adults chanting "two, four, six, eight, we don't want to integrate." Attack Man After the worst of the day's dis- orders apparently had subsided, eight Negroes attacked a white man and shot him. White men beat up four Ne- groes. A group of whites stoned a Ne- gro truck driver, who threw half bricks back. Police broke up the fight. None was hurt. Gov. Jimmie H. Davis in Baton Rouge called on "all those in New Orleans who are under this emo- tional strain to stay at home and don't do anything" they might be sorry for. PARIS ()-President Charles de Gaulle announced yesterday he is going to submit, to French vot- ers a plan for a new system .of government for rebellious Algeria. The new system would prevail, a cabinet announcement said, until Algerians themselves decided their own future in a subsequent vote under de Gaulle's already pro- pounded doctrine of self-determi- nation. Autonomy for Algeria ap- pears to be the end in view. De Gaulle's action yesterday had been expected, and there have been predictions that any refer- endumn will go the way he wants it to. But yesterday's develop- ments may touch off explosions among European settlers of Al- geria, who want the African ter- ritory to remain part of France. Breaks Secrecy Breaking some of the secrecy shrouding his deliberations on the thorny problem, de Gaulle told a cabinet meeting that "at the appropriate time" he will ask the nation's approval of a new sys- tem of government in Algeria. The cabinet itself was asked to draft the text of this new provi- sional constitution, and to pre- pare for the referendum. Spokes- men said it is up to the cabinet to decide whether voters in Al- geria will also be able to partici- pate in this referendum, or wheth- er the vote will be restricted to metropolitan France. ' Technically, Algeria is now part of France and participates in all national elections. But the cabinet could rule that public order was too troubled in Algeria to permit voting. Discusses Republic The cabinet announcement did not mention local autonomy. But Nixon Leads California SAN FRANCISCO (A) - Vice- President Richard M. Nixon cap- tured California's 32 electoral votes last night on unofficial re- turns from a wave of more than 230,000 absentee ballots counted eight days after the polls closed. Nixon led in California by 13,- 160 votes. Democratic Sen. John F. Ken- nedy still was President-elect, based on national electorate vote totals in the closest race in mod- er times. Republican Nixon had the con- solation of eking out victory in his home state after Kennedy had led narrowly from start to finish of the regular vote count. Here were the latest unofficial California figures: Absentees: Nixon 132,186; Kennedy 84,458. Statewide resident and absen- tee: Nixon 3,219,211; Kennedy 3,- 206,501. The remaining absentee votes- about 20,000-were mainly in the Republican strongholds of San Diego and Orange Counties. The official canvass, due by Nov. 28, will give the final score, but it appeared that only a gross error at the county clerk level in some major counties could upset Nixon's success in California. at * DECCA RECORD DEPARTMENT State Street ;at North U. de Gaulle in his Nov. 4 radio 'TV address to the nation spoke of an eventual Algerian Republic. And he said the Algerian administra- tion must henceforth be com- pletely in the hands of Algerians --the so-called Algerian Algeria which has become his goal The cabinet is expected to call the referendum for mid-January. There was no immediate reac- tion from the embittered Euro- pean settlers of Algeria. It' is al- most bound to be hostile, since'any new political, system in Algeria would be a step away from 'thee complete union with France they have long demanded. Heavy Patrols The streets of Algiers were heavily patrolled by French riot police and mobile guardsmen, many of them newly arrived from France.-The government has sent 1,100 police reinforcements as a precaution against any new civil- ian uprising. Criticism of de Gaulle's move cropped up in the corridors of the National Assembly where the Gaullists control a safe majority. SPECIAL PURCHASE Selected Closeouts from * COLUMBIA PRES. CHARLES DeG Algerian Plai Some deputies were ha de Gaulle apparently is r to set up an Algerian immediately, and took -t tactical retreat. * VOx *MERCU $3.98 Reduced to $4*93Redued t RIVERSIDE WHILE THEY LAST Frieze Bldg. No Admission Charge I 4 ACTORS, WRITERS, COMMITTEE PEOPLE WORK ON HILLELZAPOPPIN Independent and Interfraternity-Sorority SKIT and COMMITTEES Call NO 3-4129 between 1 and 5 P.M. or fill out and return coupon .. _. . -..._.,..__ - ....._... .___ Name Position j Address Phone _ I -ws ----------- --- NAACP Membership Drive Membership Table in Mason Hall "Fishbowl" Tuesday - Friday# 10 A.M. - 2 P.M. : I I UNIV ERSITY LECTURE 31 DR. PAUL TLIC Ii NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION FLIGHT RESEARCH CENTER EDWARDS, CALIFORNIA Invites Applications from Stvdents majoring, or with advanced degrees in, Philosopher - Theologian on "Symbolism: Its Significance in Religion" * PHYSICS .. * AERONAU ._ -ELECTRIC TICAL ENGINEERING AL ENGINEERING 1 4:15 P.M. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18 r1 I WNNMMMM W