I I7, 7 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'eath Claims 'Mr. Sam' Vietnamese Receive m _ ' a U.S. Aerial Support I i fI-V1tStCfF111 1 tUXW6 11U111C U.S. Leaders Saddened Plane Snags U.S. Capsule Over Paei VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (P)-The gold-plated cap- sule of the 35th Discoverer satel- lite was caught in the air by an Air Force recovery plane yester- day. This is the 10th recovery in the series and the seventh to be made in the air, the Air Force announc- ed in Los Angeles. Three capsules have been recovered from the sea. The capsule was parachuting toward the Pacific when it was plucked from the sky at about 13,000 feet, the Air Force said. The catch was made on the plane's first pass about 15 mile* west of Tern Island and about 650 miles west of Hawaii. Discoverer 35 was launched here Wednesday. It was powered by a two-stage Thor-Agena B rocket. One aim of the series is to per- fect a recovery technique that can be used later on manned space vehicles. The Discovered 35 capsule con- tained a variety of experiments designed to provide important data on space environment. The capsule also contained bio- logical matter, including spores, tissues and cells. The Air Force wants to determine the effects of different radiation doses on such, samples. World Protests Seek o Free Rebel Leaders PARIS ,-M)-International pres- sure mounted on France yester- day to release imprisoned rebel leaders in the 16th day of a hun- ger strike. Rebel leader Mohammed Ben Bella and four other imprisoned ministers of the Algerian govern- ment in exile declared, however, that negotiations for a cease-fire in the seven-year war might be resumed before their release and even while they are still on strike. One of the most violent demon- strations against the detention of Ben Bella and his fellows broke out in Moscow. About 2,000 stu- dents from Friendship University, marched on the French embassy, broke all its windows, threw ban- ners into the front hall, and ran up an Algerian flag on the flag- pole. * I IAmericans SAM RAYBUIvN ...former speaker BERLIN: Seeks End Of Red Wall BONN ( )-Chancellor Konrad Adenauer declared yesterday that East-West talks on Berlin can- not get under way until the Com- munists tear down their wall di- viding the Red-encircled city. The Chancellor, just elected to serve a fourth consecutive term as leader of West Germany, said he sincerely hoped that negotiations with the Soviets would start soon. But he asserted the West must go into such negotiations backed by the greatest possible military strength and he reiterated that NATO members should be entrust- ed with powers to decide for them- selves on the use of nuclear weap- ons in an emergency. Adenauer said these points about Berlin are non-negotiable: The freedom' of Berlin must be preserved, the wall must be re- moved and the communications between Berlin and West Germany must be secured because without them Berlin -cannot live. Immidgration Bill Approved LONDON --A bitterly dis- puted bill limiting Commonwealth immigration to Britain was ap- proved by the House of Commons last night over opposition protests that the measure was rooted in ra- cial discrimination. The vote on the bill was 283- 200. It ties the number of immi- grants to the number of jobs available for them. Criticism was based on the belief that would-be immigrants from India, Pakistan and the West Indies would be thej first kept out. Hugh Gaitskell, leader of the' opposition Labor Party, begged the government "to drop this mis- erable, shameful, shabby bill." "The whole future of the world probably will depend on whether people of different colors can live in harmony with each other." Laud Deeds Of Ra yburn Meader, Peek View. Possible Successors By MICHAEL HARRAH Speaker of the House Sam Ray- burn is dead. The Texas Democrat, who serv- ed as speaker twice as long as anyone in history, passed away early yesterday at the age of 79. He had been stricken with wide- spread cancer, and he died in his sleep at his Texas home. President John F. Kennedy, en route to the west coast, said that "the nation has lost a devoted servant and the citizens of this country an unflinching friend." Tower of Strength Former President Dwight D. Ei- senhower noted "the title, 'a dis- tinguished American,' is rightly his. On international affairs he was a tower of strength to four presidents." Leaving Detroit, Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson said "the Cap- itol is a pretty lonely place with- out him and the good people of the world have lost a champion and an ally." Rep. George Meader (R-Mich) of Ann Arbor noted that "his death will leave quite a hole in the House of Representatives. He will never be replaced." Meader said that Rayburn was held in great respect throughout the Capitol and thus he com- manded support from the many factions of the Democratic Party for much of President Kennedy's legislative program. Seek Successor He said it certainly wasn't yet settled who would succeed Ray- burn. However, frontrunners in- clude Majority Floor Leader John McCormack (D-Mass) and Rep. Wilbur Mills (D-Ark), current chairman of the House Commit- tee of Ways and Means. He said that Mills had long been respect- ed in both parties. Prof. George Peek of the poli- tical science department agreed that it probably would be much harder to hold the Democrats to- gether, and he said the party might well experience an internal scrap over his successor. "McCormack is head and shoul- ders above the rest of the field," he said, commenting on various representatives' chances, "but if he is not selected, they will have to get a man who is not particular- ly identified with either South- ern conservatives or the Northern liberals." Influence Choice Prof. Peek suggested that Rep. Albert Rains (D-Ala), Dep. Carl Elliot (D-Ala), and Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Mo) were all "moder- ates." And too "Bolling is Ray- burn's man," he said, though it would be hard to say whether Rayburn had tried to influence the choice of his successor. Prof. Peek said that the situa- tion was "tough for Kennedy. If it comes out that he is support- ing someone for the post, con- gressmen could look on it as a disruption of their prerogative." There were a number of times when Rayburn was considered a possible Democratic nominee for the White House, but the fact that he didn't make it never disap- pointed him. "I might have been president if Franklin D. Roosevelt hadn't wanted to stay in the White House forever," he once quipped. "But really I think I'was born in the wrong section of the country and at the wrong time to ever become president. I don't care; I've achieved everything I wanted. Hell, I'd rather be speaker than 10 senators. I love the House." WASHINGTON ()-Reports of a marked buildup of United States military assistance to South Viet Nam received indirect con- firmation in the State Department yesterday and accounts from Sai- gon told of aerial reinforcements. But, at present, there apparently is to be no use of United States combat forces to check Communist guerrillas besetting that nation. Lincoln White, State Department press officer, told newsmen "we will fulfill our commitment to help the Republic of Viet Nam in responding to the Communist" threat and in its determination to remain free." iRenew Tall This significant statement came a day after President John F. Kennedy and the National Secur-O ity Council re-examined the Viet Nam situation in the light of re- cent on-the-scene findings by MOSCOW (M)-The Soviet Un- Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, Kenne- ion unexpectedly renewed strong dy's special military adviser. pressure on Finland yesterday for There have been reports that in the past few months reinforce- consultations on joint defense. ments from Communist North Viet First Deputy Foreign Minister Nam have boosted the Viet Cong Vassily Kuznetsov called in Fin- guerrilla forces in South Viet Nam nish Ambassador Euro Wuori and from 7,000 to 20,000. White said he could not go into told him "alarming news" makes detail on the steps the United the threat of West German ag- States is taking to counter this gression seem even worse than on multiplied threat to the govern- Oct. 30, when Moscow first asked ment of President Ngo Dinh Diem. for the consultations. r i May Request Nuclear Law WASHINGTON (P)-Adminis- tration sources predicted yester- day President John F. Kennedy will ask Congress for a stand-by law to authorize price and wage controls and rationing for use only in event of nuclear attack on the United States. Tension over Berlin has lent new urgency, officials said, to the long-standing proposal for "self- triggering" control authority - a plan, which the Eisenhower cab- inet debated several times, but never formally requested. Frank B. Ellis, director of the Office of Emergency Planning, can be expected to "bring the need forcefully to the President's attention" before Congress con- venes Jan. 10, an Administration source said. The plan for national survival contemplates that the government would immediately invoke, by proclamation, a general freeze of prices, wages, salaries and rents. Where necessary, governors, may- ors and other innal authorities FOLK MUSIC NEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS *Mike Seeger *Tom Paley *John Cohen Tomorrow-8:30 P.M. ARMORY . . . 223 E. Ann Tickets $1.25 at Disc Shop, Union, Record Center, and at Door ITALIAN AIRMEN: U.S., Blasts Congo Murders UNITED NATIONS WI) - The "Now comes confirmation of the the Italians in the UNCc United States declared last night latest revolting acts of murder of became known.h"romu that 'revolting murder" of 13 the Italian airmen, presumably by His demands for swifi Italian airmenee nfte CngdN- soldiers from Stanleyville," tion came in advance of He proposed that the UN make Security Council meetin tions action against the forces of available to the Central Congo crucial situation In the leftist leader Antoine Gizenga as Government "a small but effective ridden Congo. well as Katanga President Moise arfre oda ihscsin Tshombe. air force" to deal with secession- The 13 airmen-five of Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson ists both in Oriental and Katan- eight enlisted men-were told the UN Security Council the ga provinces. Kindu in Kivu province United States welcome the strong U Thant Angry UN officials here rec steps taken by acting Secretary- U Thant's angry words reflect- ports that some of th General U Thant ordering UN of- ed the shock and revulsion that were hacked to death a ficials to take every possible ac- swept through the UN headquar- bodies dr ag ge d thro tion to restore law and order in ters as details of the killings of streets. the Congo. U Thant denounced the slaying of the Italians by Congolese troops 171 P . ehond as an outrageous crime, and in- Word News ROuna structed UN"officials on the scene to make sure that those responsi- ble "get the punishment they de- By The Associated Press ing to ease economic sar serve." UNITED NATIONS-The So- the Dominican Republic Defy Government viet Union pleaded poverty yes- pending an OAS trade ri Stevenson said the Gizenga terday in protesting any increase proposal. forces were apparently operating in its United Nations budget as- The new stand, anne in Kivu province "in defiance of sessment and insisted the United the State Department, the central government. States must pay more. reports that Hector and Kuznetsov's oral presentation suddenly dashed the speculation of some diplomats here that a Finnish communique issued in Helsinki Tuesday represented a softening of the Soviet demands and that this particular situation would remain quiet for at least three months. The new development revived fears that Russia may now press for bases in Finland, endangering that country's precarious neutral- ity. Kuznetsov called alarming the visit of West German Defense Minister Franz Joseph Strauss to Norway and his talks there on military cooperation, imminent NATO maneuvers off Denmark's Baltic islands, and reports in Dan- ish newspapers that a Danish- West German agreement on a joint command would soon be reached. The Soviet Union was represent- ed as being uneasy over agitation in Finland among some political circles to upset the present rela- tions. Army Jubilant Over Success Of Nike Zeus POINT MUGU, Calif. (P) - A Nike Zeus solid fuel rocket streaked far over the Pacific yes- terday and scored the first test success for the new "missile kill- er" defense device. Jubilant Army officers, who had to destroy rockets used in the two previous tests because they veer- ed off course, pronounced No. 3 "a 100 per cent success." The Nike Zeus system when per- fected is expected to be able to knock down attacking nuclear tipped missiles. Unofficial reports say that the United States is going ahead with development of a new kind of nu- clear device, the neutronbomb. A Nike Zeus with a neutron bomb warhead, scientists say, could detonate oncoming missiles at far greater distance than with a con- ventional atomic warhead. I S S Harmon Kardon CITATION AR-JENSEN-Electro Voice Speakers DAYSTROM Hi Fi Kits GARRARD RECORD CHANGERS (ask about our cartridge deal-new models just * EICO-DYNA-SCOTT 1319 South University NO 8-7942 60 P4 KEDS - KEDS - KEDS - KEDS- KEDS ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME Beauty begins with TENOSIX LOTION! SALEl WOMEN'S WOMEN'S / MUSKET presents LAND HO: A NEW MUSICAL PREMIERE Nov. 29, 30 Dec. 1 & 2 at 8:30 P.M. Saturday Matinee 2:30 Size 4 toi 1 Narrow and Medium - - Sale Will Continue Until Entire Stock of Over 1100 Pairs R of Keds and Boots Are Gone. 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