. , w THE' MICHIGAN DATINY Ad e naner Pa ces Vote Losses BONN (A )-Konrad Adenauer, despite his 85 years and the set- back his. Christian Democratic Party suffered in Sunday's par- liamentary election, showed iron determination yesterday to try to hold onto the chancellorship of- West Getmany. His party's loss of about 5 per cent of the total vote and 40 seats in the Bundestag (lower house) cost the chancellor the absolute majority which the party has held will have to be formed before the for a dozen years. Bundestag sits Oct. 17 and chooses This apparently has put him at a new chancellor is not expected the mercy of his political ene- to mean -any weakening of this mies, who are bent in bringing country's - membership in the about his downfall. But he made Western alliance or major change it clear yesterday he will not give in its domestic policies. up without a fight. He told a news But the existence of a lame duck conference he had no intention of government until then will keep entering a coalition with the new- the Big Four powers under a dis- ly powerful socialists. advantage in their attempts to The coalition government that I reach agreement among them- selves and begin negotiations with the Soviet Union on the Berlin crisis. There had been hope that indecision about West Germany would end Sunday with a clearcut majority for one party or the oth- er, which then could make bind- ing international commitments. Official preliminary calcula- tions for the new four-year Bun- destag show the Christian Dem- ocrats down from 281 seats to 241 seats, so that they no longer have the strength to pick a chancellor single-handedly.- The balance of power now lies with the liberal Free Democrats, who went up from 43 to 66 seats. They are insisting that Adenauer be dropped in a coalition govern- ment and replaced by the No. 2 Christian Democrat, D e p u t y Chancellor and Economics Minis- ter Ludwig Erhard. VOLUNTARY MOVE Georgia Tech Desegregates ATLANTA () - Three Negro youths peacefully and without'in- to a new era of integration in pub- Wallace said the loud sti cident became students at Geor- lic-financed education at all lev- "Old Black Joe' came fron gia Tech yesterday in the first els. ord player in a nearby fre voluntary desegregation in the Tech voluntarily opened its house. It was halted quick: state's public education system. doors to Negroes after the federal his advice. courts ordered a change in the Earlier in the day, Gov. They started getting theirbear- traditional segregation pattern at Vandiver disclosed that ings as orientation week for'fresh- the University of Georgia and At- agreed with President Ed men opened at the school famous lanta's public schools.- arisodwo mrembdenE both for its production of engi-li Harrison and two members neers and top-ranked football A protective escort of state pa- state board of regents in a teams. trolmen saw the trio to the doors on the order making the It was a peaceful transition of the infirmary on the sprawling off-limits 'to newsmen. from the old Southern way of life 142-acre campus near Atlanta's and its rigid segregation customs business district. Classes start next week at the church Group 5,000-student college located on aGru Truck Production 142-acre"campus adjacent to the Debates Allian business district of this city of A t GM Resumes more than a million inhabitants. DETROIT - Two car Robert Wallace, publications di- Episcopalians yesterday' Detroit (AW - General Motors' rector, made a noon announce- off of a historic struggle ov truck division resumed production ment to reporters who had volun- far they should go in form yesterday, turning out the first tarily observed a Tech rule bar- ligious compacts with vehicles since the start of a strike ring them from the campus which other Christian groups, that closed down most GM's 129 said: Presented for action 1 United States plants last Monday. Georgia Tech's 20-man security church's triennial general c But the company's five passen- force, augumented by one police- tion was a far-reaching p ger divisions still were paralyzed man and several plainclothesmen, for merger negotiations w by strikes at key stamping and patrolled the campus but found United Presbyterians, Met assembly plants. no duties to perform. and the United Church of World News Roundun By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -- A United States spokesman yesterday re- jected a Soviet charge that two West German jet fighters deliber- ately flew across East German territory. He said the pilots had only made "an honest error." State Department Press Offi - cer. Joseph W. Reap denied the accusations sent to the United States, Britain and France by the Soviet Union Sunday. STEWART AIR FORCE BASE, N.Y.--Two Texas towers off the coast of New England have been ordered evacuated immediately due to the possibility that hurri- cane Esther may hit that area, the Boston air defense sector said last night. The towers are radar stations that form part of the United States-Canadian defense warning system. N.Y. -- News of Dag Hammar- skjold's death was a shock to Wall Street yesterday and prices de- clined sharply on a world front. Also disconcerting to market chartists was a decisive penetra- tion of a "support level" repre- sented by the August closing low of 714.03 in the Dow Jones in- dustrial average. The lowest reading of this aver- age was 708.6d at 2 p.m. but the market closed at 714.03. PASSES HOUSE: Submit Education Bill For Kennedy Approval WASHINGTON ()-The House yesterday sent to President John F. Kennedy the remains of his ambitious school aid program, thoroughly shredded in months of congressional pulling and hauling. The 342-18 vote was anticlimac- tic. It merely confirmed House passage of the two-part $900-mil- lion bill two weeks ago. The Sen- To DisCuss Debate Rule WASHINGTON (P) - Leaders. on both sides of the -fight over the proposed tightening of Sen- ate's anti-filibuster rule agreed yesterday that a move to shut off debate and force the issue to a vote is likely to fail. . The vote on the debate-limita- tion. motion, requiring a two- thirds majority of senators vot- ing, Will be taken one hour after the Senate meets today. There was some tendency to hedge forecasts, however, because of uncertainty over how many. senators will be on hand for the showdown. Most estimates were that 80 to 85 of the 100 senators will be here to vote. ate meanwhile had approved the same bill, All that was left of the Presi- dent's far-reaching school pro- gram in the bill was two-year ex- tension of the impacted areas program and the National De- fense Education Act. The first helps school districts with a high percentage of chil- dren of federal employes. The idea is designed to strengthen the. teaching of mathematics, science and languages in response to the Russian spurt in space technolo- gy. Some key backers of the ad- ministration program have con- ceded that the possibility of a wider school aid program is dead for at least two years, and possibly until after the next presidential election. Both programs that were ap- proved had wide support among conservatives. They had been wrapped into the Kennedy school program in an effort to win votes for the more- controversial sec- tions, such as $2.5 billion in fed- eral- grants for public school con- struction and teachers' salaries. The fact that the extensions are for two years rather than one means they are lost to the ad- ministration as levers for use in seeking a wider school program next year. D%. I . I I ANTI-NUCLEAR MEETING - Philosopher Bertrand Russell, dean of the nuclear disarmament movement, lower right, ad- dresses a Traflagar Square crowd in London recently. Magistrates Move To Curb 'Ban-The-Bomb' Campaign LONDON ( -- Magistrates worked in relays yesterday to nip a civil disobedience campaign by Britain's Ban-The-Bomb nuclear disarmers. Ten London courts and one in Scotland operated at a brisk clip, slapping fines-and a few jail sentences-on hundreds of the nearly 1,700 arrested in a week- t il end sit-down protest in London's Trafalgar Square and at the Unit- ed States Polaris submarine base at Holy Loch. Earl Bertrand Russell, jailed a week ago as leader of the ban- the-bombers, was let out of Brix- ton prison a few hours before the courts got down to work. Defiant and unrepentant, the 89-year-old pacifist called to his followers "re- sist while time permits." There has been nothing quite like the Ban-The-Bomb move-4 ment since militant suffragettes chained themselves to the railings of Downing Street half a century ago and finally won the women's vote. Men, women and adolescents, famed and unknown, the demon- strators werearraigned 10 atra time on the charge of disregard-IS ing police directions to clear the streets. the UNIVERSITY of MICHIGAN BAND ltie October 13 8:30 P.M. Hill Aud. All Seats Reserved $1.00 1.50 2.00 TICKETS ON SALE AT HILL AUD. BOX OFFICE Beginning October 4 10 00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. S E k f, y r _. f J ____ _ , __ __ ,,, / . *. ~t§::a".t.Qrr +;f:::{? : '{~rvai.:".". r;; ;, f rrfiv~'~v . '}}: }":,rr{'S R.TjF'" ." " '{'' ' y}~.".;. r"'' tft . C, {'i4"",f?+.".: .A..,s: .cs..s.:}; r .l NO 3UTTS ABOUT IT! SENIORS GRAD STU Sign up for your SENIOR and JDENTS 4t an Daily has a Place for YOU PICTURES Organizational Meetings Tuesday, Sept. 19 Wednesday, Sept. 20 Thursday, Sept. 21 4-l5 PM 4-15 P.M. 7.15 P.M. On the Diaa Monday thru Thursday I till 5 o.m. 1 0*1 -of I *IT,* i#a-.U 1TS*I . e 1 .1v1 11 .