THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE I THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE l GOP NEW YORK OP)-On the morn- ing after his greatest political victory, John Vleit Lindsay rolled his lanky frame out of bed and returned to the pavement he had been pounding for five months. It wasn't habit that sent Lind- say back onto the sidewalks where he had worn out four pairs of shoes, but political savvy. 'I told you that if I were elected mayor, I would come back," he told a crowd welcoming him in Brooklyn's Bedford - Stuyvesant section. "Now I'm back." Neighborhood This predominantly Negro-and predominantly Democratic-neigh- borhood was the first stop on Lindsay's walking tour to thank the people for electing him the 103rd mayor of the nation's big- gest city, his hometown town. This was the sort of personal contact with the voters which has worked magic in the political ca- reer of the 43-year-old, 6-foot-3, 180-pound, boyishly handsome congressman from Manhattan's "Silk Stocking" District. He never has lost an election. The Republican mayor-elect was faced Wednesday with getting this Rebel ~Sa ys I JAKARTA, Indonesia ()-An improvement in the critical situa- tion in central Java was reported yesterday and thousands of rebel forces there were said to be sur- rendering. Radio Jakarta said the army chief, Maj. Gen. Suharto, report;- ed on central Java at a morning cabinet meeting attended by Pres- ident Sukarno. The radio added Rebir battered city "on the move again" with a Democratic crew. Victory His election victory Tuesday over Democrat Abraham D. Beame failed to carry in any of the young congressman's fusion team. And while his personal triumph makes him a national GOP figure, Lindsay faces staggering problems in a City Hall which has been a political deadend for all previous occupants. The new City Council president is Democrat Frank O'Connor, who promised cooperation with Lindsay but said he would not be a rubber stamp. A jubilant Governor Nelson Rockefeller said Lindsay had made New York "a Republican town." Only Four Votes But Lindsay can be certain of only his own four votes on the 22- vote Board of Estimate, the city's key budget body. The Democrats have 16, counting 4 each for O'Connor and the new comptrol- ler, Democrat Mario Procaccino, who also ran under Beame's ban- ner. The Democrats also maintained 9" dt in a firm 37 to 7 grip on the City Council. During the campaign, Lindsay charged that 20 years of Demo- cratic rule had "brought the city to its knees." He pointed to budget deficits, a water shortage, a severe crime and narcotics problem, slums, inadequate transportation, air pollution, dirty streets and myriad other problems. Republican JFK Sometimes called a Repuglican John F. Kennedy, he now is being compared with Fiorello LaGuardia, the late mayor whose campaign tactics Lindsay copied in winning City Hall. Like LaGuardia 32 years ago, Lindsay cloaked his Republican- ism in a multiparty "fusion" or- ganization, winning Liberal party endorsement and wooing many re- form Democrats. As a consistently liberal con- gressman, Lindsay frequently had bolted his party and in 1964 he disavowed Barry Goldwater, the GOP presidential candidate. Mantle Thus he wore his campaign mantle of nonpartisanship so na- turally that the Democratic can- N.. didate purchased full-page news- paper advertisements to remind voters that Lindsay was a Repub- lican. One irony of the success of Lindsay's "fusion" tactics is that his victory projected him into the front ranks of Republicans na- tionally. Lindsay, a social registerite, was born on Manhattan's West Side on Nov. 24, 1921. As a boy, he played football under the Queens- borough Bridge, but he went to private schools-Buckley School here and St. Paul's in Concord, N.H., where he prepped for Yale. Ivy Leaguer The Ivy League influence is re- flected now in his clothing, and his lifelong interest in athletics now manifests itself in riding, swimming, tennis, skiing and sail- ing. He also mixes in some bowl- ing and bike riding. Newly graduated from Yale, Lindsay served as a naval officer aboard a destroyer in the Mediter- ranean and Pacific. He returned from World War II with five battle stars and returned to Yale for his law degree, which he re- ceived in 1948. REP. JOHN V. LINDSAY posed with family in home yesterday. Surrender udone sian that 100,000 university students declared they will help crush the rebel forces, mostly Communist or pro-Communist. Several thousand of the stu- dents paraded through Jakarta's streets demanding dissolution of the Indonesian Communist party, blamed for masterminding the coup attempt against Sukarno Oct. 1. The armed forces n Angkatan Bersendjata sa 3000 Communists surren military authorities in K central Java 17 miles eas jakarta. Jogjakarta hast of the cities reported und munist terror attacks. Suharto also reported first surrender appeal t bers of the armed for Eshkol Leads Israeli Voting aii Ben-Gurion is Roundly Defeat Begins General ewspaper joined the rebels had met with a id about good response, Jakarta'radio said. dered to laten, in More trouble was reported in t of Jog- eastern Java, where Communists been one burned 230 tons of sugar at Situat- ier Com- bondo and tried to destroy a sugar mill at Pragdjekan. that his The ,army pressed its purge of o mem- Communists in office. The official ces who news agency Antara said 57 In- donesian Communists had been dismissed temporarily from the House of Representatives, an ad- visory body. Among the 'Reds ousted were M. H. Likman and Njoto, No. 2 and 3 leaders of the party and both members of Sukarno's cab- inet. D. N. Aidit, the party leader, has been in hiding since the coup nists lost attempt. ree. More than 1300 Communists two par- were fired by the Maritime Min- of four istry, Antara said, and 14 Com- hat with munist or pro-Commuist uiver- .1 aim at sities and colleges have been clos- deputies ed. the nine Meanwhile, diplomatic sources pam or said a mob attack Tuesday on and five Red China's consulate in Medan, ikol now northern Sumatra, might balk Su- coalition. karno's efforts to maintain close his Rafi ties with Peking. t in the About 100,000 demonstrators with Esh- crowded in and around the con- n affair, sulate, tore down its flag and rs ago in shield, and presented a petition ed a ju- protesting Red China's backing of air. the rebel movement. Diplomats said Peking is ex- pected to file a protest and pre- dicted the attack would jeopar- dize talks Sukarno had been hav- ing with Chinese Ambassador Yao Chung-ming. After each talk, Su- karno has insisted relations with past or Peking will remain as friendly as may sit ever. But the army has been in- 1 decide sisting Peking backed the coup y of fail- attempt. nt of the An Indonesian official accused Communist China of not honoring a navigational agreement, An- The issue tara said. JERUSALEM (P)--Israel's Par- liament elections may have spell- ed the end of the political line for David Ben-Gurion, 79, who saw his new Rafi party go down to resounding defeat. The patriarch of Israeli politics, Ben-Gurion came out of retire- ment to form his party as a splin- ter from the Napal party, which he helped found. Decisive returns from Tuesday's 'election show Ben-Gurion's for- mer protege, Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, is assured 44 votes in the new 120-seat Knesset (Parlia- ment). The Rafi party got only 10 seats. Eshkol's two-party combination Wor By The Associated Press LONDON--Prime Minister Har- old Wilson said yesterday there are still wide differences between the British and Rhodesian govern- ments on granting independence to that white-governed central African colony. Wilson told the House of Com- mons both he and Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith were agreed on, setting up a royal com- mission to sound out the Rhode- sian people on the independence issue, but they were far apart on what instructions to give the com- mission. Wilson said his differences with Smith "are very great, not merely as legal matters, but because of the political differences, and I fear they may represent some- thing deeper than physical ap- proaches to the problem." * * * SAIGON - U.S. Marines and Vietnamese government t r o o p s joined Wednesday, nearly 2,000 strong, to clear Viet Cong from the area of Chu Lai, whose air strip was the target of a guerrilla suicide raid a week ago. The operation, 340 miles north- east of Saigon, was dubbed Black Ferret. Briefing officers said the Marines drew sporadic sniper fire IRREGULARITIES? Cleveland Election Results Contested LOUIS LOMAX IS COMING Writer-In-Residence Program Committee Help Needed: " BOOKLET " SCHEDULING " PUBLICITY SIGN UP NOW In UAC Office -the Mapai and the somewhat more leftist Achdut Avodah party -will search for enough other votes to form a coalition govern- ment. Eshkol was reported as not eager to take in his former friendsfrom the Rafi party, particularly Ben- Gurion. The result of the Israel elections shows there was no landslide in the state's internal sociological setup. The Herut and Liberal parties kept their same strength, 27 seats. Both conservative, they announc- ed they would remain in opposi- tion to Eshkol's government. The religious block lost 8 seats but retained 17. The Commu one seat but retained thr Observers say Eshkol'st ties can expect the votes Arabs. They predicted t] these 48 seats, Eshkol wi: a coalition with the 17 from the religious bloc,t deputies from the Ma United Workers party, independent liberals. Esh governs under a similarc Thus Ben-Gurion and party would be left oui cold. Ben-Gurion broke w kol mainly over the Lavo a security foulup 10 year Egypt. Ben-Gurion wante dicial inquiry into the aff CLEVELAND, Ohio (IP)-Carl B. Stokes, Negro Democrat who bucked the party organization and came within 2,458 votes of pulling an upsetin Cleveland's mayoral race, plans a court action to stop Mayor Ralph S. Locher's inaugur- ation Monday. Stokes, 38, first Negro Demo- crat ever - elected to the Ohio Legislature, planned to consult aides before deciding whether to seek a recount. But hetsaid he had to block the inauguration. "Once he-Locker-is sworn in, we're out in the cold," he ex- plained. Stokes added his aides are com- piling a report on alleged irregu- larities in the balloting. He would not cite any specific reports of irregularities, but said he had asked Secretary of State Ted W. Brown for an investigation. Brown, in turn, said in Columbus he was suggesting that the Cuyahoga County (Cleveland) Board of Elections impound the ballots. Election board officials said they had not heard from Brown but indicated they would go along with his request. Political observers, meanwhile, were studying the vote by which Stokes, with 3,000 volunteers head- ed by Dr. Kenneth Clement, a noted surgeon but political ama- teur, came close to becoming the first Negro mayor of the nation's eighth-largest city or any of the nation's metropolitan cities. Locher's margin of 87,833 to 85,375 for Stokes gave the Dem- ocratic incumbent a margin of only 1 per cent on the 236,977 votes cast. Republican Ralph J. Perk and Ralph A. McAllister, like Stokes an independent Demo- crat, apparently divided Stokes' opposition, polling 41,100 and 22,660 votes respectively. Leaders of the Negro commu- nity, which accounts for one-third of the city's 337,803 registered voters, interpreted the close vote as a repudiation of Mayor Locher's policies as much as support for Stokes. Richard L. Gunn, attorney for the United Freedom Movement, called on the mayor "as a start" to lift trespass charges against UFM leaders arrested for a sit in at the mayor's office last summer. Negro leaders have been critical of Locher for his refusal to see the UFM leaders and for his re- fusal to discuss with them state- ments made by Police Chief Rich- ard Wagner at a legislative hear- ing in Columbus. The chief, testifying on propo- sals to end capital punishment in Ohio, was quoted as saying the death penalty was a deterrent to members of certain Negro ex- tremist organizations that advo- cate violence. Locher, 50, a Democrat who won by a heavy plurality two years ago, gave no indication of plans to make any changes. But he is- sued a statement saying his first job is to "bring harmony and unity to the city." Second Floor, Union B'nai B'rith H illel Foundation 1429 Hill Street SABBATH SERVICE STUDENT ADDRESS and DISCUSSION on: "Must Religion Be Meaningful?" Friday, November 5, at 7:30 P.M. sharp in the ZWERDLING-COHN CHAPEL Participating in the Service: Ed Adler Judy Elkin Sue Ellen Lorge Marcia Berlin Marc Gertner Sue Meyers Leslie Klein John Planer, Cantor The Hillel Choir under the direction of Mike Robbins Read and Use Daily Classifieds I.- i I News Roundup and suffered light casualties, but captured six Viet Cong and seized an enemy battle flag in the open- ing phase. * * * PARIS-With secrecy befitting a military headquarters, Charles de Gaulle is preparing to tell Frenchmen tonight whether he wants them to elect him to a seven-year presidential term that would end when he is 82. The president's message, to be broadcast at 8 p.m. (2 p.m. EST), will be recorded a few hours ear- lier. To guard against any leaks, the television technicians will be kept inside the Elysee Palace un- til the speech goes on the air. Most Frenchmen think De Gaulle will be a candidate in the Dec. 5 election. Two separate newspaper polls have indicated that 75 to 85 per cent of the pop- ulation expects him to run in the nation's first popular election of a president. * * * WASHINGTON - Trial of the U.S. Communist party was further delayed yesterday as court offi- cials tried to find in this federal city 75 potential jurors who have never worked for the U.S. govern- ment. U.S. Dist. Judge William B. Jones has ruled that no present federal employes on the panel that wil whether the party is guilt ure to register as an age Soviet Union. * * * UNITED NATIONS -I of seating Communist C the United Nations is exp come before the General. on Monday, diplomatic said yesterday. A U.S. su pressed confidence in tli of the United States to1 Peking regime out of th Nations. To the readers and admirers of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead Nathaniel Branden's recorded lectures on Objectivism the philosophy of ATM RAND and its application to psychology Begin Monday, Nov. 8, 8 P.M. Ann Arbor Federal Savings & Loan Assoc. 401 E. Liberty St., Ann Arbor Admission opening night-$2.25 Student admission-$1.75 Nathaniel Branden Institute, Inc. For descriptive brochure, contact NBI's Local Representative Mr. Irving J. Ralph 2635 W. Delhi Road Ann Arbor, Mich. 48103 Ph.: 663-3205 (eves. & wknds.) Dr. Richard Meyier speaking on presents UNITARIAN STUDENT GROUP SOCIAL SYSTEMS OF THE FUTURE I EiI China in pected to Assembly sources )urce ex- e ability keep the e United h 1 THE STUDENT ZIONIST ORGANIZATION of Hillel invite EVERYONE to meet the SZO Midwest Regional Executive at BRUNCH Discussion on "Is There Jewish Creativity in America?"- "Israeli and American Views" SUN., NOV. 7, 11 A.M.-1002 Packard Join The Daily Sports Staff UA(00 INTERNATIONAL IMAGE: E In order to a accurate, 'w academics, you have dc which pertai ii~ W Inorertoa ct effectively and knowledgeably SGC needs ell documented information in the areas of student economic welfare, housing, etc. If ne or would like to do research on topics RENT-A-CAR ILLINI SPECIAL $65-No Mileage Charge Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday Spotlight Africa " TWO MOVIFS I V 1 EALINU M ~IIV LUP 1 Mt Vi UP IM