I SUNDAY, JANUARY 16,196e? THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE T EN STJND4Y, JANUARY 16, 196~ TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE I + Nigerian Army Rebels New Indian Leader, Kashmir Discussed 1Hold LONDON (P4)-Rebellious Niger- ian Army troops seized Prime t Minister Sir Abubakar Tafewa Balewa yesterday and announced they had taken control of the country. A broadcast last night, however, said the Army chief re- mained loyal to the government and had regained control of the Nigerian capital, Lagos. A Radio Lagos broadcast, heard in Cotonou,, Dahpmey, said Gen. Aguiyu Ironsi, the Army com- mander, still had control of part of the Army and was "taking nec- essary measures to put down the mutiny." The broadcast said that in addi- tion to the prime minister, the Army rebels also had seized the IOfficials, Rio PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Woshtenow Avenue presents the 1965 film "DECISION TO DROP THE BOMB" (based on an NBC White Paper) STUDENT PANEL FOLLOWING -ALL STUDENTS WELCOME finance minister, Chief Festus Okotie Eboh. It said the where- abouts of both were unknown. Previous broadcasts said they had been under house arrest.. Assassination Two political leaders were re- ported assassinated. Earlier, Radio Lagos carried a broadcast by an unidentified but apparently high-ranking Army of- ficer saying the Army had taken power "to bring an end to gangs- terism and disorder." The later broadcast said a "mutinous general," not named, had taken brief control of the radio station but that "Gen. Ir- onsi now has control of the situ- ation." The situation outside the capital was not known. Refugees fleeing to Dahomey firom adjacent Ni- geria reported bloody incidents near the frontier. The distance between Cotonou and Lagos is about 60 miles. A broadcast monitored in the Ivory Coast identified the muti- nous unit as the 16th Regiment. It was not immediately known whether this was the only Army unit in rebellion. Loyalists in Control Troops loyal to the government were said to be in control of pub- lic buildings in the capital. Normal channels of communi- cation with Lagos were shut down. But reports reaching London said the premier of the Northern Region of Nigeria, Surdar Ahmado Bello, and his wife had been as- sassinated. Chief Samuel I. Akin- tola, premier of the Western Re- gion, also was killed, the reports said. Makarios Safe President Makarios of Syprus is visiting in Lagos but "there is no fear for his safety," authori- tative sources in London reported. Earlier, Cypriot High Commission sources in London expressed fears that Makarios, who is a Greek Orthodox archbishop, had been placed under house arrest. Murder, arson and general law- lessness have been spreading across Nigeria for several months arid reached Lagos area last week- end. The rioting and violence packed hospitals with victims mutilated by spears, axes, arrows and acid. It was politically inspired. Power Struggle Since last October, Sir Abuba- kar has been under considerable attack by opponents who claimed he rigged elections in Western Nigeria in order to keep power in the federation as a whole. His political allies had believed that by playing host at the first top-level conference of the Com- monwealth to be held outside Lon- don, Sir Abubakar had strength- ened his internal position. But it appears .that the depar- ture of the Commonwealth lead- ers was a signal for upheaval. NEW DELHI (k')-The govern- ment radio yesterday quoted President Kumaraswami Kamar- aj as saying "almost all" state chief ministers favor Indira Gan- dhi as the next prime minister of India. Mrs. Gandhi, daughter of the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, thus appeared to gain a strong boost in the race to be- come this country's next leader. Such a declaration from Kam- araj, head of the governing Con- gress party, carries immense weight in Indian politics. Elections The Congress party next Wed- nesday elects a new parliamentary leader, who is asked to form a gov. ernment. The race began Tuesday with the death of Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri, who succeeded Nehru in June, 1964. Home Minister Gulzari Lal Nan- da, sworn in to replace Shastri, opened a campaign to keep the job permanently. Private Talks Kamaraj spent the day confer- ring privately with politicians from throughout India. He re- ported that of 14 state chief min- isters he met, 11 had announced support of Mrs. Gandhi. One of Kamaraj's aides reported a twelfth chief minister later declared for Mrs. Gandhi. The surge of support for Mrs. Gandhi followed a strong bid by Morarji Desai, leader of the par- ty's right wing. Many of the party's proffes- sional politicians fear that De- sai ,a controversial figure, would harm party unity and thus cre- ate trouble at the polls next year. LONDON (P)-British authori- ties are convinced Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin promoted the India-Pakistan accord of Tashkent with backing from President Lyn- don B. Johnson. On the surface the encourage- ment appears implicit rather than explicit. But officials in London believe there was behind-the- scenes coordination b e t w e e n Washington and Moscow to get India and Pakistan to Tashkent. 'India's late Premier Lal Baha- dur Shastri and President Mo- hammed Ayub Khan of Pakistan both knew that resumption of American financial and other aid depended on their coming to terms. This aid was stopped when heavy fighting began over Kash- mir late last summer. In addition India, facing the threat of famine this year, was made acutely aware that pros- pects of emergency food shipments could be jeopardized by any re- newal of war. And Ayub, at his December meeting with the President in Washington, was left in no doubt about Johnson's dislike for Paki- stan's flirtation with Red China. In Washington, officials said that the calling of the Tashkent meeting was done entirely on So- viet initiative without prior con- sultation with the United States. But once that step was taken it is understood that the United States made clear to Russia through di- plomatic dhannels that it welcom- ed the Soviet move and hoped the meeting would be successful in producing an accord. This attitude was also express- ed publicly, and following the Ayub-Johnson conference, U.S. of- ficials said they welcomed- the Tashkent session. If you've never flown an airplane. just $5 puts you at the controls of a Cessna 150 For only $5 you can sit in the pilot's seat alongside a government-li- censed instructor and fly a Cessna 150 while he explains and demon- strates how easy a Cessna handles. Later you'll be presentedha flight log with your first flight lesson entered...a permanent record that is yours to keep and add to! You can fly every day or once a week or whatever your time will allow. Call Today, FLY NOW MICHIGAN'S LEADING CESSNA DEALER TWINING AVIATION, Inc. Ann Arbor Municipal Airport ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN NOrmandy 3-9321 Sunday, January 16 French Room 7 P.M. -i the 11 CANTERBURY HOUSE presents a BLACK WALL IIll Ii who will present CORY MULLEN doing folk things and others 8:30 p.m. 218 N. Division one dollar per person world News Roundup PRIME MINISTER Sir Abubakar Tafewa Balewa of Nigeria, who was reportedly ousted by re- bellious army troops, and Cyprus President Archbishop Makarios, who is visiting in the Nigerian capi- tol but is said to safe. DENIED SEAT- GOP Senator's BackPacifist By The Associated Press I OAKLAND, Calif. - Four men accused of dropping anti-Viet Nam war leaflets from an unlight- ed plane over the San Francisco Bay area were in jail yesterday. Their' flight Friday night was tracked by two radar stations and a plane piloted by the sheriff's air patrol, said Sgt. Carl Dahl of the Oakland police intelligence unit. RIO DE JANEIRO-Thousands of evacuees returned to the hill- side slums of Rio de Janeiro yes- terday after being washed out by four days of floods and landslides which took a toll of more than 400 lives. WASHINGTON battle in the historic conflict be- tween federal authority and states' rights reaches a showdown in the U.S. Supreme Court this week. Immediately at issue is the constitutionality of the 1965 Vot- ing Rights Act, which abolished literacy and other voter qualifi- cation tests in seven states of the Deep South. TOKYO-Communist China has lodged another strong protest with the Indonesian government, charging "murder" of Chinese nationals in Indonesia by anti- Chinese demonstrators, the New China News Agency reported yes- terday. - A major program schedule THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Tune in the Philharmonic each Sunday at 2:00 p.m., (WUOM-FM, 91.7 on your dial), brought to you through special arrangements between the University of Mich- igan, Ann Arbor Federal and the Liberty Music Shop. The current program schedule is: Sunday, January 16 STEINBERG, Conducting; DE LARROCHA, Pianist Schubert: Symphony No. 5; Mozart: Piano Concerto, K488; Busoni: Tanzwalzer; Rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances. Sunday, January 23 STEINBERG, Conducting; CORIGLIANO, Violinist Brahms: Haydn Variations; Lalo: Symphonie Espagnole; ANN ARBOR FEDERAL SAVINGS and LIBERTY MUSIC SHOP JOIN THE DAILY, BUSINESS STAFF WASHINGTON (P) - Eight Republican members of Congress last night called the refusal of the Georgia Legislature to seat H. Julian Bond "a dangerous attack on representative govern- ment." Bond, 26, a Negro, was denied his seat because of his support of a statement calling U.S. in- *volvement in Viet Nam "aggres- sion and his saying he admired the courage of draft card burners. Three GOP senators and five representatives issued a statement declaring the legislature's action threatens American political free- dom. "The Georgia Legislature has repudiated an honest and open election on the sole ground that the elected representative endors- ed unpopular 'views," they said. "None of us agree with Mr. Bond's views on the Viet Nam war; in fact, we strongly repudiate * these views. But unless otherwise determined by a court of law, which the Georgia Legislature is not, he is entitled to express them." The statement was signed by Sens. Clifford P. Case of New Jer-; sey, Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania and Jacob K. Javits of New York. Along with Reps. Silvih 0. Gon- tee, Massachusetts; Frank J. Horton, New York; Joseph M McDade, Pennsylvania; F. Brad- ford Morse, Massachusetts, and Stanley R. Tupper, Maine. They said as members of a po- litical minority 'themselves they are "actively conscious of the dangers involved in suppressing minority rights of any kind." They said the views of an elect- ed representative on an important, ground for refusing him his seat. "The whole purpose of repre- sentative government," they said, "is to reflect the views of all the people in the composition of their legislative bodies and to permit the free determination of policy as the result of open debate. "If unpopular views are to be arbitrarily excluded, as they have been in the Georgia Legislature, then the legislative process, free elections and free speech can have no meaning." Riots Overshadow Arrest, Memorial BOAC will leave you alone in Europe. TUSKEGEE, Ala. (P) - Sheriff Harvey Sadler said a group of young Negroes threw rocks and bottles in Tuskegee yesterday after one of them was arrested. He said he has called on the governor to send state troopers to aid local officers. Sadler said about 30 pickets, most of them Tuskegee Institute students, "went wild" after one of their number was arrested on a warrant sworn out by the op- erator of a drug store. According to the Macon County sheriff, the demonstrators, their numbers growing quickly, hurled rocks and bricks through about 14 windows, including those of the Tuskegee News and an auto supply store, and "climbed all over the Confederate monument" in the center of town. Negro College Sadler said, "We couldn't con- trol them with the number of of- ficers we had." He added that a group of instructors from Tuske- gee Institute, a predominantly Negro college, broke up the melee and the demonstrators went back In Hattiesburg, Miss., a memo- rial march for a civil rights leader slain by a fire-bomb attack on his home swirled into an uproar yes- terday when police arrested a marcher. The tense situation - teetering on the brink of violence-was fin- ally eased by civil rights leader Charles Evers' bellowed pleas and commands. The uproar came when two city officers forced their way into the ranks of the some 500 marchers to seize a Negro they said was drunk. Precedes Funeral The march was staged in down- town Hattiesburg shortly before the funeral for Vernon Dahmer, 58, former president of the For- rest County branch of the Na- tional Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People. In contrast to the march, the funeral was a scene of quiet weeping at a little church about five miles outside Hattiesburg. There was a scattering of whites among the 1,000 who attended. On a swinging BOAC Grand Orbit student tour you can ex- plore the coast of Portugal, gaze at the Rif Mountains of Morocco, take an Adriatic cruise, visit the Islands of Greece, absorb culture in Spain, France, Italy and England, find yourself a Scandinavian viking, lift your stein in Germany, Switzerland and Austria, play roulette in Monaco, and have plenty of time to roam around on your own. The whole package will cost you $1921.30* round trip from New York. And that in- cludes most meals, hotels and everything else. (You can also jet BOAC direct from Miami, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco, or Honolulu. And join the group in London.) To be sure you get what you pay for we hired some young tour leaders from Oxford and Cambridge and told them not to bug you. They were all for it. They said that's the only kind of tour they'd be interested in leading anyway. And that they weren't above a little freedom themselves while working their way through college. So that's the kind of deal you'll get on a BOAC student tour of Europe this summer. Clip the coupon for more facts. And cut out for Europe. *Based on economy jet fare and double or triple occupancy in hotels. 2~BOAC AND BOAC CUNARD Serrie operated for BOAC CUNARD by BOAC --------------- British Overseas Airways Corporation Dept. BE-178. I Box No. W~ 10, New York, SN.Y. 10011. MU 7-1600. SPlease send me details on the S1966 Student Tour Program., Name Address City State Zip Code -I I S....-.-.. .... e.... .-...... L------------ public issue do not constitute to the college. ... ..... .. .... ..}: :.::.v :. . ...... .......... ... .. ..... ... ..........x:. .. : ::r:::Y}}: <>r..,:..v.vv.. . . ..'>:r.......:.....' r}:.; v:::...:.,...... : .--:-- .... . .:.. Y. . . h,.v:: :;:::": .-:.:.... :.. :v.:w . . ..<.:..::..v..W. 4::}" x...f ..:.: ..:.;.... .. .. . . . . . . ...r-.. . ..!..:< v::,:: .:: v::.v..,:.,.,"v ,: v r:::'. {:.. v .: ?.v: ::. :. ....v... ..":.} ............. . / :.i.. . .r";:.;:v,{.. . . . . ..x'A z - ; s. 4 t 4 i .9 THE EARLY BIRD SUBLEASES u Save yourself time, aggravation and $$$ SUBLEASE NOW! The quickest and easiest way to sublet your apartment is through The Daily's special apartment supplement to be published Sunday, Janu- ary 30th (and distributed free on campus January 31st). For only five dollars you can place a one-column by four-inch i ... CANADIAN CAMP DAYS JAN. 18 and 19 0 DISCOVER JOB OPPORTUNITIES in Canadian Camps r MEET CANADIAN CAMP DIRECTORS " INFORMAL GET-TOGETHER 8:30 P.M. Tuesday evening, Jan. 18, Room 3G, Michigan Union for color slides, camp talk and refresh- ments. INDIVIDUAL PERSONAL INTERVIEWS Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. 18 and 19 . . . for appointment see Mr. Ward Peterson, Sum- mer Placement Office, Student Activities Building. " MANY CAMPS REPRESENTED including general land and water sports programs, co-ed= all boys, junior program, music and fine arts. * GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE students (at least sopho- mores) needed to fill the following positions: I WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION & RETENTION EASE PRESSURE - SAVE TIME - IMPROVE CONCENTRATION You can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to comprehend at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual mate- rial as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-in your required reading and in the additional reading you want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READ- ING method. Thus the reader avoids developingrany dependence upon external equipment in reading. An afternoon class and an evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY adiacent to the U. of M. campus, beginning on February 15. 11 I UI