I WOMEN'S RUSH PRESENTS DILEMMA See Editorial Page cl: r SirF ,I* :43 a t I COLD High--20 Low-1U Snow today and Monday Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 95 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, 17 JANUARY 1965 SEVEN CENTS 0d SIX PAGES Rainey, Price Returne As U.S. Officials Apprel l to jail, LIh A I4 O'Brien to Burundi Premier Killed Stay with Seven Politicians Seized for Assassination d 1 6 NAIROBI, Kenya (A') -Diplo- res en t matsreported yesterday the arrest of seven Burundi politicians in "T connection with the assassination Initiate N ew JOHNSON CITY (R) - Two of of that East African nation's the late President John F. Ken- premier, appointed, only recently nedy's associates are leaving, the in an apparent move to check Red t t m PWhite House staff, but President Chinese influence. The assassin A ttem pts A t Lyndon B. Johnson has talked a was reported still at large, how- third into remaining. ever. P os onJohnson announced at a news Premier Pierre Ngendandumwe, Prosecution1 conference yesterday that P. Ken- was shot in the back Friday night neth O'Donnell and David F. Po*- outside a maternity hospital ers have resigned as presidential where his wife had just given Twin Indictments assistants. birth to a baby. Ngendandumwe But Johnson said Lawrence was 29 or 30. Reveal New Charge O'Brien, another close associate of Western diplomats reached by the assassinated President, has telephone in Burundi said the na- MERIDIAN, Miss. (P)-United agreed to stay on at his urging tion's capital, Bujumbura (former- States marshals yesterday arrested as presidential assistant for con-n ly Usumbura), was being patrolled 16 white men charged by the Jus- gressional relations. by troops and police led by'Bel- tice Department with a Ku Klux And for the time being, at least, gian officers. Before independence Klan-inspired plot that snuffed O'Brien at $30,000 will be the in 1962, Burundi was a UN trus- out the lives of three civil rights highest. paid member of the teeship administered by Belgium. workers last summer., White House staff._ - -- -. _ ._ ..,.......,.,...f. .._,. .... ...a., .v....a. : t i PREMIER NGENDANDUMWE -Associated Press INDONESIA'S PRESIDENT AHMED SUKARNO (left) conferred yesterday with Indonesian Com- munist Party leader D. N. Aidit in Jakarta yesterday. Aidit requested Sukarno to arm Indonesian peasants and workers to defend the country. Both Indonesia, with Communist aid, and Malaysia, with the aid of Britain, are building up armed forces in border areas. Britain Sukarno Step Up Forces KUCHING, Malaysia (MP)-Brit- In some places howitzers haveI ish transports flew another de- tachment of Gurkha troops into Malaysian Borneo yesterday amid reports that Indonesia is rein- forcing troops on its side of the border. British intelligence sources said there were indications the In- donesians were building their force on the western end of the border with Malaysia to about 3000 men. They said the arrival of the Gur- khas - tough mountain people from Nepal-boosted the strength of the Malaysian defenders to about that number. Two more planeloads of Gurkhas are due in Kuching within the next two days. The newly arrived Gurkhas stepped off their planes and were taken immediately into the jungles toward the western border with Indonesia. Malaysia's states of Sarawak and Sabah occupy al- most all of Northern Borneo. In- dependent Brunei forms the rest. Frontier Most Malaysian troops are atj the eastern end of the 900-mile frontier. The 10,000 British, Gurkha and Malaysian soldiers in North Bor- neo are jungle fighters who havej been through eight weeks of jun- gle training in Malaya.1 British policy is to keep mov- ing patrols from one place to an- other.E "We have sealed the front by keeping it fluid," one officer said., been set up. The British believe that if the Indonesians cross the border the British will be able to use heli- copters to airlift small parties to areas from which they would move into the jungle and press the In- donesians from all sides. Patrols and forward gun em- placements are supplied partly by helicopter but mostly by para- chute drops from airplanes. Ammunition These planes are operating in the western area, dropping.food and ammunition, including how- itzer shells, at the rate of a half a million pounds in weight a month. "We drop them everything but water," said one officer. "Even live goats and live chickens for the Gurkhas to slaughter. They have plenty of water." In Indonesia, President Sukar- no told a cornerstone-laying cere- mony for a Soviet-supplied atomic reactor that Indonesia wants peace and will not fight unless attacked. This pretty much reiterated what he said in a news conference at Jakarta Thursday. Malaysian officials said, how- ever, they would not believe Su- karno unless he showed through deeds that he wanted peace. Malaysian d e f e n s e officials, shrugging off Sukarno's remarks, watched war games designed to test air defenses around Singapore. home base for Britain's Far East forces. Neshoba County Sheriff Law- rence Rainey and his deputy, Cecil Price were among those quietly taken into custody at Philadel- phia. The arrests started a two-prong- ed attempt by the federal gov- ernment to prosecute the men ac- cused of a conspiracy that brought death to two white and one Ne- gro civil rights workers. A federal grand jury at Jack- son indicted 18 persons in all. But only 16 arrests could be con- firmed. The other two men were believ- ed to be somewhere outside Mis- sissippi. The twin indictments revealed for the first time a government charge that Price had held the vic- tims in the Neshoba County jail while the mob gathered. The two indictments were bas- ed on old laws enacted during re- construction days. One charges the 18 with con- spiracy to violently deny civil rights of the trio. The second alleges the 18 men took part in a coispiracy involving law enforce- ment officers to illegally punish the trio. Only the state could bring mur- der charges innthis case, since the slayings did not occur on federal property. In Mississippi, the max- imum penalty for murder is death. The Neshoba County grand jury meets next month and could con- sider the case. If convicted on the first count of the federal indictment, the 18 men could each be sentenced to a maximum of ten years in prison and fined $10,000. Conviction on the four-count second indictment carries a penalty of one year and $1,000 fine on each count. Personal Friends O'Donnell, Powers, and O'Brien' all were personal and political friends of Kennedy long before his presidential days. For exam- ple, Powers helped with Kennedy's first campaign for the House. Johnson announced also that Myer Feldman, White House spe- cial counsel, has submitted his resignation. Feldman will be suc- ceeded by Lee White, a Nebraskan, who has been Feldman's assistant. Johnson also dealt with many other domestic and foreign prob- lems in a question-and-answer period during the news confer- ence. The President: Discussions -Said there have been discus- sions with some Soviet officials on his bid for a visit by Soviet lead- ers to this country. He said he could not gohfurther nor would he talk about his hopes of visiting Europe or Latin America this year. -Asked whether he expects any changes in his cabinet within the next few months, said "I don't think I have the answer to that." -Said about one-third of the budget has been completed and sent to the printer, but declined to give any hint of his total money requests and in particular whether it willcall for spending more than $100 billion. -Reiterated strong support for a multilateral nuclear - armed naval force manned by various' nationals within the North Atlan- tic Treaty Organization. -Declined to talk about any military operations in Southeast Asia beyond South Viet Nam on the ground that it would not be helpful or desirable. -Issued a statistical report on the growth of the nation's econ- omy last year in which he de- scribed the dip in unemployment as most important of all. ernmnt pesued Nendadum Group Discusses I A uthorities on Poverty To Attend Symposium By ELLIOT BARDEN "Recently people have become aware of 'the invisible America,' the slum-ridden areas the suburbanites never see, the poverty pockets far off the main highways. Since the publication of Michael Harring- ton's 'The Other America,' this awareness of the American poverty problem has increased and is now most concretely evident in the recent creation of the federal Office of Economic Opportunity," Jack Warren, '65, chairman of the Special Projects Committee of the Union, said recently. In an effort to focus attention on this national problem the Union and the League are co-sponsoring a symposium on poverty. Seized The diplomats said those seized for questioning were a former premier, a former justice minister, a former cabinet chief and labor union and youth leaders. None was named. Red China has a large embassy in Bujumbura and officials in the Congo claim the rebellion in the northeast Congo against Premier Moise Tshombe's government has been supplied and financed, at least in part, by Chinese diplo- mats in Burundi. In Brussels, a foreign ministry spokesman said the Belgian gov- ernment presumed Ngendandum- r r we's death was a "political murder." "We are shocked," the spokes- man said. "He was a man we knew well. He was a deputy premier when Burundi became independent in 1962. We had many contacts with him in Brussels, New York and Bujumbura. He was a diffi- cult but loyal partner. We pay tribute to his loyalty." Reports reaching Washington said Ngendandumwe was shot by an assassin who had been working on the terrace of the hospital. These reports said the assassin had been recognized by someone around the premier. Ngendandum- we's death was reported instan- taneous. Second to Die Ngendandumwe was the second Burundi premier to meet his end' by assassination. Nine months be- fore independence in 1962, Crown Prince Louis Rwagasore was shot dead as he sat in a cafe. Five men were executed in 1963 for complicity in his assassination. He was a son of the king and the nation's first premier. This was Ngendandumwe's sec- ond time around as premier. He had been relieved of his post last April by Mwami (king) Mwam- butsa IV. Nevertheless, Mwam- butsa chose Ngendandumwe to ac- company him on a visit to Wash- ington and meetings with Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson last May. Eight days ago the king return- ed Ngendandumwe to the pre- miership, replacing Premier Albain Niyamwaya. Belgian diplomatic sources said the king regarded Niyamwaya as pro-Chinese. Ngendandumwe has been described as being opposed to what he had called the growth of Red Chinese influence in the country. Belgian sources said there is in.- tense political rivalry in Burundi between pro - Chinese "feudal" leaders of the Tutsi tribe and the "Young Turks" of the Hutu tribe, trained in Western universities. The two tribes have a long history of mutual hatred. Course Evaluation By PETER R. SARASOHN The coordinating committee compiling a course description1 booklet met yesterday to irqn out difficulties with the questionnaire it will use. The committee consists of representatives from eight major student organizations. It announced that the questionnaire which will supply the information for the booklet will be distributed this week in all University housing units. It is still uncertain how to1 handle distribution to apartment dwellers, the eight representativesl said. The questionnaires will concentrate on specific information. - >Rating of courses and professors" "A skAon a scale will be avoided since U nions the survey will not be scientific. nThe committee indicated that graduate students will probably Codo the evaluating of the estion- U .S. Control naires and the final booklet will be released within two weeks. It WASHINGTON (P)-Rail labor is essential that the deadline be union chiefs urged yesterday that met to allow students its use be- the government buy and oper- fore preregistration for the fall ate the country's railroads: A man- begins. agement spokesman called the Student reaction has been var- proposal a pressure tactic by frus- led. Some think it will be "a trated men. great help to the grapevine" to know the feelings of a great num- G. E. Leighty, chairman of the ber of students concerning courses Railway Executives' Association, and professors available during announced the group's decision, preregistration. Others have in- which came as a reversal of a 45- dicated that they "are in favor" year-old union policy of opposition of the publication but believe it to nationalization of the carriers. "really doesn't matter because you -°-- can't get anything you want in preregistration anyway because all the good courses close in the first three or four weeks." Some of the faculty are optimis- tic about the booklet, but for the most part their attitude is "wait- and-see." Assembly House Council, The Daily, Graduate Student Council, . Interfraternity Council, Inter- quadrangle Council, the Union, * Panhellenic Association and the League are woiking together on the publication. The final booklet will be printed as a special supple- ment in - The Daily.r One of the big problems of the questionnaire is its wording. It was agreed at the meeting that the wording be unambiguous toc "illicit the correct response fromC the student.' One problem still exists. IQC .J has voiced approval of the projects -Daily-James Keson and indicated its willingness to work with the other organizations fuseum of Art but has yet to senda representa- tive to any meetings. " /iIf IQC doesn't lend its help itf W ork s will make distribution of the ques- 7 7 EI tionnaires in the quadrangles very difficult for it will force the com mittee to deal directly with in, necessarily obscure to weak dividual houses. This will create men. That which can be made more work and confusion. explicit to the Idiot is not The committee will meet againb worth my care." Monday to approve the final drafte Late Recognition of the questionnaire.c Although his approach wast unconventional, he was a mas- - kle ter craftsman, having served an L eri apprenticeship of seven years to a master-engraver, followed Sets New Rules by work at the Royal Academy, However, the modern world special To The Dailya has become increasingly aware By of the relevance of his art. BERKELEY - The University Combining poetry and art, of California's faculty has easedo Blake's linear sensuality and exam time pressures on its stu- organic movement influenced dents by voting for more liberalh the pre-Raphaelite movement rules on "incompletes."'' and art nouveau. Students unable to' completea fh ,. rni,,, wok , i,,, the nm.s WINSTON CHURCHILL Wolverines Coast by Wildcat Five, 90-68 By TOM WEINBERG Special To The Daily EVANSTON-Overcoming a two-game Saturday night jinx Coach Dave Strack's Wolverines slid along for 15 minutes, then broke loose and coasted to a 90-68 victory against Northwestern here last night.' The win put the Wolverines in undisputed possession of first place in the Big Ten with a 2-0 mark and gave them a 10-2 record for the season. Cazzie Russell from Chicago's Carver High School, playing in the Chicago area for the first time in his college career, delighted the fans with a variety of skills and 36 points to lead all scorers. Bill Buntin notched 17 for Michigan and captain Larry Tregoning added 15 while leading everyone in rebounds with 16, including 10 in the second half. The Wolverines were almost outrebounded by the smaller, aggressive Wildcats, but wound up with a 55-53 edge in that depart- ment. Humble Beginnings The shaky start, marred with turnovers and missed Michigan layups, was overcome quickly, as a seven-point Wildcat lead was quickly made invisible when Cazzie and the Michigan fast break attack went to work. With 6:02 remaining in the first half the score was 29-22, Northwestern, but from that point the Wolverines notched 23 to Just 6 by the host Wildcats. Russell had 10 points on a variety of shots in the Michigan scoring splurge, gai'nering two layups, a jumper from the corner, another from 22 feet out in front, and a sweeping hook from the free-throw line. Quick NU Lead CEntitled "In the Midst of Plenty," it will be held from Feb. 16 to March 2. "We hope to present little- known solutions for the elimina- tion of poverty," Warren said. The speakers list now includes Michael Harrington, author of "The Other America"; Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago; Wil- bur Cohen, assistant secretary of Health, Education and Welfare; Vernon R. Alden, president of Ohio University; and Whitney Young, director of the National Urban League. Each of the speeches will be followed by a "reactor panel" composed of three professors, social workers, or welfare admin- istrators who will react to the 'speechwith their own observations and interpretations as well as handle questions from the aud- ience. In addition, the panel will par-# ticipate, with the speaker and se- lected students, in a seminar on the following day. The seminar participants will be encouraged to voice their own opinions and to criticize the speaker's views. The joint committee is still waiting for replies from Sargent Shriver, director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, w h o m they hope will keynote the sym-I posium; Jack T. Conway, director of the community action phase of the war on poverty; Charles Killingsworth, professor of eco- nomics at Michigan State Univer- Drawing from the Blake Exhibit at the M Museum Shows Mysti Churchill Still Fights for Life; Family Is Near LONDON UP) -- Sir Winston Churchill slumbered in a coma last night, still clinging feebly to life' after a stroke laid him low. Little hope seemed left that the 90 - year - old warrior -,statesman could survive this toughest battle of his long career. His condi- tion showed no change overnight, when his doctors reported ilm slipping peacefully and painlessly into deeper sleep. Churchill's' personal physician, 'Lord Moran, visited him Saturday, The man who had steered his old friend through other serious ill- nesses stayed half an hour, then issued this bulletin: "Sir Winston had a peaceful night. There is no material change in his condition." Churchill was stricken Friday by a cerebral thrombosis--a clot on the brain--and developed cir- culatory trouble. 'The first sign that he was not well came when it was announced that he had a cold. Then came medical bulletins tell- ing a graver story of a brain clot., Commenting on these bulletins, a. British Medical Association spokesman said: "In a man of his age it is a grave illness. In a younger man, perhaps, the chance of recovery might be greater. "In spite of the fact that he has been very robust and borne his illnesses in a terrific way, at the age of 90 this condition must be regarded as a grave one. By KAY HOLMES He who binds to himself a joy Does the winged life destroy; But he who kisses the joy as it flies Lives in eternity's sun rise. The words of the poet Wil- liam Blake are familiar in their mysticism. Yet Blake is a sen- sual mystic as many of his prints indicate, for he was first an engraver. A combination of these two sides of Blake are found in his Illuminated Books, a part of which will be on view at the University Museum of Art to- morrow through February -4. 7- - - A 4-,, 4..- .,-' .-- - - - ally by the Smithsonian Insti-, tute. The Illuminated Books and manuscripts are lent by Lossing J. Rosenwald through the Na- tional Gallery of Art and the Library of Congress and by Paul Mellon. The exhibition also includes facsimile copies of Blake's books made by the Trianon Press in Paris for the Blake Trust. New Approach William Blake (1757-1827) was interested in poetry and visual art as a single artistic expression. His approach, while influenced by medieval manu- scripts, differed from them in that the text. engraving and il-