The Halfway Inn East Quad's Coffeehouse & Snackbar Inexpensive Luncheons, Dinners, Snacks Integration still lags in Southern schools CONTINUOUSLY OPEN STAGE- ALL WELCOME TO PERFORM or Just Come In and Jam' HOURS: Mon.-Thurs.-1 1:00 A.M.-2 A.M. Fri.-1 1 :00 A.M.-3 A.M. Sot.-7:30 P.M. -3 A.M. Sun.-3:00 P.M.-12 A.M. Informal Atmosphere, Good Food By The Associated Press a Integration remained largely un- r accomplished yesterday in many r of the more than 30 Southern school districts ordered to end se- i parate classes for blacks and i whites a week ago. r In some instances, the school system under Feb. 1 deadlines set by the U. S. Supreme Court, 5thi U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals orr U.S. districts Courts did not com- t ply with the orders. In many of those districts that did carry out the court orders,i e white pupils generally boycotted o schools in which they would be tl greatly outnumbered by blacks c nd large increases in white en- ollment in private schools were eported. In others, parents stood by wait- rng developments before decid- ng whether to send their child- en to newly integrated schools. Violent incidents were few, and n at least one district, Alachua "ounty Gainesville, Fla., expected rouble failed to materialize as in- tgration plans went into effect. Gainesville police had been giv- n riot equipment in anticipation f disturbances, but 600 pupils of [he recently closed, all-black Lin- oln High School transferred to e three other schools without trou- ble. White threats of massive with- drawals from schools failed to de- velop as the schools opened Fri- day. Florida had three days of racial flareups at Manatee High School in Brandeton, where a brick-throw- ing melee on campus injured as many as 15 persons Wednesday. Eight blacks and three w h i t e s were arrested Thursday in con- nection with the incident, while state troopers turned back 200 protesting black pupils at the tense high school. The confrontation came after an emergency meeting of t h e Manatee County School Board, which voted to appeal to U.S. dis- trict judge Ben Krentzman for re- hearing on an April 6 deadline to begin mass bussing. However, whites stayed away in large numbers in Madison and Corcordia parishes, with nearly half of the white pupils in Tal- lulah, La., enrolling at a private+ school. Officials of Mississippi's large school district - Jackson - re- ported everything going smoothly when classes opened Friday under new desegregation plans. There were indications, how- Mobile County schools reported ever, a significant number of white only 55,000 pupils enrolled under itedfo dsemes-new integration plans ,although pupis registered for second sesa70,000 had registered originally. In ter did not report for classes at spite of an order for immediate their assigned schools. integration, the Mobile school In two districts - Tunica and board voted Thursday to put off Indianola - some 1,000 white pup- the transfer of pupils until March ils stayed home, with the publicj 16. schools turning all black. Every private school in ManateeI C',unty Bradenton, Fla., is jam-I med to capacity, and plans are in the works to open several n e w schools. Enrollment at three white private schools in Jackson was reported to have jumped from 500 to 3,000 between semesters. The Supreme Court refused to grant a delay in the desegregation of Greenville and Darlington County public schools in S o u t h Carolina, and set a Feb. 16 hear- ing for a proposal that Memphis, Tenn., schools be desegregated during the current school year. !! TON IGHT Cpeatie Ipt4 lejtsaI PROUDLY PRESENTS- Louis Falco and Company of Featured Dancers A Journey thru Your Mind and Body 8:.30P.M.--Hill Aud. page three MfIA-rirtitan aipt*i1y NEWS PHONE: 764.0 552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Sunday, February 8, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three 11 II l the i TON IGHT TON fGHT COMING NEXT WEEK: From Off Broadway "THE CONCEPT"-Feb. 12, 13-Trueblood Psychodrama with ex-addicts and TOM WOLF TICKETS: 1st Floor Union M-F 11 :00-4:00-Sat. 1 :00-3:00-Sun. 1:00-3:00 I U U by The Associated Press and College Press Service B52 BOMBERS returned to Vietnam's skies yesterday ig- noring a Viet Cong cease-fire for Tet, the lunar new year. The Viet Cong called for a four-day cease fire but the U.S. com- mand wanted only a one day moratorium on fighting. Targets were suspected enemy troop concentrations and bases near the Cambodian border northwest of Saigon and in Binh Tuy Province, east of the capital. No significant change in the fighting occurred during the 24-hour allied cease fire according to a U.S. spokesman. ARAB LEADERS representing five countries met in Cairo as Israeli attacks escalated. During the past few weeks, Israeli air attacks have reached the suburbs of Cairo and come closer to the capital than at any time since the 1967 war. Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser was said by informants to have expressed concern over United States involvement in the increasingly dangerous situation. Yesterday The New York Times reported that the Nixon Admin- istration has already decided to supply Israel with additional Phan- tom jets. The State Department denied the report. There was no immediate comment in Cairo. * * * CONSUMER ADVOCATE RALPH NADER announced the start of "Campaign GM," which will attempt to force General Motors to pay more attention to the public interest. Althoug GM is the initial target, other large corporations will be tackled in a continuing program to make them more responsive to consumer and public welfare. A group called the Project on Corporate Responsibility, which owns 12 shares of GM stock, will represent the movement at GM's annual shareholder's meeting in Detroit next May 22. The Project will seek to have the corporation include three shareholder resolutions in the proxy statement to be sent to GM. stockholders. * * * ITALY'S Christian Democratic government resigned, plung- ing the nation into a governmental crisis. The minority government of Premier Marinao Rumor was formed six months ago after a split in the Socialist party broke up the ruling coalition. Rumor's government was to rule until a majority alliance could be formed again. However, prior to his resignation yesterday Rumor said that a minority cannot cope with Italy's rising wave of strikes and student disorders. Rumor will remaingat the head of a caretaker regime until a new government can be formed. Barring new parliamentary elections, a coalition is likely to be put together, and Rumor is expected to be named premier of the new alliance. -Associated Press Italian government falls Italian Premier Mariano Rumor leaves his Rome office to inform President Giuseppe Saragat that his all-Christian Democrat government has resigned. Rumor's government was Italy's thirtieth since World War II. POPULA TION CONTROL: ENACTbaecks abortion reform D.A. rests in trial Of 'Chicago 7,' CHICAGO (W) - The govern- ment rested its case yesterday in the trial of seven men charged wi th conspiracy to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic Na-, tional Convention. Judge Julius J. Hoffman first denied and later granted a de- fense motion for an early recess in the U.S. District Court trial to allow time for lawyers to produce witnesses and documents for the surrebutal. The judge refused to recess the trial before its usual 4:30 p.m. CST closing time and t o 1 d the lawyer, "You are asking me to re- cess with no adequate showing." The government, which origi- nally h a d objected to a recess, then withdrew its objection to the delay and said it would prefer that one of the witnesses, a tele- vision cameraman, be given time to appear. The cameraman was expected to view a film of con- vention week violence before the start of trial tomorrow to deter- mine if he was the cameraman who photographed it. Thomas A. Foran, U.S. district attorney, asked that the judge grant the recess and allow the cameraman to view the film so there would be no basis for "the constant attempt by the defense to make the appearance of repres- siveness." Judge Hoffman accepted For- an's suggestion and was in the process of instructing defense and government attorneys to reach an agreement on the matter when someone at the defense table laughed. "The defense motion will be de- nied," said the judge. "I was being sneered at at that table." Kunstler argued that the legal- ity of the motion was of greater import than the judge's concern over "a modicum of respect." "I haven't even had a modi- cum," interrupted the judge. "I don't want to discuss the matter any further," he continued. After the defense completes its surrebuttal case next week, de- fense and government lawyers will confer on guidelines for closing arguments. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.Q0 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. By SUSAN LINDEN The Environmental Action for Survival (ENACT) steering com- mittee has endorsed legalized abortion and urged federal and state government to insure the availability of contraceptive de- vices. In a resolution passed 7-3 Thursday, the group said "we believe that any woman should have the right to seek and ob- tain an abortion under quali- fied medical supervision cif she feels strongly that, either for personal, economic or social reasons, she is incapable of giv- ing a decent education and en- vironment to a child she has conceived. "History has shown that laws which condemn women to com- pulsory pregnancy merely serve to endanger the health and even the lives of countless women who, out of desperation, accept abortions from any source avail- able. This pattern is particularly true of poorer women who can- not afford to seek illegal abor- tions from qualified physicians nor the expense of airline tickets< to places with more tolerant laws. "Countries with a fairly long experience in the field of legal- + ized abortion have proved that legal abortions performed in good conditions have a risk of maternal mortality many times less than the simple risk of childbirth in the United States," the resolution continued. -- -- Try Daily Classifieds t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A B 1 d g., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices a r e not accepted for publication. F 0 r more informa- ti In, phone 764-9270. Read and Use Daily Classifieds SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8 Day Calendar1 Degree Recital: Irene Btychcin, clar- inet: School of Music Recital Hall, 4:30 p.m. International Center Film Series: Why Man Creates, Disneyland, U.S.A., and East Germany: Land Beyond the Wall, International Center, 7:30 p.m. Degree Recital: Linda Oakley, so- prano: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Creative Arts Festival: Louis Falco Dance Company: An evening of mo- dern dance, electronic music and lights: Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9 U. of M. Senate Assembly: Agenda: Minutes, Report of SACUA Activities, Report of Calendar Comm.; Rackham Amphitheater, 3:15 p.m. Professional Theatre Program (Phoen- ix Theatre): Helen Hayes and James Stewart in Harvey: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. Choral Union Series: Vladimir Ash- kenazy, pianist: Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. General Notices The Graduate School has been in- formed by Inst. of International Educ that Fulbright-Hays awards to the fol- lowing countries have unexpectedly be- eome available for academic year 1970- 1971: Greece, 1 award; Malaysia, 1 award; The Netherlands, 1 award (lim- ited to candidates holding a Master's )egree who wish to pursue a project in Netherlandic studies). Any graduat. ing senior or graduate student inter- ested in applying, contact the Grad. uate School Fellowship Office, 1012 (Continued on Page 2) s t -Z Steering committee member Bill Manning felt the whole question is particularly delicate. "To be very honest," Manning said, "we as individuals of ENACT differ strongly in philo- sophy on abortion, but as a group representitng ENACT, we feel quite strongly that a writ- ten stand is very necessary, and as group we would back it (legalized abortion) 100 per cent. Group to meet on abortion A Women's Liberation abortion action group will meet this after- noon to organize long range abor- tion reform plans. - The plans include an education campaign, a counseling and re- ferral service for women seeking abortions, and a program to raise political support for the legaliza- tion of abortion. An ad hoc committee of the action group will also be formed to plan demonstrations during the state Senate abortion hearings in Detroit on Feb. 27. Today's meeting will be at 2 p.m. at Guild House. Although steering committee members pledged to support the resolution, s o m e individuals feared it would cause a loss of community support for ENACT. "Inevitably we are going to shock certain people," said ENACT population committee chairman Pierre Pradervand, "If we're for population control, there's no reason to be opposed to abortion-if we consider it to be important for social and med- ical reasons." The Outspoken Leader of the Repubican Right in Michigan-Direct from the 14th Congressional District: R chard Durant (WILL HE CHALLENGE MILLIKEN IN THE PRIMARY?) SPEAKS: I DR. DAVID BINGHAM is currently testify- ing in Lansing in favor of liberalizing abor- tion laws. He will discuss THE DILEMA OF ABORTION WITH RABBI JAMES GORDAN, Oak Woods Sons of Abraham (Oak Park) REV. ERWIN A. GAEDE, Minister, First Unitarian Church FR. GERALD J. HUGHES, S.J., Ph.D. candidate in Philsophy DR. DAVID B INGHAM, Obst./Gyn., Imrr~ DIAL 8-64 16 A Great Screen Classic Returns V\V\EN LEIGH and MARLON BRANDO in TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' PJC, "ASTREETCAR NAMED DESIRE" Screen Play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS " Based upon the Original Play"A Streetcar Named Desire" by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS A Presented on t e Stage by Irene Mayer Selnick. Dected by EL1 A KAZAN Re-released thru United APists i "Education Reform: Disaster or Progress " TUESDAY, FEB. 10 7:30 P.M. I VA HELD OVER 3rd WEEK! NO 2-6264 SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20 The Most Explosive Spy Scandal of the Century! 7 7 2 . 'iimil I