DIAL 5-6290 ENTERTAINMENT . . "a re- markable story . . . an experience. C I if f . Robertson's performance could not be better." -WINSTED, N.Y. POST ACADEMY AWARDA NOMINEE BEST ACTOR- CLIFF ROBERTSON TECHNICQLOR TECHNISCOPE "SO ABSORBING AND SO GOOD THAT ONE IS HELD FROM/ BEGINNING TO END." -COMMONWEAL "Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell" IS NEXT right after you le CHARLY go! NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE:- 764-05'34 Ci4c 1M i itan Datiy seconid front page Tuesday, April 1, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three -- the news toeday by The Associated Press and College Press Service Gorman calls for student acti on FOUR U.S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGES Carolina yesterday ordered 20 of the state's districts to submit desegregation plans to1 within 30 days. in South 93 school the court Who would have. suspected the sergeant? ROD ANY I1 E Q --TECHNICOLOR' SFROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS i FRIDAY-April 25-8:30 P.M.-FORD AUDITORIUM PETE SEEGER "l would place Pete Seeger in the first rank of American folk singers."-Carl Sandburg TICKETS: $5.50, $4.50, $3.50, $2.50. Available at Ford Audi- torium, all Grinnell and J.L. Hudson stores, Wayne State University and University of Detroit. Student Discount of $1.00 per ticket at each price level for tickets purchased at Wayne State University or .University of Detroit Mail orders should include self-addressed, stamped envelope Auspices: American Civil Liberties Union In issuing their orders, the judges called on the defend- ants to submit'"an acceptable plan of operation comfortable to the constitutional rights of the plaintiffs.. " In each of the 21 cases, Negro plaintiffs had complained the districts had not moved swiftly enough to comply with desegregation guidelines set by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Once the plans have been submitted, the plaintiffs will have ten days to challenge the constitutionality of the plans, the order said. If HEW and a district cannot develop a plan in 30 days, the court will hear arguments from' both principals and enter a decree. ELECTIONS today for two seats in Congress will test the power of Barry Goldwater's name in southern California and the influence of Hubert H. Humphrey and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in Wisconsin. In California Barry Goldwater Jr., son of the 1964 Rep. presi- dential candidate, is among 15 candidates seeking the seat vacated when Rep. Ed Reincke (R-Cal.) became lieutenant governor The election in Wisconsin is to fill the congressional seat which Melvin R. Laird gave up to become President Nixon's secretary of defense. Democrats are using as much influence as possible in order to gain the seat from the Republicans who have held it more than a' quarter of a century. Both Humphrey and Kennedy have come to Wisconsin to campaign for their candidate, David Obey, assistant minority leader in the State Assembly.a M I THE VIET CONG spring offensive has inflicted heavy Amer- ican casualties, but their own losses have caused them to lessen their attacks. Allied officers estimated more than 20,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops have been killed over the past five weeks. However, military analysts refused to ignore the 37-day of- fensive. They do not foresee any mass assaults, but anticipate con- tinued rocket and mortar attacks on Saigon and other key points. Analysts see the next couple of weeks as a period of assessment by the enemy. They base their thinking on the fact that the Com- munist command has failed to follow through with battle plans out- lined in captured documents. * * * FRENCH PRESIDENT CHARLES DE GAULLE spent an hour yesterday in private conversations at the White House. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said he would not characterize the meeting "necessarily as working sessions" but added that it was quite possible the two leaders "discussed matters ranging beyond courtesies." When the White House announced last Sunday that De Gaulle would call on Nixon, the President's spokesmen had described the visit as a courtesy visit. NIGERIA'S MILITARY CHIEF-OF-STATE, Maj. Gen. Yakubu Gowan, said yesterday his country's air force would continue to bomb Biafra. By BARD MONTGOMERY "The University must live up to its commitment to admit more black students," claims Darryl Gorman, newly elected member of Student Government Council. "Out of 38,000 to 40,000 students, only 730 or 1.8 per cent are black." Speaking before a 'group of Residential C o11e g e students Sunday, Gorman also charged that "five big organizations at- tempt to run this campus." He maintained that "The Daily, UAC, IFC, Panhel, and IHA tend to be manipulative" and to ex- clude the interests of black students. Gorman focused his accusa- tions on The Daily's editorial policy, declaring that "just be- cause The Daily is liberal or radical or whatever, they don't have any right to tell people what to think.". In an editorial listing endorse- ments of SGC candidates, The Daily rated Gorman "unaccept- able." In explaining his position on black admissions, Gorman in- sisted that because there are "so few black students it is difficult for the University to know what blacks want;" "One reason I ran," he said, "was to make the University more sensitive to the needs of black students and to change the elitist image of this Univer- sity." Gorman also urged students "to become more involved" in campus activities as a solution to "manipulation" by major campus organization's, "Right now, students don't really feel they have power," Gorman claimed. He believes this was reflected in the turn- out of 7000 voters for the SGC election. "That's only one quar- ter of those who could have .voted," Gorman said. Gorman reiterated the de- mand of the Black Students Union, which endorsed his can- didacy, that The Daily be made "more democratic and repre- sentative" by the creation of an editorial board. "I wouldn't want the board to be a reflection of studentor- ganizations-they're already too influential," he said. He indi- cated that "the board should be independent of student organi- zations but reflective of indi- vidual student opinions." In addition to increasing black enrollment, Gorman has called for an appropriation to the BSU to r FINAL EISENHOWER JOURNEY to evaluate courses in black literature and history. "The courses are ineffective in striking at the heart of the matter," Gorman claimed. He advocates the establishment of new courses in white racism and other contemporary issues' to better educate students in racial problems. Asked if SGC should take the initiative in recruiting black stu- dents and leading student in- volvement in issues such as last September's w e I f a r e march, Gorman said he was "not in favor of SGC initiating pro- grams without knowing what the BSU wants-they're closer to the situation." Gorman said the "BSU is now defining its program for next year." He reported that there will be "more' involvement with the community but the specifics have not been determined." cortege goes isas. Help Peace the World Together PEACE CORPS 3529 SAB until Friday NATIONAL SEVERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTEERN TH.ATRES-1 FOR VILUaG! 375 N.MAPLE R.D. .769.1300 ENDS THURSDAY, Times: 7:00-9:00 Dean Martii I-. COLUMBIA PICTURES e AN IRVING ALLEN production s att Helm swings Wrecking STECHNICOLOR° Crew WASHINGTON PS -- After three days of pomp and cere- mony, President Dwight D. Eisenhower's body was put on a train to be carried to Abi- lene, Kansas where he will be buried tomorrow. An estimated 50,000 people came to the Capitol yesterday where the former president's body lay in state. Representatives of more than 120 nations we r e among the 2,107 people invited to the funeral. Eisenhower's body was takeh by hearse from the Capitol to the Washington National Cathedral' where Rev. Edward L. R. Elson, minister of the National Presby- terian Church gave ; memorial service. Elson said the entire nation was grateful for Eisenhower's "kind- ness and his firmness, for his com- passion and mercy, for his warm inclusive friendship, his transpar- ent spirituality, his patience and suffering, and for all that endear- ed him to the multitudes of man- kind." From there the body was taken to Union Station where it was put on a train to be taken to K~ansas. Eisenhower is to be buried near his boyhood home in Abilene, Kansas. The 1,300 mile Tourney is expected to take 30 hours. Tomorrow at noon ,military in- stallations and major ships in port will give "Ike" his final military tribute in the form of a 21-gun salute. The funeral train is to travel at 50 miles an hour, with no cere- monial stops along the route to Abilene. When the train does halt, it will be to switch tracks. Nonetheless, officials in C I#n- cinnati announced they plan a memorial service Tuesday morn- ing, as the train stops there. President Nixon, who eulogized the former President last Sunday, will fly to Abilene tomorrow for the burial service on the steps of the Eisenhower Library in Kansas. Yesterday was slated as a na- tional day of mourning and many schools, banks and businesses were closed. Trains and busses stopped for one minute in the Chicago transit system to honor the de- the ceased 34th President. The three days of rites for the 78-year-old leader who died last Friday were days of military pre- cision and grief. "Hail to the Chief" was played as the coffin was taken from the Capitol Rotunda. "Army Blue," the West Point hymn, was played as nine military pallbearers carried the flag-covered coffin across the concourse of Union Station to the waiting blue and yellow railroad car, draped in black. Ii Prime Minister Harold Wilson of Britain, a supplier of Nigeria's military aid, concluded a four-day visit to that country yesterday where he urged Nigerian leaders to reduce civilian bomb casualties in Biafra. However, Gowan charged that the Biafran regime had "stage- managed" civilian casualties in raids by federal planes. Visitors to the war-torn area have reported that the Nigerians 1 en t, S have been bombing isolated hospitals, market places, schools, and feeding stations in Biafra. THE NATIONAL ACTION GROUP (NAG) vesterdavan-o --Associated Press Eisenhower lies in state at the Capitol strikers ask restructuring * STARTS FRIDAY * MGM presents a Jerry Gershwin.-iott Kastner picture starring Richard Burton-Clint Eastwood -Mary Ure "Where Eagles Dare" nounced plans for anti-war protests in 42 cities on April 5-6 for "resistance and renewal at the grass roots." The plans call for a wide range of activities, including "teach-I puts" at defense plants, death-watches at draft boards, freedom vigils, memorial services for Martin Luther King Jr., Easter peace parades, and freedom sedars on Passover. M M THE JUDGE who presided over the James Earl Ray case since last summer died of an apparent heart attack in his chambers yesterday. Shelby County Criminal Court Judge W. Preston Battle was found slumped over his desk by one of Ithe prosecuting attorneys in the 'Ray case. Battle accepted Ray's March 10 plea of guilty of the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and sentenced Ray to 99 years in the Tennessee state penitentiary in Nashville. While Ray entered a guilty plea to the King slaying, he later said he was pressured into doing so and would seek a review of his case. Under Tennessee law, it would have been Battle, as the judge who passed the sentence, who would have granted such a review. (Continued from Page 1) Fleming said the University would provide any information it has which is public. However, in- formation the University has on a confidential basis cannot be re- leased, Fleming said. p Members of the committee told Fleming they could probably get the information with a court order.. However, Fleming doubted that such an order could be obtained and added that he would not re- lease the information until there was such an order. "There is no better case for re- leasing confidential information on landlords than there is for re- leasing confidential information on students," Fleming said. However, the president said he would check to see what informa- tion was confidential and what could be released. The strike , steering committee also asked that the University undertake building several thou- sand units of low cost housing. Fleming told the committee that they should discuss that issue with those administrators "directly in- volved" rather than with him. However, members of the commit- tee claimed that only a policy change from the top administra- tors could direct the University to- ,ward the students' housing needs. The strike steering committee asked Fleming to make a state- ment of support for the rent strike, but he refused. poet series faces cuts (Continued from Page 2) ing circuit between colleges and perhaps even high schools. One such circuit now operates between ten Michigan colleges. A poet is invited to make the circuit about once a term, and the colleges guarantee him a reading at each school and about $125 for each appearance. If such a program could be established on a regular basis, the University could afford to bring in several major poets without asking them to reduce their fees. The sort of regular exposure to the literary arts which a poetry reading program pro- vides will, Hornback says, "teach us to respond to people like the writers-in-residence so that when they are here, we can ap- preciate and use them without destroying them." Lg1 Panavision@ and Metrocolor MGM 1 nrwr ii _._ --, i Y'OU HJ EADQUJARTERIS FOR U1]of IlMlMUSIC UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FRIARS (New Edition) UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GLEE CLUB: White Tie and Tails . .. On Tour Songs of American Universities UNVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BAND: Kick Off, U.S.A... .Touchdown, U.S.A. Hail Sousa. . . On Tour P.S. We also have U of M Songbooks 11 .