. Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, , Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, Governor requests guard for Louisville (Continued from Page 1) persons arrested during the riot-I ing. Braden is executive director of the Southern Conference Educa- tional Fund. Monday's rioting , resulted in some 20 injuries and more than 100 persons arrested. Four persons were wounded by gunfire. Eighteen adults arrested were] charged yesterday with storehouse breaking. Bond for each was set at $20,000. One of the wounded persons was also charged with storehouse breaking. Thirty-four other persons were charged with breach of peace. Each was being held in lieu of. $2,000 bond. The city's top officials were huddled behind closed doors yes- terday to plan strategies for cur- tailing the racial violence. They' were unavailable to comment on Braden's charges. An aide to Brig. Gen. William Buster, commanding officer, said some 200 guardmen were patrol- ling the restless West End area yeserday. He said the guardsmen had received riot control training and were issued ammunition prior Many of the businesses were protected by iron gates stretched in front of the windows. Some 50,000 of Louisville's 86,000 Negroes live in the West End area, which is approximatelya 20 blocks square and located some 20 blocks from downtown Louis- ville. The area is filled with large,j private dwellings which often house more than one family. -- - ---- - - - - - Beadle leaves state Senate { LANSING W) - Sen. Frank Beadle (R-St. Clair), chairman of the powerful Senate Appropria- tions Committee, has announced he will resign from the Michigan Senate some time this summer. Beadle said he has not yet set the exact date, but will tender his resignation before the Aug. 6 primary. This, he said, will be so a successor can be chosen in the; November general election to serve for the remainder of his term which expires Dec. 31, 1970. B~r1 d r~l h 'YYCtt tht ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of this column for announce- ments is available to officially recognized and registered student organizations only. Forms are available in room 111 SAB. Bach Club Meeting, wed., May 29, 8:00 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Program: a talk by Randolph Smith on Bach's Sonata No. 6, and G Major for violin and clavier, featuring a per- formance by part of the Bach Blue Ensemble of the never-before-recorded; Cantabile, ma un poco Adagio, and Adagio of the earlier versions of this work. For further information call 769-2922 or 769-1605. * * * UM Rifle Club, Wed,, 7-9 p~m., ROTC Rifle Range; Shooting open to students .and faculty.v TONlIGAT A THRILLING DISPLAY. OF F I /SU..5CRI7E TOT !IE MXWOAN 2AlLY -Associated Press Parisians 'caricaturize' de Gaulle and Pompidou Frenchminister resigns (Continued -from Page 1) France's biggest trade union, nounced' he will resign if the law the Communist-led General Con- is rejected. federation of Labor, said the piof- Information Minister Georges fered concessions were "notorious- Gorse told newsmen the law aims ly insufficient" and the immense at modernizing French educa- majority of French workers re- tional institutions, ending the ex- ject them. cessive centralization which has The federation called for a na- existed since the days of Napol- tionwide demonstratioh of workers eon, and the reform of the coun- for full satisfaction of their de- try's economic life to aid less fa- mands. These include a call for vored citizens. a wage hike of 1? per 'ent. Left wing opposition parties, in- The proposed compromise pack- cluding the Communists, have al- age would throw onto French in- ready called on the people to re- dustry a load that would send ject the law on the ground that the prices of many French export it amounts to a plebiscite for de goods soaring above prices for Gaulle. comparable goods in other coun- Gorse denied this saying "Those tries. who are crying 'plebiscite' are At the same time, the wage those who are trying to personal- raises would hand French workers ize the crisis by demanding the extra purchasing power amount- resignation" of the president. ing to nearly $4 billion a year. The laiv gives de Gaulle, the This could mean a mass influx government and the parliament of foreign imports which would until June 1, 1969, to carry out havetobe paid for out of the the reforms in conjunction with reserves. "all representative organizations." The strike wave erupted briefly This showed, Gorse said, the gov- in the National Assembly. Left ernment was not seeking "full wing deputies - Communists, So- power or a rubber stamp" to car- cialists and left-of-center mod- ry out the reforms. erates-stormed out of the cham- Underlining the gravity of the ber in protest against hearing a crisis was the absence of any sig report on the social turmoil from nificant back-to-work movement two ministers they considered in response to compromise pro- second ranking. posals. Social Affairs Minister Jean- Auditions for the Broadway smash, love-rock musical Hair for London, New York, and national company. Principles and chorus,f singer-actors, should be late teens, early twenties, male/female interracial cast. SATURDAY, JUNE 1st SUNDAY, JUNE 2nd 10 A.M.-6 P.M. at Loyalty Lodge 646 Lothrop, Detroit Marcel Jeanneney and Jacques Chirac, state secretary for employ- ment, described by the leftists the "ministers of strikes and un- employment," delivered their re- port to a half-empty chamber. Pompidou told newsmeni Peyxe- fitte, a member of the govern- ment since 1962, had offered his resignation when the premier re- turned May 18 from a visit to Af- ghanistan. Pompidou said he had decided to accept it "in view of the circumstances." Francois Mitterrand, head of the opposition Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left, an- nounced his candidacy for de Gaulle's office as chief of state. See Liz as Maggie the cat one of her greatest bitch roles. Featuring her battle with the little no-neck mon- sters. Cal on a Hof Tin Roof PAUL NEWMAN" ELIZABETH TAYLOR FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7:00 and 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM a mere 75c Program Information 662-8871 Read and Use Classified Ads ! to their employment, ts ea1e, wno represents e e The aide declined to comment eastern Michigan district of St. on whether the soldiers' weapons Clair, Huron, Sanilac and Tus- were loaded and said ie troopers cola counties, is serving his ninth had standard orders to fire their term and is in his 18th year in weapons only on the order of an the Legislature. officer or in self-defense. In 1966, he was elected by a There was no pattern to the majority of more than 25,000 haphazard fire bombing and loot- votes. ing Monday night. Police said that Beadle still was an early sup- liquor stores, pawn shops, groce- porter of a state income tax and ries and drug stores in scattered also has a record of voting for areas of the West End were the constructive social legislation, in- main targets. cluding the open housing bill. U - - BEST ACTOR, RDSTEIGERĀ£ BEST DIRECTOR,NORMAN JEWISON BEST SCREENPLAY, STIRLING SILLIPHANT SADAPTAT IOM) 20th Century-Fox PETER COOK DUDLEY MOORE and ELEANOR BRON in STANLEY DONEN'S bedazzled RAQUEL WELCH as Lust Produced and Directed by STANLEY DONEN -"Screenplay by PETER COOK- From the story by PETER COOK and DUDLEY MOORE Music by DUDLEY MOORE - PANAVISION' Color by DeLuxe MON. thru THUR.-7-9:05, FRI. & SAT.-3-5-7-9:05-1 1:05, SUN.-35-7-9:05 *1~ I SIDNEY POITIER ROD STEIGER "IN WAT (OF 1WNIGHT" 3rd Week 1 TONIGHT at7&9 - r i ri r i A / TRUEBLOOD THEATRE Friday and Saturday May 31-June 1 8 P.M. Ann Arbor Junior Light Opera (formerly music theatre) presents A NEW MUSICAL- I THE FOOL KILLER preceded by COX and BOX TICKETS: $1.00 Box office open daily at 3:30 P.M. Join The Daily Today! .4 SHOWING MAY 29 THRU JUNE 4 _. WED.-SAT.-SUN. 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 1-3-5-7:05-9:10 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor OTHER DAYS 7 & 9:10 WINNER OFO6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!, BEST DIRECTOR Fred Zinnema BEST ACTOR Paul Scofii BEST CINEMATOGRAPF (Coka BEST COS~TU ME DESIC 1 ann fld or) starring If IL 5 IA HM ,. CL f HOLDLAT I) ITS T 3 SMIG~H IEL RE N A RW WECH 'LER- ANDREW aPAI ELAIJIE AI As RoLL ocoNR RICHAR~D JAECK[L Ā°JACK 'WATSON "PAUL HORNUNG -6GENE FULLk4ER V1LLIA MRyOBERIS ROBERTI-H.ADLEMANa EORGE WALTON AE . 'McLAGLE. Pio ii d by DAVIDI. WOLPER m~~c-ALEXNOM j=1 LMOTON PiCILJRI SC()R[ AVAILA)3LFON UNiv-!E,, TSTS aCO os8 PANAVISIONSCOLOR by Deluxe (' 1~JUIiJLIJ I1JIJ 11JM .IL' 11111 1 I