FRIDAY, 19 MARCH 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TRRER FRIDAY 19 MARCH 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE King Announces Plan For Highway March To Alabama Capitol Cosmonaut Takes First DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- lal responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- p.m. Franchot Young, pianist: Recital Hall, School of Music. 8:30 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Gerald Duncan Taylor, Mathematics; thesis: "Contributions to the Theory of Mul- tipliers," 3006 Angell Hall, at 2 p.m. A BOSTON POLICEMAN INTERVENED as rowdies heckled Negro and white members of the Catholic Interracial Council marching in St. Patrick's Day parade Wednesday. The march in South Boston was one of many sympathy marches occurring daily across the nation. ANNUAL AFFAIR: Officials Apprehensive As Viet Hate' Day Begins DA NANG, Viet Nam (A)--Communist North Viet Nam is observ- ing today its annual "Hate America Day." United States and Saigon authorities were alert to a possibility the holiday might bring trouble south of the 17th parallel. Ho Chi Minh's Communist regime customarily marks "Hate Amer- ica Day" with rallies in Hanoi and other cities. But, U.S. warplanes have staged a series of raids on North Vietnamese military targets in the interval since the 1964 observance. While the day has not been used in the past for any particular anti-American terrorism by the Viet Cong, officials were taking no 'Court Halts 3 Ha All Protests Of Governor1 White Segregationists Plan Reverse' March MONTGOMERY, Ala. W) - Dr. Martin Luther King outlined plans yesterday for a massive highway pilgrimage on Sunday for Negro voting rights, and im- mediately a white segregationist vowed to lead a reverse march in protest. Gov. George C. Wallace went into Federal Appeals Court t block King's march but was di- rected back to the District Court here. About 80 civil rights demon. strators were arrested in front oi the Alabama capitol yesterday. after they refused to leave the street. A march to the same area by about 200 white segregation- ists came off without incident. March on Sunday King told newsmen the long- planned and twice-blocked march from Selma to Montgomery wil' start at noon Sunday and ending the following Thursday, "I predict it will be the most massive march that has ever been held on a state capital in the South," King said. Specifically, he called for vol- unteers from elsewhere to joir the ranks when the march reach- es the outskirts of Montgomery on Wednesday night. A reverse march was announced in Birmingham by Art Hanes, for. mer mayor, and ardent segrega- tionist. Hanes said he will lead a march from Montgomery to Sel- ma beginning Sunday also. Details of the march which King will lead were announced after an order by U.S. District Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr., bar- ring interferenc by officials. Ask Suspension Attorneys for the governor ask- ed the 5th Circuit Court of Ap- peals in New Orleans to suspend Johnson's order pending a hear- ing on an appeal. But the appeals court directed Wallace to take hiE stay motion before the district court. . In his order, Johnson directed Wallace and other state and county officials to provide pro- tection for the marchers. Police here arrested about 80 white and Negro demonstrators who for a short time shared the streets in front of the capitol with about 200 white segregation- ists. Gov. George Wallace told the Alabama Legislature that feder- al help will be necessary to guar-, antee the"safety and well being"' of the civil rights marchers as well as other residents of the state. MOSCOW (P)-A Russian cos- tore 2 p.m. of the day preceding Chairman, A. L. Shields. publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday moniaut squeezed out of history'sfor Satuiday and Sunday. General Phi Beta Kappa: Annual meeting, highest orbiting manned satellite Notices may be published a maxi- Fri., March 19, at 4 p.m., Room 439, yesterday and took man's first mum of two times on request; Day Mason Hall. Election of officers and slowly somersaulting, free-float- Calendar items appear once only. new members. ing swim in outer space. Student organization notices are not in wmi ue pc-accepted for publication. - Then he returned safely to thep ciGeneral Notices cabin of his two-man spacecraft. FRIDAY, MARCH 19 ta heSoNotice to LS&A and Rackham Stu- the Voskhod 2, as the Soviet dents: Those students who have early Union took another giant stride f Day Calendar registered for Spring-Summer (I) in the race for the moon. Mil- Spring (IIIA) and also Summer (IIIB), lions watched the exploit on tele- Bureau of Industrial Relations Per- may pick up their approved class sonnel Techniques Seminar-Fred C. schedule during the week of finals. vision while the official news Munson, Graduate School of Business Beginning April 20 and ending April agency Tass poured out details. Administration, 'Fundamentals of 27 or May 3 and 4 at the Natural Re- It was the second Soviet team wage and Salary Administration": sources Bldg.-Room 1040. Please di- flight in one space capsule, fol- Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. rect questions to Advance Classifica- tion, 764-2154 or 764-5520. lowing a three-man, 16-orbit tiip Dept. of Speech, School of Music last October. It came only five Opera-Mozart's "The Magic Flute," Detroit Armenian Women's Club days before America's first plan- Josef Blatt, music director and con- Scholarships: One $300 undergraduate ned attempt to orbit a spacecraft ductor, Jack Bender, stage director: scholarship and one $400 graduate fel- Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. lowship will be awarded for 1965-66 with more than one man aboard. by the Detroit Armenian Women's Club, Dress Rehearsal Astronomical Colloquium: Fri., March Applications must be on file in De- At Cape Kennedy, astronauts 19, 4 p.m., Room 807, Physics-Astrono- troit by April 15. Applicants must be my Bldg. Dr. Helen Dodson Prince, men or women of Armenian parentage Virgil I. Grissom and John W Dept. of Astronomy, will speak on "Re- whose legal residency is in the state Young began a full dress rehear- cent Solar Activity." :f Michigan Character, academic achievement, and financial need will Tsal . the tre-it feemed Doctoral Examination' for Thomas be considered when the awards are Tuesday. The Russians seemed Grayson Harding, Anthropology; thes- made. See Mrs. Lyons, Scholarship to be just warming up after the is: "The Trade System of the Vitiaz Office, 2011 SAB, for further-informa- first half dozen orbits. Strait, Northeastern New Guinea," to- tion. Alexei Leonov, 30, a chunk" day, 221D Angli Hall, 3 p.m. Chairman, M. D. Sahlins. Housing: Graduate and undergradu- lieutenant colonel and a gifted ate students now on campus who do artist, became the first man ir Doctoral Examination for Edgar Frank not have a housing commitment for history to step into outer space. Codd, Communication Sciences; thesis: the Spring-Summer Term, 1965, may More than half of his 10-mn- "Propagation, Computation, and Con- apply for housing in residence halls struction in Two-Dimensional Cellular at the Office of the Director of Resi- ute, slowly spinning maneuver in Spaces," today, 4001 Angell Hall, 10:15 dence Halls, 3011 SAB, beginning Mon, s -o" "as seen on Soviet televi- a.m. Chairman, J. H. Holland. March 22. Applications will be avail- sionr sets.E able from 9-12 and 1-5 week-days Biological Chemistry Colloquium: Dr thereafter. Cosmonauts Well Clinton Ballou, University of Califor- Tass reported that Leonov and nia "Structure of Mycobacterial Gly- the ship's commander, Col. Pay- colipids" today at 4 p.m., M6423 Med. el Belyayev, 39, were well after Science Bldg. they had successfully pulled of school of Music Recital Cancella- the dramatic venture into space. tions: The following two recitals for It came at the beginning of the Sun., March 21, have been canceled. John Carlson, organist: Hill Aud., 4:15 second orbit. --__ Tass said the orbit ranged from an altitude of 107.5 miles to 307.5 miles-the highest ever for a Summary of Action Taken by Student Government Council at Its Meeting of March 17, 1965 Appointed: Michael Bross as treas- urer of Student Government Council. Approved: VOICE, Bucket Drive, - March 18, Campus. (Continued on Page 5) STUDENT ZIONIST ORGANIZATION of Hillel University of Michigan Chapter invites you'to its FINAL BRUNCH-LECTURE-DISCUSSION NEW TRENDS IN ZIONISM 11:30 a.m.-SUNDAY, March 21 at Hillel - ----mm-mm----mmmmm-mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm-mmmmmml. 1 1 . LAST TIMES TONIGHT at 7 and 9 * U * U * U starring Jack Lemmon and Glenn Ford * in Technicolor * I /a Jack Lemmon and Glenn Ford team up to drive a herd of cattle i * from the Rio Grande to Chicago-over a range replete with i * U * rattlesnacks, redskins, and stampedes. / 1 , I , COWBOY shows the West as it was. These are not the stereo- / * I * typed wranglers who cannot chose between the ranch-owner's j / daughter and their trusty quadrapeds. They sneer at their cattle and claim that "a horse's brain is no bigger than an acorn." / j Vivid color photography, a magnificent score, and fine portrayals combine to make COWBOY the finest of the adult westerns. / / N T HE A RC HIT ECT U RE A UODITOR IUM i ADISSIN: FIF=TY CENTS r / r / r s ~rr ~ r~ ~s +~rew~aaO rr* manned spaceship. All systems aboard the Vos- khod were working normally, Tass said. Soviet leaders gathered in the Kremlin and spoke with the two cosmonauts by radio. Their spokes- man was Leonid I. BrezhnevL first secretary of the Soviet Communist Party. The cosmonauts replied to Brezhnev's congratulations with a typical Russian Communist quote: "The honorable assignment of the homeland will be fulfilled." Complete Eight Orbits Leonov and Belyayev finish- ed eight orbits and were expected to complete at least five more. A top Soviet space official, Vas- ily Seleziev, told a television news conference that "the target be- fore us now is the moon, and we hope to reach it in no distant future." A Soviet space official said practice for a manned moon shot was the most important reason that Leonov left the ship. ROBERT LOWELL MARCH 20....8:30 P.M... HILL AUDITORIUM Acclaimed by many as the best poet now writing in English, Robert Lowell's poetry is a poetry of "coming to terms," of intense and often violent struggle with the most ele- mentary, the most profound questions. It ranges back in guilt-laden examination of the New England past, forward to the horrors of the totalitarian state, of war, of shattered faith. Nothing escapes his eye, little remains unexamined. Yet if he catalogues life's absurdities, at the same time, he is aware of its wonders, its joys, and sings their praise. Tickets $1 at: Bookstores, Union Desk and Lydia Mendelssohn box office ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. * * * #Baptist Student Union, Talk byN. Patrick Murray of ORA, "The Na- ture of God," Fri., March 19, 7:30 p.m., Packard Road Baptist Church, 1131 Church St. Cervantes Club, General meeting on Fri., March 19. at 8 p.m. For informa- tion call Eduardo, 665-2325. Graduate Outing Club, Hik'e, March 21, 2 p.m., Rackham, Huron St. en- trance. Newman Student Association, Mass meeting for "A Christian Response," summer service program, March 19, 8 p.m., 331 Thompson St. Newman Student Association, "Clean- up Day," March 20, 10 a.m., 331 Thompson. [oin The Daily Sports Staff chances. One precaution was a 24- hour curfew confining Americans at Da Nang to their barracks or the heavily guarded air base. Prompted by Viet Cong agents, villagers from the hamlet of Man Quan attempted yesterday to use the bodiesof 16 children killed by Vietnamese fighter- bombers to stir up an anti-Amer- ican demonstration at Da Nang. Government troops intervened when the group arrived by sam- pans with the. blarnketed' dead from Man Quan, five miles south of this city. They dispersed a gathering crowd on the water- front. Government representa- tives launched efforts to smooth over the situation. U.S. officials said Americans had nothing to do with the air strike at the village, which one source described as "sympathet- ic to but not dominated by the Viet Cong." Ground fire at a Vietnamese pilot and display of the Viet Cong flag above the vil- lage school were reported to have prompted the raid. I I 1 ABOLISH 1.Q,.C. 9 incompetent *irrelevant *immaterial Greene House Lounge, March 19, 7:30 P.M. Sponsored by ... AACLC You always get the lowest rate when you make a station-to- station Long Distance call on Sunday. No need to wait until after 8 o'clock at night. You can call anytime-morning, after- noon, or night. Sundays are just right for Long s HOMECOMING '65 HOMECOMING '65 HOMECOMING '65 1 HOMECOMING '65 Distance calling, too. You're A Vietnamese officer in close touch with the situation said 32 persons-20 children and a dozen adults-were killed. HO AECOi I G more relaxed on Sunday. And the chances are you won't have to stand around waiting to use the phone. Long Distance is the next best thing to being there. i I I SEATS AT BOX OFFICE MON.! I I I Mt~ Professional Theatre ~ Program and Creative Arts Festival present vv% v/wh 4*- CENTRAL COMMITTEE PETITIONING Petitions for Homecoming '65 Central Committee posi- tions are now available in the Student Offices of the Michigan Union and League. Long Distance station rates are lowest anytime on Sunday I Petitions are due Monday, March 22nd FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: BARB NEPSTAD 663-0575 ANDY FALENDAR 663-0190 A BRILLIANT STUDY OF THE NEGRO STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM IN AMERICA. M 1111 I " i v,,1. "+ ' nnel' -n m i intnI I 1111