Page Ten I Saura; ue 0 17 A. f V W THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 20, 1970 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sauda.Jue2017 r sityplayersmichiganrepertory70universityplayersmichigcnreper tory70universityplayersmichiganrepertory7Ouniversityplayersm THE UNIVERSITY PLAYERS -present-- ALa U ft E U. ll S 4, t 3 i I I Rioting ends i Miami 2 Banfk of A merica posts, MICHIGAN REPERTORY Shakespeare t e n b e C 0 F MERCHANT OF VENICE C E A E bigotry, greed and romantic love in a subtle and complex blend of high drama and delightful comedy In Repertory July 14--25 a disturbing, prophetic story of America in crisis and'the harvest of shame reaped by men disowned by their society garson kanin BORN YESTERDAY a rough diamond is polished too well, and the process is hilarious peter nichols JOE EGG highly acclaimed in London and New York, this recent play examines a troubled marriage and a retarded child in a moving, humorous and totally surprising way July 28-August I i f' I i ' I'' ' I' w i ' - i I a I i i I i I i I r I I I I MIAMI (A-A dusk-to-dawn curfew in black neighborhoods here was lifted yesterday after s o m e 300 volunteer black peacemakers restored at least temporary calm to a city I which has been wracked with four days of racial violence. City Manager Melvin Reese lifted the curfew inside the city limits and police returned to normal duties. The curfew in un- incorporated areas remained in effect, however.' twThe peacemakers, .in' groups of two and three, roamed through slum areas calling for an end to rock throwing, firebombing, loot- ing and sniper fire. Their actions came after a meeting of 30 black leaders at the home of Athalie Range, the city commissioner. Thirteen persons have been shot, none fatally, during the dis- turbances, which followed reports that a white supermarket owner had insulted a black housewife. "Once it started, the rioting was continued by groups of rest- less young people who find some pleasure in terrorizing others." Mrs. Range said. "No one knows who were the leaders---if there were any leaders." Reese, County Manager Porter Homer and Sheriff E. Wilson Pur- August 4-8 No Iinjuries; man convict~ed in NY blasts BERKELEY, Calif. (AP-Bombs ex- ploded yesterday at two branches of the Bank of America, the latest in a series of violent acts against the nation's largest bank. The blasts, which shattered dozens of windows, came within seven minutes of each other in the early morning hours but did little structural dcmage. There were r)r injuries. Meanwhile, in New York, Samuel J. Melville was sentenced to prison for at least 13 years yesterday for the bombing of eight government and private build- ings during a four-month campaign of anti-establishment terrorism. The bearded leader of a band of youth- ful revolutionaries, Melville was one of five persons, two of them women, orig- inally charged with the series of bomb- ings, which included three Manhattan skyscrapers as targets. Antiwar demonstrators have described the Bank of America as a symbol of the "capitalist establishment." The worst in- cident was in Isla Vista, adjacent to the University of California's Santa Barbara campus, where a $300,000 branch was burned in February. A student was fa- tally shot in another disturbance. Bank of America officials have re- peatedly denounced the violence, de- scribing it as "troublesomely reminiscent" of riots by the Brown Shirts in the late 1920s that led to the rise of Nazi Ger- many. Earlier this week, two persons were ar- rested for spray-painting the words, "Dig Isla, Vista" on the walls of one of the Berkeley branches which were bombed yesterday. Police said there.-was no evi- dence of any connection. Each bank is about five blocks from the University of California campus here, in different directions. Police said a person who was awake just before the first blast reported seeing a van-type vehicle with two occupants leaving the scene. The first bomb went off at 3:52 a.m. against the south side of the branch at Telegraph Avenue and Russell Street. It blew a hole six inches deep and a foot in diameter in foundation. At 3:59 a.m., a cigar-box mixture of firecracker powder, wires, light bulb fil- aments, a battery and a clock went off against the Shattuck Avenue branch. One window was broken in the bank. BOX OFFICE OPENS MONDAY, JUNE 22 Season Tickets Only June 22-30 Individual Tickets Beginning July 1 PRICES: (SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS OFFER SAVINGS AND PREFERRED LOCATIONS) Season Subscriptions: Individual Tickets: REGULAR: WEEKEND: MIXED: (Tues., Wed., Thurs.) -$6.50, $5.00 (Fri.-Sat.) -$8.50, $7.00 (weekdays and weekends mixed) -add 50c for each Friday or Saturday ticket ordered to regular price above. dy met with leaders of the Black Coalition and received a list of short-range grievances. It called for investigation of charges of in- discriminate firing by police into homes and apartments, and for more jobs for teen-age blacks. Fred Weller. owner of the grocery store around which the disturbances ocurred, held a news conference yesterday :nd claimed black leaders planned the rioting because they "don't want white ownership in their community." "They want to run over you and possess you," Weller said. .Blackshad accused Weller of selling bad meat and produce. jacking up prices, cha; ging as much as $5 to cash Social Security checks, and insulting black cus- tomers. Mrs. Range said the charges should have been pursued through legal channels, and then there would have been no disturbances. Daily Official Bulletin Saturday, June 20 General Notices Grade Sheets for Spring Half have been sent to depts. for instructors. All grade sheets should be submitted with- in 5 days of the exam, and no later than Wed.. July 1, 12:00 noon. A grade messenger service will be provided on regular basis by Office of the Registrar to departmental offices on the central Campus Fri., June 26 - 12:00 noon, Thurs., July 2. Grades may also be sub- mitted directly to Office of Regis trar at "Window A," L.S.A. Bldg during working hours. Questions may be di- rected to 764-6292. Student I.D. Cards: Any student .D. card marked "Valid Spring or Winter 1970 Only" must be replaced before student may register for Summer term. 1970. This may be done by making ap- plication at "Window A" in L. S. A. Bldg. before June 26. Proper notifica- tion of correct social security no. should be avail, when applic, is made. Students should check I.D. cards for errors; first 9 digits of student no. should be equal to his soc. sec. no.; in- correct cards should be brought to "Window A" L.S.A. Bldg. for replace- ment. No fee will be charged. For Summer term registration, June 29 - 30, ail matters concerning I.D. cards w i11 be handled in Lobby of L.S.A. Bldg. Summer I.D. cards distrib- uted at this location June 29-July 1 during working hours. Placemenit Service General Division 3200 S.A.B. Openings in S.E. Mich, areas, others nationwide: Bureau of Industrial Relations,.sem- inar registrar, starting early Aug., co- ordinate mgmt. seminar plans, BA any area and secretarial exper. in business setting preferable. High Scope Educ. Research Founda- tion, Ypsi., receptionist, typing ability, degree not nec. -Associated Press Ruiisfelc d (iseiusses poverty program At a news conference yesterday, Donald Rumsfeld, 37-year-old director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, said his future aim will be to secure broad national support for solving the problems of the poor. INQUIRIES THWARTED Grand Jury probes JaSckson St. kilings JACKSON, Miss. W)--The federal gov- N. Mitchell said yesterday. "The grand rnment, thwarted in efforts to gain Mis- jury will make a detailed investigation ssippi Highway Patrol cooperation in of what actually happened on this oc- its investigation of last month's violence at Jackson State College, announced yes- terday that a special federal grand jury will be convened here June 29 to probe the disorders. "This federal grand jury is expected to make a complete investigation of all as- pects surrounding the incident which oc- curred at Jackson State College May 15 to determine whether or not any federal laws were violated," U.S. Atty. Gen. John TUES., WED., THURS.-$2.00, $1.50 FRI., SAT.-$2.50, $2.00 M He The I Defense recommi grams- that the campus: Presid Regents ment or reached COmmitt ing the The cl last Dec ulty, ine: -The bers by fessional who hol departm -The faculty, appointe ROTC s ricula; -The of a "prl "depart -The ing cedi stlucto's pointmer adopted college. The Ri of 12 co ulty, pre faculty credit in The m cations v bers last Assembly body. The fa a month against t pus. Curren $89,000 a rent was to some $200,00. ' rently sp cluding si programs Prix RO PRINC versity an nate its I program i Universi said the had accej faculty an is compw~ members. Student; recommem programs followedt Cambodia students a during a < chosen to bers to re In a stg felt the R( and the u the progra their accej undergradt "that regr( The pros here earlie rules that ROTC cot training p er si Note: The higher priced tickets are the first 17 rows of orchestra and first 4 rows of balcony. ALL PERFORMANCES IN THE AIR CONDITIONED LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE, MICHIGAN LEAGUE. CURTAIN: 8:00 P.M. SHARP! Tuesday | Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday, July 14-18 J14 MER. J15 MICE J16 MER. J17 MICE J J1S MER. July 21-25 J21 MICE J22 MER. J23 MICE J24 MER. J25 MICE3 July 28-Aug. 1 J28 BORN J29 BORN 3J30 BORN J31 BORN Al BORN Aug. 4-8 A4 EGG A5 EGG A6 EGG A7 EGG A8 EGG SEASON SUBSCRIBERS PLEASE NOTE: By ordering the same day for all four weeks you automati- r,1il casion." Two young black students were shot to death during the second night of dis- turbances on the predominantly black campus. The announcement of the federal probe, officials here said, was not unexpected. There were reports more than a week ago that federal authorities would convene the grand jury because of state reluctance to turn over highway patrol weapons to FBI agents for examination. Asst. Atty. Gen. Jerris Leonard con- ferred with state officials recently in an effort to obtain permission to interrogate highway patlolmen who were on the scene when the firing occurred. He in- dicated later _he was unsuccessful. Mississippi Gov. John Bell Williams has said the officers fired in self defense because they were drawing sniper fire. Williams also said federal officers were unwilling to cooperate in the state probe of the incident, and "they must learn that cooperation is a two-way street." Some 200 to 300 rifle and shotgun were fired by officers into a women's dormitory during a confrontation with a crowd of young blacks in front of the building. Stu- dents vehemently denied reports of sniper fire from the campus during the en- counter. When the barrage ended, the two youths lay dead and nine were wounded. Phillips Gibbs of Ripley, a 20-year-old junior at the college, was cut down in front of the dormitory. James Earl Green, a 17-year-old high school senior, was found dead across the street, behind the point from which officers unleashed the barrage. Pathologists said both died of shotgun wounds. A spokesman for the governor said he would stand by an earlier statement that. he would "cooperate with any duly con- stituted investigative body." In that statement, Williams had said he would refuse a subpoena to testify before any grand jury. cai y see allt our plays. Box Office Hours: June 22-July 10 July 13-Aug. 8 12:30-5:00, Mon.-Fri, 12:30-8:00; performance days Cosed July 3, 4, 5 sityplayersmich iganrepertory70vniversityplayersmich iganreper tory70universityplayersmichiganrepertory70universityplayersm -Associated Press Kent State to reopen Kent State University students registered yesterday without incident for summer classes scheduled to begin Monday. The university has been closed since May 4 when four students were shot to death in a confrontation with the Ohio National wuard.