Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY PageTwoTHE ICHGAN AIL _.. _... . - 1 - J STRIKES, BOMBINGS: Protests sweep U.S. campuses 200 organize class strike at U'; Fleming asks memorial service DIAL 5-6290 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Shows at It,3, 5,7f9:05 (Continued from Page 1) ' the Cambodian issue and the deaths at Kent State. Notre Dame University canceled all classes for today, as did North- western where 3,000 students buried coffins in memory of the Kent dead.' In Washington, D.C., antiwar groups called for rallies and vigils on tomorrow, a national day of mourning Friday and a march on the White House Saturday. In Waltham, Mass., a national student strike information center was set up at Brandeis University. In New York, classes were sus- pended or rallies scheduled at most colleges and many high schools. Columbia University and New York University classes were sus- pended. Student pickets march at Hunter College. A statewide march in Lansing next Monday was being planned last night by students at Western Michigan University in Kalana- zoo. A spokesman for the group said Eastern Michigan University, Michigan State and Kay College, also in Kalamazoo had agreed to participate. President Nixon's daughter, Julie, and her husband, David Eisenhower, were strikebound at their apartment in Northampton, Mass., as David's Amherst class- mates struck to appose his father- in-law's policies. Julie goes to Smith, whose student body voted for a strike. Students at Finch College, a fashionable girl's school in New York from which Tricia Nixon was graduated in 1968, went on strike to protest dispatch of troops to Cambodia. At the University of Maryland a faculty committee said the Na- tional Guard has agreed to leave the campus by noon today, unless there were further disturbances. About 350 faculty members said they would take over watch duties from the 500 Guardsmen and po- lice who have been on duty since antiwar demonstrations broke out over the weekend. The presidents of 37 Northeast schools sent a petition to President Kent Ohio: A tense, quiet and empty town By RICK PERLOFF patrol the adjoining streets munch Special To The Daily food and sip coffee. KENT, Ohio-This town was Kent gives the impression of a deserted last night: its streets typical Midwestern college town lacked pedestrians, its stores were with a rolling campus green and closed and the only sounds came advertisements on the highway for from National Guard jeeps which the University Inn. rolled to a squeaky stop at street But that was not the atmos- corners. phere yesterday as most of the A 10 p.m. curfew was in effect vehicles which traveled along and visitors were warned by Summit had three armed men sit- guardsmen and citizens alike to ting inside them. The National stay off the streets lest they spend Guard jeeps were eyed quietly by the night in jail, three students sitting outside a Martial law has been proclaim- Theta Chi fraternity house. Their ed, and the town breathes it too-- manner was sullen. They had little after four Kent State University to say. students were killed Monday by A girl pointed to the Guard's Nationaly Guardsmen. Students at patrol of the main campus and Kent State had been protesting quietly cautioned visitors against ROTC, U.S. involvement in Cam- approaching it. Newcomers to the bodia and for black demands. The town who do enter the area are ROTC building was burned down asked their business and newsmen Friday night. have their names taken and are The entrances to the main cam- directed to an administration pus area were blocked by guards- building which clears all press. men and Ohio state highway pa- As the curfew approached, t e trolmen who wave a gun at visitors atmosphere grew more tenser. Gas who attempt to enter. About 50 stations began to close as attend- trucks and jeeps were lined up ants nervously eyed clocks, an- Summit Road, Kent's main tho- xious to leave the campus area as roughfare, and the guardsmen who soon as possible. Nixon criticizing his Asian poli- cies. The White House acknowl- edged receipt of the communica- tion but said Nixon has no imme- diate plans to meet with them. The Reserve Officers Training Corps program was a particular target of demonstrators. Fire damaged the ROTC build- ing at the University of Idaho, and a fire bomb was tossed into the University of Utah ROTC build- ing but failed to ignite. The ROTC building at Seton Hall University in South Orange, N.J., also was fire bombed. About 500 University of Okla- homa students clashed with more than 100 police in an anti-ROTC demonstration. Demonstrators oc- cupied the University of Arizona ROTC building. Kansas University canceled an ROTC parade scheduled for Fri- day. ROTC uniforms were burned at the City College campus of the City University of New York. Police said a Boston University freshman was burned from a fire bomb he intended to throw at the school's administration building. The second fire in slightly more than a week broke out on the Northwestern University campus. A small explosive device was set off in a building at the University of Miami, police said. There were fires in the National Guard Armory in Lewiston, Idaho, and in the Naval ROTC building in nearby Moscow, Idaho, on the University of Idaho campus. There were two attempts to fire bomb the ROTC building at the Univer- sity of Notre Dame. Other fires were reported at the University of Houston, Geneseo, N.Y., high school, Syracuse, N.Y., University, the University of Ten- nessee and the University of Cali- fornia-Davis. Some students sought to ob- struct normal school functions by taking over buildings or blocking campus streets. For the second straight day, students at Stanford University blocked the enrtances of campus buildings. "The joint is ninety-nine and forty-four, one hundredths per cent closed," a school spokesman said. About 150 students occupied the ROTC building at Central Mich- igan University in Mount Pleasant. More than 200 did the same at the University of Nebraska's Military and Naval Science building. And ther were several confron- tations with police. In Buffalo. N.Y., about 1,500 students left a State University rally and marched down Main Street chanting, "Re- member Kent State," until they were turned back by police. HELD OVER* 2nd WEEK... Shows at: 1 -3-5-7:05 & 9:15 P.M. ANTONION s? w i> mma ca AM DMU ®- II'Ill 1111 II (Continued from Page 1) another work day with such grave tragedies occurring." Over 200 people attended last night's strike coalition meeting and made final arrangements for strike activities. A second rally was scheduled for 5 p.m. today. The first dissemination of strike information will begin this morn- ing as picketers and leafletters place themselves at strategic posi- tions across campus. After much debate last night the coalition voted to emphasize that the protest will be peaceful. There was some indication, how- ever, that certain factions intend to engage in disruptive actions. In order to ensure a "militant, but disciplined, n on - v i o l e n t march," the coalition has organ- ized a contingent of student mar- shals to stifle any outbreaks of violence. Members of local high school organizations also met last night to plan protest activities in their own schools. Strikes there are planned for Monday, and will be preceded by leaftletting through- out this week. The statement by President Fleming said: "All of us have been shocked and depressed by the tragic events on the Kent State University cartipus," "A number of faculty people have called me sug- gesting that there be an oppor- tunity for the academic com- munity to share its sorrow in some kind of convocation. , "Accordingly, I have initiated arrangements for a memorial ser- vice to be held on campus Thurs- day, May 7, probably at noon," Fleming added. In an earlier statement on the wave of student strikes across the country, Fleming said: "The depth of alienation among youg people over our involvement in Southeast Asia is a national tragedy. I see no hope that these wounds will be healed so long as our present poli- cy continues." Meanwhile, Student Govern- ment Council last night endorsed the national student strike. In a statement, SGC said, "We con- demn the slaughter of four univer- sity students at Kent State and feel that their responsibility for this tragedy lies in the calculated effort of the Nixon-Agnew admin- istration to destroy all forms of dissent. "The government must recog- nize the rising crescendo of dissent' against its policies," the statement continued," and act in a manner responsive to the growing concern' of the American people over this country's involvement in the war in Southeast Asia. We demand an immediate withdrawal of all American troops in Southeast Asia." In anticipation of today's strike activities, University administra- tion representatives and SGC of- ficers met with Mayor Robert Harris and Police Chief Walter Krasny last night to discuss the proper action to be taken if dis- ruptions occur. Administration of- ficials said that disrupters would be dealt with more severely now than they had been during the recent class strike supporting the demands of the Black Action Movement. Fi Daily Ciassifieds Get Results STARTING FRIDAY P "I I TOO y .. 1 NGC THEATRE CORPORATION A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY FOHVILLaGE 375 No.MAPLE RD.-7694300 MON.-FRI.-7:20-9:30 SAT.-SUN.-1:00-3:00 5:10-7:20-9:30 An Ingo Preminger Production Color by DE LUXE ° Panavision® DRESS SALE MASS MEETING to JOIN INADCODNTw'ith the NATIONAL STUDENT STRIKE *1 44 I I mi Call to protest the escalation of the Vietnam War into Cambodia. STRIKE and JOIN the 0 MASS MARCH at the WHITE HOUSE this DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Wednesday, May 6 Day Calendar Tennis - U-M vs. Univ. of Miami (Fla.): Tennis Courts, 2:30 p.m. Placement Service Career Planning, listings of openings, registration and forming a resume, di- rectories. Hours: 8:30-12 noon and 1:30- 4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Current Openilngs:Many Others Nationwide P.P.G. 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