mmm .. mmmwmvmw I ALICE'S RESTAURANT presents SKRU 9 P.M. ALICE LLOYD HALL Pilot Program page three 94 lB Sk ti!tn 43 ttt NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PhONE: 764-0554 Saturday, March1 4, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three 50c DIAL 5-6290 ___ THE FUN STARTS AT 2:10- 3 -5 -.7 -9p.m. A RAWNOvsc~i PAOOUJCTk MtI1IHU BOhIUlMf Academy Award Nominee (Best Supportinq Actress) Extra: Academy Nominee Best Short: "People Soup" -W.C.FIELDS - SATURDAY AND SUNDAY MATINEES ONLY "THE BANK DICK" 1:45-4:15 "NEVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK" 3:00-5:30 the newst by The Associated Press and Col ege Press Service THE CAMBODIAN GOVERNMENT yesterday told the Viet Cong-North Vietnamese troops to get out of Cambodia before dawn Sunday. The ultimatum came in the form of a message delivered to the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese as hundreds of Cambodians ram- paged through the capital streets of Phnom Penh attacking Viet- namese shops and houses. Violent demonstrations against the presence of Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops in Cambodia have been taking place around the country all week. Prince Norodom Sikanouk announced that he would visit Moscow and Peking to seek help in curbing Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troop activities. SEN. J: W. FULBRIGHT (D-Ark.) yesterday hailed the Nix- on administration's decision to drop its opposition to repeal of the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution. In a seven page letter to Fulbright, the State Department said it "neither advocates nor opposes congressional action" on the reso- lution by Sen. Charles Mathias (R-Md.) to terminate the Tonkin resolution. Fulbright predicted early Senate action on the Mathias pro- posal. The position by the- State Department is a reversal of previous opposition to similar resolutions to repeal the Tonkin resolution. The Gulf of Tonkin resolution allows the President to send troops to Vietnam by executive order without congressional approval. In addition to the Tonkin resolution, the Mathias proposal would repeal the Cuban resolution of 1962, the Formosa resolution of 1955, and the Middle East resolution of 1958, all of which authorize the executive branch of the government to take whatever action it deem- ed necessary to meet crises that were at the time occurring. ISRAELI JETS yesterday flew deep into Egypt to bomb a Soviet-built missile base. Egyptian spokesmen reported five civilians killed plus 35 civilians and five soldiers wounded when the Israeli planes pounded an anti- aircraft installation at El Mansura, 45 miles west of the Suez Canal and 70 miles north of Cairo. It was the 15th air raid deep inside Egyptian territory this year. Israelis said all the planes returned safely. Israeli jets also continued short-range strikes across the canal' and military spokesman in Amman said Jordanian and Israeli forces exchanged machine gun fire for 10 minutes in the northern Jordan Valley. A STRIKE BY CITY EMPLOYES in San Francisco yesterday halted public transportation, ,shut down many schools, and crippled city services. The strikers from five unions represent more than 7,000 nurses, clerical workers, hospital housekeeping employes, social workers and maintenance employes. Police and firemen are not affected. Many of the other 7,000 city employes - either nonunion or covered by other union contracts - refused to cross picket lines at 200 buildings throughout the city.,. This refusal resulted in the complete shutdown of the city's streetcars, buses and cablecars, whose drivers are covered by a separate contract. The unions said one of their key demands was restoration of the increment system, which the Board of Supervisors did not include in the new salary increase ordinance adopted Monday night. This system provided automatic 5 per cent annual raises to new employes for four years. EXPO '70, Asia's first World's Fair, is scheduled to officially open today in Osaka, Japan. Seventy-seven nations and 33 Japanese industrial firms- a1 record number for any world exposition-have erected pavilions on the site. There also are structures housing the exhibits of several1 American states and Canadian provinces, the United Nations and1 other international organizations. Emperor Hirohito and 2,000 invited guests will attend the opening.' The six-month extravaganza, which already has cost the Japan- ese $2.7-billion to stage, will open to the public tomorrow when up- ward of half a million Japanese are expected to visit the compact grounds in the Senri Hills. No work of art at the exposition has aroused more comment than the three-faced theme sculpture by Japanese artist Taro Okamotot which towers over the roof of the theme area. Looming high in thet night sky, two beams of light shoot from the eyes of the topmost face, prompting one man to liken it to Godzilla, one of the horror monstersa of the Japanese movies. The Japanese public is not likely to be so critical. To many itt will evoke memories of Haniwa, the primitive Japanese sculpturet of the past.' Senate passes vote billU WASHINGTON -M- The Senate yesterday passed, 64 to 12, a voting-rights bill which extends the 1965 Voting Rights Act f o r another five years and lowers the voting age to 18 in all elections after Jan. 1, 1971. The Senate bill now goes to the House, which could accept it or direct the appointment of con- ferees to try to work out a com- promise. The 1965 Voting Rights A c t was designed primarily to prevent discrimination against blacks in the Southern states. The Nixon administration re- quested and the House narrowly approved last December a bill that would treat all states alike. Senate opposition to the admin- istration bill centered around the elimination of a requirement that the states covered get prior ap- proval from the attorney general of any changes in election laws. The Nixon bill would substitute for this provision authority for the attorney general to b r i n g court action against changes which he felt were discriminatory. Civil rights forces argued that this would open the way for many new bars to registration of blacks. House Democratic leader Carl Albert of Oklahoma, questioned at a news conference, said per- sonally he supports the Senate proposal to permit 18-year-olds to vote. Rep. Lloyd Meeds (D-Wash), who said he long has backed low- ering the voting age, said "I hope it is constitutional." There was no vocal opposition in the Senate to lowering the vot- ing age but many senators argued it could be done legally only by a constitutional ame n d men tor state-by-state action. They said t h e 1972 presidential election could be thrown i n t o hopeless confusion if the law extending the franchise were ruled out by the courts. -Daily-Jim Diehl New lights for police security at City Hall Security tightened at City Hall in response to recent bombings adults-$1.50 child-75cj frY- PTH POI'UM PRIW~I7 AVUNUU AT LMESY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 761.3700 not continuous with "Downhill Racer" By BILL ALTERMAN, In response to recent acts of violence directed at government buildings here and around t h e nation, the city has established tighter security regulations f o r City Hall. The .measures, which Police Chief Walter Krasny says are mainly designed to prevent bombings, in- clude: -Locking all but one set of doors to City Hall; -Increasing the number of foot patrolmen in the City Hall area; -Installing floodlights- on t h e concourse outside the City Coun- cil chambers; -Requiring people who come in- to the building after 5 p.m. to sign in at the lobby desk, which is manned by a police officer; and -Locking all floors in the eve- ning. The security measures at City Hall were first tightened t h r e e weeks ago following the clash be- tween police and demonstrators protesting the verdicts in the Chi- cago 7 conspiracy trial. Before. the clash, some of the demon- strators had smashed windows of businesses and thrown rocks at police cars parked outside City Hall. According to Krasny, there have been no bomb threats against the building. However, the p o 1i c e chief cited the recent bomb inci- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier. $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by mail. dents in Chicago and Detroit as evidence of a need for precaution. Around the country, bombings have been on the upsurge for the past year. In Seattle for instance, there were 32 bombings in the last year, with more than two-thirds of them coming in the last four months. courthouse where Brown was ori- ginally set to be tried. Thursday, three New York sky- scrapers were rocked by explos- ions in the early morning. According to police, most of the recent bombing attempts - not necessarily the ones mentioned above - have been caused by youthful left-wing militants. The strict sign-in regulations at City Hall may, in Krasny's words, "cause a little more inconven- ience" for several groups that meet in the building after 5:00 p.m. and for city employees who some- times return in the evening to finish up work. However, he points out that be- fore the regulations were impos- ed, numerous unauthorized per- sons wandered through the build- ings at night. ENACT workshop generates debate on 'ecology and ethics' By LYNN WEINER "You must begin -- and this is real ecology - to take control of your own lives," said Murray Bookchin, author of Ecology and Revolutionary Thought, to the over 250 people who crowded into Canterbury House yesterday. Bookchin spoke during an EN- ACT teach-in workshop on Amer- ican ethics and ecology, along with Rep. Paul McClosky (R-Calif), and history Prof. Robert Sklar. "Ecology is an entire outlook," Bookchin said, "and our society does not embrace that outlook in its ethic. - "The current American ethic," he explained, "is based on splits -such as between town. and coun- try-and hierarchies such as in government. "Unless we reject and transcend this ethic for one which is based not on splits but on integrations, we are lost." By accepting the authority of the government, Bookchin add- ed, "people consent to be dom- inated." And this is contrary, he said, to the non-departmentalized framework of nature. "One way to achieve both eco- logical and humanistic ends," he continued, "would be the decentral- ization of cities and governments into small, free communities tail- ored to the ecosystem." "The problem with ethics in terms of change," Sklar told the audience, "is that most Ameri- cans are willing to consider n e w ideas only when they're scared." He questioned whether or not the concern for the environment could be maintained without the pressure of fear. McCloskey disagreed with Book- chin's remarks, saying that gov- ernments are necessary. "We're all capable of evil,' 'he said, "and so we have government to check this evil." He also debated with the aud- ience on the value and the role of the legislative process in Amer- ica. One student. rejected McClos- ky's belief in the legislative sys- tem. "It's just not true," he said, people's attitudes are changed not by government but by minority pressure -- "by the people in to1e streets." McCloskey agreed that minority- pressure changed majority opin- ion but that the structure needs time to respond to this pressure. "And if you suggest that we have no government," he said, "Y o u mustj suggest a way to insure peace." 1 I I row.. STATE SHOWS AT: G}l)BBUIUOUSB GOOD NEWS I1 4 n4 X { 1:00 - 3:00 - 5:00 Proqram lnf Q: NO 2-6264 l7:00 and9:1o0p NOMINATED FOR 7 ACADEMY AWARDS p.m. "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR I" -National Board of Review "BEST ACTRESS- JANE FONDAI" -New York Film Critics ' OiL AIIM ADRflD I M FTIIAI 1 I U LVA ,~A ~ I 0