Wednesday, March 12, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page ThreA Professional Theatre Program Presents by the Authors of "FIDDLER ON THE ROOF !" CAMPUS CONSPIRACIES? Crackdown on protests spreads ,f ~WILL TO GUJGE ROSGVA ?RINZ By PHIL SEMAS College Press Service SAN FRANCISCO-For years Students for a Democratic So- ciety and other groups in the Left have been worrying and talking about "repression" on the campuses. Most students thought they were beingro- mantic or paranoid or both. But now the worry is a reality: the crackdown has begun. Governors and state legisla- tors are moving quickly to crack down on the unrest that is sweeping American campuses. Legislatures and governors in Wisconsin. California, Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, Kansas, New York and other states are all working on legislation which in- creases penalties for disrupters, cuts off their financial aid, and keeps them off the campuses. More than 5 such bills have been introduced in the Cali- DIAL 5-6290 FRI.-SAT. 8:30 P.M. MARCH 14-15 Hill Auditorium TICKETS NOW AT PTP TICKET OFFICE MENDELSSOHN THEATRE PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM presents National Theatre of Canada -2 NEW PRODUCTIONS- SBen Jonso's Hilarious Satire THE ALCHEMIST fornia legislature, and 17 in Wisconsin. Even President Nixon has en- couraged talk about campus conspiracies, saying in letters from Europe that he is "very concerned" about the rash of uprisings on campuses across the country in past weeks s Two Republican governors, Warren Knowles of Wisconsin and Ronald Reagan of Californ- ia, have also been- using their executive authority extensively, B o t h called out the National Guard in recent weeks, and Rea- gan has announced that from n o w on extensive police force will be used at the start of dis- ruptions, rather t h a n waiting until the violence reaches a high level. Campus administrators, w h o must live with strict new regu- lations and who are usually a little m o r e liberalrthan state legislators, have been moving a little slower. But they are mov- ing: recently the president of Notre Dame - hardly a hotbed of unrest ,-announced t h a t demonstrators would be dealt with harshly. The crackdown is probably heaviest in California, which has h a d more campus unrest than any other state. S. I. Hayakawa, acting presi- dent of San Francisco State Col- lege, practically invented the crackdown. He recently told a Congressional subcommittee, "I believe I have introduced some- thing new to this business of preserving order on campuses," referring to his use of police early rather t h a n waiting as long as possible "the way some other administrators have dome." At the University of Californ- I ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE BEST ACTOR- CLIFF ROBERTSON 'We shall never surrender' CIA L TECHNICOLOR' TECHNISCOPE' fMtlNltTIIGA,. tiEt~t C(nOP ,AF. I CATERING COMPANY Well established, offers excellent food service to Fraternity and Sorority houses, on a full or part-time basis. For Information Call 665-4967 or Eves. 663-5895y ia's Berkeley campus, the ad- ministration also took a hard line on the student strike which began Jan. 22. Police have been on the campus almost from the beginning of the strike, although Chancellor Roger Heyns has tried to keep a tighter reign on them than have administrators < at San Francisco State, where the police were turned loose on several days to beat demonstra- tors almost at will. Administrators w h o don't move fast enough orcrack down hard ,enough m a y find them- Iselves in for some heavy crit- icisli from the politicians. San Francisco State President Rob- ert Smith, who actually tried to talk about the issues in his cam- pus' strike also t r i e d to cut down on the escalating cycle of student - police confrontations, was one casualty of such crit- icism. Although Roger Heyns* is by no means soft on campus pro- testers, he has come under hea- vy fire for trying to control the police and insisting on due pro- cess in disciplinary cases f o r those cited in the disruptions. Sheriff Frank Madigan of Ala- meda County, where the Berk- eley campus is located, criticiz- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students of the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published -daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. HEL O ER NATIONAL SN RLCORPORATION H ELD E OX EASTERN T E ATRES 6TH WEEK FOR VILLa5E 375No. MAPLE RD. "769-1300 The Theatre Will Be Emptied After 7:00 P.M. Showing Fri.-Sat. ed Heyns for not summarily dismissing student strikers. When the Regents m e t 'in Berkeley recently, Reagan and several other Regents attacked Heyns. Reagan demanded a ban on all rallies and removal of all strikers from the campus. He implied that Heyns was being soft "because of the cause these dissidents are advocating" and that there "would be no ques- tion if it were the Ku Klux Klan trying to bring the Grand Dra- gon on campus." Thus, a good deal of control over the situation has been tak- en away from Heyns. The po- lice, under Sheriff Madigan, have been breaking up picket lines and attacking crowds, beat- ing students indiscriminately. Heyns is under orders from the Regents to immediately suspend any student involved in disrup- tions and not to approve any rallies or meetings which might be used to organize disruptions. The crackdown means more than police beating demonstra- tors. Both Berkeley a n d San Francisco State seem a little like dictatorships today. The right to assemble on S an Francisco State'scentral campus has been denied since Jan. 6, and Haya- kawa recently tried to stop the critical student press by cutting off funds for the college's stu- dent newspapers. At Berkeley 'there has been no general ban on gatherings, but the adminis- tration has been rejecting appli- cations for outdoor and indpor rallies alike. Tear gas, long lines of police, and helicopters whirling over- head are part of everyday life on both campuses, making them -resemble battlefields. One state legislator 'has proposed what may be the ultimate solution: walling in the campuses a n d forcing students to check in be- fore going to class. the Snews today by The Associa/ed Press and College Press Service PRESIDENT NIXON will announce his decision on whether to proceed with the Sentinel system later this week. Nixon's press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler, said yesterday the announcement will come after the President confers with Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, due to return from his Vietnam trip late tonight. Meanwhile, opponents of Sentinel increased their efforts to influence Nixon's decision. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.), a leading critic of the system, told the Senate, "Each increase in arms generates an increase in tension and each increase in tension leads us closer to hostilities." Three scientists who met w i t h foreign affairs advisor Henry Kissinger were unanimous in their opposition to the anti-missile system. * ., . THE NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION TREATY won an early test vote in the Senate yesterday as the first of a series of moves to modify the agreement was rejected. A proposal, sponsored by Sen. Sam J. Ervin (D-N.C.), ask- ed that U.S. approval of the treaty be contingent on an under- standing it involved no commitments to defend smaller na- tions from "nuclear aggression." The Ervin proposal was de- feated by a ,vote of 6G1-30. Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said efforts to modify the treaty at this late stage would require an extensive new round of in- ternational negotiations and would only serve to delay its passage by the Senate. Opponents of the treaty, with no apparent hope of block- ing the required two-thirds vote of approval, are concentrat- ing on efforts to modify the U.S. position. FRENCH WORKERS staged a 24-hour strike yester- day to demand higher wages from the government. President Charles de Gaulle accused the leaders of the strike of attempting to pulverize the nation, the economy and the franc. De Gaulle pledged to defend all three. The millions of workers who t o o k part in yesterday's walkout are demanding wage increases of at least 10 per cent. The government maintains such an increase would be infla- tionary. The wage demands had encouraged last week's gold rush across Europe on the theory the franc might be devalued. Gold prices dropped sharply in yesterday's trading. GOLDA MEIR was inaugurated as Israeli prime min- ister yesterday while Egyptian and Israeli troops dueled along the Suez Canal. Mrs. Meir indicated she would follow the hard-line policy of her predecessor, the late Levi Eshkol, in holding the Arab territory the Israelis acquired in the six day war of June, 1967. Each side accused the other of starting yesterday's inci- dent, which lasted nearly six hours. The Israelis charged the Egyptians had twice ignored ap- peals by United Nations observers for a cease-fire. The Egyp- tians said that Israel was responsible for the slow response to the UN appeals. A third UN call for a cease-fire ended the shooting. THE APOLLO ASTRONAUTS will be brought down on schedule tomorrow morning, despite turbulent weath- er in the prime recovery area. The announcement from Mission Control yesterday came amid the astronauts' reports that there was a brewing storm 200 miles southwest of Bermuda where Apollo 9 is scheduled to land at 10:24 a.m. tomorrow. If the landing area is changed Apollo's flight would be shortened or lengthened accordingly. * - * NORTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS unleashed three at- tacks yesterday near Saigon in what US officers said marked the beginning of a new phase of their enemy's offensive. All the attacks, which occurred about 50 miles north- west of Saigon, were repulsed by the Allies. US officers said they were convinced that Saigon re- mained the main objectiveof the new offensive. * . . THE SOVIET UNION took the unprecedented step of formally briefing West Germany on the Chinese-Soviet dispute. Soviet ambassador to West Germany Semyon Tsarapkin asked Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger to join the Soviets against what he termed the threat to Asia of Peking's "chauvinistic" foreign policies. German government spokesman said Tsarapkin re- quested the meeting "urgently," but added that he assumed Moscow was undertaking similar briefings in other Western capitals. Shakespeare s HAMLET MaRch 25-April 6-2 Weeks Only! MENDELSSOAIN TH EATRE TICKETS NOW AT PTP TICKET OFFICE SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Nominated for 2 Academy Awards * BEST Picture * BEST Director ' PARAMOUNT PICTURES A MEL FIL Te-r FRANcoZEIE Prodfuction or ROMEO ~JULIET Showings Doily 1:30 4:00 7:00 9:35 I i j PETITIONING for CINEMA GUILD BOARD I 2o, by Robert L. Short "The Parables of Peanuts is filled with wonderful quotes and is a real de- light to read from begin- nling to end. I could not possibly be more pleased." - *CHARLES M. SCHULZ, creator of PeanutsO Cloth, $4.95 " Paper, $1.95 S At ali bookstores Harper & Row 1817 Sign Up No s, AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day CINEMA GUILD Presents "AN OVERGROUND SEX-PROTEST FILM!" -Archer Wnsten. New York Post' 2538 SAB THE SEVENTH ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL MARCH 11-16, 1969 Architecture and Design Auditorium SCREENINGS at 7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 P.M. (excluding Saturday) SATURDAY MATINEE at 3:00 P.M. LITTLE CLUB featuring "The Six of Spades" League Snack Bar I I U OF D CARNY March 14-16 Rides-Games-Movies Side Shows-Midway AND FREE LIVE SHOWS BOB SEGER SYSTEM 8 P.M., Friday, Mar. 14 0 ROTARY CONNECTION 8 P.M., Saturday, Mar. 15 Red, White & Blues Band-. . . Poor Richard's Almanac U of D Corny Opens Fri., 6; Sat., 1; Sun., 1 :30 State Fair Coliseum Today at 1:15-5:05-9:05 inh PAULNEWANA Wdca!n rachel Today at 3:25-7:15 I HELD OVER, 6 Academy Award Nominations I E - .... I. I