Wednesday, .tune 12, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, June 12, 1 9 6 8 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three t, East Germany announces Berlin travel restrictions BERLIN ()P-East Germany an- The United States, Britain and of the recent passing of what they nounced yesterday sweeping re- France protested the restrictions labelled aggressive national state strictions on travel by West Ger- on grounds travel rights must be of emergency laws in West Ger mans in a drastic move fore- decided under the', four-power many. shadowing a new Berlin crisis, agreements and that the Soviet The East Germans also an A top U.S. official called the Union, not East Germany, is the nounced complicated taxes o measures intolerable and West responsible authority. freight and transport mileag Berlin's mayor labeled the move The three Western allies, in through East Germany and raise "a black day for all Germans." identical letters to the Soviet am- transit fees for those travelin In an apparent bid to achieve a bassador to East Germany, called land routes to and from West Ber large degree of sovereignty, the for the Soviet Union's "urgent lin. East German Communist regime attention" to the need for re- SERIOUS SITUATION said it will require West Germans storation of free access to Berlin. In Bonn, Eugene Rostow, U.Q for the first time to have pass- PASSPORTS REQUIRED undersecretary of state for polit Sports. and visas for travel to West ia fardcae h rv Berlin, encircled by tommunist Foreigners now are required to rit irs ,declared the trav have passports and East Germanretiiosae"in tob territory. serious situation . . . such a chang There was no mention of offi- visas to travel between West Ger- from the present pattern can't b cial Allied travel through East many and West Berlin.ntolerated. Interior Minister Col. Gen. toeae. Germany which is controlled by Friedrich Dickel said West Ber- In Vienna, West German Vic the Russians. liers could travel to West Chancellor Willy Brandt urged th ________could_,traveltoWest Ger-Western Allies to "make it lea House defeats y et in )e xd g - S. ,el ge be ce he ar gun control bill Committee vote deadlocked; Celler predicts later aproval WASHINGTON (P-President Johnson's bid for a tougher gun control law was defeated yesterday in the House Judici- ary Committee by a tie vote but Chairman Emanuel Celler, (D-N.Y.) held out hope for a favorable vote next week. The committee deadlocked 16-16 on Celler's motion to re- port immediately the bill submitted by the administration Monday. The measure, introduced in the House by Celler and in the Senate by Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, (D-Conn.), would for- bid mail order sales of rifles and shotguns as well as hand- guns.- ., -Associated Press I guns. 40 - CIS &IIIL many and to East Germany Dy obtaining "an annex" to their present West Berlin identity cards and that there would be no change in theprocedure forWest Berlin citizens traveling into East Berlin. The East Germans said the new regulations were necessary because of neo-Nazism and revenge-seek- ing in West Germany and because MISTERS . FAMILY RESTAURANT " HAMBURGERS TR=R£ C= *CHICKEN CU1CMN . CONEY ISLANDS * JUMBOYS SMILING C SPEEDY SERVICE beyond doubt" that they will pro-I tect free access to West Berlin. Brandt said East Germany's an- nouncement "must be taken very! seriously." If the West Germans and the West Germans and the West Ber- liners agreed to everything order- ed by the East Germans, masses of paperwork and long delays in M already complcated transit would WeE be inevitable since travel by Ger- of 1 mans makes up well aver 90 per yest cent of traffic to and from West for1 Berlin. W East Germany in April an- diti nounced restrictions on the use men of land routes between West Ger- U.S many and West Berlin by West fron German officials. The Soviet T Union endorsed the restrictions eve as being within the jurisdiction of its East Germany. sibl Soldiers battle in SaigonL . ..as Napoleon's Ill's Empress of Mexico in JUAREZ Friday & Saturday-7:00 & 9:05 75c-Architceture Aud. CARRY-OUT SPECIALISTS NO WAITING - PLENTY of PARKING INSIDE SEATING OR EAT IN YOUR CAR OPEN 11 AM DAILY 0662-0022...<., 3325 WASHTENAW RD. ANN ARBOR 2 BLKS. W of ARBORLAND I. '.SUPERIOR entertainment-warm laughter even more enjoyable!" LUCILLE BALLif4 Vietnam buildup urged By The Associated Press South Vietnam can bear a greater cle around Saigon seven miles out, [ANILA - Gen. William C. load of the fighting." the maximum range of the big tmoreland, former commander In Saigon the Viet Cong switch- Russian rockets. U.S. forces in Vietnam, urged ed to daytime bombardment yes- Instead, the U.S. command says erday more American troops terday slamming some 30 big sallied troops constantly patrol th the Vietnam war. rockets into the heart of the city outskirts of Saigon and observa Vestmoreland called for an ad- during the morning rush hour. tion planes and armed helicopter onal troop buildup of 15,000 The barrage killed at least 19 patrol the area 24 hours a day. ato support the present 535,000 Vietnamese civilians and woundedp fighting men now oh the war 106. u i. it. It was the heaviest casualty toll Paris m eeting he four-star general, said how- -and the first major daytime r, the United States can reduce bombardment- since the Viet level of commitments, pos- Cong began almost daily shelling reconvenes - .y in troops in 18 months "if of the capital 34 days ago. The barrages have killed at least 128 PARIS .,P)-The possibility of persons and wounded 519. , new moves by the United States DIAL 5-6290 Tpero andounded 51. xand North Vietnam focused at- The six-foot 122mm rockets ex- tention on the deadlocked Paris ploded in the vicinity of major peace talks as negotiators pre- Sbuildings but did lit-pared to go back to the conferenc nth and wisdom make the tle damage to most of them. How- table after back to renc. tabl afer ~sixday recess. -Life Magazine ever, one landed on the roof of the government communications The meeting today will be the 1VY f\A 1headquarters and knocked out eighth between U.S. Ambassadox most telecommunications abroad. W. Averell Harriman and hiy including lines leased by a num- North Vietnamese counterpart: ber of American firms . Xuan Thuy, since the talks open- The rockets were fired from a ed May 13 rice paddy area about six miles While no one on either side here east of the center of the capital. expects any major breakthrougl Counter artillery fire was directed for some time, perhaps months; at the area, and just after the Western diplomats expect occa- COLOR barrage troops of the U.S. 11th sional tactical maneuvers by . byDuArmored'Cavalry Regiment swept Hanoi and Washington. by D~uxethe area. The Viet Cong apparently have rk in "MADIGAN" rocket units on all sides of Sai- ap an c -A U.S. spokesman said it would take at least fourrdivisionsiof rP~ar"OCN. -FRI. troops to throw a protective cir- / .-n:n b c w F . . .r - .-' .e Ir Rep. William M. McCulloch, (R-Ohio), voted against immedi- ate action but made a motion to reconsider the vote. It was agreed the committee would vote again June 20. Celler said he expected a com- promise version of the legislation would be approved at that time. At the White House, President Johnson called on the committee to reconsider promptly what he called "this shocking blow to the safety of every citizen in this country." Johnson said the deadlock" is a bitter disappointment to all Amer- icans and to the President. There is no excuse whatsoever for fail- ure to act to prohibit the inter- ,tate mail order sale of rifles." A ban. on mail order sale of pistols was included in a broad crime control bill which Congress sent to President 'Johnson last week. The House completed ac- tion on that bill following the fatal shooting f Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Following the Kennedy assassi- nation, the National Council for a Responsible Firearms Policy has pushed for tight federal gun con- trol legislation. James V. Bennett, former direc- tor of the Federal Bureau of Pris- ons and president of the associa- tion said he would prefer a law. as tight as that in Japan where he said all firearms, whether long guns or pistols, are denied to any- one except law enforcement offic- ials and a ivery few other closely screened individuals. ~I 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor EXCLUSIVE SHOWING WED.-SAT.-SUN. 1:10-3:50-6:30-9:10 OTHER DAYS 7:00 and 9:18 UN passes- .ban on weapons UNITED NATIONS ( R)-The treaty to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons won overwhel- ming approval in the United Na- tions yesterday, but more nations abstained on the vote than ex- pected. The vote in the General As- sembly's main political committee was 92 for the resolution, four against it, 22 abstaining and four absent. Delegates had expected between 100 and 105 U.N. mem- bers to vote for the treaty. The committee adopted a 48- nation resolution commending the treaty and asking that it be open- ed for signature and ratification as soon as possible. The assembly will give the resolution final ap- proval later this week, Winding up the session. Of the ,five nuclear powers, the Soviet Union, the United States and Britain cosponsored the reso- lution and voted for it. France abstained, and Communist China, which is not a member of the United Nations, called the treaty a Soviet-U.S. plot against rev- olutionary peoples. Nuclear powers signing the treaty pledge not to transfer nu- clear weapons to countries that don't have them,. while countries without nuclear weapons pledge not to acquire them. DISARMAMENT The nuclear powers signing also pledge to seek nuclear disarma- ment, spare other countries from nuclear attack and share .with them the peaceful benefits of nu- clear energy. U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg told the committee it was "a historic vote" and "a good augury for a more peaceful world." He said the treaty was "one of the most momentous in- ternational agreements ever pre- sented in the United Nations." ? But Tanzanian Ambassador Akili B. C. Danieli said it would only "malie the nuclear club more exclusive." He accused the big powers of using "blackmail and threat" to get it accepted. BIG POWERS Foreign Minister Chen Yi of Red China declared that the treaty resolution was adopted "un- der the manipulation of the big powers." The treaty names the Soviet Union, the United States and Britain to receive signatures and ratifications. It is to take effect when ratified by those three and 40 other signers. cO..sYAN JOHNSON Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. FRIDAY: Richard Widmar met urg1es1 'gelocation I 1 H ELD FOXE OVER F1 3RD WEEK 375 NOTICE! CONTIN OVAL GENERAI. CORF EASTERN THeATReSI D. VILL GE 5No. MAPLE RD.-'769.1300 SAT.-SUN. 2:25-4:10 7 :00-9:25 I I %-,/ 0 k_/ 0 -W-F ww -M STARTING JUNE 15th 4UOUS SHOWINGS DAILY Carefree Parking Inside We Make Our Comfort Own Weather Program Information 2-6264 IFISTFUL OF DOLLARS" plus "FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE" ~~-Starts TO MO RROW! London isforthebirds" andthe loveliest birdso!all toHerman andhis Goldwyn ' C v Alt Nt Ti EVERY DAY FOR THE SUMMER "PLANET OF THE APES' IS A BLOCKBUSTER. FASCINATING If -Uz Smith, Cosmopolitan 20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS CHARITON HESTON in an ARTHUR P. JACOBS production DLAN RODDY McDOWALL- MAURICE EVANS - fJ IM HUNTER JAMES WHITMORE JAMES DALY UNDA HARRISON APAC PRODUCTIONS- MORTABRAHAMS FRANKLIN J SCHAFFNER C Ar WiSL N R(} N G It a f OONotsl .E .o. AviCE IQA[ WLSN OOSERUNG aE~ c t Ira soui [ PANAYISI Otr -COLORBY DELUXE SUNDAY AFTERNOON 3 P.M., Multipurpose Room Undergraduate Library METROPOLIS Fritz Lang-Theau von Harbou (1927) film version of class conflict in the, future city, distorted by "ornamental" style and misunderstanding of ideas. Sponsored by Voice Film Series Free-donation requested TOKYO (K')-The presence of American troops in Japan was further criticized yesterday by a special committee of Japanese cabinet members who urged the United States to relocate an air base. In addition the Tokyo city council demanded a ban on visits by nuclear warships, and student demonstrators blocked a gunpow- der shipment. Sentiment against American bases in Japan increased marked- ly this month after an American I jet based at. Itazuke Air Base crashed on the Kyushu University campus. Despite a U.S. promise to cur- tail night flights, the cabinet committee recommended that Prime Minister Eisaku Sato ask the United States to move the air base to another site. Chief Cabinet Secretary To- shio Kimura said even if the full cabinet agrees, no formal request will be made to U.S. authorities until a number of alternate loca- tions can be offered. The U.S. Embassy declined to comment until a formal request is made by Sato. Sources said the Japanese are considering asking the United States to share the Japanese air bases, at Tsuiki or'Miyazaki, which like Itazuke are on Kyushu, Ja- pan's southern island. At Kitakyushu about 100 leftist students charged into a railway station and snake-danced on its track to prevent the arrival of 1,800 tons of gunpowder for the U.S. ammunition depot on the city's outskirts. T TONIGHT at A HOOT 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. An evening of endless musical Come, do your thing and 'or long. variety. sing-a- I Alogldmwmm r AFTER "A MAN ANd A WOMAN;' TE NEW lOVE STORY by ClAUdE [EIOUCb THURSDAY ASHOK TALWAR singing Indian classical and folk music, accompanying himself on the Tampoura. --==--======= ==*-== U jia_ STARTS TOMORROW-7:00 & 9:00 IF YOU THINK YOU'RE OLD ENOUGH. I I COPEFOR SHERIFF HELP RESTORE PRIDE IN THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE Please make your check payable to Copi for Sheriff and send it to R. Sauve, Treasurer, 1315 Cam- bridge, Ann Arbor. Ann Arbor Dance Theater Summer Activities STUDIO CLASS Dancers will participate in weekly hour long sessions , of composition. No previous experience in dancp com- position or advanced techniques is necessary. Wednesdays, beginning June 12, 2:00-3:00 at the Jones School-No Fee NOTE: Babysitter will be hired for mothers attending 'sAlber L Finney~ ChalieBubbSes "A Memonali Ene~prises Prdaciton . A Reg~onal Fim Release . TechnKcOWc' YVES MONIANd /-All f-.r- krnir ni n nr. nn Al i~~i1 ~*!~ -IFT V i