Millet hits sex roles _. 11 NEED A FAST CEANIG JOBLIO * One hour service 0 Drive thru pick up Low prices " Open Saturday COME SEE 'US SOON A&P One hour cleaners 312 E. Huron-Across from city hall OPEN: Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. 7 a.m.-5 p.m. CALL 668-9500 NEW YORK (AP) - Feminist au- thor Kate Millett said yesterday that all women seeking a career in the arts must overcome "the enemy within" - a self doubt she says is imposed on women by his- tory and society, "Hamlet is thie human condi- tion; Ophelia is just a girl who didn't get married," said the 36- year-old writer, charging women in the artsare not considered peo- ple in their own right, but treated as "adjuncts to men." Dr. Millett, author of "Sexual Politics," commented at the final session of a five-day hearing on the status of women conducted by the City Commission on Human Rights. Others appearing before the p a n e 1 included anthropologist Margaret Meade, women's libera- tion activist Betty Freidan, Rep. Shirley Chisholm (D-N.Y.) a n d experts in the fields of welfare reform, tax law and psychology. Mrs. Chisholm, the nation's first b l a c k woman member oi Congress, said yesterday that a special fund should be created to help finance involvement by wo- men in politics. Her testimony supported earlier remarks by Commission Chairman Eleanor Holmes, who said women should organize a political coati- tion "equal in organization to any lobby Congress has ever seen." Extensive tax reform for work- ing mothers was urged by Colum- bia University tax law professor George Cooper. He said a married woman with two children w h o earns $5,000 a year is left with only $635 to add to the family's income after paying various ex- penses such as her taxes, carfare I and child care. The take-home pay could be tripled, Cooper said, through a series of tax reforms, including elimination of joint returns, de- ductions for child care expenses ' and reduced Social Security de- WOMEN MAR ductions. Day saw mar RCH in New York to bring attention to their demand for equa ches and rallies in many major cities on Aug. 26. page three .aat11t NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 B SINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, September 26, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three U LAST NIGHT! JOHNNY AND THE HURRICANES BEGINNING MONDAY STANLEY MITCHELL nd the Peoples' Choice specializing in Soul and Rock for 'your listening and dancing pleasure Open 7 days a week from 11 A.M. to 2 A.M. Fine Food 761-3548 c 3 P.M. to 1 Ali. 314 S. Fourth every day Ave.. *Sa -Sun.,r Sept. 26-21 BREATH LESS, dir. JEAN-L UC GODAR D (1959) Godard's first film, and some say his best.' 1 & 9:05 Architecture 75c 662-8871 Auditorium ne ws briefs By The Associated Press A WEEK-OLD ELECTRICAL CRISIS continued yesterday as New York City had voltage cut back for the fourth day in a row. Consolidated Edison again cut back its voltage, and other utilities in the eastern New York State also reduced power five per cent yes- terday. In New York, the crisis reached its peak on Tuesday, when Con, Edison blacked out 90,000 homes on Staten Island and in Westchester County to conserve a rapidly dwindling power supply. The power drain on the nation's largest city was expected to de- crease over the weekend with the shutdown of business and industry. Elsewhere, the restoration of broken down generating units did much to ease the pressure on utility companies, as power demands went into a weekend decline. And the New England Electric system reported through a spokes- man that "the present facilities can more than handle the require- ments with an adequate reserve." * * * CAMBODIAN TROOPS closed in yesterday on the Communist force which has stalled a major government offensive for nearly two weeks. Two wedges of Cambodian troops closed in yesterday in an at- tempt to divide the strong Communist forces dug in at the village Taing Kauk. In the Cambodian fighting, Taing Kauk must be reclaimed if the Cambodians are to achieve the goal of their offensive: to push north to the provincial capital of Kompong Thom, clearing Highway 6 and reclaiming an important part of central Cambodia. Meanwhile, the U.S. Command in Vietnam announced that the remaining elements of the 199th Infantry Brigade had begun a with- drawal of 5,000 men as part of President Nixon's fourth-phase cutback of .50,000 troops. NGUYEN CAO KY, vice-president of South Vietnam, might be advised against coming to the U.S., Washington sources in- dicated yesterday. Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, national security adviser to President Nixon, will leave for Paris next Saturday to confer with U.S. nego- tiators at the Vietnam peace talks. Ky is expected to be in Paris then also, and a meeting between them seems highly probable. Washington officials did not say directly if Kissinger planned to advise Ky about his planned trip to the U.S. to appear at a Vietnam rally Oct. 3. They did hint, though, that Ky's appearance in the U.S. might cause embarrassment to the administration. * * THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT for direct election of the President will face an important test on Tuesday. Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.), the majority leader, filed the cloture petition to stop debate on the amendment. Last week a previous cloture petition was six votes short of the two thirds majority needed for passage. Sen. Mansfield described the upcoming vote on Tuesday as a "momentous occasion." He said that he will send telegrams to his fellow Democrats to vote on Tues. Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa), the minority leader, said he didn't. expect the petition to pass. Scott also signed the petition. base in Cuba WASHINGTON {M)-- The Pentagon said yesterday it has solid indications that the Soviet Union is building a perman- ent submarine base in Cuba. A White House official, who preferred to remain anony- mous, said the U.S. would view a strategic installation there "with utmost seriousness." The Defense Department 'did not rule out the possibility that the facility reported under development may be designed to support missile-firing subs now cruising off U.S. waters. The White House official drew a parallel with the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, when -Associated Press) Search fo~r bank robber Policemen from the Boston area line up to join in the search for William M. Gilday, who is suspected of slaying a policeman during a bank holdup Wednesday. Gilday is one of four suspects sought. in connection with the holdup and slaying. POSSIBLE DANGER: rAECreconsieders radla tion waste site *4 WASHINGTON (P) - The Atomic E n e r g y Commission, caught between pressure to save money and fear of another up- roar over safety, is taking a sec- ond look at a radioactive waste storage plan once criticized as "in its essence dangerous." Under Project Bedrock, mil- lions of gallons of hot, highly radioactive substances would be poured into man-made caverns in the bedrock 1,500 'feet below the AECeinstallation at Savan- nah River, S.C., and kept there for the 1,000 or so years it would continue to emit radio- activity. The project was stalled ini the furor touched off when a Na- tional Academy of Sciences committee said it seemed possi- ble the mud-like waste could ooze through the undiscovered fissures in the bedrock and eventually contaminate the Sa- vannah River. Soviets charged wihbidg A majority of the committee recommended that Project Bed- rock be dropped and more effort be concentrated on solidifica- tion of liquid waste and storage in salt mines in Kansas. How- ,ever,some members disagreed and recommended further re- search into Project Bedrock. The AEC had budgeted $1.3 million two years ago for re- search into feasibility of Pro- ject Bedrock. But that money ias never spent following the disclosure last year of the NAS report, which also criticized. waste handling at other AEC installations. Instead, AEC spokesmen push- ed the advantages of salt mine storage in appearances before congressional committees and began developinent of a reposi- tory in mines near Lyons, Kan. This salt mine project is con-' tinuing. But for the radioactive liquid now stored in huge tanks at Savananah River, the AEC estimates solidification a n d shipment to Kansas would cost about 10 times more than devel- oping bedrock storage. President John F. Kennedy said peace in the Caribbean could be preserved only if So- viet offensive weapons were removed from the area and were kept out in the future. Kennedy's statement remains U.S. policy, the White House of- ficial said. That Soviet ships have moved barges and other' equipment into the harbor at Cienfuegos over the past few weeks "makes us feel they m a y be seeking sustained capabilities in the area," Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim announced. Asked if the base is intended to support Russia's new Yankee- class submarines, each of which carries 16 missiles and is similar to the U.S. Polaris subs, Fried- heim replied "We can't rule out that possibility." The White House official said such submarines clearly would be offensive in nature and thus would bring into play the policy Ken- nedy enunciated. He added that this country "would view the establishment of a strategic base in, the Caribbean with utmost seriou'sness." He said no representations on the subject have yet been made to the Soviet Union, adding that the United States isnkeeping c 1 o s e watch to determine what kind of weapons could be based at the site where activity has been spot- ted. "At the right moment," the ad- ministration official said, the, United States "will take the action that seems indicated." The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the Universit vof 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: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. Avi ation security, tighteneda WASHINGTON (P)-The Nixon administration toug h e ne d its stanld against hijackers yesterday, warning that federal guards will not hesitate to shoot if all else fails in halting an airline hijacker. "We will do everything in our power to prevent shooting on the plane,",said Secretary of Trans- portation John A. Volpe. "Shoot- ing will be done as a last resort." He added, however, that "When it comes to the lives of 200 Amer- ican passengers and crewmen as opposed to the life of a hijacker, there is no question of what we're going to do." Volpe's remarks came as he signed an agreement with the Justic'e Department that gives jurisdictional responsibilityhf o r hijackings to the FBI while a plane is on the ground, and to the Federal Aviation Administra- tion when it is in the air. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell signed for the Justice Department while FBI Director J. Edgar Hoov- er and retired Lt. Gen. Benjamin 0. Davis Jr., President Nixon's di- rector of civil aviation security, looked on. Mitchell told newsmen that the memorandum of understanding merely formalizes current proce- dures, ,but should eliminate un- certainty in a crisis situation. The guards, who include FBI and Treasury agents and FAA air marshals, will be supplemented by military personnel trained in han- dling potential hijackings, Volpe said. At least. some of the mili- tary men should be on the planes within a week, he said. Hoover said FBI agents acting as airliner guards will carry reg- ular sidearms. He said the FBI will exchange intelligence infor- mation concerning hijackers or potential hijackers with govern- ments of other countries. Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY I, I I # ry '> >F % "_f;y :i:J ':+?ppi: rl.. ..SM 4+ 3: ",. # fq y W:' f' r +y '. i {y .. _'.4j r: :: \ $ f ; }: }n'S'% {F.,:,{i ., C}i{%' K fc+T } COMVE AS YOU ARE l { is 'f:YJ r? ii31:' I y{: ?J r +r::,loo ' iiiIi T }'f+t twol WRITERS AND POETS (Students, Faculty, Everybody) mm - THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE a new, monthly in-depth look at society, politics and the culture, literature and the arts WANTS: " feature articles " essays " book reviews m a n 3n Ur 4'i .1I JEFF GUTHRIE Old Time Fiddle with BUSTER piano Sat., 1:00-P.M. WORKSHOP Tues., 8:30 CTEV EIJW fHOICE £ S DIAL 8-6416 4th Hit, Week O i C kiti 4eObL~*daw44p rr "Start the Revolution Without Me"~ and WEAR WHAT YOU WANT for your 0. £du. WITH GENE WILDER - out of "The Producers" DONALD SUTHERLAND fresh from "M*A*S*H" "#j - - " ,':....:_ to i I I i