Ann Arbor Civic Theatre presents "CACTUS FLOWER", by ABE BURROWS October 14-17, Trueblood Theatre Ticket Prices: $2:00 - $2.50 Box Office Open Mon. & Tues., 10 A.M.-5 P.M.; Wed.-Sat., 10 A.M.-8 P.M. 764-5387 P.O. Box 1993 Ann Arbor 48106 page three C14C Sitiiian Dai1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Wednesday, October 14, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three Page Three GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16-8:30 P.M. BENEFIT PROGRAM FOR OZONE HOUSE "An Evening in Readers' Theater" (Play-reading by student group from EMU) DONATION $1.00 Preceding Program, 6 P.M. Japanese Dinner, $1.10 (SUKIYAKI) for reservations call 662-5189 before Friday noon news briefs By The Associated Pres THE QUEBEC GOVERNMENT yesterday continued negotia- tions with the Quebec Liberation Front (FIO) for the release of two kidnaped officials. Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau of Canada endorsed the action of Quebec premier Robert Bourassa in opening talks with the F.I.Q. The F.I.Q. is still insisting on its six demands for the release of British diplomat James Richard Cross and of Quebec labor minister Pierre Laporte. * * * U.S. B52s continued to bomb the Ho Chi Minh trail for the fifth straight day of saturation raids. About 30 of the U.S. bombers flew from a Thailand bas'e to empty 30 tons each ow explosives on the communist supply route. The intensified bombing campaign was aimed at stopping North Vietnam's "dry season" drive to send war materials to its forces in Cambodia and Vietnam. WARSAW PACT FORCES launched military maneuvers yes- terday in East Germany. The maneuvers were the largest in the pact's fifteen year history.j For the first time Rumanian forces took part in the military ex- ercises. East German leader Walter Ulbricht and premier Willie Stroph were on hand to see the exercises. About 100,000 forces from all seven pact nations were deployed. Canada Italy e to Xpects to follow recognize 1 0a Sult By The Associated Press a n a d a and Communist ma yesterday agreed to es-, lish diplomatic relations. he two countries also agreed exchange ambassadors within months. A THE PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT on women's rights was modified by an amendment to permit prayer inthe public schools. This addition to the amendment followed three other additions which would exempt women from the draft, require ratification by the necessary three-fourths of the state legislatures within seven years and make the effective date two years after ratification. Women's rights spokesmen opposed these additions to the version which passed the House because it would send the bill to a House- Senate conference which would be conducted by the bill's foes. FRANCO-SOVIET RELATIONS were strengthened by an agreement signed yesterday in Moscow. The agreement, signed by French President Georges Pompidou before he left the Soviet Union yesterday, provides for consultations between French and Soviet representatives twice yearly. It also provides for cooperation between the two countries in utilizing mineral deposits in Siberia. A separate declaration signed at the same time by the leadersj of the two countries condemns foreign intervention in Indochina and urges the resumption of the Mid-East peace talks. THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT reported yesterday that a1 Soviet ship had left Cuba after the Pentagon cited indications that the Soviets were building a submarine base there. Howeyer, Pentagon spokesman Daniel Z. Henkin declined to say whether this laid to rest U.S. claims that the Soviet Union was constructing what appeared to be a strategic naval base at Cienfuegos, Cuba.t YU-CHU HSUEH, Nationalist Chinese ambassador to Canada, leaves Otta Nationalist China and Ottawa broke off diplomatic relations. The actiont recognized Communist China. BOMB SCARE: Government tightens se rfor federal offitce buildt Italy expressed hope yesterday that it would soon follow Canada's action in establishing full diplo- matic ties with Communist China. Canada's action came 20 years >>afterBritain took a similar course. However, Britain and Communist ..:'China have never exchanged am- bassadors, allowing their embas- sies to be headed by secondary diplomats. pmIn Washington, Robert Mc- Closkey, a S t.a t e Department Press officer, expressed concern that the agreement would have adverse effects on the internation- al position of Nationalist China. S"We believe also that this con- cern is shared by other members of the Pacific community," Mc- Closkey added. At the same time, Chow Shu- kai, Nationalist China's ambassa- dor to the United States, decried t~ Canada's actions as "incompre- hensible," and a "mistake." u Y 4.' x Meanwhile, Ottawa broke rela- tions with Nationalist China. -Associated Press Nationalist China, with head- wa yesterday after quarters on Formosa, announced came after Canada that it in turn had severed rela- tions with Ottawa and declared Canada had ignored "its friend- --ship of long standing with the government of the Republic of China. Yu-chu Hsueh, Nationalist am- bassador to China, left Ottawa by plane for New York, saying he was distressed by Canada's decision. Forty-six nations now recognize Communist China and 67 h a v e relations with the Nationalist government. T h e United States recognizes agon is among the t h e Nationalists of President dings guarded by the Chiang Kai-shek and opposed e Defense Department Canada's move to begin the talks own guards at most with Peking in Stockholm in Jan- pry installations. uary 1969. -hi o The White House in Washinig- ad the White House ton said Canada and the United eir own guard forces. States had discussed the question 'ederally owned build- for some time. SA guard, 78 are o- U.S. officials said the decision Washington, D.C. ar- in part reflected t h e easing of Peking's relations with the West. can't tolerate this any They added that this was an im- t taking some action," portant development b u t would not change U.S. policy on China. WASHINGTON ( P) - The gov- ernment tightened security at fed- eral buildings and offices through- out the nation yesterday after a series of terrorist bombings. A spokesman for the General Services Administration (GSA),t manager of federal civilian in- stallations, said he did not know whether the alert was prompted HELD OVER-2nd BIG WEEK "A BEAUTIFUL A N D ENGROSSING FILM. NOTHING SHORT OF MASTER- LY. PURE PLEASURE." -Judith Crist, New York Magazine "More successful than Ken Russell's inter- esting rendition of 'Women in Love' earlier this year." -vogue The minister's daughter. Her father taught her about God. The gypsy taught her about heaven. D.GH. Law irce's THE VIRGIN AND THE GYPSY Color Prints by Movielab A CH2O N Pictures Release:a division of incom Corporation u SENATE VOTE Report on obscenity rejected WASHINGTON (e) - The Senate yesterday voted 60-5 to denounce the recent report of the Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Porno- graphy. The vote to condemn the report came mo- ments after its chief sponsor, Sen. John L. Mc- Clellan, (D-Ark.), declared: "I fear that if we allow and encourage the flow of obscene material, there will be no stopping these sex offenders. "This filth is stimulating to them, they feed on it and the commission would guarantee that they have their fill." In their findings, 15 -of the 18-member com- mission said that there is no evidence that ex- posure to pornography is a significant cause of crime or leads to immoral or unnatural sex acts. They recommended that "federal, state and local legislation prohibiting the sale, exhibition or distribution of sexual materials to consenting adults shoulld be repealed." The resolution, which expresses the sense of the Senate but has no legal force, follows closely a letter signed by 34 Republican senators urging President Nixon to "disavow" the commission's findings. McClellan and a number of other senators said the commission wasted three years and $2 million in producing a final report they said con- sisted of "a series of unsupported or flimsily docu- mented opinions resting largely on a philosophy of permissiveness" "I do not think that the Senate should al- low this report - which would substitute hedon- ism for morality - to stand unchallenged," Mc- Clellan said. Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.), added: "The re- port gives the impression that the majority of the commission haveessentially given up on human nature and are prepared to accept a very cynical view of any inherent good in the human soul." Sen. Gordon Allott (R-Colo.), said he was particularly incensed at what he termed pseudo- scientific testing financed by the commission in- volving measuring the reaction of young men exposed to pornographic material. "This is one of the worst abuses of commis- sion power I have ever seen," Allott said, de- nouncing the report as "revolting" and an exam- ple of "marshmallow-headed thinking." ' by any secret information that might warn of further attacks; nor did he know how long the alert might last. The GSA placed guards on pa- trol outside federal buildings and in parking areas; locked all butc the main entrances; and began denying entrance to persons car- rying "suspicious packages" un- less they permitted inspection of the parcels. A spokesman said General Ser- vices Administrator Robert L. Kunzig ordered the security alert late Monday night and it was placed in effect yesterday. He said the GSA had been studying security problems "for some time" because of bombings against both government and nongovernment buildings. A fed- eral office building in Rochester, N.Y., was hit Monday. Kunzig said Monday that bomb threats to federal buildings have been running one to two a day for months. The alert means more activity and longer hours for the 3,582 un- iformed GSA guards who patrol 266 federally owned buildings and 104 other buildings or offices leas- ed by the government throughout the nation. But the government also leases another 7,321 premises which are not protected by GSA guards -I including 2,200 of the nation's 4,- 087 local draft boards. The GSA has alerted such agen- cies to step up their security ac- tivities, and it has contacted oth-! er federal and local law enforce- ,ment agencies. S. Vietnam Inew peaee LONDON 1P) - The Saigon government plans soon to offer the Communist-led Vietcong a new basis for a political settle- ment in South Vietnam, Ameri- can sources reported yesterday. Details of the proposals being prepared by the government of president Nguyen Van Thieu werenot disclosed. But in gen- eral their aim, according to the sources, will be to reinforce President Nixon's peace initia- tive. The Nixon initiative called for an internationally supervis- ed cease-fire throughout Indo- china; a peace conference to end hostilities in Laos and Cambodia along with the Viet- nam war; negotiations for the phased withdrawal of all for- eign troops; the immediate re- lease of all prisoners of war held The Pent federal build GSA, but the provides its other militax Congressa also have th Of the 266 R ings under C cated in the ea. "We just c more without he said. to propose settlemrent (' by the contending sides; and a fair political settlement reflect- ing the balance of forces in South Vietnam. It will be Saigon's purpose to spell out its approach to that political settlement, the infor- mants -said. The Thieu administration is expected to announce its pro- posals within the next ten days. In an effort to make those proposals as attractive as pos- sible, informants here believe, Saigon will proclaim its read- iness to cancel all past restric- tions on political activities by former members of the Viet- cong, sympathizers and com- munists. North Vietnamese and Viet- cong delegates at the Paris peace talks have given the Nix- on initiative a frosty reception. But the U.S. sources said the administration d o es not look upon that reaction as a rejec- tion. O O0F'IF'TH Forum FIFTH AVBNUU AT LIRERTy D~OWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 76.1-9700 7 :15 and 9:00 FM I III1 i LEARN SOMETHING IMPORTANT Yi ta top Al B dis an Bu 10 Ta use no' tem COME HEAR ABOUT HISS DEFYING, TAPE EXPANKING, MONEY PINCHING DOLBY NOISE REDUCTION BY ADVENT The Dolby "B" circuit was developed to rid pe recording of its most obstinate problem: THERE MUST BE pe hiss. 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