Tuesday, March 18, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three ................. ._.s U.S. embassy burns files, expecting Phnom Penlf all PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (P) -The U.S. Embassy, apparently anticipating Phnom Penh soon may fall, burned documents yes- terday and told refugee agen- cies to "pare down to essential personnel," American sources reported. At the same time, field re- ports said insurgent forces cap- tured the airstrip at Neak Luong, the government's last and only position on the Mekong River, cut off a government force that had captured Tuol Leap, six miles from Phnom Penh airport, and rocketed the airport, killing five children and wounding two. "EVERYBODY IS packing up," one American said. "It's just a precaution." But a visitor to the homes of several Ameri- can diplomats said, "Everyone is trying to be casual but they are packing furiously." Sources said Ambassador John Dean asked Catholic Relief Services, World Vision and CARE to send nonessential per- sonnel to Bangkok or Saigon until after the U.S. Congress votes on President Ford's re- quest for additional military aidt for Cambodia. Some diplomats fear the request will be rejected and foresee Phnom Penh falling to the Khmer Rouge insurgents. d ii e1 Prince Norodom Sihanouk, nominal leader of the Cambo- dian rebels, warned over the weekend that foreign embassies in Phnom Penh should urgently evacuate their nationals or his forces could not be responsible for them "at the moment of liberation." In other Indochina develop- ments: -South Vietnamese bombers struck across the Cambodian border attempting to knock out North Vietnamese artillery and troops threatening the South Vietnamese provincial capital of Tay Ninh City, field reports said. -On Cambodia's war fronts, insurgents pressed their attack on the besieged Mekong River naval base town of Neak Luong, 30 miles southeast of Phom Penh, military sources said. Government troops evacuated five small positions northeast .f the town, while in the south military sources said fighting had reached the outskirts of the town's market. Daily Official Bulletin Tuesday, March 18 Day Calendar WUOM: Sen. John Pastore, D,- R. I., & Congressman John Dingell, D.-MI, discuss nat'l energy policy at Nat'l Press Club, 10:05 am. Materials, Metallurgical: C. Preece, SUNY, Stony Brook, "Civatation In- duced Damage in Materials," 3201 E. Eng., 11 am. Medical Ctr. Commission for Wo- men: C3086 Outpatient, noon. Music School: Trumpet Student Recital, Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. Art: Walter Spink, "Art: East and west,"rArt, Rrch. Aud., N. Campus, 1:30 pm. Environmental Studies: G. Kane, "Energy," 4001 CC Little Bldg., 3 Great Lakes Research: T. Platt,, Bedford Inst. of Oceanography, "Spatian Structure of Phytoplank- ton Populations," White Aud., Cooley Lab, 4 'pm. Str. Coordination Ancient, Mod- ern Studies, John W. Aldridge, "Jo- seph Heller's Something Happened," 2408 Mason, 4 pm. English, Ext. Service: Poetry read- ing, Frederick Morgan, Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10 pm. Res. Col.: Rhoads Murphty, "Perspective on the Western Impact in Asia," Greene Lounge, L. Quad, 7 pm. Art History: Richard Burgwin, "Early Romantic Cross-Currents Among Nations and Art Forms," Pendleton Ctr., 2nd Flr., Union, 7:30 pm. Hillel: Living Jewish Catalogue Series, "Good Deeds," Hillel, 8 pm. Psychiatry: Benjamin Libet, U. Cal., "The Time Factor in the Cere- bral Processes Involved in Conscious Experience," CPH. 8 pm. Music School: Degree recitals - Jean Phillips, mezzo-soprano, Re- cital Hall, 8 pm; Ann McCutchan, clarinet, Cady Music im., Stearns Bldg., 8 pm. General Notices May 1975 Teacher's Certificate Candidates: All requirements for the teacher's certificate must be com- pleted by April 7. S NITE STEAK SPREE $1.79 RIB-EYE STEAK FOR ONLY New York MD's stage work walkout $ 39 AP Photo Be my gwest Cambodian children watch gleefully as one of Phnom Penh's palace elephants proceeds to devour everything in sight. UNANIMO US DECISION: Supreme Court backs federal WASHINGTON (P) - Adminis- tration plans to open the Atlan- tic to oil drilling cleared a major stumbling block yester- day when the Supreme Court upheld federal ownership of the offshore rEsources. A unanimous court rejected the claim of coastal states that colonial charters granted by the English and Dutch gave them domain over a 100-mile- wide belt of the Atlantic off their coasts. THE COURT ruled separate- ly against efforts by Louisiana and Texas to claim offshore areas beyond a boundary drawn by a special Supreme Court master. Both contended the boundary ignored their histori- cal control over offshore areas awarded the government. An Interior Department oil claim spokesman said the Atlantic ruling freed the department to ask oil companies to recom- mend areas for leasing, a pre- liminary step in the leasing process. "1 don't think we'll rush out tomorrow to do that, but we should be able to do it soon," said the spokesman. THE DEPARTMENT had ask- for the recommendations last month, but Secretary Rogers Morton rescinded the invitation when reminded of an -earlier promise to make no such move before the court's ru3ing. Morton said he was pleased by the ruling and assured coas- tal governors "we will continue our policy of early and frequent discussion with them as we pro- ceed toward the development of this precious resource." Maine Gov. James Longley said he was disappointed by the ruling and hopedthe court, based its decision on "more! valid information" than the' Ford administration presented in its arguments. At issue in the case were ad- ministration plans to accelerate offshore leasing as a key part of its program to reduce the nation's dependency upon for- eign oil. The administration intends to lease 10 million acres during the next year, including three and one-half million tcres off the Atlantic Coast. Geologists estimate there are 20 billion barrels of oil under the Middle Atlantic, an area that has been closed to oil ex- ploration. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 132 Tuesday, March 18, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). day through Saturday morning. LblAItIleNdfCHARTEnI u NEW YORK (P) - Some 3,000 doctors went on strike yesterday for shorter hours in the f i r - t major walkout of men in white in the nation's history. Twenty-three of the city's 72 private and municipal hospitals were targets of the 7 a.m. walk- out. AN ESTIMATED 24,000 pa- tients are under daily treatment in the beds, outpatients clinics and emergency rooms of t n e struck institutions. But a spokes- man for the League of Volun- tary Hospitals declared: "We will be able to provide full and uninterrupted service. We do not expect to turn anyone away.", In addition, Dr. Richard Knut- son, head of the striking Com- mittee of Interns and Residents, pledged the union to take care of emergencies in any hospital where there was a shortage of, physicians and surgeons. Z THE UNION sought a cvtopck to 80 hours in weekly schedules which it claimed now keeps in- terns and residents on duty up to 110 hours, with uninterrupted stretches of as long as 56 hours. Knutson told a news confer- ence that a doctor Jag-ti-ed from too many hours wihout rest poses a greater threat to the well-being of patients than the strike would. The union leader added thatj the strikers are prepared to ac- cept binding arbitration a a d added: "As soon as that comes, the strike will end." HOWEVER, the league term- ed the walkout "irresponsible and unconscionable." The American Medical As-h sociation in Chicago, called itt the first such strike in the na-1 tion's history, not counting brief "job actions" by hospital em- ployes. Interns newly graduated from medical school and assigned to on-the-job training receive $13,- 500 a year in the struck hospit- als. Residents augmenting their basic training to develop special skills for private practice make $16,000. THE STRUCK hospitals were in Manhattan, the Bronx, Queens and Brooklyn. S e v e n municipal hospitals were involv- ed because they are staffed by the private hospitals, at city ex- pense. The remaining 72 private hos- pitals in the city have no con- tract with the CIR, the strikers' union. Three of the struck hosptals reported transferring some pa- tients or sending them hcma to' ease the burden on theirhdeplet- ed professional staff. Emergen- cy planning in advance called for the postponement where ne-I cessary of such routine surgery as tonsillectomies. Hours on duty for senior physicians weref stepped up. ---- 548 Church 1 77 7. - Rod Rodgers Dance Company I DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 663-2476 INCLUDES: TOSSED SALAD BAKED POTATO HEARTHSTONE TOAST YOUR BUCK Ma rch 20 & 21 EMU's Pease Auditorium 8 P.M. $3.00 General Admission Sponsored by The Office of Student Life, The EMU Dance Department, and The Michigan Council For The Arts. -- 3035 Washtenaw :across from Lee Oldsmobile Veterans Add $100 to Your GI Benefits Call ROTC, 164-2401 1{ I Judge orders quiet on Slasher case U NOWMEMN II STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 S0. UNIVERSITY Home Cooking Is Our Specialty Every Monday and Tuesday Nite BEER NITE Pitcher Beer- price No cover for Students WED.-FREE PINBALL NITE THURS.-TEQUILA NITE 341 S. MAIN U. - I LOS ANGELES (P) - A judge yesterday imposed a gag order on authorities, including Police Chief Ed Davis, to halt further comments in the skid row Slash- er case. The order was signed by Su- perior Court Judge F r a n k Baffa shortly before Davis was to hold ahnews conference to discuss the case and about charges to be filed against Vaughn Greenwood, linked by Davis to the case. quested by Public Charles Gessler. DefenderI Davis, is a taped interview with a television station Sunday, said Greenwood would be charg- ed in the Slasher case. He later told the Los Angeles Times, "- am convinced that we have the right suspect and we will go to the district attorney to seek a, complaint within a week or} two." Breakfast All Day Specials This Week 3 eggs, Hash Browns, Beef Stroqanoff Chinese Pepper Steak Toast & Jelly-$1.05 Home-made Beef Stew Eaq Rolls Ham or Bacon or Home-made Soups (Beef, Sausage with 3 eggs, Barley, Clam Chowder, etc.) Chili, Veqetable Tempura Hash Browns, Toast and (served after 2 p.m.) jelly-$1.50 Hamburqer Steak Dinner- ( lb.)........$1.89 3 eggs, Rib Eye Steak, Spaghetti in Wine Sauce Hash Browns, Beef Curry Rice Delicious Korean Bar-q Beef Toast & Jelly-$2.10 (served after 4 Daily) DON'T SIGN YOUR LIFE AWAY! 1!