4
See Calley Similarity rr. MEADE, Md. !II - A definite re- lationship betwen the case of Lt. Wi!- "am L. Calley Jr. and Col. Oran K. Henderson's was seen by Henderson 's civilian lawyer Friday at the colonel's pretrial on My Lai coverup charges. "I think the American public has ex- pressed strong feelings about the Calley case," sald Henry B. Rothblatt o[ New York, who. defended Green Beret offi- cers in a 1969 spy slaying case. I Henderson, SO, is charged with "will- fully falling to conduct a proper and thorough investigation" into reports of "elcess ive killing of noncombatants." "We don't think there Is a case," Rothblatt said of the Army's charges against the much·decorated command- er of the nth Brigade In the Americal Division during the March 16, 1968 as- sault on My Lai. Henderson was obvl- au Iy not guilty, he told newsmen. "I think they the public also would have trong feelings about this case, Rolhblatt said. "I feel the same way," said Hender- son outside the 1st Army courtroom building. "These charges are totally un- founded in fact and the Army knows it," Rotbblatt said In a statement. "To be specific, Henderson has con- sistently stated that he saw only 6-8 killed or wounded in My Lai on the date in question and that it had been reported to him that 20 non-combatants had been inadvertently killed that day, along with 128 Viet Congo Lt. Col. Frank J. Dorsey, heading Hender on's three·man mnitary defense team, sald Calley probably would not be among the witnesses called but capt. Ernest Medina probably would be, The pretrial hearing, before Military Judge Peter S. Wondolowski, lasted less than two hours. It is sche duled to re- convene Tuesday. Medina, 34, was CaUey's company commander in the assault and Is ac- cused with over-alt re ponsibility for the Vietnamese deaths. Army' on My , Lai: 'One Course of Action: Wr.y jl WASHINGTON 1.4'\ - The Army said Friday night it had " only one legal course of action" In the My Lai case and was to investigate the allegations of massacre and prosecute the accu se d if the evidence warranted. "Even though the legal action was painful and difficult, the Army would have failed to meet its obligation to the law of our nation had it not acted, " the Army said. It issued what it called a " fact sheet on the Son My incident" after a wave of protests swept the country following the court· martial conviction of Lt. William L. Calley on a charge of murder in the killing of at least 22 South Vietnamese I civilians in March 1968. The four-page statement Included a review of milestones in the cllse, includ- ing the first allegations by a former soldier named Ronald L. Ridenhour and running through the various courts- martial and other actions which have followed. The statement leaned heavily on tbe FT. BENNING, Ga . iA'I Strict new Army rules kept convicted My Lai mur- derer WlIliam Calley under tight bouse , arrest Friday, but he was able to serve as host in his bachelor quarters to Ala- bama Gov . George Wallace. "I believe President Nixon is going to do the right thing and the right thing Is to grant clemency to Lt. Calley ," Wallace told reporters as he emerged from a 13- minute chat with the 27-year- old Calley. "1 would cllI on the President Ind Iht CongrelS lind I think they wi II r.· not to me but ie the Americ.n people." I The [ormer third-party presidential candidate came to nearby C01umbus , here I Ga .. to address an American Legioh w fund-raising rally for Calley and drop- I ped ofr at the Vietnam war veteran 's apartment before the gathering. or the r sburg' ne and cal soc- chaos . focused eif-coo' ! templa- ld Lo or 1noiogy, Wallace said he had met Calley in Montgomery , Ala. , before the recent trial which resulted In a life imprison· ment sentence against the decorated young lieutenant. Schwarz Freed , Less Than Year After Sentencing PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (A'J - Marine Pvt. Michael Schwarz was freed from lh e Portsmouth Naval Prison Friday, less than one year after he was sen- tl!nced to a life term for the tated murder or 12 Vietnamese civilians. Schwartz, of Weirton, W. Va ., receiv- ed the life sentence June 21 , 1970, but I military authorities reduced It later to one year at hart! labor , loss of pay and allowances , and a dishonorable dis- charge. . An appeal of the Marine private 's case is before the Naval Appelate Review BO Rrd . Des pite the dishonorable di charge ordered in the revised sentence Dec. ]5, 1971 , 8 spokesman at the Portsmouth Naval Disciplinary Command Prison said Schwarz had not been released from the Service . The spokesman said &hwarz was ordered to report to the Marine Development and Education Center in Quantico, Va., by midnight Saturday , and had left by bus . '!be one-year term at hard labor was shortened by 77 days for good conduct , the prison authorities said. Schwarz will remain In the service 3ven though his enlistment has run out. Officials said he must remain since hiJ dJscbarge.is in appeal process presently. Geneva Conventions , aying they have the force of law becau e they have been ratified by the United States and adding that because of this : "The Department of the Army has had a moral and legal obligation to adopt a continuing policy of investigating fully all substantive allegations or violations of the laws of war involving American personnel. "Every allegation of misconduct OD the battlefield - regardless of the rank or position of the person purportedly responsIble - must be thoroughly ex- plored." Without referring to the upS well o[ protests against Calley's conviction, the Army saId his ca e will now ' be subject to review by the commanding general Itt Ft. Benning, Ga. , the Army court of military review, and the U.S. court of military appeals, a three-judge civilian body . It said the review process may not in- crease either the charges or the punish- ment, but may confirm or reduce them . As outlined, the new grou.,a rules mike the 27·year·old Calfey virtuatty In .round·the·c1ock prisoner within his g.r- den apartment. Nearly all of this 21S· square. mil. infantry eenter is oH 11m· Its to him. And I military pollc.mln lIuards him night and d,y. Calley was released from the stock- ad e Thursday evening for at lea the initial slages of what shapes up as a long appeal from a life sentence. It was imposed Wednesday by the same six-man military jury which had con- victed him 48 hOllrs earlier of the pre- meditated murder of 22 unarmed Viet- namese civilians at My Lai on March 16 , 1968. Tbe al ernative penalty was death. Calley left the red brick stock- ade, an Army spokesman said he would be under su pervision of a lone guard, and probably would be denied the pri- vileges 01 officers' social clubs and gatherings . otherwise, it was said, he would have pretty much the freedom of the post, · Wallace Visit I.taltll.h... In 1861 Henclerson Serving the University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City lewa City, Iowa 12240-Saturclay, april 3, ,." Henry B. Rothblatt, left, civili.n lawyer from N.w York is shown outside th. Ft. Me.de court building with his ctient, Col. Oran K. Henderson. The Army oHICIr I. ch.rlled with failing to conduct • proper investigation into reports of excessive killing of noncombatants in My La!. The pretrial hearings got underwlY Frid.y. - AP Wlrtphote 10 eont. a copy Suez Rlan ' Responses Mixed Iy , .... Ateocimd P ..... Egypt's Dew proposal for reopenIng the Suez Canal drew a mixed response Friday from two Israeli ministers . One denounced it as absurd and the other said it merited discussion. Information Minister Israel Galill, one of Premier Golda Meir's closest associ- ates , declared in a radio interview in Tel Aviv that the proposal advanced by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt was absurd. He indicated t1l41t Israel would reject it. A few hours earlier, Deputy Premier ViO.1 Allon expresnd reterv.tion•• But he told • lourn.lis's' luncheon in Tel Ayiv th.t his 1I0verllm.nt should be re.dy to discull • partill 'reaty over the w.terw.y. I rael's r'oreign Ministry issued a statement repeating Israeli readiness to hold "serious di cusslons" on the canal, as well as other issues linked to the sta lemated Israeli-Arab negotiations in New York under the auspices of U.N. mediator Gunnar V. Jarring. Unemployment Levels 011 At 60;0: Bureau 01 Labor The ministry statement criticized what it cailed Egyptian preference for "a campaign of public statement rather !ban detail ed negotiations." in Washington said the United St.tes is expected to advise Isrlll not te reject Egypt's proposal out of hind, but thlt no preuure will be brought to be.r. The Egyptian offer is regarded In !be U.S. capital as a possible vehicle to end the Middle East stalemate and offer both side an opportunity to re ume negotiat- ing through Jarring. WASHING1'ON IA'I - Unemployment appears to have leveled off at an annual rate of 6 per cent but the economy it- seU may be heading toward recovery, the head of the Bureau of Labor Statis- tics ( BLS ) told Congress members Fri- day. This interpretation of official unem- ployment slatistics for March was given br BLS Commissioner Geoffre,y before the Joint Congressional EconOm- ic Committee . The committee called Moore to testify aItrr the Labot De- partment last month halted regular news briefings on unemployment and economic figures . Th. oHicial st.tistics, rele.led by the burl.u .n hour before Moor.'. .ppt.r· 'nce, showed the lobi ... rate hll .g.in hit the 6 per c.nt m.rt Ifter twe months of decline. The 6 per cent represents 5.2 million jobless men and \Vomen, t he bureau said, and is an increase of 150,000 on an an · nual basis when seasonal adjustments are made. The bureau said the unemployment rise occurred largely among teen-agers and those in the 2G- to 24-year age brac- ket. 11 said many of the jobless were wo- men and young people entering the lab- or force for the first time and finding no work. The ending of the monthly news con- ferences, a fixture since 1959 at least , came after a series of conflicts in inter- pretive statements of the professional statisticians and their policy-making superiors in the Labor Department and White House . Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson AI.bem. Gov.rnor Gto,... W.lIece, left, paid vl,lt Frluy to Lt. WillI.m Cilley Jr .• t CII1IY'. Ft. BIn"I"" <iI., qu.mrs. WIII.e. will help I .. d I r.My for C •• ley tonl,ht In IIIIrby Columbl., 0.. -APWI ......... . saw the two-tenths of a percentage point decr ease from the December 6.2 unem- ployment rate , the highest in nine year s, as a " heartening sign of improvement in the economy." Moore', IIsistlnt commissioner, Hlr- eld Goldstein, Slid the figures repre. unted a mixed picture. Moorc himself told the Economic Committee it is " approximately right " to say I hc rate ha Ic\ ' eled off at 6 per ccnt. But he said orne signif- Jeant components of lhat rale show signs of decline. And Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien said the jobless figures are the result of a fallUre ' of Nixon administration economic polic- ies . Nixon did not comment directly , but the White House staff at San Clemente, CaliC., announced $12 million has been provided to help promote jobs and to retrain thousands or unemployed teeh- nicians and scientists left jobless by cuts in the aerospace and defense In- dustries. UI Afro-American Program Receives Humanities Grant t The interdisciplinary Mro-American studies area in the University of Iowa's American Civilization Program has re- ceived a grant of $56 , 264 from the Na- tional Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) for the 1971-72 academic year . Prof. Robert A. Corrigan, executive secretary of the Committee on Afro- American Affairs, said $15 , 000 of the grant would be devoted to fellowships lor thr ee graduate students joining the progra m next year. Also to be hired with gra nt support are two scholars in the field of Afro- American stu die , one of whom will be a specialist in Mro-American literature and intellectual thought. The univesity received a grant o[ $37,000 from NEH [or the current aca- demic year, some of which has been used to support the studies of 10 black graduate and undergraduate students. Corrigan said the aim of the Ameri- can Civilization Program is to provide stud ents with integrated knowledge of American life, history, thought, insUtu- lions and characteristic by studying the whole cuI lure of the U.s. in historical perspective . He said, "Although the program, through its genera l courses, concerns It- self in part with material relating to the participation of the black American life , there is still room for specialized courses on the black experience which could provide the student with a more detailed knowledge than is now avail- able." Sad at aid he would agree to a new ex- tension of the cease-fire and reopening of the canal, if the IsrRelis pull back from the waterway and withdraw from part of the Sinai Desert. But, Sad.t added, Egyptian troop. 'WOuld move into the territory vac.ted, .nd this Is regarded as one sticking point with the Isrl.lis. The 1m Ii government has said that II is willing to withdraw from the banks of the Suez Canal, if there is peace, but not pull back to its old frontiers, which It considers insecure. Allon said " Egypt has made a propos- al for reopening the Suez Canal to inter- national shipping without reaching a full peace treaty, and we should be ready for suc h a partial treaty." He w.rned, however, th.t "w. must .rrlve .t the kind of legal .rr.ngement th.t will not weaken Israel's defen .. 111- up in the Sinai Deltrl." In Cairo, acting Foreign Minister Ismail Hafaez called in representatives of the Bill Four and officially informed them of Cairo's demand that Israel pull back from the canal. He also advised representatives of the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union of the stand set out by Sa- dat that Egyptian troops should cross onto the Suez Canal's eastern bank. In Amman, Jordanian government aathorities said Palestinian guerrillas blew up an oil pipeline early Friday and that a town in northern Jordan came under fire from neighboring Syria. The guerriltas also planted a land mine which killed three people and injured a fourth , a government communique said. Controversial Teacher May Be Fired, Says Basic Issue Is '6ensorship' . One of the partiCipants in the ex ed- ucation controv ersy in Iowa City, fam- ily living teacher Michael Roe, has re- ceived notice that his teaching contract may be terminated at the end of the current academic year. Roe the notice in a let rr from the Iowa City schools superinten- dent that the School Board is consider- ing taking such action. The te.cher has reque5led the first of two private hearings before the board to which he is 'egally entitled. The first IUO _ting will probably be on Tu ... d.y. In his first public comments since the oontroversy erupted. Roe said Friday that the basic issues is one of censor- ship. "The question is, are the public schools going to be indoctrinators or a place for education? I think there Is a big difference ," Roe said. Roe added that it appears that a view- point such a that of the Gay Liberation Front wiU nol be allowed in the class- room . Roe was removed from his position in teaching after two members of the Gay Uberation Front visited a course en- tItled "Human Relations" In South East Junior High on March 4. He was assigned to research in the Board of Education Office shortly after that. At time Schools Superinten4Mnt James Reusswig s.id th.t Rot mid. I serious error in bri"gino lhe two mtft to the class. Soulh East Principal Kirk Hansen also rebuked Roe, sayi ng that at a time when the program was endangered by legal action, the visit of the Gay Lib members wa a "fla unting in the face of ob jections the independence of the pro gram." The reason t hat he had used the Gay Lib member as a " resource" for the cia ,Roe sai d. was because the "mel!· age" about homosexuality that these per OilS can deliver cannot be delivered by else . "Their basic message was 'Yes, we' re homosexuals. We 're not sick, not un- happy, not dangerous , nol perverted. Yet we're oppressed by this society. We 're persecuted!' I think that mes- sage can't be delivered except by some- one in Gay Liberation someone who is a homosexual - that is, the message of wanting not to be persecuted," Roe said. He itid th.t It'. importlllt th.t tht students he.r th.t point of view bee_II it's not one th.t they he.r .v.ry d.y .nd beclUse of their behlVler pattwM .mong th.mstlv ... In regard to the matter of eensor- ship, Roe maintained that it Is the oM- cia I policy of the district that teachers are supposed to deal with controver ial issues. , In addition , he said, " the official cur- riculum for eighth grade human relati or ips does list homosexuality as one of the topics for study." The same guide. he added, which is approved by the School Board, says that the course should be a student-di- rected type of course in which ques- tions , concerns and interests of stu dents are to be considered in what is offered In the cia, sroom. His job illS a te.cher, Roe said, Is not to say " underst.nd this information In this way .nd you should beh• .,. .c· cordingly. " "My job is not to determine their be- havior . My job is to provide knowledge, to help them assimilate it, to provide an environment where they can ta lk about the information they have," he explained . As far as his course is concerned , he said, "I think that the School Board and some of the public have forgotten that it (t he course) is not without values - values In the sense that we are saying that honesty is good , knowledge is good and very dIrectly by having sex openly as a subject of discussion that sex is good - not a bad thing. It's a healthy aspect of our lives."

See .Hende~som/ Calley Similarity - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-04-03.pdf · 4/3/1971  · Calley Similarity rr. MEADE, Md. !II - A definite re lationship

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Page 1: See .Hende~som/ Calley Similarity - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-04-03.pdf · 4/3/1971  · Calley Similarity rr. MEADE, Md. !II - A definite re lationship

See .Hende~som/ Calley Similarity rr. MEADE, Md. !II - A definite re­

lationship betwen the case of Lt. Wi!­"am L. Calley Jr. and Col. Oran K. Henderson's was seen by Henderson 's civilian lawyer Friday at the colonel's pretrial on My Lai coverup charges.

"I think the American public has ex­pressed strong feelings about the Calley case," sald Henry B. Rothblatt o[ New York, who. defended Green Beret offi­cers in a 1969 spy slaying case.

I Henderson, SO, is charged with "will­fully falling to conduct a proper and thorough investigation" into reports of "elcessive killing of noncombatants."

"We don't think there Is a case," Rothblatt said of the Army's charges against the much·decorated command­er of the nth Brigade In the Americal Division during the March 16, 1968 as­sault on My Lai. Henderson was obvl­au Iy not guilty, he told newsmen.

"I think they the public also would have trong feelings about this case, Rolhblatt said.

"I feel the same way," said Hender­son outside the 1st Army courtroom building. "These charges are totally un­founded in fact and the Army knows it," Rotbblatt said In a statement.

"To be specific, Henderson has con­sistently stated that he saw only 6-8 killed or wounded in My Lai on the date in question and that it had been reported to him that 20 non-combatants had been inadvertently killed that day, along with 128 Viet Congo

Lt. Col. Frank J. Dorsey, heading Hender on's three·man mnitary defense team, sald Calley probably would not be among the witnesses called but capt. Ernest Medina probably would be,

The pretrial hearing, before Military Judge Peter S. Wondolowski, lasted less than two hours. It is scheduled to re­convene Tuesday.

Medina, 34, was CaUey's company commander in the assault and Is ac­cused with over-alt re ponsibility for the Vietnamese deaths.

Army' on My , Lai: 'One Course of Action:

Wr.y

jl

WASHINGTON 1.4'\ - The Army said Friday night it had "only one legal course of action" In the My Lai case and ~at was to investigate the allegations of massacre and prosecute the accused if the evidence warranted.

"Even though the legal action was painful and difficult, the Army would have failed to meet its obligation to the law of our nation had it not acted," the Army said.

It issued what it called a "fact sheet on the Son My incident" after a wave of protests swept the country following the court· martial conviction of Lt. William L. Calley on a charge of murder in the killing of at least 22 South Vietnamese

I civilians in March 1968. The four-page statement Included a

review of milestones in the cllse, includ­ing the first allegations by a former soldier named Ronald L. Ridenhour and running through the various courts­martial and other actions which have followed.

The statement leaned heavily on tbe

FT. BENNING, Ga. iA'I ~ Strict new Army rules kept convicted My Lai mur­derer WlIliam Calley under tight bouse

, arrest Friday, but he was able to serve as host in his bachelor quarters to Ala­bama Gov. George Wallace.

"I believe President Nixon is going to do the right thing and the right thing

~ Is to grant clemency to Lt. Calley," Wallace told reporters as he emerged from a 13- minute chat with the 27-year­old Calley.

"1 would cllI on the President Ind Iht CongrelS lind I think they wi II r.· ~nd, not to me but ie the Americ.n

people." I The [ormer third-party presidential

candidate came to nearby C01umbus, here I Ga.. to address an American Legioh

w fund-raising rally for Calley and drop-I ped ofr at the Vietnam war veteran's apartment before the gathering.

or the

rsburg' ~bstract ~intings ne and cal soc-

chaos. focused eif-coo'

!templa­ld Lo or 1noiogy,

Wallace said he had met Calley in Montgomery, Ala., before the recent trial which resulted In a life imprison· ment sentence against the decorated young lieutenant.

Schwarz Freed ,

Less Than Year After Sentencing

PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (A'J - Marine Pvt. Michael Schwarz was freed from lhe Portsmouth Naval Prison Friday, less than one year after he was sen­tl!nced to a life term for the preme~l­tated murder or 12 Vietnamese civilians.

Schwartz, of Weirton, W. Va., receiv­ed the life sentence June 21, 1970, but

I military authorities reduced It later to one year at hart! labor, loss of pay and allowances, and a dishonorable dis­charge. . An appeal of the Marine private's case is before the Naval Appelate Review BORrd .

Despite the dishonorable di charge ordered in the revised sentence Dec. ]5, 1971, 8 spokesman at the Portsmouth Naval Disciplinary Command Prison said Schwarz had not been released from the Service. The spokesman said &hwarz was ordered to report to the Marine Development and Education Center in Quantico, Va., by midnight Saturday, and had left by bus.

'!be one-year term at hard labor was shortened by 77 days for good conduct, the prison authorities said.

Schwarz will remain In the service 3ven though his enlistment has run out. Officials said he must remain since hiJ dJscbarge.is in appeal process presently.

Geneva Conventions, aying they have the force of law becau e they have been ratified by the United States and adding that because of this:

"The Department of the Army has had a moral and legal obligation to adopt a continuing policy of investigating fully all substantive allegations or violations of the laws of war involving American personnel.

"Every allegation of misconduct OD the battlefield - regardless of the rank or position of the person purportedly responsIble - must be thoroughly ex­plored."

Without referring to the upS well o[ protests against Calley's conviction, the Army saId his ca e will now 'be subject to review by the commanding general Itt Ft. Benning, Ga., the Army court of military review, and the U.S. court of military appeals, a three-judge civilian body.

It said the review process may not in­crease either the charges or the punish­ment, but may confirm or reduce them .

As outlined, the new grou.,a rules mike the 27·year·old Calfey virtuatty In .round·the·c1ock prisoner within his g.r­den apartment. Nearly all of this 21S· square.mil. infantry eenter is oH 11m· Its to him. And I military pollc.mln lIuards him night and d,y.

Calley was released from the stock­ade Thursday evening for at lea t · the initial slages of what shapes up as a long appeal from a life sentence. It was imposed Wednesday by the same six-man military jury which had con­victed him 48 hOllrs earlier of the pre­meditated murder of 22 unarmed Viet­namese civilians at My Lai on March 16, 1968. Tbe al ernative penalty was death. Wh~n Calley left the red brick stock­

ade, an Army spokesman said he would be under su pervision of a lone guard, and probably would be denied the pri­vileges 01 officers' social clubs and gatherings. otherwise, it was said, he would have pretty much the freedom of the post, ·

Wallace Visit

I.taltll.h... In 1861

Henclerson

Serving the University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City

lewa City, Iowa 12240-Saturclay, april 3, ,."

Henry B. Rothblatt, left, civili.n lawyer from N.w York is shown outside th. Ft. Me.de court building with his ctient, Col. Oran K. Henderson. The Army oHICIr I. ch.rlled with failing to conduct • proper investigation into reports of excessive killing of noncombatants in My La!. The pretrial hearings got underwlY Frid.y.

- AP Wlrtphote

1 0 eont. a copy

Suez Rlan 'Responses '~re Mixed

Iy ,.... Ateocimd P .....

Egypt's Dew proposal for reopenIng the Suez Canal drew a mixed response Friday from two Israeli ministers. One denounced it as absurd and the other said it merited discussion.

Information Minister Israel Galill, one of Premier Golda Meir's closest associ­ates , declared in a radio interview in Tel Aviv that the proposal advanced by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt was absurd. He indicated t1l41t Israel would reject it.

A few hours earlier, Deputy Premier ViO.1 Allon expresnd reterv.tion •• But he told • lourn.lis's' luncheon in Tel Ayiv th.t his 1I0verllm.nt should be re.dy to discull • partill 'reaty over the w.terw.y.

I rael's r'oreign Ministry issued a statement repeating Israeli readiness to hold "serious di cusslons" on the canal, as well as other issues linked to the sta lemated Israeli-Arab negotiations in New York under the auspices of U.N. mediator Gunnar V. Jarring.

Unemployment Levels 011 At 60;0: Bureau 01 Labor

The ministry statement criticized what it cailed Egyptian preference for "a campaign of public statement rather !ban detailed negotiations."

Officlal~ in Washington said the United St.tes is expected to advise Isrlll not te reject Egypt's proposal out of hind, but thlt no preuure will be brought to be.r.

The Egyptian offer is regarded In !be U.S. capital as a possible vehicle to end the Middle East stalemate and offer both side an opportunity to re ume negotiat­ing through Jarring. WASHING1'ON IA'I - Unemployment

appears to have leveled off at an annual rate of 6 per cent but the economy it­seU may be heading toward recovery, the head of the Bureau of Labor Statis­tics (BLS) told Congress members Fri­day.

This interpretation of official unem­ployment slatistics for March was given br BLS Commissioner Geoffre,y MOQ~e before the Joint Congressional EconOm­ic Committee. The committee called Moore to testify aItrr the Labot De­partment last month halted regular news briefings on unemployment and economic figures .

Th. oHicial st.tistics, rele.led by the burl.u .n hour before Moor.'. .ppt.r· 'nce, showed the lobi ... rate hll .g.in hit the 6 per c.nt m.rt Ifter twe months of decline.

The 6 per cent represents 5.2 million jobless men and \Vomen, the bureau said, and is an increase of 150,000 on an an· nual basis when seasonal adjustments are made.

The bureau said the unemployment rise occurred largely among teen-agers and those in the 2G- to 24-year age brac­ket.

11 said many of the jobless were wo­men and young people entering the lab­or force for the first time and finding no work.

The ending of the monthly news con­ferences, a fixture since 1959 at least, came after a series of conflicts in inter­pretive statements of the professional statisticians and their policy-making superiors in the Labor Department and White House.

Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson

AI.bem. Gov.rnor Gto,... W.lIece, left, paid • vl,lt Frluy to Lt. WillI.m Cilley Jr .• t CII1IY'. Ft. BIn"I"" <iI., qu.mrs. WIII.e. will help I .. d I r.My for C •• ley tonl,ht In IIIIrby Columbl., 0.. -APWI ......... .

saw the two-tenths of a percentage point decrease from the December 6.2 unem­ployment rate, the highest in nine years, as a "heartening sign of improvement in the economy."

Moore', IIsistlnt commissioner, Hlr­eld Goldstein, Slid the figures repre. unted a mixed picture.

Moorc himself told the Economic Committee it is "approximately right" to say I hc joblc:l~ rate ha Ic\'eled off at 6 per ccnt. But he said orne signif­Jeant components of lhat rale show signs of decline.

And Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien said the jobless figures are the result of a fallUre ' of Nixon administration economic polic­ies.

Nixon did not comment directly , but the White House staff at San Clemente, CaliC., announced $12 million has been provided to help promote jobs and to retrain thousands or unemployed teeh­nicians and scientists left jobless by cuts in the aerospace and defense In­dustries.

UI Afro-American Program Receives Humanities Grant

t

The interdisciplinary Mro-American studies area in the University of Iowa's American Civilization Program has re­ceived a grant of $56,264 from the Na­tional Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) for the 1971-72 academic year.

Prof. Robert A. Corrigan, executive secretary of the Committee on Afro­American Affairs, said $15,000 of the grant would be devoted to fellowships lor three graduate students joining the progra m next year.

Also to be hired with grant support are two scholars in the field of Afro­American studie , one of whom will be a specialist in Mro-American literature and intellectual thought.

The univesity received a grant o[ $37,000 from NEH [or the current aca-

demic year, some of which has been used to support the studies of 10 black graduate and undergraduate students.

Corrigan said the aim of the Ameri­can Civilization Program is to provide students with integrated knowledge of American life, history, thought, insUtu­lions and characteristic e~pression by studying the whole cuI lure of the U.s. in historical perspective.

He said, "Although the program, through its general courses, concerns It­self in part with material relating to the participation of the black American life , there is still room for specialized courses on the black experience which could provide the student with a more detailed knowledge than is now avail­able."

Sad at aid he would agree to a new ex­tension of the cease-fire and reopening of the canal, if the IsrRelis pull back from the waterway and withdraw from part of the Sinai Desert.

But, Sad.t added, Egyptian troop. 'WOuld move into the territory vac.ted, .nd this Is regarded as one sticking point with the Isrl.lis.

The 1m Ii government has said that II is willing to withdraw from the banks of the Suez Canal, if there is peace, but not pull back to its old frontiers, which It considers insecure.

Allon said "Egypt has made a propos­al for reopening the Suez Canal to inter­national shipping without reaching a full peace treaty, and we should be ready for such a partial treaty."

He w.rned, however, th.t "w. must .rrlve .t the kind of legal .rr.ngement th.t will not weaken Israel's defen .. 111-up in the Sinai Deltrl."

In Cairo, acting Foreign Minister Ismail Hafaez called in representatives of the Bill Four and officially informed them of Cairo's demand that Israel pull back from the canal.

He also advised representatives of the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union of the stand set out by Sa­dat that Egyptian troops should cross onto the Suez Canal's eastern bank.

In Amman, Jordanian government '·aathorities said Palestinian guerrillas

blew up an oil pipeline early Friday and that a town in northern Jordan came under fire from neighboring Syria.

The guerriltas also planted a land mine which killed three people and injured a fourth , a government communique said.

Controversial Teacher May Be Fired, Says Basic Issue Is '6ensorship' .

One of the partiCipants in the ex ed­ucation controversy in Iowa City, fam­ily living teacher Michael Roe, has re­ceived notice that his teaching contract may be terminated at the end of the current academic year.

Roe receive~ the notice in a let rr from the Iowa City schools superinten­dent that the School Board is consider­ing taking such action.

The te.cher has reque5led the first of two private hearings before the board to which he is 'egally entitled. The first IUO _ting will probably be on Tu ... d.y.

In his first public comments since the oontroversy erupted. Roe said Friday that the basic issues is one of censor­ship.

"The question is, are the public schools going to be indoctrinators or a place for education? I think there Is a big difference," Roe said.

Roe added that it appears that a view­point such a that of the Gay Liberation Front wiU nol be allowed in the class­room.

Roe was removed from his position in teaching after two members of the Gay Uberation Front visited a course en­tItled "Human Relations" In South East Junior High on March 4. He was assigned to research in the Board of Education Office shortly after that.

At t~e time Schools Superinten4Mnt James Reusswig s.id th.t Rot mid. I

serious error in bri"gino lhe two mtft

to the class. Soulh East Principal Kirk Hansen

also rebuked Roe, saying that at a time when the program was endangered by legal action, the visit of the Gay Lib members wa a "flaunting in the face of objections the independence of the program."

The reason that he had used the Gay Lib member as a " resource" for the cia ,Roe said. was because the "mel!· age" about homosexuality that these

per OilS can deliver cannot be delivered by an~·one else.

"Their basic message was 'Yes, we're homosexuals. We're not sick, not un­happy, not dangerous, nol perverted. Yet we're oppressed by this society. We 're persecuted!' I think that mes­sage can't be delivered except by some­one in Gay Liberation someone who is a homosexual - that is, the message of wanting not to be persecuted," Roe said.

He itid th.t It'. importlllt th.t tht students he.r th.t point of view bee_II it's not one th.t they he.r .v.ry d.y .nd beclUse of their behlVler pattwM .mong th.mstlv ...

In regard to the matter of eensor­ship, Roe maintained that it Is the oM-

cia I policy of the district that teachers are supposed to deal with controver ial issues.

,In addition , he said, "the official cur­riculum ~ulJjne for eighth grade human relatior ips does list homosexuality as one of the topics for study."

The same guide. he added, which is approved by the School Board, says that the course should be a student-di­rected type of course in which ques­tions, concerns and interests of students are to be considered in what is offered In the cia, sroom.

His job illS a te.cher, Roe said, Is not to say " underst.nd this information In this way .nd you should beh • .,. .c· cordingly. "

"My job is not to determine their be­havior . My job is to provide knowledge, to help them assimilate it, to provide an environment where they can talk about the information they have," he explained.

As far as his course is concerned, he said, "I think that the School Board and some of the public have forgotten that it (the course) is not without values -values In the sense that we are saying that honesty is good, knowledge is good and very dIrectly by having sex openly as a subject of discussion that sex is good - not a bad thing. It's a healthy aspect of our lives."

Page 2: See .Hende~som/ Calley Similarity - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-04-03.pdf · 4/3/1971  · Calley Similarity rr. MEADE, Md. !II - A definite re lationship

Kien: 'I Wanted to Spit •

EDITOR'S NOTE: T .. 1M" .... If Liber.I*' N.WI Mriice, ..... DMbry ... IC¥en K,.".., MV, jlltt rttunIIIt fnm • two.... lrip .. tilt Dtmecratk It.,blle If Vlttntm. While III H ..... tllty visited the embtuy If .... ' ... vit­ItNl R.volutitMry ~ II .... Stuth ... nwt HIIYft Thi K .... , ... ,....., , pe ... '" frem the Swth, lit •• ..,.. Itt the city. Dockery ..... KMnIS ....,.,., th.I Kltn "movH .... Iy ,. ..... -..er, .mlled IfMI ., .... y ........... ...,. rldu In the cem_ ..".... .. eM tilt •• r, wls.hed VI pM ........ 4Iuri!!t eur .I.y In Norlh VlttMm. "...., ",11e .. I'" ... In the ....., ,..,.... 1'MftI, her vek: ...... lit r .... ,... II ... ItW htr stwy. Her Im,lI tur'NII hind I."... • IIIthttY ..... 1 .. artHk .. let wII'" she .... "

* * * To tell my story I must tell you of an the thlngs 1 have een In my IIItive provo ince. 1 Uve near Da Nan.. whIch Is a very big port dly. You may have bem! a lot about the crimes of U.S. forces through newspapers and the rldio, but I myself was a victim and witness of them. When the U.S. forces came to my village they used bulldozers and leveled III the hou es and cottages III order to build their military posts.

Vlen Quang Is a ham&et near oun. When the U.S. forees raided It. the youllg people ran away becau e they are .trong. The Americans herded all the old people .nd children left behind Into trenches. Then they exploded miMI ad grenades In lhe trenches. Twenty·five people were killed. When they were dead, the GIs trampled them underfoot. At the same time the chool at Vlen Quang was bombed and 4S pupils 1ft the classroom were killed .

I'll .. II yeu .btut ....... r IncWent , IIW. A WDmlln WII PInt .. ,In Itlrth te I dlild In .IItut twe WHIt,. Durlftt • rlld flvi GI. fwad ......... III • ~ .nd trltd .. r.pI Mr, but ,hi ,...1 ...... So the flYI GI. tild ....... the Itt4 end rlped hlr ,. delth. Afttr ..... tllty """ their bIYDn." ,. pluclt tilt .... fttua. And they II"ghtcl.

Another case - two GIs tried to rape a woman who had a Uttle child two years old. She fought back, so tbey eluaht hold of the little baby Ind tore him tn two with their bayonets. They took the b.by Into the kitchen Ind burlled It t!l­gelher with the woman.

In my case. IS a woman Ind I peas­ant. Ilke any other ordinary woman alld pe ant In the South, I only work very hard to live. But when I wllnessed these savage crimes of the Gis with my own eyes. 1 felt very stron.ly. In order to defend my lUe and the Jives of my family I had no other Wly but to joill other women and to fllht back. So r join­ed a lot of battles to fight when our hamlets were raided. In one battle] w,s wounded. It was In the sprin, of 1987. ~ben 1 \\'as 21. 1 was wounded by a bul· let in the call of my leg.

MIt'NIIfIIIICI mo .nd IIld th.1 I WII •

Vllt CMt. , den'" It. The Gis eilled .... twe ,upptt camlllMdo. who lived in "" "'","1. T1Ity laW they knew mt vwy ",II, II I WII terturtd. They be.I _ Vlry hlrd ,nd .sked wh.r. ,II my _ ... __ , ... wIttre WII ,II the .mll'lUllltlelt that .. hail hitUtn In tilt vIf .....

1 thouJht 'ery hlrd and decided that I would rather die than let my comrade gel a.rrested and maybe killed because 01 my information. The Gis and com­mando couldn't mue me ulk by tortur· illi me. 10 !bey resorted to psychological wl.r£are.

The commandol told me that It was just becauae I was 10 young that I bad foUowed the VC. 'I1Iey told me that the puppet authority II !be just cause. 1 Wlllted to IlIit In their (aces because I knew very well that those two com­mando hid burned the people's house! and killed the children In tbe villages.

After two hours of beatings and sweet words. trying to buy me off, they didn't IUcceed, 10 they called a helicopter down and they brought me to Hoi An jlil. WIIell ) lOt to lbe jall they put my bands and feet in shackles. 1 felt very exheusted, and aerlously .Ick. so 1 feU down. 'l1Ie gulrdl of lbe prison tried to

put me back on my feet - alter tbat I fell many times. At multime they lave me some rice and somc salt. Ind after the meal they put me in shackles .gain.

The next morning tllty ltd me to the torture room. Thlt !'10m is thrH Hmo. If ...... If th" _. (AuttItn' ne": tNt wouhl ",.. H .... , .1......, .m.l ......... • Ittsk ..... I' eeurt.l It .... vtrY hlth celli"" .... , taW ....... tf t.rtur"" tltll. T1Ity "M mo wMthtr 1 wouhl Ilk. to hav. the tty I", twtv... er 1M w.ter tw1u.... 'I,int Itrlv... - .... , ",... they tiM ..... at yeur _ ... hang yeu frem tilt ceill,. wHtt ... ........ ,.,.. Or they will """ yeu by ytur hlir aM ItrIIIf ytU .. the ceil .... by tilt ,.,.. WaIw tMurt - .... , 11M

limo water.,...." ......... the, ...... yeu .. ~rIIIk It.

In that room at that time there wtrt four Vietnamese commandos and two American advisors. They tied my legs and hands. They .tretcbed my legs and arms and they tied them. and they took a can of soapy water and poured it Into my mouth. [ tried not to swallow It, but they forced my mouth open with a stick. When my stomach swelled they put • wooden boar<' 08 my stomach and two of them .tomped their 1ft! on It. So I vomited and an of the water cam. out of

The GI forces came in and t got an­other bullet and ] 10 t a lot oC blood. I fell exhausted and [ couldn't get away. One of my comrades tried to carry me away. but [ knew that since I had been seriously wounded I couldn't light any· more. I said. "We only run on root -they have mobile cars and armored lorces." So 1 told my comrades to just tide me somewhere.

Then I WII IplttM. sty....... GI. Huyn Thi Kien

Heavy Casualties Reported for 'NLF

my mouth and I fainted . They questioned me again when I was

balf conscious, but 1 said nothing. After that they beat me with a ick - they just hit my shoulders very hard . Two or Ih Vietnamese commandos Ihreatened me with a revolver and said, "You are just a pig·beaded VC.),II hoot your head olt.'· But the advisor oid "no." and he questioned me.

Arter that the two American advisors exchanged some word with the com­mandos and then they tied and slrapped me on the table again. I didn't know wbat was bappening to me. One took out • very long noife or sword, I don't know ,,·hlch. They threatened to saw my head of£.

Ifandl,. .t my .hIt .... Itur Vllt· "'moll comm..... At my heed lit Amtl'lc.n IdvllDr IfMI If my .... .n· ethar Amtl'icln edvilDr. You know th.t each tlma .... y terture • WIman they strip Mr n'ked. One of tilt VI.tn,m ... am""ndo. showed mo the knlft .M uicl that H I dWn't IIY anything they would IIW my htad tff. And lech time ....y shouted, they ,trudc the knlft If my Itg. After two Dr th,.. tim .. IIka th.t I f.lnted.

When J came to, I didn't know If I hid died or not. I tried to touch some part of me. I ached all over my body and I dldn't know what bapened to me yet. I couldn't move any parL of my body - I tried to use my handa to move my right leg. But to my surprise there was no leg anymore. I falnted again. because then I knew they had sawed my right leg off.

Even some of those who were work· ing In lhe jails showed pity when they saw me. And I thought, they are Viet­namese and they are forced to do such I hings as work in the e jails, but they still have human feelings. A nurse who was working in tbe jails was very kind to me. She tried to get some blood for a transfusion. Every day she washed the wounds for mc and tried to get something for me to put on them.

But there were also some very cruel nurses. For example, there were some men nurses - when they came in to give me new bandages they tried to do it In SUCh a way that it was a kind of lorture to me again. When they changed bandages. they hit my broken bones very hard with their scissors. I felt shocks aU over my body. Even more cruel , they used the scissors to pierce into my marrow at the broken bones. I nearly Cain ted when they did thai. ~ut I lold them to their f,ctI th'I I

w.nttd to I.ugh ,I Ihelr actions. lie. c,use I have luff.red all klndl of ter. tures, and I have lold them nothing. Now !+ley hardly can get tears from m. Inymore. Those wicked nurles bec,,.,, v.ry perplexed at luch II sight. After they left I fainted again, beCIUIt It WII

too shocking, too painful fer tr .. tment. They didn 't question me because I

was so weak. But aller I had recovered somewhat they took me every day to the interrogation room to question me again and again. I never said anything to them - no matter what they did to me. [ haled them so much, and I said nothing.

They took me back to the j ail and sUer about a month the wound at my leg was mending. The Americans and commandos had concentrated mucb ef-

Their Faces' fort in curing my wounds to gel me in fOOd condition aa,in. Now they were goinl to torture me for the last time. They held a meeting to discuss their experiences with me - to figure out how to get information from me. The nurse who had been kind to me "'as .Iso in the meeting. She WI! crying when the came to tell me about the meeting because she was afraid that after this kind of torture I would die. She told me that the American advis· ors Ind the commandos had worked out I plan of how to torture me.

Aceenll.. to tilt Amtr'IcIII .. I..,., they would .... y tilt limo _,_

at ..,.,. - .... y woulll '" Iff 1M mIN .... n.ty ... 111 lilt kIM _ Itut lulf .., ... lIlY ........ , at III .. _ jilt ......... Ye. If , llYN, I woulll lit In IIrtllltl ..... I woulll lilt lit ..... to ... ...ytII..... n.t Vletll.""" am· m.... ...... .. thl. "'III. 'M IIId they woulll ... It the IItIIt """"I", .. 7 a·cltck.

After the nurse lett me I thought ,ery hard lbout the terrible thing that would happen to me the nest morning. I thought many thlngs. I thought about how 1 joined the struggle to liberate the famill.. and mYlllf, my brotherl and alaters and the ,maten. and the country In general. I thought that If I died many others will live Ind fight for the cause I have followed. I was determined to keep my loyalty. I can­not be boa",t off by tbe enemy, I can­not betrlY the country. I would rather die. Thinkln, these things, I feU asleep, and in my mind I WI! ready to face everything.

The nut morning when I wok, UP. they ,Ive me a little cup of rice soup. From the bottom of my he.r! I didn't want to eat because I knew that ter· rible, terrible things were goillg to hap­pen to me. But I tried to set my mind II t peace to be ready for the new fight­ing and I tried to eat something In or· der to have good healtb for the new battle.

I WM .......... ,...m where I w •• terturtel ......... A,lift tllty tltd my • rmt end my Itt to the tHlt. Thl """ ftur VlttNmtU am"",,", 1M ... AmttlCIII .. I ..... wilt hM twtvrttl mo btftN wer, there. All theta bal ... IVr· rlUndtcI m. Ind twa cemmlfMl.. lItat my facl. , vemltt4 Itt_ Ind llliv •.

For the last time they wanted to buy me off. The commando used his hand­kerchief to wipe off my blood and they tried to soften me with sweet words.

One of tbe commandos said to me, "Well, little girl, you are very stub-

~ . born. 1 and our brothPnI the Amerletnl ' have taken much pity on your cast Try to think the question over .gain. Now you are an invalid. If you don~ answer Ihia time, you will become com­pletely disabled for life. "

He told me that if I would live the word Ih.t 1 1m reconciled with the p . emment then he would tell the Ameri­can advisors and they would live me a r.lse leg which is made of nylOll Then I could walk and resume a nor· mal life. I

It..... tfttr ... fIIIhhM ...... wri, I bellM _ with r ... - I w • ....., " .. III thalr f_1 but , ceu ... ·t ..... I oW ..... II they II1II their Ilk. h_ till pity 1ft mo they ...... ·t hi" ..... my ... Iff. After that I cal .... ItItIII _, .. tllty ..... mo III.... I~

th......... to kill mo. Afttr the 1INt­..... they tMk up the Imlft 1M ..... Hili....... If m, feet .nd oW "'" .at the 1.1t mlnuft If my INt. If I • lilt __ ty"""''''' tllty will kill l1li,

And each lime they shouted tbey chopped down on my right thigh. Ead! time tbey chopped down I SIW very clearly tbat the American advisol'l burst out laughin,. They leemed vet'J otislied It lOch a sipt. My only fee~ In, "as tb.t I wanted to kill them. At the last chop I fainted.

After I fainted they put me In thl hospital morgue - they thoupt I bad died. The ,ood nurse had followed tbe wholt thin, very closely - she tried 10 get lome medicine and save me. She told the doctor to give me medical tre.tment and afterwards Ihe tried 10 belp me escape. For several daYI .. 1 terward I fainted many tlmel beea. I felt so seriously lick. When I finall, r elme to I asked the nurse "hat .a. happenln, to my leg many times. TIl, artery was damaged, so the command. er thought I had died - that's why tbey threw me Into the morgue. TItf nurse and her best friend the dodnr tried to give me medical treatment !nr the broken bonea.

T1It fturth My tfttr my terturt ....

vII....,. end my Gemr'" '" trill, IIVtc/ mo and lit me fret fNll! .... j.lI. Afttr that I WII ,Ivlft mttIlcal treltment In the llber,ted 1_. I WI' lick fer I very !tnt limo .nd I WI. ytry thill. , en'v _i,htc1 l6 kl .... ml

(ao poundl). Afttr "'at' wil IIftf "'" ftr mediCI' lre.tmtnt. It WIU Id t akt )'Mri te .. II ylU .. tht crlmll e.mmh· ted Ity till U.S. ferell in the Stuth. " WII' not only ml thaI lufftrtel ""'t crllllll. but m,ny tthtr vill.gen •• .... 11.

OPINIONS PAGI2 SATURDAY, APRIL " "71 IOWA CITY, IOWA --------------------~----~-----------IdU.r . .. .......... L..... Du,him Mln"ln. Idltt, .... ........ "my C".,men N.wl IlIltt, . . . . . . . . . . . . L.w.1I May Clty·Unlvlrllty 11I1ft, ....... Will.,. ltown 1.111.,11' , ••• 'dlt., ........ cherv' Mill ... '" .... ,."., •• tor ........... I)llnl ""~. F'''I Attl lI'ter .............. V.'er'. Klnt

.,.rtl Illite, . Ja, Iw.I" ANteI... N,wl 1111.... Mlk. MeG, • .., A_ •• Clty·U"I,.,slt, I;!'t.,. D ..... I. "",I(It "" ••. CIt,·Unlvtnlt, 1tI1tt, . . . .. .. . RI.II.,.. Ter "..., "_. .,.m 11111., ........ Jlltn "'clt,,6 .t._. '1Ittt ""I, .......... ItII Will ...

Nixon, Reagan 'Reform' Welfare

SAIGON I.fI - The ThJeu wtrtI ...... yl .. Itftov,r 1m· I SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (.fI eminently successful C/!UlTl!i\lt reqime command claimed Frl- I IIWIIItItft end full ."",1'" .... - The dlspule over California's conference 01\ welfare reform." day that National Liberation tthtr ...m.1M If the btu. compliance with federal wel- , Tbe President told reporters Front (NLFl troops suffered A lew btmdred American reo fare regulations apparently 'Vas that Reagan's proposed Califor· hea vy ca5uBltie in their Attempt. n1ained at Lang Vei , five miles worked out FridlY at a meet· nia welfare reform plan call ~ lo seize Fire Base No. 6 in the west of !<he Sanh near the Laos ing of Presidpnt Nilon, GoY. implemented In major detail central highlands. border, bul field sources Indi· Ronald Reagan and Secretary "without being In violation or I

Saigon forces retook the base cated that it " '8S only a matter of Health. Education and Wei· contrary to federal regulatiorU late Thursday after two days of of days before all the Amer!· fare ElIlot Richardson. of law." fierce fighting al ng Ihe Lao ian cans would pull back. "We have found II way to At Issue was the posslbl~ border. work together for a common withholdin~ 01 some $700 mil·

Lt. Col. L. TI'I/tIII Hlen, c:om· Sovl'et Clal'ms cause," Nixon announced aft~r I lion in federal welfare PlY' m.nd Iplkl,m,n In 511gan, w hat he described as an ments over Reagan's fallure tol laid the bodll. of 2It N'rth pay cost-of·living increases td Vi.mlmo.. IIkllt" w.... B' W He h C welllire recipipnts and his ins is· foufMI III ,''' ,rtIIIIII .... fire 19 eapon 19 ourf tence on public service job! bUI litU.1td In I 'IIIIIIM . for those 've1f'lre recipien~ moutIt,ln ,rM .ht mlltt "..,.. MOSCOW I.fI - Defense Min· k f capable of working. tilt boNer wtlt of Dak T.. Ister Andrei A. Grechko de- As s or Cars It was agreed Ih~t staff mem

l Hlen listed Thieu r~g1m~ . bers of the Department ol.

casualties as 20 killed and 25 1 clared Friday there exl ts in Bedlts of clvlll.n, II, III the ground of the I! •• I P,kl.t.nI c:lty If Jet..,. U mil.. Health, Education lI'1rt Wetfau wOllnded, but miUtary BOurees the Soviet arsenll Ha weapon of c,'v,'l War from tilt Indl.n benler. Offlc .... of tilt rebel EI,t ,.kl.t.nl Itrctt ".Im ..... WASHINGTON I-" - Con· and representatives nr Reagan said It Is estimated that more hup destructive power which rnss Is considering a request would meet next week In SAcra. th 1II,,·mment troops ,I.ughlertd them. Many Punllbl morchlntl fNm Wilt 'akl.. mento to work out "interim

an 200 Saigon troops were l is capable of reaching any t.II h.ve been killtd lit the .re. In rtbtl rl"IIII,. - A' Wi........ to put the Supreme Court on problems." but the word from killed , wounded or ~e miSSing. point on tbe globe." He also wheels . the summit meeting was thai

A Viet Cong r.dlo broadcast I . " The I d to H quoted In a Saigon newspa-- caned VIetnam. !be. graveyard b pea, ma e lOUse California would bl' In maior

..... f I lalist mil t d R I H Sh k H Id J appropriations subcommittee compliance with NIxon's wel" said five Americans were I 0 mper lary oc' e e 5 ave a y 0 on essore I th aat mon ,Is for about $5,000 fare reform bill now In the captured in the attAck. 'I1Ie U.S., trine." to lea~e and operate lutomo- House Ways lind Me 1M Com. Command refused 10 comment. In I speflch at the 24th con· biles for the eight associate Jus· mittee.

Meanwhlle, long lines of hell- gress ot the Soviet Communist JESSORE, East Pakistan I", .. IlIfermld ........ thtr., civil war were being burled In other bodlee, Iyina II fleldl lice! Ind for unspecified court C rr . h 3q copters new out of Quang Trl . (All - Rebel army command· hi W'I "'WIt aut the d.y tf communal graves. and ditches, showed evidence of "Issistants Ind officers." de':l:n~ru~r :os mp~la:cuene with and beaded 5O\Jth while ground party. Grecbko old the Red ers In Jessore said Thursday hi •• r,...t I -" '111 in Dac· Sarli of un.rmed mill, b b h troops moved out of their bunk- army and navy were In a slate Bengali freedom.fighters would el. the p...vlncl.1 clpHll of .. men In d dllld,.II .. re ayonet etl S. Warren E. Burger. the clef the federal law. It i8 the same ets as the U.S. Commlnd of "constant preparedness to baltle the Paki tani army to I .. t '.'dltln. killed, rtbtl I...... ..Id, In their fury, the sheik', sup' justice, already receives .bout date by which Reagan sald ·!ht : clo ed down Its support role for lulHlI the orden 01 the party the death but conceded their SheiJc Mujlb. 51, has been whan limo If tht 100 "kl.. portera rounded up 14 Punjabi ,11 ,000 a year for a new lim· state legislature must get I the Thleu regime thrust into and the motberland." control is shaky In Jessore and branded a traitor and President t.nl ........ entrtllChtd .t the merchants and butchered them ~~ne and I chauffeur to drive budget passed, Including ~II Laos. If Soviel military atreng\h Is dozens of the other cities In Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan ....... 1,.. of tht townl .term· on a field near the city" bus . weUare reform proposals wh,~

!<he Sanh, the forward blSe being increued. be said, It WIS the breakaway province. has said he must be punished. Id trem their poaitlon, twe So fir, his ellht colleagues he Slid he Celt would be ap. for the operation, was aimoIIt .. not for attlck, but for the de- Strong West Pakistani army The army was reported to be "'''''' .go. station. A miSs .,ave WIS hive had to IUppl1 their o~n proved and be in compliance deIerted. fense of the Soviet state and forces are dug In outside Jes- holding at least 24 other mem·' A column or troops backed by being dug (or them. wheel! and do theIr own drtv· with federal 18WS.

Only .... twIttetI.,...... other COII/Itrief ., the Socialist sore. and they have already bers of the working committee armored cars destroyed rows of The East Pakistanis, some ~ng, unless a court. mesaenler Reagan last month propose!! II hi".....,. •• yaclllt""'" community." made one sally, killing scores. of Muji~'s now banned Awami peasant homes and shot any· armed with World War n rifles IS pressed Into servIce. paring $740 mlllion from t hf •• y end Itlltted 1MIk.,..... Western dIplamata were un- Achl..,. from K.rechl IIhI League, which held 187 of the thing that moved, the rebels reo and a few machine guns. can Meanwhile, subcomm I t Le estate's .., blllion·a·yeir well.11 ""I ..... , ...... y II the lett certUt whetJllr GrechJco WII the .... r of the ltalilanilt 313 seall In the twice postponed ported. Whole families. they do little to stop such sorties by sources •• Id Friday, the memo effort. mlChlllllM .... ......, ........ referring to lOme new weapon, ftrcea, Shi'" Mulibur It ... · Nltional As8embly. I claimed, were machine gunned the Pakillanl troops and seem bers, headed by Rep. John Roo- Democrata control the Call-airy ........ "'.,.,.., ....... or limply to tIM known biet min, w .. h.W In army CUI' In Jessore, BO mile. IOUth- as they ned from tbeir bUminl increaaln.ly apprehensive of a ney (l).N.Y.) are "lakinl. dim fomlt leRIII.tur~, whllt R'-! .... DtmeIItItft cr-. ..... dMIaIe 1)'*Dl.. . !My In Wilt I'tkIlt.II. ACIIrII- Witt . of Dacca, Yic:t1mI of the huts_ major attack 011 Jeuon. view" 011 the request. . au It • Republlcaa.

--.. -.......

/:,

Page 3: See .Hende~som/ Calley Similarity - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-04-03.pdf · 4/3/1971  · Calley Similarity rr. MEADE, Md. !II - A definite re lationship

T"~ DAILY IOWAN-iOWI 1:If'(, low~I'., April ~, 171,_.., _

Atlanta, Pistol Pete (

BegiA Harmonizing NEW YORK {All - Pete ' weU as I could," he said. Coach money himseU, and when be Maravicb stood relaxed a.nd Richie Guerin agreed. didn't gel it, jumped to the riv.

JOking with reporters as he tow· "ll certainly wasn't a dis· al American Basketball Associ· tied himself dry, put on his appointinll year for him." Gue· aUon. !lI1rt, combed hts mop-like hair. rin said. "He was as good as he The Him, division wiJllleI'8

\fe WIS .bout to walk out of the could be under very adverse the previous seaSon, struggled lOCker room for the last lime conditions. 1 don 't know how I'd along with I 8-25 record as the 1m season, and he was glad. react as a 22·year.old kid if 1 players pouted and Mltavich , . "I could hive done without had to go Into such a situ· played part time. ----':-'E:-T~S-----.....;O""';' 'this year in my life," he said In ation. " "We If'" I Itt ef rMCti,. te

---~~~§§j --- ==

CHILD CARE APARTMENT POR SALE

obvioua ........ humor Thursday The sltv.tion, of cou .... , I. e.ch ..... r. We IIldn't try te rOil SALE - sulpolnt Siame.e WILL DO fuliUm. b.bnltlln,. I§""" "tt , ~. Id 3'1 71" To .. ...,r,.l Aru. c.u all·otis. IliJbt after the New York ax"" _,v ...... Ittct_ .. '.5. ".e ... 0 . ". .... H 4-t

PERSONAL \ .-

A qunllon lbout Houdtnt! Want Ad Rates student Inform.Uon. W-

Ont o.y .......... 15c: • Word

SMALL .partment . t 128 outh I "COT Summll . SeplemMr oceuJ>.nc~. CIII

*&.500. 3S'/·284I . J.11AR ; 4&se."

Knlcks eliminated the Atlanta • team," •• 1eI fttIr." IHI PItO/i'ESSIONAL bo, Groomln, _ CONCERNED chUd caro In III.Y Hawks from the playoffs. Briel..,. 8oordln,. Puppl... Tropical lloh. home. ronc.d y.rd. 35J.37... LOTS FOR SALE Pet" pet .uppU ... Brenneman S •• d 4-15 __________ _ CAMPERS FOR SALE Two D.y. .. ....... llc • Word

He IIImttt.cI hi. rMkla yur "But you can suffer just 80 Store, 401 South GUberl. 3l1U5Ol. ROSE KILL _ Counlry llvi~« . USED diesel city bu. tor III • .. ... - N • ...., .. a .. ktttNlI A.· much. We finally realized what 4·24C.1I MOBILE HOMES BuUdln, loll .. lib clly adv.nt· Idul lor motor bOllle. Call 338 FI 0 23c I Word '" .... PO S I I ., •. Overlookin. be.utlful Rlckor)' 513D. TFN ". ay. .. .. ....

L_ ....... _ was happening and moved for ODL£ Groomin« a on - Pup. Hili Park Drlv. east on Bloomln.. d

Th,... DaYI ...... . 2Oc: I Word

_1.tIM h ... IIttII nwgn;. • pI... bre.dln. • .... Ic.. boardln, 10 x ~ AMElllCAN EI,le Air lon, Da .. nporl or Ced.r Slr •• I.. I T", Days ......... 2fc • Wor "You · .... -'t know -hit I've ward as a team . Corrie Ann Konnel •. 351·5341. .. 3 eondIIUo".r. w.sher·dr)tf. clrpel· All ulllJII.. ultdtrground. Wald.n MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

"'111 ... "We lost the batue and the 11".'r· 5 peemlY furnl!h.d. 351 .. 4138 '"1[4. CorutrucUon Com pa/\)' , 338-1297. • • )ne Month .... , S5e: • Word been through," he Slid. "U's .,. .....

rth I b I' bel war, but we'll be better off for LOST AND FOUND I lees raw MOON 10.47 _ Two I QUALITY Gret.,b Guitar, Imp In· Minimum Ad 10 Words not WI) t, ut m ng it," he said of Atlant. 's climb b.droom. carprl.d .• Ir condillon· I dud.d. Beat off.r. 351·SUI ofter paid. I can't even w.tch the LOST - Mal. I.", ••• e'l. Vicinity pd. June OCtup.ney. 35106959. 5014 WHO DOES m s p.m. _____ 4:8 PHONE 353 6201 playoff- on televl'slon no... . I've from last place into the play· 0' Mlchaol Slreet .nd 8enlon. 'VURUTZ"R Eleclronle pl. no', GIl>- •

• offs, only to be eliminated. 3.'7·7755. $-14 l~:n.~~Rl~~ 8O~r~o~ • .;-~.ed~}~: PORTRAIT Phlllo,r.phv - "ormol son vi' !3I).TD, bl.ck el.ctrle just got to get away from bas· The bi" forward now finds it KELP! REII'ARD! AKC t.\too.d I), furnl h.d. SIO",,' hOd. I •• d. and InformA' 33~8:l2. 8-1 ,ultar. 1'><0 Sunn 100 .... ltt< en· ketball for .while. I weigh 185 "" htle mal. HU'ky. 4 monlh . 0"" nwhrook Court. 331·84211 4-13 cia ure •. One •• 1 brand new Lud· easy to praise Maravich, who blu., One brow" •••. "G~p~". '~7. PASSPORT and .DDl1e.llon ~holo . wi, Umb.I ... Din. 1~202. 4·3 ""wand In th- w-ks I'm ' ,-, '" 969 OU'~ I··"" fib d 0" J Siudio. 338-6983. HAR I ..,. , ,~.. ~.. adJ'usted hIS· pllY to th'" Howks 3Ul. 4-7 I H "UH , .. - ... "", urn e, ___ --:--:-~--::~-~":":"-In l I .... ZIO nds " ... ~ two b.drooma. .Ir condillon ... 110 g 0 we I§" poll • tyle, while they compromised Lo.t~ .. ;;.s Bl:c~'cl;:~::::'~1 :~I~:tci : 351·24 ... 3311·'1272. ..15 l' h;~:~~:Kto o~g~:. :~~. ~~~~~ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ( It WISII't just the bad playoff ·th h' mad. 338·1086 4·3 ~ ..... - he had aglinst the WI 1m. b.l .. ·.·n 5· ' ~.m, TFN ROOMS FO" RENT I" 1__ -- --= "H ' . I '"- h bet 1\ I ZIEUNSKI'S Photo-Art Gallery - !

Knk:ks It e s gOing 0 .,., muc • ----------- Aml.~. 1m .... Unlimited, 103 B RARE OPPORTUNITY • was, IS everyone PI!TI! MARAVICH ter than Jerry West." Bridges HELP WANTED GIRLS fOR mmmer, ",ht cookln .. A .... K.lon.. S-I R r bl Q1an r woman from

knows, much more than thaI. l sald o( Marlvich. " He drives ----------- Calt 338 ... 647. 5·13 ORES!:' MADE. Alto aller.Uons e 13 eo. t 0 fill d 'I1Ie likeable %2-year-illd. who SurvlvM Hectie: YHr be he' . k nd h h H1!ATlNG·AI'I condillonln, e ... lce· MEN ONLY _ One Iln,I •. w.lkln~ E .... rlln.,.d. Ruson.ble orkes. this area 0 re our rug

~... th So th' b' I tter, s qUlc er a e an· m.n. t.rn ove' IIt.ooo ~.r yeor distance to campus. Cookln. prlv. 35l-3128. 4·UAR displays In high volume retal! WIS !"""IPS e u S Igges _II kno- '"y now, L_W M.r.. dies the ball .... tter plu. benefilll. CI.an f,mlly m.n II AI tl d.~""11 for - t II' t II

i be E Lee -. - .. " '"' I ' ..., . ..-tIIlnl 10 mo' e 10 0 .. ""olne . P;.. ~~~'rr a~~ ~;I~'~~~s 33118430 0' II' 'IUD mONINGS _ r.mllv .nd sores. 0 se lng, sore se s hero s nee Ro rt. ,spent "ich joined the H.wk. with. "Nexl year is going 10 be a lot periuced ~ .. on onlv apply. Yrar· a".7141. __ . S- IMR I .• Iud.nt •. as. " 1.1511_. ___ 4.27AR for you. No experience. Car a whole season under the guns .round work (or 0 •• , ao V"". o.

$2 mllll"" contr.ct, the ,t.m, better for .11 of us. There's no GI" complete d.tall. In IIr I lei· VAILABLE April I _ Lore. ludlo WE nl:pA.1R all m.kes of TV',. and 1795 cash capital neces· olthe enemy and half a season If • lupent.r .nd .nov'" reason why we can'l start with ter. C1ark·p.I ... on Comp.nv Inc.. room At,o snldi I.epln. room. 10reOl, radl .. I1\d t.p. plly.rs sary. Part·time work. full· under pressure from his own publicity to fill the .e:r.pbaek the same harmony next sea .. ~~~ I Unlv .... lly A .... De. Moln .. "noklll, privlle~ ... Black', GIslI~ht ~elbl'c .n~ ~OCC~ ~~ctronl~t,o%~ time income. For local inter. teammates. of .w.ry pl.yer on the t •• m. on " - ---- VII~" m Brnwn IrW. U a lour ... . one 4.i3"R vi w. write lincludin phone

• • NEED MONEY! ell Kn.pp hoo .. Ala. CondltloncO unapprov.d. (ur. 1 - ber ) AMERICAN Sys.. HI. own JItpuI.rlty ..... lat· Before he had cored hl's fl'rsl - ParI tlmo or futi Ume. No tn· nlshed In,l, room. rOt men . WANTED - Sewln,. SlMIct.il1lnl nuEmMS & INDUSTRIES D Maravich now has become "OItmenl. Send for (ree eilin. kit. Acro," :treeL hum ".mp"'. Cook. In ... ddln, ,onu. formal •. elc T , epl.

IIId he "'" with him tilt of point as a professional he was one of the guys, along witb 111,11 commlMioru plus bonus. Writ. Inl f.cllllIo . Jackoon·. Chin. and 33_46 HOAR H. """" Metro Dr., Minn ap-I 10 II . A. DI M.roo, Knapp Shoel, Glfl II E t \1' hI ton (,hon - i1IN\J Ltuls In. St.tt Inlt .... pro., the center of att.raction, and the scoring more than 23 points II Brocklon. M •• rhl/leU, 02401. '~. aa as nl. ·1 fOR RENT Addl hi olis, Minn., 55420, or cali 612 .. 3.17·",,41. _ _ _ ~ lelevlslim lei . • ~er."IR.ri'1:f, I~~ .:

CYCLES

1969 25O<c YA~tAHA Enduro; 1m Chtvy p.nel truok. 353·3&10, 3SI·

5038. S-I

I Itfte V iiAii'A BI, 8.or Scr.mbler .. High b.n, new tires. helmet

$28(1. 33 .. 7186. e,onlng.. ..29

SPORTSMAN CYCLES HWY 6 WEST 351-1477

1970 YAMAHA DT·l 250 cc 1600 Mil" $Sl5

1969 SACHO ENDURO 125 cc Exc.llent Condition

$485 limaat IIhI him In. other Hawks resented it. One, game after he moved into the IF' YOUR rhlld II b.t .... n 17·19 DOUBLE ROOM ror Xl rt .. TV, r.e. 810 M.lden wne. 413 727-1295. "I feel 1 cam'" through it as Joe Caldwell, demanded more starting lineup at mid·season . months 01 ••• h~ 10 .bout to re.lion room, eookln, prlvU..... - -- -- - - -----------" ___ ...,-__________ produce hb first .. ntenct. We Av.U.ble Immedlltely. 337.2038. I EL£CTtUC SHAVER Rep.lr - 24

1967 SUZUKI X·, 250 cc 1500 Mil .. $315

19" BSA ~I VICTOR $725 ... auld like 10 t.pe record hi. d.· 4~AR Hour ",vie.. Meyer'. 8arbor ,.Iopmen t of l.n"'.I~ In our lIb· hop. ..15AR WANTED Wicks Signs

Five Year Portland Pact

D b Hopefu I or.tol')' ovor tho n'''1 Ie .. month --er y S to learn how chlld,.n lurn. We APPROVED ROOMS HAND TAILORED bern .nerolo.s 'I i~~:'~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiii~~ .r. In d'.p.rol" n •• d or .UbJtCl . I Co.t.. dre .. and .hlrl.. Piton. If you cln h.lp "' I.arn .bout APPROVED otn,l. room fnr wo- 3~47. 4013A.R Get Tests Today il':::~ ~~~e.~I~:'3~ ~.~ ~:!.~~5 :::r: man. 303 SOUU, CUhlon. KlIchu FLUNKING MATH or 81 Ie Slit. IIfnnday Ihrau,h frtd.", flff' mort prh'll ••••. A'·IU.ble April lit. 351 1.1IC1~ CIII J.n.l, 338·g306. Inlorm.lIon. 4-& 1\48. 4·14 4.10 I

By 10 SCHUYLER JR. I NltED MULTI·LITH oper.lor with ROOMMATE WANTED INSURANCE A.Nei..... P'H. Spert. Writer rldlul politic! for Idvlc. .nd Inr

U CO S I· U. -t S nta Anl'ta help. No PIV bul the project ts -----------n nco 0" a , worthwhile. CaU 337-4728. 4022 nMALE _ Own room. (urnlohed. Droll Role at Aqueduct, North· , Close In. 3~l-091l Dr 351·5382.

PORII'LAND, Ore. 1.4'1 fields at Oaklawn Park. These --TYiiiNG-SEIWICES 4-11 All·American (orward Sidney are just three o( 30 Kentucky ~ FE~t,.Io~m - .I~u~~~itlo~~:re 'P~~~ Wicks ol UCLA signed a five· Derby eligibles thal will see ac· ' EUCTlUC typln, . • dIUn, .• ,per. ment, ",.Iklng dl.llnc •. S31 .~33: year contract Friday with the tion today. I.ne.d. Corbon ribbon. S38 ... tH7. 410 Portland Trail Blazers of the The ..... rformance of these _____ ~R I

k ball A . ".. h I k 111M PICA .nd .lIte . corbon rlh. APARTMENTS FOR RENT Natlollal Bas et SSOCI· Derby hopefuls as a en on 1 lton. Erperienred. J •• n AU2nn~

Irvin Pfab In.urance

I Motorcycle

• Mobil. Home • Homeowner'. • And Llfel

'16 M.ld", L •• 351·7333

WANTED by IOWA CORPORATION FOR EXPANSION PURPOSES

$15,000 In units of $1,000, $2,500 or $5,000

willing to .. cure ond off.r

9% interest rate Box 1052. Iowa City. lowo alion. a.dded importance bec.use 338-3513. S-4AR lilA Y oceu:r."cy - AI, CO ndltlOn.d ' l ~;;~;;~~~~;;~~~

furnbh, ap.rlmonl no .. tom· ~~ii;;;~~;;;~~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Terms of the contract were DJ Sport. Hoist the Flai, the aclmowledg. ELECTRIC - Form.r secrelary. lie. pUI lor 3 ,lrI.; '88.3~ •• eh, 3.11. i rur.i.. "unn.ble. n.... camDU'. 9759. ..13

Jet disclosed, but the Blazers ed leader of the 3-year..,ld div· 338·3783 5·IAR -- - --- Sh R •. earlier were said to be ready to slon and the Derby favorite, 111M SELECTRIC _ Carbon rlbbo~ . s~~~r~.,~r.ble~~,~ .. - n·.o bt~~g~~ oe el)alrlng offer the 8-fuot.J standout a $1.5 has been knocked \lut of racing ' P.p.r. 1!1~S", I~tl..... Exp.rt· Aporlmrnt •. ~;;I·0315 5-4 millioB contract. Wicks had ' More Sports by 8 broken leg. I .nr.d. 337·7.65. ~ I MARRIED couple apartm~nl - One I , .. ,un r'"port~~ to b. S-";-g '"e. T .... y·. ....we.,.. f. r IBM SELECTRIC - Carbon rlbhon bedrooOl (urn lIlted. Lease. no ..- ~ = ",,~/UD" I Short p.ners .na the e . 3~7-7>fi~ . pel!. 1140 per monlh. All ulUilies tweell $1.5 .nd $2 million. On Page 4 Htoblilhi"l DtA., crM",H •• , 4·24 "otd The May flo .. er Apartm.ntl,

... - 1M DOG dd-" S 11 10 North Dubuque Streel. 4·8 Wicks hel ..... d UCLA to Its .n mw , ... , •• ... .nt. ELECTlllC - F •• I, .ccurat.. ex· .. ~ & II ......... th $'" ItO _.... I ... rlene.d r •• on.bl •. Jan. SilO I' . AVAIl.AJlLE IMMEDIATELY . 308

fifth straight NCAA champion· .. n • ..wvY, • ft, ...... 3st·&l71 (·23AR oulh Dubuque. Furnlsh.d IPlrt· be I II M Gothlm the $50 .·.dded - --- ment. 1150 monthly plU3 electrte·

ship last weekend, at ng V • A I by & ..... n ••• .:... ..... y .~ .... _ $25.. MANUSCRIPTS, Gen ... 1 . Not.ry lIy. 1100 advlnce d.poslt. 5 monlh Ian v In th f Is He finished ppea S ... r/\..-.. "" ,... Public. M.I')' V Bllrn •. 6411 low I ltase required. No pets. Two pto-

o • e rna : 000......... GelII Rush Stak.. ..... "nil Bulldinll. 337·26:i6. ' .22 pie only. 4-6 1 tile season with a 22-point scor· I '

bed .t Gthl", G ... FI.lds ---- - SUBLET - Summer, 1 · bedroom

• Western Boo .. • Dingo Boo .. • Moce:.sin • ~ S.ndal •

ROGER'S SHOE SERVICE # 2

210 South Clinton Nut to The

Whit.w.y Groc:try ill, average and also grab F fred Umps . ·b ELEC'fRIC type,,·,l1er - Carbon .Ir conditioned .p.rtmenl. Fur· 13 rebounds. g.me. I UnconSCIOUS, owned y At· rtbbon. Phone Nanry, ~51·641i6 nlshed or unrurnlshed. Clo •• 10 Unl·

Wicks was asked if he ever ' thur A. Seeligson Jr ., will be :;'1 vet'Slty Hospllal •. $14'. 351 .0821' .. 8 , ___________ ,

Hriously considered In ~f/er A re Den ,'ed iooking for hi fou.rth victory ~n I IB~nt.S~~~~;t;~u.; ;,~~~~~~e{I~lr::~ from Texas of the American as many starts thIS year III tne 1I1nla!, 351·7700. ..20AR Basketball Association, which Jli·mile Sanla Anita Derby in TYPING - Electric Iypewrller. i2 *Iso drafted Wicks. WASHINGTON 1m - The N.· which nine o{ the 10 entered .YOIU .. perlene. ",lIh Ihe e

. . ~re elitrible for the Kentucky P,.on. 337·3843. 1-20AR "Definitely so," Wicks said, lIona1 Labor Relations Board · e· , JEIIRY NYALL. £leclrle IBM typin !

"But the Trail Blazers offered dismissed Friday unfair labor I Derby. .ervlec. P-"~~1330'_"'I8AR more mon!!y. That's why I I . . The early favorite for ~he FAST. ACiurat •. reason.bl. Thele .

h " pracllce charges flied agamst · Gotham at Aqueduct In which oIIorl "ru, former En,llsh

APARTMINT I

lor .wlngln~~~:.~~"dOO' POOl, ! .nuk .... 'rl •• I •• UI .... let to tho Unlv.rslty. Alr.condltionlng, Oll·,t".t pork lng. I

MODEL SUITE NOW OPEN came ere. I the American Leaalle by two eight were ~ntered Fnday, Is Ioocher. 5 -4578. ____ H 3

I ~... . Now acc'ptlng 1 ... tI for summer

CUNNINGH&U OK baseball umpires who were fir. , the entry or Good Behaving .n~ E~~~~tPI~~ Pseb.~~t·~.P;;" 1~~t!~:: .nd foil . "'" - I ed in 1968. Johnny West - neither noml· elc. 337·7988. 4·13 THI MAY FLOWIR !

PHILADELPHIA ~ The th be I f lh nated (or the Kentucky Derby. I ii:ECrRlc . Expenenced. ,cl~r.te , Philadelphia 76ers breathed a l A ree·mem r pane 0 e Among the six Derby ell. will .d,l. C.II 351·9292 .rternoon. APART MINT.

[h'e·man labor board adopted . . or .v.ntn,.. H

RENT·A·CAR 24 HOUR SERVICE

LIVERY STABLE Pinto •• M.Y.rickl.

D.t.ons •• Ic.

$5 o.y Sc Mile

Loc.led C.roultl Inn 351·~

OJ, Advertising Gets Results

We Found A 1934 Hawkeye

BUT WE STILL WANT A

1924 HAWKEYE (1922 • 23 SCHOOL YEAR)

Ind

1939 HAWKEYE (1937 - 38 SCHOOL YEAR)

CALL OR WRITE

Roy Dunsmore, Daily loweln

Communication Center, Room 201

Phone 353·6201 ligl\ ot relief Friday when they . gibles In the one·mlle Gotham 1110 .... oubuqu. Sf. Phon. 33 ... 70'

~~Q~~~m~ IM~I~~~f~t~~~D~~~~~m'l M~.~~~ .~~~~~~_~~~~~~~~~~=- ~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~~= fered no broken bones Thurs. rec?mmen a on 0 a na ex· who Is high.weighted It 122 __________ ,;;; day night in his collision with ·I smmer. ' pounds. Good Behaving gets 118 FOil SALE - Old radio. In load Baltimore 's Gus Johnson. Umpires Al Salerno and Bill and the other t14 apiece. I tW~'1 t~O~dJ~ :::.~ . R:~on:~I~~ld

Cunningham has • bruised Valentine Jr . were discharged I A real free·for-lil Is shaping _~ chest, but he'U be ready for Sepl. 16, 1968. American League up for the 1'4-mlle Arkansas STElIEO PHONO wilh AMnl reo SaturdlY's sixth game In the I official~ said they were fired 1 Derby at Oaklawn Park, "'til celver, '100. 351 ~18 .fter 5 p .... ':':i ?Sers·Baltimore Bullets Natloll" for Incompentency. Salerno 20 entered. 12 eligible for the IIltFRIGERATOR. ,15; dave",)ort. al Basketball Association semi· I and Valentine had charged they I Kentucky Derby. '5; 3·drawtr tne coblnel, $5. 351· final series. I were fired for trying to organ.. Among those entered Is 7293. :'0

The Bullets lead 3·2 and can ize league umpires Into a un· Northfields the Louisiana Der· 1 OLYMPUS PEN·F'I' S.L.n. n.8 -. t • .,' hehlnd lens meie r. ClSe. Immlcu·

close out the best.of·seven ser· lon, the Major League Umpires , by winner who wl1l tote the top lat •. '105. Ome,. 11·22 ell iarlier, ... i@s "ith one more victory. I Association, Inc. , Impost of J28 ~. I ~ .... I ... 35l-8522. H5 ,

Now At Our New Location

CAROUSEL INN Hlthw.y , W., c."'vm.

WE NOW CAN OFFER 24 HOUR RENTAL SIRVICE * W.'re located on the Coral vIII. BUI Lin. * W. honor mOlt credit cardl * Mak. Your R ••• rvation. early, •• Call 351.04404 Anytimtl

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It. 331-2807. tin TENNA"I track car Ileroo - 43 '

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1. 7.

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1 2, 3. I 4. 1 .5. 'I 6. 1 8. 9. 1 10. i 11. 12. 114. 15. 116. 117. 118. I 20. i 21. I 22. , 23. 1 24. I 26_. __ --:..1_27_. _~....L.I _28_. _.0-.--.;...."'-1 2~9_. -_-=-~-='+-1L.-3~O-._ -...., -....., -_ -_

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NAME .. .... .....•.•.. ......•.......• PHONE No. . ........................ .

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To Figure Cost: Count th. Ilumlttr of word. In your .11 ••• Ih,n multiply the nllmlttr of words by thl ..... Ittl.w. I, .ur ... ceunt .lIdr" •• nd/or phon, numD.r. S .. l.m~l •• d.

MINIMUM AD 1. WOltDI d ds The sample a at left contains 10 war .

1 DAV ......... .. . . ISc ,., wenI nI The cost for five insertions would be 10 x 23c 3 DAYS .......... 20c per wo SAMPLE AD

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10 DAYS 29c per wonl 1 MONTH ....... . . sSe per word (NUMBER WORDS) (rate per word)

Clip this order blank and mail or bring with your check to:

The DAILY 10WAN Room 201 _. Communications Center

ColI.g. and Madilon Strlttl Iowa City, Iowa 52240 itfte MUSTANG t·lltJa~k . geo, four· 1

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Page 4: See .Hende~som/ Calley Similarity - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-04-03.pdf · 4/3/1971  · Calley Similarity rr. MEADE, Md. !II - A definite re lationship

'''' 4-TH! DAILY IOWAN-I ... City, I"-set., AprtI S, 1m ,

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Sand Road and Hiway 6 lyPau

Iowa City 331·7'"

POWER PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS

'he UP

DIRECT FROM DETROIT Kickift9 out Jems In the spirit

of the MC S.

APRIL. RIVER CITY LOWEST LEVEL

7:30 p.m, 1.SO perMrl Ligh's by PlOP I •• Llgh' Co.

Open Mon . • nd Thurs. nite. till t p.m.

20% OFF this week only April 5th thru April lOon

, ,

Peterson Furniture • strollers • swings • high chairs • walker-jumpers • playards • pen.cribs • car seats

All in the Spring color collection to catch and delight baby's eye.

REGISTER for a free

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Automatic

Swing

j Seek Frazier, Monroe in Package DeQ

ABA Hopes to P\~ek ' NBAIa\eat NEW YORK lA'I - A $3 mil- ew York Knlcks and Earl may work out other arrange- I of the 'op men It his posl'lon I "They are both under con-

lion package deal which could I "The Pearl" Monroe of the Bal- menls_ Besides, [ have a COlI- In the I...... tract," an NBA spokesman take two of the top players of timore Bullets - into the rival pIe of other ABA teams inter- Garrett we t fr m Los An said .

The NBA and the ABA, re­sisting suggestions of a mer­ger , have been engaging in a player war reminiscent of the big money battles between the National Foolball League and American Football League be· lore they became one.

the National Basketball Asso- American Basketball Associa- n . 0 - "Any attempt to raid them ciation - Walt Frazier of the tion was revealed Friday. e led ." geles to Buffalo !n the 1970 ex- could bring trouble."

NOWI IN IT'S 4th WEEK

NOMINATED FOR 7

ACADEMY AWARDS

Admi$lion Price Mond.y through ThursdlY

Nighh-S2.00 WHk Days Mlli"",

'til 5:30-$1.75

I i~1 a. ~ ill NOW - ENDS WED.

IftVIN~ AU.fN PROMTION

P.ul Corvino. presiden' of He declined to identify them . pan ion draft. Fillmore is a 7- Frazier, who has played out Sports Productions Un limit- Fruler.nd Monr~ .r. foot-I forward and Mast a 6-9 his contract, acknowledged that ed, • New York·used firm s'.r gu.rds of their respec- I center-forward. both young re- he had received tempting offers d •• Iift9 In pl.yer mlnlge- I tive 'ums, Frazi.r rated one s~s ~ the ew Y~rk team. to shift. ment, Slid he hid been dis-

~:~i,,: ~"!... :~I:: '::: I Downpour Le"'ve' s T.XlS Cheparrels. ~

Trevino 2 Down "These have been v e r y

guarded negotiation but they are real," Corvino said. "The package include~ Walt Frazier. Earl Monroe, Dick Garrett of the Buffalo Braves and Gree( GREENSBORO, .C. 1.4'1 - had a 69 and Barber look a 70 Fillmore and Eddie Mast , both Ve,el'an Pe te Brown and MiI- for 137, five-under-par on the or the Knlcks. ler Barber Jusl beat a cold, waler-Iogged Sedge field Coun-

'" have been given the au- driving rain J;'riday and shared try Club course , a 7,034-yard thorily to peak for all of these the second-round lead in the par 71 layout. players. ! have Fillmore, Gar- $190,000 Greater Greensboro They held iI one·,trok, Iud rell and Masl under exclusive Open Golf Tournament. ov.r Aus'r.lian Bruce Crem-contract and have agreements The 36-year-old Brown. one of pton, T.rry Dill and young with jo'razier and Monroe." I the few blacks on the pro lour, Jerry Heard.

The report Idded e frtlh Crampton had a 71, Dill 68 buck"t of fuel '0 the multi· The Daily Iowan and Heard 67 . million·dollar ',Ient wilr be- Cramplon was the only one of tween the rivil pro blsk.t- Publlshtd by Studtnt Publico· the five leaders who played in

tlons, Inc" CommunlCltlons Cen· bill I"oei.'ions. 'tr, 10WI City, 10WI 52240 dally ox- the aflernoon and took the

cept MondlYI, holldlYs, legal holl· In Dallas, Max William , dlYs. Ind Iht dlYs tftor legll holl. I brunt of some of the most se-

owner of the Chaparrals , ac- dlYs. Enttred ., s!cond ell .. ml" vere weather conditions in two

I fer .t thl post offiCi It low. City knowledged that he had dis- under 'he Act of Con,re.. of years on the pro tour.

d h d d I Mirth 2, 111', cusse t e propose ea with Le. Trevino gol caught in Corvino and had made a spe- Frink F. Huh, Publisher the rain Ind 'ook I 72' for 139, John Camp, Asslst.nt Publisher cia! trip to New York for that Roy Dunsmore, Advertl. ln, Director one of a large group .t th.t purpose, but had turned it Jim.. Conlin. Clrculltlon Mlnlger figure.

RDWm HARRIS

NlC GUINNE5S

down. Th. Dally Iowan 18 wrllten and Bob Charles a New Zealand S 00 riC or our 00 sUy of lowi. Opinions e.prmed 111 leflhander who had shared the I

"II' t . h f bl d edlled by studenLS 0' The Untver· ,

right now," Williams said. "We ~I:: ~~~~rl~} ~~~ul~,'::lle~'~ ' the paper first-round lead with Trevino are not interested in lhose terms." The A"oelated Press Is entllled and Barber, also had his proh-

10 the exclu Ive use for republlca· lems ',!ith the numbing rain Corvino, told of Williams' lion all locil as well I. all AP new. and c~iIl temperatures.

r.ac:lion, expressed surprise. and dl$palchcs. , "This is the first word I've Subscription Ratt" By carrier In He , too, had a 72 and was In Troubles for Trev;n~ AT 1:32 - 4:03 - 6:34 - 9:05 lawa Cily. $15 per year In advancc: tq~ group at 139 along with U.S. h.d .Iong th.t line," he Slid. six months. $II: three month •. SUO. O""n champion Tony Jacklin of "W'II' h ed All mall sub&Crtptlon.. 520 per I"~

I IlmS al INm very year; Blx months. $12; Ihre. months. England, wh9 had a 69, and LH Trevino hiS hi. troubl .. IS h. blalts from I sand bunker on the 13th hoi. during Thursday'. atcend round in the Gree'· er Greensboro Open Golf Tourney_ Trev1flo, who r's • t "-

interested In our t.lk.. $6.50. _ _ roo~ie Bud Allin, who ignored "But that does not mean the Dill 337~U1 from nOOn 10 mid· th I t £ k bl

deal has fallen through. We night to report news Items and an.j e e emen s or a remar a e nouncomentB In The Dally Iowan. seven-under par 64, Edllorlal office. are In Ihe Com· . mu nlcatl ana Center. Gary Player, the little SOuth

lead.r going Into the diY, 5hot • cint-o¥tr"H' 72. - , - AP Wlr.photo

NOW ENDS WED. ~g"::<:::::~':"

~1hp£aLf

THe DilM!S MeNPUI

" ...... ELU DlNIEL' LUIIIlNDRIMI

STUDY SOUNDS IMPROVE GRADES TM

Improvt Grldas Whnt D,voling Tht Simt Amount Of Tlmt

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PRE·EASTER CLEANING

SALE! Mon. • Tues. • Wed.

April 5-6-7

Ladies & Men's

2 -PIECE

SUITS!

Pleats extnl.

Men/s Shirt Special!

Dr .. or Sport Shirtl

Mon., Tue •. , Wed. Only

One Hour

Eleaners 10 50u,h Dubuqu. 51. - 338--«46

OPEN fram 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. MONDAY 'hru SATURDAY

Dill 353-6203 If you do not recelvr African who is the defending your paper by 7:30 '.m. Every .1· champion 'in this event and who fort will be made 10 correcl the e"· ror with the next I. .ue. Circulation won the last two tour titles, ral-Office hours are 8:30 to 11 I.m. lied for a 70 and 145, eight Monday lhroul/II Friday.

strokes off the pace. Truste... Board Of Studenl Pub· IIcI\II,n.. Inc.: Carol Ehrlich. G; Masters champion Billy Cas-John Cain. A3; Ron Zobel, A2; h d 71 f 146 d ' t Sherry Martinson. M; Joe Kelly. per a a or an JUS

Big 10 StatsSay Defense Helpea Ohio State to Title

CmCAGO (All - Defense the Buckeyes led in conference A4 . William J . Zima. School 01 made the cut for the final two ~~~~:~~mbr ~I~~~::'mlt.~br~~~:rm~~i rounds today ahd Sunday . It proved the key to Ohio State's defense with an average yield George W. Forell . School <If Re· took n score of 146 to make It march to the title in the tight of 727 1I«lon ; and David Schoenba,um t De-I '- , ' .. partment_ of History. Both Brown and the ~9-y:ar- Big ]0 basketball race, final However, the Bucks still had

BUDGET IOld Barber scrambled In lust official conference statistics in- the best eye for the basket with moments before a steady . . .

RENT.A.CAR drizzle gave way to heavy dlca~d Friday. ... .. 48:4 ~ccurac~ r~om the field. ~howcrs that left water pooled While second-flms~lng MIChl- Michigan, wmdmg up a game

L~:W C~~;T Pp~RR ~~:E - and pu died over the course ~an was th: league s top scor· behind Ohio State in the title anA .Irove the handful of 109 club With a 88.4 average, xt ·th 472

337·5555 '" 1,1 • 'ced ·th Oh' St t ' race, was ne WI .• • p.;:c(ators (0 cover ompar WI 10 a e 5

iii~:iiiiiii~::;:;' ~:-:.=~.:~~. :~~ seventh-best average of 81.66, On offense, £ourth-place In-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _____ """i diana was No. 2 with an 88.2 NOW THE CRISIS CENTER average and Wisconsin which

ENDS SAT.

SATURDAY AT 2:20 • 4:35 - 7:00 • 9:15

JEAN·PAUL BELMONDO ALAlN DELON

A '_HaIiUO c.,..Hctioo • ADil. PlOOUCI'1ONS P,ria ' .AlWlNE PlOIIOC'rIIIf« PIN • .us fill PlODtlZION£ R.- . A Po_ PIdoro ~

STARTS MON.-WED.

~S~U~N~DA~Y~ __ ~~~Ii~~~~ __ ~7~:1~O~&~9:~25, 1 ___ SUNDAY i :40 • 3:30 • 5:25 • 7:25 - 9:30 I

Week Days

7:15 & 9:30

SATURD~Y AND SUNDAY TIME 5CHEDUU: 1 :50 - 3:40 • 5:35 • 7:35 • 9:40

COLUMBIA P ICTU~ES P,.se." • U~ ProduCI,on JACK NICHOLSON ,

FIVE [RSl PlEaS ~ COlO. [j!) _ •

Admission - Evenl",. Ind Sundey 1.75 - Seturdey Met. 1.25

I

Somebody Clre5. lied for seventh was next with 8U

Every nigh' aft.r S p,m. No. 2 on defense was third-' spot 'Purdue with an average yield of 78.7 Michigan was No. 3 with 80.1.

351·0140

DIAPER SERVICE

(5 Doz. per W .. k t - m PER MONTH -

Free pickup & delivery twice I w .. k. Everything Is fur. ni5hed: DilIMfS, cont.iners, d.odorants.

NEW PROCESS Phone 337-9666

Other departmental leaders: rebrunds, Indiana 55.7 per cent; free throw accuracy, 77.1 per cent; fewest fouls, Mich-

l igan, 16.5 per gam'::..

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BONUS FEATURE FRJ. & SAT.

Nu' Wednesday See ...

THE HOUSE THAT SCREAMED

•• ,.lall

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While a Inductees