Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 8, 1971. Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 8, 1971 Daily Classifieds CALLEY TRIAL AFTERMATH (Continued from Page 5) PERSONAL PERSONAL TRAVELLING THIS SUMMER? - Try double-knit flare slax from Marty's. One rinse and they're ready to wear. Marty's Men's Fashion Clothing, 31Q .S. State. CFtc WEDDING INVITATIONS you can dig. Custom designs. Do your thing and call 761-0942 anytime. 96F80 FILM ON "CEYLON." Rive Gauche, 9:30 p.m. CF73 WOMEN interested in women's studies come to a meeting tonight (Thurs.), 8:00 p.m. in the Women's Liberation Office. 80F73 THERE WILL be a membership meet- ing Thursday, April 15 at 8:00 to elect 3 members to the Ozone House Board of Directors. 218 N. Division. 88F73 BOARD EXAMS - Kaplan tutoring classes now being formed for June and July. ATGSB EXAMS and July LSAT EXAM. For information, call 851-6077. 55F80 "Waterbeds can get you through times of no money better than money can get you through times of no waterbeds." ,Love, Tom and Harry cFtc TURN ON TO YOUR MIND.. Biofeed- back (alpha wave) equipment avail- able. Explore meditation states and other altered states of consciousness. Call John Evans, 769-0868, for more information. CF80 FLYING TO NEW YORK AFTER EXAMS?-For schedules, reservations, youth cards or reduced rate informa- tion, call Peter Graham, 761-4014. 22F8C EUROPE $159.00 SUMMER: Detroit Departures 3.15/2 -6/6 Det/Ams/Det. 4. 5/5 -6/25 Det/Ams/Det 5. 5/16-8/16 Det/Ams/Det 6. 6/25-8/29 Det/Ams/Det 6A. 6/26-8/27 Det/Lon/Det 7.7/1 -8/15 Det/Ams/Det 8. S/1 -9/2 Det/Amss/Det $159 $169 $189 $209 $209 $209 $219 SUMMER: New York Departures 9. 5/28-6/27 NY/Lon/NY $199 10. 7/12-8/1 NY/Ams/NY $209 Also, a Complete Range of Travel Services: Rail Passes; Car Leases & Purchases; Motorcycles; Intra-Eu- ropean 'Charters & Many More. PLEASE PHONE OR STOP BY AT EITHER OF OUR TWO OFFICES: WORLD-WI DE CHARTER 211 South State Street or 611 Church Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Dial: "ON-A-TRIP" 66-2-8747 Open only to U of M students, facul- try, staff, and immediate families. MAGIC IS FUN! You should have a magician at your next party. Call Bill 764-0731. CFtc PEOPLE NEEDED for five week Alaskan summer backpack expedition with ex- perienced guides. Call John, 663-6036, or Otis, 663-9283. FD WHY BUY mass-produced wedding bands? Have yours personally design- ed. Order now for summer. Reason- able prices. Call Jhan, 769-7550 after 4:00. P79 HUNGRY? 3% minute walk from the Bagel Factory CARRIAGE HOUSE Red is a rose, green is the grass, you'll feel much better, with a waterbed under your mass. Love, Tom and Harry; cFtc WATER BEDS - don't consider this a fad. Proven to aid the back and aid the couple. 50 yr. guarantee. All sizes. Lowest price anywhere. Willing to make deals on 5 or more. Four Rivers Co. 769-8235. cFtc WATERBEDROOMS have lots ofpoten- tial. Consider, the possibilities at Wave of the Future Waterbeds. Tom and Harry discount everything. 214 E. Washington. 769-9020. cFtc ADVENTURESS Send $12.95 in' cash silver or gold buillion to the Wagon Werke along with your VW and get a spring tune- up for "cheep." 1245 Rosewood, Ann .Arbor. 662-2576. 61F78 CAN'T GET IT UP? Maybe you need a Wave of the Future Waterbed. Re- sults not guaranteed but lots of fun trying. See Tom, Harry, and Cathy at -214 E. Washington for further con- sultation. 769-9020. cFtc EXPERI-ENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 12Jtc SALES CONSULTANT "PLACING SALESMEN IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" 2155 Jackson Rd., Suite 101. 769-8270 Ftc LIVING on or near campus? Tired of your old furniture or just can't find a furnished apt.? Let GLOBE IN- TERIOR RENTALS help you. Rent one room of furniture or a houseful! Coordinate your own ensembles or rent an entire suite. All rentals with option to buy, or rent fortwo years and it's yours! We also rent office furniture. Contact Claudia Schaper, our Ann Arbortrepresentative, anytime at 769-7667 or call collect 313-682-0078, from 10-6 p.m., Monday-Saturday. cCtc CAN YOU BELIEVE IT? Tom and Harry have sold enough waterbeds so that they can offer Kingsize waterbeds for $29. Special finals sale to brighten those bleak days. Wave of the Future. 214 E. Washington, 769-9020. cFtc REALLY FINE WEDDING PHOTOG- RAPHY done by a Daily photographer. Call Jim Judkis, 769-5814. dF76 Richard Lee, Inc. For simple passports-go to ANY studio. For photography that 'requires a Photographer, call 761-9452. CFtc WRITING A PAPER? Need ideas? See an UGLI librarian today. Library Re- source Instruction, 213 Undergraduate Library. CF79 OVERLAND EXPEDITIONS TO INDIA. Leave London mid-June. $490. Also charters to London, approx. $190. Encounter Overland, International House, 1414 E. 59th St., Chicago, Ill. 60637. 35F SITUATIONS WANTED: Parttime or full-time babysitting. 769-4170. 98F74 IF YOU ARE considering an abortion, take some time to communicate with your heavenly father through fasting and prayer for inspiration to make the right decision. Phone 764-2004 if you want to talk things over or need assistance in prayer. 36F76 BLOW UP YOUR GRANDPA, boyfriend or pet canary. Giant 2 ft. posters - anyone or anything. Send any photo (returned) any size, 2.85 plus .25 postage to Personal Posters, P.O Box 42972, L.A. Calif. 90050. 1074 FRESH LIME, lemon, orange, and palm trees. Miniatures. Grows live indoors. 761-1932. 761-7764. 93F73 IT'S A WONDER anything this good is legal. The Four Rivers Company, 769- 8235, dist. for Waterbed Company. Prices start at $30cn. 9 LEARN THE FACTS before you buy- there is more to a diamond than meets the eye. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University. 663-7151. F SIERRA CLUB RECOMMENDS Shacklee products as best for the en- vironment. Line of organic non-pol- -luting cleansers includes Basic H (household cleaner-good for taking camping too). Laundry stuff, sham- poo, elec. dishwasher stuff, etc. 769- 4289, 769-7761. DF76 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $7.50 Rh positive, $10 & $12 Rh neg- ative. Mon., Tues., Tirs., Fri. 9-4. Wed., 1-7. 18-21 years old need par- ent's permission. Michigan Community Blood Center 404 W. Michigan, Ypsilanti 483-!894 By JOHN WHEELER Associated Press Writer In the public furor after Lt. William Calley's murder con- viction, an often heard cry has been: "If Calley was guilty at My Lai, then what of the gen- erals and colonels above him?" The question is not new in warfare or in the tragic story of My Lai. Charges of attempt- ed coverup were leveled at sen- ior officers, not only directly above Calley but in other units, soon after news of the massa- cre broke more than a year ago. After an exhaustive Army in- vestigation 14 officers w e r e charged with dereliction of duty and other offenses in connec- tion with alleged failure to re- port or adequately investigate the mass murder. The list was topped by Maj. Gen. Samuel Koster, Calley's division commander who return- ed from Vietnam to become sup- erintendent at West Point, a prestigious job the Army often gives tomen destined for big- ger things. The prospect was for public courts-martial, But then charg- es of coverup against all t h e officers except Col. Oran Hen- derson, Calley's brigade com- mander, were dismissed "for lack of evidence." However se- cret "administrative actions" were begun and these may cause Gen. Koster and his deputy, -Brig. Gen. George Young, to lose a star each and may ef-' fectively ruin their military ca- reers. Other officers, too, a r e under consideration for similar action, decided on in secret, for their acts after the killings at My Lai. The Army has shut the door onpossible public trials or hear- ings on charges of coverup and it is not certain whether t h e voluminous report of the Army investigation into the matter will be made public. A House Armed Services sub- committee held hearings f o r seven months on the events at My Lai and while nearly all-the evidence still is secret, the group did publish its conclus- ions. Among them: Beginning the day of the shootings and run- ning a short time beyond, word of the slayings was reported, "at least in part," to numerous sen- ior officers. These included Cal- ley's battalion and brigade com- manders, helicopter unit com- manders, the division chaplain, Koster, Young and other divi- sion staff officers. Other reports of the massacre went through the separate U.S. /l.L G COi! intelligence pipe1in e and through the equally separate Army advisory network to the State Department officer who was provincial senior advisor. Repeated testimony s h o w e d Koster had information on the day it happened that from 20 to 28 civilians had been killed in My Lai. And when Capt. Ern- est Medina, Calley's immediate superior, was ordered back into the village to investigate t h e deaths, as U.S. command regu- lations required, the order was countermanded by Saber Six. This was the radio name for Koster, who was flying by heli- copter over the operational area. Later it was said there might have been tactical reasons for not returning to My Lai that day, but the House unit's evi- dence was that no one return- ed at all until Washington or- dered an investigation a year later based on hearsay reports from an ex-GI, Ronald Riden- hour of Phoenix, Ariz. "The most damning evidence that there was a conscious ef- fort to suppress evidence was the disappearance of documents from the files of U.S. organiza- tions between early 1968 and mid-1969," the House panel's re- port said. Of six documents the c o n- gressman said related to the in- vestigation, only one copy of one of the least important sur- vived. This was a report by the brigade commander, Henderson, to Koster giving the. number of civilian casualties at about 20 and saying these were due to ar- tillary, gunships and cross-fire on the ground. Henderson is be- ing court-martialled on charges of dereliction of duty, failure to obey lawful regulations, making false official statements a n d false swearing. Officers called to testify quot- ed Gen. Young and another divi- sion staff officer as saying, "That's murder," when told of the My Lai details shortly after the killings. Koster was quoted by one witness as saying an oral report blaming all known deaths on artillery and helicopter fire was "unacceptable." As further proof that sen- ior officers knew possible war crimes had been committed, the congressmen said, officers and enlisted men in the division er up4 were 'i'nformed directly or in- directly that the My Lai opera- tion was being investigated and therefore were instructed t h a t they should not speculate on or discuss the matter pending com- pletion of the investigation." In a slap at top Army brass, the subcommittee also said: "From its inception the subcom- mittee's investigation has been hampered by a generally unco- operative attitude of the De- partment of the Army." Commenting on the Army's switch from the courts-martial to secret administrative actions, Rep. Samuel Stratton, a hawkish member of the staunchly p r o- military House Armed Services Committee, said, "The A r m y now is involved in a coverup of the coverup." Stratton, a New York Democrat, was one of four members of the subcommittee that investigated My Lai. Robert MacCrate, a Wall Street lawyer who was special counsel on the select panel which investigated My Lai for the Army, said he was "shock- ed" that charges against Koster were dropped. He added that the action "effectively cut off the orderly progress of inquiry tip the chain of command." A senior aide to Army Chief of Staff Gen. William West- moreland said the Army report establishes that senior offi- cers had lied. He said the troub- le was establishing who lied about what since there was so much conflicting testimony. Stratton called for a rein- statement of charges. But a sen- ior Army legal expert said in nearly all cases this was impos- sible since the statute of limi- tations on suchi charges had run out. Stratton says while the origi- nal "suppression" of My L a i events may have involved only officers in that region of Viet- SALE ON SHERWOOD PRODUCTS at HI FI STUDIO 121 W. WASHINGTON Downtown across from Old German Rest. NO 8-7942 nam, the decisions to prevent embarrassing courts-martial of senior officers can be traced to top brass in the Pentagon. A spokesman for the West- moreland denied that West- moreland had ordered or influ- enced Army officials who decide to drop courts-martial charges. Westmoreland did, however, re- commend the still-pending ad- ministrative actions a g a i n s t Koster and Young, according to reliable Department of Defense sources. Koster so far has declined all comment on either action. Young said he feels "like a poli- tical scapegoat" since the ad- ministrative action came about six months after the original charges were dropped. Capt. Medina is facing murder charges. In all the ranks above his the charges involved the al- leged coverup and not respon- sibility for the killings at My Lai. Another Captain, Eugene Kotouc, faces court-martian on charges of maiming and assault- ing an unidentified Vietnamese. He was assigned to interrogate suspected enemy during the My Lai assault.I With the nation's entire de- fense establishment under heavy pressure due to the Vietnam war and other issues, the My Lai is- sue could not have come at a worse time for the Army. One of Westmoreland's aides said, "I think it is a tribute to the Army that it has followed through aggressively on the murder charges no matter what it does to our public image." Westmoreland, in person and by regulation, had tried from the onset of U.S. participation in the war to make it clear that unnecessary civilian casualties were intolerable. Stratton and some others, in- Who s at cluding a few in the military, view the handling of Koster's case as the clearest evidence that the Army has changed its mind on how best to deal with the aftermath of My Lai. When Lt. Gen. Jonathan Sea- man, as immediate commander of the accused at Ft. Meade, Md., dismissed court-martial charg- es against Koster Seaman said he "did not know any inten- tional abrogation of responsibil- ities" in the My Lai affair. The charges against Koster involved regulations which required prompt reporting of even su- spected war crimes and civilian deaths to higher headquarters and then launching an investi- gation of his own. After Stratton charged that the dismissal amounted to a whitewash, the Army said Kos- ter had been censured by Sea- man and would, together with other officers, face possible fur- ther administrative action. The Army says the months-long de-- lay in announcing the kFensure was due to a "public relations blunder." In announcing the action, a spokesman said, "The general tenor of the censure letter was to censure Gen. Koster for his failure to report civilian casual- ties and to insure that the cirr cumstances of those casualties were investigated promptly and thoroughly." The letter of cen- sure was, followed by an an- nouncement that the -Army has TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi rauIt? recommended to the secretary of the Army that Koster and his deputy, Young, be demoted one rank and officially reprimanded. Stratton said of the admin- istrative actions, "If they (the Army) had all the evidence for that, then why didn't the courts-martial go forward?" He added the latest actions w e r e taken only "because the Army now knows that it made a hor- rible mistake in court-martialing enlisted men and lieutenants in the My Lai case and letting old generals go free." Westmoreland said last week, "No, I feel no guilt, not in the least," about My Lai. He added, "You cannot compare my role and conduct ... in Vietnam with that of Gen. Yamashita." Tomo- yuki Yamashita was hanged for atrocities Japanese troops com- mitted in the Phillipines during World War II even though he had not ordered them and was said to have no personal knowl- edge they had occurred. On the alleged coverup, West- moreland earlier told congress- men, "Well, this is absolutely unexplainable to me." Stratton believes it must be explained, publicly' "I support the Army," he said in an inter- view. "If I am a hawk, I am an honest hawk. The Army has to have the public confidence that the truth about My Lai, all the truth, has come out. "It has not." ;% <:'o',: }' y'.r:ti-i;vr r:?":"io,..'.vii v Q ITT A professional ABORTION that is safe, legal & inexpensive can be set up on an outpatient basis by calling The Problem Pregnancy Referral Service 215-722-5360 24 HOURS-7 DAYS for professional, confidential and caring help eous tech- mind and E Aud. B Apr il8 Transcendental meditation is a natural spontan nique which allows each individual to expand his improve his life. INTRODUCTORY LECT URi III I An gell Hall 8:00 P.M. Thursday,, 1224 Washtenaw 665-8825 F INTERESTED IN WORK OR STUDY ABROAD? CALL EVE, 769-4925. 41F74 CUSTOM SANDALS We Mak'e and Guarantee for 2 Yrs. Fine Handmade Sandals in 20 Styles CALL 662-6845 HIDE-OUT, 343 Maynard St. Come On In 86F90 ATTENTION - Pinball freaks, the Wiz- ard has come to Mark's Coffee House (605 E. William) bringing a room full of pinballs. DF70 DEAR MILDRED Go to the Wagon Werke at once. I just traded 75 lb. of brown rice for a spring tune-up worth $12.95. It's just off Industrial Hwy. in Ann Arbor, 1245 Rosewood, phone 662-2576. 59F78 GOING TO EUROPE? Girl needs tra- vel companion May-June. Call 764- 7618. 79F73 FREE Computer Dating information. Send name, address to Data-Mate, 1324 CD Commerce Center, Lansing. 99F80 RIDE NEEDED to Washington, D.C. anytime after 6 p.m. on Tuesday, April 27. Will share driving, expenses. Please call Harry at 764-9833. DF76 For the student body: LEVI'S CORDUROY Slim Fits ......$6.98 (All Colors) Up Against the Wall Street Journal FORUM for political discussion on Organizing the University DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING RESULTS--USETHEM 1.! I Bells $8.50 DENIM Bush Jeans Bells..-.+ Pre-Shrunk Super Slims. $10.00 $8.00 $7.50 $7.00 Thurs., April 8 37:30 p.m. State Street at Liberty East Quad, Room 126 TON IGHT Ftc : I 1 MMMMMMMomn I Come experience THE CRUCIFIXION OF CHRIST through CONTEMPORARY LITURGY and modern media on GOOD FRIDAY EVENING April 9, 1971-7:30 to 8:30 P.M. at FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH STATE ST. AT HURON A special event to which the public is cordially invited SBICCA Summer's grand opening LETS YOU WIGGLE YOUR TOES ... WITH CLASS ... at the Shack. Our stocks are complete with the area's largest sandal selection. Try us first, or try us last . .. but try us! f I - ---s^- _.___. :_r._' make your move in polyester knit flares. . .the pants that give you the ultimate in freedom, comfort, ease of care and shape retention. Blue or camel. 29 to 36 waist sizes. $11. I r Exploring Theological Education: A Conference for Students Considering Seminary SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 9:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. AT The Center for United Ministries in Higher Education MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY 1118 S. Harrison, East Lansing, Michigan . ,-- "A llI M...i..........y 11 I