Friday, December 4, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sever' Friday, December 4, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven i ' WILDFLOWER AT LEAST 20Off EVERYTHING IN THE STORE (CHECK OUT OUR 50c HATS) WILDFLOWER LAST 2 DAYS Fri. & Sat. OlY 516 E. William MY LAI ONLY THE LATEST Massacres part of m Used Equipment Sale WASHINGTON (A') - T h e My Lai atrocities, if they did occur, are not unusual in Amer- ican history. What is unusual is that charges have been filed and men are being brought to court martial. Although Americans h a v e been punished for isolated atro- cities in time of war, the men accused of wiping out the South Vietnamese hamlet of My Lai probably are the f i r s t to be court-martialed o n massacre charges. E The first massacre in Ameri- can history was committed by the same Spanish force which established St. Augustine, Fla., the nation's oldest city. The Spaniards wiped out a ri- val French settlement at Ft. Caroline on Sept. 30, 1566. Even the sick were hauled from their beds and slain. The slaughter continued along the Florida' coast for several w e e k s until more than 500 were dead. "I put Jean Ribaut the French leader and all the rest of them to the knife," reported Don Pe- dro Menendez de Aviles, "judg- ing it to be necessary to the ser- vice of the Lord our God and of Your Majesty." In 1622 Opechancanough, bro- ther of Powhattan, decided to drive the Europeans back into the sea. In a surprise attack 357 English settlers were killed on March 22. The English spent the next two years destroying Indian vil- lages in retaliation, but Opech- ancanough was n o t deterred. Twenty y e a r s later, he tried again and killed 500 settlers. The English repeated their ear- lier performance and this time managed to kill the Indian lead- er. When a Boston trader was killed by Indians in -1636, the Massachusetts Puritans respond- ed by attacking a Pequot In- dian camp on the Mystic River and slaughtering 500 men, wo- men and children. Land speculators trying to steal Indian hunting grounds brought on N e w England's bloodiest war and destruction of the Narragansetts who stood in their way. In a surprise attack Dec. 19, 1675, on the principal Narra- gansett village, some 300 wo- men and children were massa- cred. Most of the braves escap- ed to join the Nipmucks, but this put the Nipmucks in a food crisis and brought on more war. The whites stopped this threat by slaughtering the village of Peskeompskut in May 1676. For the next two centuries the Indians resisted land grabs but they consistently lost. The worst Indian slaughter was dealt by Andrew Jackson against Creeks who sided with the British in the war of 1812. In t h e Battle of Horseshoe Bend on March 27, 1814, more than 800 Creeks were killed - fourt times the number of whites who died with Custer. Jackson forced the few survivors to sign over half their land. When white settlers decided they wanted Indian land in the Illinois plains country, a white mob fell upon the main Sauk village in the spring of 1829 and drove the natives f r o m their corn fields. Other Indians took the hint and fled across the Mississippi River. But after a miserable winter in Iowa with- out food or shelter, Chief Black Hawk decided to return his peo- ple to their homeland. On April 6, 1832, Black Hawk and 1,000 followers returned to the Rock River Valley, only to run into a militia army. Black Hawk'tried to surrender but was answered by fire from a gun- boat. For three hours the fron- tiersmen drove the Indians into the river at bayonet point, then shot them as they struggled in the water. Only 150 were taken alive. Discovery of gold in Colorado sent thousands of miners Ito U.. h caves or dig into the sand, but they were dragged out and kill- ed. Black Kettle and a h'andful of braves escaped, but left be- hind the mangled bodies of 450 Indians, most of them women and children. "They were scalped," a wit- ness reported, "Their brains knocked out; the men used their knives, ripped open women, clubbed little children, knocked them in the head with their guns, beat their brains out, mut- ilated their bodies in every sense of the word. "The colonel all the time in- citing his troops to their dia- bolical outrages.", For the first time public and official opinion w e r e aroused In the cold dawn of Nov. 27, 1868, Custer stormed the village and slew nearly 200 men, wo- men and children. This .t i m e Black Kettle, the luckless peace- maker, was among the dead.. In a letter to the: St. Louis Democrat, one of. Custer's offi-_ cers described the scene that followed: ". ..Little has been., done save the work of the first hour. That which cannot., be. taken. away must be destroyed. Eight. hundred ponies are to be put to. death. Our chief exhibits his close sharpshooting and terri- fies the crowd of frightened captured squaws and papooses by dropping the straggling Pon- ies near them. "The last pony is killed The is tory .4 1a RECEIVRS-AMPS-TUNERS 1 Ampex 1100 Auto Reverse Deck-$225 When a Boston trader was kille d by Indians in 1636, the Massachu setts Puritans responded by attack ing a Pequot Indian camp on t h e Mystic River and slaughtering 500 men, women and children. S:S:.::Y St4L L4L41 VLL"1:V "V """"""""s~ee.2 m ssa 1 Fisher 500C-$100 1 Eico 3566-$100 1 Harman Kardon 720-$150 1 Lafayette LR 500 TA-$125 1 Scott LT-112 Tuner-$70 1 Olson Tuner-$30 1 Dyna 120-$125 (factory wired) 2 SPEAKERS 2 PR Marantz IMP lI-$130 each 3. TAPE RECORDERS AND DECKS 1 Ampex 761-$215 1 Ampex 1200 Wal & Portable Case-$185 1 Ampex 900 Auto Reverse Portab e-$ 190 1 Concord MK IlIl Demo-$199 1 Viking 77 Portable--$70 4. TURNTABLES AND CHANGERS 1 Empire Troubadour without arm-$90 2 Garrard SLX-2's Demo-$59.50 1 Garrarl X-11 Demo-$27.95 1 Garrard 408 Demo-$37.50 1 Garrard 30-$30 1 Garrard 50-$30 ALSO-Sale onall Demo Portable and Table Radios at 304 SOUTH THAYER Opposite Hill Auditorium 665-8607 and 8 Te music center, inc. r __-- 'FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY! Ir - 9 MONDY, ECEMER T H byth aiersx.Ou mpoye -,5. MONDAY, DECEMBER 7TH 7:00 P.M.-10:00 P.M An evening reserved for the male-a ropportunity to shop in a relaxed atmosphere, unhampered by the fairer sex. Our employees; will assist in filling your list of i gift needs. Every purchase glamor-wrapped, ready to put Ii under the Christmas tree.I Ib 1 Cheyenne and Arapaho lands. After three years of warfare the Indians tried to lay down their arms in the autumn of 1864. Chief Black Kettle turned to Gov. John Evans, who said the war must go on. Black Kettle then tried to surrender to the federal government and settled his tribe in a camp on Sand Creek near Ft. Lyon, where he thought he had been guaran- teed sanctuary. During the night of Nov. 28. as 500 unsuspecting Indians slept, 1,000 Colorado militiamen under Col. John Chivington, a former Methodist preacher, sur- rounded the camp. At dawn the soldiers charged, shooting and tomahawking ev- ery Indian in sight. The Indi- ans were driven across the camp, down into the dry bed of Sand Creek and back against the high banks on the other side. Women and children tried to hide in The1 other odor No feminine spray can stop it. The "other" odor. It starts in the vaginal tract where no spray can work. You can't spray it away. And it's more offensive than external odor caused by perspiration. That's the reason you need N orforms*... the second deodor- ant." These tiny suppositories kill germs-stop odor in the va- ginal tract for hours. Something no spray can do. And doctor- tested Norforms can be used as often as necessary. They insert easily, quickly. Get Norforms protection for the "other" odor no spray can stop. The second deodorant. enough to question a massacre. Two congressional committees investigated and the Army held a court of inquiry. "In going over t h e battle- ground the next day I did not see a body of man, woman, or child but was scalped," testi- fied 1st. Lt.!J a m e s Cannon, "and in many instances their bodies were mutilated in t h e most horrible manner.'' "Children two or three months old," said Janes Smith, an in- terpreter, "all ages lying there, from sucking infants up to war- riors." "Next morning after the bat- tle," recalled Cpl. Amos Miksch, "I saw a little boy covered up among the Indians in a trench. still alive. I saw a major in the Third Regiment take out his pistol and blow off the top of his head." No action was ever taken" against Chivington or anyone else. Black Kettle ,apparently did. not learn enough from the ex- perience. After another Indian war he signed the Treaty of Medicine Lodge. But an army under C o 1. George Armstrong Custer stumbled across Black, Kettle's trail.in afresh snow- fall and followed it to a 'camp in the Washita Valley in In- dian Territory. DANIEL'S JEWELRY CO. AUTHORIZED KEEPSAKE JEWELER N ANN ARBOR 201 S. MAIN Mon & huge fire dies out. And as, the brave band of the SeventCay- alry strike up the air, 'Ain't' T Glad To Get Out Of The Wild- erness,' we slowly pick our .waY across the creek over which we charged so gallantly in .the ear- ly morn. "Take care! Do not. trample on the dead bodies of that wo- man and child lying there!". The final massacre of the In,: dian wars came in 1890 after the Teton Sioux of:'South- Da- kota,'aced with starvation; turned to a medicine mran who promised t h a t certain dances and rites would lead to return of their lands and disappearance of the whites. The whites took alarmr :t the "Ghost Dances," and Ar-ay ef- forts to stop the dncing craze brought resistance a d the death of a number of warpiors, including Sitting 1 . Sitting Bull's foloes 1 e d from their reservationv to;join another Sioux^ band.- "tied- eral troops caught. thbm Within a few days and toqk, them-to a camp on Wounded Xnee Creek. During a bungling:Axrm at- tempt to disarm the Sioi, a shot was fired and 200 arriors, women and children were mow- ed down by machineguns. OVER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK WATCH FOR SPECIAL SALE ITEMS CHANGING WEEKLY discount eords 1235 S. UNIVERSITY 6 300 S. STATE 0 ANN ARBOR, 668-9866 665-3679 'MICH. FREE NORFORMS MINI-PACK plus informative booklet! 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