Page Two Thursday, Aprtl t , r [HE MICHIGAN WA1LY ThrdyA .7 ,TY _... .e TONIGHT at 9:00 ' R a'4' theRFD BOYS AT THE PRETZEL BELL EVERY THURSDAY- :00 EVFRY FRI. & SAT-10:00 SPIRITUAL.COMMUNITY OF THE SUN PRESENTS DICK GREGORY * Speakinq on the food crisis and survival of humanity *, FRI., MAY 16, 1975-7:00 P.M. UNIV. OF MICH. BALLROOM Donation $4 plus 1 can of food profits ao to world community food bank ann arbor. mi GET TICKET in ADVANCE of show! Available at David's Bookstore-529 E. Liberty and n the Michioan Union Cambodia surrenders An evening with ORIGI NAL COUNTRY MUSIC with JAY STIELSTRA, guitar and JOHN NORDINGER, piano at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE Friday, April 18 7:30 admission free (Continued from Page 1) calm. The people and the mili- tary are welcoming the Khmer Rouge," he said. He iesaid fighting had stopped in the city. There were demonstrations in the streets and people were shouting, "We are Cambodi- ans," Colonel Phuc Luc said. "We do not want to kill each other." HE CONFIRMED that the in- surgents had taken the capital's Pochentong airport. He said the Khmer Rouge had not entered the military head- quarters from which the radio link was working. "Our comrades are working .. they let us work to the end," he said. ABOUT 50foreigners - jour- nalists, relief workers and oth- ers - were believed to be in the Hotel Le Phnom, a neutral zone last night. Prince Sihanouk, titular head of the insurgents, had earlier rejected a ceasefire offer from the Phnom Penh Administra- tion. He has been in Peking since March, 1970. As word spread in Washington yesterday, that the airport in ~ s 0 T the Cambodian capital had fall- en, Sen. John Sparkman, chair- man of the Senate Foreign Ie- lations Committee, issued a statement on "the fall of Cam- bodia." "We must keep in mind that Cambodia was not ours to have and not ours to lose," the Alla- bama Democrat said. Five years of civil war devas- tated Cambodia, leaving more than half of its population home- less, at least 13 per cent killed or wounded and its agriculture and small economy ravaged. The conflict between govern- ment troops and insurgents has been one of the darkest chap- ters in the country's long his- tory. IN NOVEMBER, 1953 inde- pendence was granted and the 1954 Geneva accords on Indo- china endorsed both indepen- dence and neutrality for Cam- bodia. In 1955, Sihanouk, believing his title restricted him from wielding the power he felt nec- essary to restore Cambodia to its former glory, abdicated the throne in favor of his father and became a prince again. In March 1970, while Sihanouk was visiting Moscow, his own rubber stamp legislators voted him out as head of state and a "government of national salva- tion was formed. Sihanoukflew on to Peking, where he became head of a gov- ernment in exile that gradually absorbed various antigovern- ment factions. CHIEF among these factions; were the Khmer Rouge - who had fought a minor guerrilla war against Sihanouk in thei 1950s and 1960s. The Khmer Rouge eventually became the battlefield umbrella organization that commanded the warfare aainst the government in ' Phnom Penh. Not all the rebels, were regarded as Communists,, but they were believed to have; fought under the Communist central command. In less than two years the re-; bels would claim control of 80 per cent of Cambodia. In December 1970 the U. S. Congress forbade U. S. combatI troops or advisers in Cambodia.f THE year 1971 began with more reverses. A rebel attackI on Phnom Penh's PochentongI airfield destroyed three-quar-f ters of the Khmer Republic'sI air force on the ground. Lon Nol, who had become premiert on the resignation of Sirik Ma-c tak, suffered a crippling stroke.I In June, Sihanouk announcedi that Khieu Samphan, a Paris-t educated economist and old an-1 tagonist of the prince who hadi gone underground four yearsf before, was commander-in-chiefc of the "Cambodian Peoples Lib-t eration Armed Forces." In 1972, Lon Nol proclaimed1 himself president, an act later ] ratified by an election. With thet 1972 insurgent offensive in3 South Vietnam, the Vietnamese Communist - led command ap- parently turned its attention and its troops to the east, and the Khmer Rouge took over more and more of the fighting. BY 1973 the insurgents were claiming 90 per cent of Cambo- dian territory. Efforts by the republic army failed to secure supplies for Phnom Penh, so in October a U. S. civilian contract firm be- gan an airlift THE Khmer Rouge forces be- gan their final push on January 1 this year. Phnom Penh's air- port, the capital's only remain- ing supply link, came under al- most daily rocket attack. Civil- ian casualties mounted. Insurgents launched a fierce attack on the strategic ferry town of Neak Luong, the gov- ernment's last major strong- hold on the lower Mekong Riv- er. It fell on April 1 - the day President Lon Nol left the coun- try. Meanwhile, U. S. planes air- lifted vital ammunition, rice and fuel into the beleaguered capi- tal.- But the government position continued to deteriorate, and on April 12 - with the insurgents almost at the city's gates, American helicopters guarded by U. S. Marines evacuated the remaining American civilians. McGee freeing attacked (Continued from Page 1) tifies incarceration," he direct- ed his main attacks at the lack of a "phase-in period" for the law. "THERE WAS too swift a change in the courts Fromn an attitude of iflstitutionalizati ya to community treatment," Bulard said. According to Dr. Robey, the Mental Health Laws were "per- fectly good until the Supreme Court made them unworkable." He said that under the McQuil- lan ruling "most of the evidence from the Center was barred on legal grounds." Robey had filled out an "al- ternative treatment form" in compliance with the ruling in which. he said that "there was no possibility of any alternative treatment for McGee" and that he should be kept under "max- imum security." However, the form' was inadm ssable as evi- dence and was never seen by the jury. WASHTENAW County Prosecuting Attorney William Delhey reluctantly referred to the ruling as a "conflict of law." .I Former governor watched Tby feds LANSING (UPI) - Michiga Supreme Court Justice Joh; Swainson, the target of briber allegations by a convicte burglar, has;been under investi gation by federal authorities to two years. U. S. Attorney Ralph Gru disclosed Tuesday that t h probe by the Justice Depart ment Strike Force in Detroi began prior to a Dec. 19, 197. Supreme Court ruling reversin a breaking and entering convic "tion against the man who ha accused the former governor o accepting the bribe. BUT GUY cautioned that thi is not cause to assume the i vestigation is any broader i scope. Supreme Court Chief Jdstic Thomas Kavanaugh announce earlier T u e s d a y that th court has retained prominen Chicago attorney Albert Jenne to "protect the court itself fron the insinuations" of the briber allegations. "A charge such as this-eve a charge made by a convicte felon - poses a threat to th court as an institution of gov ernment," Kavanaugh said. S WA INS 0 N, 49, a Demo crat, served as, Michigan's go ernor from 1960 to 1962 followin a two-year term as lieuten governor and four years in state Senate. He was electe to the Supreme Court in 1970. Kavanaugh released a state ment on the bribery allegation at a news conference that als was attended by Swainson. Kavanaugh, contacted later the day, was asked if Swainso should resign because of th .allegations. He replied: "Abs lutely not." Connally .. tralgoes 'to jury (Continued from Page1) cumstantial evidence is strong and he cited bank records, ap pointment books and testimon presented in the 2 weeks o trial. "ILLEGAL payments ,whe made to public officials do n occur in the presence of thir parties, or cameras, or with reporter present," he said. Tuerkheimer told. the jury five men and seven women thha evidence, they will find Con nally guilty. Williams, lowering his voic to a near whisper, said: "I ASK you at long last t lift the pain and anguish, os tracism and suffering, false ac cusations, vilification and slan der from John Connally and i you do, the United States wil win the day." Whether you use in dash or underdash is up to you- Giving you the best of each is up to US! 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