1 Page Ten Paris talks suspended as Viet Cong minister .z walks out of session I THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 5,19t/3 r 'Calley harbored no malice,' lawyers say PARIS (P) - The political talks between the Saigon government and the Viet Cong were indefi- nitely suspended yesterday after Viet Cong State Minister Nguyen Van Hieu walked out of the 28th session without waiting for the other side to speak. Hieu said his walkout marked a protest against what he termed Saigon's "continuous and flag- rant violation" of the cease-fire signed in Paris more than eight months ago. SOUTH VIETNAMESE Deputy Premier Nguyen Luu Vien said the walkout displayed "a discour- teous and insolent attitude unac- ceptable among well - educated people and unacceptable and in- tolerable among negotiators seek- ing a peaceful solution." Hieu stressed that he was only walking out of the 28th session, and demanded that the stalled conference should continue Oct. 11 as though nothing had hap- pened. Vien angrily rejected the date set by Hieu and told newsmen the talks would resume only when the two sides had reached agreement on a date. Confer- ence sources said nonetheless -they expected the two delegations to resume their talks before the end of the month, particularly in view of Secretary of State Hen- A Aceres thru Classified LEGAL ABORTIONS $135 National Abortion Center 19009 W. 7 Mile Rd. Detroit 255-3985 clinics in Midwestern cities Licensed Qualified Physicians ry Kissinger's forthcoming visit to Peking. THE TALKS were arranged be- tween Kissinger and Hanoi's Le- Duc Tho during their talks here last winter and were explicitly required under the Jan. 28 cease- fire. The agreement called on the rival South Vietnamese regimes to "hold consultations in a spirit of national reconciliation and concord" to agree on South Viet- nam's political future. The talks soon settled into a weekly routine of mutual accu- sation and abuse, and thus far have made no progress whatever toward agreement on the pro- posed n a t i o n a l reconcilia- tion council which is to organize South Vietnamese elections. Viet Cong spokesman Ly Van Sau called a special news con- ference to announce that the walkout was meant to "underline the gravity of the situation" caus- ed by continuous incursions by Saigon forces into Viet Cong-con- trolled areas in the central high- lands, the coastal plain and the Mekong Delta in violation of the cease-fire. HE S A I D the United States was in collusion with the Saigon military command in launching these attacks and in "feverish preparation of new military ad- ventures." In some of the at- tacks, he said whole villages had been wiped out, including some in the area of My Lai, the site of the 1968 massacre.- At the United Nations in New York, South Vietnam's Foreign Minister Nguyen Phuc Duc said in an interview that North Viet- nam is infiltrating men and wea- pons into the South at a "serious and disturbing" rate. He claimed Hanoi has sent 70,000 troops- and 400 tanks into the South since the Paris peace agreement. - - WASHINGTON (P) - Lt. Wil- liam Calley believed he was carrying out a legal order at My Lai and so was guilty of noth- ing more than an honest mistake, his lawyers said in court yester- day. "Lt. Calley harbored no ma- lice," said Army Lawyer Capt. Houston Gordon. "He did not have the mind of a murderer." GORDON ASKED the U. S. Court of Military Appeals, the fi- nal arbiter of American mili- tary courts, to reverse Calley's conviction for murder and his 20-year sentence at hard labor. No decision from the three presi- dentially appointed civilians on the court is expected for several weeks. Then the secretary of the Army and President Nixon will review the decision. Nixon has said he will look at it personally. There is some chance that ci- vilian federal courts might be asked to review the Calley case, but Army lawyers in the Pen- tagon said yesterday's hearing is likely to be the last formal appeal on behalf of the 29-year- old lieutenant. CALLEY WAS convicted March 29, 1971, of murdering at least 22 Vietnamese civilian and as- sault with intent to murder a Vietnamese child. Testimony at his court - martial showed hun- dreds of civilians died as Calley's platoon swept through the village March 16, 1968. I I HILLEL YOM KIPPUR SERVICES Oct. 5 Oct. 6 REFORM, 1429 Hill ...........7p.m. 10a.m. ORTHODOX, 1429 Hill.......6:30 p.m. 9 a.m. CONSERVATIVE, Mich. Union Ballroom........7 p.m. 9 a.m. SGAY RUMMAGE SALE ~ Sat., Oct. 6, 1973 2Hj St. Andrew's Church Division and Catherine St. 9a.m.-4 p.m. clothes, books, records, appliances, lots of plants 4.- Sand other goodies To benefit a gay community center Come out and join us - -4- AP Photo LT. WILLIAM CALLEY'S lawyers George Latimer, right, and Capt. Houston Gordon arive at the U.S. Military Court of Appeals in Washington yesterday. They have asked the court to reverse the decision on Calley's conviction. WOMEN'S FAIR "WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING" FRIDAY, OCT. 5, 1973 The Whole Earth Catalogue calls it- "A masterpiece. If you don't think you have any ques- tions about your body, you'll probably be surprised. And if you're looking for a stronger, clearer sense of yourself as a woman, you'll be satisfied." -Diana Shugart, The Whole Earth Catalogue Saturday Review says- "It's one of those rare books that truly make a difference. One wants to urge, cajole and plead with women - and men; too, most of them equally ignorant of the female body - to Sread it, study it, discuss it with friends, use _ it as a reference, and perhaps even lend it toa doctor." -Genevieve Stuttaford, Saturday Review First prepared and published locally by The Boston Women's Health Book Collective, < "? this great underground bestseller -now published for general dis- tribution - covers such sub- jects as anatomy, sexuality, birth control, abortion, nutri- tion, exercise, childbearing, common medical problems of women, and much, much more - all of it carefully Sresearched clearly illus trated and presented from the women's point of view. UR DIES A BOOK BYAND OURSELVES WOER By The Boston Women's Health Book Collective f Touchstone paperback $2.95. Simon and Schuster Photo: Robert Parent Henderson Rm. 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