Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 24, 1973 Page EIght THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 24, 1973 Nixon speech highlights Il Countries offer aid to war-torn Vietnam WASHINGTON P) -- Here are highlights of President Nixon's address last night announcing an agreement to end the war in Viet- nam: The following statement is being issued at this moment in Wash- ington and Hanoi: "At 12:30 Paris time today, Jan. 23, 1973, the agreement on ending the war and restoring peace in Vietnam was initialed ... "The agreement will be formally signed by the parties participating in the Paris conference on Viet- nam on Jan. 27, 1973, at the Inter- national Conference C e n t e r in Paris." Throughout the years of nego- tiations, we have insisted on peace with honor . . In the settlement that has now been agreed to, all the conditions that I laid down on Jan. 25 and May 8, 1972 have been met. -A cease-fire, internationally supervised, will begin at 7 p.m. this Saturday, Jan. 27, Washington time. -Within 60 days from this Sat- urday, all Americans held prisoner of war throughout Indochina will be released. There will be the full- est possible accounting for all of those who are missing in action. -During the same 60-day period all American forces will be with- drawn from South Vietnam. -The people of South Vietnam have been guaranteed the right to determine their own future without o u t s i d e interference. By joint agreement, the fulltext of the agreement and the protocols to carry it out will be released to- morrow ... This settlement meets the goals and has the full support of Presi- dent Thieu and the government of the Republic of Vietnam, as well as that of our other allies who are affected. The United States will continue to recognize the government of the Republic of Vietnam as the sole legitimate government of South Vietnam. We shall continue to aid South Vietnam within the terms of the agreement .. - All parties must now see to it that this is a peace that lasts, and also a peace that heals-.. This will mean that the terms of the agreement must be scrupul- ously adhered to. We shall do everything the agreement requires of us and we shall expect the other parties to do everything it requires of them .. . (Continued from Page 1) trade - particularly with North Vietnam. Foreign M i n i s t e r Masayoshi Ohira has already promised Japa- nese participation in an interna- tional conference on reconstruc- tion. . A leading Japanese private re- search body predicts North and South Vietnam will require $12-15 billion for rehabilitation and de- velopment over the next 10 years, of which Japan could expect to contribute up to $3 billion. In Britain, the government said it was very glad that after all these years of war there is an agreement on Vietnam. "The opportunity is now there to convert it into an enduring peace throughout Indochina," a foreign office statement said. West Germany greeted Nixon's announcement of a ceasefire agree- ment with an expression of "re- lief." "West Germany welcomes the announcement that a ceasefire agreement will be signed on Satur- day, and hopes that therewith the foundations have been laid for peace in Indochina," a government spokesman said in a written state- ment. Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp of Canada welcomed the prospects of peace, but said his government had not yet decided whether to take part in an international cease- fire observer force in Vietnam. He said the Cabinet must see the cease-fire agreement before ac- cepting an invitation to commit Canadian troops to the planned four-country observer group. GET ATT ENTIO Tribute to LIJ set ; i (Continued from Page 1) caisson for a march up Constitu- tion Avenue - from a point within view of the White House - to the Capitol Rotunda. President Nixon and other dig- nitaries are expected to accom- pany the hour-long procession, scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m. Then the casket will be placed upon the Lincoln Cataflaque, be- neath the Capitol dome, where Johnson will lie in state through- out the night. The U. S. Army band will play four "Ruffles and Flour- ishes" and then "Hail to the Chief" as his body is transferred. Following an hour-long service, including hymns and eulogies, for the official party, the rotunda will be opened to the public, at about 4 p.m. The line of mourners will be closed at about 8 a.m. tomorrow when Johnson will be moved by hearse to the National Christian City Church for a 10. a.m. service. Then there is a flight back to Tex- as for the burial near the LBJ ranch. The former President's death leaves the nation without a living ex-president for the first time in 40 years .For only the second time, flags are being flown at half-staff for two former chief executives. Johnson's death Monday night came within a month of former President Harry Truman's on Dec. 26. The only other time when flags were flown at half-staff for two ex-presidents was when Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died on the same day - July 4, 1826. AP Photo PRESIDENT NIXON meets with members of his Cabinet last night prior to delivering his nation- wide television address. Film groups compete for student viewers (Continued from Page 1) Relationships between the film groups, in an admittedly tight mar- ket, seem to be somewhat strain- ed. While most groups charge a dollar or $1.25 for their films, Me- diatrics charges only $.75. Lopatin said, "We're not trying to compete with Cinema Guild or Cinema II. It would be senseless to do so. They show different kinds of films." He denied that his group would affect Cinema Guild. ESP talk presented By SUE TRETHEWEY "ESP exists best when the per- son is in an altered state of con- sciousness," Dr. Stanley Krippner said yesterday during his lecture on "Developments in Parapsychol- ogy in Russia and the U.S.". Krippner, director of Maimo- nidies Hdspital Dream Research Laboratory in New York, was the first in a series of speakers spon- sored by the University Activities Center and the Office of Religious Affairs. The 12 lectures are part of the required curriculum for Geography 303, "Future Worlds,". taught by Prof. Bernard Nietsch- mann. Addressing an audience of over 400, Krippner detailed recent dis- coveries in ESP research. "A person's volitional control of the magnetic fields give them pow- ers of psycho-kinesis," he con- tinued. "PK," as it is called, is the ability to move an object without touching it. He demonstrated this phenome- non with a film of a Russian wo- man rolling an object back and forth on a table while holding her hand a few inches away from it. "They were in (financial) trouble before we even entered the pic- ture," h e s a i d. "Mediatrics wouldn't make the difference." Lopatin said the fact that Ann Arbor Film Co-op, his most simi- lar rival, shows films on Tuesday and Thursday, while his group screens on weekends, means that these two groups will not conflict. Bill Clark, a member of Cinema II, says he does not think the broadly-based, commercially ap- pealing flicks scheduled by the UAC group will pose any "serious economic threat" to the varied Cinema II slate, which he de- scribes as "selectively schizo- phrenic." However, he said that the high rental rates Mediatrics has ac- cepted set a damaging fiscal pre- cedent among city film groups, which have been trying to keep about a 50 per cent ceiling on rentals. Lopatin admits that for "2001: A Space Odessey" his profit was "negligible", quoting a figure in the neighborhood of $20. The groups have been less than cooperative with regards to lend- ing each other equipment. Lopatin claimed that Cinema II and Cinema Guild refused to lend him a special lens needed for the screening of 2001, even though the two other groups were not using it. Bob Honeyman of Cinema II, however, indicated that Lopatin's request for the lens "assumed a basis of friendliness that hasn't been established yet." Because of the expensive nature of the lens Cinema II and Cinema Guild's policy is that the only other group to use the lens is the Ann Arbor Film Co-op. Honeyman said that offering the lens to Mediatrics and none, of the other new groups would be "dis- criminatory." Lopatin termed the action of Cinema II and Cinema Guild as "childish." "I was screwed by the other film groups," he complained. 41 We Don't Just Publish a Newspaper " We meet new people " We laugh a lot " W e find consolation " We play football + We make money (maybe) * We solve problems * We debate vital issues * We drink 5c Cokes 1 A!_ t - - T % / A ..... . ... j .. .. _ _ .. .