Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday; January 31, 1973 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednsda. Januar.,y.,.,3.. 1913. Fighting continues in Vietnam, peace force remains immobile i (Continued from Page 1) hering to the ceasefire agreement. William Porter, American am- bassador to the Paris peace talks, gave the warning when discussing aid and the Vietnam peace agree- ment with the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee. The four ICC countries now have nearly 400 troops in Saigon, and they should have already started deploying to observation posts across the country. But they were still' in Saigon hours after the Paris peace agree- ment signed Saturday said they Douglas urges change, questions U.S. policies (Continued from Page 1) paring the invasion of the Domini- The long-time civil libertarian ran Republic to the Soviet Union's commented that the loyalty probes invasion of Czechoslovakia. "Ourl of the 1950's "cleaned out innova- invasion was a great tragedy not tion in the government and left the only to Santo Domingo but also to governmental architects building Latin America as well," he said. on conventional grounds." He also criticized surveillance in American society. "I haven't seen the dossier on each and every one of you in Wash- ington-including the kind of lec- tures you attend-but there prob- ably is one. The government is continually trying to identify the 180 million subversives in our midst," he joked to the crowd. Douglas also defended the judi- cial philosophy that has made him a favorite target for American conservatives. "When they talk about strict con- structionists, what do they mean? Is it better to decide a case of due process on your own predilec- tion or according to the Bill of Rights? I say the Bill of Rights," he said. On questions of foreign policy, he was unstinting in his criticism of U.S actions in Latin America, com- Douglas, who has written a book on Latin America, spoke of the 'topic at length, describing the use, of natural resources by the great "industrial plants"-the U.S., Russia, Europe, and Japan. "The Latin American countries now realize that the big nations want to use their resources for their plants," he explained. "We must develop a harmonious com- mon market and not only ship raw material out of other countries." The judicial maverick also spoke of the ecological hazards that our nation faces. Long associated with t h e environmental movement, Douglas was critical of the lack of concern shown by many Ameri- cans. Buckminister Fuller, the inventor of the geodesic dome, will speak on Sunday as part of the same lecture series. should spread through the country- side. The Joint Military Commission (JMC), composed of the four com- batants, has itself been unable to make ceasefire arrangements because of differences between the Saigon government and the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese on im- migration procedures. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong representatives staged a sit-in in their aircrafts at Saigon airport for 20 hours until they were allowed early yesterday to disembark without signing immigration pap- ers. They said signing the forms would in principle acknowledge the sovereignty of President Ngu- yen Van Thieu's government over South Vietnam. The foreign ministry allowed them into Saigon, but said no more delegates would be permitted to land in Saigonrwithout signing immigration papers. The JMC eventually had six hours of talks here but the dis- cussions were believed to have centered on the immigration dis- pute. S a y o ye . a CLe HC ule lurfilalful iSGa Enjoy It! For a subscription call 764-0558 AP Photo SOUTH VIETNAMESE villagers walk past the bodies of Viet Cong and North Vietnamese soldiers kill- ed in post cease-fire fighting, yesterday. Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard samasu* a .............. "4 e i University Towers Apartments offers Eight month leases with no rent increase * Free weekly housekeeping * Study room SPiano room 0 Heated Pool -O P, ,I . *I w.: