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March 30, 1973 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-03-30

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. Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, March 30, 1973

Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FridayMarch _, 17

STRUGGLE CONTINUES

Shop at
FOLLETTS

P

k6

Last GIs

leave

Vietnam

SAIGON (P) - The last American

nation as no other foreign war to defend the regiie we have chois- by the fouir-power neacecommnris-

for TEXTBOOKS,
TRADEBOOKS,
and SUPPLIES

combat troops pulled out of Viet- had done before. en," said Thieu.
nam yesterday, leaving a still-em- At a 20-minute stand-down cere- Completed yesterday was the re-
battled nation that President Nguy- mony at Saigon's Tan Son Nhut lease of the last of 587 U.S. POWs'
en Van Thieu vowed would con- air base, departing commander begun by the North Vietnamese on'
tinue to "fight under all condi- Gen. Frederick Weyand claimed Feb. 12.]
tions to defend itself against com- U.S. forces had accomplished their At Clark Air Base, Brig. Gen.
munism. mission to prevent a Communist Russell Ogan of the Air Force said'
The U.S. troops depated after takeover by "raw military force." yesterday an intensive search will
more than a decade of dogged be launched soon for the 1,328
fighting which cost nearly 46,000 But as he spoke, North Viet- servicemen listed by the United
American lives land billions of dol- namese and Viet Cong shells were States as missing in action in Indo-
lars and which divided the U.S. blasting a beleaguered government china. The United States also wants
ranger camp at Tom Le Chan, 50 a North Vietnamese list of those{
1 .miles to the north, and the Saigon Americans killed in action.r

Rap Brown

command charged 146 violations of
the cease-fire in the last 36 hours.

Negotiations will begin shortly

The last GIs filed aboard a C141
transport aircraft at Tan S o n
fOun' g iltNhut under the watchful eyes of
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
officers whose manner suggested
! Pob ep they regarded the American de-
parture as little short of a Com-
NEW YORK (Reuter) - Black munist victory.
militant H. Rap Brown and three On the other side of town, Presi-
accomplices were found guilty dent Thieu told 10,000 members of ?
yesterday of robbery, assaultfand his Dan Chu Democracy party that
weapons charges stemming from Ypryta
a Manhattan bar holdup in Oc- the Communists had not given up
tober 1971. their goal of world domination.
Brown, 30, former head of the "Therefore, if the other side still
Student Non-Violent Coordinating stubbornly clings to its dream of
Committee, a now defunct leading invading our country in one way
civil .rights group, was convicted or another, we still have to be pre-t
by a jury of 11 men and one wo-
man after a 10-week trial. The pared to fight under all conditions

I
E
T
r
,{
1
C
T
T
E
t
t
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sion in Vietnam to allow Ameri-
cans access to search North Viet-'
nam and areas controlled by the
Viet Cong, said Ogan, director of
prisoner of war and missing in ac-
tion affairs for the secretary of de-
fense.
Former U.S. prisoners of war
said yesterday that the captured
servicemen were beaten, drugged
and tortured-sometimes fatally-
by the North Vietnamese who want-
ed them to make antiwar state-
ments.
The picture of life in prison
emerged at news conferences held
by the former prisoners after the
release of the last known POWs.1
The men previously refused to dis-
cuss their captivity, fearing for the
lives of those still held prisoner.
One man said 95 per cent of the
American prisoners were tortured
and 80 per cent finally agreed to
make some sort of antiwar state-
ment; another said a prisoner who
escaped and was recaptured was
tortured to death; a third recalled'
times when he screamed all night
with pain.

__ I

I

Sat., Sun., & Wed. at
1, 3, 5, 7, 9
Mon., Tues., Thur., Fri. at
7 p.m. & 9 p.m. Only
ING AR BERGMAN'S
cRIESAND
wHt EP

ft 1

k.

KID
written by NEIL SIMON
directed by ELAINE MAY
-N EXT---
Barbra Streisand
in "UP THE SANDBOX"

I

I

i

3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile

U

Pres. Thieu

jury deadlocked on a charge of
attempted murder.
Brown and three other defend-'
ants - Arthur Young, 27, Levi
Valentine, 26, and Samuel Petty,
25-faced possible life imprison-
ment. Sentencing will be May 30.
The jury found that Brown and
his accomplices held up the Red
Carpet Lounge in Manhattan Oct.
16, 1971, but could not agree on
charges that they tried to kill
three policemen in the subsequent
gunbattle.

The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at the University of
Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second
class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
stay year, Subscription rates: $10 by
carrier (campus area); $11 local mail
(in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail
(other states and foreign).
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-3
tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus
area); $6.50 iocal mail (in Mich. or
Ohio); $7.50 non-local mall (other
states and foreign).

-TONIGHT-
Snoessa Glenda
Redgrave -"Jackson
MLB
$1 .25 Friends of. Newsreel

featured in
this month's
Playboy.
See it while
zyou cani.
Z
0
plus ALL ABOUT SEX !
art (1 eM482-3300
. OG1EE ttilli40

PRESENTS:
UIIIAHHEEP
WITH
SPECIAL GUEST STARS
Billy Preston & McKendree Spring
April 7, 8:00 P.M. at
E. M. U. BOWEN FIELDMOUSE

r r4
X
"BEST
Picture Director
Screenplay
Actress (Liv Ullman)
--N.Y. Film Critics Awards
Tonight! 8:00 PM.!
THE UNIVERSITY
PLAYERS
SHOWCASE
PRODUCTIONS
present
"The Architect
and
The Emperor
of Assyria"
by
FERNANDO ARRABAL
MARCH 28-31
ARENA THEATRE
FRIEZE BUILDING

I

Med iatrics
POLANSK I'S
Rosemary's Baby
Re-scheduled from April 6 & 7
7 & 9:30 P.M.
Friday & Saturday
MARCH30 & 31
Nat. Sci. Aud.
ONLY 75c Tickets on sale at 6 p.m
FRIDAY 30 MARCH
KEY LARGO
Director: John Huston 1948. HUMPHREY BOGART, EDWARD G. ROB-
INSON, LAUREN BACALL, LIONEL BARRYMORE. Robinson as the last
of the old time gamblers, intent on a comeback, confronts Bogart, an "ex-
army ex-idealist" in a shutdown hotel in the Florida Keys. "With remark-
able filming and cutting, Mr. Huston has notably achieved a great deal of
interest and tension . . . he has also got stinging performances out of most
of his cast."-New York Times
AUDITORIUM A 7 and 9 O'Clock ONE DOLLAR
it e as: 9A & &&& &a5fa a & & l'a&a& - & fa51 .! L&

i

_ _ _.

** NEW WORLD MEDIA **
INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES
Program No. 4
"MEXICO: the Frozen 'Revolution"
FIRST PRIZE Mardheim
Film Festival, 1971
FIRST PRIZE, Locorno
F i l m F e s t i v a l , 1 9 71We<
music & entertainment. *r4
Speaker from
Travajadores de La Raza.
Mexican Art Display
Tonight
8 P.M. in the Under-
grad Library multi-
purpose room, 3rd floor
U. of M. central campus
sponsored by
New World Film Co-op GE
NO ADMISSION CHARGE

Tickets: $1.50

I

-I

-TONIGHT-

I Mary, Queen of Scots

i

Vanes RedgraveG lenda Jackson

SAIL THROUGH AFRICA f
with
KATHARINE HEPBURN and HUMPHREY BOGART
in
The African Queen
A great one directed by
JOHN HUSTON. Screenplay by JAMES AGEE

"Two fine actresses, Vanessa Redgrove and Glenda Jackson, give
force and substance . . . Redgrave's Mary is regal, nervous,
uncertain-a delicate creature who becomes indomitable only in
death . . . Jackson's Elizabeth is cunning, complex, intriguing-
a monarch whose desire for power is both a motivating force and
a tragic flaw."
Jay Cocks, TIME

.

:1

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