Page Two I HE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March.31. 197V Page Two 1I-1EMICIcNDAL .... , ...... T .. .. , .. w.. FORCE-FED LSD "" £WT - -- -11 9 r uws recaii grim ca By The Associated Press terviews, the men provided fresh "I wasn't prepared to become a Former U.S. prisoners of war details. They did not discuss re- prisoner," he said, "and had de- yesterday discussed the torture and ports of servicemen who cooper- cided I would never get captured. I' brutality they underwent at the ated with the enemy or possible was going to fire five bullets into hands of their communist captors. retribution. Military sources said the Vietnamese and use the sixth "After about an hour or two," said earlier they had been told by the on myself, but then I decided be- one man, "I actually hoped they Pentagon to maintain their silence ing dead lasts a long time." I would kill me." on this issue. Galanti said he surrendered and The men had kept silent until the Navy Lt. Cmdr. Paul Galanti of later was interrogated and repeat- last of the POWs, originally sched- Richmond, Va., who was shot down I edly tortured with ropes by the uled for release in Indochina land- June 17, 1966, said he was sur- North Vietnamese. He said he fin- ed Thursday at Clark Air Base in rounded by about 50 North Viet- ally answered questions - with the Philippines. namese peasants when he reached fabricated answers. At news conferences and in in- the ground. Galanti said his doctor at Ports- t's not j Ust a lot of hot air: smoking among teens on rise K I ptIVity mouth Naval Hospital confirmed he'd been subjected to an LSD-type drugging. For months afterward, he said, he heard voices telling him of people who were coming after him. "To counter them," he said, "I began to talk back to them. I'd say, 'Well, look, this isn't real, so go away."' Hospital officials declined con- ment on the drug. Another former prisoner of war, Ernest Brace, was kept in soli- tary confinement in a bamboo cage for almost five years. One day in 1966, informants said, Brace attempted to escape but was caught. His captors placed him in stocks for several days, sitting up day and night, then buried him up to his neck in a hole, they said. In that time, during which- he was I exposed to the sun, he was given a little food and water. Charles Willis, a civilian worker, was the manager of the Voice of America station in Hue when he was captured by the Viet Cong. "One thing is for sure," he said. "there are kind and humane peo- ple all over the world and I ex- perienced both types." SAT. & SUN. AFTERNOON SPECIAL YOUTH DOUBLE FEATURE "MAD MONSTER PARTY" plus "Wacky World of Mother Goose" Complete Double Feature at 1 p.m. and 2:45 NO MATINEES SATURDAY and SUNDAY! IN THE LIFE AND Sat. and Sun. TiMES OF 7 p.m.& 9:051 I ~4ji~Mediotrics Rosemary's Baby Re-scheduled from April 6 & 7 7 & 9:30 p.m. I Friday & Saturday March 30 & 31 Nat. Sci. Aud. ONLY 75c Tickets on sale at 6 p.m. NOGALES, Ariz. W) - T h e number of teen-age smokers con- tinues to rise, even though can- cer caused by smoking takes 70,000 to 80,000 lives a year, the president of the American Can- cer Society said yesterday. Dr. Arthur James of the Ohio State University School of Medi- cine, in Columbus said the in- crease comes principally among teen-age girls who have started smoking. The cancer society said that the percentage of teen-age boys, aged 1248, who smoke cigarettes rose from 14.7 in 1968 to 15.7 in 1972. But more significantly, the percentage of teen-age girls rose sharply from 8.4 in 1968 to 13.3 in 1972. If the trend among the girls continues, the society said, t h e percentage of adult smokers, male and female, will be about the same. At present, the per- centage of adult male smokers is 43.2; women, 30.9. The figure comes from government surveys, the society said. Creationists ask 'equal time for God in texts SACRAMENTO, Cal. (UPI) - sides of the story," Assemblyman! Spurned by the state Board of Ed- Wakefield said in an interview.: ucation, divine creationists are go- "If the legislature is fair, it will ing to the legislature with their put creation and evolution on equalI campaign to get "equal time" with I footing. Charles Darwin's evolutionary the- Wakefield, author of a success-I ory in public schools. ful antibusing initiative, said heI "Omitting the theory of creation may sponsor an initiative in 1974 from public texts is worse than to guarantee a place for creation book burning," said Alive Vipiana, theories in public schools if the head of a new group called Crea- legislature fails to pass the GOP tion Evolution Equality that was bill. formed to push for new legislation. While thrice rejecting proposals "You can't 'call it anything but at nld raintere nsi censorship," she added in an in- to inctex creationtheoris induci- terview Thursday. "Evolution and tion did make some concessions. It creation must be given equal has voted to reduce the presenta- time. tion of evolutionary theory from pledgesanR faelresideconsevativ purported fact to simple specula-I GOP assemblymen to carry the tion. Creationists decided to fight for new legislations after the state board thwarted their moves toin- CA PU clude the theory of special crea- tion -in science texts to counter- Theatre Phone668-6416 balance the theory of evolution. "Our children should get both Sat., Sun., & Wed. at -1__ _1,3,5,7,9 James spoke at a science writ- ers' seminar sponsored by t h e cancer society. Lung cancer kills more people than any other cancer. An esti- mated 72,000 of the 350,000 who will die of cancer in 1973 w iI succumb to lung cancer. "And al- most all of these deaths are pre- ventable," the surgeon said. If cigarette smoking were eli- minated, the death toll for all cancer could be reduced by as much as. one-fifth, he said. James said that even though the facts about the dangers of cigarette smoking have been widely disseminated, "there has been a counter wave of induce- ment and almost of seduction to keep the cigarette smoker shack- led to his addiction and to entrap new converts among the young." Eighty per cent of lung can- cers result from cigarette smok- ing, but it also is involved in can- cers of the larynx, kidney, eso- phogus, pharynx, urinary blad- der and pancreas. "Altogether these sites, along with lung cancer, account for about 100,000 deaths a year," James said. "Conservatively it can be estimated that from 70,- 000 to 80,000 of these deaths are related to cigarette smoking." The number of adult ex-cigar- ette smokers has risen over the years, with 29 million having quit by the end of 1970, he reported. featured in this months Playboy. See it while o * 0 plus ALL ABOUT SEX! or _a m B 48-3300 -TONIGHT - ---- o i i a Vanessa Redgrave °Glendajackson The Michigan Daily, edited and man-! aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Secondj Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, ; Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich or Ohio);r$13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or IOhio); $7.50 non-local mail (other, states and foreign). -TONIGHT- Vanessa Glenda Redgrave - Jackson E N MLB $1.25 Friends of Newsreel _ .: RANDY NEWMAN TIM BUCKLEY "Two fine actresses, Vanessa Redgrave 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 bolt a motivating force and a tragic flow." --Jay Cocks, TIME "A truly extraordinary film in every way, a great directorial achievement. Brilliant acting . . . without question one of the year's best (1972)." -AFTER DARK MAGAZINE -TONIG H T- MLO 3 & 4 Friends of Newsreel WED., April 1-1 - POWER CENTER PRESENTS: $3.00 Admission Advance $3.50 at the door BOTH PERFORMING AT 7:00 and 9:30 CONCERTS ADVANCE TICKETS now: Union, 11-5:30, Mon.-Sat. and Power Center, M.W.F., 2-5 and T.Th. 10-5 FURTHER INFO.: 763-4553 during Union hours above. GRADUATING ? Make your job search more pro- ductive. Trained consultant will write your resume. 50 one-page copies for $20.00. BEST RESUME SERVICE PHONE: 1-356-2332 (mail orders invited) 17220 W. 8 Mile Rd. Southfield, Mich. 48075 Mon., Tues., Thur., Fri. at 7 p.m. & 9 p.m. Only INGMAR BERGMAN'S WISAND WHM.AERSO m Il URIAH HEEP THE DIVINE MISS M I HEART written by NEIL SIMON directed by ELAINE MAY -NEXT- Barbra Streisand in "UP THE SANDBOX" Last Performance TONIGHT! 8:00 P.M.! The University Players Showcase Productions PRESENT "THE ARCHITECT AND THE EMPEROR OF ASSYRIA" by FERNANDO ARRABAL March 28-31 ARENA THEATRE FRIEZE BLDG. r L L. -a I NOW ONLY $369 wwU Uww~