Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Friday, May 25, ]973 Deserter testifies, surrenders at unofficial amnesty hearings WASHINGTON (') - A 25- year-old man who said he de- serted the Army three years ago gave surprise testimony today before a group of congressmen holding hearings on amnesty, and then turned himself in to Capitol police. Edward Sowder of Detroit ap- peared before an unofficial hearing and told the panel that when he joined the Army in 1965 he believed in fighting in Viet- nam. "DAZZLING" William Wolf, Cue "V Special Times: - 1 P.M.-3:30 6:10-8:45 LAURENCE MICHAEL OLIVIER CAINE nIOSEPH LMANKIlWICZ i m oi 3rd Hit Week r BUT he said what he witnessed in Vietnam changed his mind and "I went on strike against the war." "I make no apology for my act of resistance. I could do noth- ing else at the time. But under- ground life has become intoler- able to me. So I'm here today, to draw attention to the true facts concerning my case and the cases of tens of thousands like me. "We are not criminals to be hunted and imprisoned." REP. BELLA ABZUG, (D-N. Y.) heads the panel which in- cludes Democratic Reps. John Conyers of Michigan, Ronald Dellums, Phil Burton and George Brown of California, Parren Mit- chell of Maryland and Benjamin Rosenthal of New York. When Sowder finished his tes- timony he joined his mother and brother in the audience of the hearing. A few "minutes later he heard that FBI agents were in the hallway, waiting for him. He left the hearing room but found no agents. He walked down the hall, accompanied by his lawyer, looking for the agents and still couldn't find them. Fin- ally he turned himself over to two Capitol policemen who took him into custody to await the FBI. .IN THE BACKDROP of the hearings were the freed Ameri- can POWs, whose ,return home was a condition posed by many for even discussing amnesty. And hanging over the session was the chance that many men avoiding prosecution for dodg- ing the draft may not be law- breakers. Their numbers were put at an estimated 2,800 in Can- ada, 550 in other foreign coun- tries and 1,250 in hiding. Two weeks ago, draft director Byron Pepitone said the possi- bility existed that many may not have broken Selective Service law. WALTER MORSE, general counsel of the Selective Service System, said this would include men whose records have errors of fact or procedure in the pro- cessing. He said when such er- rors are found the man's case is reopened, automatically wiping out any possible charge of draft evasion. For those who have been pro- secuted, about one quarter of them have been convicted and nearly . three-fourths of these were put on probation. Recent figures show that before the war's end more than 4,000 were accused but over 3,000 were not convicted. President Nixon has said he is against amnesty. Some liber- als from both parties have said they would favor a conditional amnesty that would include pub- lic service jobs upon conviction. THERE has been no recent barometer of congressional senti- ment for conditional or uncondi- tional amnesty, such as proposed in two bills introduced in the House. One bill was introduced by Abzug and the other by Del- lums. AP Photo ARMY DESERTER Edgar Sowder of Detroit surrenders to Capitol police after appearing before an Ad Hoc Hearing on Amnesty on Capitol Hill. Sowder told Congress members at the hearing, "I make no apology for my act of resistance." PIRGIM, RITA MESSENGER DIBERT: RECENT DRAWINGS4 May 23 through June 3 Opening Reception Friday evening, May 25 from 7 until 10 p.m.ne THE UNION GALLERY Located on the first floor of the Michigan Union GALLERY HOURS: Wednesday through Sunday, 12-5 p.m. also Friday evenings, 7-10 p.m. - - 4 colorado's natural ice cream no no chemical artificial 4 additives flavoring making history in ann arbor PRICE SURVEY FOR THE WEEK OF MAY 22, 1973 Volunteers for the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan have compiled a price survey on a- standard market- basket of goods at the following area stores: Rank Store, Location % it ovc st 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 KROGER, Westgate KROGER, Arborland MEIJER, Carpenter Road A&P, Industrial WRIGLEY, Maple Village KROGER, Packard GREAT SCOTT, Carpenter VESCIO, Stadium AP, Maple A&P, Plymouth KROGER, Broadway WRIGLEY, Stadium-Liberty WRIGLEY, Stadium-Washtenaw A&P, Huron The next PIRGIM price survey will be conducted on May 30, 1973 ncrease er no. 1 ore 0.4 1.0 2.3 3.3 3.3 4.6 7.8 9.6 10.8 11.5 11.9 13.3 14.9 C "QUITE FUNNY" -Time THIS CRITIC DIDN'T MLIKE " TREA TE tDF BLOD'" f VINCENT PRICE A Shakespearean a c t or gets revenge on the-critics who vili- fied him! with DIANA RIGG and a 1214 s. university large cast of British'CU actorsThar Phn66-4 COMING The controversial but critically acclaimed "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" Applerose Natural Foods Capitol Market Sgt. Pepper's Soybean Cellars Village Corners Meijer Thrifty Acres: Ralph's Market Big Ten Party Store Campus Corners, .............. F'