Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 26, 1973 Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 26, 1973 Thousands st By DENNIS NEELD SAIGON (I - Police went to the two-story, middle-class home of Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao at 3 a.m. on Jan.'23. In a stack of her books, they found the lyrics to songs extolling peace. She was arrested. It was four days before the signing of the Vietnam cease- fire agreement in Paris and a month since Thao had celebrated her 14th birthday. She is still in jail and no formal charge has been filed against her. "ACCORDING to police regula- tions it is an offense to distri- bute subversive literature or to possess it, a government offi- cial explained. "These songs she had in her possession . . . they were written by a man who is now in North Vietnam." The songs have been played on Saigon television since the cease- fire, but the government official said that at the time of Thao's arrest they were banned. Thao, who is in the eighthi grade in school, is in a cett at Than lim) Prison osI de Saigot along ,Asitlh a doe n tother girts. H tiiissarc oed to visit St. IS. i oo o i be afrai ," r thr says. -Shc smivs she Was bea ten until shie voited blood." The father, Nguyen Duc Duong, a writer, served a three- year jail term on unspecified charges beginning in 1967 and her brother is serving a 20-year term now as a suspected Viet Cong. Thao and her brother are among thousands of prisoners classified by the South Vietnam- ese government as either Com- munist offenders or common cri- minals. Others say many of them are political prisoners held in violation of the cease-fire agree- ment. 'There are no political prison- ers in South Vietnam," says the chief government spokesman, Pham Duong Hien. CLASSIFIED AS Communist offenders are not only saboteurs, terrorists and Viet Cong, but al-. so those suspected of Communist sympathies and of spreading Communist propaganda. President Nguyen Van Thieu's regime presented to the Viet fiong a list of 5,081 of Common ist offenders which it was will- iug.lto exchange fur Sooth Viet- naiese giivernment prsonnet altgedls in Vir.e o nd Nirtti V ictnamese hands. It s-ys ther care 67,tt of thci. Thc Vies ('ngt claims it Sisv hut Is inly 252, i%,ile main- taining the tsighn authorities W captive in Vietnam have "hundreds of thousands" of ing as many as 200,000 political officials report about 6,000 civi- civilians in jails and detention prisoners. "That figure is just lian prisoners have been released camps for pro-Communist acti- wild," says one U.S. official. this year. vities. "But it's been repeated so many Politicians and religious groups times that it's taken a life of its opposed to the Thieu regime dis- THE PARIS peace agreement own. South Vietnam just doesn't pute this. They contend no ac- refers to "all persons arrested have the prison space to hold count is taken of scores of local and detained during the period that number. police stations, prefecture head- of hostilities for having in any "The whole push is the other quarters, provincial detention way contributed to the political way. The trend is downwards, centers, military stockades and and armed struggle between the the pressure to reduce.' U.S. See VIET, Page 9 two parties." Under the original agreement, they should have been freed by April 27. The latest accord work- ed out between Henry Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Duc Tho says a they should be released within 45 days - by July 28. Most foreign observers dis- count Saigon's claim that the Viet Cong are holding 67,000 ci- vilian prisoners. The figure may - represent the number of officials ' who are missing, but most are likely either to be dead or as- similated into the structure of Communist-contr led ar=as. THEY EOUAIIIY dits7- gv ernment claiss hat thr are no non-Coiunist politicuIp l'1 pmsrisonf ers. Jtnt stins'mInateIsust howsmty diffr s'tl ac-_turuting 'Ii t phtu- ticaI persuusiuu Amsericasoui'rces put Suh Vt st1am' alt'lII risn ssuulat sit 43,717 tut ste first sit thn yva Gutsverunmcent fiues ptta te is. Ne larit tith uer hldon Csin Out telsld ith Sot C tna Se'a, 140 miut-s suhato 8,ttO Isrisutners lusts beets r5Ic ing current breakdown: 19,00 common criminals, 4,300 C(o t monist offenders, 6,000 military offenders in civilian jails, and A Photo 4,000 prisoners awaiting trial. A VIETNAMESE CITIZEN suspected af being a Vietong guerilla * * peers through barbed wire in the prisoners' compound at Cai Cai, THE VIET CONG and Vietna- South Vietnam. Thousands of political prisoners and "Communist mese charge that Thieu is hold- offenders" are still held captive by the Thieu government. Specil Pales H Pin Bowling for Billiards Win a FREE Game MICHIGAN UNION WHY US? EVERY BANK IN TOWN WANTS YOUR BUSINESS. OBVIOUSLY WE THI CHOOSE ANN ARBOR BANK. WHY Us? BECAUSE WE OFFER YO SERVICES AND CONVENIENCES THAT NO OTHER LOCAL BANK CAN TO Ann Arbor Bank en Central Campus Ann AB h AI1 fluron ___ a aric AB a 0 -Ls rt' bridge South U. LOCATION: ANN ARBOR BANK HAS 4- CA OFFICES -- INCLUDING ONE ON NO YOU'RE ALWAYS CLOSE TO AABI HOURS:, OUR CAMPUS BRANCHES OPERA UNTIL 6 P.M. DURING THE WEEK, SATURDAYS. MONEY MACHINE: YOUR MONEY IS NEVER AT AAB. NEED CASH AT 3 A.M? ANY CAN GET CASH OR MAKE DEPOSITS AT / DO IT NOW: BANK LINES WILL BE LONG AVOID THE HASSLE. $1.00 WILL OPEN OR CHECKING ACCOUNT NOW. NO CHEC UNTIL YOU USE YOUR ACCOUNTr WE'L IN TIME TO MAKE A DEPOSIT FOR FA TODAY, OR MAIL OUR COUPON. NK YOU SHOULD U A SLATE OF UCH. LIKE: MPUS BRANCH RTH CAMPUS, uTE EVENINGS 'TIL NOON ON OUT OF REACH AAB CUSTOMER f5, ANYTIME! * THIS FALL. ,sm 5A ANY SAVINGS KING CHARGES L REMIND YOU a. ' LL. DROP IN ,°a. , G B 0 I xi *10 IV, ANN ARBOR__ BANK We want to be your bank! MEMBER F.D.I.C.