Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, July 25, 1972 REFUGEES RELATE EXPERIENCES Thousands flee Quang Tri in fear By THOMAS FOX Dispatch News Service HIGHWAY 1, SOUTH OF THE QUANG TRI BORDER - Viet- namese refugees coming out of Quang Tri province- after two months of the war's heaviest con- centration of American bombing report that thousands of civil- ians have been killed as a result of B-52 bombing missions. Nearly 4,000 refugees have been trucked out of villages in Quang Tri during the past week and are being brought to one of two refugee centers here on High- way 1 north of Hue for tempor- ary food, shelter and interro- gation. Government officials here esti- mate that as many as 50,000 peasants may never have left Quang Tri before it fell to the North Vietnamese, who gained control of the provincial capital on May 1. Since that time the U n i t e d Sta tes has flown 449 B-52 mis- sions over Quang Tri, averaging three planes a mission, dropping more than 33,500 tons of explos- ives from the eight-engine jets. Additionally, American and Viet- namese aircraft have flown thousands of tactical air strikes against North Vietnamese tar- gets in the province. A twenty-six-year-old mother of three, Nguyen Thi Hiep, burst into tears as she was lifted down from a three-quarter-ton Army truck that had just driven her from the Phu Xuan hamlet in Quang Tri province. Under her arm she clasped a one-year old boy. Two other children held to her loose, black, peasant shirt. She, like the other peasants, seemed compelled to speak about their ordeals. "For two months we never left our shelter beneath our hut . . . except to cook rice," she told several officials. "Days and nights we listened 'to the B-52 bombs. They shook the earth. Sometimes they were very near. Sometimes they fell on the ham- lets, killing the villagers." She estimated that of the-forty fam- ilies in her hamlet, half were kill- ed by the B-52 strikes. Peasants from different ham- lets also reported hundreds of civilian deaths. "They wanted to kill the North Vietnamese sold- iers but they dropped the bombs on many villagers instead," a middle-aged man said angrily. Since families lived' individual- ly in shelters under' their own hunts, the peasants explained, they either liver or died togeth- er en masse. Few were wound- ed. The bombs either .missed, or hit - and killed. "We were so afraid to die . . . so afraid," said a forty-year-old woman. "We never knew when the bombs and the artillery would drop on us," she added. "All we ate was rice and salt," said an old man with a wrinkled face. Another added that in his village they also managed to gather some rotten bananas.n - A dirty-faced ten-year-old girl, emotionally emptied by what she had experienced, sat under a large tree, resting her head on her knees, sobbing alone. An old woman, sitting quietly near- by, suddenly jerked and rolled to the ground, at the sound of artillery not far away. Some refugees said the North Vietnamese soldiers lived with them in their shelters. Others, however, reported that the North Vietnamese tried to stay apart from them, coming only to gath- er food. "They always bought their food," one woman s a i d . "But they gave us their own money., We said we couldn't use it. They told us ; we were living in an independent zone where the money was good," she add- ed. Nguyen Doi, a sixty-two-year old man from a village f i v e miles south of Quang Tri city said the NVA regulars were "very, very polite". Other peas- ants generally agreed. "T h e y were proper, the Northern- sold- iers, but they would not let us leave our villages," a forty-year- old mother added. "But the guer- rillas were more harsh and less polite,". she went on. The peasants also said they were not allowed to listen to any other radio other than Hanoi radio or South Vietnamese Lib- eration radio stations. The ann arbor festival MILES DAVIS OTIS RUSH BOBBY "BLUE" BLAND ARCHIE SHEPP DR. JOHN MUDDY WATERS SUN RA SEIGAL-SCHWALL BLUES BAND CHARLES MINGUS JR. WALKER &ATHE ALL-STARS FREDDIE KING LUTHER ALLISON HOUND DOG TAYLOR & THE HOUSE ROCKERS MIGHTY JOE YOUNG with LUCILLE SPANN & many other Blues & Jazz Artists 3 DAYS - 5 SHOWS Friday-Saturday-Sunday September 8-9-10 OTIS SPANN MEMORIAL FIELD (next to Huron High School) Ann Arbor, Michigan SERIES TICKET $15.00 ALLSHOWS TICKET OUTLETS--Michigan Union, Salvation Records (330 Maynard & 1103 S. University), Ned's Books (Ypsilanti), and by mail from Ann Arbor Blues & Jazz Festival Box 381, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48107 WE EXPECT TO SELL OUT! BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW! ! ! Limited time offer. Ticket sales will be limited to Wash- " * tenaw County area until August I. Only $15 series; tickets ill be available until that date. I a * Number of series tickets at $15 per ticket - ! ! Total enclosed * NAME -- ! ! ADDRESS. CITY_- - -STATE ZIP - mail to: Ann Arbor Blues & Jazz Festival ! P.O. Box 381 * I Ann Arbor, Mich. 48107! Send certified check or money order NO CASH PLEASE ! , - --.. ..,.- -..-.... ....- -... .... ...... --........I DIAL 5-6290 Tl) ECNcOAfrom W aern G'ool.* V Rtoualca.-0. 5TIa ItEHNICOtOO®Fnam Warser 13s.. THESE YOUTHS are all recent refugees from the fighting taking place in .the northern section of South Vietnam. The children at right share a drink in a camp set up outside of Hue for the civilians who fled the fighting around Quang Tri. Kids program starts July 31 Children in the Ann. Arbor area will once again have a chance to participate in physical educa- tion activities sponsored by The University of Michigan physical education department. The Micigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the4University of Michigon. News pene: s64-as62. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- lean. 420 Maynaed St., Ace Aebor, Miehigan 4804. Publised dasiry Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session"- published -Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Oh:o); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). The program, to begin on July 31, will include lessons on games, gymnastics and dance. All ele- mentary school children, kinder- garttn through 6th grades, are eligible. The primary purpose of the program is to provide a labora- tory experience for teachers-in- training. But it also provides a supplementary educational ex- ,Perience for the participating children. Sessions will be held July 31- Aug. 4, from 12 noon to 1 p.m. each day, in U-M's Barbour Gymnasium. Children will be di- vided lio age groups for in- struction. They should be com- fortably dressed in activity cloth- es and may wear tennis shoes or go barefoot. Parents, who wish to reserve a place for their children, should call the U-M physical education department at 764-1342 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 to 4 p.m. TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEWA TV RENTALS 662-5671 MICHIGAN REPERTORY 72 TONIGHT-8 p.m. 3~H £'~~ IBRENDA4 IOSTAGE BEHAN additional- performances: 27, 29Q INDIVIDUAL TICKETS $2.00, $3,00 in the an;-conditioned POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Box Office open 12:30-8.00 Mon.-Fri Phone 763-3333 STUDENT RUSH TICKETS AVAILABLE