Tuesday, August 8, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday, August 8, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven DAILY OFFICIAL U.S. a'cuses N. Vies BULLETIN . . . BULLETIN.......... of eivilian massacres TUESDAY, AUGUST 8 AV Center Fms: "Wsndersng about WASHINGTON (:-A State He said another columnc Things" and others, Aud. 4, Modern Department spokesman said yes- refugees was caught five day Language Bldg., 7 p.m. terday U.S. military advisers and earlier a few miles south c Music School: William Dole, Saxo- other eyewitnesses estimated Quang Tri of April 24. He gas phone & Bamoon, Oeh. 01 Has. Neelal 1,000 to 2,000 South Vietnamese no estimates of the casualties i U Players: Gelbart, Shevelove & died last April 29-30 in what the earlier incident. sondheim's "A Funny Thing Happened was described as "a deliberate According to official repor o nthe Way to the Forum," Power North Vietnamese Army mas- received by the State Depart Ceate, 1 p.m. sacre of helpless civilians." ment, U.S. Marine Corps Maj The action was said to have rD ld Prip R o h of ys of ve in ^ts js. New Do you want money, a draft deferment, leadership and management training, seilf-confidence? If your answer is yes, then invest/2 hour of your time to find out how you obtain the above by attending the Army ROTC orientation at Room 200 in North Hall at 3:30 p.m. every day. Use Daily C lassifieds taken place near the My Chanh River bridge on Route 1 when thousands of refugees fleeing from Quang Tri were caught in the open by Communist artillery fire. State Department press of- ficer John King said the esti- mates of deaths were probably closer to the higher figure of 2,000 noncombatants, composed mainly of women, children and older people. " RENT RELIEF democrat state representative Paid Political Advertisement jona trice ana rcoa etS ber- dan said they had seen the civilians brought under fire by 130mm artillery shells fired over their heads with delayed action fuses. Sherdan said the column stretched three miles north and one mile south for a total of four miles from his observation point near the My Chanh bridge. There were no weapons nor South Vietnamese soldiers in the column which moved almost shoulder to shoulder down the highway, he said. King said the dimensons of the killing are only now becom- ing known as South Vietnamese troops return to the area which had been occupied by'the North Vietnameae. Buddist Monks and Catholic prests are now trying to recover bodies n the area, he said. But there has been no organized graves registration operation there. Daily Classifieds Bring Results State Repr ECKS Demc A Strong Voice Paid Political DO YOU TRUST THE JUDGEMENT OF SENATOR HART? r Sen. Hart supporting Rollinger's candidacy for County Commissioner,.Dist. 15 ROLLINGER DEMANDS! e county jail reform * reorgnization of the Sheriff's Department * adequate child-care facilities * establish Consumer Protection Office * -establish Office of Environmental Health . intra-county bike routes * protection of minority rights VOTE ROLLINGER AUG. 8 paid for by People for Rollinger TWO VIETNAMESE GIRLS mourn the death of their relatives buried in a mass funeral along Route 1 near Phofig Dien, South Vietnam, recently. Officials estimate 2,000 civilians were killed, allegedly by a North Vietnamese ambush south of Quang Tri. All but 110 victims were identified. CRUSHED 84-7: Senate kills handgunt bill WASHINGTON (P-The Sen- Hart, in urging his more ate rejected, 84-7, yesterday a sweeping bill, told his colleagues bill to outlaw private possession that if they voted for it they of handguns. would "be making more likely Sen. Philip Hart (D-Mich.) the survival of your family and offered his measure as a sub- your neighbors." stitute for a bill by Sen. Birch Bayh said Hart's bill went too Bayh (D-Ind.) to ban the sale far and that his own proposal of snub-nosed, easily-conceal- would take out of the market able hand guns not suitable for place the kinds of handguns sporting purposes, most commonly used by crimi- _ __ _ ----_ nals. Hart agreed that his bill 'esentotive would "not guarantee the dis- appearance of handguns," but he told the Senate it would "take a healthy nick out of them and put us in the direction we ought to be going." Under Hart's proposal, posses- ocrat sion of handguns except by the military, police, security guards, for Ann Arbor and licensed pistol clubs, would be illegal. Violators would be Advertisement subject to five years' imprison- ment or a $5,000 fine, or both. THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC presents Mozart's Opera C0SI FAN TUTTE~ SUNG IN ENGLISH August 18, 19, 21 & 22-8:00 P.M. MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Conductor: Josef Blatt Stage Director: Ralph Herbert TICKETS: $3.00 Some reserved seating avail- MAIL ORDERS: School of Music Opera, Men- able at $1.50 for University students with 1.D. delssohn Theatre, The University of Michigan, cards. Sold at Box Office only Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Box Office opens Auugust 14 at 12:30 P.M. Information 764-6118 "COMEDY TONIGHT" OPENING 8 P.M. MICHIGAN REPERTORY 72's PRODUCTION OF THE TONY AWARD WINNING MUSICAL A Funny Thing HAPPEY EO THE In the oir-conditioned Power Center Tickets $2 & $3 Box office open 12:30 to 8:00 . Phone 763-3333 Good seats still available. Additional performances Aug. 9-12