Saturday, July 14, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY U.S. hands over last base near DMZ to S. Vietnamese By The Associated Press mount another during the sum- The last U.S. base guarding mer months aimed at seizing the demilitarized zone was turn- the populous coastal lowlands er over to South Vietnamese and also at disrupting S o u t h troops yesterday. Vietnam's presidential elections The U.S. withdrawal from the Oct. 3. base known as Charlie 2 com- While theDMZ changeover pleted the northern border was under way, other So u th turnover that had been under Vietnamese troops pressed their way since 1969. It handed to new drive into Cambodia, but the South Vietnamese the re- for a second day reported no sponsibility to defend the coun- contact with opposing units. try's most sensitive frontier. Meanwhile in Washington The Americans left behind more was revealed about the about 50 U.S. artillerymen and history of American involve- technicians to man a battery ment in the Vietnam war. of 8-inch guns and montor ra- Daniel Ellsberg, who turned dar and sensor equipment that over the secret Pentagon pap- detects possible North V i e t- ers to newspapers, said yester- namese infiltration, day that intrigue in the Penta- The North Vietnamese ri a v e made repeated drives in t hi s - sector and are expected to JDL admits WINNER OF bombmaking THE GOLD DAVID NEW YORK (A) - Rabbi Meir AWARD--Italys Kahane, leader of the militant Jewish Defense League, a n d Best Fim two league members pleaded f guilty yesterday to charges of Gi the8 Year conspiracy to manufacture ex- plosives. Highest Award! The plea came at a pretrial hearing in U.S. District Court "A DAZZLING MOVIE. in Brooklyn. THE MOST STRIKING The three were among 12 AND BAROQUE IMAGES league members who were in- YOU'RE EVER LIKELY dicted May 13 for conspiring to TO SEE" -VnetCby move guns and explosives across EE --VincentCanby, state lines. New York Times Kahane told the court t h e "'T H E CONFORMIST' bombs had been constructed to provides a chilling fascin- instruct league members in their ati d a cfillin fba- effects. ti on and ilm so beau- Acting U.S. Atty. Robert tifl i i's ecetin o Mosesaid the defendents. an era and so multi-level- agreed to turn over to thesu- ed in its implication that thorities all rifles, handguns I defy you to look away and other arms in their pos- from the screen for its session. duration." --Judith Crist New York Magazine Program Information 434-1782 "Bertolucci creates a ci- y nematic style all his own. -WASmEA i ue5 434-t7, 2 -Newsweek On Washtenaw Ave. ,e By11 Miles East of U.S. 23 "The Best movie this year WORTHY OF ITS AN by for" -Pauline Kel The New Yorker First Planetthen Bene the conormist PITH P~i tIVT INnMT PANVISAON9 COLOBY'DELUXE' TODAY 3 0@5@0T7 0A9e. NOW SHOWING MICHIGAN I - REPERTORY forces gon was such that even then Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara was unaware of some things that were going on in connection with the Viet- nam war. Ellsberg, interviewed at a n informal breakfast gathering by selected correspondents, refer- red to one study on the Gulf of Tonkin incident which he said was withheld from McNamara by the Joint Chiefs of Staff un- til McNamara had been asked about it in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee. Ellsberg told his interviewers that all conversations that went through the Pentagon's "war room" were taped and that the chiefs did not want to call this to McNamara's attention, Ellsberg, accused McNamara of deliberately misleading Con- gress in hearings that led to Congress' passage of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution under which President Lyndon Johnson drew his authority for much of his Vietnamese opera- tions. "McNamara testified with far more certainty than the c a s e justified," Ellsberg said. "His testimony was highly mislead- ing. He did give a very mis- leading impression of his con- viction and the degree of evi- dence." CORRECTION It was incorrectly reported in the News Briefs in yester- day's Daily that the Michigan Association of Broadcasters had urged a citation of con- tempt of Congress be issued to CBS. In fact, the association has come out in opposition to such a move. Now Open Daily at 12:45 SHOWS EVERY DAY AT 1, 3, 5, 7 & 9 P.M. CESTORS!-T.M.K. ath.now... McCloskey challenges Rep. Paul McCloskey (R-Cal) tells a news conference in Los Angeles yesterday he will enter the 1972 presidential primaries in California, New Hampshire and possibly other states in opposi- tion to President Nixon. McCloskey has been a strong critic of Nixon's Indochina policy. I By The Associated Press A VIOLENT EARTHQUAKE in central Chile has killed 74 persons, injured 317 and left thousands homeless, the Chilean government announced yesterday. The severe earthquake which rolled across the country Thurs- day night also did extensive damage to Valpariso, the country's major port. Electricity, drinking water and telephones were knocked out in what interior minister Jose Toha termed a "true catastrophe". LOCKHEED'S threats to kill a jet airbus program unless the federal government gives them a $250 million loan guarantee is a "game of chicken" according to a study by the staff of the House Banking Committee. The report questions whether plans to drop the project would be carried through as the three major interests involved the British government, banks that have loaned Lockheed $499 million or potential buyers would stand to lose heavily. THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY'S top legal officer acknewledged yesterday the government may have created a problem by planning to base pollution guidelines on in- formation that is withheld from the public. Bert Printz, acting director of the agency's permit program had said earlier that basing industrial effluent guidelines on indus- try's trade secrets, as now planned, leaves the public "no way of keeping us honest". MINORITY MEMBERS of the House Conference Committee said yesterday it is unnecessary as well as unconstitutional to require CBS to produce untelevised material gathered for the documentary "The Selling of the Pentagon". The committee has voted 25 to 13 to cite the network for con- tempt for refusing to produce the material. The minority group consists of 10 Democrats and 3 Repub- licans. ACCUSED SLAYER of United Mine Workers insurgent Jo- seph Yablonski, Aubran Martin, pleaded innocent to state murder charges yesterday. Martin is charged with being one of three hired gunmen who murdered Yablonski, his wife and daughter, Martin was arraigned in the same courtroom where co-defend- ant Claude Vealey pled guilty saying that he along with Martin and Paul Gilly had carried out the murders for $5,200 paid them by a man named "Tony," I shakespeare's *-TWELFTH NIGHT boisterous comedy OPENS TUESDAY Additional Performances: Thurs., Sat., July 15, 17 and Wed., Fri., July 21, 23 shaw's * YOU NEVER CAN TELL a farceof OPENS WEDNESDAY Additional Performances: Fri., July 16 and Tues., Thurs., Sat., July 20, 22, 24 HI-Fl STUDIO ANNUAL SUMMER SALE Offering REAL price reductions that will not be repeated in 1971-START- ING NOW Some of our lines * Jensen*Acoustic Research * Garrard * Kenwood *KLH 0 DUAL * Scott 0 Sherwood * Sony LYDIA MENDELSSOHN Box Office Open 12:30-5:00 Mon., 12:30-8:00 Tues.-Sat. Ph. 668-6300 CURTAIN TIME: 8:00 P.M. Season Subscription: $5.00-$8.00 Individual Tickets: $1.50-$2.50 Air Conditioned! 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