Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August IQ, 1971 Pag Sx TE ICHGA DALYTueda, Agut 1, 97 THEY'RE NOT THERE: Daily ClassifGieds G~s feel abandoned a base Coot inied from Page 5j PERSONAL I WEDDING INVITATIONS--Mod or Tra- ditional StylI. Call 701-0942 anytime. Free Marriae Certificate with order cFti 4 WATERBED today keeps the bedbug Lac IciaIs;cr Love. Torn & Harry CF' BUMPER STICKERS cstom printed white-U-wait! $2. aT'usual printing obs our specialty. MBL Press, 1217 Prospect. Ann Arbor-761-0942. cFtc WEDDING RINGS AND JEWELRY Have Jhan create your own design in white or yellow gold. Reasonable prices. 769-7550. cFtc PERSONAL MCAT & DAT Kaplan T torin aCourses nowbeing formed. For information and enrollment call (313) 851-6077 THE PROOF Ihe Photogr spy of Richard Lee is a continuin tsplay at Paradise-tie waterbed manufacturers -at 213 S. Fourth Ave. Free-lance Editorial. Commercial and Portraits. 761-9452. cFtc HYPNOTHERAPY - To improve study habits, to lose weight and stop smoking. Douglas Beltz, 761-0440. cFtc TV AND STEREO RENTALS--Satisfac- tion Guaranteed. Free Delivery, serv- ice, and pick-up. Call Nejac. 662- 5671 6Ftc PEAT THE HEAT, set cysur seat, swe cao make k oua tumer a treat by joioing the Wave of the Future Fleet. Love,Torn & Harry eFtc AUTO UNE-UP Ludicrously reason- able. Guaranteed. Student. 662-6746. 47F6E PINBALL ARCADE, 1217 S. University (across from Campus Theatre) 59F71 COMING Thursday & Friday .aFOR 4 FMARDS , ORSON WELLES SUMMER FILM FEST. A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATON PANASON"Colorby DELUXE. ANATIONALGENERAL PICTURES RELEASE TOMORROW-WEDNESDAY IS LADIES DAY 1-6 P.M. LADIES 75c WED. 1-6 P.M. OPEN 1 2:45 P M. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 PM At corner of State & Liberty DIAL 662-6264 (Cotntied from Page 1) In the morning, when it 's clear, and the sun hasn't yet begun to beat down with a fero- city that drives everything un- derground by midday, you can see for miles. To the n o r t h- west there is "Rocket Ridge", a launching site just inside the DMZ where th North Vietnam- ese fire the 122 mm rockets that come whistling through t h e night, smashing through layers of sandbags and huge wooden beams. One rocket killed 30 GI's and wounded 32 others huddled in- side the bunkers May 21. To the west is Firebase Fuller, which was captured several weks ago by 1200 North Vietnamese, de- spite the pounding of our sharp- nosed cobra gunships and de- vastating B-52 strikes and dead- ly artillery bombardment. Day after day the GI's sit and wait for the rockets to start coming again. Asked how long his unit would stay at the sight, Captain Mar- tinez, a career officer who is the battery commanderreplied.a"Wt ace here indefinitely. As far as I know there are no plans to pull us out of here in the near future." Like any company grade of- ficer at this stage of the war, Captain Martinez is in an un- comfortable spot, with pressure from above to maintain s o me semblance of a military unit, and rumblings from below about the uselessness of th effort. As "Rat Man", a long haired, bead- ed veteran with only a month left complained. "We're j u s t sitting here and letting Charlie shoot at us. We're sitting ducks, How's Your Gall Bladder in case your're interested in an operation come to the BACH CLUB presenting Penny Crawford, Harpsichord Enid Sutherland, viola da Gamb"a David Sutherland, Narrator pertortmiBUgstlks ByBach, Boo- del, Still, Byrd, Ortaz, silOMaa~eis. Including "The Gall Bladder Op- eration. Base a Jelly tonust slid sect soie Iiteresing Poleafte s e program THURS., AUG. 12, 8 P.M. S. QUAD WEST LOUNGE EVERYONE invited Musical Knowledge REALLY not necessary, Further Info: 61-3931 just like a shooting gallery. We've only fired two rounds in the last three days." Morale has not been the only problem at Charlie 2 since the Vietnamese troops took control of the firebase. Vietnamese soldiers are rigorously excluded from the American compound to prevent thefts from GI's. and at the same time, Americans must be kept away from the Vietnamese, who are their pri- mary suppliers of drugs. "How do we get the stuff," chuckled Hollywood,-"just go over to the fence and rap with a soldier with the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN). It he's got it you can make a purchase." Apparently, tactical differ- ences of opinion btween Amer- ican and Vietnamese command- ers have also been unresolvable. The Americans, now at t h e southwest edge of th hill, were asked to move their guns to the unprotected crown, so that the Vietnamese infantry would have a smaller perimeter to de- fend from ground attack. Mar- lines, feeling that the location could rnot provide sufficient pro- tection for his men or equip- mnent. refus d. As a result., Lt Col. Toan. regimental operations officer for the Vietnamese unit, has begun rebuilding the ARVN perimeter to exclude the Alpha Battery position. AIrD icans will be ex- pected to maintain their own defenses with some reinforce- ment from the ARVN battalion in the case of a serious ground attack. To the troops. exclusion from the ARVN perimeter is o n e more indication of their status as forgotten men. They have seen it before, and recognize the signs. At the Laos border, dur- ing the invasion, one section of the battery saw its gun destroy- ed by a North Vietnamese rock- et, along with M-16's, helmets. flak jackets, and personal cloth- ing. One GI reported, "So there we were at the Laos border, nothing to do and nothing to defend ourselves with. It took .._........ . TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 'em ten days to decide to pull us out." - Many of the U.S. troops in supporting roles at the DMZ feel that with the area nom- inally under ARVN control, the remaining GIs coulld be left there indefinitely and forgot- ten, ass long as their casualties are kept reasonably low. In fact, the process may al- ready have started. Stoll, in- formation officer for the 1/5, could not recall what American unit remains at Charlie 2, how many GI's there are, or even their function. A general who visited the firebase following the 1 5 pullout is reported to have looked at the large contingent of Americans and, remarked, "You're not even suppOsed to be here." The reaction of one GI is not surprising. "I feel like I've beeln left out here to die- and I don't want to die. I want to go home." Dispatch News Servie International Andrews: A musical iman (Continled froiPae 1) which once held Canterbury House in hopes of turning it into a blues house -- something he thinks Ann Arbor is well suited to. Besides his University job and his potential Blues House, An- drews will continue working as manager of the SRC rock group, a position he has held for sev- eral years. He says he feels that The Al- ley - the name of his blues house - will not interfere with his job with the University, since his planned concert seres and the entertainmenteat shesAlley are different kinds of diversion. He also says that in keeping The Alley and managing SRC he stays in touch with the music world. Litter doesot throw itself away: litter doesn't just happen. People cause it-and only people can prevent it. "People" means you. Keep America Beautiful. 4 TONIGHT ONLY- ALL SEATS $1.00 Whatlgoes on in pson is a cne. ANDI iRIN'S 0EYES MGM METROCOLOR A 'THForum STARTS WEDNESDAY FIj1JO0OO ATttsi05 l POO ST RT SHE DIED WITH HER BOOTS ON... 4 AND NOT MUCH ELSE. - /v ARM Michigan Film Society Ecumenical Campus Center cinemascope in color They Shoot Horses, Don't They? Michael Sarrazin JANE FONDA Susannah York '01 MORE SHOCKING THAN "PSYCHO"! MORE SENSUAL THAN "REPULSION"! AL EUIA KAZAN'S MORE NERVE RIPPING THAN PRODUCTIONOf "BABY JANE"! TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' Starring)[] KARL MALDEN CARROLL BAKER0 ELI WALLACH Story & Screenplay TENNESSEE WILLIAMS ° The modern classic of Depression aspiration and despair. Life as a marathon dance contest. Originally scheduled as a People's Peace Treaty benefit in the spring, but blocked by Rightwing pressure, commercial and criminal, Then advertised by the so-called Orson Welles Film Society summer film festival, will be shown as a liberation move- ment benefit for Michigan VOICES a new people's monthly newspaper in September WEDNESDAY Aug. 11 THURSDAY (12) FRIDAY (13) at the Alley formerly Canterbury House 330 Maynard 7:30 & 9:45 $1 CONTRIBUTION FREE COFFEE I,