Tuesday, May 11, 1971 THE MtICHIGAN DAILY Page Seveni Tuesday, May 11, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven news briefs By The Associated Press SECRETARY OF STATE William Rogers reported to President Nixon yesterday on his Middle East mission. Nixon called the trip "useful in making progress toward the eventual solution of the prob- lems in the area and in carrying the momentum of the discussions." Joseph Sisco, assistant secretary of state in charge of Middle East affairs, cautioned meanwhile against too much optimism that settlement of the Suez canal issue is near. "We are not on the brink of any settlement on the Suez canal," he told reporters. "This is an ongoing process that will take time." A FORMER ARMY sergeant who says he saw Americans massacre 30 women and children in a Vietnamese village in 1969 said yesterday he would not divulge the names of enlisted men and low-ranking officers involved in the incident. The former sergeant, Daniel Notley, said revealing the names would enable the Army to make them "scapegoats" as he said it did in the case of Lt. William Calley Jr. Notley told a news conference he wants to put the responsibility for the murders in the upper echelons "where it belongs." THE CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION accused the federal govern- ment yesterday of substituting empty promises for effective en- forcement of anti-discrimination laws-at a point when "time is running out."' The commission reserved its harshest criticism for the Depart- ment of Housing and Urban development, but said the blame for what it called ineffective and unaggressive civil rights action must be shared "by everybody from the President on down." POSTAGE RATES are going up again despite a suit by maga- zine and newspaper publishers charging that the increase is not legal unless apiroved by the Postal Rate Commission (PRC). The U.S. Postal Service, however, says the boost comes under its authority to make temporary increases in postal rates pending a recommendation of PRC. The proposed increases will raise first-class mail to eight cents, air mail to 11 cents, post cards will go up to six cents and some fourth- class rates will increase by 10-20 per cent. HAITIAN EXILE LEADER Paul Colas of New York yesterday was granted a visa to enter Haiti in his attempt to "resolve the problems of Haitian exiles." Colas arrived in Miami yesterday after rumors spread in Haiti and among Haitian exiles living in other nations that Haiti's 19-year- old president, Jean Claude Duvalier, and his family were planning to leave the country. Col. Max Dominiquem, Haiti's ambassador to France, returned to Paris Saturday after a four-month stay in Haiti. Duvalier saw him off at the airport, and this apparently started the rumors that he planned to leave. A PETITION for the impeachment of President Nixon was ac- cepted on the Capitol steps yesterday by Rep. Ronald Dellums (D-Calif.). The petition bears the signatures of 400 Harvard Law School stu- dents and calls for the impeachment of Nixon on the grounds he exceeded his constitutional authority in waging the Vietnam war with- out a declaration of war by Congress. BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY Sir Alec Douglas-Home has made a personal appeal to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to agree to the release from prison of 77-year old Rudolf less. After World War It, Hess, Adolf Hitler's deputy, was convicted by the Nurenberg tribunal of crimes against peace and sentenced to life imprisonment in Berlin's Spandau Prison. He is the only prisoner left in the jail, which is guarded in turn by British, French, Soviet and U.S. troops. The Russians have continuously rejected the pleas of their allies to release Hess on humanitarian grounds. TV RENTALS $10.00 per month NO DEPOSITZ v FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICO CALL: s Loaded NEJAC TV RENTALS with Protein 662-5671 The Apetite- T Avenger BRAWNY BEEF 69c Lots of beef for little bread 3362 Washtenaw Ave. Just up from Arborloodi Ex-GI speaks Daniel Spencer Notley, 23, of St. Paul, Minn., a sergeant, tells of seeing Americans kill 30 women in a Vietnamese village in 1969. But Notley re the names of the men involved. Sel News Briefs. SENATE DEBATE: Drat e-knd crFit Bombings resume in S. Vietnam SAIGON (A -- U.S. B52s resumed bombing raids in South Vietnam following a weekend cease-fire period during which they concen- trated solely on 6rgets in Laos and Cambodia. Tw o formationsof thebombers -s returned to the battered north- west corner of South Vietnam to hit at North Vietnamese infiltra- tion routes along the border of -Assoiate Pre Laos. -Associatedt PressThe U.S. Command said the B52s struck 15 and 17 miles northwest of Khe Sanh, a jungle former Army coveredssector which has been and children under intensive aerial bombard- fuses to give ment since April 21. The bombing raids provided most of the war action in the wake of the cease-fires called by the allies and the Viet Cong over the weekend to mark the 2,515th anniversary of Buddha's birth. After the truce periods ended rNwZed only minor ground fighting was reported but the allied commands y leader Mike charged the North Vietnamese nt.) said the de- and Viet Cong violated the cease weeks. He said fires 66 times with small ocale whether the bill attacks ranging from sniper fire before June 3 to shellings and ground assaults. draft law ex- The U.S. Command announced that the 2,216-man U.S. Marine expcte toat Force logistic command at Da expected to at- Nongill be deactivated shortly. ce lenthydet This will leave only about 8,000 ce lengthy de- Marines in Vietnam and all of g them is lie these are slated for withdrawal sed by Sens. during the next month, except a s an - . small number of advisers. n (iD-S.D.) to In its weekly summary on troop thdrawal from strength, the U.S. Comoand the end of Ilhe said the American force here was cut by 6,300 men last week, leav- ances have in- ing 267,100 men in this country bly since last as of last Thursday. This is the said. lowest level in nearly five years. WASHINGTON (P) - The chair- man of the Senate Armed Serv- ices Committee said yesterday it would be "a calamity for our na- tion's security" if Congress ends the draft in an effort to end the war in Southeast Asia. Sen. John Stennis, (D-Miss.) said the war is the underlying issue in what looms as a mara- thon debate over a two-year ex- tension of the Selective Service System. "I do not agree that we should consciously force all of our a.m- ed services into continudig con- fusion and disruption in an at- tempt to end the war," Stennis said. Senate majorit3 Mansfield, (D-Mot bate will last for he does not know will be finished when the current pires. The draft bill is tract a series o certain to produt bate. Chief amon legislation propo Mark Hatfield, George McGover compel U.S. wit South Vietnam by year. "I think its ch creased considera year," Mansfield There is a time for loee. There is a time for peace. For you the time is now. 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