Page 4 THE FULL MOON December 18,1979 The Seven'ties: A Decade of C VIETNAM NEXT STEP FOR LIEUTENANT CALLEY AGREEMENT ON ENDING THE WAR ; AND RESTORING PEACE IN VIETNAM A World SiZ6”UD' SAiGON^ndWashington ^ V# I#j For the United States, the end in j Vietnam finally was in sight. It was com- c-^ wi^ same fits and starts that I K rnajor and immediate Ci" marked the beginning of American in- lenge, but it is to problems beyond Vietnam tfiat 1 volvement a decade ago. U.S. will be turning more and more in the coming ye nearly 43a years of truce talks. And no matter where Americans look around j P^^idential aide Henry A. Kissinger world thAv \A/ill finri I ^ ... aimounced at the White Housc On Octo- wn n,’,t » H M opportunities-ttber 26: “Peace is within reach in a mat- WIM put a second Nixon Administration to a severe te ter of weeks, or less." From memb VIETNAM PULLOUT Kent State:four deaths at noon et It Be Word from Fort McPherson, Ga., is that the life* sentence meted out to Lt. William Galley for the My Lai massacre will be reduced to twenty to years by Lt. Gen. Albert Connor, Third commander and the reviewing oflScer, RU is expected in a few \ggeks. The p" f go to higher military review V dent Nixon has promised, final judgment (Any ffw i±Q duce—but not increase-^ ^ beetles died last wee ® =°"dition, maturity. picked up a phone, called y WHAT SUPREME RULED ON ABORTION LAWS^;€c when the U. S. Supreme Court struck down abortion laws in Texas and Georgia on Jan. 22, 1973, it limited any State’s right to prohibit abortion. In effect, the Court’s 7-to*2 ruling said that a State can prohibit an abortion only In the last three months pf pregnancy and then not if the abortion is necessary to protect the health of the mother. Basis for this decision: the right to privacy as protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Snfinifically, the Court St The Teen Vote waf fte’nIaTS debate voted tajavor of the a^itlht ble, the State can regulate'or even prohibit abortion except when it’s necessary for the mentd or physic^!^^t«>^^\ Thus the Co*' The Beatles died last week, victims of Paul McCartney picked up a phone, called John Lennon and said, “I’ve .decided to leave.” The pop world's greatest partnership was thereby real villain the troops even when the sbldiers low- [lein, the Beatles’ current manager, cas®^^‘Ateet'^^^Auir.s.” - guardsmen toloadlive for his share. But the . [me, the decade that had transformed leatles from four identical boys to four dif ^ weapons. One fusillade of high-veloc- jrent and disar’ eing men. ^ ^ clipful of .45s, all steel-jacketed in accord with the articles of war, left four students dead and 11 wounded. The leader of the Guardsmen ^id his men fired in self-defense, fearing for their lives. THE WHITE HOUSE WA5HIKOTON ers had the a\& August 9 Dear Mr* 5«cretaty iThe upheaval in Kent seemed at its outset to be merely an other of the scores of student demonstrations that have rocked U.S._i:aiJMBises. But before it ended, in senseless t point-blank range, Kent State had the fearful hazards latent in dissent, t cause it. On cue in the by now fa- s Governor James Rhodes ordered to the campus after some 3,000 of idents had rampaged through town '^g win^ ' and setting the ROTC potv Monday noon, stu- ^ A Co' students flut- oping campus in re- issolved. Explanations flew thick and oping campus in re tome writers blamed Yoko Ono, John’s \“ soldiers like leaves bme Linda Eastman, Paul’s bride. . [naware that Ohio, I hereby re»iga the 0£fice of President of the Unlived Stetee, due-prt dudethV^^^'" aoes not iO' le HottorabXe Henry A le Secretary of State eshSngton» D.C. 20520 Death fo Ozone Scientific concern about the to radioactive contamination in a nu-^?? ^ deaf . war. Now researchers are turnint^ their attention to the atmosphere’s ozon layer, which protects all life below fro a lethal overdose of the sun’s ultravio light. Their ominous findings: the vi blanket of gas is so fiagile that it mig., well be severely damaged or destroyer by large-scale atmospheric nuclear tests, to say nothing of military and civihan supersonic aircraft, and even the wide spread use of aerosol sprays. 'Wi ' IV 4^ EFFECTS OF NIXON PARDON Betty Ford: Mgjlp- ••• ... Facing Cancer -w-^® , shutout victory i nter McGovern in att for Nixon over u- 50 States^ No ciose Vicians ^ ^^ends hoW- if \ate campa'S mirth* k color photograph S ® a paper- t»ck thriller—or a recruiting poster for the revolutionary left. But the comely wholesome-looking girl holding Hub: machme gun was Patricia He£st and tape rfecording of her ^0'»»Pson ^ bizarre message: Patty : 20, had decided to forsake her million- aire parents and join the fanatics who ^dnap^ her two months ayr The Hearst Nightmlf

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