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Show 1 -1 V...UUH.1C, summer naition. A115. 6 1971 Carpenters show need for censorship hrnrv Trip P-iUctn: d .:j I of the New York Times, the London Observer, the Wall Street Journal, World Bank a delegation of members of British Parliament and a delegation of American senators, Rafia Ahmad not only believes in his government-coined reports, but wants other to believe them. Lalit Kumar, President Indian Students Association . and 17 others elected parliament. The result was revolution in the Fast. Khan had two choices: submit to democracy dem-ocracy or butcher his massive opposition. Despite confusion at first, all news sources now agree that Yahya Khan chose butchery all news sources, that is. except the controlled press of West Pakistan. Paki-stan. This is not surprising. What can we expect this controlled press to say? That West Pakistan must fight to keep the wealth and control of Fast Pakistan in the hands of the Khan family' Certainly not. If Pakistani students wish the respect of Americans, they must have the coinage to look beyond their embassy's propaganda. They must have the courage to set their country right. Michael Casella and 14 Others " - -w a p. 1 stani students on campus indicated indi-cated in their letter (Chronicle, July 30), why has the U.S. House of Representatives voted to cut all the aid to Pakistan'.' If India had inspired the war in East Pakistan, why didn't the House cut the aid to India? 1 hope that the Pakistani students quit parroting the views given by their government propaganda and try to utilize the golden opportunity op-portunity of reading the free press which all the West Pakistanis Paki-stanis do not have in their country. coun-try. S. Che Butchery cited Editor: In the first free, comprehensive comprehen-sive election since the founding of Pakistan, 167 or 309 seats in the national assembly were won by an East Pakistani party. Would the handful of families headed by the prolific Khans sit back and watch their wealth and power shift from West to East Pakistan? Of course not. Yahya Khan refused to turn the government over to the brary. The Pakistani President quoted 'London Times' dated April, 1971, about 'Indian lies' of the early stages of civil war, but he forgot to quote a five-page five-page report on 'Genocide' in East Pakistan written by Anthony An-thony Mascarenhas in the London Lon-don Sunday Times, dated June 1971. He should also read "The Terrible Ter-rible Blood Bath of Tikka Khan" in 'Newsweek' (June 28) in which Tony Clifton writes that he saw "babies who've been shot, men who have their backs whipped raw. I've seen people literally struck dumb by the horror hor-ror of seeing their children murdered mur-dered in front of them or their daughters dragged off into sexual slavery," he Wrote. Congressman Cornelius Gal-laghar, Gal-laghar, a Warld War II hero, found that the stories of atrocities atroci-ties reported in the world press were not exaggerated but toned down. "In the war," he said, "1 saw the worst areas of France-the France-the killing grounds in Normandy-but I never saw anything any-thing like that. It took all of my strength to keep from breaking down and crying." When Max Goff reported on the Pakistani massacre in The Utah Chronicle, he must have had more access to the world press than the Indian press. It is only a pity that despite reports iior: Jlon with thousands of oth-. oth-. "Saturday I attended the 'Inter's concert. I went with f lation of being entered enter-ed uplifted. Entertained ; uplifted I was not. t off-color story told by Davis was uncalled for and me feel rather uncomforta-5 uncomforta-5 To feel this way I thought ewhat prudish, but as I to others, I found they :'0f similar sentiments. -mvt, as students, pay enters en-ters phenomenal sums for ..'much more than one hour of 1k 1 feel that we should have Vchance for input into the ;jpe" of entertainment which presented. I hope that in the future a :,ief scrutiny will be made of , entertainers brought .to our :ffl)llS. ;" Gregory Gunn Pakistanis err 1 lor: his interesting to note that : president of the Pakistani Ants Association and his jipany are swallowing their vemment-controlled Islama-i Islama-i press while major papers of :t world are available in the li- Letters to the Editor 'Quit parroting' Editor: If the "so-called" civil war of Pakistan is similar to the American Ameri-can civil war as the West Paki- |