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February 06, 1972 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-02-06

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FREE UNIVERSITY
REGISTRATION
In the FISHBOWL 2:30-5:00 & 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 7-Thursday, Feb. 10
Catalogues available in U. A. C.
office, 2nd floor Union, by Monday
CONCERT
JAVANESE GAMELAN MUSIC
and DANCE
with KI WASITODIPURO
famed Javanese musician
MONDAY, FEB. 7 HILL AUDITORIUM ,
8:00 P.M. FREE

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554
Ann Arbor, Michigan

al4e

4uA&i g1F

Itai1ll

page three

Night Editor: Sara Fitzgerald

Sunday, February 6, 1972

news

by The Associated Press

I

A HOUSE LABOR SUBCOMMITTEE is drafting legislation to
end the 120-day West Coast dock strike by compulsory arbitration,
but still'hopes a last-minute settlement by the parties involved
would make the bill unnecessary.
In appearances before the subcommittee on Friday, longshoreman
leader Harry Bridges and Pacific Maritime Association President Ed-
mund Flynn seemed near agreement to voluntarily submit unresolved1
issues to a private arbitrator. The two sides resumed negotiations
yesterday.
Though the subcommittee would not release the content of prospec-
tive bill, Rep. Spark Matsunaga (D-Hawaii) said he thought the sub-
committee would propose an extension of negotiations, at the end of
which, if no agreement had beeh reached, only those issues still un-
resolved would be submitted to arbitration.
PAKISTAN'S PRESIDENT ZULFIKAR BHUTTO received pres-
sure from political opposition and from within his own People's
party to immediately lift martial law.
The demands came as Bhutto's regime arrested one of his sever-
est critics, Atlaf Gauhar, editor of the country's most powerful inde-
pendently owned newspaper groups.

"THE MOVIE IS A GREAT BIG RICH
AMERICANA EXPERIENCE...GO!"
-COSMOPOLITANMAGAZINE
is better than he has been in yearslI
-TIME MAGAZINE
1/ /RYI11
..the best work of a lifetime!"
- -TIME MAGAZINE
is simply fantastic!"
- COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE
7R1W/8/ORRZ/ I9/
. sstiv!" . ."fine!"
-CORONET MAGAZINE -CBS-TV

A government spokesman said
har's, work as a journalist, but on1
formation secretary. He accused
among various groups in the country,

the arrest was not based on Gau-!
his former role as government in-
Gauhar of promoting disaffection'

SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY (D-Mass.), accused the United
States and Cambodia of engaging in a conspiracy of silence con-
cerning an increasing toll of civilian war casualties and refugees
in Cambodia.
Kennedy said the General Accounting Office (GAO), the con-
gressional investigating committee that prepared the report at the
senator's request, stated that two million refugees had been dislocated
1 during 18 months of war and that 20 per cent of destroyed refugees'
homes were bombed by the U.S. and allies.
x
WEST PAKISTAN received over a half million dollars in spare
parts for war planes from the United States last July, it was dis-
closed Friday, even though the Pentagon had said no arms ship-
ments were being made at the time.
The disclosure came from a General Accounting Office's report
requested by Sen. Edward Kennedy last summer.
Arms shipments to West Pakistan had supposedly been halted in
June, in the wake of the West Pakistani army's fierce repression of
Bengali rebels.
The State Department said that the shipments were an accident.
KURT WALDHEIM, United Nations Secretary General, said
yesterday that the prospects of resuming indirect talks between
Israel and Egypt regarding the reopening of the Suez Canal
are "not too bright."
Waldheim met with Gunnar Jarring, U.N. mediator for the Middle
East, during a stop in Rome yesterday.
While both sides of the conflict seem willing to resume negotia-t
tions, there remain differences on how the negotiations should be
conducted. Israel welcomes the United States as a go-between, while
Egypt wants to woik with Jarring.

-Associated Press
In memo riam
Demonstrators hold a silent vigil in Chicago's Civic Center Plaza yesterday in memory of thirteen
men and boys killed by British troops in Londonderry, Northern Ireland, last weekend. The casket
is draped with the Irish tricolor, and the crosses carried the names of those killed. (See related
story, Page 1.)
RECOGNIZING 'NEW ERA':
omen to receive top posts

Trail hit
bybomb',
clusters
Bombers armed
with smaller but
stronger weapons
SAIGON (N) - American B52
bombers operating over Indo-
china are now delivering clus-
ter bomb units, one of the
most deadly aerial weapons, in
addition to conventional
bombs, informed sources re-
ported yesterday.
The cluster bomb units (CBU's)
are believed to be more effective
against truck parks and troop lo-
cations, frequent targets of t h e
bombers. Most of the B52 strikes
are concentrated along the Ho
Chi Minh trail, North Vietnam's
main supply line to the South.
The CBU's, though smaller than
conventional iron bombs, have a
wider radius of effectiveness.
"With an iron bomb," one of-
ficer said, "you've almost got to
drop it on top of trucks or troops,
or it will Just leave a big hole
in the ground."
"A CBU will literally tear a
truck to shreds from a consider-
able distance," another s o u r c e
said.
The source added that iron
bombs are still being used against
such targets as bunkers and un-
dergroup storage areas. Both
CBU's and iron bombs often carry
delayed fuses.
CBU's have been used for sev-
eral years by tactical fighter-
bombers, and thousands of t h e m
have been dropped over N o r t h
Vietnam. However, the B52's had
never carried them until recently.
Some U.S. officials in Washing-
ton have maintained that bomb
tonnage carried by the large B52
bombers has been reduced, b u t'
they have never given the reason
for such a reduction.
Now it is apparent that the in-
troduction of the smaller CBU's
was the cause of the reduction.
The B52's are now carrying an
average of 24 to 25 tons of bombs
each, rather than 30 tons.
Meanwhile, a rash of fighting
was reported yesterday in the
central region of South Vietnam,
where a Communist offensive has
ben predicted for the Tet lunar
new year February 15.

in '72 Re
WASHINGTON (A' - The Com-
mittee for the Re-Election (if
Richard Nixon is discarding the
traditional women's activities
divisions and will be sex-inte-
grated, a top woman policymnak-
er reports.
The Republican Party will re-
cognize the "new era for wo-
men" by assigning women to top
posts on all levels of the :972
campaign organization, s :t i d
Rita Hauser, an international
lawyer who resigned her post as
U.S. representative on the Un -
ed Nations Human Rights Coin-
mission this week in order Di
join the Nixon campaign.
Hauser, a longtime friend of
Attorney General John Mit-

pub lican campaign

RICHARD JAECKEL- LINDA LAWSON
CLIFF POTTS Screenplay by JOHN GAY
Eased on the Novel by KEN KESEY- Music by HENRY MANCINI
Directed by PAUL NEWMAN Produced by JOHN FOREMAN
AUniversal/Newman Foreman Picture TECHNICOLOR -PANAVISON
Program Information 665-6290
Today at 1-3-s-7-9

chell, will be one of the k e y
Nixon campaign planners. She
worked with minority groups in
Nixon's 1968 campaign and was
one of his first woman appoint-
ees.
Hauser said that several states
will have women campaign chair-
men or co-chairmen.
She predicts that 25 to 30 per
cent of all convention delegates
will be women this year, c 3 m-
pared to 17 per cent at the 1968
convention.
Such committees as Women for
Nixon-Agnew and Republican
Women's Finance Committee,
won't be around anymore as wn-
men get higher status in t h e
regular campaign.

Everyone concedes that wom-
en always bore the major share
of the day-to-day workload in
campaigns, Hauser says, and
never got commensurate posi-
tions.
She added that those c a m-
paigners who; still prefer to worn~
in the traditional ways, such as
conducting luncheons and teas
and coffee-time fundraisers, may
continue to do, so, but they
won't be in a separate operation.
The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at the University of
Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second
class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan, 420 Maynard Stree*, Ann Arbor,
Michigan48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by
carrier, $11 by mail.
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail.

"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!"
-Bob Salmaggi-WINS Radio
-Frances Taylor-L. 1. Press
-Archer Winsten-Pete Hamill-N.Y. Post

pp-A

ft4

A

1971
CANNES FILM FESTIVAL AWARDS

1971
ATLANTA FILM FESTIVAL AWARDS

Special
Jury
Grand
Prize

Inter-
national
Critics
Prize

Interfim
Jury
World.
Council
of Churches

Golden
Poenix
Best of
Festivol

Golden Dove
Peace Prize

SPECIAL!! ONE NIGHT ONLY!!
For the cultist, the freak, and the entire family

Basil Rathbone

ONE OF THE GREAT FLS OF OUR TIME!
A TRUE GIANT UNFORGETTABLE THE ACTING IS EXTRAORDINARY
ABC TV -CATHOUCFILM NEWSLETTER .-KY. ALY NEW*

in

I ', '

:41

1 *1

"Magnificent!"
-After Dark
"Truly a remark-
able film!***!" -w
-News TIMOTHY KATHY MARSHA
BOTTOMS FIELDS HUNT

I

Sherlock Holmes Meets
The Spider Woman
ALSO: SELECTED SHORTS
MONDAY NIGHT
at 7:00 &s 9:00; Aud. A; Angell

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Dalton Trumbo's *
ohnny GOt is Gun
RUCE CAMPBELL PRODUCTION From the book that sold over a million copies!I
RY GROSS PRESENTS A CINEMATION INDUSTRIES RELEASE
as the impact of a recoiling howitzer!"-Newsweek .. -

O FITH orum
I'M AVNUe A'LiUEATI
R OWNTO WN ANN ARApopt
NFORMVATION 761-9700

N.507e.9
MON. & TUES. 7 & 9

-ENDS TUESDAY

MANY WERE TURNED AWAY FROM
CEREMONIES AND GODOT-WE'RE SORRY!
DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU
PLEASE
~ _ CRDE P

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POPULAR PRICES!

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NOW
February 16-19 March 29-A

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4pril 1

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Genet-THE MAIDS
Ionesco-VCTIMS
Of DUTY
Mendelssohn Th.
Box Office Feb. 14-19, at 12:30
'"""""'""rmmmrm-"-m-m""m
Maids/Victims Indians

arthur kopit
INDIANS
Power Center
Box Office Mar. 27-Apr. 1,
at 12:30
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No. Price Office

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