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October 08, 1972 - Image 10

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Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-10-08

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v

Poge Ter,

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday, October 8, 1972

NEW RAIDS:
U.S. orders strikes
deep in N. Vietnam

China, U.S. to oppose
UN arms conference

GRAND OPENING

GRAND OPENING

GRAND OPENING

GRAND OPENING

GRAND OPENING

SAIGON (JP) - The United States
responded today to what officials
describe as an upsurge of Com-
munist attacks across Indochina
by sending its most powerful bomb-
ers, the B52 Stratofortresses, on
their deepest raids into North Viet-
nam in six months.
"It is a defacto response," one
informant said of the raids that hit
near the major port of Vinh, just
below the 19th parallel.
The raids also were seen by
some military men as a warning
from President Nixon that he
would retaliate for each blow
struck by the Communists in South
Vietnam.
The U.S. Command declined to
make any comment, or say wheth-
er the raids would be kept up.
But the Air Force is known to
have prepared contingency plans
and outlinedtargets for even heav-
ier B52 raids in the Hanoi region,
should the go-ahead be given.
A Communist attack on Saigon
might prompt Nixon to give clear-
ance for retaliatory B52 attacks
on the Hanoi region, sources
acnowledged.
Informants said the targets of
today's raids in the North were
stockpiles of war materials await-
ing shipment to South Vietnam
either across the demilitarized zone
or through mountain passes lead-
ing to the Ho Chi Minh Trail in
Laos, a key infiltration corridor.
About 30 B52s in all struck in-
side North Vietnam today, but the
other strikes were farther south,
around the port of Dong Hoi, 45
miles above the DMZ. About 750
tons of bombs were dropped, mak-
ing the strikes the heaviest by B52s
in the North since Aug. 12.
Middies
meet U'
students
(Continued from Page 1)
ing at the academy but admitted
that it was possible.
As might be expected, President
Nixon emerged as the most popu-
lar candidate in this year's presi-
dential election. McGovern's pro-
posals to cut back the military ob-
viously did not sit well with stu-
dents who plan to make the mili-
tary a career.
"I dig Nixon," one middie ex-
claimed. "Any guy like McGovren
who wants to cut back on the mil-
itary, I'm not exactly wild about."
A first year student from Prince-
ton, N.J., also voiced support for
Nixon but was not quite as effu-
sive in his praise.
"Nixon's a professional politi-
cian. He knows how to manipulate
support for his policies like in
Vietnam. He's n o t completely
straight, but nobody is in politics,"
the midshipman said.
The visitors expressed the notion
that the Naval Aacademy was a
good place to go to school. They
admitted that things were often
tough, but agreed that the chal-
lenge was well worth it.
Most of the visitors said they
enjoyed the game, and it was
rumored that one middie was evn
passed up in the stands, a Sign of
genuine acceptance by the Mich-
igan fans.
DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN

Not since last April at the start
of Hanoi's offensive into South
Vietnam had B52s gone so deep
into North Vietnam.
Other waves of B52 bombers
kept up saturation strikes against
Communist positions in the Saigon
region, flying their closest mis-
sions to the South Vietnamese cap-
ital since the Communist com-
mand's 1968 Tet offensive. The
latest strikes were within 15 miles
of Saigon.0
Communist-led f o r c e s poured
hundreds of rounds of shells into
government militia outposts brac-
keting Saigon and small, sharp
battles erupted. Military authori-
ties reported a four-month high-
point in Communist attacks-pos-
sibly the start of a predicted effort
to influence the U.S. presidential
elections with at least the appear-
ance of a renewed offensive.

UNITED.NATIONS, N.Y. (I)-In
what certainly must be called an
unlikely alliance, the United States
and China yesterday were reported
to be opposed to a Soviet proposal
asking for a UN General Assembly
conference on disarmament.
A U.S. note to Secretary-General
Kurt Waldheim expressed belief
the assembly should avoid raising
hopes throughout the world that it
might now be possible to make
rapid, major progress toward gen-
eral disarmament through prepa-
rations for, and convening of, a
world disarmament conference."
"To decide now to begin such
preparations or to set a time for
such a conference would inevitably

lead to frustration and disappoint-!
ment," the note went on. "The re-
sult would be damaging, not help-
ful, to the real task of developing
the techniques and mutual confi-
dence involved in limiting and re-
pudiating armaments."
China's deputy foreign minister,
Chiao Kuan-hua, told the 132-nation
assembly, "The 'world disarma-
ment conference' as proposed by
the Soviet Union has neither the
necessary requisites nor c 1 e a r
aim.
"It would in fact be an 'empty-
talk club' which would indulge in
far - ranging rambling discourse
without solving any practical prob-
lems," he said.

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SENIORS
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