Nag t t614 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 12, 1972 F v vEgt H IHIA AL S. Vietnamese watch as village destroyed ON HIGHWAY 13, Vietnam (-1 Whatever happens at the Paris peace talks it will be too late for the people of Xom Suoi. They stood on a hillside yesterday and saw their homes crumble and burn under a rain of bombs and artil- lery shells. Some cried as South Vietnamese bombers and artillery hammered the little town and its buildings burst into flame or spun skyward in smoke and splinters. Others watched with a silent detachment not unlike that of tourists. The people of Xom Suoi had been forced to leave the hamlet, Kissinger, extends Pa-is talk. WASHINGTON (A') - Henry Kissinger completed a fourth day of private talks with the North Vietnamese yesterday and unex- pectedly delayed his departure from Paris until today. which straddles Highway 13, about 20 miles north of Saigon, last Fri- day when communist troops ar- rived in the middle of the night. For five days the intruders stayed, as they have in hundreds of other hamlets, daring South Vietnamese soldiers to come aft- er them. Yesterday, after some delay, the soldiders did - implementing a policy established at the highest levels in the 1968 Tet offensive: If the communists take a town, or a building, it will be taken back even if it means destruction. An anti - aircraft gun, hidden a mile or so to the west, pounded away at the South Vietnamese FS jets and the slow propeller-driven Al Skyraiders, but the pilots ig- nored it almost insolently as they swept in to blast the town with high explosives, napalm and 20 mm cannon fire. Then came the artillery, fur- nishing covering fire for the in- fantrymen moving forward from the south. About the time it seem- ed sure that nobody could have survived in Xom Suoi, the North Vietnamese replied with automa- tic weapons fire that clattered across the paddies. The attack seemed to bog down almt asit bean- The South Vi- Rally set' to support Prof. Green (Continued from Page 1) was scheduling slide showings for their classes in record numbers, according to David Houseman of the Interfaith Council for Peace, the group which makes the pre- sentations. "My' phone has been ringing constantly all day with requests for the slide show," Houseman said yesterday. "We have two sets of slides but I've had to call Wash- ington to order another one 'to meet the demand." The classes for which the show- ings are scheduled range from a computer science class which vot- ed unanimously to see the pro- gram to a geography class on cul- tural and ecological systems. A number of professors who have scheduled the slide show ex- pressed support for Green and dis- approval of acting chemistry chairman Prof. Thomas Dunn, who ordered Green's suspension. "The freedom of the University, both its faculty and students, is at stake," said history Prof. Ernie Young, who " has scheduled the slide show for his class. GLIDING Glider mail was tested in 1934 when a plane took off from New York towing three gliders. As the sky train passed Philadel- phia, Baltimore and Washington, the rearmost craft was cut free from carrying mail for that city. Turkish Arts & Gifts MOVED TO 215 E. LIBERTY p ~0 UNUSUAL ORI ENTAL GI FTS Sheep Skin & Afghan Coats, Jewelry REASONABLE PRICE-COME & VISIT US RETURN OF: The Best of the First Annual N.Y. Erotic Film Festival COME TO THE ISRAELI BET CAFE (COFFEEHOUSE) An evening of Israeli song, food, dance,a ing friends!! and mak- AP Photo Kent1edys confer Caroline Kennedy, daughter of the late President John Kennedy, and Joan Kennedy, wife of Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) listen as Sen. Kennedy introduces George McGover'n at a fund raising dinner in Boston. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN " EAT felafel and pita " SEE the movie "Beyond the Mirage" " MEET people who share a common interest in Israeli happenings, problems, culture. Enjoy socializing in an informal, Israeli atmosphere. TONITE-THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12-1 p.m. 936 DEWEY(off Packard) ' INFO, CALL: 761-3161 Sponsored by CHAVURAT ALIYA and ISRAELI STUDENTS UNION FRI.-SAT., Ott. 13-14 7:30-9-10:30 p.m. NAT. SCI. AUD. $1.25 cont. FRIENDS OF NEWSREEL Midwest premiere: Dec. 8-9 NY EROTIC FILM FESTIVAL If II1 But White House press secretary e1tna etook ecove t1antdpa Ronald Ziegler said "we have no stillmoet eel intothe indicationothe talks will be ex- where th communists appar tendedethanotheristday."r tende anoher ay."were well entrenched in bun Ziegler would not say why Kis- singer's departure - originally and fighting holes. scheduled for Tuesday but reset Even so, field reports said, for yesterday - had been de- Saigon troops lost two men k layed again. and five wounded. But there were indications that Nobody knew howmany r Kissinger might confer w i t h Vietnamese troops held Xom French officials upset because but it has become - perhaps their diplomatic mission in Hanoi cause of its location on the was severely damaged during a way - the focal point of the U. S. air raid yesterday. week's fighting in the region The unprecedented extension of north of Saigon. Kissinger's 19th round of secret One of the farmers from th Paris talks to four days had stir- gion, Nguyen Nghi, was a red speculation that a break- whether he thought the cu through toward a settlement might negotiations in Paris meant p be near. But officials refused to was coming soon. "Too r give any encouragement to such fighting. I am too busy tot theories, about that," he said. S. bombs hit French (Continued from Page 1) Navy, and Marine planes have happened," Vogt told The: been making 300 or more st Associated Press: "We'll just have a day against North Vietnam. to go into it and see what hap- Laird said the bombings v pened. We're going to take a good continue despite the delicate1 hard look at it." tiations in Paris between F Secretary of State William Kissinger, U.S. presidential s Rogers messaged his regrets at ity adviser, and the North the wounding of Susini to the namese. French foreign minister, Maurice Laird's remarks came d Schumann. the same 55-minute news c President Georges Pompidou af- ence in which he described firmed that the damage to the George McGovern's plan for French mission was caused by U.S. ing the Vietnam war as a bombs and called the incident "a out to communism. deplorable act." McGovern has said that he' Meanwhile, in the United Na- suspend the bombing and a tions, Sweden accused the United South Vietnam on Inaugu States of "indiscriminate bombing Day if he were' elected andN of central Hanoi" and U.N. Secre- withdraw all U.S. forces v tary-General Kurt Waldheim called 90 days. hits on the French diplomatic mis- "Never before has a canc sion there "regrettable." for major political office advo Yesterday's U.S. air attacks in a program of unconditional the Hanoi area were the first in render," Laird said. "That's e several weeks although Air Force, ly what that program is." ured town *ently rkers , the killed North Suoi, s be- ihgh- past just The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Mic'igan. Notices should be sent in TYF-sWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the dry preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not acceptejl for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12 e re- DAY CALENDAR asked Student Services Policy Board Meet- rrent ing: vice Pres. Conf. Rm., 3rd floor, peace Union, 9-11 am. Mental Health Research Inst.: S. much Brodsky, Univ. of Alabama, "The Psy- think chologist in Criminal Justice; Chang- ing Systems and Challenging Myths," 1057 _MHRI, 3:45 pm. W. S. Woytinsky Economics Lecture: A. M. Rivlin, Brookings Inst., "Social Policy: Federal Options for the Fu- have trikes THE QUE would, nego- Henry secur- Viet- ture," Rackham Amph., 4 pm. Botany Seminar: B. J. D. Meeuse, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, "Bio- logical and Biochemical Investigations on the Voodoo Lilly and Other Aer- oids," 1139 Nat. Sci., 4 pm. Residential College Renaissance Dra- ma Film: "Throne of Blood," Japan, 126 Residential Col., 4 pm. Computers, Fortran IV, and MTS: B. Carnahan, "The IBM 360/67 Com- puting System and MTS," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 pmn.j University Players: Farquhar's "The Beaux Strategem," Lydia Mendelssohn, 8 pm. Music School: M. Ronish, flute hon- ors recital, Sch. of Mus. Recital Hall, 8 pm. Music School: Stanley Quartet,' Rackham Aud., 8 pm. International Social \Hour: Rive Gauche, 1024 Hill St., 8 pm. Shop Fol Ietts State Street at North U. Thursday: East Quad, Green Lounge 8:00 P.M. Stockwell, Stockwell Lounge 8:00 P.M. Monday: South Quad, Dining Room 112 8:00 P.M. -v VN ONFootball Ticket Exchange for Michigan-Michigan State Game Get the ticket you want Friday, Oct. 13 from 1-5 p.m. n the Michigan Union lobby A STION OF . mwmm.mmmm.' i uring )nfer- Sen. end- sell- would id to [ration would within didate cated sur- exact- THURSDAY, 7-8 P.M. wcbn-fm 89.5 on "TALKBACK" a new audience-participation show of involvement GET THE REAL DEAL DIAL 761-3500 LOOK INTO THESE: NEAR EAST 201: Introduction to World Religions: Near East MWF 2-3 RELIGION 211: Mormonism Tues., Fri. 10-11:30 RELIGION/LINGUISTICS 429: Buddhism MWF 10-11 RELIGION AND SOCIETY 455: (to be arranged) (these courses are not listed in time schedule) Contact STUDIES IN RELIGION- 1053 LSA--FOR FURTHER INFORMATION I --- -- -- --------- - C rz a_ UOO GRADUATE PROGRAMS AND ADMISSIONS MANUAL A four-volume set of the most complete information available ."on graduate institutions and programs, published jointly by the Council of Graduate Schools in the United States and the Graduate Record Examinations Board. 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