Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 9, 1972 W-N i 1 U.S. bombers hit North Viets in record strikes By the AP and Reuters April, striking 51 miles northwest rea on C54 transports. Bien Hoa More than 75 B52 bombers of the port of Vinh. is 15 miles northeast of Saigon. pounded North Vietnamese posi- U. S. officials said the B52 cam- Meanwhile, in Washington it was tions in both North and South paign is aimed at destroying sup- announced that President Nixon Vietnam with 2,000 tons of bombs ply lines between North Vietnam yesterday sent key aid Gen. Alex- yesterday, the U. S. Command and the front lines in South Viet- ander Haig to Saigon for a new and other sources said. nam. round of talks with South Vietna-, About 80 per cent of the B52 the United States and mese President Nguyen Van Thieu. strikes were concentrated along Noth hetU intensified their the .South Vietnamese northern INrth Vietnaminesfdthr White House press secretary fteruh betnahesemitarn crash supply buildups yesterday Ronald Ziegler said the purpose of frontier, between the demilitariz- in advance of a ceasefire. The first the trip is to "confer with Presi- ed zone and Quang Tri City. team of American civilian tech- dent Thieu on progress of peace The 20 strikes in the 24 hours cians arrived at Bien Hoa to negotiations and make a general! up to noon yesterday in that el I help the South Vietnamese air assessment of the situation in In-, were believed to be a record forfdochina." strikes by the bombers in any one force. -i rovinceI Sources said the civilians would In Saigon, a pro-Thieu newspa- I AN P1 EEBNT TNT o toA NATURAL. ~3OWabo'uFO ~OAWY PLUS- ALC'S$ -$4 , duiV PLES-- TUES. Alice at 7:20 It's i. Sex at 9:15 UFL WED. Continuous From 1 p.m. UAC-DAYSTAR presents .1 A A -u Y* DA* {I II B52 bombers flying above thun- stay at least a month and start derstorms spawned by Typhoon out by assembling F5 fighter-bomb- Pamela made their deepest raids ers flown into Bien Hoa air base into North Vietnam since 1 a s t from Iran, Taiwan and South Ko- Hanrahan defeated as Daley influence falters per yesterday repeated Thieu's in- sistence that all North Vietnamese forces must withdraw from the South to insure lasting peace. APM Asa .A F, y 1 41 JMf M I LM 4~ 1 T\ I I= NA/ I% AP Photo PAT SCHROEDER celebrates after becoming the, first woman to represent Colorado in Congress. She defeated Rep. James Mc- Kevitt of Denver. Women lose Senate seat, gain in House WASHINGTON (P) - Sen. Mar- tion, and Texas State Sen. Bar- garet Chase Smith, (D-Maine) a bara Jordan of Houston. powerful figure in Congress for The other new congresswomen over three decades, was toppled in are Brooklyn lawyer Elizabeth a major election upset Tuesday. Holtzman, Democrat; Maryland While losing out in the Senate, lawyer and Circuit Court Clerk which now becomes an all-male in- Marjorie Holt, Republican, and stitution, women captured five new Patricia Schroeder, Democrat, a seats in the House and seemed to Colorado lawyer and a founder of have returned all but one of the the Women's Political Caucus in 10 incumbent congresswomen who Colorado. o ran for re-election. Only Rep. Louise Day Hicks, (D- Mass.), was in trouble as late elec- tion returns were counted. She was trailing Boston city council- man John Moakley, a Democrat who r a oh n independent. Hicks campaigned against busing of school pupils. With Hicks, there would be 15 women in the House. THURSDAY Female newcomers to the House include two black lawyer - legisla- An evening of tors, California assemblywoman FEMINIST SHORTS Yvonne Brathwaite, of 'Los An-' geles, who was vice chairman of ANYTHING YOU the Democratic National Conven- A 11T T flR CHICAGO (Reuters) - Tues- day's election may have marked the beginning of the end for the last of America's big city boss- es-Chicago Mayor Richard Da- ley. Almost complete returns show- ed that Daley's vaunted machine failed to deliver the votes when and where he needed them, es- pecially in the crucial race for State's Attorney of Cook County. Edward Hanrahan, w h o m many considered to be Daley's heir apparent, was defeated by more than 100,000 votes by Re- publican Bernard Carey. Sen. George McGovern carried the City of Chicago, but his mar- gin was only about half that which Daley's workers usually deliver. The Hanrahan race showed a breakdown in what has always been one of the machine's strong points, the ability to deliver an almost unanimous vote from the city's black areas for whatever candidate Daley chose. Daley has always given the state's attorney race high prior- ity because of investigations of the Daley machine an opponent might pursue, as state's attor- ney. As returns Tuesday night show- ed Hanrahan losing, Daley com- mented: "Well, you win some and you lose some." with SECTION DANNY KORTCHMAR-RUSS KUNKLE CRAIG DOERGE--LELARD SKLAR I l l{ 3 a { 5th Dimension Paul Williams NOV. 10, 8:00 P.M. BOWEN FIELD HOUSE EASTERN MICHIGAN U. TICKETS: Reserved Seats- $3.50 $4.50 $5.50 TICKET OUTLETS: McKenny Union Huckleberry Party Store J.L. Hudson's Ann Arbor Music Mart For ticket information call WWWW 961-4323 MAIL ORDERS: Send self-addressed envelope to Office of Student Life, 3rd fl., McKenny Union NOVEMBER 17 FRIDAY, 8 P.M. $3.50, $4.50, $5.50 crisler arena Reserve your seats today at Michigan Union. (You'll receive a receipt- COupOfn which you ex- change for a ticket when they arrive from the print- ers Nov. 14) OR BY MAIL- Money Order to: UAC-DAYSTAR P.O. BOX 381 ANN ARBOR 48107 (sorry, no personal checks) Coming: Dec. 9 Sat. The Aliman Brothers and Dr. John $4.00 Gen. Admission TICKETS go on sale this FRIDAX, Nov. 10 Michigan Union 11-6 Sat. 1-4 p.m. Salvation Records 10-8 Mon.-Sat. also, by mail orders I The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at, Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail' (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). WANTIIVD Dir. Liane Brandon 1971 The (non)choices available to girls SCHMEERGUNTZ Dir. G. Nelson & D. Wiler First prize at Ann Arbor Flm Festival 1968. Contrast between the grime in sinks & the gloss in advertisements. DOROTHY PROVING GROUND Dir. Vaugh Obern 1969 A nitty-gritty feminine hygiene commercial. GROWING UP FEMALE Dir. J. Reichert & J. Klein 1970 Six women, age 4 to 35, black & white. 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