Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY f-ridgy, November 10, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1-riday, November 10, 1972 $20 MILLION GIVEN: McGovern contributors fill Democratic coffers WASHINGTON (A) - T h e r e is at least one bright legacy George McGovern is leaving the Democratic party following his disastrous presidential campaign -millions of dollars worth of campaign contributions. Despite the trouble McGovern had in getting votes, he proved amazingly adroit at bringing in money. His campaign is expect- ed to end up with some $20 mil- lion raised, compared to the $8 million Hubert Humphrey col- lected four years ago. McGovern's managers have said they expect to be in the black when the final tally is made. This is a far cry from the $9 million debt the party wound up with in 1968. The 1968 debt included some bills of candidates who lost to Humphrey in the nomination race, but even if the party takes on some of the primary expens- es this time, they won't be as .high as they were four years ago. The party raised $2.5 million froma telethonstaged during the Democratic National Convention last July. Another slice of the debt was settled by persuading various creditors to accept pay- ment of 25 cents on the dollar. .The key to the future is direct- mail fund raising, which the par- ty already had been experiment- ing with and which McGovern raised to undreamed-of success. Morris Dees, the Alabama di- rect-mail whiz who managed Mc- Govern's mail order solicitation, estimates that the Democrats can easily take in $5 million a year with the kind of list they are now building. With that kind of money the Democrats could conceivably pay off their four-year-old fiscal alba- tross in another year, although more realistically their planners think it will take two. NEW- BLUE 217 S.ASH e 2FPM-2AM ETHNIC DANCE AND MUSIC WORKSHOPS PECE ATANASOVSKI of Macedonia, Yugoslavia A leading professional Macedonion folk musician and dancer Fri., Nov. 10-8-11 p.m. Barbour Gym Sat., Nov. 11-10-12 2:30-4:30 WAB Everyone Welcome $1.25 Sponsored by UM Folkdoncers $ .0 SCARLET . 55 ID CINEMA II PRESENTS * * FRIDAY 10 NOVEMBER Josef von Sternberg's 1934 Film adapted from the personal diary of Cath- erine the Great. Barbaric pageant of 18th century Russia with crucifictions, tortures, mass slaughters. With Marlene Dietrich and Sam Jaffe. "Bizzare and fantastic historical carnival . . . strangely beautiful."-N.Y. Times Auditorium A * 7 and 9 o'clock * One Dollar This is the REVISED CINEMA 11 SCHEDULE for remainder of term v FRI. 17 November SAT. 18 November SUN. 19 November FRI. 1 December SAT. 2 December SUN. 3 December FRI. 8 December SAT. 9 December SUN. 10 December FRI. 15 December SAT. 16 December SUN. 17 December LA DOLCE VITA Fellini (7 and 9:30 approx.) GOLD-DIGGERS OF 1935 Busby Berkely 7: GOLD-DIGGERS 9: LA DOLCE VITA THE 39 STEPS Hitchcock PSYCHO Hitchcock 7: 39 STEPS 9: PSYCHO AP Pnoto A TEEN-AGE CAMBODIAN SOLDIER, the agony of a- wound showing on his face, is helped to an aid station by an older buddy during fighting north of Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital. N. 'V1e O N. Viet convoys hit by heavy B52 raids By the AP, UPI and Reuters Alexander Haig, top aide to Presi- SAIGON - Attempting to in- dential advisor Henry Kissinger ar- hibit the flow of supplies going rived in Saigon to confer with South south, U.S. B52 bombers dumped Vietnamese President Van Thieu, LOOK BACK IN ANGER CASABLANCA CASABLANCA FEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS Polanski PHANTOM OF THE OPERA Lon Chaney 1925 7: FEARLESS 9: PHANTOM -TONIGHT- (All shows at 7 and 9 o'clock except for 17 November) Auditorium A 7 and 9 o'clock * One Dollar thousands of tons of bombs on North Vietnamese convoys yester- day, in a continuation of the most concentrated American air at- tacks of the Vietnam War. The huge Stratofortresses con- centrated their attacks in t h e border areas of North and South Vietnam. Military sources said that t h e bombing was designed to blunt a last-ditch drive by the North Viet- namese to move men and equip- ment into the south. Both sides are hurriedly building up armaments because the propos- ed cease-fire would prohibit any in- troduction of additional weapons. In Saigon, tanks, armored per- sonnel carriers, guns, and am- munition poured into airbases. The airlift was being conducted by both military and chartered civilian air- craft, and is considered to be one of the largest of the war. With the possibility of a cease-1 fire, the character of the ground fighting has also changed. Higher casualty figures reflected an at- tempt by both sides to try to hold as much territory as possible be- fore the end of fighting. On the diplomatic front, General; Tim Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second I 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. Subcrip- 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). in an attempt to iron out objections to a Vietnam peace settlement. Thieu is reportedly concerned over a clause in the proposed trea- ty that would set up a coalition government - a concept he has refused to accept. smilimisiin o =11 DIAL 668-6416 -PLUS- d6 FRI.-Alice at 7:20 Sex at9:15 SAT., SUN.-Continuous From 1 p.m. Arthur Penn's Faye Dunaway, Warren Beatty BONNIE &CLYDE '"They're young, and in love . i; I 7:30 & 9:30 p.n PETER FOND TH "not onlyc and they kill people." M. $1 cont. SI DE-BY-SIDE A'S E HIRED HAND a film, it's a poem "-NBC TV MODERN LANGUAGES Auditoriums 3 & 4 -Newsreel The School of Music presents two coya-ct operas Puccini's SISTER ANGELICA Ibert's ANGELIQUE BRIGHTON CINEMA 3 1-96 and' Grand River-227-6144 CINEMA I--SWINGING STEWARDESSES & THE NIGHT THEY RAIDED MINSKY'S CINEMA IlI-KANSAS CITY BOMBERS & SKYJACKED CINEMA Ill-ASYLUM &s LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH MATINEES WED., SAT., SUN. Admission $1.00 Theatre Club ID cards--75c (for sr. citizens and students) for student regular evening admission at $1.25 Eve. shows start at 7:30 I Sung in English NOV. 17, 18, 20, and 21 8:00 P.M. Conductor: JOSEF BLATT MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Stage Director: RALPH HERBERT TICKETS: $3.00 MAIL ORDERS: Some reserved seating available at $1.50 for School of Music Opera, Mendelssohn Theatre, University students with I.D. cards. Sold at Box The University of Michigan, Office only. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 BOX OFFICE OPENS NOVEMBER 13 AT 12:30 P.M. INFORMATION: 764-6118 11 HELD OVER AGAIN ! GEM., DIAL 665-6290 SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9:05 P.M. I _ - rl i FESTIVAL OF FILMS" ON WOMEN FRIDAY KATE MILLET'S THREE LIVES Mode in 1971 by a female crew. Three women talk to the camera about themselves and I S R 4 . , .. . - i},' i : ', w r Academy Award Winner "BEST FOREIGN FILM" Golden Bear Award First Prize 1971 Berlin Film Festival David of Donatello Award, Best Italian Motion Picture of the Year All-American Press Associates Film Awards DOUBLE FEATUR " BEST FOREIGN FILM " BEST ACTOR- Helmut Berger INTERNATIONAL FILM AWARDS -Best Foreign Film Best Actress -Best Director "Reaches a r t i s t i c and human heights of 'Bicycle Thief'." ---Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post "The hand of genius is once again evident." --Judith Crist -N.Y. Mag. "DeSica returns to great- ness." -William Wolf, Cue Mag. The Winningest Film of the Year E fc 1 * BEST ACTRESS- Dominigue Sanda " BEST DIRECTOR- Vittorio DeSica V v1 "Or Canb W( LUCHINO E ISCONTI'S ne of the Year's Ten Best" y N.Y. Times-Crist; N.Y. Magazine-Reed, Holiday- V'olf, Cue-Klein, WNEW-TV-Salmaggi Group W- Winsten, Post-Sat. Review-National Observer "THE YEAR'S ULTIMATE SPECTACLE IN THE BEST SENSE." -Canby, N.Y. Times VITTORIO DE SICA'S the Carden of the Finzi-Continis 5 fl#+o c FRI - "Garden" 7:00, 11:05-"Damned" 8:30