Friday, May 26, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Fridy, My 2, 192 TE MIHIGN DALY age eve TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEIAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 OPEN EVERY NIGHT AND SUNDAY AFTERNOON Higgledy, piggledy, Centicore Booksellers Shun the mere commonplace; Will not permit Unjustifiably Heterogeneous Volumes of stuff which to Print is unfit. Double dactyl from the book Centicore Poems Copyright 0 1972 By Jos. F. Dulon I Main Store Branch Store 336 Maynard 1229 S. Univ. 663-1812 665-2604 North Viets hit Kontum; attack appears stopped (Continued from Page 1) tacked some of the biggest power plants and major bridges in the Hanoi-Haiphong industrial com- plex, the U.S. Command report- ed. Two Navy jets, an F8 Cru- sader and A7 Corsair, were lost in the raids, with one pilot mis- sing and the other rescued un- hurt. Pilots reported heavy damage to two big power plants that had not been hit since bombing of North Vietnam was suspended by then-President Lyndon John- son in 1968. -The Haiphong highway and railroad bridge was reported knocked out, and raids continued against rail lines link- ing Hanoi with China. North Vietnam claimed Ameri- can planes rocketed and bombed dikes and water systems in a half dozen communities in Thai Binh Province on Wednesday. A North Vietnamese news agency dispatch also said the city of Nam Ninh was attacked and a textile factory, a theater, a pagoda and schools were hit. Twenty-three persons were kill- ed or wounded in the textile plant and there were another 19 casualties elsewhere in the city, the report added. In the south, where the Sai- gon government appeared on the verge of a major victory a week ago, a relief column trying to reach the beleaguered provin- cial capital of An Loc battled enemy forces throughout the day. Delayed reports said the government troops had suffered as many as 200 casualties since their planned final push to break the 49-day-old siege bog- ged down along Highway 13. At the same time, South Viet- namese marines repulsed an at- tack on the northern front above the old imperial city of Hue as other marines returning from a raid into enemy-held Suang Tri Province brought out about 1,800 refugees. The marine raid fell short of its objective of clearing a North Vietnamese regiment from the "Street Without Joy" but dem- onstrated the marines' offensive capability, said one senior Amer- ican military adviser. Two marine battalions that landed by helicopter and am- phibious landing craft four or five miles behind enemy lines Wednesday returned to govern- ment-held territory yesterday. A third battalion that was to sweep north to meet the other two was reported still fighting the enemy on the coastal end of the defense line. The adviser said the two bat- talions had to sweep down the beach instead of coming down the inland Route 555, named the Street Without Joy by French forces who suffered heavy cas- ualties there 20 years ago. The North Vietnamese proved to be strong, and the marines had to spend time caring for the refugees as well as fighting, the adviser said. But he said "they showed they can make an anphibious landing, which will scare them all the way up to Hanoi." Marine sources said the claim of enemy killed in the operation would total 600 to 800. The Viet Cong's Liberation radio claimed 200 marines killed and two heli- copters shot down when ,the raiders were ambushed. Travel Happiness is ... THE NATIONAL BANK OF YPSILANTI TRAVEL BUREAU 611 W. Cross St., Ypsi. 483-8556 Weekend whirlwind If you have suggestions for future columns - travel ideas, block parties,music, fun and games - please sendthem to Rose Sue Berstein, c/o The Daily, 420 Maynard St., by Wednesday each week. Happy weekend. Movies Campus--The French Connection and The Magus Michigan-The Godfather State-Skyjacked Fifth Forum-The Decameron Wayside-Slaughterhouse Five Fox Village-Cabaret Cinema Guild-On the Waterfront (Fri. and Sat., 7 and 9:05 p.m.) Cinema II-Rosemary's Baby (Fri.); 'X'-The Man with the X-Ray Eyes (Sat.); 7 and 9 p.m. Music The Ark-Jim Kweskin, 8:30, $1.50 Golden Falcon-Opus IV Lums-RFD Boys Pretzel Bell-Roy Bookbinder and Woody Mann (Fri. and Sat.) Bimbo's-The Gaslighters (Fri. and Sat.) The Del Rio-Jazz band every Sunday Odyessey-Niagara (Fri. and Sat.) Other Events LOCAL Ann Arbor Dance Theatre-at the Conspiracy; Fri., Sat. at 8:30; Sun. at 2:30 and 8:30. $1.00 at the door. Under Milkwood, Pioneer High School (Fri., Sat., 8 p.m., $1.00) Farmers Market open Saturday 8-3 Community organic garden at North Campus open daily Graduate Outing Club-outside Rackham Hall, Sunday, 1:30 p.m. NOT TOO FAR Monster Matinee-Son of Dracula, and Flash Gordon; Detroit Institute of Art, 11 a.m., 2 p.m.10c. Tour wineries in Paw Paw, Mich. Free samples! Steve Miller, Herbie Hancock Sextet, Shoo Bee Doo- Oakland University, tonight, 8 p.m.; $5.00 Ike and Tina Turner-Cobo Arena, tonight 8 p.m. $6, $5, $4. Music Marathon in Ford Auditorium-Sickle Cell Ane- mia Benefit, 8 p.m. Sunday James Brown-Cobo Arena, Mon., 8 p.m. $6, $5, $4 IT CAN'T BE DESCRIBED- IT MUST BE EXPERIENCED GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wed., May 31 8 p.m.. E. CONFERENCE ROOM, RACKHAM Lemonade and Cake for all JURY PRIZE AWARD WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL A GFORGE ROY HILL-PAUL MONASH PRODUCTION SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE staring MICHAEL SACKS - RON LEIBMAN - VALERIE PERRINE o Based on the novel by ;KURT VONNEGUT, Jr. Screenplay by Stephen Geller - Directed byGeorge Roy Hill - Produced by Paul Monash . A Universal Picture in TECHNICOLOR' r y ISf~t MATINEES Wed.-Sat.-Sun. 1-3-5 Program Information 434-1782 NIGHTLY at 7-9 "SHOWSMAY 29 1-3-5-7-9 3020 Washtenaw 1