Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 17, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 17, 1972 Under New Management The VILLAGE INN Open 4 p.m.-Daiy, including Sunday DANCE TO S.J.Q. The Seven James Quintet North America's hottest new group! Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. starting at 9:30 p.m. 3411 WASHTENAW NEAR ARBORLAND 973-2100 OPEN SOON The newest and only Discoteque in Michigan 341 S. Main 769-5960 Mozart's comic opera "Cosl Fan Tutte" (That's the Way of all Women) will be presented by the University School of Music Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 8 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The production will be sung in English. Working together on their 26th collaboration at the University are conductor Josef Blatt and stage director Ralph Herbert. Guest set designer is Russell Smith who heads the theatre de- sign programs at Wayne State University. Tickets, available at the Men- delssohn Theatre Box Office are priced at $3.00 and $1.50 for stu- dents with University I.D. cards. COBO HALL is bringing some good people into Detroit during the up-coming weeks: The Jef- ferson Airplane (August 22), Black Sabbath (August 27), Joe Cocker (September 1), Yes (September 21), and Leon Russell (September 28). For ticket information, call Detroit 962-5870. Tickets for the Ann Arbor Blues Festival are selling fast, promising a large crowd at the three-day festival scheduled for September 7-8-9. Tickets are be- ing sold daily in the lobby of the Michigan Union. HAIRSTYLING AS YOU LIKE ITI NEW TRENDS FOR 1972 TRIMS-SHAGS and RAZOR CUTS Dascola Barbers * 611 E. University * near Michigan Theatre Clark calls U.S. dike bombing widespread' WASHINGTON (A) Former civilians in highly populated Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark said areas. yesterday that contrary to Penta- The Pentagon has acknowledg- gon claims, American bombers ed only using some anti-personnel have done extensive and wide- bombs against the crews of anti- spread damage to the dikes of aircraft guns in an attempt to North Vietnam. knock out the weapons. During a two-week tour of Of the dikes, President Nixon North Vietnam, Clark said, he has said they are hit only inci- frequently saw bomb-damaged dentally as an offshoot of the dikes and sluices located great proximity of military targets in- distances from missile sites or cluding railroad lines, roads, or other intended targets of U.S. SAM missile sites. war planes. Clark, who was attorney gen- In testimony before a Senate eral in the Johnson administra- subcommittee on refugees, Clark tion, has been criticized by Re- said every hospital he saw had publicans in the past week for been damaged. Civilians in at his remarks broadcast over Rad- least three villages, he said, were A brHanoi. killed with no evidence that they Asked . about the broadcast, were near military targets like theClark saidvedeclined to gron antairraf sies r fel ump. te ar lve.During his tour, antiaircraft sites or fuel dumps. Clark said, he was questioned by Clark, who visited an Ameri- North Vietnamese reporters with can prisoner-of-war camp near tape recorders and was asked Hanoi, said he is convinced that his impressions of the impact of as long as the bombing contin- the bombing. ues, the North Vietnamese will Clark said if Radio Hanoi of- refuse to release the American ficials distorted his remarks by prisoners. editing tapes, that was their re- He said the 11 POWs he was sponsibility. permitted to meet with were well fed, alert, and concerned that St. Pachomius, an Egyptian, "their families believe they are founded the first Christian well." He said the men told him monastery,aaccording to the conditions were similar in four or. book,"Great Religions of the five other POW camps where World." a few had been held previously. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- At one point, Clark displayed aged hy students at the tni5ersie a Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Secsnd a small green grenade-sized plas- class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- tic oval he said was the casing igan. 420 Maynard St., An Arbor, for a fragmentation bomb. In- Michigan 48104. Publihed daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- side; he said, were pellets sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by signed to kill people. Clark call- carrier, $11 by mai (in Mich. or Ohio), ed them "instruments of death," $13 non-local mail. useless against military e Summe es i putished T esday are.thriugh Saurday morning. usrp- Clark said the casing was given tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus to him by the mayor of Hanoi area); $6.50 1cal mad (in Mich. or to support North Vietnamese re- Ot; $7. 5 non-oal mali tother states ports of deliberate bombing of ad forig). for a PLEASANT DIFFERENCE r> at ANN ARBOR'S New Mexican Restaurant FEATURING: MEXICAN TRIO-Weds. thru Fri FIESTA HOURS-4-6:30 Tues -Sat. 990 BROADWAY OPEN TUES.-SAT., i1TO 011 SUN 2 TO 11 FOOT OF BROADWAY BRIDGE AT PLYMOUTH RD. 663-0563 Read and Use Daily Classifieds ABSOLUTE CLEARANCE BOOK SALE Everything 30% Off -PAPERBACKS -PAPER SUPPLIES -CHILDREN'S BOOKS -REFERENCE BOOKS -RECENT PUBLICATIONS at Wahr's University Bookstore 316 s. State Street I "'The War Between Men and Women' is a comic feast for fans ." -READER'S DIGEST "Extraordinarily funny and extraor- dinarily touching! "-NORMA MCLAIN STOOP, After Dark "Jack Lemmon and Barbara Harris are hilarious" -ED SULLIVAN 10 ENDS TONIGHT: "WHAT'S UP DOC?"