Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 16, 1971 Page Ten TI-fE MICHIGAI4 DAILY Wednesday, June 16, 1971 War policy exposed in govt. study (Continued from Page) conditions" and the U.S. financ- ing of a regional economic de- velopment program for the Me- kong Delta in which North Viet- nam might participate. The second action was the unannounced five-day pause in bombing in May during which Johnson called on Hanoi to ac- cept a "political solution" in the south. This "seemed to be aimed more at clearing the decks for a subsequent intensified resump- tion than it was at evoking a reciprocal act of de-escalation by Hanoi," the study says. The installments in the Sun- day and Monday Times told abot cla n destine warfare against North Vietnam before the Tonkin Gulf incident in August 1164 They said the administration of former President Lyndon B. Johnson hsd reahed a "general -consensu"' before the 1964 elec- tion that bombing of North Viet- nam would begin early in 1965, and that Johnson decided in April 1965, to secretly use Ameri- can ground troops for offensive action. Right wins support in board vote (Continued from Page 1) tinue operating the school dis- trict as it is now. Bohouse went on to state that "Teachers, I'm sure will realize the financial problems we are having." Yet. this does not take into considera- tion the anticipated raise. With the conservative sweep. moderates did poorly. But Robert Hener, director of the Center on Research for Conflict Resolution, running as the RIP candidate did comparatively well. Although they gained no seat on the board. RIP received 11 per cent of the total vote city- wide - offering policies most consistently opposed to those of the victors. Compared to the one per cent of the vote they received in the mayoral election - held at a time when students, 'who form a large base of RIP's support, are in town - RIP's support seems to have skyrocketed. It is uncertain though wheter the votes Hener received ere for the party or only- for Hefner- who has a respected profession. O t h e r observers attribute RIP'S strong showing to the fact that those who ran the April mayoral campaign are out of town and their replacements have been able to achieve more suc- cess. Hefner's strongest showing was in what is generally considered the student ward -- despite the fact that many students are on vacation - and in the Burns Park area. However, the totals for Heusel and Renken were even in these areas extremely close to Hefner's. Yet, in the Burns Park area, as well as at the Michigan Leage,. both Hefner and Hesel were o t- polled by Marcia Fedrbush, who in her initial candidate stateme stressed a, women's liberation platform, and by Nancy Brussolo, a member of the coinodttee which formulated the "Humane- ness in Education" report. These areas also supported the defeated millage proposal. Yet, in spite of the strong showing by RIP and the more liberalcandi- dates. Heusel, Renken and Bol- house, won their victories by comnfortable margins. The University Players 3rd Exciting Summer Repertory Season! MICHIGAN'7 "A SUPERIOR COMPANY!"-MichigartDaily * TWELFTH NIGHT.- Shakespeare's finest comedy * YOU NEVER CAN TELL Shaw on the generation gap * A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE Tennessee Williams' powerful, prize-winning drama * FIVE ON THE BLACK HAND SIDE Charlie Russel's witty and provocative dissection of family life in Black America I I 1 In -Repertory July 13-24 July 21-31 August 3-1 AVOID BOX OFFICE RUSH ORDER TICKETS NOW! ALL PERFORMANCES IN THE AIR CONDITIONED LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday July 13-17 J13 12th J 14 You J 15 12th Jl6 You J17 12th July 20-24 J20 You J21 12th J22 You J23 12th J24 You July 27-31 J27 S-car J28 S-car J29 S-car J30 S-car J31 S-car Aug. 3-7 A3 Five A4 Five A5 Five ! A6 Five A7 Five SEASON SUBSCRIBERS PLEASE NOTE: By ordering the same day for all four weeks you auto- matically see all four plays. When you have completed your order below check your choices on this performance schedule and keep it for your own record. TICKET INFORMATION -The box office will open June 21. From June 21 until July 9 it will be open 12:30-5:00 Mon-Fri. From July 12 to August 7 it will be open 12:30-8:00 on performance days. Mail orders will be filled prior to the opening of the box office. Season ticket sales begin June 21; single tickets on sale from July 1. PRICES: (SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS OFFER SAVINGS AND PREFERRED LOCATIONS) Season Subscriptions: REGULAR: ITues., Wed., Thurs.)--$6.50, $5.00 WEEKEND: (Fri., Sat.) ,$8.50, $7.00 r MIXED: (weekdays and weekends mixed) -add 50c for each Friday or Saturday ticket ordered to regular price above Individual Tickets: TUES., WED., THURS.-$2.00, $1.50 FRI., SAT.-$2.50, $2.00 NOTE: The higher priced tickets are the first 1 7 rows of orchestra and first 4 rows of balcony Season Subscription [3 NAME -._ Individual Tickets E PREFER: Orchestra Q] PLEASE ADDRESS Balcony s " C PRINT CiTY ___AT Are you on our mailing list? " PHONE ZIP S--- - Faculty Mail orders to UNIVERSITY PLAYERS " Studene DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH UNiVERSITY OF MICHIGAN E Ann Arbor 9 ANN ARBOR, MICH. 48104 Q Visitor PLAY Performance (day and date) No. Price Office Use OC'lly 12TH - . o - -1 - * _YOU S-CAR FIVE TOTAL (Season price or individual tickets_ (For mixed season add 50c for each Fri. or Sot. to regular season) CHECK ONE: E I enclose stamped, self addressed envelope. Please mail my tickets July 5. E I enclose no envelope. Hold my tickets at the box office. I will pick them up. (See box office hours above.) 4 a A