Sunday, September 8, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Sunday, September 8, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe NOON LUNCHEON S I Monday, Sept. 9 25c Brooke, Morton hit GOP overconfidence OKLAHOMA CITY (M)-Two Republican senators warn- ed against over confidence yesterday as a result of the large and enthusiastic crowds attracted by Richard M. Nixon in the first three days of his campaigning for President. "I want to warn everybody, from the county chairmen on up, 'Don't sit on your duffs now, boys, and do what we did in 1948," said Sen. Thurston Morton of Kentucky. Sen. Edward Brooke of Massachusetts also referred to the 1948 presidential election. He said Nixon should not "play it PROF. HOWARD SCHUMAN, director of Detroit Area Study. Contributed to Kerner Report: "DY- NAMICS OF 'URBAN' DISORDERS." U. S. increases Vietnam assault Trap VC in Mekong Delta attack, terrorist attempts reported in -Saigon SAIGON (-Eight companies of U.S. infantrymen drew a circle around a Viet Cong force in the Mekong Delta last night while artillery and air strikes pounded the center of the ring. Field reports said 31 enemy had been killed when dark- ness fell. There were reports of U.S. casualties, The action, 20 miles south of Saigon, erupted after two companies from the U.S. 9th Infantry Division were landed along the Ben Tre River and made contact with a enemy :.... Friday and Saturday $5 Al Other $00 Eves. and All Day P er Sunday Performances LU NCH DISCUSSiONI TUESDAY, September 10, 12:00 Noon Subjept: "INTERNATIONAL UNDERSTANDING- TODAY'S IMPERATIVE" Speaker-PAUL R. DOTSON Director of Ecumenical Campus Center For Reservations Sponsored by the' Call 662-5529 Ecumenical Campus Center ii ~fI, Soviet aide meets with Dubek PRAGUE ('P)-Soviet trouble- shooter Vasily V. Kuznetsov met yesterday with Alexander Dubcek, the Communist party boss whose reforms caused Soviet-led occupa- tion troops to invade Czecho- slovakia Aug. 20-2 1. An official announcement said the two exchanged views on rela- tions between their two countries. It did not elaborate. Kuznetsov, the Soviet Union's first deputy foreign minister and a member of the Soviet Commu- nist party's Central Committee, arrived here Friday to seek a political solution to the occupati:2n. He met that day with Presi- dent Ludvik Svoboda in what an official announcement called "a frank and comradely exchange." In Communist terminology "frank" means they disagreed. - Tass and the Czechoslovak Com- munist party organ Rude Pravo gave prominent play to a speech by Gustave Husak, chief of the Slovak Communist tparty. It in- dicated the outlines of a govern- ment policy acceptable to the Soviets. WANT TO STOP FEELING SORRY FOR YOURSELF? The Univ. of Michigan. Tutorial Project is sponsoring a program at the Mental Halfway House. WE NEED YOU. People are needed to spend one evening a week tutoring' and socializing with emotionally disturbed women from ages 17 to 25 who have no social contacts outside their home. For informa-j tion call Susan Mintz, 761-7166.- PATTERNS, 4safe" in spite of the recep- tions he has had to date. In the 1948 election the Repub- lican candidate for president, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, expected to defeat President Harry Truman long before t h e election. Republican over-confi- dence was ascribed as a major factor in Dewey's defeat. Morton and Brooke made their statements in a news conference in Houston before flying with Nixon to Oklahoma City. Meanwhile, Nixon and Brooke asknowledged that they have dif- ferences on certain issues. Bu t Brooke emphatically denied ru- mors that he is leaving Nixon's campaign. "I want to hang in with him all the way," Brooke told a newsman on the way to Oklahoma City. He said he and Nixon had discussed their differences before he joined Nixon's campaign team, and add- ed that he is not "disaffected." Nixon talked with newsmen and said, "The differences a r e not significant." Brooke is returning to the Sen- ate next Monday. But Nixon said, "He will be returning to the cam- paign in about a week." "I w i11 do whatever Richard Nixon, asks me to do," Brooke said. "I fully support him and will cam- paign vigorously for him." Both Brooke and Morton said they were surprised by the throngs that turned out to see Nixon in Chicago, San Francisco, Santa Clare, Calif., and Houston. Nixon said in Houston, "These are October crowds, not Septem- ber," and he said they portend a "great Republican groundswell." In Houston, the crowd was so great that several thousand peo- ple, standing on the down side of a knoll in a park could not even see the former vice president. Morton called all this "heady wine" and he said Nixon would not let this prevent him "from be- ing definitive on the issues." Nixon, in his Chicago question- and-answer telecast, said he would not comment on the Chicago dis- orders because investigations had been opened both on the federal and local levels. FALL MEETING: Johnson may hold Viet summit talks > -Associated Press U.S. troops retake a hilltop north of Saigon. Meanwhile, land forces, supported by heavy bombing, near Saigon to encircle the enemy., "From the moment of my birth To the instant of my death There are patterns I must follow Just as I must breathe each breath. Like a rat in a maze The path before me lies And the pattern, never alters Until the rat dies."s -Simon and Garfunkel IS THERE AN ALTERNATIVE TO FATALISM? Hear Calvin Malefyt, Ph.D. 10:30 A.M. Sunday University Reformed Church (East Huron at Fletcher) 7 P.M.--SMALL GROUPS AND CHANGE" PROFESSOR ROBERT NYKAMP Western Theological Seminary WASHINGTON (P) President Johnson is expected to meet in mid-Pacific this fall with the heads of other nations supplying' troops to South Vietnam, several administration officials indicated yesterday. A report in the Washingtonj Expect new Pueblo report WASHINGTON (1)-U.S. radio monitors were alterted yesterday, to the possibility that North Koiea may broadcast an important state- ment. today. Washington officials took a' wait-and-see attitude, however, on whether the expected Pyongyang statement would shed any new light on the Communists' inten- tions about the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo. The Communists seized the vessel off Wonsan Jan. 23 and have rebuffed U.S. efforts to get back the ship and its 82 surviving crewmen. Evening Star said informed di- plomatic sources had reported that several leaders, of Southeast Asia believe a summit meeting will be held before the end of this year. Johnson told a news conference Friday he had "no new travel plans in the offing," but did not want to preclude the possibility of a trip. His statements came in reply to questions about possible: travel to Europe for a meeting with leaders of the Soviet Union or to South America. White House press secretary George Christian said he knew of no definite plans for such a meeting. $ut he noted that John- son himself has said the general policy is to have a summit ses- sion about every six months. The newspaper said its sources thought the meeting would prob- ably take place in October in Honolulu. The President met with South Vietnamese P r e s i d e n t Nguyen Van Thieu in Honolulu in July. Last April, he met with President Chung Hee Park of South Korea there. force of about the same size. The enemy began breaking up into small groups, some plunging into the river in an effort to dis- perse. While a ground thrust by the Viet Cong on the South Vietnam- ese capital still is not considered imminent, there was an increase in the terror campaign, with seven incidents reported in the city since Most of the incidents were re- latively minor following an ex- plosion that demolished a govern- 4ment information office Friday night, killing nine persons and in- juring 55. American military personnel in the capital were directed to take special precautions and stay off the streets at night, keep their weapons with them. at all times and travel only in military ve- hicles. 1 Authorities said it still was too early to define the latest pattern of the war, but there was some feeling that the increased terror- ism was part of enemy strategy calling for harassing attacks in outlying areas and terror tactics and shellings in populated areas. In the Mekong Delta action, helicopter gunships raked them with rockets and machine guns while reinforcements moved in to support the Americans. Before darkness, the circle maneuver was being employed with increasing frequency and success by the 9th Division in the delta. Chandler eyed for VP spot MONTGOMERY, Ala. () - Sources close to George Wallace said that "unless there is a last- minute change," the former Ala- bama governor will announce foriher Kentucky Gov. A. B. Chandler as his running mate at a news conference Tuesday in Wash-. ington. There was no confirmation from Wallace or members of his staff that the onetime baseball com- missioner will run with him under the emblem of his American In- dependent party. "They've told me Chandler is going to be nominated," said Pete Brown, a Lexington real estate man, "I know he's going to be." Thi.e assesses Viet talKs VI THANH, South Vietnam (M - President Nguyen Van Thieu said yesterday the en- emy will have to soften peace terms at the Paris talks un- less they win some spectacular battle. "We are winning and they realize they cannot win a spectaculgr victory," Thieu told newsmen during a tour of the Mekong Delta. "If they don't obtain such a victory they will have to adopt a new attitude, perhaps a softer at- titude, because they cannot do otherwise." Commenting on the renewed enemy attacks two weeks ago that broke a two-month lull in the ground war, Thienu said, "They would like to sustain the pressure around the, cities and at the same time spoil and disrupt our pacifi- cation program." He added that the pattern of light and scattered attacks show- ed the Viet Cong "were wiser than before." "They like to attack our out- posts now and are =reluctant to attack the cities 'although they would still like to," said Thieu. "We have upset them. What they want to do now is to sustain their force for a longer time to have an influence on U.S. and world opinion. t "They 'wish to show they are strong and perhaps influence the new President of the United States." Asked if he thought the next U.S. President might alter Amer- ican policy in Vietnam. Thieu re- plied that/ he didn't, think "any president would= like to concede to the Viet Cong when we are win- ning and have showed our willing- ness to seek peace." 7I - TONIGHT - j y BUDDY GUY BLUES BAND BElT MIDASH-College of Jewish Studies-1429 Hill SI. Registration & First Course Sessions: Wed., Sept. 11 and Thurs., Sept. 12, 7:30 P.M. at; DOORS OPEN Admission $2.00 at the door, yes NEXT WEEK!! SPIDER JOHN!!! Open to Everyone-FREE College level courses to ught by University faculty BASIC JUDAISM BIBLICAL LITERATURE Book of Ezekiel Talmud JEWISH MUSICOLOGY HEBREW LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE For beginners, intermediates, advdnced YIDDISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Hillel Grad Mixer Sun., Sept. 8 8 P.M. CONTEMPORARY JEWISH HISTORY & THOUGHT For more information call 663-4129 MUSIC .. BEER I FCCOMMENTARY REFRESHMENTS 75c members You must be 21 $1.00 others to attend All Welcome 1429 Hill St. LEROI JONES AND THE BLACKARTS THEATER SEPTEMBER 17-29 MOLIERE'S -Dtd by " Adapted by Richard Wilbur 4 A delightful satiric romp Presenting "A BLACK MASS" Tonight-8:O0 P.M. OCTOBER 1-13 A contemporary approach to Shakespeares Directed by Ellis Rabb - Music by Conrad Susa , ( I OCTOBER 15-27 .f _ T'he conmedv-.fntas v y amaster of mordern theatre. SE 'S A uA HILL AUDITORIUM Profits will go to support the I I I .U I