Thursday, August 29, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three T h R s d y u u si9 9 6 H I C H G N D I YP g h e IT [Ii Ike no longer 'critical' WASHINGTON OP) -- Doctors artery disease, his present con adf- The University of AMichigan GILBERT and SULLIVAN SOCIETY MASS for'former president Dwight D. Eisenhower said last night they no longer consider his immediate condition as critical But his overall situation follow- ing his seventh heart.attack Aug. 16 is serious, they said. In response to questions from reporters the doctors said it is not yet possible 'to say whether Eisen- hower will be able to lead a rela-I tively 'normal life in ,the event he recovers. The doctors at the Army's Wal- ter Reed General Hospital said:I "Because of the extent of Gen Eisenhower's underlying coronar y 'f . Y.\...... f.***.... Wl V Ij %440 "Q%" llU II Ctll:llV4, tion must still be considered seri- ous, albeit not necessarily critical at this time. The long range out- I look is still guarded and the po- tential for sudden reversal of the current favorable trend is ever present." The doctors said that "critical" refers to severity of illness where the immediate outcome is in doubt "In the General's condition where a number of days have elapsed since the last occurence of life threatening rapid heart action we no longer view the immediate situation as critical but still view the overall disease as 'serious," they shid. MEET G Lose Somneth In JAiIJI I UI LL UY Los, 5t71tfl iYl u nnoer asgone lour tdays without suffering a recurrence of Find it with a major heart rhythm disturbances. The doctors said that they at- tribute Eisenhower's apparent ral- D l lSly to a combination of medical treatment and- what they called . the natural recovery process. Kre mlii MOSCOW ()-The Soviet press hinted yesterday that the Kremlin is bearing down on Czechoslo- vakia's leaders to purge outspoken advocates of the country's reform movement. Two newspapers charged that "enemies of the people"-a term used in past Soviet-inspired purges -were still operating in Czecho- slovakia despite the occupation by Soviet bloc troops.; Singled out as targets were Czechoslovakia's free radio sta- tions and a leading Czechoslovak force for further liberalization, a political group called Club 231. This is a group of previously, purged persons who were reha- bilitated during the Czechoslovak liberalization drive earlier this year, and had been urging the government to expand "their re In the first major Soviet com- ment on the four-day talks be- tween Soviet and Czechoslovak leaders in Moscow, Pravda com- mentator Yurt Zhukov wrote that "measures were worked out that will favor the elimination of the menace to socialism.'' He did not spell out those A measures, but implied in an article A C in the Communist party news- street paper that they involved strong actions against the previously un-o D censored Czechoslovak news media DO' and unnamed individuals he la- beled "enemies of the Czechdnd Slovak people." Khukov complained that "nu- merous clandestine transmitters are continuing to operate." It de- nounced these radio stations for supporting new, liberal ;ruling e bodies of the Czechoslovak party elected at a secret congress after SAIGC the Soviet bloc in-vasion.I demand 1 assails and 11 TRYOUTS for ~THE GONDOLIERS THURSDAY 29 AUGUST 7:15 P.M., 3RS MICHIGAN UNION "A STUNNING, BEAUTIFULLY MADE FILM- ONE THAT YOU WILL NOT FORGET!" -Judith Cr~st. NBC-TV Today Show "SO BEAUTIFULLY AND THOUGHTFULLY MADE! There are moments of great suspense... everything, every sound is a threat. The use of music and sound...is very effective and delicate. Brynych becomes With this movie quite simply one of the, best directors we have!" .-.at Adler, New York Timos "EXCEPTIONALLY POWERFUL IN BOTH CONCEPT AND EXECUTION! A HIGH LEVEL OF CREATIVE CINEMA!" -Tme Mogor-- "DAZZLING AND TO THE POINT!" -pnelope Gilot, T, he N.w Yorker "BRILLIANT! REMARKABLE!" -Joseph Morgenuten, Newsweek a ,FEW FILMS ARE WORTHY-OF BEING CALLED ARTISTIC. THIS IS ONE! Brilliantly accomplished!" r -Moths Alp.rt, Saturday R. iow -Ass LUMN OF SOVIET TANKS line up yesterday near Old Town Square in Prague. EAD 1.S. bombing lrn yt , un PRAGE (a- Ter, eh pull- out; dryefotdrmsstindead Condemnin as cupato illegal ~ '~ PRAGUE (A'---'The Czecho- Inslovak National Assembly yester- day adopted aresolution demand-d ing a 'firm deadline for the with- drasal of Soviet-led occupation troops and condemning the occ- . pation as illegal. Informants said the National SAssemblyalso declared it could =h not ratify the Moscow agreem'ent pbecause it was reached under oc.td Press ere, was no immediate? 1'e- .in pot from a secret meeting of the .,Communist party Central Cor- .' mittee of its position on the Mos- cow accord that continues the oc- cupation and has forced the Czechoslovak regime to rein u Son its liberalizing program. But sources indicated that op- ~ position to ,the terms of the settle- ociahd Press ment was hardening rapidly e- in a side spite appeals by AlexanderDb- cek, the party leader, andPresis- mdent Ludvik gvoboda Tuesday for Czechoslovak understanding while they work to end the occupation. Dubcek was expected to address the Central Committee meeting S Veat the clandestine Communist .t s headquarters. ILLEGAL th. h h "The National Assembly s con- tinues to regard the occupatior rs of the Czechoslovak Socialist Re- public. by forces of five states of the Warsaw Pact as Illegal andl as e Viet Cong violating international treatesr outh Viet- the U.N. charter and the Warsaw ounded five act, said a Free Prague raio It was the broadcast.I th that the "The National Assemblyis con vinced that our armed forces are nemy gun- capable of security of our western A bigmU.S. frontierand calls on the govern- I Nang 7and ment to insist the fuing of ard t fire slam- adherence to concrete datksfor ,ck barrage, the withdrawal of foreign troops. dualties sand "At the same time we maintain at the 4th that all our citizens who hae base, about been illegally detaned and im- sf Da Nang. prisoned by 'Czechoslovak and B52 bomb- foreign organs since Aug. 24 should' ions against be released." ions in s the SHOWDOWN TALKS The assembly statement reaf- flew. 10o 7 firmed *support of Dubcek's r- the North, fomist leadership and thanked U.S. hpead- Czechoslovak leaders for their ef- rday. Pilots forts atthe showdown talksidn r damaging Moscow. It also added that the seven fires "National Assembly is convinced S dumps thats this country's only plae is ie the community of Socialist na- ed anuun- etions." tsv. plane was Reformist sources said that yesterday Dubeek has been asked to deny irters main- rumors he' Yielded to 'Soviet de- omnmenting mands to declare the special 14th f.ned flights party congress illegal. The con- gress met secretly last weeka and ,elected a liberal CentralComit- tee replacing onemthat stil in- cluded a strongconsrvative wg. Informants said there sas grow- ing opinion that Dbcek hould be voted outof office if he confirmed the rumor. This could result in two rival central committees 'with reformists holding membership Int both. The congress of the Slvak Communist party also was under way at Bratislava with increasing signs 'that delegates would sup- port reformist efforts to oust Vasil Bilak, the orthodox first Slova1 ' secretary. ON (M) - More than 3001 Jipnme t tn hpl md t I I. COME ONE! COME ALL! G&S is the U-M's ONLY YEAR-ROUND MUSICAL THEATER GROUP and We are planning now for our next two G&S shows plus a hit-Broadway musical! So-JOIN US NOW and get in on the Ground Floor! I Presents INGMAR' BERGMAN'S THE, {SEVENTH- (1956) "God is dead or death isGod" 7:00 & 9:05 Thursday and Friday ARCHITECTURE AUD. iJorn Viena.mese roops eLa ou in bunkers against a heavy allied air and Artillery bombardment yesterday night after losing 84 dead in a battle with U.S. air cav- alrymen along an infiltratiori route northwest of Saigon. U.S. 'headquarters said Jets, helicopter gunships and artillery were supporting troops of the 101st Air Cavalry Division battling to dislodge the enemy force in jungled terrain 34 'miles north- west of Saigon. American casual- ties were termed light.' 'The presence of North ,Viet- namese troops so close to Saigon, coupled with fresh rocket attacks on the capital, gave rise to new unconfirmed reports of an im- pending -enemy assault against Saigon. Several hundred police swept through the heart of Saigon as a 10 p.m. curfew went into ef- fect. They searched buildings and checked residents' identification papers, presumably looking for enemy infiltrators, Artillery barrages were heavier than usual along the southern fringes of the capital, particularly near a slum area wher rockets killed three S namese civilians and wi others early yesterday third time in two mon city was shelled Far to the no th, e ners opened up onA supply base near Dan sent 10 rounds of"rocke ming in during a qui First reports said cas damage were light a Logistics Command b two miles northwest o In the air war; U.S.- ers flew 11 more missic suspected enemy posit South. U.S. strike planes' missions Tuesday over Vietnamese Panhandle quarters reported yeste reported destroying or 20 trucks{and setting; indicating ammuniti were hit. Radio Hanoi claim manned AmericanI downed over Hanoi morning. V.S. headqua tains a policy of not c on reports of unman over the North.' NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION STARTS TODAY 1 FOX EASTERN THEATRE- FORVILLBG!E 375 N MAPLE RD. "764~340 NOW SHOWING DIAL 8 6416 We Need} SINGERS ACTORS DANCERS TECH CREWS and t/ OUR ALL-CAM PUS ORCHESTRA NEEDS MUSICIANS to play for 4 The Gilbert & Sullivan Society * MUSKET '69 * Ann Arbor Junior Light Opera * Ann Arbor Civic Theater NOW in its FOURTH WEEK! I 7 I Paramount Pictures Presents MiaFarrow In a William Castle Production wfa s ,s~tm I Il I 110 1