THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 15, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 15, 1968 University Players Department of Speech present N. Vietnamese accused of 'meddling' in politics PARIS (MP) - The United States policy. No sign of progress was accused North Vietnam yesterday detected by Harriman. of meddling in American politics, Harriman, acting on instruc- and demanded that it quit. Spurn- tions from Washington, called on ing the demand, Hanoi's Ambas- Thuy to quit "trying to interfere sador Xuan Thuy accused Presi- in internal American affairs" dent Johnson's admiistration of with constant comments on the forcibly suppressing opposition to presidential election contest I the Vietnam war. Thuy's statement was made in the 19th session of the Paris peace talks. U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman called for a start in ser- ious peacemaking with an end to what he described as North Viet- namese interference in American internal affairs. The three-hour session focused on the issue of American bombing Pueblo talks WASHINGTON (P)- The State Department indicated today that a new secret meeting has been arranged between U.S. and North Korean representatives on the re- lease of the captured intelligence ship Pueblo and its 82 surviving officers and crew. The timing of the meeting was not disclosed but press officer Robert J. McCloskey told news- men, "I anticipate there will be a meeting." There have been 19, earlier meetings at Panmunjom in the demilitarized zone between North .and South Korea. Thuy displayed his disinterest in the protest by sailing o n c e more into a freewheeling assault on the Johnson administration. "Among the American people the voice against the U.S. war of aggression in Vietnam is every day growing louder," Thuy told Harri- man. "This is why in t h e present election campaign, in o r d e r to cope with the indignation of the people, the U.S. authorities have had to use barbed wire and tens of thousands of troops and police agents." Both in and outside the confer- ence the men dwelt on North Viet- nam's main demand - the ending of all U.S. military action against its territory. Both stood fast on their old positions. Before going into the meeting, Harriman said he would call on North Vietnam "to stop the car- nage, stop the fighting, and get on with the making, of peace." "But if your choice is continued fighting, and the continued use of force and terror to achieve your goals, you will find that the people of South Vietnam will continue to resist you with all their strength-as they have over the past decade." THE THREE CANDIDATES for the Democratic presidential nomination met Tuesday before the balloting for a bit of friendship. The familiar faces are Hubert Humphrey, left, Eugene McCarthy, middle, and George McGovern, right. Factionalismn at convention 0 PLAYBILL '68 -'69 may have lasting impact J . . ,4, zr_ featuring 6 GREAT PLAYS and a PREMIERE PRODUCTION Only 24 hours eariler the spokesman had said there had been no response to U.S. requests for a meeting. The last talks were held July 9. I Downtow~ vn Honda Euripides' THEHBACCHAE William Shakespeare's THE TEMPEST I By CARL P. LEUBSDORF Associated Press News Analyst CHICAGO - The confronta- tion of forces at this Democratic National Convention is more basic than traditional political faction- alism, and thus more likely to have a lasting impact on the par- ty's course. J This is not a situation in which one group of party leaders, sup- porting Hubert H. Humphrey, fights to fend off other groups backing Sens. Eugene J. McCar- thy, George S. McGovern or Ed- ward M. Kennedy. Rather, it is a challenge of groups with important generation- al and ideological differences: the political neophytes and the party pros, the militant blacks and the traditional white ethnic groups and, in John F. Kennedy's phrase, the New Frontier and the Old. It is the type of conflict that could not have erupted among Republicans, who have managed to maintain a basic homogeneity despite the fact it has kept them a minority for most of the past three decades. And it is the kind that will not be halted among Democrats by a successful drive by party regulars to win the presidential nomination for Humphrey. Some party leaders have joined with the insurgents in states such as New York and California to Harold Pinter's THE HOMECOMING HONDA HEADQUARTERS protect their own positions. But the driving force behind the coalition that has challenged the party establishment in one floor fight after another has been the young lawyers and housewives, the civil right fighters and the. anti- war activists-plus their, old line liberal allies-who have entered the main Democratic arena and tried to capture it.I Similar groups, though less mili- tant ones, were led into party ranks by Adlai E. Stevenson in the 1950's and played ', key role in John F. Kennedy's 1960 vic- tory. Whether it has been the Viet- nam war, growing racial unrest or the candidacy, of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy-and that of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy-that loosed this force, it is here and stronger than many had imagined.j The challenges to the regular party organizations in Georgia and Texas, beaten back by the convention under prodding from Humphrey leaders who feared a disruption of their New Deal-type coalition, have, won wider support here than is held by the anti- Humphrey presidential forces. And the anti-establishment co- alition victory in overriding the Rules Committee to force Texas and other-'states to drop the unit! rule from the precinct level on up starting in 1972. The unit rule, as used through- out the political structure, is the way regulars have kept their op- ponents on the outside in Texas, for years. Presumably now, more people with dissenting views will be 'able to get in as they have in other states.1 Besides the big delegations of California and New York, which have more than 10 per, cent of all convention voting strength, sup- port in these votes has come from the McCarthyite visitors of New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Oregon,' from Gov. Harold E. Hu'ghes' Iowans and McGovern's South Dakotans, tand from, the newly seated biracial loyalists of Georgia and Mississippi. This coalition, as the procedural test votes clearly show, is not yet a majority. And even on Vietnam, as on the unit rule, it was depen- dent on support from party reg- ulars. But those who have taken over local and state Democratic parties as part of the McCarthyite effort are likely to persist past 1968. And a defeat this year of the party's national ticket, which so many here freely predict, will only spur increased efforts in 1972, even though the spark of Vietnam might be extinguished by then. Chicago police irk newsmen CHICAGO WP)-Foreign .sews- men from East and West have heaped scorn and mockery on police actioes and security meas- ures at the 'Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Dispatches to their papers bristle with refer- ences to "storm troopers" and "concentration camps,." Winston 'S. Churchill, who like his famous grandfather, is start- ing life as a correspondent, wrote in the London Evening News: "The Chicago police department are primitive in their actions and mulish in their, mentality.> Jour- nalistic sorties in the past have taken me to Aden, Yemen, Angola,, the Congo, Borneo, Vietnam and Israel. In none of these did I feel the necessity of wearing a steel helmet. I now rather regret not having brought with me the one I picked up in the Sinai Desert a year ago." John Pilger of the L o n d o n Daily Mirror wrote, "We are con- vened in a building called the In- ternational Amphitheater which. stands beside the Chicago stock- yards where the cattle and the pigs are surrounded by an ordin- ary fence and we, the people are surrounded by barbed wire and by soldiers and police and deputy sheriffs and Secret Service men with guns and tanks and planes at the ready and little canisters of spray which, when squirted, dis- able the body and the mind." *i rK 'F' ""S. ':..i -, In cooperation with the Department of English BANG! BANG! YOU'RE DEAD! A Premiere. Production by Mack Owen Immediate Delivery Wenk Sales and Service, Inc. 310 E. Washington 665-8637 4 John Osborne s THE ENTERTAINER s . ' '1 ; Anton Chekhov's THE CHERRY ORCHARD Aristophanes' LYSISTRATA W4elcome Students Come Visit RADIO TRONICS The Electronic Discount Center with the new look. In many states, procedural votes have been directly In line with Humphrey-anti-Humphrey senti- ment. ----------- --..-.--.------------------1 [ FOR SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS [ [ Enclosed find $ for______________ (number) season I subscriptions at the price of $10.00 , $7.00 , [ plus. 50c for each ticket for each FRIDAY or SATURDAY evening performance checked below. THE BACCHAE I Wed., Oct. 2 Fri., Oct. 4 * I Thur., Oct. 3 Sat., Oct. 5 THE 'HOMECOMING [ Wed., Oct. 30 Fri., Nov. 1 * Thur., Oct. 31 Sat., Nov. 2 * THE TEMPEST 1 Wed., Nov. 20 Fri., Nov. 22 *x [ Thur., Nov. 21- Spt., Nov. 23 * 1 MATINEE: Sat., Nov. 23 SBANG! BANG! YOU'RE DEADI Wed., Jan. 29} Fri., Jan. 31 'x_____ I Thur., Jan. 30 Sat., Feb. 1 *_ THE ENTERTAINER[ Wed., Feb. 19 . 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