FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY illiams, Griffin Battle in Close Senatorik PAGE THREE il ace EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth in a series on state- wide offices at stake in the Nov. 8 election. It deals with the race for U.S. senator., By The Associated Press Michigan's senatorial election will give voters what both candi- dates admit is a choihe between a yes-man and a no-man. They will choose between Dem- ocrat G. Mennen Williams, who voices solid support for. Johnson Administration policies, and Re- publican Sen. Robert Griffin, who has voted "no" on most Democra- tic legislation. The outcome of the battle be- tween Williams, a former six-term governor, and Griffin, a former five-term congressman, remains in doubt. Some polls give Williams a slight edge, others show Griffin in the lead.' Unknown factors in the race are six kidney stones, an expensive primary election and the death of Democratic Sen. Patrick McNa- mara, whose vacant seat is being filled by Griffin. Also listed among the impon- derables is the impact on voters of an all-out campaign effort by Gov. George Romney to help Griffin become the first Republi- can senator elected in Michigan in 14 years. Romney appointed Griffin to the Senate last May, a move which Democrats concede gave the GOP candidate a boost in his campaign. Thn last August, shortly after Inflicting a resounding defeat on Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh in the primary, the 55-year-old Williams underwent surgery for removal of the kidney stones. Democrats bemoan the fact the two candidates spent nearly $700,- 000 in their intraparty fight. It was money they could have put to good use in trying to topple Grif- fin. And Griffin supporters are whispering that Williams' opera- tion merely underscores their man's "Youth and Experience" slogan, with an accent on youth. Griffin is 42. The recuperation period took him off the campaign trail for five weeks, a development which may explain why he slipped a notch in some public opinion polls. There has been no visible let- down in the vigor of Williams' attacks on Griffin's 10-year voting record in Congress. Griffin, he says, "voted consis- tently against the progressive pro- grams of the eKnnedy-Johnson administrations. Now, in a state- wide Senate campaign, he presents himself as a moderate Republican. "But don't be fooled. His voting record proves he's followed the same old reactionary, anti-every- thing GOP line." Griffin replies that his opponent is distorting the record by picking out only a few of thousands of votes he cast on the House floor and in committee meetings. In turn, the senator accuses Wil- liams of having changed his tune on the Landrum-Griffin Act, which some labor leaders contend is antiunion. "Early in the campaign," says Griffin, "my opponent said I would have much to explain about my co-sponsorship of the Land- rum-Griffin legislation-but now he admits that he would have vot- ed for it." The two candidates held only one face-to-face formal debate, despite Griffin's repeated chal- lenge that Williams accept some of the free television time offered for a verbal duel. Underscoring the importance with which Michigan's senatorial race is regarded in national ciri- cles has been the caliber of top- ranking help sent into the state by both parties. Griffin has shared the spotlight with Romney and basked in the the praised heaped on him by the governor during most of the cam- paign. "This man has a great record in Washington, and I want you to keep him there," Romney has told rallies all over the state. "He's a credit to his state and to his coun- try." In his turn, Griffin has assail- ed Williams as having done a me- diocre job during his five years as assistant secretary of state for African Affairs, and contends his opponent earned the reputation of being Michigan's No. 1 problem- maker during his 12 years as gov- ernor. Williams has, in effect, had to fight three opponents. First, there was Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, who waged a hard-hitting primary campaign for the Democratic nomination. Then came the general election campaign, with both Griffin and Gov. George Romney to battle. Much of Williams' campaign thas been based on the contention that Griffin is an anti-people, an anti-everything candidate who compiled a sorry record during his ten years in Congress. "Now that the junior senator from Michigan is about to face the people in a statewide election he's trying very hard to pretend he's a moderate," Williams says. The truth is, says Williams, that if the majority of Congress had voted in the '60s the way Griffin did "our state would still be wal- lowing in the Republican recession with national automobile sales off and Michigan unemployment still up above 10 per cent." President Will Recommended Undergo Surgery UN COMMAND: Formally Accuse No. Koreans Of Killing Americans, Soldiers Political 'stumpign Cancelled General Health Good; Doctors To Operate Within Three Weeks WASHINGTON (A) - President Johnson will undergo surgery within the next 15 to 18 days. Johnson, who personally an- nounced the forthcoming opera- tion to newsmen summoned to the Cabinet Room, described it as an operation to "repair a defect at the site of the incision made dur- ing the gall bladder operation a year ago." t A small polyp will be removed from his throat at the same time. Less than two hours before Johnson made his announcement, press secretary Bill D.. Moyers told newsmen that "the President is in excellent health." Later statements by Johnson's doctors said his general health was excel- lent. With the announcement, John- son ended all speculation that he was planning a cross-country campaign swing prior to next Tuesday's elections to plug for the election of Democrats all the way down the line. Democratic politicians in more than a dozen states from Massa- chusetts to California have re- ported they expected Johnson for political speeches prior to the elections. Butheeding recommendations of his doctors, Johnson plans t get in as much rest as possible b prior to the operation instead of political campaigning. He will begin resting up at the' LBJ Ranch in Texas sometime today. Johnson, reading from a pre- pared statement, said that about six months ago a small bulge be- gan to appear in the region of the scar from last year's operation on the right side of his abdomen. Al- though it would disappear from time to time, he said, "I experi- enced -a continuing soreness and a drawing sensation. The protru- sion has enlarged recently and the soreness has recurred, and the doc- tors have recommended surgery." Johnson said Vice Adm. George G. Burkley, the White House psys- ician, recommended to him in Seoul, South Korea on Tuesday that the operation take place within about 15 to 18 days from now and that he agreed to the recommendation. Burkley, who keeps daily watch over the President's health, said Johnson's general health contin- ues to be excellent, and that there is no indication of any serious problem in either instance. Doctors described the abdominal protrusion as an "incisional her- nia." One of the President's doctors who was present, James C. Cain, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., said the protrusion at times reaches the size of a silver dollar. Burkley explained that at the time of the President's gall blad- der surgery Oct. 8, 1965, drains were placed in the abdominal wall about one inch from the end of the incision on the right side. When the drains were removed, he added, the wound appeared to R heal completely but that on sev- eral occasions a drawing pain was noticed in the region of the scar, localized where the drains had been removed. He said a small protrusion was first noted last April. Burkley said the protrusion has . enlarged somewhat in the last * * * * * 7S * * * Inflationary Price Rise Exerts Pressure On Unstable South Vietnamese Economy SAIGON (P)-The cost of rice- Viet Nam's staple food-has in- creased 16 per cent over last month, and the country's fragile economy faces a new surge of in- flation. Economists reported yesterday that Saigon's consumer price in- dex rose 13 per cent in the past two weeks. They said it was re- lated to political infighting in South Viet Nam, among other things. Economy Minister Au Truong Thanh resigned two weeks ago in a turbulent political dispute. Ex- perts say the manner in which Thanh quit shook the economy as much as his resignation. Thanh made public letters to SCuba Asks Hanoi To Resist U.S., Soviet Peace Efforts businessmen warning that re- newed inflation was likely in 1967. Consumer costs here rose about 100 per cent between April 1965, when the buildup of American troopsb.gean, and June 1966, when drastic financial reforms were undertaken. Thanh, who is regarded as an able, experienced minister whh oolitical ambitions, supervised these reforms. Viet Nam devalued the piaster by 50 per cent-a dollar now is officially worth -f18 plasters- and slapped higher taxes on luxury goods last June 20. The result was a spurt in prices followed by a period of stabilization during which living costs held steady. Gold Prices Good prices actually dropped during September. Experts said Thanh had pulled off necessary reforms and he was regarded as MOSCOW (P)-There are signs that Cuba is encouraging Hanoi to take a tough stand against the United States, while trying to head off any Soviet moves toward peace in Viet Nam. This may help explain the inde- cisive outcome of the Communist summit conference in Moscow two weeks ago. The nine-nation meeting dis- cussed the Viet Nam war and what is described as China's ob- struction of Communist aid de- liveries across Chinese territory to Hanoi. China hahs seemed fear- ful that extensive Soviet-bloc aid would increase Kremlin influence in Hanoi. Communist sources suggest the purpose of the conference was to coordinate bloc policies for a slow, careful effort to move out of the present deadlock. This is inconfirmed, although curious variations in the way the Soviet attitude on Viet Nam has been expressed recently tend to support the view. Cuba's ability to directly block any Soviet peace effort would be limited but it has supported Han- oi's unyielding line that the war must end in a complete Commu-1 nist victory. The summit meeting ended with a communique saying opinions had1 been exchanged on international problems "in an atmosphere of fraternal cordiality and friend- ship."' It did not claim agreement, as many Communist communiquesl do, There might have been disa- greement with Romania, which has avoided speaking out against China in the Moscow-Peking dis- pute. But this problem is believed to have been papered over before the meeting. a key minister in Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's regime. However, Thanh is a Southerner and one of seven Cabinet members who resigned in a regional dispute last month. Thanh and fellow Southern Vietnamese regard Ky and the governmental inner circle as intruders. Ky and his ,losest advisers come from what is now Communist North Viet Nam. Less than a month ago, Presi- dent Johnson had commended the South Vietnamse government on taking action on the inflationary front. Announcing that consumer pri- ces jumped 13 per cent in the past two weeks, economists noted Saigon's consumer price index rose 53 per cent for the cost of over two weeks ago. The index is a rough economic barometer based on 22 foods and six non-food items in Saigon's central market. The most expensive grades of rice cost 16 per cent more than they did a month ago. Experts blamed the political situation, military -operations in farm areas, price speculation and seasonal flooding in the Mekong River delta for the price boosts. One U.S. expert said the "most difficult problem in 1967 will be the cost of domestic food supply." SEOUL, South Korea (O)-The United Nations Command is for- mally accusing North Koreans yes- terday of killing six American and three South Korean soldiers in two unprovoked attacks that mar- red President Johnson's visit to South Korea. The Military Armistice Commis- sion was summoned to an emer- gency meeting at Panmunjom, in the border demilitarized zone, to air charges about the attacks and other incidents over the last two weeks, regarded here as the grav- est since a truce ended the Kor- ean War in 1953. Truce Center Panmunjom, the truce center where opposing delegations have exchanged thousands of charges, is about six miles west of the rocky knoll where Communist am- bushers wiped out an eight-man patrol of the U.S. 2nd Infantry Division early Wednesday. The hero of the Patrol's defen- sive fight-800 yards south of the demilitarized zone-was identified as Pvt. Ernest D. Reynolds, 20, of Kansas City, Mo. The division commander, Maj. Gen. George Pickett Jr., is recommending 1,im for a medal for bravery. Though on outpost duty 60 feet from the rest of the patrol, Rey- nolds chose to open up with his rifle rather than try to slip away in the night. He was killed along with five other Americans and a South Korean soldier attached to the patrol. The wounded lone survivor, Pfc. David E. Bibee, 17, of Ringgold, Va., said Reynolds was "one really brave guy." Hit by grenade fragments and CINEMA II PRESENTS TOM JONES in color With Albert Finney and Susannah York Friday, Saturday, and Sunday 7 & 9:15 PoM Aud. A, Angell Hall Many Seats Still Available temporarily knocked out, Bibee tion Hospital, 15 miles west of escaped by playing dead even while Seoul: one of the raiders stripped off his "We just didn't have a chance. wristwatch. They seemed to come from behind. Still suffering from shock, the The only thing I could make out youth said in an Interview from a was that there were at least six wheel chair at the 121st Evacua- of them." world News Roundup 50c Ie tt , I D Required TONIGHT! By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Praising Con- gress while he worked, President Johnson signed into law yester- day a series of acts widening fed- eral roles in health and education, in reshaping cities, in pollution control and in protection of con- sumers and children. 4 PROVIDENCE, R.I. - State workers who staged a work stop- page yesterday to press demands for pay boosts ran into a court injunction ordering them back on their jobs. Presiding Justice John E. Mullen of Superior Court issued the in- junction at the request of Re- publican Gov. John H. Chaffee, who had pledged to support the increase when the General Assem- bly convenes in January. * * * GUATEMALA-The Guatemalan' government decreed yesterday a state of siege in an action design- ed to curb terrorist activities and holdups which have been increas- ing lately. The suspension of constitutional rights, a modified form of martial law, was approved by President Julio Cesar Mendez and his Cab- inet just 126 days after he had .taken power as president. TONIGHT! Fearlessly Presents U BLOCK ORDERS TODAY and TOMORROW Hill Auditorium Box Office 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. ARK COFFEE HOUSE 1421 H ILL ST. LEE PANTAS SINGING AND PLAYING BLUES FRIDAY, NOV.4, 8:30-11:30 $1 .00 Cover Includes All Refreshments * U ! U 1 t ! U ! ! ! 1I t ! r U 1 ! ! 1 1 1 ! ! , I A SATYAJIT RAY FESTIVAL 1 * 1 ! I t Nov. 4 (one night only)r APARAJITO (1956) Is : Nov. 5 (one night only) * U THE WORLD OF APU (1958) Nov. 6 (one show only) THE ENTIRE APU TRILOGY" (dir. Satyajit Ray-1952/58) I U 1 Indian, subtitles. The greatest Cinematic Poem ever created. u Presented in cooperation with the University Dept. of East Asian i (Direct from Hill Auditorium) SINGING: READING: His Famous from the "Nickels Arboretum Song" "Rootie Kazootie Cycle" (condemned by the Save the Children Foundation) of "The Elder Edda" I And Oh, somuch more . .. $1.00 * FREE FOOD * G103 SOUTH QUAD * 8:30 .f: N+3 M;. :;.;..Y . v.. rr ,.+ xMM nEyn M is b M M ,y,:.am , ,ry, BOB 9 LEN CHANDLER folk singer and composer Columbia records recording artist FRAN KE . Michigan Men's Glee Club Northwestern Men's Glee Club appearing with: Len Chandler, on guitar Len Chandler, on voice Len Chandler, on stage "An excellent guitarist"-M. Bell "An excellent voice"--M. Bell "An excellent stage"--Michigan B. JOINTI GLEE CLUB CONCERTS ANIMAL CRACKERS! for true! B. B. BATS! for honest! LEN CHANDLER ! probably,! U . 0