PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER $, 1966 .. PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESD-YPNIV-M-VR0, IOVU I, Republicans Expected To Make Gains on All Levels of Balloting But Nation-wide Sweep Doubtful LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, November 8, 12:00 Noon U.M. International Center SUBJECT: "INDIVIDUAL ATTITUDES UNDERLYING CUBAN AND LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS" SPEAKER: MR. JOSEPH IGNATI LAMAS Graduate student in Psychology from Cuba (Continued from Page 1) They rode the Lyndon B. John- son landslide to victory in 1964, then, gave the administration com- forting and sometimes crucial votes, on item after item of John- son's "Great Society" legislation., They weren't always unani- mously with the administration. But enough of them were so that the Democrats would like to have them all back. In The Associated Press tally, 16 are leading, 11 trailing, and 17, Iowa 4th; Walter H. Moeller, Ohio 10th. On this basis, there could be an even-stephen split of the bell- weather districts. The House membership of 435 is divided now among 295 Dem- ocrats and 140 Republicans, coun- ting one vacancy for each party. A majority is 218. But the Democrats need more than 218 for a working majority, because many Southern conserv- atives often vote the way most of were tagged as tossups. the Republicans do. Six of. them represent weather- In the Kennedy administration, vane districts which consistently the Democrats got up to 260 in mirror .the shifting pattern of the the House, and that wasn't enough national vote, for an effective, working control. In these contests that bear The survey counts 5 Democrats watching for Tuesday trends, the who are expected to oust Republi- survey gives this reading: cans, 18 Republicans who are like- '@ Leading, 1-Lee H. Hamilton, ly to defeat Democrats, and thus Indiana 9th District. a net gain of 13 seats for the GOP. * Trailing, 3-Donald J. Irwin, Forty seats are classed as in Connecticut 4th; N. Neiman Cra- doubt. If all these went Repub- ley Jr., Pennsylvania 19th; Lynn lican. the GOP gain would be 49, E. Stalbaum, Wisconsin 1st. if all went Democratic, the Repub- " Tossups, 2-Bert Bandstra, lican gain would be 9. An even split of the tossup dis- stricts would give the Republicans a net gain of 29 seats. This com- pares with an average gain of 40 seats in off-year elections over the last 40 years for the party out of power. It compares, too, with predictions of Republican analysts in the House of a gain of 28 to 32 seats and those of Democratic rivals of a GOP gain of 18 to 20 seats. Should the Democrats yield 29 seats, they still would have 266- a few more than the Kennedy ad- ministration could claim. But there is another element in the picture. Of the 5 gains credit- ed to the Democrats in the survey, 4 are in the South-2 in Alabama and 1 each in Georgia and Mis- sissippi. And of the 18 gains as- signed the Republicans, it should be underscored that 11 would bei at the expense of those freshmen Lemocrats on whom the Johnson administration leaned so heavily. So a 266 to 169 bulge for the Democrats could turn out to be more statistical than practical. Even with an advantage of 155 seats over the Republicans in the latest congressional session, the administration escaped House de- feat on four key tests by margins of 8 or fewer votes. Thus shadings of political col- oration are important to the pol- iticians. But probably the people who will be piling into 175,000 polling places Tuesday wont' be concentrating on such things at all. In addition to tossup races in Georgia, Arkansas and New York, six other governorships are so close they could go either way. Four of them are Democratic, in Alaska, Maryland, Minnesota and Nevada. The other two are Republicans, Kansas and Maine. Oregon should have offered about the closest approach to a showdown on, sentiment for or against administration policy and actions in iVet Nam. But it isn't turning out that way. The Democratic Senate seat of retiring Maurine Neuberger is at stake in a scrap between Repub- lican Governor Mark O. Hatfield and Demeocratic Rep. Robert B. Duncan. Duncan is down the line with Johnsin on Viet Nam and has been saying that's the only issue. Hat- field used to be the outstanding critic of the administration's course in Viet Nam among all the governors. But now he is contend- ing there is no issue because the' Manila conference was what he had b e e n recommending for months and he and Johnson want the same things. There's one spot, though, where people will vote on Viet Nam. Mayor Orville L. Hubbard of Dearborn, Mich., a Detroit sub- urb, got this question on the bal- lot: "Are you in favor of an imme- diate cease fire and withdrawal of United States troops so the Viet- namese can settle their own prob- lems?" Phone 482-2056 E nae O CARPENTER ROAD NOw SHOWING OPEN 6:30 P.M --FREE HEATERS- at 9:10 Only NANI&OioMETRM Als -*~~ For reservations, call 662-5529 Sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center Ssome people will do anything for $249,000 92 Ursu Andre show~ atr 7:05 Only Plus: ess -TECHibOR# "ROOFTOPS OF NEW YORK" COLOR CARTOON 0 1,H6 MIA)N$ tollp6 r~11 flresents' lack Lemmon WaLTMR Mai~ai BILLY WILDeR'S i v'nie Ffoerune . 1 " d d; o . rd ed and directed by IUYWI written by BILLY WILERand ULDMO PAw4SO released tin UriT@OarTSS Shows Today at 1:00-3:50-6:30-9:05 KEEP FREEDOM RINGING 1, v: r. ". r.::" M " : Y nLhv " ,f"r.""r : y -nM: fdMrr.".y "r v t """rv. .oM.""A" :M.": "r " r ".w: r::Lh '. . ' ," "v:"::":::" ' .. if "" ! 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