Friday, January 30. 1976 3 Stoneback The cultural revolution occurred in the late 1960s. Chief of State Liu Shaochi and other governmental officials were removed from office for not following Communistic principles and the teachings of Chairman Mao Tse-tung. From page one "The people still claim the Revolution is on goon," Stoneclark said. "The labor (wage system was left over and they still got equal wages, but they're working on it." --gender if the Equal Rights Amendment would have required equal rights. Gleave said that he thought the vote was appropriate. STONEBACK SAID the people of China averaged from 30% to 67% in monthly growth. "But there's no inflation," he explained. "A haircut only costs 50 cents." Adequate food is a main concern of the Chinese, Stoneback said, with 90 per cent of the population working in agriculture. People in the cities told Stoneback that they would be glad to answer the call of Chairman Mao and go to the country to work. "MAO IS LIKE a religion, and I would consider his book, The Teachings of Mac Tse-tung," as being the Chinese bible," Stoneback said. One communal farm visited had about 40 acres of ponds for fish, and Stoneback said laborers were digging new ponds by hand with pick axes and shovels. Stoneback said Rape law . . . From page one were ever ratified by the requisite 38 states. Glover said that he thought there could be a problem if people charged their spouses with rape in the course of a marital quarrel. Meyers' bill would also restrict the accused rapist's defense attorney in introducing testimony about a victim's previous sexual experience. The law would extend the power of wives to prosecute husbands a step further. Women can now sue their husbands for assault and other violent crimes. IF THE TESTIMONY concerned sexual relations with someone other than the defendant, the attorney would have to move the case to trial. If the defendant's session and rule on its relevancy in the case, "THERE COULD be some problem in restraint," he said. "The courts would have to decide." Glover said anticipated conservative opposition to this part of Meyers' bail hadn't. Efficiency is poor on the farms, he said. Oo, dairy farm that was seen, had 100 head of cattle. This is consistent with the accused's constitutional right of cross-examination, In camera hearing are closed to the press and the public. If the testimony concerned previous sexual experience with the defendant, it would be admitted as evidence without restriction. Glover said. CASEY EIKE, assistant dean of women and a member of the Douglas County Rape Prevention Unit, has the defense attorney's ability to discuss the victim's prior sexual activity was "critical in the effort to enable sexual assault victims to seek the help to which they are entitled." RAPE VICTIMS often don't report or prosecute for rape because they are afraid sexual affairs unrelated to the case would be discussed in court, she said. Of 62 incidents reported to the Douglas County Rupee Victim Support office, 22 were related to fraud. "Our experience in Douglas County has been very good," she said, "but other areas do not extend this protection to rape victims. Eikae said Douglas County justices didn't admit such testimony now. "I would estimate that at least 10 of these victims would not have reported the crime at all, had we not been able to assure her that usually judges in Douglas County will not allow the court to scrutinize her past sexual activity," she said. that after the ponds were stocked, the fish summer and summer and cow mammals in the winter University Dally Kansan The opportunity to admit the evidence if it's relevant to the rape case must be retained, however, in the event of a fraudulent case. Wilson said. WILSON AGREED that local courts were following the evidence restriction now but it was not. *Court today should be concerned about the complaining part of a rape case, and they must stop the rape.* STONEBACK ALSO said he was surprised at how much winter wheat he saw growing between Shanghai and Peking. He saw thousands of persons digging canals on his farm, as well. The farmers were carrying the dirt in two small basins connected by sticks on their backs. The other provision of Meyers' bill changes rape from a class C to a class B felony. This would increase the minimum sentence for a convicted rapist from one to five years to 15 years, and the maximum sentence from 20 years to life. OF THE PROPOSED changes in the rapa saturates, the reclassification of rape is least important. Hogard said she was afraid raising the parole for rape would make it harder to get it done. Meyers said that provision wasn't in the original bill. The Senate Judiciary Committee made this amendment in Meyer's bill before they approved it, she said. The intent of the committee's action was to alleviate the inconsistency between the penalty for rape and the penalty for agravated sodomy GLOVER SAID HE favored making aggrated towson a class C felony, in addition to the usual punishments. He said he had talked to prosecuting officers who were hoping to reduce the number of successful presidents. "To increase the maximum and minimum sentences, lower the maximum to be said." It wouldn't necessarily affect the number of guilty verdicts, Wilson said, because the jury is concerned only with guilt or injury, not with the severity of the sentence. Wilson said he was skeptical about the difference effect of raiding the penalty for a law enforcement officer. MEYERS SAID she introduced the bill to impose stricter gun violence crime in the country. If women felt more secure in taking rape cases to court, she said, perhaps more rapists would be apprehended and prosecuted. "A U.S. citizen who has lived in China since the '30s told us that before the revolution hardly any land was irrigated," he said. "Many people starved because it only rained during the months of June, July and August, but now the have irrigation." However Chinese farming has improved greatly from the way it was before the Communist revolution took place in the late 1940s. Stoneback said. STONEBACK LEARNED that farmers in China also spread night soil, which is human waste from the cities. He said the fields were covered with fields, and after it dried, it was scattered. Another practice of fertilization learned by Stonehill was the burying of China's first female explorer. "that's kind of detrimental to our farming (in Kansas)," Stoneback chuckled. "Can you imagine having a grave out there?" Stoneback has lived in Douglas County since 1934, moving from Clay County. He has served on the Douglas County Board and has one year left on his present term. HE SAID A GROUP was needed in order to go to China. Each member of the proposed group had his political qualifications checked by the Chinese. "I feel fortunate to have gone," he said. "Not just anybody can go." Charity dribblers begin Dribbling for Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity's "Bounce for Boys" began in Manhattan yesterday morning with a brief stop at the Capitol in Topeka planned for today. Committee chairman Daryl Cook said yesterday that the basketball dribblers would visit legislators and then would proceed to Lawrence, where the group hoped to arrive in time for the KU-KState basketball game tomorrow night. Members of the KU fraternity began dribbling at the TKE house in Manhattan, Chelsea. The project was undertaken to raise money for the Lawrence Boy's Club, he said, on a money-per-mile basis pledged by local businessmen. "We don't have a definite goal, but we hope we make about $1,200." Cook said. The dribblers work in groups of six each group dribbling for four hours, but wouldn't do the same if they were in a single team. Want to Make Some Easy Money? Sell what you don't need with a Kansan Classified. Classified Rates One Time Two Times Three Times Four Times Five Times 15 words or less ... $2.00 ... $2.25 ... $2.50 ... $3.00 Each additional word ... .01 ... .02 ... .03 ... .04 Classified Display Clip and fill out the form below. Bring it by the Ad Office, 111 Flint Hall (with the cash), or mail your ad to us! Classified Ad Manager, 111 Flint Hall. Please include check or money order for the full amount. --- Do Not Write In This Box! Days to Run ... Your Name ... Address ... Phone ... Rec: ... Adv. Taken ... Copied by .. (Print ad below as you want it to appear) 842-9458 ONLY AT Paul Gray's Jazz Place JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ TONITE: Tom Montgomery Trio—fine modern jazz 843-8575 SATURDAY: Gaslite Gang—great dixieland Paul Mostert, professor of mathematics and member of the University Council, confronted Calgaard with the possibility that written statements about faculty might be more persuasive. He said the existence of such statements could be very damaging to faculty members. Council members had questioned the lack of opportunity for them to comment on the process, he said he was merely informing colleagues of his intent and didn't need their consent. Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, was criticized by University Council members yesterday for his recommendations for the policy by which annual merit salary increases for faculty will be made. Calgaard's office and the council of deans have prepared a policy call for written discussion on individual faculty members during hearings on merit salary increases. He said that if a question came up in the nature about why one professor received more than another professor, there would be duplication or instead of individuals' memories. 926 Mass. Several drafts of the document have been considered by SenEx and members of the administration. Both have now agreed upon a document which, pending approval by Chancellor Dykes, will appear in the faculty handbook when it's released in the next few weeks. The Council also discussed a document entitled, "Selection, Appointment and Tenure of Chairpersons, Deans, Directors and Vice Chancellors." Five proposed changes in the document are a five-year term for all administrative offices, 20 per cent student representation office, and two to three per cent process for vice chancellors as well as for chairmen and deans, elected instead of appointed chairmen of search and review committees, and the opportunity for students to rank selected candidates if they wish. Al Biggs, professor of electrical engineering, and Roy Laird, professor of political science, were appointed to replace council members Charles Sidman and James Seaver, professors of history, who are on leave this spring. Group critical of policy for merit raises The only jazz place in the midwest! As part of BLACK HISTORY MONTH activities, Giard R. T Bryant, premiere emeritus of Penn Valley Community College in Kansas City, will speak on "The Black Presence in the Midwest," at 2 p.m. in Marshall Auditorium in Bell Hall, Ft. Leavenworth. Events... SUNDAY: THE LAWRENCE WOMEN'S POLITICAL CAUCUS will sponsor an Assertiveness Workshop from 1 to 5 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. A LAWRENCE CYCLO CROSS will be sponsored by the M. Oreat Bicycle Club at 1 p.m. at Martin Park, one mile west of Kasol and Peterson Road. MONDAY: The film, "This Day in History," will be shown at 8 a.m. on channel 6, the educational television channel at the Command and General Staff College and in room seven of Bell Hall. THE CENTER OF LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES will sponsor a lecture, "Ancient Ecuador: the Beginnings of New World Civilization," by Donald Collier, in connection with a Nelson Art Gallery exhibit, at 2:30 p.m. in 3139 Willecce. THE DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY will present Thane H. McCullough, research geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, for a lecture, "Geology of the Santa Barbara Sput- Before and After," at 4 a.m. in 426 Lindley. TOMORROW: The SUA will present the rock band, Tide, for a concert and dance from 9 to 12 p.m. in the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. Announcements . . . Entries are being accepted for the SEVENTH ANNUAL HIGHER EDUCATION WRITERS AWARD, sponsored by the American Association of University Professors. Entries should have appeared between March 1, 1975 and March 1, 1976. Entries and supporting materials should be sent to: Office of Information, American Association of University Professors, Suite 500, One Dupont Circle, Washington, D.C. 20038, by April 1, 1976. PLANT SALE --- Grants and Awards . . . The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Office of Honors Studies, announces the following undergraduate as RECIPIENTS OF $25 RESEARCH GRANTS for the spring semester following a university-wide competition: Marilyn Atlas, Creve Coeur, Mo. seni; Annette Stanton, Osage City seni; Sharon Brown, Kansas City, Kan., seni; Diane Hawley, Salina seni; Phillip Jones, Amapoli, Md., seni; Mary Kelley, Overland Park seni; Susan McBride, Salina seni; Diane Pihal, Overland Park seni; Brenton Schender, McPherson senior; Gregory Vogt, Wichita senior and Ann Narner, Hutchinson sophomore. NOW $1500 ONLY 4 blocks east of Mass. on 15th Snorkles—Corduroy reg. '30 The Garden Center & Greenhouse $999 Come and Grab These Great Bargains! SALE Famous Brand Recycled BLUE JEAN BELLS ALL COATS JANUARY Come to Lawrence Surplus See Yesterday's Kansan for Details Top Quality FLANNEL SHIRTS reg. '8 NOW $599 ONLY Just Arrived! Famous Brand Recycled CORDUROY BELLS 10 Colors $999 Famous Brand BRUSHED JACKETS reg. 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