2 Tuesday, November 4, 1975 University Daily Kansan DIGEST From the Associated Press Peron ill; tensions mount BUENOS AIRES—President Isabel Perón was rushed to the hospital yesterday amid mounting pressures to give up leadership of the crisis-wheaked Argentine An official bulletin said Mrs. Person had a gall bladder problem and that it was attacking, but private doctors close to the case said she had suffered a nervous attack. Mrs. Peron, 44, has been faced with governing a country weakened by inflation, allotments of a government financial scandal and violence. A Peronist congressman was also assassinated yesterday and tensions rose higher in Argentina than at any time since the military restored civil rule to the late Juan D. Peron's movement in May 1973. Mrs. Peron became president on the death of her husband in 1974. Kickback jury to get case TOPEKA-A Shawnee County District Court jury is expected to begin deliberating today the fate of Richard L. Malloy, former Decking administration Maloy is accused of collecting $30,000 in contributions during Docking's 1972 reelection campaign from architects and engineers in exchange for the awarding of a contract to the University of Kansas Medical Center, the biggest construction project in state history. The attorney for Malloy rested his case yesterday after calling nine witnesses. The last witness was former Gov. Robert B. Docking. Docking testified he knew nothing in advance of an alleged plot to trade a political contribution for a state contract three and one-half years ago, but when he Malloy is the only person charged with bribery in the case. Seventeen others were indicted for contracture to commit bribery, but only four individual defensives. Three other trials are scheduled after Malloy's ends. However, there is speculation the state may give in if Malloy is recruited. Franco suffers relapse MADRID-Gen. Francisco Franco, In critical condition from new internal bleeding, underwent surgery yesterday to remove an ulcer and repair an abduction fracture. He reported the 82-year-old generalissimo came through the operation and anesthesia well Banaladesh army in feud NEW DELHI- The military-backed Bangladesh government was shaken by an internal army feud yesterday, but Khondakhar Muskhore Ahmed remained as president, although many of the officers who brought him to power Aug. 15 were thought to be arrested, diplomatic sources in New Delhi said. They discounted an Indian news report that Mushtaque Ahmed had been replaced by Brig. Khalil Musharaf, the No. 2 man in the army, and said it was possible that Musharaf would play an important role as one of the main powers behind the government. Events... TODAY: An exchange agreement between the UNIVERSITY OF COSTA RICA and the University of Kansas will be renewed at 1:15 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. THE ELECTIONS COMMITTEE of the Student Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Governors Room of the Union. The 4-8ACHIEVEMENT BANQUET will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. A documentary on the organizing efforts of the UNITED FARM WORKERS in California and Arizona, "Fighting for Our Lives," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk room of the Union. Announcements . . . LORI GORDON, Lawrence freshman, has won the 1975 Women's Intramural Badminton Championship. GREG MORRIE, Salina junior, has won the SUA Travel and Recreation Fair contest. Morris will receive accommodations at the Mariott hotel at Kansas City International Airport, private limousine service, dinner, breakfast for two and champagne. Major crime rate drops; campus security tightened The number of major crimes on campus decreased during the first six months of the year, according to Mike Thomas, director of the Office of Crime Prevention. Steps are beaten to continue the trend. Recommendations made by a security consultant from the University of Illinois in January included the hiring of five additional patrolmen, Thomas said last week. Because of budget limitations only two positions were added. The positions were made available July 1 and have been filled, he said. Casey Eike, assistant to the Dean of Women, said assault and rage, major security problems in the past, weren't the worst problems now. Bicycle thefts have increased greatly in the past few years and exhibitionism is a bier problem, she said. Linda Weppelt, president of the Commission on the Status of Women at the University, said several women had complained about how dark it was on campus. Though some lights have been installed, the lighting still isn't adequate, she said. Keith Lawton, director of Facilities Planning and Operations said that lighting on campus had been increased continuously for several years. Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, said five emergency phones, with direct lines to the University police dispatcher, were to be installed soon. The phones will be installed in front of Bailey Hall, near the Zone X parking area and the new art museum, on Irving Hill Drive between Allen Field House and the residence halls, at the 14th Street control room, in front of the Kansas Union, he said. Shankel said the phones would be located on poles with blue lights on their tops. The total cost of installation of the phones will be about $5,000, Shankel said, and telephone service charges will be about $40 each month. In a nationally broadcast and televised White House news conference, Ford said repeatedly that his shakeup at the top of the Pentagon, the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Council was designed to install his own people, "the best of us," in work with very intimately," and not to satisfy anybody else. WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Ford named a team of "my guys" last night to manage national security affairs, and said he has a promise of 1978 campaign support from Nelson A. Rockefeller, the vice president who won't be running with him next year. Ford brings in national security second team He said he wanted to be sure that U.S. allies and adversaries knew there would be continuity and stability in American policy before dismantling the lineup of officials he inherited from Richard M. Nixon when the former president resigned on Aug. 9, 1974. "I believe the team that I've assembled will do a first-class job," he said. On a day of overhaul for the administration, Ford also announced that Elliot L. Richardson, now U.S. ambassador to Canada, will become his secretary of commerce. Ford said he is now convinced that has been done. —At the Pentagon, White House chief of These were the lineup changes: staff Donald Rumsfeld for Secretary of defense James R. Schlesinger. He said Schlesinger is "owed a great debt of gratitude" but Rumsfeld is the man he —At the CIA, George Bush, now U.S. emissary to Peking, to succeed William E. Colby who, Ford said, has done an outstanding job of working with Congress during a difficult period of intelligence investigations. At the National Security Council, L.T. Gen. Brent SCOwcroft to take over the directorship that has been held by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, Ford said Kissinger "will have the dominant role in the formulation of and the carrying out of foreign policy" despite relinquishing the job. At Commerce, Richardson, the former attorney general, to replace Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton. Ford said Morton had told him he wanted to resign to return to the office of the year. He added that he will be calling on Morton for assistance in the future. Inmates could seek bachelor's degree —To succeed Rumsfeld, his current White House deputy, Richard Cheney. Approval of a plan to offer more upper-level University of Kansas courses in Leavenworth could result in Bachelor of General Studies (BGS) degrees for inmates and Graduate Liberties there, according to Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs. "These are my guys and the ones that I wanted and I hope and that their confirmation will be quick in the U.S. Senate." Ford said. One is the question of which courses to offer. A University committee is now looking for candidates, he said. Because the penitentiary lacks laboratory facilities, most courses will have to be selected from the social sciences and not from the natural sciences, he said. Ford wouldn't speculate on a possible vice A major condition for approval is assurance of minimum enrollment in each course. "In order to offer the courses, we have to have some assurance that there will be a reasonable enrollment," he said. "We're not in the business of taking risks." That guarantee would probably be in the form of a contract, signed by KU and prison officers. Most of the 12 courses now offered by the university are taught by teacher assistants and instructors. BESIDES QUESTIONS OF EVERYTHING CENTRE said two other factors were being studied. THE CONTRACT WOULD ASSURE the University that fees would be paid and that enrollment would be a certain minimum number, he said. It would also guarantee the inmate that the course he wanted would definitely be offered. Calaisard said. To acquire a BGS degree at the penitentiary, upper courses are offered by the Office of the军官学院 to the军官学院. The other factor being considered is the development of a course sequence to enable the inmate to emphasize a particular area of study. Calzaard said. An increase in upper-level courses would require participation of professors and associate professors and would result in a decrease in the number of increased salary levels, Calgaard said. David Swyart, superintendent of the education department at the penitentiary, said prison administrators had requested that the inmates in upper-level courses two years ago. Sywahart said that prison administrators were meeting with five schools, including KU, Kansas State University and Missouri State University. A program that would grant degrees, to interns OF THE FIVE, SWYHART SAID, KU'S BGS program offered the most flexibility because specific courses were not required. The course programs the program easier to administer, he said. A total of 163 students are enrolled in the 31 courses offered by three schools, KU, Highland Junior College and Missouri State University. Assessment intentism averaged 10 per cent, he said. James Quiggin, assistant instructor of speech and drama, said that attendance in his speech class at Leavenworth was good. He recalled, "I went to three interns absent each class, he said." There was one exception, Quiggins said. "One night the prison was showing an X-RAY movie," he said. "It's only understandable that the movie win it out." Villages . . . From page one in favor of the permit because the project was needed and worthwhile. Stoneback said he would still vote against him. If another protest petition wasn't filed, He said he received protests from 710 persons in August and he would honor the victims. Stoneback, commissioner from the third district, represent residents who live in Plaquemont. Meanwhile, Burr said he was trying to purchase property near 29th and Missouri streets to house the children. He declined to answer questions about his suit, but said it was well suited for the children. Meetings are being held with neighbors, arrived said, and thus far there has been no excuse for the failure to attend. The planning commission will consider the temporary site on Nov. 19, he said. If it is approved, he said, the city commission will have to approve it also. SANDWICHES Smokely the Bar-B-Q Hamburger .95 ½ lb. Hamburger .85 Cheeseburger .15 Bar-B-Q Sandwich Beef .95 Pork .45 Meat .95 HOMEMADE Vegetable Soup .85 HummBears & ComboBears Chili .85 2408 Iowa (Next Door to Mothers) presidential choice for 1976 now that Rockefeller has stepped aside. The vice president did so in a letter to Ford made without so explanation, day and, he did so without explanation. Ford said he didn't pressure Rockefeller to withdraw, but didn't try to talk him out of it, either. The President said it was Rockefeller's decision, and "I accepted it." Ford said that while he is installing new bosses at the Pentagon and the CIA, he is keeping Kissinger because the secretary of state has done an outstanding job. He denied the assertions of some congressmen and Pentagon sources that Schlesinger was forced out because of policy differences with Kissinger. Overall, Ford pronounced himself happy and optimistic about the outlook for the administration, for U.S. foreign policy and the economy, and for his election to a full term. The Christian Science Organization has testimonial meetings at 6:30 Tuesday night at Dandranch Chapel Hillel Presents: ISRAEL AWARENESS WEEK November 3-7 Movie: "Let My People Go!" Visit our table set up in the Union. Movies: "The Last War!" "The Yom Kippur War!" 7:30 p.m. November 6—Council Room 7:30 p.m. November 5—Forum Room Museum of the Lord Warl MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SIZES HIKING BOOTS 02011 • traction tread Vibram sole and heel cushion collar • tough, reverse-grain tan cowhide 813 Mass. 843-2091 So your girlfriend dumped on you your best friend got the jump on you you haven't got a single else. It's clear The time has come to have another beer I forgot tonight you had a date. Youre upfront, drink number eight It's midnight and you can't relocate open It's time to have another glass of cheer Yes, let's all have another mug of beer There's nothing else to do while you're down here The guitar player's singing low There’s nowhere else for you to go It's time to have another Go buy one for your brother For me there is no other glass of cheer It's time we had another sound of beer. "The Beginning of a New Decade" the Stables and the Sanctuary enter their 11th year. to celebrate this Anniversary on Nov. 4, the house will buy rounds periodically throughout the day. along with this, the Sanctuary maintains its 4-7 Happy Hour (their large drink for the price of a small) and the Stables maintains its $1.00 pitchers from 12-6. "The Entertainment Mecca of Lawrence" the Stables 1401 W.7th the Sanctuary 1401 W.7th