THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan KU This was the main reason for discontinuing the search for a new "Dean of Students." Due to the broadening of the student - faculty - administration relationship we have changed the name to dean of student affairs, said Francis Heller, acting provost. KU is not looking for a dean of students. The term had become ambiguous, Heller said. After Laurence C. Woodruff announced his retirement as dean of students nearly a year ago, a search committee was appointed by Provost James R. Surface, now on leave, to compile a list of likely candidates to fill Woodruff's position. Committee looks for new KU dean ministration has become more complex, Heller said. These three KU coeds were selected from 38 candidates Sunday afternoon in the Kansas Union. They are from left to right, Nancy Schoenbeck, St. Louis, Mo., senior, Nancy Miller, Topeka senior, and Wendy Berg, Shawnee Mission sophomore. During the next two weeks, before the final judging, they will travel to Wichita and Topeka for personal appearances on four TV stations and one radio station. At present the coordination of services available to the KU student is handled on an almost direct line to the Chancellor. The position of dean of student affairs was created to act as a middle man—the Chancellor's right arm—in coordinating these services made available to the student. The original committee, composed of faculty members only, was expanded to include four students; Mary Beth Jenks, Lewis Hall president; Resie Burps, former ASC secretary; Kyle Craig, student body president, and Cliff Conrad, President of AURH. With the initiation of Centennial College and "College-within-a-college" programs the student's relation to the faculty and ad- 78th Year, No.26 A student newspaper serving KU HOMECOMING QUEEN FINALISTS None of the organizers of the protest, which drew an estimated 55,000 persons at its peak Saturday, were seen as the last of the demonstrators were hauled away early today. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday. October 23.1967 Permit expires Before the midnight expiration of the demonstration permit, the remaining demonstrators told the soldiers they would not resist. War protest ends UPI News Roundup A die-hard group of Vietnam protestors were forced from their vigil outside the Pentagon early today, ending the largest antiwar demonstration in the capital's history. When a demonstration permit expired at midnight, U.S. marshals and military police moved into a crowd of about 175 demonstrators. About half of them walked voluntarily to waiting trucks. Others went limp and were carried away. Offer no resistance There was no repetition of the violence that marked the opening day of the antiwar rally Saturday when thousands of shouting demonstrators marched on the Pentagon. One girl was carried off drapped in what appeared in the gloom to be a Vict Cong flag. The end came after a rather quiet, anticlimactic day to Saturday's melees. Leaders of the protest claimed a "treemendous victory" for the peace cause. The armed troops standing guard at the Pentagon entrances were almost bored as night settled over the scene of Saturday's tumultous clash with the (Editor's note: Ruth Rohrer, a former Kansan Staff Reporter, was visiting Washington, D.C., this weekend. She observed the antiwar demonstrations and spoke with several demonstrators and Washington citizens. Here is her story.) There seemed to be a lot of people in the demonstration who were very sincere in their belief about peace. Many were "clean-cut" college students. Others included middle-aged people and businessmen. Washington officials and citizens were quite tolerant. All the freeway entrances to the Pentagon and the bridge across the Potomac were blocked off for the demonstrators. Considering Washington's confused freeway system, this required a lot of patience on the part of the citizens of that city because many had to take different and longer routes to go about their normal business. The demonstrations were generally peaceful until a hard core of hippie-types began prodding the soldiers, spitting at them and even using tear gas against them in their attempt to get through the lines. I was even told by someone that the hippie slogan "make love, not war" was sort of enacted on the Pentagon lawn. The speeches at the Lincoln Memorial were quite militant. Speakers called President Johnson and Secretary of Defense McNamara "traitors" and "fools." They were generally anti-administration in nature and some were quite violent. Leaders of the antiwar mobili- The people of Washington will not remember the purposes of the demonstration as well as they will the ugliness of it. Most people empathized with the demonstrators, but did not expect the demonstration to turn out the way it did since it was supposed to be a "peace" rally. war protestors which saw at least 47 injured and 443 arrests of defiant, sometimes unruly, demonstrators. s of the antiwar mobilization held a news conference in which they charged brutality on the part of the security forces that battled a militant phalanx of the antiwar throng who tried to invade the Defense Department's vast "nerve center" Saturday afternoon. They also accused federal authorities of illegally denying the arrested their constitutional rights to counsel and also claimed newsmen were guilty of "inaccuracies and distortions" in their coverage of the protest. David Dellinger, an organizer of the two-day protest, who was arrested and fined as a result of his actions during Saturday's uproar, told newsmen the outpouring would stimulate a "new movement" for peace among the American people. He also claimed that he had been struck by a rifle butt during the battle at the Pentagon gates and that Dr. Benjamin Spock, noted baby specialist, had been trampled during the ruckus. No further plans Dellinger reported there were no present plans to try to arrange any further peace dem- See Protestors, page 10. Pepper relaxes, hustles as KU wins By Mike Jones Kansan Sports Reporter When everyone else is nervous, KU football Coach Pepper Reddens manages to stay relaxed and organized. On the bus ride to Stillwater Friday for the Oklahoma State game, there was a curtain of quiet tension hanging over the players and assistant coaches. What did Rodgers do? He talked Athletic Director Wade Stinson, KU ticket manager Nick Roach, and sports announcer Max Falkenstein into a bridge game. After the squad had traveled about a hundred miles down the turnipke, Rodgers calmly walked to the front of the bus. "Better turn in at the next service area," Rodgers said to the driver. "Some of the boys probably have to take a walk." As soon as the team arrived in Stillwater, Rodgers paired and assigned them to motel rooms. There was a precision about Rodgers that moved through the crowd. The players quietly disappeared into their rooms. The next day, two hours before game time, Rodgers was inspecting the playing field. When he found it to be satisfactory, he opened a box lunch, sat down under a shady tree, and ate. He waved and extended friendly greetings to people passing by. Once the game started, Rodgers was a busy man. He was always moving, yet always organized. One minute he was on the sideline phone talking to an assistant coach in the press box. See Rodgers, page 5 UNDEFEATED IN THE BIG EIGHT