6 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, September 19, 1967 Communists bomb embassy From the wires of United Press International SAIGON—Communist terrorists today bombed the Nationalist Chinese Embassy and sniped at rescuers in the ruins. Police said the terrorists killed two persons and wounded at least 26 in the two-hour attack. Authorities believed the attack may have been the work of Chinese Communist party Chairman Mao Tsetung's Red Guard fanatics. Meanwhile, U.S. jets hit Haiphong for the second straight day and pounded North Vietnamese divisions battling American Marines on the flooded South Vietnamese border. Landon urges peace OVERLAND PARK-Alf. M. Landon, former Kansas governor and 1936 Republican presidential nominee, said Monday he was "not willing to spend one drop of an American boy's blood fighting for freedom of a people unwilling to fight for their own freedom." He called for President Johnson to develop a long-range American design toward peace rather than one developed piece-meal to meet the crisis as seen from the eyes of the President alone." Rocky's not running WASHINGTON—Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, though "gratified" by the polls listing him as the strongest GOP candidate against President Johnson, still insists he will not enter the 1968 Presidential race "under any circumstances." In addition the New York governor doesn't think the Republican National Convention would offer it to him in 1968. He considers talk of a Rockefeller draft as divorced from political reality. His reaction to latest polls was provided by a close political associate. Storm nears coast Enrollment fouled- BROWNSVILLE. Tex.—Beulah the killer hurricane today was heading for this U.S.-Mexico border town here at an excruciating slow pace. At 7 a.m. (CDT), the New Orleans Weather Bureau said the storm's center was 200 miles southeast of Brownsville with gale winds brushing the Gulf Coast. Authorities in the lower Rio Grande Valley worked to complete evacuation of Padre Island in Brownsville ahead of high tides and waves that washed across the beaches and sand roadways to the dunes beyond. A new million-dollar motel on Padre Island was boarded up and boat owners lined the seashore waiting for crane operators to beach their boats. Beulah's death toll Monday rose to 29 including 18 from a sweep through the Caribbean and 11 more from the Yucatan Pensinula and its islands. Continued from page 1 new class on a moment's notice. Student demand "It looked Friday like the student demand was coming closer than usual to over-running the budget." Why? "I think we have more freshmen than we expected," Hitt reported. Hitt listed several possible reasons. He said the senior class in the high schools last year was smaller than usual, but the freshman class this year is larger than last possibly "because KU is becoming a more attractive place to go to school." "We have open enrollment here, so we can't cut cut any of the Kansas graduating seniors who want to come here. The only place we can make cuts is with the out-of-state people. We can't cut too many of them because of alumni pressure." "We're not real sure." Priority is given to applicants on the following bases: Then, to sons and daughters of KU alumni. Then, to graduates in cities and towns bordering Kansas, to graduates in states surrounding Kansas, to everyone else. First, to graduates of Kansas high schools. The new draft law is a prohibitive factor. It promises a de- B-school dean to leave At KU, McGuire established closer liaison between the School of Business and its alumni of the area, added to the master's degree programs and installed the first Ph.D. program in business. An expert on the place of business in society, he is the author of three books and nearly 50 publications. His most recent book, "Business and Society," received the McKinsey award of the Academy of Management for being among the best five books on business during 1963. By a Kansan Staff Reporter The dean of the business school since 1963, Joseph W. McGuire, will leave the campus next year to become dean of the University of Illinois College of Commerce and Business Administration. McGuire is on leave as a visiting professor at the Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pa., but will return to KU in the spring to aid in the transition to a successor. Wiley S. Mitchell, associate dean, is acting dean this fall. ferment for students where the old law only permitted them. "I see the new law as a direct invitation by Congress to young men to go to college." Donald M. Baer, research associate of the Bureau of Child Research, has returned from a six-week visiting professorship at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu. While in Honolulu, Baer taught a seminar behavior modification and a course in developmental psychology. He also addressed the Hawaiian Psychological Association on behavior modification in preschool children. Baer was one of four members of KU's Bureau of Child Research engaged in summer educational programs at the University of Hawaii. DISTINCTION Baer returns from Hawaii DETROIT — (UPI) — Fred Payne, a part-time player for the Detroit Tigers in the early 1900s, holds the distinction of being the only man ever to pinch hit for the immortal Ty Cobb. Fisher Stereo Equipment? Yes! Roberts Tape Recorders? Yes! Panasonic & Sony? Yes! Records? Mais Oui! 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