THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY JULY 17,1973 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE,KANSAS Icelandic Gunboat Cuts Wires; British Try to Ram in Return REYKJAIVK, Iceland—The Icelandic icebank Aegir cut both trawl wires of the British vessel Bosten Blenheim on Monday, and other fishing boats flying the Union Jack made an unsuccessful attempt to retaliate by ramming the iclandic competitors. Earlier, Iceland recognized that the German government's Germany recognize only a 12-mile limit for fishing control. The Aegir managed to cut the Boston Blenheim's trawl wires despite the presence in the area of three British ships, the frugile Berwick and the protection tugs Englishman and Irishman. Then other British trawlers in the area tried to ram Englishian trawlers, and five of the British boats even headed for their competitors inside the 12-mile limit. Pulitzer Prize Winner Dies NEW YORK—Relman "Pat" Morin, who won two Pulitzer prizes during a distinguished reporting career with The Associated Press, was found dead in his Manhattan apartment. He was 65. Pulitzer honors came to Morin for his Korean War report in 1951 and for eyewitness coverage of the Little Rock, Ark., school integration crisis in 1958. He served in Los Angeles, New York, London, Algebras, Tokyo, Cairo, New Delhi, Italy and had been chief of the Paris and Washington bureaus. Fighting Nears Cambodian Capital PHNOM PENH—Fighting continues just south of Phnom Penh and a government commander says Communist-led troops may be preparing to attack one of the capital's suburbs. In Washington, the United States forces are preparing for an Indochina. The Pentagon said the first three of 15 bombers had arrived over the weekend at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, N.C., after a flight from Guam. Meanwhile, a broadcast from Peking quoted officials as saying the mission was "warning the foreign powers" to "give up completely, and forever, wedding with Cambodian affairs, which have nothing to do with them." Tony Boyle's Conviction Upheld WASHINGTON—The U.S. Court of Appeals has upheld the conviction of former United Mine Workers President W. A. "Tony" Boyle on charges of illegally contributing union funds to political campaigns. In 1972, in U.S. District Court to five years in prison and fined $130,000. Boyle's attorney, Plato Cachier, said he was "virtually certain" an appeal would be filed within 30 days to the Supreme Court. Report Out on Discrimination TOPEKA—There were 364 complaints of discrimination in Kansas in the 1972 fiscal year, and 86 per cent were related to employment, the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights says. There were 313 complaints of discrimination in housing, and 16 of discrimination in public accommodations. The most numerous complaint in the housing area involved refusal to rent. The commission report voiced a need by the court to require a staff member to initiate and administer the contract compliance program and a need for revision of the Kansas Act against Discrimination. Arctic Games Funding Pondered WASHINGTON—A House Commerce subcommittee heard testimony in favor of an appropriation of $150,000 for the third biennial Alaska Gaming, to be held next March in Anchorage, Alaska. Alaska Gov. Wendy McCarthy asked the state's basketball, hockey, and other sports as well as Eskimo games. The latter includes blanket tossing and a game in which the players carry weights suspended from their ears. He said the weights run high as a result. Chairman John Moseh, D-Calf, said he would schedule subcommittee action. The Senate has already approved the appropriation. Porno Test Case Underway KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Jury selection is under way in Wyndotte County District Court in the first metropolitan area test of the U.S. Supreme Court's recent obscenity ruling. The recent ruling by the high court permits cities to determine what, under community standards, is obscene. Harold Doran, Kansas City, Kan., is on trial on charges of promoting obscenity by selling two films. The films, each about 12 minutes long will be shown to the jury, which will establish whether they violate state obscenity laws. Tanzania, Burundi Lock Horns BUJUMBURA, Burundi—A Tanzanian army company crossed into Burundi and attacked an army post last week, Burundian President Michel Micombero says. Burundian infantry repulsed the attack but a Burundian force to retreat under mortar fire, he said, Micombero said the Burundian forces been placed on a state of alert. Tension between the east-central region has been high for more than a year. The Burundians were recently assailed of ordering a genocide against the Hutu tribesmen whom they suspect of working for Tanzania. It's Warming Up Again Warm weather is forecast for the Lawrance area, after two days of sunshine and moderate temperatures. Highs today will be 85°F, upper 80%, and we should have a 25-mile-eighth southern breeze. Former Aide Says Office Tapped To Keep Records for 'Posterity' Nixon Taped Conversations WASHINGTON (AP)—An administration official said Monday that President Nixon had listening devices in his offices and on his telephones that would have recorded conversations with Watergate figures John F. Kennedy, John Ehrlichman and Charles Colson. The microphones and telephone taps were installed with Nixon's knowledge and concurrence and operated all the time, Alexander Butterfield, a former presidential assistant, told the Senate Watergate committee. The White House confirmed that the devices were activated in 1971 and said they had also been used in the Johnson administration. Committee counsel Samuel Dash said efforts would be made to get the tapes. AFTER BUTTERFIELD'S surprise testimony, Nikon's former personal lawyer, Herbert Kalmbach, told the committee that Ehrlichman authorized his raising support money and legal fees for the Watergate case. He did not believe he could be do not think it illegal or improper. When the day's hearings ended, Kalmach had barely begun his testimony. He was one of the few who knew. Kalmbach, who said he still handled legal matters for Nixon, told the now-familiar State Department to raise money for the Watergate defendants and channeling $75,000 he received from Maurice Stans to the defendants through New York police Anthony Ulanewicz. BUT WHEN Dean asked him to raise more money, Kalmbach said, he became concerned about 'the James Bond scenario' in the secrecy that was in place—including long-distance calls from telephone booths—and he went to Erichlman. "I wanted Ehrlichman to confirm that Dean had the authority to direct me to carry out this assignment and second I wanted him to assure me of the propriety of this assignment," Kalmbach said in a monologue. authority, it is proper and you are to go forward "" "He said 'Herbert, John does have the Malbach said Ehrlichman remarked that if word of his assignment got out "they would kill him." might jeopardize the Nixon re-election campaign. KALMBACH SAID he received another batch of money from Thomas Jones, and was sent to the United States. would have him a package of $7,000 in $100 bills. He said he told Jones the money was "for a special assignment, that I could not reveal the nature of it, that I had been given See NIXON. Back Page Pep Turns to Pique Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED A disagreement over which drill to practice next stymied several of Lawrence's West Junior High cheerleaders during the International Cheerleading Foundation clinic held at Naismith Hall this week. (See story, page 3.) The Pentagon acknowledged that the border area raids were conducted for "some period of time" prior to public disclosure at the time of the incursion of American forces into Cambodian sanctuary areas in May 1970. WASHINGTON (AP)—A former Air Force officer in South Vietnam testified Monday he was instructed to falsify and bomb missions in Cambodia in 1970. U.S. Bombing Records Falsified, Former Air Force Officer Says Military spokesmen denied, however, that reports of Cambodia raids identifying targets in South Vietnam could be conspiracy theories. The facts were known by highest authorities. FORMER MAJ. HAL Knight, who testifies before the Senate Armed Service Committee at the request of Sen. Harold Hughes, D-Iowa, said he believed the reports he filed on 20 to 24 Cambodian border area raids in 1965, and recommended decline at least, the members of Congress. Hughes said the Pentagon this year gave the committee a breakdown of Indochina air operations without listing raids in Cambodia prior to May 1970. "To me that seems to be official deception," he said. GEN. GEORGE BROW, newly appointed Air Force Chief of Staff, told the committee that he had been a key force in the operations, competent authority may properly direct that accurate information not be contained in certain reports." PENTAGON SPOKESMAN Jerry Friedheim indicated to newmen that the strikes were carried out with the knowledge and approval of President Nixon. Friedheim said key Congressmen were informer of the raids, but he refused to give them. A White House spokesman confirmed that President Nixon had approved the bombing and the decision to keep it secret at the time. DAVID HERMAN, ORGANIST, will present a recital at 8 o'clock tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. He also presented by Gary McCarly, percussionist. "THE CRIME OF Monseur Lange," the story of a man who murders an evil man to financially protect his friends, will be shown in the Helen Ashley Theater in the Kansas Union. Admission is 75 cents. People's Pages Snow Prison Art By NANCY COOK Kansan Staff Writer Artwork by prisoners at Lansing State Penitentiary will illustrate the People's Yellow Pages of Lawrence, a directory of inmates in the KU Information Center. Kathy Haggard, director of the Information Center, said the opportunity to participate in a tech conference HAGGARD HAD ORIGINALLY asked a KU art education major to do the illustration. She declined, but suggested that he teach her she taught at Lansing could do the job. "This just sort of dropped into our laps," she said. Most of the illustrations were done by one prisoner. Bob Fulhage. "He said quite matter of fact he would illustrate it all. And he very nearly did." Haggard said. "He must have done 90 per cent of it." The artwork heads the approximately 60 topics included in the directory. Haggard said the artwork was used for the sake of organization and readability. In addition to creating headings for the inside pages, Fulbage also illustrated the interior. "All the people inside are on the cover—just standing around in a crowd," Haggard said. THE IDEA FOR the Yellow Pages, which will be distributed to students at enrollment free of charge, came this spring. The Information Center was updating a booklet printed last year, Help for People, when someone brought them a copy of a people's yellow pages printed in Kansas City, Haggard said. They liked the idea and wrote letters to other people who had out together similar experiences. The directory should make available information that someone would know if he had been there. "There's sort of a community mind that has all these things in it," she said. SOME OF THE TOPICS in the directory are food, educational opportunities, family and personal counseling, employment, used clothing and used furniture. Listings under food include inexpensive eating places that students might not know about, Haggard said. The educational opportunities section includes information on the continuing education program at Lawrence High School. "We came up with so much more than we thought we," Haggard said. Section Headings for People's Yellow Pages The directory should be 48 to 68 pages long. It is now being typed. WORK FOR THE Yellow Pages is being done by 12 employees of the Information Center. Haggard said everyone working on the project picked a few topics that they knew something about and gathered information on those. "What you have is what one person can find out about a topic or already known," Hurtzler said. Since most of the people had been employees at the Information Center for some time, Haggard said, they already knew what happened and or how to find out what they didn't know. She said the Information Center also offers people with particular kinds of experience. "There were things that none of us knew about so they aren't in there," Haggard said. One thing they wanted, she said, was a section on insurance. But no one on the floor knew what was going on. "Rather than doing it poorly we didn't do it at all," she said. "It will undoubtedly reflect our briances" "Hungarian will. 'Most of all, it will reflect" "Our briances." THE DIRECTORY was funded partially by the Student Senate and partially by the Information Center. Haggard indicated those funds weren't really enough. Our money ran out a long time ago and See PRISONER'S. Back Page