6. Monday. June 11. 1973 University Daily Kansan Photo Courtesy Sigma Nu Fraternity C. M. Kelley (1st Row, Left) and the Late William Inge (4th Row, Left) in 1935 KU Sigma Nu Photo Playwright Dies at 60 . . . From Page One began to think of becoming a playwright, and then of Further Off. From Heaven, he met with likeness. He went on to In 1950 "Come Back Little Sheba" was produced and a hit "a wick" "brought him, in addition to the Pulitzer Prize, the Critics prize and the Donaldson Award." Born in Independence, Kan., on May 3, 1913, Inga was a self-professed "small town boy." All his plays were set in the mid-West that he had grown up in and knew so well. He was an active performer, making in the lyrical speech of the area, victim to human weaknesses and failures. entertainment industry and teamed up with men such as Elia Kazan, finally made up his wife, Miriam. INGE, WHO had made it to the top of the The refuge he chose, quite naturally, was the Kansas he loved. In 1963 he bought what was one of the oldest buildings in Lawrence—a barn at 803 Avalon Road—to be his home. Even at the time people said Inge was unpredictable and were skeptical about his ever come to live in Lawrence. They may have been right. In any case, he was wrong. This is one script that cannot be rewritten and the world will have to satisfy itself with the contribution to playwriting that he has left behind. Thieu Recalls Envoy from Paris William Inge has passed on. SAIGON—President Nguyen Van Thieu recalled a top envoy from Paris Sunday for consultations on the Vietnam peace talks scheduled to resume this week in the Meanwhile, the shooting and bloodshed continued in South Vietnam. With no firm understanding among the four signatories on how to enforce the cease-fire agreement, he and his team are be ignored by Saigon and the Viet Cong. Government sources said Thieu had 5 KU Profs Recognized Five University of Kansas professors have been singled out for recognition this spring. Jerry Stannard, professor of history, has been elected to a two-year term as chairman of the history section of the Botanical Society of America. He will assume office at the society's annual meeting at Amherst College in July. Grant Goodman, professor of East Asian studies, accompanied Gov. Robert Docking on his "reverse investment" trip to Japan. Goodman acted in several capitals, including representation of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Economic Development John Murphy, professor of law, has been appointed a member of a study panel on the Constitution and the Conduct of American Law. He is also chair of the American Society of International Law. B. G. Barr, assistant dean of research and director of the KU space technology center, recently received a National Science Foundation travel grant to attend the First International Congress on Technology Assessment in the Hague, Netherlands. ordered the deputy chief of the Saigon delegation to the bilateral political talks in Paris with the Viet Cong to return for "consultations." The deputy, Nguyen Xuan Phong, also was described as Saigon's key liaison with Henry A. Kissinger in the peace talks between North Vietnam and the United States. Emeritus professor Richard Honeye, who retired this year after 44 years as a member of the economics faculty, was recently honored at a dinner at the Alameda Plaza Hotel in Kansas City, Mo. The establishment of the R. S. Honeye Honor Award was announced last year. The award will provide scholarships for outstanding students in economics. Kissinger returned to Washington Saturday night without reaching an agreement in the Paris negotiations. He said he would return to Paris to resume the talks Tuesday after discussions with President Nixon. The Saigon military command reported another 162 alleged violations of the ceasefire by the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces at 30-hour perid ending at noon Sunday. The biggest fight reported by the Saigon command Sunday was along the central coast in Quang Ngai Province 100 miles north of Hanoi, said spokesman for the Saigon command, said Communitis-led forces attacked a government position, killing four soldiers and wounding 25. He said the attack was not fatal as casualties to the other side were not known. First Tango for Pandas By JUDITHMARTIN The Washington Post WASHINGTON—Now that it's warm out and the zoo is full of couples strolling about with their arms around each other, even the polar bears power animals are beginning to get the idea. Two bald eagles who haven't looked at each other in years have suddenly taken up family life, and the Chinese pandas, whose idea of a big thrill used to be attacking a bamboo tree, had a wild weekend giving each other little blits on the neck. All in all, it's been an exciting week for the staff at the National Zoological Park (NZP), where speculation about who's doing what isn't confined to the lunch hour THERE IS even something to show for it at a tiny, shivering fuzzy white chick, who is one of the few bald eagles to have been born in captivity. The bald eagle is an endangered species, most of the thriving ones being these which are carved on presidential seals. The official announcement is that the new eagle was born Thursday, but since the zoo people admit that they hadn't even been sure there was an egg—nests neatly high up and don't welcome casual visitors—nobody knows for certain. There it is, at any rate, putting an end to talk about a feathered sex problem that was going on for years. It seems to have been a matter of privacy. While there were other birds in the flight cage, the adult birds did nothing but what a zoo spokesman denied. They didn't awfully half-hearted nesting—they'd pick up a sick or two now and then." LAST YEAR, the other birds were removed, and only three bald eagles were left, until it was clear which was a third wheel, and she left, too. The remaining birds are the presumably proud parents. We know, at any rate, that we are all part of a tight-knit family. Privacy has never been a factor for the pandas, who have been watched like hawks ever since they arrived here as a gift of the Chinese People's Republic last year. A CROWD of eager keepers assembled, not only to watch but also to comment on the proceedings with one another by radio, when Ling-Lang went into heat. She and Hsing-Hising tried to break down the door between them last Saturday. Methodists Veto Gambling Approve Legal Abortions Actually, Ling-Ling was in heat for two weeks before Hsing-Hsing, in his adjacent outdoor pen, noticed something funny about her. BALDWIN, Kan. (AP)—Delegates to the Kansas East Conference of the United Methodist Church said "no" Sunday to legalized gambling and abuse of alcohol and said "yes" to family planning, legalized abortion, welfare reform, the elimination of unprotected sex and study the treatment and rehabilitation of compulsive narcotics users and addicts. Freedom of the press was strongly affirmed and the delegates adopted a resolution which read: 'We, as Christians, oppose restrictions or future legislation that infringes rights of the news media and the people to protection of sources of information. "Furthermore we affirm our wholehearted support and belief in the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America which safeguards an essential and basic liberty—the freedom of speech and the press." A resolution for granting unqualified amnesty to "those who are in legal jeopardy because of the war in South East Asia" was narrowly defeated. Delegates approved support of American Indians through such groups as the Oklahoma Indian Missionary Conference and the University Scholarship Program at Baker University. The longest discussions dealt with the treatment of American Indians and with "The Indian-American liberating groups are trying to alleviate the oppression of white people," said Rev. Pat Freeman, of Lebo, himself an Indian, in speaking on behalf of the CHIEF PANDA expert Larry Collins, roused from a sleep-late Saturday off by an equally excited keeper, decreed that the door should be opened. People stood by with their hands and loaves because, as Reed says, "Love's great thing, but not when it gets violent." Well, it wasn't violent. It was beautiful. Only not beautiful enough. As Dr. Theodore Reed, the head of the zoo, put it, "She was vocalizing. Well, what do you think she said? Here I am, some kind of monster as calling. You never heard such hongking." And while the rendezvous was unproductive, it was, however, enough to satisfy Collins, who gave Hsing-Hsang creedit for a good try. "But he's too young and too young from now, when Ling-Ling should be in heat again, it may be a different story. He urged the U.S. government to take immediate steps to restructure the Bureau of Indian Affairs to give leadership to American Indians. "Hising-Hsing was the soul of politeness, considerate, gracious," said Reed. House Vote May Hinder Paris Talks WASHINGTON (AP)—Henry A. Kissinger is likely to come under pressure at the Paris peace talks this week from another vote in Congress, possibly two, against continuing Indochina war operations. But it added that in September the North Veitnamese were expected to emphasize ammunition in their supply flow and by late next fall they could again be in position to launch a major offensive similar to that in the spring of 1972. Meanwhile, a Senate report released Sunday sees little prospect for peace to be achieved in Indochina by political means. It is unclear if the involvement in the southeastern Asian war. The Senate, which already has voted to cut off all funds for U.S. war actions in Cambodia and Laos, takes up a proposal to cut off the actions in all of Indochina. The staff report prepared for the Senate foreign relations subcommittee on U.S. security agreements quoted Central Intelligence analysts as concluding there will be no general Communist offensive in the next four months. The war vote in the Senate is on the Church-Case amendment to cut off all funds for U.S. military operations in Cambodia, and has not approved any specifically approved by Congress. House Appropriations Chairman George H. Mabon Friday rated prospects 'excellent' that he could put a bill with a parity to the Senate-Less cutoff to a House vote this week. But Mahon said that before indications became clouded over the weekend of an early supplemental cease-fire agreement adviser Kaisinger and Hano's Le Duc Tho. ★★★ANNOUNCING★★★ JAY BOWL Kansas Union MIXED LEAGUE: Starts Wed. Nite, Sign up today! ALSO DON'T FORGET MON.-FRI. SPECIAL June 6 Entries accepted until June 13. Bowl 3 games for $1.00 Noon 'til 6:00 p.m. only KU ID or KU personnel From Page One for more information call: "hung around" the Hillside Pharmacy in school here. JAY BOWL 864-3545 Friends Recall... Saturday Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Closed Sundays Summer hours: Closed Sundays THE HILLSIDE PHARMACY was located at Nindh and Indiana streets and the owner's wiew, Helen Semple, said that although she could not specifically recall Kelley, she did remember his fraternity very well. Sloan's Testimony To Continue Today Associated Press Writer "They used to sit in our back booth and drink near-beer and eat hard-boiled eggs." Semple said, adding that she was always full of eggs. "You could boil boiled eggs the Sigma Nua could consume. By BROOKS JACKSON CARL METTNER, 2018 Ohio, remembers Kelley as "quite a ball player." The two played intramural baseball together while they were in Sigma Nu. Sample said that she occasionally tired of hearing the jukebox in the pharmacy, but that she had saved many of the old records and would give them to Kelley if he wanted them. Kelley was inuited to Sigma Nu on Feble, 25, 1834. He was named the fraternity's Master. Kelley graduated from KU on June 8, 2005, and graduated from University of Kansas. WASHINGTON—The Senate Watergate committee today resumes questioning Hugh Sloan Jr., the former Nixon campaign treasurer who testified that he refused to lie or keep quiet about the money that paid for the wiretapping. Perhaps with an unknowing eye on the future, the Veterans of Foreign Wars presented Kelley with their J. Edgar Hoover Award of $1,000 in July, 1970. letters policy The Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 300 words. All letters are addressed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed. KU students must provide their name, year in school and hometown; faculty members provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address. Persons reportedly facing indictment include former White House aides John W. Dean III, John D. Ehrlichman and H. R. Haldenman, former atty. Gen, John N. Weinberg, former atty. Gen, John N. Maurice H. Stans, former Nixon campaign deputy Jeb S. Marruder and others. Cox contends the Senate hearings jeopardize his own investigations, and make it possible that guilty parties will go free. The committee unanimously rejected Also on today's witness list was Herbert L. Porter, who had been director of campaign scheduling. Sloan testified that he paid $100,000 in cash to Porter but Porter refused to tell him the purpose of such allegedly went for political espionage. As the committee resumed its televised hearings, special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was seeking to block news coverage of some future proceedings, a move likely to be opposed by committee Chairman Sam J. Ervin. COX HAS filed a motion asking U.S. District Court Judge J John S. Sirica to order the Senate Committee to go behind closed doors for testimony from persons facing indictment, or at least to prevent radio and television coverage of such testimony. Cox's earlier request for a three-month postmenopment of the hearings. THE JUSTICE Department has announced that it will not appeal the dismissal of charges against Pentagon papers Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo. U. S. District Court Judge W. Matt Byrne dismissed the charges because of government misconduct after it was disclosed that Eilersberg's psychiatrist's office was raided at the direction of a White House intelligence squad. Sloan told the Senate committee Wednesday that four or five days after the Watergate raid, campaign deputy Magruder told him he might have to lie under oath. And in a statement to G. Gordon Liddy, the campaign counsel later convicted in the wiretapping. Soon thereafter, Frederick C. LaRue, aide to campaign chairman Mitchell, told Sloan "that the Liddy money is the problem, it is very politically sensitive, we can just use the money in high figure." Sloan testified that he paid $190,000 on orders from Magruder. Sloan said he later voiced concern "that there was something very wrong at the campaign committee" to a number of White House aides at a cocktail party and in the lobby, then in his chapin, then the President's personal appointments secretary, and Ehrlichman. Chapin"s suggested the important thing is that the President be protected," Sloan said. Ehrlichman said, "I do not want to know." Announcing: THE END of the VOMITUS SPEAKER If You're in the Market For: 1) HAND-BUILT CABINETS 2) LONGER GUARANTEES 3) MUCH LOWER PRICE Then Come Listen To PSL Speakers Available Exclusively At STRAWBERRY FIELDS 712 Mass.