2 Thursday, April 26, 1973 University Daily Kansan Soviet Attache Speaks on Education By RUTH HEUERTZ Kansan Staff Writer There are now 4.8 million students in Soviet universities and institutes of higher education, according to Yourl Gorycheny, cultural director of the Academy of the arts in Washington, D.C. Goryachev spoke Wednesday night on "Education in the Soviet Union." Goryachev's work has been influential in Slavic education. The Area Studies International Program and the School of Education. "We have the moral right to appoint students to work in areas where specialists need them." After graduation, students in the Soviet Union are distributed to areas in the country where specialists are needed. Students must work two years in this area and then may move to areas of their choice, Gervachev said. The major difference between Soviet and U.S. education, Goryachev said, was that in the U.S.S.R. "We take care not only about having good specialists but also good citizens for the Soviet Union from a moral point of view." Young people must be disciplined because the world is in their hands, Goryachev said. The Young Communist League, youth organizations, student councils and trade unions take care of moral, cultural and economic needs of students, he said. Higher education is free for Soviet students except for a dormitory fee of one ruble per month, he said. Eighty per cent of all students receive stipends equal to a worker's minimum wage. Consequently, parents do not have to finance their 3 KU Students Get Fellowships National Science Foundation Fellowships for graduate study in mathematics, engineering or the sciences have been awarded to three KU students. The students are Thomas J. Chester, Topeka graduate student, who will study theoretical physics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology next fall; James S. Krett, Parrie Village senior, who will study mathematics at Princeton University; Marsha Wilson, missionary, Mission senior, who will study anthropology at the University of California at Berkeley. Each fellowship is awarded for three years of graduate study. They may be used over a five-year period, permitting students to participate in research assistant jobs into their curricula. News Briefs By the Associated Press Wounded Knee WOUNDED KNEE, S.D.-Militant Indians holding Wounded Knee say they will spend the next four days mourning one of their members who was wounded during a shootout and died Wednesday in a Rapid City hospital. The death of Frank Clearwater, a native of the capital occupation of this village. Clearwater died from a head wound suffered in a gun battle between American Indian Movement forces and federal officers April 17. 1970 Undercount WASHINGTON—The Census Bureau said Wednesday that it missed about 5.3 million persons in the 1970 Census, notably 7.7 per cent of the black population. The bureau said that when the census was due in part to fear of census immurators to knock on doors in the inner cities. The bureau called a news conference to announce the undercount, which it said was 2.5 per cent of the total 203.2 million residential population reported in the 1970 census. Drug Banned WASHINGTON—The Food and Drug Administration Wednesday banned all use of the drug DES in beef cattle and sheep because it could be detected in edible tissue. The fda recently announced, however, that it would approve the use of DES as a "morning meal" for both pork and pall for short-term use by women who take precautions before sexual intercourse. AIM Convention OKLAHOMA CITY—A spokesman for the American Indian Movement said Wednesday that the AIM national convention had been postponed until about July 1. AIM leaders had said over a month ago that the national convention would open May 1 at Pawnee. State and local officials had asked the convention not to hold the convention there. Teachers Hired TOPEKA-Bruce Henoch, superintendent of schools in Seaman Unified School District 345 said Wednesday that he had hired several teachers for temporary work to finish out the current school year, in order to hire a new fledged last teacher the district for not showing up for work during a contract negotiation dispute. Henoch would not reveal exactly how many teachers he had hired or were dismissed last week as strikers. children's higher education," Gorychev said. Youth organizations and student councils decide which students will receive stipends, Goryachev said. Students receiving bad奖学金, in socially active usually receive no stipends. According to Goryachev, principles of Soviet education are: Accessibility to all higher education. Equality of men and women. language. The right to study one's native History Prof Receives Grants The practice of communist construction. From July to September each year, college students organize voluntary construction teams that go to Siberia and the Arctic areas of the Soviet Union, Gornychev said. This year 400,000 students will volunteer for this construction work, he said. These students usually live in tents, lecture to their assigned communities, organize camps for children and perform other services. KANSAS CITY (AP) -Cross-examination of Arnold A. Stead, government witness in the trial of four men charged with contempt of court and continued in the third day Wednesday. Stead Says Memory Poor Concerning Dates, Events Stead, 26, who is serving a five-year term in federal prison for unlawful possession of a bomb, admitted his memory could be faulty about some dates and events, under questioning by Ronald J. Clark, a Chicago defense attorney. The four on trial in the U.S. District Court before Judge William H. Becker are Kenneth D. Sandusky, 25; Randolph E. Gould, 26; Baumgarten, 28; and Richard Stanley, 29. Stead acknowledged he had been mistaken in his testimony before a federal grand jury. He was asked by Clark if he had told the grand jury that the bombs he exploded at the Southgate State Bank on June 20, 1970, were contained in a naper sock. After Clark read from the grand jury transcript, Sieed said that he had made the statement. borns to Gould when Gould came into the house in which Stead lived. G. Cameron Hurst III, assistant professor of history and East Asian studies, has received three grants that will enable him to spend the next year in Kyoto, Japan. Earlier Steen had told the jury that he had wrapped the bombs in a pillowcase and that they were loaded with explosives. When Clark cited Stead's testimony before the grand jury in which he said the primary target was a finance company, the judge also said the same company had a rival company to it. In direct examination, Stead testified that Gould picked him up in Gould's car about midnight and that they drove to Prairie Village. He said Gould selected a realty company there as a bombing target. However, there was a police car parked nearby. The officer told the bank the bank where Stead exploded two bombs while Gould waited in the car, he said. 'Students want to contribute to the cause of society—politically, economically and culturally.' Earlier Stead told the court he had agreed to testify for the state because he didn't want to spend any more time in prison than he had to. His original 10-year sentence was reduced to five years after he agreed to testify for the government. The grants were awarded by the Japan Foundation, the Joint Committee on Japanese Studies of the Social Science Research Council and the American Council Goryachev studied international law and political thought at the University of Moscow. He is not assigned to the Institute for Science, which is the faculty of Sciences and is working for a Ph.D. of Learned Societies and the U.S. Office of Education. While in Japan, Hurst will be associated with Kyoto University and will investigate materials at the Historiographical Institute of Tokyo University. Hurst will be studying our own case, which reached supremacy in the late 1960s and early 1970s A.D. 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