PLEASANT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 83rd Year, No.132 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Monday, April 23.1973 KU Relays See Stories and Pictures Pages 6 and 7 Kansan Photo by JACKIE GIBSON Lazy Days It's lazy, barefoot weather again. Patty Drysale and Jeff Schoules. Leavenworth freshmen, took advantage of the Kansas sunshine by taking an afternoon snooze on the lawn in front of Fraser Hall. Saturday is when the weather turns cold. Saturday by rain and threats of tomades. With sunny skies, the temperature today should reach 70 degrees. Increasing cloudiness is forecasted for tonight and there will be a surge of thunderstorms by Tuesday morning. Faculty Pay Boost OKd By LARRY FISH Kansan Staff Writer A request for a 10 per cent increase in University of Kansas faculty salaries for fiscal 1975 was included in the state college and university budget guidelines approved by the Kansas Board of Regents at a meeting Saturday in the Kansas Union. The guidelines, which are the board's recommendations to the state legislature, also called for a 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries at Wichita State University, and an 11 per cent increase at Kansas State University and the state colleges. "This is really a crisis situation," said James McCain, president of Kansas State University. schools to which we've never lost anyone before." After the regents unanimously approved the increases, Jess Stewart, regent chairman of Wamgoe, said that the action reflected the total commitment on the part of the regents to improve the faculty salaries in the state of Kansas. Regent Henry Bubb, Topeka, suggested that a public relations campaign was needed to make Kansans aware of the schools' needs. "If we sell the people, they will in turn sell their legislators," he said. Paul R. Wunach, regent from Kingman, recommended that a brief statement of the reasons for the decision be made. areas be prepared and sent to each member of the Kansas Legislature. The action was referred to the board's legislative committee. In addition to the faculty salary increases, the budget guidelines included a request for $5.757 for a women's athletic center and $1.40 per cent increase in the operating budget. In other action, the regents formally ratified Archie Dykes as chancellor of the University of Kansas. Dykes was among those attending the meeting. The regents also passed a resolution praising the Campus Advisory Committee for its work in screening candidates for the position of chancellor. French Planes Transferred To Egypt, Eban Claims JERUSALEM (AP) - Foreign Minister Abba Ebna interrupted French Ambassador Francis Hure's Easter Sunday holiday and summoned him to Jerusalem to him proof that French-built Mirage warplanes were delivered to Egypt from Libya. The presentation of Mirages to Egypt influenced the use of power in the Middle East, and then said A communique said Eban furnished Hure with data upon which Israel bases its firm conviction that Mirage aircraft have been transferred to Egypt. No details of the data shown to the French diplomat were released. Israel's chief of staff, Lt. Gen. David Elazar, announced Thursday that Israel received secret knowing that Libya and Iraq had delivered a total of 35 warplanes to the Egyptians. Neither the ambassador nor other friends diplomats could be reached to learn Hure's reasons for joining the United States. In Paris, the French government said Sunday that Israel had provided no documentary evidence to support its charges. F&A Adjusts Budget Two new budget recommendations are scheduled for completion early today by the Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee. The presentation will be presented to the senate on Tuesday. funds for organizations and councils be combined in the new budget. Student Senate Enactment (SSE) 17 requires that any such change be made by Dec.30 before the fiscal year affected. The resolution signed out Jacob Kleienberg, professor of chemistry and committee chairman, and Richard Von Ende, the committee's secretary. It also expressed appreciation to Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the KU Endowment After two days of intensive debate on the committee's original recommendation, the senate voted Thursday to return the budget to the committee for further consideration. The Finance and Auditing Committee met during the weekend to revise its report to comply with SSE 17 and the guidance provided by the senate. A major problem in the original committee report was the recommendation that Mert Buckley, Wichita junior and student body president, said that the committee was preparing two recommendations to present to the senate. See FACULTY Page 3 Applicants for news positions must sign up today or Tuesday on the bulletin board outside 141 Flint Hall for an interview. They edit the "editor Tuesday" or Wednesday. One recommendation distributes the funds among the organizations and council as required by SSE 17. The second recommendation combines the funds from the fund to the fund and distributes the funds to groups selected by the committee for funding. Applications for positions on the news and business staff of the fall Kansan will be accepted in 105 Flt Hall until noon. The applications are available there now. An amendment to SSE 17 to allow the combination of funds for organizations and councils into one fund will require a two-thirds vote of the senate. Announcement of a budget should be included in the announcement of the meeting at which it is to be considered. The committee's two new recommendations will be presented at the senate meeting Tuesday. The meeting will be at the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University. Applications For Kansan Sources Say Nixon KnewAides Involved The sources were also quoted as saying that Nixon was told at the time that his aides were attempting to cover up their involvement. Those applying for business positions will be notified by the business manager at the place of interview. Both staffs will be sent a report to the Kansan Board for approval. Nixon was told that former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell and White House counsel John Dee III were probably deeply in- spired by Mr. Bush's actions and alleged coverup, said the Post's sources. The sources reportedly said that Nixon indicated he wanted to learn the truth, but maintained that both Mitchell and Dean disclaimed any involvement in Watergate. "GIVE ME some evidence," the sources quoted Nixon as saving. Sen. Edward Brooke, R-Mass., said Sunday it was difficult to understand how persons working with President Nixon and his team were affected by the Watergate bugging before it was done. "It is inconceivable to me that they would not have told the President about this matter," Brooke said in a televised interview on NBC's Meet the Press. "In fact, that they wouldn't have asked for his approval or disapproval." However, Brooke said later: "I am not trying to make a case for him, but conceivably they could have concealed it from him." A Senate investigation source has said that eight new indignities are expected. new indictments are expected. The San Jose, Calif., Mercury reported Sunday in a dispatch from its Washington bureau that Atty. Gen. Richard Kleidendt might resign after the watergate incident. He had already withdrawn from the case. The Rider Publications' bureau quoted sources as saying several other high administration officials also were expected to resign. The story did not name the other administration officials. IN OTHER developments: —Charles W Colson, former White House counsel, said he had no knowledge or involvement in any way with the Watergate matter. The Los Angeles Times said in its Sunday editions that Colson reportedly had evidence the administration covered up the Watergate affair and is ready to testify. The story "is just plain wrong." - At Key Biscayne, Fla., deputy White secretary press secretary Michael Brutus refused a release published that the names of presidential aides H. R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrichman went out. friend of presidential counsel Dean said Dean might now help Nixon "clear the White House of those that have bemismerified the role of their government," reportedly has been named by a former White House aide as among those present when plans were made for the Watergate bugging. Dean issued a statement last week that no evidence could be made a "scapement" in the affair. A source who identified himself as a -MITCHELL issued a statement Saturday says reporting to the press about grand jury testimony were not factual and that the leaks should be investigated. "The press reports being leaked out of the grand jury Watergate investigation stating that John Mitchell was the instigator of support for the defendants and counsel fees in the trial," he said, "which is contrary to the facts that have been testified to the grand jury." Mitchell said. Nixon Knew of Watergate Say 4 out of 10 in Poll PRINCETON, N.J. (AP)—Four of 10 Americans feel President Nixon had advance knowledge of the Watergate bugging case, according to a recent Gallup Poll. A Gallup spokesman said the nationwide survey was conducted to determine the public's level of awareness about the case. A total of 83 per cent responding said they had heard or read about Watergate, an event that occurred October when a similar survey was made. The poll revealed that the case itself has become familiar to an extraordinary lawyer. "This is a surprisingly high awareness figure, even considering the attention given Watergate by the media," the spokesman said. The spokesman said 41 per cent of those responding indicated they thought the President had prior knowledge about the bugging of Democratic National Headquarters in Washington's Watergate building last summer. The spokesman said nearly one-third of all persons in the survey thought that the Watergate affair revealed corruption in the Nixon administration and a significant percentage of those responding called for a clearing of the air by the President. Thirty-two per cent said they thought the president did not and 27 per cent had no reason to believe so. The spokesman said the poll was conducted the day before 7-10 and 1,528 persons were surveyed Archie Dykes, soon to become chancellor of the University of Kansas, made his fourth visit to Lawrence this weekend, but it was only his second as a prospective resident. Dykes Introduced to KU Dykes brought his family to KU Thursday to make his first appearances here since he Archie Dykes Dons Jayhawk Hat at KU Relays . . . new chancellor joins in University tradition . . . Kansan Staff Photo by CHRIS CANNELLA The first visit was give years ago, when he was on the way to a speaking engagement in Topeka before a convention of the state's school boards. Excluding a visit here during March for interviews during the search process, Dykes had stopped at KU only out of a casual interest in the University he said. "I just stopped out of general interest," he said last week. "I had no idea then that I was going to buy the book." was named April 13 as KU's 13th chancellor. The Dykes returned Sunday to Knoxville, where Dykes is chancellor of the University of Tennessee. THE SECOND, two years ago, came during a vacation when he was taking his final Spring vacation. The University he saw here was much like the UTK campus. Built on one of the foothills of the Smokey Mountains called "The Hill," the UTK campus has sprawled through expansion in much the same way KU has. Dykes was hailed several times during the weekend as officially a Jaghawak. Active Athletic Director Dutch Lombong presented his book *Ansas Relays in recognition of such status*. At a lunchroom Friday, Dykes told a story about the pride of Tennessee before acknowledging that he would be proud to be a Kansan. AEC Leaves; Mine Conflict Comes to End LYONS (AP) - A quiet move operation from this small central Kansas community is the last chapter of a bitter controversy that raged across the state from 1970-72. Officials of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) arrived here last week and began putting their equipment from the lab into use, where they were to serve as a nuclear waste repository. It beats its retreat with a final message, that it remained convinced storage of nuclear waste in salt formations in the water to the disposal problem at present. The AEC, which had been conducting experiments at the site since the middle of the 1980s, has now build a repository in the mines for nuclear wastes. The announcement aroused such a furor that the commission backed off, an argument that was no longer considering the Lvls site. A TENNESSEE man who was drafted into the Army, it seems, was the best markman, the best dancer and the best drinker in his outfit. Whenever anyone else was not there, this prodigious talents, the Tennessee replied simply that he was a Tennessee man. One night, Dykes related, the Tennessean danced and drank so well that he passed out. His cohorts, fed up with all the trouble, fed him off to a graveyard and waited for them. Soon after dawn, the Tennesseeese awoke, looked around the graveyard and said, "Praise the Lord. It's resurrection morning, and the first one up is a Tennessee." About 60 persons attended the luncheon Friday. Guests included Chancellor Raymond Nichols, the vice chancellors, the Kansas Board of Regents, the Campus Center, and other state colleges and universities and representatives of the Lawrence press. NCHOLS, IN introducing Dykes as his successor, praised the support given him by students, faculty and alumni in the eight months he has been chancellor. "If you, Chancellor Dyken, receive the rich information, be a rich investigation, indeed be said. Dykes has set his main goal as rebuilding public confidence in and support for higher education, he said in a press conference Friday morning. He said University administrators, students, faculty and alumni needed to double their efforts in seeking public confidence in higher education, and he called for new cooperation between public and private institutions of higher education. The University can raise public confidence by responding to cultural, social and economic problems and by providing education for all age levels, he said. "TO TALK about high level aspirations and not have them directly related to the aspirations of the people of the state is folly," he said. Dykes had he expected increasing participation by faculty members in university governance, a topic on which he has written extensively. Dykes spent much of the weekend attending sessions of the Board of Regents and the Council of Presidents. He also attended a dinner in St. Louis, and at the home of Nichols and his wife. When he will move his wife, Nancy, and their two children, John, 17, and Tom, 15, to Lawrence, Dykes has said, has not yet been completed. He will take over the duties of chancellor July 1. }