THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A LITTLE WARMER 83rd Year, No.123 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas B.G.S. Students Will Find Closed Doors Tuesday, April 10, 1973 See Story Page 6 Copter Crash No Accident Official Says SAIGON (AP) — A Canadian peace-keeping investigator charged Monday that a ceasefire commission helicopter was shot down in flames by a heat-seeking missile while flying over Viet Cong-held territory in South Vietnam. Maj. Gen. Duncan McAlpine, head of Canada's delegation to the international commission, sharply disputed a Viet Cong claim that the helicopter, in which nine passengers, including a Canadian and two American civilian pilots, were killed Saturday, met with an accident. “An accident?” McAlpine said. “Surely with everyone in the area knowing this was an approved flight, and with verbatim reports of the survivors, I think otherwise.” The helicopter was on a mission in South Vietnam's northwest corner for the International Commission of Control and Supervision—ICCS. Among the dead were four commission members, three crewmen and two Viet Cao liaison officers. A second commission helicopter was hit by "sustained ground fire" and made a forced landing near the first in what McAlpine called "desperate circumstances." Its 11 passengers and crew were not hurt. McAlpine said the pilot of the second helicopter reported seeing a missile. McAlpine spoke at Saigon's airport on his return from an investigation of the incident. Reports that the aircraft was hit by a missile were a "distortion of the truth," the report said. In Washington, a White House spokesman said that President Nixon viewed the attacks on the clearly marked ICS helicopters as extremely serious. The State Department said the incident was a "totally callous flaming" of the cease-fire agreement. Kansan Photo by ALICE COSTELLO Disgusted Becky Eddie, Shawnee Freshman mishm, and Julie Perry, Barrisville, Oka. Teddy Becker, Wheeling. temperatures that brought blizzard-like conditions back to Lawrence Monday. Students were forced to drag their winter wear out of the closets in order to combat the temperatures. Today's forecast promises to be mildly sunny with the highs in the upper 30s. Israelis Raid Beirut After Arab Bombing Bv the Associated Press Israeli troops, striking from air and sea, attacked Palestinian Arab guerrilla strongholds Monday night in the Lebanese casualties and Sidon, inflicting dozens of casualties The attacks came 12 hours after Arab commandos hit Israel targets in Nicosia, Al Fatah leader Yasir Aisraf said his No. 2 man, Mohammed Yusuf Najjar, was killed and Najar's wife seriously injured. Najar's son was reported missing. Another guerrilla leader killed in the raid was Kamal Adawal, Al Fatah spokesman, and another was Tariq Laberion Organization, the guerrilla coordinating body, also was reported missing. One report from Beirut said he was shot at his apartment, his body riddled with bullets. INITIAL REPORTS from Beirut said the hailstains had killed or wounded more than 40 people. A terse communique issued by the Israeli military command in Tel Aviv said that its forces attacked terrorist bases in Beirut and Sidon, that the missions were accomplished and that the troops withdrew with four wounded. The attack occurred 12 hours after two groups of Arab guerrillas bombed the Israel ambassador's apartment building in Jericho and an Israeli airliner at the Nicosia airport. The Israeli military command did not say whether the raid in Heerut and Sion were related to an attack on the Gaza Strip. Another Israeli commune said the attackers raided two guerrilla headquarter workshops handling explosives and weapons, including member terrorists, an automobile repair garage north of Sidon and two refugee camps where nearly 13,000 Palestinians AT NICOSIA the Arabs fought gun battles with Cypriot police at the apartment building and with Israeli security forces and a policeman at the airport. It was not immediately known if the group had any ties with the Black September terrorists who carried out the Olympics massacre in 1972 and the slaying of two U.S. diplomats and a Belgian envoy in Sudan last month. swiftly at Palestinian guerrilla camps in Lebanon in response to terror acts, The government said one of the attackers, wounded in the head, died in a hospital. Three other Arabs and a Cypriot policeman were wounded. No one was hurt in the bomb blast at the apartment building. Monday's attack was the fourth attack on Israeli diplomats abroad since September and the first major Arab-Israeli encounter on Cyprus. Jerry Lewis, associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that it was impossible to seek assistance elsewhere within the University structure. Requests Burden Student Senate Lewis indicated that the courses enjoyed great popularity according to the Curriculum and Instruction Survey and that classes always close quickly during enrollment. AN AVERAGE OF 1,700 students a semester have been taught by the LA&R staff of mostly graduate instructors who received a salary $150 less each semester "THEERE IS NO question, on the basis of economics, that the University should support our program. But it doesn't, so the students are forced to pay extra," Lewis said. Levis explained that the LA&S program supplied an important service to students by offering new and interesting courses such as black and Indian studies, The Liberal Arts and Sciences (LA&S) program requested $2,250, the night's largest request. The program was representative of groups that are highly dependent on senate funds for their continued existence. 'Your rightful expansion in future years will eat up activity fees as never before if Requests for $59,421.61 by six of the 10 groups heard by the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee Monday night emphasized a growing conflict between what campus organizations are requesting and what the senate can provide. Timor reported the embassy was aware of the possibility of a terrorist attack. By DWIGHT DEAY Kansan Staff Writer JOE SPEELMAN, second year law student from Dodge City and finance committee member, encouraged the group to merge a merger with the athletic department. than the absolute minimum given to in structors in other departments, Lewis said. The Israeli ambassador, Rahamin Timor, said later that he had left his residence on the third floor for his office just before the blast. The bomb went off, tearing open the front of the building and blasting out the rear wall structors in other departments, Lewis said. Women's Intercollegiate Sports (WIS) defended a request for $17,806.61 on the grounds that it was expanding its athletic schedules and adding another sport next year. The club provided its 60 members who *u*- enrolled in the school of education with an Mary Vissier, Emporia junior and club treasurer, said that WIS was in no way connected with the University of Kansas Athletic Association. some kind of consolidation is not reached," Speelman said. By CATHY GRIPKA and BILL GIBSON Kanonen Staff Welcomes The airport battles lasted about half an hour. Three Arabs were injured and two passengers and staff were moved from the airport until the captured Arabs were taken away. Police gave this account of the Arab guerrillas' attacks; "TEACHERS IN THE PHYSICAL education department support us by devoting perhaps $30,000 of coaching time to our athletic teams. If we went to the athletic department we would have to pay for our coaches." Visser said. The group had considered merging with the Athletic department, but probable discrimination against them in receiving funds and their present relationship with the physical education department prohibited such a move, Visser said. A group of Arabs drove up in a car in front of the Israeli residence, a three-story apartment house in Nicosia. One ran to the front door and left a bag of explosives there. He then rushed back to the car, but Cypriot security guards opened fire as the car started away. Three of the Arabs were seized. Stores Post Prices; Customers Apathetic After hurrying to post required cookies on price肉 before Monday's deadline, local grocers said that very few customers had ordered their price lists displayed near meat counters. See FUNDING Page 3 In response to growing concern over rising meat prices, President Nixon ordered grocers to sell their meat for no more than 90 per cent of a store's meat sold for in March. The ceiling prices must be conspicuously posted. A spot check of local groceries Monday revealed that area stores have cooperated with grocery stores to offer sober reading to customers, who cringe at the already inflated prices. Many customers, muttering that the prices are too high, were on to the soybean or peanut butter shelves. Patrick Lawer, manager of the Seven Eleven Food Store at 828 Iva St. said that none of his customers had noticed his sign, although it was clearly displayed. Lawer said that the ceiling would be effective only in keeping prices down temporarily and that prices would shoot up again as soon as the ceiling was removed. GLOLIA STRICKLAND, of 2401 25th St., after shopping at the meat counter of Rusty's that she was aware of the price listed. She didn't notice the price list posted in Rusty's. "It's not going to affect the prices I pay, and I'm sure that the grocers will obey the regulations, so it's really not very important to me," she said. "Think the prices on packaged meats are just outrageous," said Bill Cunningham, manager of Miser's Market, 700 New Hampshire St. But he predicted that the price ceiling would make little or no difference in the prices of meats or customers' shopping habits. STILL, THE RISE in meat prices has caused a change in the buying habits of some stores and customers. Because of this, it is common to cut down on his order for meat, he said. Judith Kroger, manager of Mercantile, 1237 Oread, said that because of the price increases her sale of soybeans had improved tremendously. She has stopped selling sausage, the store's only meat produce, until the ceiling is lifted, she said. The biggest problem has been interpreting the list of requirements passed on to the grocers by the Internal Revenue Service. The management manager of the Rugt's food store chain THE REQUIREMENTS came out so fast, with no advance notice," he said. "The week before the deadline they were making a list of the people to visit the print and locations almost every day." "We still aren't sure as to what the requirements on these lists are exactly, but they are definitely important." Springer said that he had received no comments or complaints about the lists. Soyburgers Come to Lawrence Safeway Manager Charles Dallas said that he had no problems in compiling figures to the lists or in meeting the deadline. By CHRISTI MEANS Kansan Staff Writer Lawrence hamburger consumers may soon find themselves munching on hamburgers that are cheaper but that include a product called textured vegetable protein. King's Food Host, 1503 W. 23rd, plans to add to its menu the King Burger and the Dougle King, hamburgers with the soy additive. The King Burger will sell for 49 cents, 10 cents less than a regular hamburger. "The home office wanted to come up with a cheap product that was still top quality and would allow going to McDonald's to come to Kingston," the manager of the Lawrence King's franchise. Duane Buck, manager of Sandy's Drive-In, 2120, W 9th, said that the use of soyburgers "will have to grow on people like frozen french fries had to." "MANY CHANS could go the cheaper route—using much of the cow—and get by without using the soybean," she said. "But if people knew what they were eating, I don't think that it would be very appetizing. So we have experimented with soybeans." Reaction to the use of soy filler in hamburgers varied among the Lawrence hamburger chains. Many restaurantateurs said that they thought soybeans would be used in the future but that they were afraid of the public's reaction because of controversy over what hamburgers now contain. "At first they were rejected, but now everyone uses them. It will be a long time, though," he said. Several restaurateurs said they were feeling the pinch of the meat boycotf in that town of hamburgers were down, but cheese and fish sandwich sales were making up for losses. None thought the immediate use of cheese was caused only by the meat boycotf. because of the high cost of beef. Restaurants will attempt to keep down the price of hamburgers, he said. ON THE OTHER HAND, David Cowden, manager of Moore Burger Drive-In, 1414 W.6th, said the use of soy filler would increase Another reaction to the soyburger came However, a representative from Kraft Foods, overhearing her comment, said that the soy filler would be used and accepted "when they get the mixture right." from Jean Collins, one of the managers of Henry's Drive In, 6th and Missouri. See SOYBURGERS Page 3 APPARENTLY, King's Food Host has found the right mixture. "I don't think it will ever be used, here anyway," she said. "I can't get it pass my pain." County Health Committee To Hire 2 Replacements The Lawrence-Douglas County Public Health Committee announced Monday plans to hire two persons to replace Dr. Terry Giddens, the county health department director of the county health department. BY JOHN P. DONICA Kansan Staff Writer The immediate needs of the county, according to Dr. Raymond Schlegel, director of the University Health Service and chairman of the committee, could best be managed by a permanent administrator to handle all the medical duties of the health department. "We want to move one step at a time," Schwegel said. "We canarry the app- Once that position is filled, Dr. Schweger said, a search could be conducted for a position with the right combination. AS OF MONDAY, four applications had been received for consideration by the committee. A closed executive meeting of the committee is scheduled for April 17 to read, discuss and evaluate all applications that have been received by that time. The committee is attempting to hire Dr. David Slovik, public health service officer at Haskell Indian Junior College, on a part-time basis for replacement for Clinton can be found. "The biring of Dr. Slovik would immediately relieve our medical problems," Schwegler said. "He is quite willing to help us, but he must first get permission from Washington (the U.S. Public Health Service)." Schweiger commented that the salary range the committee was considering for the position is not available. Schweiger said that Slovak did not know long it would take to receive per- See COUNTY HEALTH Next Page Bob Noun, Des Moines Third-Year Law Student, Inspects Meat Prices ... grocery stores are required to meet cooking prices on menu