University Daily Kansan Thursday, January 25, 1973 7 Cat Nap Kansan Staff Photo by PRES BRANDSTED A Kansas Union employee catches a few brief moments of rest in the Union jobbity after a chaotic working day. University employees as well as students find the first days of class even more hectic than usual, and are taught such as this are few and far between. Viet Terms... (Continued from Page 1) will represent South Vietnam, and the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam will act for the Communists in the Vietnamese group will be the Hanoi regime. The said there were "no remaining problems to be settled." He denied, as did Kissinger, that there were any secret understandings or protocols. ASTO THE issue of the North Vietnamese troops in the South, Tho said, "We have completely rejected the alleged alliance concession in the requested forces in South Vietnam." He said further that the American side completely dropped a demand for the withdrawal of North Vietnam. The immediate reaction from world leaders combined expressions of welcome and caution. The Soviet union echoed The's advice, urging the Russian finance expressed "profound satisfaction." China was quoted by Japanese news agencies as being relieved and pleased. However, Peking was said to feel there would be further political struggles between President Nguyen Van Thieu and the Viet Cong. Despite the announcement of the ceasefire, fighting continued in South Vietnam as both sides tried to gain foothold. The enemy had also announced a tightening of the city's curfew. IN SAIGON, the South Vietnamese foreign minister, Tram Van Lam, said he hoped elections would be held within three months but made it clear that no provision for a political settlement with the Viet Cong had been worked out. From Vientiane came word from diplomatic sources that a cafe-fire will be announced Feb. 11, or 15 days after the Vietnam truce. In Phnom Penh, the Cambodian premier, Hang Thun Hak, said that with the Vietnam cease-fire, his country's armed forces would cease all offensive operations against North Vietnamese, Viet Cong and rebel Cambodia guerrillas. KISSINGER WAS asked what was accomplished in the agreement that couldn't have been obtained four years ago and he would be the opportunity to outline the U.S. gains. For the entire period since the first negotiating session in Paris four years ago Thursday, Kissinger said, any chance for a settlement "founderied on the insistence of the North Vietnamese that a political victory be handed to them" by demanding acceptance of a coalition government as a precondition to negotiation on other issues. It was not until Oct. 8, of this year that the North Vietnamese ever agreed to separate the political and military issues, Kissinger said. He believed that the negotiations moved relatively fast. What this led to, Kissinger stated, was a guarantee that no coalition government would be imposed on the South, that the U.S. will determine their own political future. THE CEASE-FIRE announcement did narrate oppponents of President Nikon's stillett Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., said discussions were being held among some senators about proposing a legislative ban on fracking in the state of Arizona "china" to prevent re-entry into the war. Jerry Gordon, a director of the National Peace Action Coalition, said, "There will be no genuine peace in Vietnam until the U.S. gets entirely out of Southeast Asia." Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., said in London, "What puzzles me is why the sun always falls on the ground." At the State Department, Secretary of State William P. Rogers gave texts of the agreement to ambassadors in Poland, Germany and Canada, the countries supervising the cease-fire. Rogers is due to fly to Paris Friday for the formal signing of the peace agreement on Syria. University of Kansas anthropologists are hoping to do more work this summer on an excavation site in Pottawatomi County, according to Alfred Johnson, associate professor of anthropology. Previous excavations at the site have yielded artifacts estimated to be from between 3,500 and 5,000 B.C. Students from KU and Kansas State University, working summers and on weekends during the school year, have unearthed evidence of at least four chronologically distinct inhabitants of the site. KU Excavators Seek Artifacts On River Banks The Potawkatwomite site is the oldest to be discovered in Kansas. It was first recorded in the early 1950s by a survey team from the Smithsonian Institution. Recent changes in the federal grant and loan programs have made the Office of Student Financial Aid unaureate of the correct information for financial aid for the 1973-74 school year. The confusion stems from a bill introduced by Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., which, when passed, created the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant program and changed regulations concerning liability for Federally Insured Student Loans. By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer The Basic Educational Opportunity Grant program replaced the Educational Opportunity Grants which had restricted grants to students from low income families. The new program allows students middle income families also to receive grants. Jerry Rogers, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, said Wednesday that the new program could go into effect for the 1973-74 school year because Congress had passed the Pell Bill, but that implementation of the program would be detained pending clarification of the provisions by the Office of Education. The new grant program as outlined in the Pell Bill extended eligibility to more candidates than the allotted funds could handle. The Office of Education decided to clarify the provisions of the grants before the program would become operable. Law Impedes Loan Action WHICH AGENCY would award the grants and who would determine a student's financial need are two portions of the program which need clarification. A guideline for eligibility suggested in the Pell bill is that a student may qualify for up to $1,400, and contributions from parents are required. Parents should be deducted from the maximum steward. A student no longer receiving any kind of financial assistance from his parents, such Campus Bulletin as a married student, who does not wish to fill out a Parents Confidential Statement, is eligible to receive one-half of the estimated cost of attending KU. Rogers said. **Q10F** Student teachers: 8:30 a.m., Parlors A,B,C, Kansas ROGERS SAID that the pending Basic Educational Opportunity Grant program could feasibly benefit any student in any school, but probably would be of greatest benefit. Book Return: 9 a.m. Jawhark Room. Return Date: 10 a.m. Jawhark Room. Alumni Committee: 11 a.m. English Room. Alumni Department: 2 p.m. SCHR Grade 4 p.m. International Room. International Department: 3 p.m. Curry Room. Design Department: 6 p.m. Curry Room. Baptist Student Union Executive Committee: 7 p.m. Parlor A. The regulations in the new Grant program and its financing may not be completed until the 1974-75 academic year, Rogers said. SCRH Grade: 7; p.m. International Room. Bachelor's Grade: 8; p.m. International Room. Flesh Lesson: 7; p.m. Woodcraft Artist Room. Flesh Lesson: 6; p.m. Woodcraft Artist Room. Flesh Lesson: 5; p.m. Woodcraft Artist Room. Flesh Lesson: 4; p.m. Woodcraft Artist Room. Flesh Lesson: 3; p.m. Woodcraft Artist Room. Flesh Lesson: 2; p.m. Woodcraft Artist Room. Flesh Lesson: 1; p.m. Woodcraft Artist Another portion of the Pell bill, referred to as the Educational Amendment of 1972, will take effect March 1 and will require students applying for Federally Insured Student Loans to file a need analysis form. Students must give commission from the Financial Aid office. The Federally Insured Student Loans are ROGERS SAID the guidelines for FederalInsured Student Loans require a detailed analysis of each applicant's background and individual interviews with many students. made through a bank, savings and loan company or other lending institution, with the cooperation of the Financial Aid Office. There are about 2,000 applications each year for Federally Insured Student Loans, Rogers said. He said there would be diffcrent types of loan applicants in the short time before loans are needed. Rogers and other representatives from the Student Financial Aid Office will attend a meeting Feb. 9 in Wichita to discuss the ramifications of the new regulations for the Federally Insured Student Loans and the Basic Educational Opportunity grants. ALL OF OUR PRODUCTS ARE BIODECREATABLE FOR THE HAIR HERBAL SHAMPOO A GENTLE SHAMPOO THAT CLEANS WITHOUT REMOVING NATURAL CONDITIONERS COCONUT OIL BASE... 14 PER BOX - PROTEIN SHAMPDO BAR...AQZ-512$ *LEMON CREME RINSE* XENIED WITH CALIFORNIA LEMON LEMON CREME RINSE THAT REMOVES SNOWS AND CONDITIONS. 194 KR OZ. AMINO ACID CONDITIONER A 2-MINUTE CONDITIONER MADE FROM MILK PROTEINS, EXCELLENT FOR SPLIT ENDING PIONEER TEAC The Malls Shopping Center DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS disc preeners RSO Records REG. $9.98 New Derek and the Dominos in Concert $4.88 Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99 Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95 12 Modern Lanes Air Conditioned Jan. 30-All Star Scratch League [Tues.] ...6:30 Jan. 24-All Campus League [Wed.] ...6:15 Jan. 24-Fraternity League [Wed.] ...8:30 Jan. 25-Guys & Dolls League [Thurs.] ...6:30 SPECIAL SPECIAL FRIDAY NITE is DATE NIGHT You and Your Date 3 games each $2.00 SPECIAL 3 Games for $1.00 Daily - Noon till 6:00 p.m.