2 Thursday, July 20, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Kissinger Meets in Secret PARIS (AP)—Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger met with Hassel Politbull member Le l'Duc Tho Wednesday in the 14th round of secret talks Kissinger has held with the North Vietnamese leaders in an effort to end the Vietnam war. The meeting, in Paris, was announced immediately in communiques by both sides. It was preceded by speculation that blessomed as soon as Kissinger dropped from public view in the United States. But no details of tone or substance were released. Two Killed in Mock Attack TWENTYNEINE PALMS, Calif. (AP)—A pilot and navigator were killed and seven men on the ground injured when a Marine jet simulating a strafing run on an "enemy" force went out of control and crashed into reservoir ground troops on a desert training war game. The Marines said an immediate explosion caused accident was heard from the field, and attack craft was one of the mock attacks on contingents of a 3,000-member reserve group on a two-day exercise near Camp Wilson in a summer active duty program, the Marines said. Tax Reform Urged WASHINGTON (AP) —The Congressional Joint Economic Committee heed pleas Wednesday for simplification and reform of the nation's tax system. An industrialist, J. Irving Miller, chairman of the board of Cummins Engine Co., said comprehensive tax reform was long overdue. The impetus to avoid pressure has been taken in the past. Author Harrington, D-Mass., called the American tax system a growing instrument for "redistribution of wealth from the poor and the working people to the rich." Gang War End Predicted NEW YORK (AP) — The city's bloody underworld war, which has claimed 15 lives in the last tumultuous year, may have ended with an order by gangland patrician Carlo "Don Carlo" Gambino to cease fighting, police sources said Wednesday. The disclosure came during an investigation into Sunday's early morning ambush slaying of 61-year-old Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli, gunned down in a Brooklyn street shooting that was later covered up. Police sources said. The aging Gambino's order reportedly forbids further gunplay between the feuding members of slain mobsber Joseph "Crazy Joe" Gallo's clan and the family of bed-ridden gang chief chieftain Colombo. Wallace Returns to Surgery BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)—Gov. George C. Wallace underwent surgery Wednesday to improve drainage of an abscess near one of his bullet wounds. A spokesman said there were no complications in the 55-minute procedure. Wallace has been bothered by an abdominal abscess since he was four months old. He and several bullets into his body at a Laurel, Md., shopping center. Wallace is paralyzed from the hips down and confined to a wheelchair. Wednesday's operation was expected to delay his therapy program but lead to faster healing. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - Bombs and gunfire claimed four more lives Wednesday in Northern Ireland only hours after new secret efforts to restore peace to the province. 4 More Die in Belfast Conflict Bomb Kills Baby The victims included a 71-year-old man, gunned down by terrorists and killed by a boy killed in his baby carriage by a car bomb that **wounded in the town of Strabane.** The blast 100 yards from the infantry position wounded the baby's mother, two other women and a 15-year-old woman. Belfast police said two wounded men were shot with a submachine gun, entered the White Horse Bar, placed a package containing a bomb on the floor of the bar. customers they had 10 minutes to get clear. As the terrorists ran out, police reported, an elderly customer tried to stop them and was killed when one of the men opened fire on the building and then armed the bomb was deactivated before it could explode. The deaths raised to at least 448 the number of lives lost in three years of sectarian turmoil, with Reform of Juvenile Code Still Lacking, Court Says Ruling on the cases of three Kansas City, Kan., youths, the high court said: TOPEAK (AP)—The State of Kansas "has utterly failed its responsibility to the troubled 16 and 17-year-old boys it now classifies as juveniles," the Kansas Supreme Court said. "The dilemma our state faces in dealing with these young men was pointed out by this court six years ago . . . where we first considered the act which tended the juvenile age from 4 to 18." The high court, in an opinion written by Commissioner Richard Foth, noted that the 1966 decision struck down that part of the act authorizing the commitment of juveniles to the Kansas In- WASHINGTON (AP)— Selective Service announcement Wednesday that 4,800 men will be drafted in September with lottery numbers no higher than 75. the same callup ceiling as in August. Callup Ceiling To Stay Same This is the smallest callup of he year since drafting resumed n April after a three-month halt. industrial Reformatory at Hutchinson. The April, May, June call was lumped together and totalled to 25,000 and 8,900 in August. The 4,800 callup for September will raise the number to 35,900 of the 50,000 the Defence department was asked for this year. "Commitment to what is clearly a penal institution was found to be incompatible with the concern expressed elsewhere in the juvenile code for the indictment. The errant boy, the court said. The peace moves were reported by sources who said that the extremist Provisional wing of the Irish Republican Army is still a new cause to replace the shortcase time ended shortly. "It would always result in penal servitude for which a criminal conviction conforming to the law is required. Commitment to the Boys Industrial School, an institution having far more different characters than its peers, the reformary, was said to be one of these drawbacks. It was partly because of the availability of BIS that we upheld the 1980 rules." The court said that when the legislature hiked the age level to 18, she had to be juveniles and the court handed down its decision striking down commitment of juvenile to the age limit. The court also all that resources and a program would soon be made available to juveniles in need of these age group. 240 killed this year in the worst turbulence in 50 years. "One product of such inaction is this case, in which the courts find themselves at loss for what to do with three young men who have gotten themselves into serious trouble." Fohl wrote. The court said the first perceptible step to solve these needs had yet to be taken. "Edward Bobby Patterson, Terry Lee Payne and Donald Wendell Dyer are all over 18 but The case involves the fatal shooting of Honer Roller, Kansas City, Kan., during a liquor store holdup. In the case, Foth said, the Wyandotte County Juvenile Court ruled the three youths were not fit and proper subjects to be dealt with under the Kansai law for a particular procedure, but it deliberately refrained from committing the boys to the adult courts. under 18. They stand accused of conduct, which if committed by an adult, would be first degree murder." The one-two punch—coming Tuesday at about 10 p.m. CDT in Kansas and 10:30 in Oklahoma—a prompted an announcement from Antraak was suspending its liquor service in the two states. Crewmen, Booze Nabbed In Amtrak Train Raids A leader of the Irish Republic Army declared the guerrilla command wants to "shift to using political persuasion." The raid occurred within 15 min of each other. However, Weldon Dale and Weldon Okhlahoma Beverage Control, said that while he had conferred with the police, Mr. Aztikrushi's liquor-on-wheels policy the actions were not co-ordinated. The train was met at the Newton station, north of Wichita, by Miller and other local officials. The train and a waver were arrested and arraigned on charges of operating an open saloon, evading payment of the bond, liquor, sale of alcohol, allowing consumption of alcohol and possession of alcohol without a Kansas stamp. They were sent to 500 boud each pending trial in Harvey Court Aug. 8. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kansas and Oklahoma were de- nied to attend Amtrak officials Wednesday after authorities in both states ambushed two Santa Fe Chief crewmen and fictional liquor. Provisional leaders met secretly in London for five hours Tuesday with Harold Wilson, British Labor party leader and minister, but returned to Dublin without disclosing the outcome. But Whitale is unlikely to accept a peace bid unless the IRA alters its terms. He already has rejected its demands that the British military withdraw from Northern Ireland, amnesty be extended and a cease-fire, the British allow the Irish to decide their own future. drinks on the way to Newton—a distance of close to 200 miles. Wilson is expected to provide details of the meeting Thursday to the British administrator for Ireland, William Whitale. In the latest fighting, two men were shot and killed by terrorists gunmen in Belfast. took action at the same date and hour that we did," David said. The vote was 189 to 206. The amendment that lined up the bill for the death blow was heavily backed by Republicans and opposed by Democrats. One was a British soldier caught at an army post in the Officers from the Kansas attorney general's office and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation in Los Angeles train in Kansas City and retired to the lounge car. Kansas City said the men purchased mixed The amendment said the money couldn't be committed for contracts in any year in which the projected project failed. But if that figure probably will be exceeded by $10 billion for the fiscal year that started July 1 WASHINGTON (AP)—AFL-CIO President George Meley led the big job for federalization in a bid to out this year's White House election race between President Nikko Shinjo and nominee Mike McGovern. House Downs Amended Bill Labor Chief Denies Candidates Support "I will not vote for either one of them," said the 77-year-old labor patrol, backed up by a wife of the AFL-CIO's executive council. "It just happened that they "I'm disappointed." McGovern said when he returned from a horseback ride near Custer, S.D., to learn the news. "I frankly don't want to feud with President Meany. I'm confident the leaders will handle it well, many individual unions will go ahead and endorse us." His vice presidential running mate, Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri, voiced similar hopes in Washington. MeGoven could gain with labor by voting for a Democratic minimum wage increase proposal now before the Senate which is more generous than the one the Nixon administration proposes. MeGoven plans to By Thursday's vote on the matter. Leaders of a number of AFLCIO unions already have endorsed the South Dakota senator and others indicated they would One small maritime union has endorsed Nikon and leaders of several of the more conservative unions reportedly lean to Nikon. TOEKIA (AP) — Robert E. Hoffman, candidate for the Republican nomination for attorney general in Kansas's Aug. 1 primary, said Wednesday memorabilia for Gen Vern Munroe, "touched the heart of my money tree for some more free raid哗licity last night." Hoffman, 53, former state assistant attorney general, issued a statement and talked with newsmen at the statehouse Dry Run Tactics Rapped about Miller's part in Tuesday night's Amtrak raid. "Although alcohol Beverage Commission agents could easily have been arrested by the torney general was aware that newspaper reporters and television reporter米尔顿 roommate passenger trains that to run through Kansas in search of newnewsworthy event reports were killed in election year," Hoffman said. Eagleton Supports New Fighter Plane WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. Thomas Eagleton, the Democratic vice preside- nant, was on Wednesday he supported the F15. But he denied that this constituted any major conflict with his presidential running mate, Mr. Obama, who opposes the new fighter plane. The St. Louis-built F15 was tossed into the political pot earlier in the week by Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird who suggested the prevailed prevailed upon McGovern to drop his opposition to the plane in return for protection of the vice presidential a.c.d. Research Continued from page 8 ment of biological sciences had happened. M.GREGRON said that in the '50s when there was enough money to go around to all of the schools, students were started at some of the smaller schools where graduates could go to improve their methods and not become teachers. Money money got tighter these programs were phased out and now many graduate students no jobs when they get out of school. This has improved the caliber of some of the undergraduate programs because some of the people who were doing research Continued from page ' "The programs that are stressed nationally now relate to the problem of overtime virement," said McGregor. "KU picked up some programs related to those areas because we were working with people working in those areas." Another program that the biological sciences department faces, according to McGregor, is that the undergraduate enrollment of the area has increased the part-time students and there are not enough new staff members to keep up with the number of new students. have moved in as teachers when a vacancy came up in the department. "Let them do as they like." Meany told a news conference. BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS The decision left the Federation in control and their total of 13.4 million members free to endorse either McGerver or Nixon on their own. Meeny fold a news conference. Democratic presidential candidate in the 17-year history of the AFL-CIO to be deprived of the AFL-CIO's nationwide Committee on Political Education. heavily Roman Catholic soldier was killed by the 100th soldier to die in the three years of turmol. The second bullet victim was a faterne 628 W. 12th (Next to New Haven) Authorities reported other scattered shooting in Belfast. They said sniper fire wounded a British soldier at an army patrol on the edge of the Catholic New York district. In the dawnstown area also came under fire but no casualties were reported. Plains Construction Company 2855 Woodlawn Wichita, Kansas Patronize Kansan Advertisers July 20,21,22 UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MURPHY HALL All Performances at 8:00 p.m. Refreshments & Entertainment at 7:30 in Main Lobby Ticket Prices: $2.00 KU Students $1.00 with ID Telephone UN4-3982 PANTS MADE TO A DIFFERENT VISION