THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Sinatra Denies Crime Connection See page 2 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas CLOUDY Wednesday, July 19, 1972 Con- mellow. divides a sphere, existing ice. The to this friend, is a 82nd Year, No. 26 Kansan Photo Foreign Student Gets Inoculation Francisco Batalier of Valencia, Spain, center, finds nothing painful about an insulation given by Joyce Mayer of Lawrence, left, and William Foster of Santa Barbara. other foreign students of the Foreign Student Orientation Center at KU were (inculcated and x-rayed Tuesday. Studies Submitted to Commission By BECKY PAGE Kansan Staff Writer A discussion of a secondary sewage treatment plant and a public hearing concerning possible sites for a new airport were heard by the Lawrence City Commission at the Tuesday meeting, but no decisions on these projects were made. The construction of a secondary sewage treatment plant in Lawrence had been proposed in order for the city to meet federal environmental standards requiring pollutants to be removed from the water. The must be accomplished by December 1975. Jack Robinson of Black and Veatch Consulting Firm said that the proposed ONE TON of lime in water creates two and one half times as much sludge. Four to five million gallons of water a day are now used for each rillion gallons. system would be designed to remove a minimum of 85 per cent of the line sludged. Robinson said that the sludge is neither harmful, offensive, but that it is directly drained. The sludge would be taken to sludge beds, dried, and would be disposed of in sanitary land hills. The lime sludge can be used to treat the chlorizer, but the market for this is not large. The total cost of the project would be about $5,150.00. Approximately 55 per unit. Saricks Says Record Of University Is Good By TRISHA TEETER Kansan Staff Writer Beginning his third week as vice chancellor of academic affairs, Ambrose Saricks said Tuesday that he was emphatically "reassured of the many worthwhile programs operating at KU despite the lack of funding and money the University contends with." Saricks conferred with deans and directors of the schools for the past two weeks and worked closely with his teacher Sarah Heller, who resigned to beach full time. "We want to develop the highest level of academic programming," he "It is sometimes hard to draw the line between academic and nonacademic affairs, but we are trying to establish basic priorities through these meetings." "TI IS important to realize that the 'period of growth in America' is higher now than it was 50 years ago." Rolling Stones Are Arrested Meauline, at Boston Garden where the concert was to have begin at 8 p.m., Mayor Kevin White of Boston told them that the Stones had been arrested in Warwick. They pleaded innocent to charges of assault or obstructing a police officer and were released to go to a concert in Boston where a cultural audience awaited them. Jagger, the lead singer, and Keith Richard, the lead guitarist, were among five persons arrested at Green Innocent Cause. The deputy diverted here because of fog at Boston. All five pleaded innocent at a special session of Rhode Island District Court. WARICK, R.I. (AP)—Two members of the Rolling Stones rock group, including Mick Jagger, were arrested Tuesday night after a fraacs with a photoburton. "I called and I got them out," he said, and "they're on their way." A Boston Garden spokesman said the scheduled concert would be held as pleas for more information. are now entering a period of consolidation of the resources, we have available." "We have to view this problem internally," he said, "because we must see what can be done and then do it independently." Although the problem is not unique to Kansas, Sarticks said the important issue now was how to keep the standards of the University on a high level. HE SAID that the office of academic affairs was currently undergoing a major reorganization. The realignment coincided with Sarick's 'assumption of duties on Jury Saricis said that Kansas had a good record for funding its institutions of higher learning until recently. She said backouts in state funding were caused by the lack of federal support for high school activities or for graduate and undergraduate students and protest activities on campuses. The new system provides that divisions directly related to the University's structural program, consisting of Continuing Education, University Libraries, Arts and Music, and Theatre Radio-TV-Film, remain under the direction of academic affairs. "A decade ago, any new program a university wanted to initiate was almost sure to be adopted and funded," he said, "but now we are sure the resources are even there to set." cent of the cost, Robinson said, would come from federal funds supplied by the Environmental Protection Agency. Funding at the state and local level would provide the remaining 45 per cent of the project's cost. SARICKS was a member of KU's faculty from 1950 to 1970, serving as a professor of history and an associate dean of the Graduate School. He was involved with the Senate and helped to develop the Senate by which the University governs itself. Seven divisions that used to be considered academic affairs will now be directed by the new vice chancellor of and graduate studies, William Argersinger. The divisions are the Computation Center, Bureau of Child Research, Institute of Environmental Studies, Kansas Geological Survey, State Biological Survey. Sarics said he expected to be in almost constant communication with the groups that report to his office through continued meetings and the use of office memos. FOR THE INDIVIDUAL, this means that the present sewer charges of $1.75 a month would be increased to $3.00 to help finance the project. The project will include a system of primary water treatment and chlorination for water that has overflowed from storm sewers. He was dean of graduate studies at Wichita State University starting in 1970 until he returned to KU to become the new vice chancellor of academic affairs. Sadat Tells Soviets To Withdraw Troops The present system, which has an 18 million gallon a day pumping capacity, returns this excess water to the river, but it will not allow this after December 1975. The primary water treatment and chlorination system will have 45 million gallons of water annually. Outflow should occur, the water in the storm sewers would not go through the proposed secondary system. It would go through the primary system only, then on FURTHER STUDY of the proposed system is required by the City Commission. Robinson reported that Lawrence was not behind schedule in its plans to meet the federal requirements. The City plans for construction bids before next year. Bucher and Willis, an engineering consortium that prepares students to study new lawrence airport. The study was presented in the form of a public bearing to Bucher and Willis. CAIRO (AP)—Soviet military advisers and experts are leaving Egypt and will be replaced by Cairo's own soldiers, including Anwar Sadat announced Tuesday. See STUDIES, page 2 He emphasized that the decision "does not touch in any way the essence of Soviet- Saidat took the withdrawal order for soviet military personnel, "who came in to the office of Mr. Monday, the Middle East news agency reported. Informants estimated 10,000 to 20,000 people." But he also implied that Moscow had not kept its bargain on delivery of military equipment, and insisted Egypt would not allow it or how to pull the trigger against Israel. The order does not apply to 10,000 to 15,000 Soviet civilian advisers assisting in engineering and other fields and in conjunction with complexes and new dams along the Nile. LONDON (AP)—An American industrialist has announced a five-year technical cooperation agreement for exploiting Soviet oil and natural gas that could become a major landmark in East-West trade worth billions of dollars. Armand Hammer, 72, chairman of the board of Occidental Petroleum Corp. of Los Angeles, told a news conference Tuesday the agreement was signed in Moscow July 14. Occidental is the ninth largest U.S. petroleum company. Oil industry sources here estimated that a deal to explore, produce, transport and market Soviet crude oil and natural gas from Russia would be worth $3 billion; western Siberia could be worth $3 billion. The agreement Hammer announced covered four other fields besides oil and gas, including chemicals, metal treating and metal plating, design and building of hotels and resorts. Hammer refused to put a price tag on the agreement, but an Occidental source said. "This is the biggest Russian deal completed by an American company." all talks on technical cooperation in all these fields are due to begin in Moscow. Experts here said the most important part was likely to be technical and financial assistance by Occidental in Soviet crude oil and natural gas. The building of one, 300-mile pipeline from the Tyumen fields alone is a $1 billion project. The president made the announcement to the 150-man Central Committee of the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's only legal political party. He called for a joint high-level Egypt-Soviet meeting to work out the transfer within the framework of the 16-year transition from a two-year ago between Cairo and Moscow. A statement issued later by the committee quoted Sadat as saying: *Taking these decisions does not mean we are delaying the battle with Israel, because it is much easier for Soviet experts and advisers. It is our battle and we will not fight except with our own force.* "Also, we do not intend to create any confrontation between the Soviet Union and China." In saving the move does not affect the nature of Egyptian-Soviet relations, Sadat observed; "It is only a clarification position where we give each side his right and put forth a new style for the coming stage of our friendship." In Jerusalem, Israeli sources greeted the announcement with guarded optimism saying it might lessen the immediate prospects of a new Mideast war. There was no official comment, and one source observed: "Israel can't make a full judgment until actually knows the Russian are moving on." An Israeli expert on Middle East affairs, Yebushos Porath, told a state television interviewer he was certain the United States had promised Cairo "sort of assistance" to fill the vacuum created by the Soviet exodus. He did not elaborate. Chancellor Praises Support by Alumni By RALPH NICOL Kansan Staff Writer Cancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. emphasized the importance of early fees payments at enrollment next semester at a press conference Tuesday. He also will speak on issues related to student finance. Chancellor Chalmers said that an early determination of the funds obtained from student fees was important in figuring the University's budgetary request from the federal government. "In the past, we've had people delaying for three months sending us fees or informing us that they were not in school," Chalmers said. This made it difficult, he said, when, as it happened last fall, the actual fees were somewhat lower, then originally anticipated. THIS YEAR, a system goes into effect requiring students to pay enrollment fees at registration at the first of the semester. *n* course, the fees can always be taken care of before registration,1 Chalmers and 'au, or in the case of a late enrollment, slightly after, but we can't have any more of these. Chalmers also reported that reimbursements for faculty trips out of state may not be raised. He said that if the subsidies for traveling were raised as recommended, it would reduce the amount of travel that could be done on the current budget by one-third. "WHILE I WOULD rather we stay on the earlier limit, no official decision has been made." Chalmers said. Action would be taken after the decision was discussed in deans' meetings and other University councils Chalmers had praise for KU's alumni and friends for their financial support of the University. In the period he has been chancellor, Chalmers thought the support was "Part of the reason for our support, I think, is the absence of a comparable private school of similar scope in the state, or even the entire region," Chailmers said. "Thus, we want to be at the forefront of providing education." CHALMERS SAID that on a per-alumni basis, KU was second only to Berkeley and UCLA in private contributions. Chalmers commented on Lewis B. Mayhew's proposals to the Kansas Master Planning Commission for the governance of Kansas post secondary education. Chalmers said he did not think a Coordinating Board would be the best system for Kansas schools. "I think even Dr. Mayhew was cautious about his recommendations," Chailmers said. "The problem of some kind of coordination between junior colleges and the graduate schools is one of our greatest challenges." Chalmers said he thought a separate Board of Regents for junior colleges should be considered. Grad Makes Second Try for Office By BALPH NICOL Kansan Staff Writer In 1970, a university of Kansas graduate ran for a legislative seat from Lawrence. It was a close race, but he lost. Two years later, Mike Glover is trying again as Democratic candidate for the 44th District legislative position. "I've been a resident of Lawrence for 15 years," Glover recalled. "I graduated from the high school and KU. My background and roots are in this community. As aometown boy, I know about the hometown problems." After the campaign two years ago, Glover went into the Army for 18 months. Even as he was finishing his enlistment, in 2014 he was bringing his second campaign for Lawrence. Glover works full-time at Hamn's Glover, just north of Lawrence, and after returning to work in the "We ARE not spending much money with the media," Glover said, "because then you just spend your efforts to develop an image. And that's all the voters would get, an image I'm going to the voters and a record as a local citizen speak for itself." While the 44th District is widely varied in its composition, Glover insisted that he would not be seeking votes as a representative of any particular groups. "I'm not a group representative, but an individual representative," he said. "I think group politics are comparable to the politics of a family where what they particularly want, without looking at it from the standpoint of the benefits of the whole society." "THE LAND that is producing the most revenue, like oil and gas land, is not being taxed at the same rate as bedroom districts, that is, areas that are basically made up of residential buildings. We have to change that," he said. Glover said he thought people wanted a reassignment of property tax burdens in the state. Glover also said that the large corporate businesses have more responsibility for state revenue. Mike Glover "Now, we are letting corporations get by with lighter tax loads because they are bringing business into the state," he said. "But it must be realized that when we bring in more companies, they bring in more people, who must be served by the government. The people end up paying for that, so we give to the corporations." Glover said that he thought that the sales tax on necessities, such as food and clothing, were higher. GLOVER also saw a need for realignment of priorities at the federal level. He was distressed that there was increased spending for defense or space programs, as well as the decrease in unemployed and the economy was only operating at 75 per cent of its capacity. He was concerned how federal funds were used when they got to the local level. "Here Lawrence received $500,000 for urban renewal, and what do they do with it? They spent it on remaking two blocks downtown into a plaza," he said. "This may be very nice for the business district, but it does nothing for the average guy." Glover said that he thought such funds could be better used repairing housing in the city, but that it also thought that it could be used for repairing the bridge over the river at 6th Street. ON THE other hand, Glover thought there were several areas where government should not be interfering. In particular, he said, the government should not ban gambling and other activities such as gambling, alcoholic drinking, abortion, prostitution or marijuana. Glover hoped that students would play an important part in his candidacy. "I see it as a common concern, because the main thing is that we want less government control over our lives. Barry Kemp in 1964 was saying the same thing," he said. He did not think that there would be a conservative reaction to such a stand. "The problems in education are not just with teachers' salaries. The way it is now, we concentrate on putting money in at the top of the education structure and letting it filter down to the students. We should also concentrate on raising students in Kansas should have the financial opportunity to go to a four-year college." "I THINK my basic philosophy is right down their alley," he said. "Students are aware of it, but I don't know." I know that higher education is valuable. Kansas needs to keep and inculcate this value. Glover said he believed that he had the ability to do whatever work was necessary to be an effective legislator. He pointed to the army in the Army as a chaplain assistant. "I wasn't exactly thrilled to join the Army," he said, "but when I was through, I received a letter of commendation for performing my duties. That shows that I can apply myself to whatever tasks that need to be done." Glover is unopposed for the Democratic nomination. Barry Albin, Richard Von Ende and Winatson Harwood are seeking GOP nomination for the 44th District seat.