2 Monday, June 19, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Mayors Support Nixon NEWORLEANS, La. (AP)—A committee of the U.S. Conference of Mayors backed President Nixon's Vietnam policy Sunday, declining to propose a specific withdrawal date as the conference did last year. Earlier in the day, in a surprise move, the resolution ordered that the United States should be killed without debate resolutions favoring and opposing the practice. By a 10-7 vote, the committee urged that "all United States air, land and sea forces shall be withdrawn from South Vietnam by a date certain and not later than four months after the conclusion of an internationally supervised cease-fire, through which all prisoners, and an accuser, will all those missing in action." Panties Too Hot PHILADLPHAII (AP) — Alice Cooper thought panties covering a record in an album was a hot promotional idea, but U.S. Customs here deduced the plan as too flammable. Alice Cooper, a five-member rock group,包装 their latest album record, "School's Out," in disposable underpants that failed to pass a Federal Trade Commission's Fibramatic Fables Test. Consequently, local Customs refused to permit the shipment of English-made paper panties to enter the country. Bad Sentence, She Says NEW YORK (AP) - Edith Irving, who goes to jail today for helping her husband sheal $750,000 from the McGraw-Hill publishing firm with a phony autobiography of Howard Hughes, has now been interviewed in an interview published in the Daily News that when they hatched their complex scheme of Swiss bank accounts under fake names to appropriate money the publishers intended forillion Hughes, she never dreamed she might go to prison. "At that time I thought, 'Why should I be so a hoax,' she said, 'why, why he gives the money back.'" Pat Attends Services RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) — First Lady Pat Nixon stopped briefly in Rapid City to attend a memorial service Sunday for the more than 200 persons killed 10 days ago when a flash flood devastated the Black Hills resort town. Mrs. Nixon was not on the program, but shooted and hands and feet in search and rescue efforts after the storm that left 216 known dead and thousands homeless. The 17 who spoke with Mrs. Nixon were representatives of hundreds who had assisted survivors during the flood. They ranged from Brig. Gen. Donald A. Rose of the Salvation Army to 19-year-old Mike Gorrell, who seriously saved eight people by backpacking into the flooded area. McGovern Is 453 Short Of First-Call Nomination NEW YORK (AP)—Sen. George S. McGovern, his dellegate support for the Democratic presidential nomination continuing to grow, waged a New York primary and helped other observers saw as a warmup for a race with President Nixon. MeGoven is the only major candidate in Tuesday's primary, and his leading opponents for the Democratic nomination were not in New York over the weekend to face the South with the South Dakota Senator. McGovern is the party's front-runner and new support in four states over the weekend we gave刃1.066 of the 1.508 delegates votes needed to win the nomination at Democratic National Convention. IN NEW YORK McGovern attacked in advance any Nixon peace effort in Vietnam that McGovern said would be timed only to fit the President's domestic timetable. And at a time when some observers believed U.S. Jews may defect from the Democratic party, they stressed his support of Israel. McGovena has been hitting the nation's administration's defense spending in general, its connections with big business and what he called "the truth." TUESDAY'S primary is the final one of the year and 248 convention delegates are to be elected. Thirty more delegates will be picked the following by the Democratic state committee McGovern, expected to pick up 20 or more delegate faces, faces Tuesday in about a half dozen of the state's 39 congressional districts. In the Albany and Buffalo areas particularly, so-called uncommitted slates of delegates running against McGovern's delegates could win. Should McGovern get 200 delegates here, he will have more than 1,200 for the July convention or so away from the nomination. THOSE UNCOMMITTED slates are thought to favor Sen. Edmund S. Musk of Maine or other candidates in Minnesota for the nomination. in another development Society was lifted that one of five memebers of the committee breaking into the offices of the Democratic National Committee to try to dismantle McCord Jr. and McCord McRison, the security coordinator for Nixon's chief cam-mitrator. Authorities said McCord and the others were planning to bug the office. President Nixon's campaign chief, former atty. John G. Nelson. Mitchell, said in Los Angeles meeting with the beaufish or with our consent." SenEx to Hold Special Meet Responding to a request from the Council, the Sean Ex Committee has called a special meeting for 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in 108 Blake The purpose of the meeting will be to discuss the desirability of a committee to investigate research activity, accuracy, and Ronald Cauley. SenEx chairman Members of the Hallowing Cooperation suggested the committee to Share in what they thought there was a need for the community to know about recreation. Calgaard stressed that the meeting was important and that the attendance of all the members of the committee if a quorum was to be obtained. TREDO'S RESTAURANT & DELICATESSEN Stop By. We're only a half block from the downtown theaters. Good Food, Good Beer Open till 1 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 844 Massachusetts 842-9577 Wallace Will Regain Partial Use of Legs SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP) — After surgery to remove a bullet from his spine, doctors reported in the news that Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace to be able to move about with aid of braces and crutches within six months. Wallace has been paralyzed from the hips down since he was sheared in 1984. Mr. Md., after finishing a speech in his campaign for the Democratic nomination, was hospitalized. Dr. Stacy Rollins, a neurosurgeon who headed the five-man operating team, told newsmen there was a 'ray of water' that Wallace may eventually resume walking without aids. Killer-Hurricane Agnes Sets Path for Florida Panhandle Rollins made his report at an afternoon news briefing after a 1½-hour Sunday morning at Holy Cross Hospital. BUT HE SAID it would be six to 18 months. He also added and he added there was less than a 50-50 chance that the governor would walk nor MIAMI (AP) -- Residents of a flooded Florida Floridaiana were urged to evacuate Sunday as Hurricane Michael with winds of up to 100 miles and tengromes that have killed one person and injured at least As the season's first hurricane plodded north at about 12 m.p.h. from a position 310 miles south of Tampa, Florida, the Hurricane Center recommended evacuation of the offshore islands and low-lying beaches along a stretch of coastline. At the outset, Rollins said the bullet had been successfully removed from the spinal canal but added immediately that doctors could not tell whether he recovered ability to walk normally. "Evacuation roads in this area are low, and some escape routes may be cut off by rising waters that reach the coast. early Monday afternoon," the center's 6 p.m. advisory said. POLICE in the agricultural northwest of Miami, said one person was killed and several were injured when a storm tore into buildings. to the local Civil Defense chief, Richard Lancaster. Civil Defense officials in Port au lae and 700 to 800 residents of wetlands were being evacuated. Many of them were preparing to spend the summer in wetlands. He added that persons would be evacuated inland Monday to Mariana if conditions became worse. THE HURRICANE center said their staff had been Pandheande coast near Apalachiola- carly early Monday afternoon if she maintained her course and "Everybody around here is boarding up their houses, and the officers are safe harbor," said Nick Forlack, an officer of the Apalachi- "It's lucky that not too many people here live in low-lying areas." Fortunas added. Apalachicola is a coastal town of about 3,500 persons. AGNES, WHICH developed in late September, also was blamed for three more deaths in Cuba, bringing the storm to toll there to 18,000. President Nixon, meanwhile, was at his Florida home at Key Biscayne, which was in the fringe area of Agnes. He flew there two days before and two days of relaxation at Grand Cay Island in the Bahamas, where Director Robert Simpson of the National Hurricane Center in Miami said that if the storm were to reach at about 12 miles an hour, it would "move inland over the Florida panhandle shortly after noon HE SAID THAT after the operating team had removed the bullet which was lodged in Wallace's spinal canal they found that his spinal cord was not partially severed but only pulsating. weather was overcast and threat ening. THE CENTER extended its hurricane watch warning to include all of northwest Florida from Cedar Key to Pensacola. He said the 'ray of optimism' that Wallace eventually might be able to walk freely was based on the fact that elements of the nervous system, including the spinal cord and a network of nerves from lower end, were found to be intact and not disrupted. ASKED WHAT activity Wallace would be capable of at the convention, the doctor (think I think) should help build skills to ask in陷害 ... make an appearance on the convention floor." "If he is nominated he could stay as long as need be," Hutchinson said. Vote on Revenue Sharing Expected in House Soon If the President's revenue sharing bill passes through Congress, Lawrence can expect a grant of $275,134. Congressman Larry Winn said that passage of the bill could be expected early this week in the House if all went well. As the bill stands now, Douglas County will receive $682,474 for all its governments. Townships will receive $90,425. Baldwin will be allocated $16,832. The bill will be debated in the hall on Monday. The vote will be taken Wednesday. The four- Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan, co-sponsor of the bill, said that Kansas would receive $47.8 million. Approximately $34 million will be allocated to governments, and $13.8 million to the state government. Winn introduced a bill similar to the President's revenue sharing bill earlier this year. Winn's bill would have given Kansas K54 that said he was still planning to vote favorably on the measure. hour closed rule will keep the bill from any amendments. Pollution Fight Endangered John R. Quaries, Jr., top legal counsel for the Protection Agency, said in an interview he was worried that help from Congress may not be available. WASHINGTON (AP) —The government's effort to fight water pollution with an 1899 law now because of legal complexities. Early last year, in an effort to get up some speed, President Nixon told EPA to dust off the 1899 Reform Act which prohibited discharges to waterways without from the Army Corps of Engineers. "If this situation should last for too long, the school would Quieres said. It could severely undercut our national program to control industrial waste. That's what I do." Since 1965, federal water authorities authorize to prosecute industrial polluters, but first had to arrange窄部位 regulation a stipulation requirements and then give industries 180 days to correct a But last December a federal court here ruled that the Corps must ensure that each individual permit it proposed to environmental impact of each individual permit it proposed to. IF THE VIOLATION remained uncorrected, they could begin a court prosecution. Over the next few months the Corps received applications from some 20,000 industries for permits to discharge wastes. Legislation now pending in Congress would give EPA alone the clear authority to run a permit program. Last May 30, a federal appeals court in Philadelphia, reversing the Pennsylvania Railroad's conviction to the Pennsylvania Industrial Workers Union that it was not convicted of lacking "fairness." ask preventing the issuance of my permits at all, and they appealed the decision. For a while, EPA prosecuted polluters for lack of a permit. EPA AND THE CORPS decided that was an impossible AND WITH THE issuance of permits blocked, he conceded, "the lack of a permit is the only handle we have. Right now it is the foundation for virtually our whole enforcement program." Quarles said that 'causes previously opened and-ended courts now be the legal grounds, even where there is no contest concerning the case.' would include not only a new permit program but also a tougher enforcement mechanism. You must issue notice, authority to issue clean-up orders, and direct authority for EPA to impose a fine up to $10,000 or seek prosecution with an insurance of $25,000 for each day of violation. permit if the permit was not available. The bill pending in Congress The House and Senate have already agreed on these enforcement provisions, but the House, in their disagreement over other issues. 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