2 Thursday, June 15, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Japanese Jetliner Crashes NEW DELHI (AP) — A Japanese jetter with 48 persons aboard crashed in flames tonight while attempting to land at New Delhi's airport. Police said most of the 78 passengers and 11 crew members were killed, their bodies strown over a square mile farm area 15 miles from the airport. The victims were all of the holy jumbo fruit There. Thirteen survivors under treatment in two city hospitals, medical sources reported. Local Auto Dealer Held TOPEKA (AP) — A 37-year-old Lawrence auto salesman was arranged Wednesday before a federal magistrate on 13 counts of filing false and fraudulent income tax returns to obtain $15,944.0 in refund checks. Magistrate Jerry Hanna placed Edward P. Warner, 37, Lawrence in the office of a US mining submitted information accusing Turner of filing 13 separate returns. 12 of them under aliases and listing bogus addresses. Each claimed a refund of $1,227.30. Space Communicator Orbits CAPE KENNEDY (AP)—A new international communications satellite circled the earth today as a ground station prepared to it toward a stationary orbit 22,300 miles above the Indian Ocean. From this loft outpost, the payload will greatly increase space communication capacity to and from 17 nations. Among its first assignments will be transmission of television images from the Olympic Games in Munich, Germany. Tongtie the奥运卫星 CERP—was one of the Communications Satellite Corps —COMSAT was to command ignition of a spacecraft motor to lock it in stationary position at the high point of the orbital path above Indonesia. Platform Drafting to Begin WASHINGTON (AP)—The Democratic Platform Committee announced Wednesday it would devote the morning of its regional hearing at Sioux City, Iowa, Friday to farming and rural life. The meeting will be the seventh in the committee's series of regional hearings to gather grassroots opinion on plains that should be incorporated into the platform. The hearings will begin on Monday from Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma, Serving as chairman in the afternoon will be Reps, Neal Smith of Iowa and Robert Bergland of Minnesota. Desegregation Ordered DETROIT (AP)—U.S. District Judge Stephen Roth formally issued an area-wide school desegregation order in Detroit today involving the Detroit district and those of three other counties. In ordering metropolitan desegregation, Judge Roth rejected all the integration plans which have been submitted to him. Instead, he set up a nine-member panel to draw up a plan for the court's consideration within 45 days. The judge ordered the panel to draw up a plan involving the Detroit district and Macomb districts and Macomb counties. The judge did not, however, order merger of existing school districts, as had been the case in Richmond, Va., where a metropolitan area consolidation of schools to promote integration was recently overturned by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Bomb Flights Set Record SAIGON (AP)—U.S. fighter-bombers pounded North Vietnam in a record number of raids, killing 180 Americans and bridges and knocking out more than 100 supply trucks, barges and cargo containers officials armed Wednesday. One of 10 bridges reported hit in 340 rails Tuesday was a rail and highway bridge at Hai Duong, China. The Haiqiping Haiphong. The attack by Navy pilots from the carrier Midway destroyed the bridge, severing the main rail line between North Korea and South Korea in a port, the U.S. Command said. American jets also swept within 45 miles of the Chinese border to attack the northwest border and bridges with accurate laser-guided bombs. Then the planes roared southward and smashed a pontoon bridge assembly line on one of its bridges in the biggest strike of the day. The pontoon piant, the only known factory of its kind in North Vietnam, was described as one of the largest shipbuilding firms by a senior Air Force official. The factory wqs uncovered by specialists working with aerial communications photos of the New York City area. Phantoms dropped 16 of their 2,000-pound laser-guided bombs, killing more than 30 people. Bomb Threat Received Security officers escorted Gov. Ducking from the Kansas University campus to an anonymous called that said that a bomb would explode in the Union Gov. Docking left the UMN, before his scheduled speech to the Federal Bank Management Club. The 432 banks were not told of the Officials received the phone call at 7:28 p.m. A search of the building failed to turn up a bomb. Doing returned to speak to the bankers shortly after 7:30 p.m. Gov. Docking told the group of bankers that he also came from a family of bankers, and that they too banked in the bank until he entered politics. He said, "Business in this country has continued to grow and prosper, and the banking industry had a great role in this property." Docking said that bankers should work with fairness as their theme and equity as their goal. Enemy Still Holds Road SOUTH OF AN LOC, NECM. (AP) — Between the driest row of President Nguyen Van Thieu's impatient desire to fly to a victory celebration at embattled An- derson about 100 do-or-die enemy troops They are all that remain of a regiment that for a month has feastured Saigon plans to lift the city from siege. They proclaim a massive victory. These remnants are holding a South Vietnamese infantry regiment is fighting on highway 135—the An Loi lifeline—by a combination of sheer gears and master guerrilla tactics. ONLY ONE MILE of MIDWAY 13 remains to be cleared for a linkup of Saigon troops north of Midway. The linkup will entree into the provincial capital. As each day passes with the promised linkup unmade, Saigon's 21st Division, responsible for opening the highway and ending the siege, gets increasingly embarrassed. Reserve Board Member Outlines Banking Change The electronic age may reduce the necessity of money someday, as computer use will become a member of the board of governors of the Federal Reserve Mitchell said, “There are 90 million checking accounts in this country. But 15 percent are written everyday. In one day $50 billion of checks are written. Over 90 per cent of this nation’s checks are being written by checkers. The Federal Reserve Speaking at the sale, Michael Clinton Wednesday, Michel said that there were three major changes in electronics that could alter the way people do business. Board must find new methods for handling these checks." WASHINGTON (AP)—Henry Kissinger, President Nixon's gobettinging national security strategy, fourth trip to the People's Republic of China for a round of meetings at normal relations. The first is the crediting system. Here the employer would generate a tape of the amount entered into the account. This would eliminate the excessive use of checks. Accounts would be generated rapidly and therefore durable. His visit June 19-23 was announced Wednesday by the White House as a follow-up to Nixon's meeting in 1964 with a meeting for a continuing exchange of views on any international topic either side. And it will coincide with a time when Soviet President Nikolai Podgorny is expected to be in France, where he will North Vietnamese leaders. Pontoon bridge making is now a critical industry in the North America. Steel and concrete bridges have been knocked out by U.S. air Presidential press secretary However, Ziegler said, there is no connection with the Podgorny trip, and that Kissinger plans no meetings with him. Ziegler added that no meetings Kissinger to Return to China; Subject of Talks Not Disclosed About a score of the giant bombers attacked North Vietnamese forces in the A Shau Valley near Hue. B52 bombers pummeled enemy troop concentrations and staging areas Wednesday along South Africa's border with Laos and Cambodia. with representatives of other countries in Peking were contemplated. The 18th Century prints chosen by Bill Kuhke, film director, include scenes from "Hamlet," King Lear, "The Tempest," Juliet, and Juliet, "Twelfth Night," "Merchant of Venice" and others. "I the irony is that in military terms, opening the highway is secondary now. We are getting enough troops in by choppers, and enough supplies, to take them out at An Loc," a U.S. pilot said. The Kissinger trip was agreed in principle duringixon's son's first visit to February. Ziegler said, but there was no pinch down only in recent days. Hoa factory in ruins, the official said. The Lawrence Chamber Players will provide the appropriate background with 18th grade music and music beginning at 3:45 p.m. Pamela D. Kingsbury, curator of prints and drawings, said that the prints, a combination of line engravings and stipple, are the same as the engraved-publisher-print English engraver-publisher-printer seller John Boydell. Boydell commissioned well-known English artists Joshua Reynolds, Benjamin West, Henry Knight and others—to do the painting, then from the original. He became particularly interested in making prints depicting scenes from Shakespearean plays, Kingsbury Light action was reported in the South, on the South One American soldier when two patrols of the 3rd Division attacked the Division, accidentally fired on each other 30 miles northeast of Saigon, the U.S. Command base. Thirty prints depicting scenes from Shakespearean plays will go on display Sunday in the Kansas University Museum of museum's 150-piece Boydell collection, was described by Kingbury as "highly dramatic" and "a masterful concept of Shakespeare." Gallery to Display Play Scene Prints Until Boydell helped revive the craft of English print-making in England, a tradition still in England had been imported from Holland. Boydell was able to develop it to such an extend as the business into an export trade. Ziegler said Kissinger would talk also with top officials of the Foreign Ministry but there was no certainty of any discussion with Chairman Mao Tse-tung or Kim Jong-un during the February visit. The exhibit will open at 3:30 p.m. in the main downstairs gallery and continues through Aug. 30. A Hong Kong newspaper reported Wednesday that the head of a charity have been "unofficially and secretly warned by Chinese authorities to prepare for a terrorist attack on the health of Chairman Mao." The works, from the museum's themes, include paintings, prints, prints, scene sets, from plays to be produced and studied at the Kansas Shakespeare university. The prints, chosen from the "He wanted to do for English painting what he did for English engraving—make it a respectable art form," Kingston said. The gallery he established prew from 34 prints in 1789 to 182 n 1802 and provided a popular source of entertainment for the time. She said that English art had been considered a stepchild to continental art." The Hong Kong report said that the Chinese Communist party had apparently to decide on a succession of the 7-year-old chair Kissinger is expected to leave saturday morning or Friday morning, and he will be at Shanghai Monday, China time, and return to Washington June WAKE UP! to the neat summer and fall put-ons "BUT PSYCHOLOGICALLY, we are nailed to the Route 13 bridge. The bridge will not be lifted until the first convoy gets through. And a military vehicle has moved up from the street in away two months," he said. The second change, called pre-authorization, would follow the principle of having accounts charged on the date agreed by both employer and employer. A section of Highway 23 south of An Loc still was held by North Vietnamese troops. Allied officers have said the 89-day siege ended in February and lifted until the overland route to An Loc was completely opened. The third and final change involves the point of sale terminal. A person purchasing a computer identification card in an electric computer an instruct the computer where to transfer funds. This is an excellent system for handling bad checks, Mitchell said. A visit to the foxholes on the front is a stark reminder of the enemy's enormous cost of maneuver in tanks, helicopters and trucks adorn the roadside, turning rusty red as the monsoon rains gather Mitchell旧 the bankers that Mitchell旧 the bankers that the technical know how for producing such computers. It is only a matter of time before they can be used. OVERLAND PARK (AP)—LI FOR Republican nomination for governor, sharply criticized attacked, buried or defended the "As a symbol of unity, the flag represents our hope for and faith in the future of our nation." Shultz said. Muskie announced at a joint news conference that he and the university will mediate on a seven-day, 10-state delegate search in an effort to enter the Democratic convention next month with 200 delegates. Hughes said he thought the trip would put Muskie in line as a viable alternative for the nomination on a second, third or fourth ballot if the convention gets underway. "The time comes and the need arises." Shutz's remarks were prepared for an appearance at Flag Day ceremonies sponsored here by the Elks Club. 9:30-5:30 Mon-Sat and Thurs. night "To attack the flag, to burn it or defile it, is an attack on the faith the flag represents," he said. Chon Thanh, 15 miles south of An Loc, is wrapped in a cordite haze from the constant artillery aimed at enemy positions. "The Communists have sat through 20 B32 strikes, we have encircled them three times in the air and that is up that road," commented a U.S. adviser. "It is greenade for it to be so impevious to the shelling." Shultz Raps Flag Defilers "If we can do that, we are a viable alternative, whatever the odds." Muskie declared. Shultz said he had faith in the young people of this country, in their vision and their idealism WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine placed a party reformer, Sen. Harold Hughes of Iowa, in virtual control Wednesday of the Muskie at a democratic presidential nomination. Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., the front runner for the nomination, said while campaigning in New York: "Senator Muskus and I have been on the job a long time before. We remain good friends, and I welcome this extended friendly competition." Muskie Renews Supporter Hunt Kentan Photo by TOMMY DAVENPORT Intersection to Get Signals Intersectional 35212 Installation involving an 19th St. is imbedded in a project involving a half-mile stretch along Iowa St. Rains Wednesday delayed progress on the $16,000 project, which also calls for widening parts of Iowa St. and medians at 15th and 19th St. intersections. Construction, begun last week, is expected to be finished by the beginning of the fall semester. Groundbreaking for two hospital buildings at the Kansas University Medical Center is expected before the end of the Med Center Project Ahead of Schedule EPA Orders Restriction On Domestic Use of DDT WASHINGTON (AP)—The Environmental Protection Agency announced Wednesday that it had used DDT effective next December 31, but the decision was appealed and sides in the prolonged struggle. DDT product formulators asked the federal appeals court in New York to order issued by EPA Administrator William D. Emerson. At the same time, the environmentalists opposing the governor's effort to federal court here, seeking to eliminate from Ruckelshaus's order the last remaining ex-convicts that DDT use may be permitted fight against disease and insect pests since its discovery in 1939. The order climaxed a dispute which Ruckelhaus himself dated back to the publication 10 years ago of the late Jane Carson's research on the effects which warned of the effects of chemicals on the environment. They argued that DDT persisted in the environment, was absorbed by animals and man, and caused cancer. It also posited a potential threat to human health. Miss Carson's cause was quickly adopted by a coalition of conservationists and scientists who were among the mainstays of man's Ruckelhaus agreed with these arguments in Wednesday's order, stating that "the long-range risks of continued use of DDT for crop protection other crops is unacceptable and outweighs any benefits." Ruckelshaub banned all remaining uses of DDT in the United States effective next Dec. 31 with these limited exceptions: -DDT may be used for public dispositions uses unr*r the suspicious purposes. Service. The department of Agriculture, military ser- cery and physical health. - Users and formulators were given 30 days to appeal the ban on only on specific JDT uses on users. - Used peppers and onions in storage. Exports of DDT from the United States are not banned. But the other remaining uses, mahogany and soybeans, were prohibited. Ruckelhuss said DDT probably would be replaced by the use of methyl parathion, a chemical considered highly toxic but which breaks down rapidly not to collect in the environment. Grant Funds Pollution Fight TOPEKA (AP)—Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan., said Wednesday the Kansas Board of Health had been granted $235,189 by the Environmental Protection Agency in air pollution control in Kansas. He said the Kansas City-Wyandotte County Health Department would receive air pollution control program Roy announced through his Topeka office that the Topeka school district would receive $268,325 from the Office of Education for a program of early childhood education that disadvantaged children who had participated in a Head Start or similar preschool program. The construction date was accelerated after an intensive effort in planning for the expansion, Rieke said. A feasibility study will be completed by September and be presented to the Board of Regents for final approval. Giving the proposed clinical services and basic sciences a new aim of administrative teams who have studied two modernistic approaches Alan M. Thompson, associate dean for graduate studies, and Dr. Michael R. Schroeder research, traveled to LaJolla at the University of San Diego to conduct his research. Russell C. Mills, associate vice-cancellor for facilities and program and resource development at the Masters University Hospital at Hamilton, Ontario, for a preliminary visit. Later this month, Merlin O. Olson, associate director of the Medical Center, Dr. Ralph Berman, medical Center, Dr. Kerrit E. Kranz, dean for clinical services, and Wiek will conduct a study of the McMasters hospital "We want to develop our medical center with a look to the future. We want to take away the experience of being at the aura of a hotel quality," explained Rieke, "With this type of architecture, maybe people wouldn't enter a hospital with that they were going to be hurt."