2 Monday, June 12, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Mine Victims Memorialized WANKIE, Ribodea (AP)—The nation paid tribute Sunday to the 426 miners who died in the gas explosions which wrecked the country's main coal mine. A crowd of about 5,000—mainly blacks—crowded into a football stadium here for the national anthem before he been left enthroned in the deserted pit. Prime Minister Ian Smith was among the long list of dignitaries who attended. Beans, Beans, Beans FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)—Quintuplets were born Sunday to an American and his German-born wife in Frankfurt, a hospital spokesman announced. Prof. Hans-Deter Taubert said Mrs. Harry C. Bean gave birth to four girls in New York City, and she and her parents were doing well. Taubert said Mrs. Bean conceived after intensive hormone treatment at the hospital. Birth was by caesarean section. Connally Rests in Argentina WASHINGTON (AP) - Gen. John D. Lavelle, who was fired as commander of U.S. Air Force units in Vietnam, is scheduled to testify before a House subcommittee Monday on the nature of the unauthorized bombing attacks which led to his dismissal. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. D. Ryan last April relieved his top general in Vietnam of command shortly before the Hanoi attack. He will be in the product of his command responsibilities. "Rep. Otis G. Pike, D-N.Y., a former Marine pilot, convinced Chairman F. Edward Hebert, D-La., of the House Armed Services Committee to open hearings to probe the dismissal of Lavelle. Lybia's Chief Pledges Arms, Aid to IRA BUENOS AIRES (AP)—John B. Connally rested Sunday at an Argentine ranch after his arrival on the fourth leg of his world tour as President Nixon's special envoy. The former Treasury secretary is scheduled to meet Monday with President Alejandro Lamusie. On his arrival Saturday, Connally said the purpose of his trip was to brief President Lucien B. Koehler of his Nixon's counsel also to obtain President Lamusie's counsel and advice on important conference conferences to be held late this year and next year." BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Libya's strongman leader, Col. Libya's kadir Kadar Awad, Sunday in the Arab nation was sending arms, money and volunteers to help the Irish Republican Army against British forces in Syria. Fired General to Testify He also assailed the United States and Britain as the U.S. and British ambassadors walked out on his speech in Tripoli, Libya's capital, Egypt's Middle East News Agency reported. Peter Tripp of Britain walked out when Kadifa accused Britain of collusion with the Zionists in the 1980s and was jailed in Jewish in 1948, the dispatched call. HE ALSO charged Britain with treason to her to occupy three Persian Gulf countries. Then Kadafi declared his regime was supporting 25 million Syrians against what he termed "America's arrogance, the white supremacy." islands late last year. "fight Britain and the United States on their own lands." States of backing Israeli occupation of Arab territories conquered during the 1967 war. supervisor Compaise U.S. ambassador Joseph Palmer walked out, the news agency reported. Kadafi also accused the United THE FLAMBOYAT, 29-year leader vowed to prepare the Arab region for an all-out war. In 1972, escalate the struggle and been Moslem-Christian clashes there recently. Kadafi, who recently announced his government would lead a movement to spread Islam throughout the world, also said that Moslems are the enemy of Muslims against the government in the Philippines. There have "Britain and the United States will pay dearly for the wrongs and perfidy they inflicted on us," Kadafi said in a speech at the conclusion of the evacuation of U.S. bases from Wheels Air Force Base. Shooting in Belfast Costs Lives of Three Civilians BELFAST (AP)—Three nights in a shooting war that erupted in the Roman Catholic church, Belfast, the British army reports. The army said troops came under intense fire from gunmen in both Protestant and Catholic districts around the Ardovie. Two soldiers were wounded. The army claimed to have shot five gunmen in firefights in the bomb-battered capital. Violence in Northern Ireland has claimed 368 lives in the past three years. A MILITARY spokesman said there were hundred shots fired when a student arrived and Catholic districts after a youth was shot dead in Old Park Troops of the Royal Regiment of Wales swept into the area and came under heavy fire. One troop was caught on the leg and another in the head. The army claimed the soldiers' return fire hit five gunmen. It was not known whether they were killed. GUNMEN peppered arm, patrols moving through a city almost enriched by Protestant built barricades. In Londonderdy, Northern Ireland's second city, a British sentry was killed when he smashed simultaneously into his head as he manned an observation post overlooking the Catholic Bogside The Provisional wing of the Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility for the killing. In Belfast British troops fired rubber bullets at militant gunmen in the barricades around an isolated Catholic enclave of the bombing site. DOZENS of Protestant-ball obstacles blocked main roads. Other harbors went up in the hills near Lazar, Largan and Dungannon. officers of the Ulster Defence Association, a Protestant paramilitary movement, said the barricades went up as a temporary measure toward the Catholic-oriented Irish Republican Army. It was the fifth consecutive weekend of Protestant roadblocks in Belfast and the most extensive barricading operation in Ireland. LEADERS of the Defense Association said the barricades would be made permanent next weekend unless the British army takes over Catholic areas of London. The largest city, commandered by the IRA's ultranationalist provisional wing. Protestant and Catholic youths threw stones, bottles and stacks at each other in a breakfast-time battle in East Belfast. That was when the troops moved to stop militants battling Catholics in the Catholic area surrounded by Protestant housing developments. Jets Destroy Giant Power Plant SAIGON (AP)—Three days of massive U.S. air raids destroyed North Vietnam's biggest hydroelectric power plant, raked scores of railroad cars strained south of the Chinese border and smashed supply depots near the city. An Israeli spiesman said Monday. The U.S. Command announced the loss of two jets over North Vietnam and two helicopters in a bombing strike total of seven cremain missing. The two crewmen aboard the A6 were listed as missing. One crewman aboard the F4 was missing, the command said. NORTH VIETNAM claimed three planes downed Sunday and several pilots captured. The command said a Navy A64 was downed near Nam Dinh, 45 miles south of Hanoi, Sunday and an Air Force F-4 Phantom was hit in the air missile in the vicinity of the militarized zone last Thursday. Over South Vietnam, an observation helicopter Sunday was shot down by ground fire 13 miles north of the two crewmen were missing. A few hours later, another aircraft came down, downward aircraft also was hit by enemy ground fire and crashed. its two crew members also were listed AIR FOREER fight-bombers struck Sunday against railroad cars isolated by cuts along the roads that connect Hanoi with China. Informants estimated as many as 600 railroad cars trying to move south from China with war materials were strung out and burned by weeks of U.S. air strikes. More were reported on sidings. AIR FORCE officers said 2,000-pound bombs guided by laser beams were used against the Lang Chi plant, 615 miles north of汉川, to insure that the 500 feet away, would be snared. Informants said the attack on the plant was approved by Washington but the dam was declared off limits. 1968 Viet Program Called Murderous On the ground in the South, a enemy sheild attack around An Loc and two other Americans were wounded in a mortar attack NEW YORK (AP)—A Newsweek magazine correspondent named and dilled a "suggesting number" of Vietnamese civilians in 1968 as part of a pacification program called "Speedy Ex- He said one official put the number of victims as high as 5,000. In a report carried in this week's issue of Newsweek, Kevin P. Buckley said the six-month operation at Kien Hoi in the south has been "made the My Lai massacre by trump by comparison." Buckley, who reported from Vietnam for nearly four years and was a graduate of Newweek's Saigon bureau chief, said, "In my opinion, the U.S. military has been guilty of more than one kind of belief, be documented that thousands of Vietnamese civilians have been killed deliberately by U.S. forces." PILOTS reported their bombs made direct hits on the transverse roof of the 400 by 150-foot rectangular structure. Photographs taken by reconnaissance jets showed damaged transformer rooftops. He said, "It has now become generally accepted that the American use of slave labor has made up of thousands of innocent civilians—perhaps, some U.S. soldiers—privately, as many as 100,000." Buckley said an operation code-named "Speedy Express" was run by the U.S. Ninth Infantry Division. He said the Kien Hoa area was under control of the Viet Cong. He and his team, faintrym took part in the campaign. 50 artillery pieces, 50 helicopters and Air Force fighters bombers made 3,381 aircraft. The 112, 500-kilowatt plant supplied considerable electricity to the Hanoi-Haiphong area, one officer said. Buckley said the helicopter headquarters had a sign painted reading "Death is our business and business is good." “This was a big real one,” another officer said. “But it does mean that they will be limited in their ability to have plant right inside Hanoi.” THE UNITED STATES has said the aim of the bombing on Honiol in Vietnamese plants that were supporting Hanoi's 74-day-old offensive in South Vietnam, to test the weapon and wreck the transportation system. But Hanoi's official Communist newspaper, Nhan Dan, said a week ago that "even if the enemy succeeds in the bomb destruction of our cities and our large industrial areas, we never will parallel our economy to the point of preventing our survival and our ability to supply the South." THEN ON SUNDAY the paper declared that North Korea U.S. bombing of North Vietnam "is to kill civilians and dampen fighting spirit of the Vietnamese It claimed that the U.S. bomb in the last two months had been used on medical establishments, 12 churches, 32 dikes, and 29 attacks. The U.S. Command in Saigon said Air Force, Navy and Marine tactical fighter-bombers flew through North Vietnam across North Vietnam Saturday. IN GROUND WARFARE in South Vietnam, enemy gunners fired 35 rounds of mortars into the city. Two American Marble Mountain near Dao Nang, two Americans were wounded and five OV10 spitzer aircraft systems damaged, the U.S. command said. A U.S. adviser was killed during a shelling attack against a South Vietnamese position on the island of An Loc, the command said. The Saigon command said that fighting erupted Saturday at several places on Highway 13, but most of the destruction was on the northern and central fronts. Kennedy Nomination Suggested by Mills NEW YORK (AP)—Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ar, predicted Sunday That Sen. George McGovern, D-SD., did not win the Democratic presidential nomination and suggested that a Republican candidate might very well turn to Sen. Kennedy M. Kennedy, D-Mass. And in that case, he said, he might reconsider his position and accept the second spot on a Kennedy-Mills ticket. Mills, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, has so far refubbed suggestions that he run for vice president. Kansan Photo by STEVE CRAIG Head Bone's Connected to the . . George Pisani, teaching structure in biology, explains differences in animal structures to a group of about 15 youngsters, aged 9 through 11, during a program on perception of animals. The program, entitled "The Eye of the Beholder," was sponsored by the KU Museum of Natural History Associates and the KU Museum of Art, and featured studies of live and preserved animals, including several ways they have been protrayed by artists. Instructors were Pisani, Ruth Lawner, register editor for the Art Museum, and Dolo Brooking, assistant museum editor for the Art Museum. Computer Contract . . . Continued from page 1 Continued from page 43 printers are of the two printers now used, which will give the center higher quality characters than the dot disc controller with a capacity to hold 90 million characters, which should help relieve the burden of manual operation. Sensibly Yesterday Or Today. Though this additional dissec space will help, Wolfe said, it is not sufficient to meet the needs of storage shortage. This will force a certain amount of selectivity in the future as to what computation is done on each page. In order to establish priorities as to whose computing will be done, a group was formed consisting of major user groups on campus and members of the computation team. As TOLSTOY, Take Off Links TOUSTOY has met regularly for more than a year, Wolfe said, to look at better ways to handle it. To do this, he has suggested solutions such as requiring justification by file review each semester, which is one of the busiest times, and working for improved communication with his classmates. China was drumming up support among the other 113 coun- Caught off guard, the U.S. delegation was unable to get its reply ready before adjournment. The U.S. delegation attended the end of today's session. China made a slashing attack on the United States over Vietnam in Saturday's general debate. STOCKHOLM (AP) — A somber interaction between the United States and China over the U.N. conference on the human environment as it entered Paris. UN Environment Conference Clouded by Vietnam Question A total of 250 questionnaires were sent. One hundred and fifty went to persons who had used them or were interested in their worth of computation in the first eight months of the academic year. The other 100 questionnaires were sent to a random sample of computer users in all departments. them what they would like to do in the future if means were available. The committee's report is due in September. Their findings are expected to constitute the core of recommendations for a new contract. tries here for a conference condemnation of the United States for its "barbarian atrocities" in Vietnam. The United States and its allies had expressed hope that such a nuclear arm would nam and nuclear arms would be left aside while the delegates concentrated on the complex and the problems of the environment. The United States and Britain said the big political problems belonged in other forums. A proposal to replace the University's present Honeywell 635 computer with a new generation Honeywell 6500 was originally introduced for the approval of administration for approval last December, but since then a budget cut and a ruling that substantial equipment acquisition required competitive budding precluded the original proposal But their hopes were dashed at the very beginning when Sweden's Socialist prime minister, Olaf Palme, accused the United States of what he called "ecology bullying," by linking the ecology of the third world. After that note by the boss country, virtually every non-aligned delegation included a sidewise at American policies. The report in September, however, is an interim report rather than a final one, Sherr said. Changes in computers are taking place faster than in perhaps any other department of the committee will have to be repeated on a year-by-year basis. There were fears among some delegations that the consequent attacks on the reckless wreck chances of the conference completing a declaration of prince Philip's death would This was to be the guideline for the global counter-terrorism coordination of Nations—on the man-made poisons damaging the earth, the sea, the rivers, the fertile lands, the climate and the atmosphere. Bill Approving Debt Extension In Committee WASHINGTON (AP)—The House Ways and Means Committee agreed tentatively to amend the present $40 billion national deey ceiling through Oct. 31, and should consider the issue this year. No More Shocks, Japan Told Such a major change, such as KU had hoped to make, to the computer center's term planning process to identify the Computation Center's needs and funding specifications for equipment to furnish the new equipment. TOKYO (AP) — Henry A. Kissinger acknowledged Sunday that the United States had made a deal with the Islamic State last summer and vowed there would not be any more "Nikon" attacks to trouble a future relations. The first of the "Nixon shokus," as the Japanese called them, fell last July when the President announced, without a word, that he was going to Peking. The second, soon after, was the unexpected imposition of surcharges on foreign imports. That dealt Japanese industry a major blow to their ability to devaluation of the yee. if sustained, the decision means President Nikon's adminis- tration will be denied its request for a $15 billion increase. Kissinger, President Nixon's top foreign policy aide, made the pledge at a three-hour breakfast meeting with Foreign Minister Takek Fakuda in the second day of U.S.-Japanese peace-mending mission to Japan. The Japanese have been saying that Kissinger knew little about Japanese feelings and affairs. He disarmed Fukuda by admitting the fallings, then showing a considerable expertise on things KISSINGER told Fukuda he realized the United States should have worked more closely with Tokyo. He promised consultation on any further China moves and economic measures affecting Japan. According to Lawrence Sherr, associate professor of business, he wants the group to contact the group sent out questionnaires to major computer users. The Long Range Planning Subcommittee, a part of the reorganized University Committee for Computing, is now working on the development of a community and recommending resources to support them. Nakasone also brought up strained economic relations between the two countries. He argued that Nakasone should anticipate future sources of friction. Kissinger showed a keen interest in this and in Nakasone's further suggestion of U.S.-Japan relations in aid to poor Asian countries. "I was amazed," commented Fukuda in a news conference, "how much Kissinger knew about Japan." During his 48 hours of almost continuous talks with industrialists, governors leaders and said the United States would like to see the U.S. Japan security force form without revision. He called it the keystone to peace in Asia. It is a demonstration of Liberal-Democratic party, among them Yasuhi Nakasone who would take defense look at it in 1975 and possibly substitute a modified security system. Kissinger has been questioned CHINA's more prepandent role in the area figured largely in the exchanges. The Japanese, still groping for a better China policy, are trying to find out how they can fit into the multipolar world. This emerged since Nixon's more talks in Peking and Moscow. The talks, which included strong editors and representatives from the United States and the American Socialist party, have been held against a background of political turmoil. on the American position with positional urgency to address the changing chamber in Japan leadership Prime Minister Elsako Sato is expected retire Whoever replaces him is almost sure to move closer to Peking. The Japanese want to attack, but the United States intends to do about the security treaty and on about the nationalist Chinese on Taiwan. Kissinger does not appear to have much confidence in answer on the Taiwan question. His pledge for more consultation found an echol in a supposed Sunday after a foundation day. He spoke of Japanese and American leaders THOUGH HE had only a few hours sleep Friday night before embarking on his intensive round of talks, Kissinger appeared fresh and jaunty in the writing Tokyo heat Sunday night. He meet a coach session with a smile and a handshake for the participants. The U.S. and Japanese governments, the report said, should cooperate in urban studies, pollution control, health areas, welfare programs and domestic political processes. and scholars. THE PARTICIPANTS also urged the two governments to promote exchanges of educational personnel and hold middle-level official meetings to improve deteriorating economic relations. The report was adopted at the end of the Third Japan-American Assembly, attended by 60 Japanese and American College Hall former U.S. underscribee of State, and Nakasase. The report said the American initiative in relations with China was strengthened and the United States. But the participants also agreed that the U.S. government was "washed away" by changes in Japan. BEER SPECIAL Light or Dark PITCHERS $100 2:00-4:00 p.m. SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & Ye Public house 844 W. 23rd 842-2266 Monday Thru Friday Prices Good Thru June