2 Thursday, June 8, 1972 University Summer Kapsan News Briefs BY The Associated Press Troubled Kids Get Column PHILADELPHIA (AP)—A 10-year-old reader of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin thought the newspaper should have "a column like 'Dear Abby,' for smaller problems." The newspaper agreed. So Angel Maria Cavaliere will soon start writing a column of answers to children's question. It'll be called "Dear Angel." 428 Miners Remain Trapped WANKIE, Rhodesia (AP)—Rescue workers attempted to pump fresh air Wednesday into the underground mine shaft where 428 men have been trapped for more than a day, but company officials held little hope of finding survivors. Three massive explosions in the No. 2 shaft of the Wankie Collapsion mine morning. No container was attached with them. Rescue workers were supported by secondary explosions which damaged the mine's venting system. Deadly methane and carbon monoxide gas still filled the shaft. Nixon Supports No-Fault HOUSTON (AP)—President Nixon asked the nation's governors Wednesday to make no-fault insurance a matter of top priority. "I have endorsed this system because I consider it to be a vast improvement and a genuine reform for the benefit of the consuming public," Nixon said in a telegram read at the concluding session of the National Governors Conference. Nixon said he believed the states and not the federal level could best respond to the question of reform for the present system of automobile insurance. U.S. Asks UN Austerity WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States has issued a 14-point policy statement designed to spark a serious economy wave in spending by the United Nations and its related agencies. In a memorandum circulated by the United Nations and its agencies, the State Department said the austerity principle set out for federal expenditures must apply equally to international organizations. Military Bust Challenged TOPEKA (AP)—A petition filed in U.S. District Court here contends that military regulations are irrational in treating marijuana like hard narcotics and that Col. Gerald K. Kelhar was singled out for discriminatory treatment because of his rank. Kelhar is serving a three-year term at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth for possession of marijuana. The petition also requests that the Civil Liberties Union forces be seeked from Kelhar from his imprisonment. Kelhar was commander of the 618th Military Airlift Support Squadron at Tan Son Nuh Air Base, Saigon, when he was charged with use, possession, transfer and solicitation to purchase marijuana. HOUSTON (AP) — Defeated in SEN. Hubert H. Humphrey abandoned his flat opposition to running mate and tried to drum up con- vention support among Democratic governors Wed- Hubert Approves Wallace At a news conference, Humphrey said he could accept Alabama Gov. Wallace as a running mate should Wallace accept the party platform, but he wouldn't be unrealistic that George Wallace and Hubert Humphrey would be on the ticket." Humphrey described his meetings with fellow Democrats at the National Governors' office, and he united, not an attempt to halt Sen. George McGovern's accelerating nomination. BUT SOME governors whom they support, and in at least one case asked a southern governor to withhold delegale support Humphrey said he intended the rest for a couple of days in his home state of Minnesota before Humprey's visit to the governors came two days after one by McGovern, who tried to assure the governors were not radical as portrayed by Humphrey and other opponents. picking up campaigning for the June 20 New York primary. HUMPHEMP took comfort in the fact that his California defeat was by a much slimmer margin than the 20 per cent poll had shown earlier. And he said he would have a winner-take-all rule he could have won at least half its delegates. Muskie Hints Withdrawal NEW YORK (AP)—NBC reported Wednesday that Sen. Edmund McSusen's "present plans" for a budget bill were approved. Sen. George McGovignor for the Democratic nomination for the presidency in a speech at Washington's National Press Club on Friday. Muskie, oneume tron-runner Treasury Suggests New Money System WASHINGTON (AP)—The Treasury Department Wednesday declared that the volatile and risky oil market was a prime reason why the world should phase out the pre-meridian in a new monetary system. "The demonstrated sensitivity of the gold market to self-generating and self-serving rumors. simply provides further evidence of the need to build a monetary relationship with commodity," the Treasury said. As the free price of gold skyrocketed, the Treasury described as false two reports that have been feeding the speculation. One report said it was a secret U.S.-Soviet deal to raise the price of gold drastically. The other report, published in the magazine *The New York Journal* for monetary affairs, Paul A. Volcker, plans to resign is without foundation, the Treasury It was a tacit recognition, however, that the free market price of gold had at the value of the dollar. The weakened dollar was three times as price of gold hit $65 an ounce. The Nixon administration's statement was cleared by Volker, chief architect of the Inter-American Agreement reached last December. Volcker wanted to phase out the part that gold played in the present monetary system. The value of the dollar, and other currencies as well, is pegged to gold official price of $38 an Industry Promises Help For Pollution Standards Prop 9, which proposed a law that would allow the nation's most populous city was turned down 2 to 1 in Tuesday's California primary LOS ANGELES (AP)—Thought soundly defeated at the polls, the Environment Initiative hasn't given the businessman who helped help it to defeat said Wednesday he had an "industrialized" proposition ONE SUCH avenue was proposed by the anti-Prop. 5 businessman. It the apparent victim of a man-do-or-die law, governmental leader who said a responsible antipollution need He campaigned hard against Prop. 9 around the state. "By God, the time has come to do something responsible to fight climate change," he said around too long inviting this sort of thing." said R. Jack Stoddard, chairman of the Los Angeles Department of Interior's major Contractors of California. He said he wanted businessmen to draft a ballot measure "that would get the pollution job done in California in the realm of good present technology. It would be an industrialized Prop. 9." HE DIDN'T elaborate much except to say that he had not visualized the measure as having 'de-die' provisions of Prop. 9. The Environment Initiative would have banned DDT and related long-lasting pesticides from gasoline from gasoline by July 1, 1976. outlawed offshore oil and gas drilling and put a five-year moratorium on construction of nuclear power was safe. Stoddard said he had already met with other business leaders, including Union and Standard Oil and support for such a measure. leaving it wide open for something like Prop. 9 to happen again," Stoddard said. Clem Whitaker Jr., partner in Whitaker & Baxter, the San Diego team that coordinated the $1,4 million anti-Pro. 9 campaign, said he had talked with business and people about such a measure "There's a strong feeling that there should be added emphasis on anything you need, and should be intelligent improvement on environmental controls. I think there's real substance to what he (Siddharth) said." "IF WE don't move, we're MEANWHILE, Ed Kouplah. Angeles-based group that placed Prop 9 on the ballot by gathering petition signatures, was dumbified. "We'll see," he said. He said he wasn't dishearted about Prop. 9's defeat. "Actually, we won by forming a coalition of leaders, including consumer advocate Ralph Nader, who advocates the measure and have it win." The Treasury said that President Nikon had made it clear that administration policies on shap- ing the air systems in the system were unchanged. "As the President said, in an announcement the day before, that he was答应 George Shultz, there will be a changing of the guard but no change in the rank." Spokesmen said the London office simply a commodity market's speculative and subject to rumors, and, "it doesn't affect for the nomination, is expected to confer with McGovern in the nation's capital Thursday, NBC will report a report from Los Angeles. But Richard Stewart, a Muskie spokesman in Washington, said he was confident that the still deciding and conferring with advisers about whether to continue as a candidate or throw his bid. But Mr. Steward, a spokesman said a decision would probably be announced during the National Press Club. Stewart added that McGovern telephoned Muskie from California to ask if he was said he was not sure what was discussed. He said he knew nothing of a planned trip to Hawaii, two seniors on Thursday. Stewart said also that the subject of delegates already committed to Muskie also would attend Friday press club appearance. Muskie has 166 committed delegates to the Democratic National Convention. Once Tuesday's popular votes in California, New Jersey, South Carolina and Florida tabulated completely, Humphrey said, he believed he would overtake Wallace as the leading candidate in all the primaries so far. MGOVERN stood third before Tuesday's votes, although he held the lead in delegate strength. Humphrey conceded that McGovern probably would go into the Miami convention controlling 1,200 or more delegates. McGovern has predicted he would have 1,200 to 1,300 and be in control of the event, the extras needed to reach the 1,509 required for nomination. As Humphrey spoke, the National Governors' Conference wrapped up its four-day annual meeting. TRANSPORTATION Secretary Deborah de lapierre the governor designated applauses he announced he would release to them a billion in highway money they already had. The governors passed resolutions reiterating their support for federal revenue sharing and federal assumption of state welfare costs, but the governor also valueed the federal value-added tax which they said would compete with state sales taxes. A motion to endorse the idea of federal compensation for innocent victims of the attack required two-thirds majority on a 12-affirmative vote. Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel, a democrat, was elected to replace West Virginia's Republican, as chairman of the conference. Next year's annual meeting is set for April at the state capitol for a 1974 site went begging. Kansan Photo by JOHN REED Suds Head for Potter Lake Water from the Chi Omega fountain, which drains into Potter Lake, carried sids with it Wednesday morning. Workmen were, according to a reporter, watching the edge of Javahawk湖, and closing the previously open culvert. Court Weakens Rights of Suspects The 5-4 decision in a Chicago case runs counter to a series of earlier rulings that expanded arrested persons' right to counsel. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that police may place arrests in groups without a lawer on hand. As a result, a suspect must be offered a lawyer from the mourning party. But he can't insist on one if罪犯 him in a lineup or a showup in front of his wife. The ruling was produced by the four Nixon appointees plus Justice Potter Stewart. Its logic was challenged by dissenters. In a fury of actions on a busy day, the court agreed also to rule on the way all states except Hawaii finance their public schools. And the justices unanimously indicted committing criminal suspects found incompetent to stand trial. The Chicago case tested the Chicago case tested was enlisted to a lawyer when a holdup victim came to the station house to view him aba Stewart said the suspect, Thomas Kirby, did not have this right either under the Constitution or under a 1967 decision by the high court providing lawyers who had been indicted after they had been indicted. The decision is likely to have a nationwide impact. In at least 13 states courts had ordered police not to place an arrested suspect on the record in a lawsuit on hand. They are California, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin. Similarly, police have been barred by eight of the 11 federal appeals courts from the process. The high court in the Kirby case John J. O'Donnell, president of the National Guard, had shadowed him be selected but it would be conducted as a matter of desperation if the current president refused to do so. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Air Lift threatened Wednesday to call a 24-hour shutdown of air service if aircraft hijackings were allowed O'Donnell told a luncheon in New York that the CIO Marieme Trade Department, leaders of the 60-million international Federation of Air Transporters. Stewart was backed by Chief Justice Warren Burger and Justice Harry A. Blackmun, Lewis Rutherford and David Bentley. Rehquist, Dissenting were William C. O. Douglas, William J. Duncan, White and Thurgood Marshall Pilots React to Hijacks; Threaten Massive Strike Brennan said there was no good reason to supply lawyers at lineup stations. He denied them when the lineup was held at an earlier point, after O'Donnell said the boycott would be applied. If swelling of his throat caused such as Algeria and Cuba and that continued serving them. in London Thursday, may join in business with the British boycott of countries which sheltered airline hijackers, or for ALPA 4,000 member pilots. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) -Norway has pledged $250 programs in Bangladesh, Ambassador Ole Adekard announced. Chinese Seaports Closed to Soviets ST. LOUIS (AP)—Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia, the son of late President China, said the Chinese have not opened their seaports to North Korean海军 harbor from North American mines, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch said Wednesday in a copyrighted dispatch from Pele's office. Siankou, who has lived in Pekin since he was ousted in 1970 by Marshal Lon Noel, made his return with Richard Dudman, chief with Richard Dudman, chief Washington correspondent of the anti-communist movement is on a two-week tour of China. Sihanok said he understood the Chinese refusal was based on unwillingness to let Russian represidents see China harbor defenses. Sishanuk said the reasoning for the Chinese refusal was his own conclusion and not something the Chinese had told him. "The they have been strengthening the defenses of their ports and all their cities," said Sihanok, who self as a good friend of China. Shamokul said in the Post-Depad interview that President Nikon's action in mining North Vietnamese harbors and bombing real and highway links with the US slowed the flow of assistance. "They fear more an attack from the Soviet Union than from the U.S.A. They want to help them by sending troops yet open their ports," he said. He said, however, that large amounts of supplies had already been cached in Laos. Cambodia has also been engaged in action. And many American- "And so, while President Nixon has slowed down the flow of Russian weapons, we now have more captured weapons. It is an additional weapon in our president Nixon". Sihanouk said in his Post-Dispatch interview. made weapons have been captured in the past two months in attacks against military installations, he said. He told the newspaper that the only obstacles to peace in Indochina were South Vietnamnes were American forces. Then and Lon of Nam Cambodia. Prof Receives Study Grant For Algebra Paul F. Conrad, professor of mathematics, has received a $10,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to continue his research on partially ordered algebras, a new area of abstract algebra. "Mr. Nixon could have peace at any time he abandons support for them," Sihanouk said. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—Sign in a hardware store here: "Whitewash—any color." He is one of about 40 mathemeticians studying this branch of science, developed since World War II. Corrad began the research in 1970 at Ulm University, where he taught mathematics and he continued it at KU. JAY BOWL Kansas Union 5 Facts You Should Know!! - MIXED LEAGUE STARTING 6:30 Wed., June 7th BEST Bowling Rates Available *OUTSTANDING Student Rates—Every Day Mon. thru Fri. 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