12 Tuesday, May 9, 1972 University Daily Kansan Caucus Seeks Candidates By LINDA CHAPUT Kansas Staff Writer A group of 15 to 20 women from the Lawrence area, members of the Lawrence Women's Political Cause, met Monday night in the Lawrence State Bank and organized programs to persuade qualified women to run for political office in the next election. The members of the Lawrence caucus are also members of the state caucus, which was formed last year. Members of the city caucus were absent during the month. Three members are chosen every three months to handle correspondence and coordinate meetings, according to Jean Robinson, one of the coordinators of the group. THE FORMAL statement of goals of the Lawrence group is substantially the same as the goals of the Kaiser group and national causes, Cynthia Kansan Photo by PRIS BRANSTED Lawrence Women's Political Caucus Me Lawrence Women's Political Caucus Meets You will need to sign up online to run for office. Neo-Fascists Gain in Italy PASSIE (AP) — Italy's reurgent FASCIA SHIP has collapsed, losses lower Tuesday in partial returns from the crucial parliamentary crisis. The Christian Democrat party, dominant in Italian politics since the mid-1960s, is showing slight gains. The trend indicated a general shift to the right, making a center government a likely result of the With about half the vote counted in the Senate race, the neo-Farcists had 8.2 per cent. In the House, 91 per cent. 1968 election. The Communists and Protatarian Socialists had 28.4 compared to 30 in 1968. The Christian Democrats had 39.4 compared to 38.4 three years ago. The vote for the 314-sent Senate as being tabulated first. Results of the Senate vote will be Deputies will follow, with a near-final count expected by 7 a.m. The uprise of the neo-Fascists was a predicted backlash against political inability, economic mismanagement and street violence that have plagued Italy for the past two years. It is estimated that more than half the small monarchist party. In some southern communities, including the city of Reggio Emilia, Italy, the neo-Fasciate emerged is the largest party. In Reggio Emilia, where the city-wide rides, the party was plunging up about 45 per cent of the population. But regardless of their success the neo-Fascists have virtually no chance of playing a role in any new government. All other parties have repeatedly stated they would shun any attempt to take the regime of dictator Benito Mussolini who fed Italy to a state of disorder. Robinson, another coordinator said Monday. "Our immediate project is to find out if there are women who are interested in running for office and to encourage them," she said. Members of the group brought up the names of possible candidates to compile a list of people to contact. They rejected the names of several women because they had been there indefinitely to run. Several members said that they had called possible candidates from the local police. "Every woman I called was in favor of finding women candidates," said Ellen Gold, third coordinator for the caucus. "MANY WOMEN said that they would be interested in running for office in the future." Jean Robinson said, "but many said that they were busy with school at the present time." "All the women that I talked to "all the women that if a woman wanted to be elected, she would have to be an agent on her campaign," she added. The group decided during the meeting that it would be better to allow women to be possible candidates and encourage them to run instead of simply calling them and that it would be more effective for women because of the women's liberal or moderate political leanings because they were, "women period." "WE WOULD like to elect women who would do their homework to office to replace men who do not," Gold said. Lee Ketzel, a member of the caucus, showed maps of the senatorial, congressional and judicial members to the group members. She suggested that the caucus try to get a woman elected in the new House. "The district runs through a wide span of economic areas and has no incumbent," she said, "so we should be ideal to run a woman." Members of the caucus planned another meeting for May 15 in the Douglas County State Bank. Five University of Kansas alumni and two other non-alumni will receive Distinguished Service Citations from the University of Kansas Alumni Association at commencement ceremonies May 21 and 22 The Distinguished Service award winners include two students from Weaver, 737 Indiana St. former owner of Weaver's Department Store, and John N. Nelson, 933 Northwestern St. graduate of the KU graduate school of Five KU Alumni Named Recipients Of Distinguished Service Citations Other recipients include Robert W. Wagtail, chairman and president of Bottling company of Mid-America; William A. Buzic, chairman and chief executive of Cornell University; George C. Corp; George H. Cady, professor of chemistry at the University of Iowa; and president of Cornell University; and Joyce C. Hall, Kansas City, M.o., founder and chairman of NELSON AND HALL are the two who are not alumni. The winners are being recognized for citizenship, their contributions to community, state and nation, and their humanitarian services, the most. Burick, Wagaffat, Hall and Nelson will receive their awards during commencement May 21. The following evening, citations will be presented to Cady, McKinnon Montgomery, Junction City publisher and director of the Kansas Highway Commission, who was selected last year, but was unable to be present to receive his award. Weaver, 77, is a life-lone resident of Kildare. He was elected to the University he was a member of the starting basketball team in 1913, 1914 and 1915. WEAVER HAS ALSO served as a member of the KU Athletic Board; and a trustee, treasurer and member of the Executive Endowment Association; and has served on the Kansas Union Operating Board. In 1957 he gave up the position to the KU Museum of Art A World War I Veteran, Weaver became associated with his father and brother, Weaver's Department Store in 1919. He later became principal owner and manager, and served capacity until his retirement. Nelson served as dean of the Admission School during the summer term and later as post-war veteran enrollment surge. During his tenure as dean, more graduate degrees were graduated in his name and all its previous years. After Nelson, 75, received his B.A. degree from Wofford College in 1923. He was a professor of English at KU, associate dean of the KU College of Liberal Arts and acting chancellor of the Graduate School, acting chancellor in 1931 and dean of the Graduate School from 1946 until retiring from his administrative duties, he taught for five more years and retired as professor emeritus of English in 1968. HALL, 80. BAS BEEN chairman of Hallmark cards, Inc. since 1910, and served as president from 1910 to 1966. A native of Nebraska, Hall came to Kansas City in 1910 and went on to develop numerous programs in the field of education, the arts and culture, inner-city urban city development including the Children's Center in Kansas City, a city under urban redevelopment program AN ACTIVE KANSAS CITY civic leader, Wagstaff is a senior and a former chancellor of the Episcopal Dicese of West Missouri is now a member of U.S. School of Business adviser board. Convention Is Goal Of KU Democrat Wayne Richardson, Ellinwood sophomore, plans to run as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention. Richardson, 19, has been telling nassif delegates that they are making a big effort to the new new voters in the first district and, in a broad sense, the new party is gaining ground. Richardson was elected as an commissioned delegate to the first congress of the 19th century. Democratic convention by Barton Coryen at bartoncoryen.com, August 4. The first district convention will be in Pratt May 13. About 150 delegates are stated to attend. Attendance is required by George McGovern for president. Richardson sent letters an- nother delegate on May 1. In his letter Richardson said he was leaning toward supporting Official Censures Penal System By SCOTT EATON Kansas Staff Writer Citing a revolution in the moral values of society and in the quest for human rights, David Fogel, Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of social welfare workers Monday morning that many changes need to be made in the culture and welfare systems of this country Fogel, speaking in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union, presented his talk "Crises in Correction. The Implications for this program sponsored by the KU School of Social Welfare and its alumni association, said the 1960s had created a social revolution in the United States which the Eight Room had yet to deal with properly. Fogel said the next decade would be important in deciding The recipients of undergraduate research awards for the summer of 1972 were announced Monday by Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Burick is also a member of the board of directors of the American National Cancer Institute in Chicago, a Chicago district crusade chairman of the American Cancer Society a chief executive of the Metropolitan Cruise of Mercy and a member of the business council of the Chicago Urban Land Trust. Awards Given For Research the future of the human race. Those offered research awards were Lois Armstrong, Kansas University; Burke, Overbrook junior, David Cohen, Shawney Mission frumshar, Dorotty Crooks, Oklahoma State University; Wavilleville fourth-year-pharmacy student, Lynne Emry, Lawrence University; Robert Kendall, Oklahoma State University; sophomore, Suzanne Kelly, Prairie Village护理, Margaret Lanoue, Albany N. V., senior, Moore DeSoto senior, senior; Sherry Michael, Overland Park junior, Janie Moore, DeSoto senior, Thomas Kendall, Marilyn Parsons, Oklahoma City sophomore; Ronald Penner, Prairie Village sophomore, M. Seward freshman; Marilyn Parsons, Oklahoma City sophomore; Ronald Prohaska, Atchison sophomore; Larry Russell, Missouri, Mo. senior; Stephen Thompson, fourth year pharmacy student; Dennis Simpson, Satanta sophomore; Ronald Schifman, Stump; Lawrence senior; Stephen Thompson, Overland Park senior, and Denny Watson, CADY, 55, RECEIVED undergraduate and graduate degrees from KU in 1927 and 1928, and his Ph.D. from the University of Berkeley in 1930. He served as an instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and as a research chemist with the U.S. Rubber Company before joining University of Washington in 1938. in the next several days, he said. Alternate candidates have been chosen and are becoming available. Shaina awards become available. The awards provide stipends of $000 for eight weeks of full-time research during the summer. Corsen, $8, received his B.A. degree from the University of Georgia in 1934 and graduate and Ph.D. degrees from KU and the University of California at the son of Hamilton Cady, a distinguished professor and director with the Manhattan Project in 1943-45 and was the discoverer of the Nuclear Bomb. Recipients will receive letters in the next several days, he said. He has been active in the American Chemical Society, and he was awarded the service citation by the Office of Naval Research—the highest civilian award given by the Secretary of State. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of Memorial Slaan. Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. CORSON WAS APPOINTED the 18th president of Cornell in 1907. He was elected since 1963. Prior to that, he served as the President of the College of Engineering. "I believe McGovern will beat Nixon. He's the only one that can." Richardson said. This constituency to Fogel was composed of minorities, poverty stricken individuals and persons in penal institutions. FOGEL SAID this lag meant simply that in general social well-being would be improved if hostages had yet to make a major response to their incarceration or what constitency was and decided if one was really necessary. "Few professions have undertaken to view their clients "Why do we show such extraordinary concern for the morals of the idle poor while the morals of the idle rich cause us no alarm, Fogel said. "Why does it matter?" The illness or ex-convict status still attack so tenaciously—even among professionals." Fogel said the problems facing the human services groups were also found in the nations correctional institutions. He said some of the problems there involved the lack of conceived delivery system of aid, policies which were too much a part of a closed institutional “UNTIL WE DO,” Fogel said, “We are wafed to achieve—at best—small incremental gains for those we should be serving, for those we should be intellectual wrestling with jargon about what our roles should be.” an anything much different than a buying group—customers—with the professionals as well, the professional agents," Fogel said. "Someone once wrote a book entitled "In There Intelligent Life," and the 1970s may indeed be the decade which has to furnish an understanding." FOGEL SAID that the revolution of the 1960s was a social one and that it is still continuing. It continues in the immensely future. FOGEL SAID persons involved in the social services need to philosophically conceive of their mission as assistance to those who need it, in a timely, efficient and morally absent way. Fogol said that the persons involved in the social services industry had a very strong concept of constituency as well as did the political candidate "We in the helping professions have been in a position of what can be called a socio-cultural and political lag." Foel said. "All we any of us have going on God's green earth are the days of hospitalization represents a taking of all or part of a life. When government or social institutions undertake to such a venture, they have the responsibility to make certain future is constitutionally fair." Fogel said that for those who could pay, service of any kind was limited only by available technology, its delivery and the ability to be properly trained, this said was true in the legal and medical profession. Those who could pay were delivered excellent service, while those who could not pay were given less service generally a much lower quality. He said the dimensions of the revolution included a great expansion of human rights, particularly of youth, women and ethnic minorities, an expansion of consumerism, and a more general consciousness of man's existence with his environment. "Consumer protection legislation is emerging—that's bit more hopeful." Fogel said. "Ecological interest is mounting—that is hopeful. Rahul Nader has predicted, that and bears watching." - **OGELSAID** this concern with the buying power of the constituency, this tendency to look upon professional services in terms of a buyer's market, had grown more than same in the term "consumerism." Fogel, one of the few men working in important places in the nation's penal system also holds a degree in social welfare, the response of the service workers, and the demands to be social workers, doctors, psychiatrists, case workers and the like, was not up to the standards of the pressures of society's world often places on them. Fogel said prisoners should be given a chance to govern partially for themselves, never be subjected to any form of censorship, and be given a chance to serve in prison as a lawful body. He said prison should be taken as a very serious matter. "If we could straighten out these problems we could bend the creativity of our modern warfare, we could bend the moon to the moon of the problem say, the successful reeninger of man himself, a hero who is a short geographical journey but still an impossible spiritual absence in the absent fogel. Fasil告 "THE TAKES a special breed of administrator. Foegal said "Who have little vested interest in caree mobility safeguards?" "Consumerism is and promises to be a major fact of life in the country," he said. "A brief sweep through the professions in the 1980s points to a new consumer society." He said there is much freedom and liberty, but it is still frightening. Quoting the writings of a social worker from the year 1908, Fogel presented the doctrine that there was no reason to aid any poor person more than was necessary andided by the social conscience. "There's no trick to running a real trick, but the real trick is to run it with some care for both the keeper and the kept. This process itself may be the most difficult. He said that a major problem in agencies such as prisons were the bureaucracy itself. He said that they often remain constantly coming into the organization, and periodic reorganization of the agency Fogel said the helping professions had been unwilling to identify their role with what this book called the "interests of the poor." system, and the fact that the structure itself, the concrete and steel of the prison is too often a message a prisoner receives. George Baxter Smith, Director of Monday's project on Monday that the projected student enrollment for the Lawrence campus next fall was Smith said projected enrollment figures were arrived at by means of statistical data, which took into account the number of graduating high school seniors, past patterns of enrolment, and trends in the number of graduates. Rowlands filed an answer stating that she knew of no illegal actions on the property. Stagg and Scarbrough filed answers denying the drug violations. Official Predicts Enrollment Gain The suit names as defendants the manager, Harold Stagg; Renalda Scarbrough, lessee and owner of the property. M. Rowlands, property owners. Flights are Filling FAST The trial is a result of the October 107 civil action filed by County Attorney Mike Elwil and Judge Steven Reid. The Gaslight seeking to have it designated a common nuisance and to have it closed, alleging that the defendant violated t Contact us NOW about your reservations and airline tickets Gaslight Trial Set on Docket A trial date for the case of the state against the Gaslight Tavern has been set for June 13 in Douglas County District Court. Maupintour Tickets, Reservations, Information. Available at NO Extra Cost! Phone 843-1211 According to Richardson, about 25 county delegates are running as delegates to the national convention. Some of the older party members have engaged him from running, he said. Richardson saw his freshness in the party as an asset, though He said most of the people running as delegates were politicians with impressive qualifications on new actual accomplishments. For The number of students enrolled on the Lawrence campus for 2013 was 7,685. The figure was four-tenths of one cent off the one projected. Smith travel service "I don't want to stand on a political background which hasn't been productive at all," Richardson said. Trans Atlantic Youth Fare 900 Mass./The Malls Kansas Union/Hillcrest Complete Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency VI 3-3012 824 Mass. St. GRADUATE STUDENTS ONLY! Finally, a place at the University of Kansas for single graduate students only! Naismith Hall's Graduate Living Group. All of the advantages of a dorm. All the advantages of an apartment. None of the hassle of either. Drop by and look us over. NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559