THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 82nd Year. No. 137 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Gay Marriage Discussed See Page 19 Friday, May 5. 1972 See Page 12 Peace March Crosses Campus on Jayhawk Boulevard March originated at McCollum Hall, prozressed through the campus and downtown, and ended at Central Park . . . Glover Petition Invalidated The Kansas Secretary of State Elwil M. Shanahan ruled invalid Wednesday petitions filed by Michael G. Gloyer, a 1970 KU graduate, that support his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for state governor in Lawrence's new 44th district The secretary of state threw the partitions out because Glover had cried. By state law, petitions must be circulated in a precinct by persons residing in that precinct other than the candidate. Glover's friends intend to recirculate the papers this weekend and he will file them. Glover needs 53 signatures on his petitions, two per cent of the vote, in the 44th district to become a Democratic candidate for secretary of state in 1970. Glover is currently serving in the U.S. army as a chaplin's assistant at Fort Hood. After he is discharged from the army June 22 Glover intends to return to Lawrence to become an apprentice and pipiter and to begin his campaign. Glover, 24, has been a resident of Lawrence since childhood. A Lawrence High School graduate, he received his B.A. in history from KU in 1970. He campaigned unsuccessfully in 1970 as the Democratic candidate for 39th district Kansas City. The new 4th district is considered the "inner city" district. It includes most of east Lawrence and the central area of Milwaukee, the 9th and Massachusetts to Iowa streets. Glover said the new district included workers inclined to support Wallace and Humphrey, students, and intellectual and middle-aged people inclined to vote Republican. Glover said he would like to see the Democratic party nominate George McGovern for president and intended to run his own campaign like McGovern's. McGovern has concentrated on building grass roots organizations to campaign for Glover sees taxes as one of the main issues in the campaign. He would like to eliminate sales tax on necessities such as food, clothing and medicine. He criticized the sales tax as regressive, since the poor pay less than the rich. Another issue that concerns Glover is crimes without victims such as those involving betting, liquor by the drink and marijuana. Glover said he would like to see liquor by the drink and legalized in Kansas and Missouri. Glover said that either the laws against marijuana would be changed or the laws would be changed. He stressed that liquor by the drink and murjuanja should be matters of personal interest. Glover is very concerned about the war in Indochina. He said the number one priority in the war should be the release of the prisoners of war. Glover is also concerned about penal reform. He said prisons were doing a dismal job of rehabilitation and should be made to do a better job. He said criminals were so much apart from the mainstream of society that there was no hope of rehabilitating them while they were in prison. He said the bombing exposed more men to capture and it was impossible to win a war. Glover recommended that more stress be placed on rehabilitating prisoners than on the regular staff. "I think the priorities (of the United States) are completely out of line," he said. Rally Follows March Moratorium Draws 250 War Protesters By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kongson Staff Writer A growing entourage of dogs, children and adults made their way from McColum Hall to the Dugout for a Party Thursday where a rally was held to protest U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Four speakers addressed the 250 to 300 people assembled at the rally. They emphasized the actions an individual could personally take to halt the war. After they spoke, the microphone was turned over and a video of the American Indian Movement (AMV) A GATHERING OF fewer than 75 people began the march from McCollium. They marched down 15th Street to Naismith Drive and then through campus where the students gathered. They marched down 12th Street to South Park, they met a second group of about 80 protesters, Bob Davidson, Salina sophomore, outlined plans to make the activities into an "ever-present movement." He said a plan to be on hand at Base 1 at 11:30 a.m. Friday to let the GIs inside know that their demands for an end to the war had not gone unheard. A group from KU will congregate in O-zone at 9 a.m. and drive to Topeka from there, he said. businessman, housewives and children, as well as students. The line of marchers, then two blocks long, walked down Massachusetts Street to Central Park. Two police cars, one at the front of the line and one at the rear, escorted the protesters from the beginning of the march. Periodically the marches encountered encouraging hones and raised fists from cars driving the opposite way on a street. A passenger in one car raised an open beer cap. THE CROWD ARRIVED at Central Park at 12:25 p.m., 25 minutes behind schedule. I.J. Stoneback, RFD 4, was the first speaker. There were some unfavorable comments from people on the street, but the majority emerged from the shops to watch or looked out their windows. He urged concerned people to call their congressmen and senators and express their antiquity sentiments. He said students who did not have enough money for the long distance could come to his farm at 4 p.m., and he would pass the phone bill. "I don't know of any way else to stop the war than to put pressure on our representatives, Stoneback said. "I understand we have only one senator, you know." Wallace Takes Tennessee Primary NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama broke through with a border state primary victory Thursday, but so few Tennessee bothered to vote in their first presidential primary that the tell fall short of the mandate he had asked. Wallace polled about 70 per cent of the total vote cast and captured the questionable commitment of all 49 members to the Democratic National Convention. But only a quarter of Tennessee's registered voters participated, despite an antibullying referendum which outpolled Wallace, who had been expected to boost voter turnout. With 92 per cent of the precincts reporting, Wallace had 68 per cent of the vote. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota was his closest competition far back at 16 per cent. The rest of the nine counties were trailing at less than 10 per cent. SEN. GEORGE S. MGOVERN of South Dakota was in third place with 8 per cent, but the other two were less than half that. votes in the black precincts of the four major cities, was fourth with four per cent. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, who dropped week, was fifth with only two open set weeks, with only two open sets per week. The referendum, which asked if Tennessee favored a U.S. Constitutional amendment banning busing for the sake of achieving racial balance in schools, was carried by 80 per cent of the vote, but drew less than the presidential preference ballot. The victory was Wallace's first outside the Deep South and his first major vote in a primary. He had won in Florida with a 42 per cent plurality in a crowded field and finished second in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Indiana. HUMPHREY DID not appear once in the state during the campaign but relied on a residual of union-labor strength. He had failed to find him, but had active organizations in key cities. President Nikon took 96 per cent of the Republican vote and all 28 GOP convention delegates. He had 105 votes, more than John Ashbrook of Ohio were distant trailers with two per cent each. The delegates won by Wallace boosted him into third place in the over-all standings among Democratic contenders, with a total of 162. Vote Totals Here are the vote totals in the Tennessee Democratic presidential preference primary with 59 per cent of the 2,433 voters reporting: Wallace 252,856 - 67 per cent Humphrey 72,349 - 17 per cent McGovern 32,320 - 7 per cent Chisholm 17,151 - 4 per cent Muskie 9,151 - 2 per cent Brown 400,408 - 14 per cent Maryland 5,471 - 1 per cent McCarthy 2,201 - 1 per cent Hartke 1,660 - 0 per cent Lindsey 1,346 - 0 per cent Vorty 639 - 0 per cent McGovern is the leader with $256_{1/2}$, and Humphrey with 188. WALLACE PASSED Muskie, who had been third with 128% "Our representatives told the German people at Nuremburg that our people had a moral law higher than the German law to which we belong. Hitler. Now we have a madman in power." The Rev. Don Baldwin, adviser in United Ministries in Higher Education, outlined the three-dimensional nature of peace. The personal dimension is achieved only within ourselves, he said, and at the interpersonal level peace must be achieved with respect to the environment. The dimension involves nations, states and politics. People must not forget to concern See MORATORIUM Page 6 Reactions Varied to Moratorium By KEVIN SHAFER Kansan Staff Writer The reactions of persons at the University of Kansas and in Lawrence to the moratorium Thursday demonstrated a wide variety of opinions. Most of the city commissioners of the city had little to say about the moratorium Jack Rose, a commissioner, said, "I don't know anything about it. Did it bring me any harm?" Rose said there had been confusion among commission members involving a proclamation that was drawn by one of the city commissioners and by a worker on the moratorium committee. The proclamation, which was presented to the commissioner, asked that Thursday be proclaimed a day of recoignion for the moratorium. Most of the commissioners, Rose said, did not know who the proclamation was from. The request did not come through the proper channels, he said. ROSE DESCRIBED the proper procedure and the normal channels through which a request must go in order to be considered as a proclamation. Rose said that usually requests came through city hall. The identification of the proclamation's sponsors accompanies the request. A representative will then appear before the commission of the Tuesday meeting and say a few words explaining the proclamation should be passed. The commission will then act on the request. See CITIZENS Page 3 U.S. to Deploy 72 More Bombers To Repel North Vietnamese Assault WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States will soon fly another 72 F4 Phantom fighter bombers to Southeast Asia, a move that may foreshadow an intensified bombing campaign aimed at stopping the North Vietnamese offensive. Pentagon spokesman J. W. Friedheim announced Thursday that some additional land-based U.S. warplanes would be sent to the war zone. Though Friedheim gave no details, other defense sources said four squads of F4s would leave Holloman Air Force Base, Alamagordo, N. M., for Thailand. Announcement of this significant boost in U.S. air power in Southeast Asia came soon after peace negotiations in Paris broke down again amid a battlefield crisis that threatened to link these events to the new air buildup, but described the reinforcement as part of "an over-all plan to make sure Gen. W. Abrams has available to him all the air and naval assets he needs to defend the country against Vietnamese", in repelling the offensive. Peace Talks Suspended PARIS (AP)—The United States and South Vietnam called off the Vietnam peace talks indefinitely Thursday because of progress in every available channel. The chief U.S. delegate, William J. Porter, used the words "in every available channel" in announcing the suspension of the conference. He apparently referred to secret talks with the Communists as well as the semipublic meetings. U. S. officials in Washington indicated later that unsuccessful private talks were held with the North Vietnamese in recent days. MEANWHILE, the White House offered its first assessment of recent military There were rumors in Paris that a high American official, possibly Henry A. Kissinger, President Nixon's chief national security adviser, had met with North Vietnamese politburo member Le Duc Tho, who arrived Sunday from Hanoi. Thursday's the 149th plenary session quickly became marled in usual charges and countercharges. The United States said the North Vietnamese did not answer the U.S. dermal made last week for the Vietnamese invasion of the South Vietnam. North Vietnamese delegate Xuan Thun called on Porter to answer his demands for the United States "to put an end to its aggression, its Vietnamization, and its imitation of the war ... and give a serious response" to the Viet Cong's peace plan. Porter made the demand after he tore down the wall, which he had suspended for five weeks. Porter indicated last week he would suspend the talks if the North Vietnamese did not agree to put an end to their invasion. "We got sterile propaganda and bombast" in reply, U.S. spokesman Stephen Ledogar told newsman. He reminded them that Nixon had said the United States was not returning to the conference table after its suspension of the talks from March 23 to April 27 to listen to propaganda and bombast. developments in Vietnam, saying there is no evidence that Saigon forces "are not going to work." Ziegler declined to give President Nixon's reaction to battlefield developments and suspension of the Paris peace talks. But he stated aned that Nixon actively involved in developments, at least from the standpoint of American support." Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said South Vietnamese troops "certainly haven't broken," and added that the United States always had "expected them to lose some territory" in the major battles under way. The additional war planes will increase to about 300 the number of U.S. fighter-bombers and bombers ordered to South Vietnam, Thailand and Guam since early April, when the North Vietnamese assault was gathering speed. OVERALL the action will boost U.S. and-based and carrier-based planes in the waters. Friedheim mentioned that some additional ships were on their way to Switzerland. A fifth aircraft carrier arrived off this virus this week, along with escorting destroyers. This raised to about 60 the number of naval vessels operating in those waters. The Pentagon, Wednesday, sent a high-level mission to South Vietnam to determine what additional military arms—aid Saigon forces need. Friedheim confirmed the arrival in South Vietnam of a giant CS transport plane carrying three M-48 medium tanks. Friedheim displayed pictures of heavy artillery shells shown up in South Vietnam. Included were tanks, artillery and antiaircraft guns. Kansan Photo by RICK KERSEY Friendship Found in Peace March Children participate in antiwar rally, but some find it tiring.