2 Friday, April 21, 1972 University Daily Kansan China Attacks U.S. Bombings SANTIAGO, Chile—China condemned U.S. bombing raids in North Vietnam and told a 140 unit U.N. trade meeting here Thursday it supported the underdeveloped Third World against American "plunder and profiteering." Chinese Deputy Commerce Minister Chou Hua-min stated his country's position in a speech to 3,000 delegates attending the UNTAD III Trade and Development Conference. His words seemed to eliminate the glow that had surrounded U.S.-China relations after President Nixon's trip in February. ITT Fix Attempt Denied WASHINGTON - Presidential aide Peter M. Flanigan denied attempting to fix the outcome of three multi-million dollar antitrust suits pending against International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. last summer. Flanigan's long-sought appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee was interrupted repeatedly in a wargame over the range of questions he could nor would answer. The committee is reconsidering at his request Kleindienst's nomination to be attorney general. PARIS-North Paris withdrew its demand that the United States cease bombing the North before regular and secret sessions of the Vietnam peace conference resume. At the same time, North Vietnam made public its hinh-tong secret record of 1968 negotiations with the United States under which bombing of the North ceased, leading to the start of the peace conference in early 1969. N. Viets Withdraw Demand WASHINGTON - President Nixon was urged to seek $500 million a year in income tax credits for parents who make tuition payments to parochial and other nonpublic schools. This was a key feature in a 38-page report formally presented to Nixon by his fourmember President's panel on Nonpublic Education. In essence, the presidential panel said it would be cheaper to aid nonpublic schools than to bring the five-million-plus youngsters into the public school system. Tuition Tax Aid Urged WASHINGTON—House Democrat described the bombing of North Vietnam as a dangerous escalation of the war and ordered the prompt drafting of a bill calling for complete U.S. withdrawal from Indochina. The resolution, approved 144 to 58, was the strongest antitwain action taken so far by the House Democrat representing Vietnam. The House defeated Vietnamese offensive, was by far the biggest victory yet scored by the antitwain forces in the House and is evidence of their growing strength. Teacher Cautions Media Against 'Liberal' Attitudes Sister Ann Christine Heinelt, of the St. Mary Center for Learning at Chicago and the High School Journalism program, warned the media Wednesday that she would average minority students. She said that such an action only emphasized the idea that there weren't many achievers to be challenged. Democrats OK Antiwar Bill or bad. She said this 'reverse English' would help eliminate the standardizing effect measurement has on people. HEINTZ said the media should instead look at society's measurement of achievement and find out whether it was good She said the media had lost the ability to present issues that makes people important. She said journalists must be sensitive to people and issues and have an understanding of them. "I personally never say to a staff go out and find achieving minority students," Heilz said. "That that's re-enforcing the idea that we don't want it much, but we're able enough to dig something out." About 150 students and their sponsors held a symposium sponsored by the Humanities Program on April 18 and 17, at Rock Springs Ranch Families Attend College Retreat Robert Knight from the University of Missouri Columbia State Journalists that when handling a tension story such as demonstrations and objective reporting became extremely important. Tension stories should be covered thoroughly, Knight said. Dennis Quinn, director of Pearson College, said Wednesday that the parents' responses were approving. Henzie spoke at a two-day mass media-race relations seminar in Atlanta sponsored by the Ethnic-Black Awareness Center in Kansas City and the Division for Continuing Education. The event, Missouri-Kansas City, dealt with the problems of ethnic news media cartoons, the role of the black woman reporter, and the handing of race relations in news media. Speaking via telelecture, Thomas Engleman, executive director of the Newspaper Fund Inc. in Princeton, N.J., said that while everyone had his own idea on reaching and getting income, he decided the team had to start stimulating interest at the high school level. Shortly after the conference began Sunday morning, the three professors who teach in it have been Quinn, John Senior, and Frank Over 180 representatives of mass media and ethnic organizations attended Kansas. Missouri and Illinois attended the two day meeting. 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