Wednesday, April 19. 1972 PHOENIX, Ariz.—The federal government's $4-million gambit in traffic safety smashed into a concrete bridge Tuesday, damaging the bumper area of the experimental air and one of three lifelike dummies. An air bag designed to protect the occupants failed to inflate as fast as expected. The front half of a fouled car was wrinkled accordian style in a similar test earlier. News Briefs By The Associated Press Experimental Auto Crashes After watching from a desert testing site, U.S. Transportation Secretary John Vope said the results of experiments could create sweeping auto design changes in the not too distant future. The Department of Transportation hopes to produce a vehicle which will allow passengers to walk away from serious accidents with only minor injuries. Butz Opposes Price Ceiling WASHINGTON - If there are ceilings on food and farm prices "we must insist on price floors to protect us from the downswing," Secretary of Agriculture Earl L. Butz said Tuesday. Butz, opposed to controls, said, "If you are going to impose price ceilings on food and farm prices, and as our food prices do, then I think you've got to ask for guaranteed floors under them to protect us from the downswing." WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court ruled by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger has approved a Massachusetts loyalty oath that requires public employees to pledge to oppose the overthrow of the government. Burger Court Upholds Oath "We are not charged with correcting grammar but with enforcing a Constitution," Burger said Tuesday in delivering a 4.3 decision that the oath is not too vague to remain on the books. All of his 1969 decisions required the oath to commit themselves not to use illegal force. In this respect, he said, the oath is like the ones taken by presidents, members of Congress and even lawyers who practice before the court. The decision reverses a panel of three federal judges in Boston who took what they believed was highly literalistic approach" and declared the oath invalid in 1969. Bombing in N-Vietnam Cut 'to Feel Hanoi Out' SAIGON (AP) — Despite perfect weather and a multitude of prime military targets, the United States has sharply curtailed its bombing of North Vietnam and used the Hanoi intercept off limits to raid serialers. U.S. military sources said Tuesday. The sources emphasized, however, that President Nikon was widespread bombing in the North if there was no positive signal from Hanoi indicating an end to the offensive offensive in South Vietnam. One source noted that air airplanes had to fly in order to than a dozen a day following the huge raids Sunday that included the Hanoi and Haiphong areas. THE CURTAILMENT, "to feel Haniol out," as one informant told me. Haniola's delegation to the Paris talks said a bombing halt would be necessary in order to ring of negotiations to end the war. Perhaps only coincidentally, war commen- ties showed the ground war in the South to have received better equipment and were no reported major battles. Military sources here said bombing now was recreated in the 20th parallel of latitude, 60 to the south of Hanoi and Haiphong. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Ladd said there are no immediate bombs in the reporting bombing restrictions. A White House spokesman said this was the first time a US official had reported bombing restrictions. Thirty-eight persons heard James Duff, Lawrence graduate student, outline the functions, purposes and methods of the anti- KU Anti-Smoking Clinic Attended by 38 Persons By SCOTT EATON Korean Staff Writer University Daily Kansan smoking clinic of the University department experimental psychiatry the clinic's introductory meeting Tuesday night in the Jawahhar campus Business School Names Pichler Associate Dean Joseph A. Pichler, associate professor of business, was named associate dean of the School of Business at Ohio State will assume his duties July 1. Pichler, who joined the faculty in 1965, plans to continue teaching in the industrial relations area and becomes an administrator He replaces associate dean Mitchelson who has been invited to the Management Institute in Oslo, Norway, as a visiting professor Pichler received his B.A. from Darmine and Drame in Ph.D. from University of Chicago. He also received a Master's from Ford Foundation fellowship. Pichler spent a year on leave from KU when he served as special assistant to the Assistant Secretary in the Department of Labor. the co-author of "I am Rich in America" as well as a writer of journal articles in the areas on manpower and labor Mitchell plans to retire from administration and his teaching afterment in Norway and return to KU as a full-time professor of history. Duff told the group they would be required to keep track of the number of cigarettes they smoked until he arranged appointments for them. He said no decisions could be made that they quit smoking until after the individual appointments. Duff also asked that they record the average number of cigarettes they think they now smoke. DUFF SAID people would be assigned to hypnotic groups and groups which would function on the basis of a will to stop smoking. He also said that a small group of volunteers randomly assigned to a control group. These persons will receive no special treatment, but will be given the opportunity. Joseph Pichler Duff said the people in the control group that were still confused experiment would be given the opportunity to receive whatever treatment had been most likely during the course of the experiment. Duff said the method he would be used with success by her clients, and by her psychiatrist. He said successes ranging from 10 to 90 per cent had occurred. DUFF ADMINISTERED two questionnaires at the meeting. One of the questionnaires was to determine the ability of an individual to quit smoking. The Group Susceptibility Test, was used determine how easily the people could be hypnotized. Apollo to Study Geology SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) —The moon is calm and peaceful now but the Apollo 16 astronauts think they'll find evidence on a rugged plateau that it had a hell-raising past. The site is interesting and important, according to Leon Silver, lunar geologist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, because in the highlands he there are clues that the moon had a violent geological history. Astronaut John W. Young is scheduled to set the landing ship speed on a tableland 8,000 feet above the level of the lunar mares. With fellow moonwalker Charles M. Anderson, he descended down on a bed of lava spewed out in the explosions of ancient volcanoes. Dr. Paul W. Gast, chief of the Dr. Paul W. Gast, chief of the NASA Planetary and Earth Science Division in the first billion billions of life, when it was being battered by the fiery impact of meteors, volcanic rock rolled up through the earth. Many scientists were many, bubbling sea water with bubbling sea water with a scum of rock on top might have been the most dangerous depth of 30 to 60 miles and in cooling formed the lunar crust. Gast places this activity at a depth of 180 meters. The Cayley Plain on which Young and Duke will touch down is believed to be a layer of lava created by volcanic activity. from the outside, it is believed that it still has a hot, active interior like the earth. The astronauts will gather samples from the plains and mountains, try to drive their lunar rover 700 feet up the side of a crater, visit a young 600-foot-deep impact crater called North Ray. Although the moon has cooled According to Ellison, she told police a man grabbed her from the street and he would kill her. The woman told police that she screamed and shouted at him. that police received a call at 10:30 p.m. from another officer in the parking lot, assailed at approximately 8:30 p.m. near the rear southeast corner of a building. THE LAST PICTURE SHOW R COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A BRIE PRODUCTION Hillcrest Mon. Thru Thursday; 6:30 - 8:40 Friday & Saturday; 3:45, 6:30, 8:40, 10:50 Sunday; 3:45, 6:30, 8:40 Hillcrest Ellison said police received a report at 9:22 p.m. from a woman who said she has been assaulted by a man on the steps behind Flint Hall. Mon.-Frihurs 7:30 - 8:40 W Mon.-Sat 9:15 - 10:25 W 4:15, 7:30, 9:40 (Fi) Sat. add'l show at 11:50 p.m. Tickets on sale until 30 minutes prior to the show or until you have a time that shows you are final No ticket excises $1.50 per ticket Two assaults were reported to Traffic and Security Tuesday捕. Capt. Bob Ellison of Traffic and Security said Tuesday. Chemistry Prof to Lecture Two Assaults Reported Here Their match sets up westerner An east vs. west battle shape up an East vs. Tuesday in the Republican race for the Kansas lieutenant governor nomination when state Rep. Calvin A. Strowg, 48-year speaker of the Kansas House, newses from Abhle, announced he was seeking the nomination. James N. Pitts Jr., professor of chemistry at the University of California at Riverside, will speak at the Edward Curdts Hall on Wednesday at 8 a.m. Wednesday in the Big Room of the Kauai Union Strowig against easterner Ove Strogir indicated that migration could also be sheikh knowledge that another candidate from western Kansas came there, another migrant there. He added "it would depend on the quality of the candidate" before he would assume a Wichita candidate would hurt his chances. Strowig against easterner Owen. He is a good lieutenant governor thus far has attracted only one candidate, the Republican Garth W of Hortt芝谷. Indication says that the Democrats will have other candidates for the position of Governor. His lecture, "Some Social and Chemical Air Pollution is sponsored" is presented at Alpha Rho chapter of Phi Alpha Upsilon an honorary chemistry laboratory. "A candidate out of Wichita would attract Wichita votes," Strowig said. Owen, at 33 the Pitts received a B.S. in Strowig will face state Sen. David Owen of Overland Park in the August primary. OPEN HOUSE at the GARDEN OF EDEN Nudist Resort 711WEST23RD—MALL SHOPPING CENTER Strowig Announces Lt. Governor Bid - Saturday afternoon April 22 ★ Broadcast Live Over KUDL Radio ★ Playboy Bunnies chemistry from the University of California at Los Angeles in 1945 and a Ph.D. from there four years later. He then served as an professor at Northwestern University from 1949 to 1954. Open Mon.- Sat. 10:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. — Open Sunday Noon 'til 6:00 p.m. Pitts then joined the faculty of UCR, where he was an associate professor until he assumed his ★ Clothes Optional current position in 1959. There he has served as academic adviser to the Chancellor and the Department of Chemistry. ★ $1.00 each Admission He was a Guggenheim Fellow at Oxford University from 1860 to and cochairman of the second faculty of Photochemistry (UIPAC). Directions to Get There If you don't want to be noticed, don't shop at the Shoe Rack. People will always be asking you where you got your shoes. These stacked midheel, open, breezy sandals in White or Tan Leather. Elsewhere you pay way over $12.95 . . . Shoe Rack's price only 19. Go to Tonganoxie, Kansas on 24-40. Take the gravel road at the curve North 1 mile, turn right .3 of a mile, turn left 1 mile, turn right 1.4 miles. ENROLL NOW FOR SUMMER OR FALL Regular Course (May, June): Wed. 7:30 a.m., May 10 June 28 and Thurs. 9:30 a.m., noon, May 11 June 29 Regular Course (June July): Tues. 9:30 a.m., noon, June 6 July 18 and Thurs. 7:30 p.m., June 8 July 20 Western Civ Course (June July): Tues. 7:30 a.m., June 5 July 18 FREE MINI LESSON BY APPOINTMENT Hillcrest Shopping Center - 925 Iowa - Phone 843-6424 ICANO AWARENESS WEDNESDAY APRIL 19 at the KANSAS UNION All Day Film Presentation in Forum Room SPANISH MUSIC IN THE UNION & SPANISH MUSIC ON KLWN 105.9 FM and 1320 AM Then Come to the Union Ballroom. There Will Be Contemporary Chicano Films, Speakers and FREE BEER From 7 p.m.-10 p.m.