12 Wednesday, April 12, 1972 University Daily Kansan 1. 2794 Kansan Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE Community Children's Center, Inc., one sharing the load. Children Blow Bubbles While Waiting Lists Swell KU's Need Undetermined For Day Care Center By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer Lucile Paden, social welfare lecturer and a member of the senate day area, was a center planner. She were being made to accommodate children on the basis of the number of applicants for the position. Lafflin, said the United Center filled up eight months before the school year began, and there people on the waiting list. The United Day Care Center, in North Kingston, was founded by Church, 946 Vermont St., is totally self-supporting, obtaining all the funds used to run the day care center. LAFLIN SAID there was no survey made, and none existed. The school's faculty, students and students who needed a child care center. People have called her to ask that she be moved to the list for the KU center, she said. Judy Bencivengo, director of the United Child Care Center, said she was a priority for September was completed by February this year. The center has turned away emergency care and there is a long waitlist Bencivengo said there were not Agnew Says History Books Have Left Bias WASHINGTON (AP)—Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew said Tuesday U.S. history and reference are beginning to be new. Left has long said permeates much of the daily press. Yearbooks, encyclopedias and on line journals are increasingly lainted clearly unobjective accounts of politically related events and research. In a speech to the Capitol Club, a Republican organization, Agnew said, "politicized material is getting into standard public discourse, and then parents rely on as general reference books for today's students. Technology Hoped to Save Energy Supply WASHINGTON (AP)—The president of the University of Tennessee, new technical knowledge could guarantee that the nation's dwindling energy resources will stay on track. Dr. Edward E. David Jr. said current shortages can be solved by raising prices and using resources more prudently. David told the House Interior Committee he opposes arbitrary curtailing of 'the nation's seemingly insatable appetite for energy supply to save the environment, support or to protect the environment. He said technology offers options to provide "a clean, abundant and assured supply of energy" for the nation at reasonable prices." This includes developing the country's abundance of coal, oil and gas. The unattapped Alaskan and off-shore gas and oil resources. David said. Steam is one of the sun's energy, the chemical deuterium in the seas and the hot water. It also means the emergence of nuclearpower, birth pains and all, David said. enough child care centers for the people that needed them, even on weekends. And there said there were 3,000 5-year-old entering the Lawrence public schools every year, and the child needs places to care for 128 children. "Lawrence is an intellectual community," she said, "and therefore the people don't want her to want any educational program." SHE SAID that many children who had attended child care centers performed better in the classroom, and schools recommended a pre-school. said that eight of the 12 children at her center were from KU families, although all the parents are still in staff, or Ph.D. candidates. twenty-two of the 48 children of the Children Center are from institutions faculty, staff, or students. Bencivieque said. Wanda Cherry, a child at the school. Mrs. Velodon Patten, who has a day care center, said the parents of two of the six children at the center were affiliated with KU. Fern Branden, operator of another home center, said two of her children at her center had KU. She was affiliated with KU. The Infant Day Care Center at Meadowbrook didn't keep records of parents occupations, or the number of children in center. A spokesman for the Community Children's Center, a part of Head Start, said there were no children of KU affiliated with the community that served families of low income In his last 30-odd days as a 17-year old, Quintus Ella, "a rich, happy, intelligent freak" maps out the territory of his life in a city where he will surely bear him. And so begins "Old Glory and the Real-Time Freaks" a new novel by Kalp Blium (offered by Press at $9.95, currently available in the Oread Book Shop) Past, Present Mingle in Novel By KIRK MCALEXANDER Kenner Becker which exhibits no remorse and asks no favors. We cannot but be perplexed, jaded as we are; we cannot but be attracted. Blum's hero reveals himself a thoroughly integrated human being who connects to the world through his family and friends, his grandfather and girlfriend with no embarrassment, each on his own peculiar merits. He is not embracing, rather he disarms. If one could do the same, do it wity as an ancient Ogala Sioux—his present thus threatened from before and behind—shocked even into the heart of his grandson at once far-flung and in touch, inconceivable and, yet fulfilled? He is in the unique position of consciousness, midway up on the 'totem pole' of his father unit (five generations). certainly a wealth of new human values to be discovered and explored, as Saul Bellow's older, *and* his more modern, *maintained back in time*. 1961. DRUGS ARE a predominant factor of our culture, the war does persist (Quinn from home from mustn'm murder with a chain-saw to wind down), their prejudice, poverty, and a whole batch of other ticks. Yet the war itself is not insignificant; it manifest (again like "Heroz") that we are really in no need of salvation. The individual wakes up to new and shining realities. Quintus Elis—as he notes, to his grandson probably Quintus Elis—was meaning in philosophy "that which was to be proved," which was to be proven, which KANSAN reviews Only if we cast out remorse, said Yeats, we must stride laughing and singing to those experiences and values. This is mindless ignorance or shallow accretion and passivity. Rather it is that we shall learn and grow. By the book's end there are rumbles in Quentin's peaceful and self-evident grief and prepares for struggle. So simple and unassuming it seems as we coast along, buoyed up by the smoke from Quintus' cupboard. It's so happy, that we almost miss its dare, implicit throughout. Almost, almost. So with suspicion I proceed with the dress before, however grudgingly, we realize simplicity and happiness! THIS BOOK presumes to talk about a modern simplicity, a modern happiness, We cannot begrudge him his easy summer, it comes and begins what follows, while it must needs be more difficult. We need to learn how to beginnings what follows, while it so well, would he not, like Quintus. also have a profound respect for the past, for the history of his world, for the past present—remarkable and abundant? WOULD HE NOT, like Quintus, be shocked into an even greater sense of personal history by the fast approaching reality of death (birthday) and the inductable coming of death to a grandfather, mystical and peaceful, wise and LBJ Improved, Admitted To Texas Army Hospital CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Former President Lydon Applein suffered a major heart attack last week at University of Virginia Hospital Tuesday night for a return to Texas and admission to another university. The 63-year-old Johnson, wearing a dark blue suit and tie but still wired to a portable heart bag, was taken off a back exit of the hospital. With his doctors, he was driven to the local airport and placed aboard a Convair prop-jet for a flight to Brooke General Army Hospital in San Antonio, Tex. He was shortly after 9 p.m. EST. George B. B. Phillips, assistant director of the hospital, read a prepared statement saying Johnson had been scheduled to leave the hospital early Wednesday but decided to depart Tuesday night because of condition plans at the local airport. As he was taken from the hospital, Johnson waved to nurses watching from windows and called. "Thank you all." The former chief executive was accompanied by Dr. John Willis Hutchins, an assistant specialist, and by Dr. Richard S. Crampon, head of the hospital's staff. The statement said the decision to move Johnson was made because he had shown "steady improvement." Hurst, who also treated Johnson when he suffered a near-fatal heart attack in 1955, had returned to his office. But newsman Tuesday night saw him slip into the hospital. the look is you... at the VILLAGE SET Gee it's swell . . . The Razzmatazz Shop that has all your life styles . . . all together! All those super jeans, pants, tanks, shirts, shirts and mates, belts and groove things. Shop in an out-of-sight atmosphere to far-out music! 922 Mass. Lawrence Also Located In: PRAIRIE VILLAGE THE PLAZA METCALF SOUTH RUGBY GAME KU vs. Des Moines Sat. April 15 at 1:30 BEHIND OLIVER HALL $18.00 2nd Floor The sidewalk Sandier soft, cilled, sophisticated suede on a solid leather sole. SANDLER of Boston adds brass rings to make it bold enough for a blazer, flattering enough to go with all your now-through-summer clothes. Navy, Blue, Bone or Lilac. Shop Thursday til 8:30 p.m. Meadowbrook 800 Feet West of 15th & Iowa NOW LEASING NEW STUDENT APARTMENTS for FALL & SUMMER featuring: - 25 SMALL ONE BEDROOMS — $160 TO $165 - 84 STUDIOS — $135 TO $160 (HOUSES TWO) - Newest Shag Carpeting & Drapes All Furnished & Utilities Paid All Electric Kitchens All Have Walled Patio or Balcony - 59 ONE BEDROOMS — $165 TO $180 - 30 TWO BEDROOMS — $200 Newest Shag Carpeting & Drapes Unfurnished — Gas & Water Paid All Have Walled Patio or Balcony All Electric Kitchen With Dishwasher Furniture — $22.50 to $36.50 - TENNIS, BASKETBALL, SOFTBALL & SWIMMING - 70 ACRES LEISURE AREA—WIDE OPEN SPACES - CABLE TV — NO CHARGE - COMPLETE MAINTENANCE & PEST CONTROL SERVICE - GARBAGE DISPOSALS & FREE TRASH PICK-UP - LAUNDRY & STORAGE FACILITIES—ALL BUILDINGS - SNOW REMOVAL—SECURITY—PARKING PLENTIFUL - GAS FIRED, OUTDOOR GRILLS — BEAUTIFUL LANDSCAPE - NO HEAVY CAR & TRUCK TRAFFIC, NOISE, FUMES - BUILDING & GLASS INSULATION - WALK TO KU — SHOPPING AREA NEARBY OPEN DAILY! Office Sunday 12:30 to 5 101 T Windsor 15th & Iowa PHONE 842-4200