THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CLOUDY The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas 82nd Year, No. 109 $160,000 Needed To Support Referendum Tuesday, March 28, 1972 See Page 2 Court Charges Gould In 2 Kansas Bombings By JUDY HENRY Kansan Staff Writer Randolph Gould, 22-year-old Overland Park resident and a former University of Kansas student, was arraigned on three counts of assault after the county after ending an 8-month extradition battle by leaving Missouri and turning himself in to Douglas County authorities. A preliminary hearing has begun against him, p. m. today in the Douglas County Court. Gould and three others were indicted by a federal grand jury in July 1971 in connection with the May 14, 1970, bombing of the Lawrence home of then-State Senator Larry Burridge and the June 20, 1970, bombing of the Southgate State Bank in Prairie Village. U. S. marshals arrested Gould in Missouri in September 1971, and he has had preliminary hearings in the Western State court. He is in connection with the federal charges. A CLERK for the Western District Court said Friday that a trial date had not been scheduled yet, although Ron Clark, Gould's lawyer, said he had filed a motion Tuesday to demand that the case be tried immediately. Gould has fought extracitation to Kansas since September, where he was wanted on bombing charges in both Douglas and Johnson counties. An extradition hearing led to Gould's arrest in Missouri, but before the hearing took place, Gould and Clark drove to Lawrence where Gould surrendered to Douglas County officials. Clark said he would not comment on the reason Gould turned himself in. "That's between Randy and myself," he said. Earlier Gould had indicated that he was fighting extradition because of the $50,000 bond awaiting him in both counties. He has posted $22,500 bond in Missouri. Dr. Folkman, 39, is surgeon in charge of the Children's Hospital Medical Center in Boston and a professor at Harvard Medical School. When a cancer cell is born, it goes through a long, silent period before it shows as a solid tumor, millions of cell divisions later. Dr. Folkman explained They might also make big tumors shrink to a harmless size. **GOULD WAS** arraigned Wednesday in the Douglas County Court, when he was officially charged for three felonies: criminal destruction of property, unlawful duplication of device and felonious assault with a deadly weapon with the intent to kill or death. Clark argued the amount of the bond, $50,000, with Douglas County Court Judge Pro Tem Charles D. Stough. After hearing testimony from Gould's father, Alan Gould, stowered over the bond to $20,000. Stowered over the bond, Mike Elwell said Friday that that bond was bond Wednesday afternoon and was released to Johnson County authorities. Blocking the chemical would keep cancers dormant, or asleep, and small in But when it is no bigger than a BB, it can be sidetracked into a permanent dormant state. This happens when the body's blood supply and then keep stimulating new capillaries as it grows larger. If it cannot get blood, its growth slows down and up and there is no method "for garbage." A clerk for the Johnson County Magistrate Court said Monday that could have been arranged two bombing charges Monday afternoon in Division 1 of the Johnson County Magistrate Court. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled The cancer sends out a special chemical signal that causes capillaries, the tiniest blood vessels, to grow toward and then into the tumor. These cells can expand to a large, leathal size. This chemical signal stimulating capillary growth now has been isolated, and methods are being sought to block its action. Dr. Judah Folkman reported Monday to an American Cancer Society seminar for science writers. Dr. Folkman and his associates have isolated what they call the Tumor Angiogenesis Factor (TAF), which is the chemical prod to stimulate capillary Angiogenesis. Angiogenesis means generating a blood supply. Most solid tumors release TAF. AFTER THE Douglass County arraignment, Mrs. Alan Gould said, "Unless you know what real heartbreak is, don't know what this is. I know my son." Ambrose Saricks One main discovery is that a cancer, regardless of how it starts, cannot grow larger than a BB shot unless it gets its own blood supply. She said she knew her son was not guilty. Chalmers Names 2 Deans To Vice Chancellor Posts Discoveries Could Limit Tumor Size By MIKE MOREY Kansan Staff Writer William J. Argersinger A new vice chancellor for academic affairs and a vice chancellor for research and graduate studies was announced Friday by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer Jr. at a meeting of the Kansas Board of Regents in Topeka. William J. Argersinger, dean of research administration, will become the first vice chancellor for research and graduate studies. Ambrose Saricks Jr. will succeed Francis Heller as vice chancellor for academic affairs. Saricks was a member of the KU faculty for 20 years before becoming dean of graduate studies at Wichita State University in 1970. CLEARWATER BEACH, Fla. (AP)—New discoveries have opened a door to keep human concers small, "asleep" and harmless. Argersinger's position is a newly-created one which will combine most of the duties of his present position and those held by the dean of the Graduate School. ARGERSINGER AND Saricks will assume their new positions this summer. ARGERSINGER AND Saricks will assume their new positions this summer. Both men were recommended by a senate committee and headed by Ron Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Saricks, from Wilkes-Barre, Pa., holds B. A. and M. A. degrees from Bucknell University and a Ph. D. from the University of Wisconsin. Before joining the KU faculty in 1950, he taught history at Ohio State University for three years. While at KU, Saricks was a professor of Fees Due at Enrollment Bv ROBERT E. DUNCAN Kansan Staff Writer The Kansas Board of Regents amended Friday the Compensate Fee Schedule for the University of Kansas by making an amendment to the regulation. The option, passed on the recommendation of Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and will become president. All fees, including those for private music lessons, practice room rentals and laboratories will be due at the beginning of the enrollment process. Campus Officers Deny Election Irregularities By JIM KENDELL Kansan Staff Writer The elections committee chairman and the new student body president denied Monday there were any serious instances in the recent campus election. Questions were raised in the final days of the campaign whether Robert "Tuck" Duncan, Wilmette, Ill., junior, had a conflict of interest. Duncan was both adviser to the elections committee and campaign manager of the University Commitment Party. He was in the room where the ballots were counted Questions were also raised when some polling places ran out of ballots for as much as an hour at a time. Concern was that people lying loose about certain polling places. Bailey said Duncan only advised the committee on how elections had been run in the past. Duncan was elections committee chairman last year. R. L. "Puff" Bailey, Atchison graduate student and elections committee chairman, commented about the Duncan case. "I don't see any conflict, because the men were merely procedural matters." Bullen Dave Dillon, Hutchinson junior and student body president, said Duncan was present in the room where the ballots were counted for several reasons. Secondly, Dillon said, Duncan was the only person with enough experience at ballot counting to do as quick a count as was made. Duncan was the representative of the Commitment Party in the room. The KU Student Party also had a representative present. Bailey said possibly stuffing of stray referendum ballots had had little effect on the referendum. He said there was no problem. He also asked the issue for people to stuff ballot boxes. Amin was concerned about some irregularities on election night but said Monday it was difficult to document the events, would probably not raise any charges. Hommad Amin, Ralsenian, Iran, senior and defeated presidential candidate of the KU Student Party, declined comment about any specific election irregularities. Dillon said, "He wasn't involved in anything that could have changed the Bailey said the fact that some polling places did temporarily run out of ballots was likely a factor. "I doubt that there were a dozen people who didn't vote because they ran out of cat food." Some of the other state schools presently operate by collecting fees at enrollment time. The regents approval to allow KU to begin this practice will permit University administrators to define some of the problems involved with early fee collection. ONE UNIVERSITY administrator said the policy must begin so the number of students enrolled would be known at an earlier date. He said early fee collection would also allow for a more efficient method of processing fees. The regents also authorized the publication of notice of the sale of $3,400,000 in revenue bonds for the purchase of a new student health center for the KU campus. The Regents did not take action on a recommendation from the Council of Presidents that the tenure policy for state colleges and universities be amended to include a provision that would not allow students to classified employees to qualify for tenure. The Regents approved a plan to allow the KU Endowment Association to construct an outdoor courtyard at Murphy Hall. Plans for the courtyard will have to be submitted to the state architect's office for final approval. MEMBERS OF THE Board of Regents, state college and university presidents, student senate, and faculty members of the faculty at each institution will attend a retreat in Tokepea April 28 and 29. The group will discuss issues of concern to all state schools and exchange views on policy matters. In other action, the board approved the recommendation by Chalmers to make repairs in air conditioning and temperature control units in Malott Hall, the Museum of Art, Haworth Hall, the Occupational therapy department. The next meeting of the Board of Regents will be April 28. It will be the last meeting before the end of the KU academic year. history and an associate dean of the Graduate School He was vice chairman and chairman of the KU division of the United Fund drive and as president of the Lawrence Kiwanis Club. SARICKS WAS also a member of the faculty committee that selected Chalmers as the successor to former KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. Argersinger, from Chittenango, N. Y., received his B.A. and Ph. D. degrees from the University of Chemistry at Cornell from 1992-44. He worked two years for the Monsanto See Related Story Page 2 Chemical Co. on the Manhattan Project, the production of the first atomic bombs which were dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Arngersinger, a member of the KU faculty since 1946, was a professor of chemistry an associate dean of the School of Science and chair of faculties for research. He has served vice chairman of the Council of Associated Midwest Universities, secretary of the Mid-America State University and president of the Organization for Tropical Studies. AFTER SARICKS takes office, Heller will return to teaching with the University of Political science, where he will hold a Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professorship. William P. Albrecht, dean of the Graduate School whose position has been incorporated into the new vice chancellorship, will retire June 30 from administrative duties and return to a professorship of English. All-White Jury Acquits Two Soledad Brothers SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—An all-white jury Monday acquitted the two surviving Soledal Brothers, black convicts charged with murdering a white prison guard. The two—John Glutchete and Fleetia Drumgo—and George Jackson, a third Soledal Brother who died in San Quentin violence last Aug. 21, are the prisoners Angela Davis is charged with plotting to free. "The verdict is beautiful" Miss Davis said in San Jose where the black Communist militant it on trial for kidnap, conspiracy and murder. She is charged with providing the evidence, which she did on the court-room break attempt in which a judge and three abductors died. The prosecution contents the purpose was to ransom the woman's family. She said. Clutchett, 28, and Drumgo, 26, were accused with Jackson, 28, of beating guard John V. Mills to death Jan. 16, 1970, at Solidaion铲在 Monterey county. The Superior Court jury had deliberated the case since Friday night Jackson, whose book of letters from prison became an underground best seller, died with three white guards and a convict, convicted in what prison authorities authorized to take. ...ed the case since Friday night. With the innocent verdicts were read, the innocent verdicts were read, and hugged their court-appointed attorneys—Richard Silver and Follid Silliman. "But our fight is not over. Drumgo is been indicted for what happened at San Quentin when Jackson died. So we had to go to New York, Izell Williams, Drumgo's mother, said." Drumbo is charged with murder in the Murdo County indictment stemming from the murder of a local businessman. The assault in which Mills died came three days after three black Soldai convicts were killed by the gunfire of a police car. They were wounded in yard menee among black and white people. The prosecution contended that Mills was beaten with his own flashlight and then tossed from a cell tier to a concrete floor three floors below. ★ ★ ★ Prosecution Links Affair To Soledad Rescue Plot SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)—The prosecution said Monday that Angela Davis had a "close, passionate, and physical involvement" with convict George Jackson during a meeting in her apartment on Friday, the scheme to free him ended in murder. "There was such a close relationship that the defendant considered herself married to George Jackson," prosecutor Albert Harris Jr. said. Harris in his opening statement to the jury in Davis' murder kidnap-capspiracy trial, said he was "deeply in love" with San Quentin and needed to rescue him from San Quentin Prison. Harris said the most convincing evidence of the love affair and the subsequent violence will be love letters that he sent to Jackson, who was killed last August. One letter, he said, bears a postscript by George's brother Jonathan who allegedly carried guns into the Marin County Civic Center, where four persons died on Aug. 7. On July 8, 1971, Harris said a meeting was arranged between Jackson and Davis, then incarcerated at Martin County jail. They met at the jail mess hall, Harris said, then spent time alone together in a private holding cell. "Her motive . . was passion," Harris said," . a passion which went beyond a respect for human life, even the life of George Jackson's brother Jonathan." Jonathan Jackson, a judge and two convicts were slain in the Aug. 7 shootout convicts were stained in the Aug. 7 shotout. Jonathan and the two black convicts hoped to rescue Soledai Brother George Jackson from San Quentin Prison in return for Davis, he said, was waiting at San Francisco International Airport to join the team. "By then, her life and her fortune were firmly committed to George Jackson," said "Solead Brothers" was the name given three unrelated block convicted accused of killing a woman. George Jackson was killed last Aug. 21 in what authorities claimed was an escape attempt from San Quentin. The other two, a man and a woman, by an all-white jury in San Francisco. Docking Threatens Budget Veto as Final Vote Nears BY RICHARD COOLEY Kansan Staff Writer By RICHARD COOLEY Topека-Final action on the $12 million-plus omnibus appropriations bill is expected today when the Kansas Legislature reconvenes for a one-day session. Governor Robert Docking, protesting what he termed a “spending spree” by the Republican-controlled legislature, last week threatened to use funds to power unless legislators act to reduce spending. In a series of news conferences across the state last week, Docking said legislative spending was up by more than 10% He called on legislators to "act in a financially responsible manner to keep state finances in or- Included in the omnibus bill is $61,454 to finance pay raises for University of Kansas classified civil service workers, effective April 1. The money was temporarily deleted by the House Ways and Means Committee in last Monday's session, but was restored before the bill passed the House. DOCKING'S CRITICISM has led many to believe he will use his line-item veto power to trim legislation. Also in last Monday's session, the house approved the issuance of $44 million in bonds to finance the expansion of the University of Kansas Medical Building construction was decisively voted down. THE BONDS would finance construction of expanded teaching and hospital facilities in Kansas City as part of a plan to establish a clinical branch at Wichita State University. Regardless of what happens in today's session, there is general agreement among area legislators that the law should be passed. session has been a vast improvement over last year in terms of support for higher education. Chancellor F. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said he was pleased with the legislature's action in terms of a bill to give him greater autonomy. "But in terms of overcoming the lack of resources this year, I can’t really say that I am pleased with the situation," Chambers said. "It would be a very good budget if I were the process of going through a zero-dollar year." CHALMERS EXPRESSED hope that the legislature's action would begin of incremental significance, high edgings. "I hope it represents a return to the old Kansas tradition of putting emphasis on religious and educational institutions as the bedrock of the state, and it should help us build to a new level of excellence," Chalkers said. Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, said that the general tone of this year's session was much more favorable to higher education, but denied that education's low funding last year stemmed from punitive motives. Rep. John Vogel R-Lawrence, said he thought there had been a punitive attitude on the part of the police in connection with the attack. "The situation which came about last year was not an adequate reflection of the attitude toward higher education," Booth said. "We just happened to come to the last minute with inadequate revenue and the financial situation and higher education suffered, but I don't many of us in the legislature were proud of it." BOOTH CITED the decreasing militance of the student body as one factor in the improved atmosphere. He also praised the work that students build legislative support for higher education. stemmed from militant student activities on Kansas campuses. "A lot of people were deeply disturbed about some of the things that were going on on college campuses last year," Vogel said. "There was a general feeling that University administrators should be more strict, and I think the legislature's action was in a sense an attempt to strike back." VOGEL AGREED that the decreased militance of the air force year had improved the legislative atmosphere. "Very few legislators felt that we had dealt correctly with higher education in the last session," he said. "We were wrong because a lot of students, faculty and alumni became involved in the political process in efforts to improve the situation. As a result, I think we have been in discussion between these groups now than ever before."