WINDY KANSAN 82nd Year, No. 100 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Center Tries To Develop Complete Child Tuesday, March 7, 1972 See Page 2 Injustice Portraved in First Performace The Festival of Arts started Monday night with Franz Kafka's play "The Prison It was performed by the Prison stage for the final act of injustice which needlessly takes the life of the innocent. The festival will continue with performances by Herble Mann on Wednesday night and will begin Friday evening at 6:30 Saturday night. See Review on Page 6. Gay Lib Appeal Delayed; ACLU Supports Kunstler BY JOE ZANATTA AND ROD HARDY Kansas Staff Writer Jack Klinknett, Lawrence counselor for the Gay Liberation Front, said Monday that the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver has asked that two items be submitted before the court can proceed with the front's appeal to be recognized. Klinknett said the front must post a cost and file records of the appeal. A resolution condemning Judge George Templar" denial Jan. 28 of court action against the Union's front's case was adopted Sunday by the Kansas affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union. The resolution was sent to the Union's bimonthly meeting in Emporia. The front lost its first bid for recognition when Topeka District Court Judge George Templar ruled against their petition Feb. 10. "First, the group has to post a cost bond," Klinken said. "This is to assure the court that the costs will be paid even if the front fails in its attempt to be recognized by the University of Kansas. Floyd Horowitz, chairman of the Lawrence chapter of the Civil Liberties Union, said Monday, that the judge's action to deny Kunstler recognition was a direct threat to the civil liberties guaranteed by the Constitution. "Second, the group must file records of the appeal, which includes all documents accumulated during the trial and which should be kept in the case or whole, to support the front's case." The purpose of the resolution, he explained, was to continue the challenge of Templar's ruling. Public response would depend on what would be done, Horowitz said. According to the front's treasurer, a representative of the front will go before the Senate Events Committee Wednesday for discussion to charge admission to the dance. In order to secure more legal funds, the front has arranged for a dance "in celebration of the First Amendment." The March 10 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Classified Salaries Boosted $430 Million State Budget Passed, Moves to House TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas Senate passed unanimously and sent to the House Monday its $430 million general appropriations bill, including an extra nearly half million dollars to provide funds for the state's institutions of higher learning. The big money bill was the first of a large number the Senate planned to take votes on as it once again worked into early evening. The Senate also concurred with the House in amendments to 10 Senate bills and forwarded them to Gov. Robert Docking for his consideration--after Sen. Glee Smith, president pro tem, had taken to the Senate floor to criticize the governor for his weekend attack on the Senate for working harder and accomplishing more. SMITH SAID the Senate could justifiably resent the governor's comments, which he called "intemperate" and likely to hamper the legislature's work as it drives to wind up the 1972 session by Friday night. Smith, said the Senate passed 114 pieces of legislation last week, worked 12 to 14 hours a day in committee work and in actual session and said "we are well on our way to achieving a very positive record in this session." Smith said Docking should keep himself better appraised of what the legislature is doing. Among the bills sent to Docking by the Senate Monday were ones which require every one riding a motorcycle to wear protective headgear regardless of age, increasing the fee for obtaining a duplicate driver's license from 50 cents to $1, and providing that anyone convicted of three serious driving offenses on three separate occasions within a 12-month period and whose license suspended shall receive a hearing. THE SENATE RESET to concur in House amendments to six bills, including the Senate reappointment bill which includes Sen. Jack W. Robinson's the zone" concept for Sedgwick and Johnson to fill the Senate seat by Sen. Jack W. Robinson, R-Wichita. The House on Saturday amended the Senate remap bill to rearrange the boundaries of three districts in Southeast Kansas—as desired by Rep. Bob Talkington, R-Iola, who is reported to be eveing a race for the Senate. Sen. Tom R. Van Sickle, R-Fort Scott, who could be Talkington's opponent, objected to the House amendments. Van Sickle and Robinson were named to the board of directors. The reapportionment bill is believed to face a likely victory by Doing, even if the conference committee works out an amendment that would drop the two counties and a nearly 15 per cent population deviation among districts. Doing vetoed an earlier Senate vote. THE SENATE'S big appropriations bill passed 35-0 after only one attempt to override it. Seen, Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, tried to add $25,000 to pave the parking lot in front of the state prison at Lansing, which he built. "I'll have it," it taints and a dust blow when it's dry."17 Winter said paving the parking lot would represent a "gesture on our part that we have done to improve his pleas he fell on the ears of many senators who feel the state cannot afford to spend any more money than the budget now needs." But the attempt lost 15-11 on a standout vote. The appropriations bill and a companion $550 million bill passed by the House last week will fund the fiscal 1973 budget, which will total about $990 million. million in state general revenue fund money. It is $450,000 move what Gov. Mackenzie said. The Senate Ways and Means Committee had increased the bill by $541,000 for higher education, most of it to provide salary increases for classified workers at five state colleges and universities which were established in the 1971 Legislature, cut the budget. Only classified workers at Pittsburgh State College and the University of Kansas Medical Center got their scheduled pay raises last year, and the lack of the increases were a major factor in a walkout of workers at Kansas classified workers recently. Smith said the raises would go mostly to custodial type workers, "some of the lowest paid workers at our state institutions." THE SENATE bill includes expenditures next fiscal year of $250.75 GLEE SMITH said the money added by the Senate would provide 5 per cent merit increases for the classified workers for both this fiscal year and fiscal 1973. Smith said Docking had intentionally left out the raises for fiscal 1972. Nixon, Muskie Lead In Early Vote Returns The bill raises appropriations for Kansas State University by $262,478, the University of Kansas $84,892, Wichita State $30,883, Emporia State $22,354, Fort Hays State $16,554 and Pittsburgh State $629. DIXVILLE NOTCH, N.H. (AP)—President Nikon took all 11 Republican votes cast at the tiny resort community of Dixville Notch, leading off the first balloting in the 1972 presidential primaries. Five of the six Democratic voters went for Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota received one vote. The voters gathered for a midnight town meeting in a hotel bar to start the voting in the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire originary. in 1968, the community went 17 for Richardixon, then seeking his current term in the White House. The one to Lydon B. Johnson, the incumbent. THE VOTING place Monday night was the 19th Hole, a bar in the Balsam's, a resort hotel that is the town's principal industry. Dixville Notch, about 20 miles from the Canadian border in far northern New Hampshire near land once claimed by both Canada and the United States, has been cast as the first primary vote. A number of other hamlets also cast early morning votes. All but two of the voters are employed by the hotel. The two nonemployees, Mr. and Mrs. Gorsky, are employed. The 17 registered voters of the tiny resort community of Dixieville Notch cast their ballots in the 19th Hole bar shortly after midnight. While New Hampshire voters prepared cast their presidential primary ballots, the candidates' campaigns took over. THE TOWN meeting opened with each voter at his own green cloth-covered table, marking his ballot. A fire blazed in a fireplace in the dark wood-named room. KU Approves Plans, to Open Bids For New University Health Center Later, the townfolk elected a selectman and the town clerk to conclude the session. Plans have been approved for the new $3,650,000 building to house the University of Iowa School of Law Service, according to Keith Lawton, chancellor and director of facilities, planning and operations. Lawton will open this building be open for fall semester, 1973. The two-story structure will contain approximately 80,000 square feet of floor space. The building is located on the school campus, southeast by Robinson Gymnasium and northeast of O-zone parking lot. The site of the new building is in a well-defined playing field for physical education and art programs. The new facility is designed primarily to provide out-patient services for KU The hospital ward occupies most of the second floor, which will have a minor surgery suite, psychiatric offices, a physical therapy department, central supply office and staff library. A partial building will provide storage space and mechanical equipment. students, although it will also include a 34- bed ward for in-patient services. The reinforced concrete building will be of contemporary design with an exterior finish of brick. Windows will be encased in the floor and walls. The building is provided for out-patient services, The waiting areas, examining rooms, administration offices, x-ray department, laboratory, kitchen, pharmacy and emergency room will be on the first floor. emergencies, staff and freight delivery. Three separate elevators are included for public passenger service, litter patients and freight. A 25-cent parking lot for staff and emergencies will be constructed adjacent to the building. O-zone parking lot will provide space for ambulatory patients. Revenue bonds supported by student fees will pay $3,400,000 of the cost of the new building. The remaining $250,000 will appropriations from state legislature从国家立法机关提取。 The building was designed by George Hampton and Associates of Wichita and Kenneth R. McLain, associate to the state architect. Bids are opened April 6. desperation tactics in a dispute over disclosure of campaign finances. Muskie countered that it was he, not McGovern, who made the first financial disclosures and said, "I'm the one he has chosen to attack." MUSKIE, THE front-running favorite, and McGovern are the leading entries in a race to be elected next year. Candidates and one write-in campaigner for Tuesday's Democratic primary. On the Republican side, President Nixon is expected to defeat easily his two main rivals. Voting hours vary, with the polls closing as late as 8 p.m. EST. IN THAT ONE, the polls indicate Nixon holds a massive lead over two challengers, Reps. Paul N. McCloskey of California and John M. Ashbrook of Ohio. The other Democratic entries are Sen. Vance Hartke of Indiana; Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles; Edward T. Coll, a social worker from Hartford, Conn., and Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas, a write-in candidate. Estimates of the Democratic turnout range from 60,000 to 70,000 votes in a contest that has overshadowed the presidential preference PUBBYH. A poll commissioned by the Boston Globe, and completed Friday, rated Muskiex's Democratic strength at 42 per cent. A survey from a similar survey five weeks earlier. WASHINGTON (AP)—Issuing the mast-draft call in five months, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird announced that the US would enter into the Army during April, May and June. The call was the first since October when the Pentagon closed out 1971 with a 10,000 man quota spread over the final three months of the year. 15,000 Men to Be Drafted First Call Since October No draft calls were issued during the first quarter of 1972 as Pentagon officials wanted to reduce the budget by a billion in new military pay increases generated enough volunteers to fill its manpower needs. Another factor was a congressional order to deploy 70,000 men (up from 65,000) The administration is trying to achieve an all-vollunteer force by mid-1973. The Army slightly exceeded its 15,000-man altiltail and its tall altiltail by more than 3,000 in February. "We're making progress," Laird told the winter meeting of the Veterans of Forces. He said the draft was 300,000 in 1969, 200,000 in 1970, 98,000 last year, "and this year we will reduce those calls to 50,000 or less." This will enable the Nixon administration to fill its military needs in an election year with the smallest draft since before the Korean War. The last time calls fell below 50,000 was in 1949 when 9,781 men were inducted. Selective Service sources said it was likely that young men with lottery numbers 60 would be safe from the draft this year. In his speech, Laird defended his new defense budget with its $6 billion increase in military spending. He called the United States held in intercontinental ballistic missile technology "could be rapidly if we do not maintain a strong research and development effort." Laird said the Russian MRVs were not as advanced as the warheads already deployed by the United States which could be directed to widely separated targets. The Soviet Union, the Secretary said, is "deploying at the present time multiple reentry vehicles, MRV warheads," on some of its ICBMs. This had been indicated earlier by defense officials who now, elaborating on Laird's statement, estimate the Russians had 10,000 to 25,000 ICRMs and SSI JCRMs with triple warheads. The defense chief said he was troubled by the difficulty military recruiters were having on some high school and college campuses. "You either have to have Selective Service as your nanpower source or you have to have a volunteer program. To be able to serve in America, and we can't have that," he said. Bids Open April 6 for the New Student Health Center . . . Architect's drawing shows health center from the Southwest . . .