2 Tuesday, February 29, 1972 University Daily Kansan People: Star government witness Boyd Douglas Jr. testified Monday that the REV. PHILIP BERRIGAN solicited him to smuggle letters out of the federal penitentiary where both were convicts in the spring of 1970. The defense has sought to depict Douglas as "an agent provocateur" in the purported conspiracy, helping the FBI weave a false web about the defendants. The trial of black militant ANGELA DAVIS on murder, kidnap and conspiracy charges opened with jury selection in a tightly secured courtroom here. The 28-year-old self-professed Communist sat smiling and silent as the names of the first 12 prospective defendants were drawn from a wooden drum. They were five men and seven women. Four were under the age of 21 all students. All 12 were white. Places: MAN, W. Va.—The toll of known dead rose to 67 in FLOOD STRICKEN Logan County and it was feared the number would continue to mount as rescue workers search the remains of 16 coal miners who were almost 350 persons are missing or unaccounted for, officials say. LEBANON—Israel forces withdrew from southeastern Lebanon after four days of attacks on Arab guerrilla havens near the border. ISRAEL claimed about 50 guerrillas have been slain and nearly 100 wounded. Guerrillas acknowledged losses of 20 dead and 36 wounded. The U.N. Security Council demanded that Israel halt the fighting and pull out of Lebanon. SAGON—The South VIETNAMESE army launched another operation inside CAMBODIA and reported nine battles with the enemy in that country and in South Vietnam. Units of the U.S. 1st Airborne Division, lashed with enemy soldiers only 30 miles northeast of this capital. ROME-Italy, with its government defeated and parliament dissolved, has plunged into 70 days of political campaigning for new elections to end the country's worst POLITICAL CRISIS since the war. The elections, Sunday May 7, will test how much the strength of rival political parties has shifted in the past four years and indicate if any new coalition could put together a majority government. TOPEKA-Failure to provide state WELFARE EMPLOYEES a pay increase for the second straight year while other state employees are receiving normal increases would be "devastating." State Welfare Director Robert Harder said. Harded the ways and Means Committee of the Kansas House, it would be very difficult to hold trained and experienced people in the welfare department if they were victims of discrimination in the matter of pay increases for the second consecutive year. Things: The Supreme Court agreed to decide whether radio and television stations are required to BROADCAST PAID ADVERTSEMENTS on matters in public dispute. This means stations may not have to carry paid announcements on such issues as the Vietnam war and conservative topics during this year's election campaigns. However, under a new law, they will be compelled to sell time to candidates. The nation began 1972 with ANOTHER LARGE DEFICIT IN ITS TRADE BALANCE but key business indicators pointed toward an improving domestic economy, the government said. January trade revenue was the continuing distortion of dock strikes which ended this month. A committee of the Kansas House of Representatives voted to put additional teeth in a resolution opposing the vaccination of a permanent resident. Two persons appeared before the Senate Education Committee at a hearing which had been billed as a session to listen to proponents of the "POWER EQUALIZATION" SCHOOL FINANCE PLAN. One of them said the bill should go farther than it does in providing state aid to local school districts and suggested a one per cent increase in the state sales tax to pay for it. TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Senate passed and sent to the House Monday a family planning bill which is designed to make women more available to school-age children, then got bogged down debating a controversial farm labor bill and adjourned until Tuesday when the agricultural item up for continued debate. A two week search for $1,000 by Eula Parsons, 1557 E. 19th st, and her six children ended in day at the 4-H (airgrounds). The money had been buried by KLW radio station in January. Clauses were given over the radio to help people find the money. Mother of Six Finds $1,000 Parsons said that two clues, broken circle and closets in the sky, helped her the most. That slow pace brought an admonition from Senate Majority Leader John Hutchinson, that debate must somehow be limited Tuesday on the farm labor bill or the Senate health care bill. The work even a token number of bills remaining on its agenda before the legislature is due to shut down this week. "This deals with a problem we have got to face," Hodge said. "If passed, it will do a lot to alleviate The Senate passed 30-7 a bill authored by Hodge which would set up family planning centers, authorizing them to provide birth control information, procedures including contraceptive devices. Kansas Senate Passes Bill for Family Planning The Senate, with 125 bills and 480 votes, passed a session calendar, managed to take action on only five of the measures in nearly three-hour session AMONG MEASURES approved by the House Monday, July 31, 2007, a penal system, with the emphasis on rehabilitation, and another bill which would create a State Injunction and Intoxication Treatment Act. Those students selected by the Student Services Committee will work with doctors and resource providers, and will develop policies and health care under the direction of Dr Raymond K. Meehan of the student health service. Sub-Committee For Insurance To Be Formed This sub-committee will intensify study insurance policies and choose one to be recommended to the Senate for approval as an optional student loan or plan available at fall enrollment. Students interested in health care are urged to apply for one of four positions on the Student Health Committee or committee for health insurance. Applications for the position are available at the Student Senate office in the Union. Applicants should applications 15 p.m. Thursday. Last year's student health insurance plan was Blue Cross and Blue Shield. "There's a place down there where there is a circle of light poles." Parsons said. "There is a space where there is no line between the light poles.' Parsons said that she had a hunch the money was halfway with the two pots with no run line around them. The in the sky were two water towers and two KU peaks, according to what could be seen from this spot. An opened coat hanger was the tool used to find the money, according to Parsons. Parsons said that she would divide what was left of the money after taxes with her six children. She then gave it to her money on bills and vacations. "Finding it was the game," Parsons said. "I've never had so much fun. I have had more fresh memories of week than I I've had in years." "I didn't want to mess up the ground," Parsons said. A new board position for minority affairs was created for the SUA president, Sack, the new SUA president; members of the board thought it would be useful to have this board supplement other SUA programs. Sack Chosen Next President Of SUA Board "It was a matter of programming, not politics." Sack Marshall, Kansah, Kansas City. Kan, junior, was selected to fill the position. Parsons praised the clue-maker, Jim Chabin, for making such good clues. Officers and members of the 1972-1973 Student Union Activities Board have been selected. The candidates for each position of the new board were selected after interviews held by the Board of Trustees of the Festival of the Arts, Robert Ramsaeer, Prairie School, sophomore films, Mark Scheiler, senior film and arts. Mark Pierce, Seward, Neb. junior, forsums, Kingsley Click, Shalmal Fla., sophomore; Publications Dau Hull, Whittier, Calif.; Kenneth Kubitschek, Salina sophomore; special events, Dan Mayo, Fairway sophomore, Dan Diehl, Prairie Junior暑假. The officers of the new board, chosen after their interviews church night, nine are president Chuck Garrett, vice president; study student; vice president, Tuck Duncan, Wilmette, III., junior; secretary, Stephanie Blackwood, Hoisington sophomore; and Johnson, Ella Ellis. Fairway freshman Temporary Office Space To Stay on Mt. Oread The temporary green buildings in front of Forsyth Hall and on the lawn of the historic brick multiply before they are removed, Kelton Lawn, vice-chief, manages them. Lawton, director of facilities, planning and open office in the temporary office buildings and the record-keeping building north of Watkins Glen. In September 1971 to "solve basic deficits and needs in classroom learning." Llawton he was not sure yet whether additional temporary buildings would be needed as early next fall. With the need for staff training, enrollment, additional buildings might be needed, he said. He said the University had tried to get funding for the buildings from the Kansas Legislature, but when the law recognizes the need, the University association to the Endowment association "meet the mission" He expects to be able to move the temporary buildings off of the Hill when Wescoe Hall is completed. The structures are located in a high-rise space for additional space at the research buildings west of Iowa Street. "This is another case of the University having to go to its own resources to fund its needs," Lawton said. Lawton said his office was in charge of choosing building sites on campus, allowing need to determine the locations. The farm labor bill, opposed by labor and minority organizations who contend it is too weighted in favor of agricultural a series of floor amendments offered by Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Prairie Village, which he said were needed to conform with the federal tax law's prolonged opposition anyway. THE BILL would prohibit strikes and lockouts by agricultural workers during peak marketing or harvesting times, because they were harmful to employers. It establishes "meet and confer" procedures for resolving agricultural labor disputes and arbitration to solve them. suffering and poverty. The people least able to have children are having them. This would cut down on welfare and child abuse. The House passed its penal reform bill, 104-11. It would amend the document of Corrections, headed by a secretary of corrections. The new agency would have divisions of professional services, research and planning, facilities Theives escaped early Sunday morning with personal articles valued at $80 belonging to Karen McBallum in a senior, room 26 McBallum Hall. Federal Office OK's Senate Highway Bill Thieves Strike In Two Dorms TOPEKA (AP)—Sen. Bob W. Storey, R-Topeka, sent Gov. Robert S. Koehler to give the governor Monday the U.S. Department of Agriculture proved the bill passed by the Kansas Senate which will bring the state into compliance with the 1965 federal Beautification Act on billboards. THE HOUSE also gave final passage to a bill which would provide a payment of $25 to any infant born with intrauterine birth control device implanted and $20 a year before the check if see still in place. The House also gave preliminary approval to a bill which would authorize experimental year-round school programs in at least three schools. The Board would make it permissive for any of the state's school districts to begin such a program. Storey urged Docking to sing the bill if and when it passes the House. The Alcoholism and Intoxication Treatment Bill would set a state policy "that alcohols and intoxicated persons may be criminal prosecution because of their consumption of alcoholic beverages, but rather should be afforded a continuation of treatment that they may lead normal lives or productive members of society." The thieves apparently entered the room via a second story window. and jail standards. operations and legal services. The federal government has informed Kansas it must be in compliance with federal billboard regulations on U.S. Highways by March 31 or be penalized 10 per cent of its The robbery occurred while Erickson was asleep in her room. Susan Silfers, Shawnee Mission freshman, reported the loss of a clothing item and several articles of clothing from her room in Corbin Hall. The ninety-nine black-and-white photographs in the book published by University Press of Kansas record rural as well as urban, scenic as well as urban, and cave caaptures ranchers, wheat farmers, horseshoes and Indian children. JAMES FISHER has been a reporter and editor for the Star for eleven years. He graduated from the University of Kansas in 1962 and was a major in History and English. He currently the Stars aviation editor. THE ACTUAL WRITING of the book took approximately one year, during that time Lyle and Just last week, Docking reminded the legislature that action must be completed this month and will lose its federal money. Storey forwarded to Docking a letter he received late last week from Edwin J. Reis, assistant chief counsel for the Office of Environmental Law Division of the U. S. Transportation Department federal highway funds, about $6.8 million. Wes Lyle, a native of Topeka, is the only photographer for United States Press, a free-lance commercial photographer, and for the last six years a state member of the HISTORY Society. His photography has won numerous awards, and he has been exhibited at the William Rockhill Nelson Museum. "IT'S TIME people realize that all those westerners that are now in the middle of a town took place 45 miles west of Salina." Fisher explained. "It's important that people become aware of the issues and proud to be a Kansan," he said. Truman Capote in his book "Cold Blood" described *Kansas* as being a state somewhere "out of nowhere" new book by Wes Lyle and Jamie Duncan "Kansas Impressions: Photographs and Words" allows Kansas to forlse itself through images and to put the state back "in there." "The review of the bill indicates that, if enacted in its present form, it would comply with the Highway Beautification Act of 1863 wrote Storey. "We appreciate your cooperation in this matter." By ED LALLO Kansan Staff Writer New Book Views Kansas From Kansans' Outlooks "After seeing all the T. v. tubes in farm houses as driven by real estate, we are be more than a bunch of wheat farmers," he told to rediscover "It's a shame to think of Kansas," Fisher. "I didn't realize what Kansas actually was till I was driving Denver one night after the game." Fisher stumbled for an adequate theme for the book. It was finally decided with the aid of Yvonne Willingham, assistant director of Kansas, and Ivan Kansas, that it would be best to let Kansas speak for Kansas. Government Career Day TRAVEL WITHIN THE U.S.A. Students interested in government employment will have information at the Government Careers Day, Bill Chestnut, conference and education said Monday. The conference will be from 10 a.m. to noon and 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Big Eight building. Chestnut said the purpose of the conference, sponsored by the DCFU, was to bring together Max Gerhardt and Mia Gerhardt the Wichita U.S. Employment Office, was to inform students of the procedures in pursuing government careers. "Students have no place to go for information if they are interested in government careers. This is an endeavor to enhance chance to find out about such employment." Chestnut said. Representatives from the highway departments, Veterans Administration Hospital, U. S. Army, U.S. Post Office and University College will be at the conference to answer questions. Coming Forums: Travel within Europe 11, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico-Canada on a student trip. Chiang to Ignore China Pact TAIPEI (AP)—Chiang Kai-she's government declared on Monday that it will consider null and void any public or secret agreement President Nixon may have made with the Chinese interests affecting the rights and interests of Nationalist China. The statement indicated the Nationalists suspect there may have been some Taiwan that was not mentioned in a joint U. S.-Chinese communique Sunday in Shanghai. The government statement focused chiefly on a section in the joint communique saying the States acknowledges there is a need in Asia and that this is something for Chinese themselves to settle. A government statement issued on Wednesday also said the Taiwan question can be settled only when the officials take back the mainland. assistant secretary of state who accompanied Nixon to China and is now on a tour of some Asian nations to explain the outcome. nationalists are particularly the United States may be leaving them open to takeover by the Communists on the mainland. However, the statement on the outcome of Nixon's eight-day visit to China seemed a retaliation of a past Nationalist positions. It is doubtful the backlash against further on the subject until hears later in the week from Marshall Green, the U. S. BULLFIGHTERS WANTED The roar of the crowd, the pretty senoritas, the charge of the bull. the "OLE" of the spectators. Prospective card carrying bullfighters watch this space. SENIORS The Deadline for Making Senior Picture Appointments is March 1. Senior Pictures Must Be Taken Before March 10th Pictures Taken After This Cannot Be Included Make Appointments With HIXON STUDIOS 843-0330 Naval ROTC Announces: The Two-Year ROTC College Program Applications are being accepted for the two-year NROTC College Program leading to a commission as an Ensign, U.S. Navy or 2nd Lieutenant U.S. Marine Corps. Qualifications: - Citizen of the United States. - Married or unmarried. - Second year college student or third year student in a five-year course, in good standing with a "C" average. Graduate students are not eligible for this program. *AI least 18 years of age and no more than 25 on June 30 of the commissioning year. ●$100.00 per month subsistence allowance. - Excellent physical condition. Waivers for defective vision are available. - Draft deferment. - Eligible to apply for scholarship status upon entry into the program with subsequent full tuition and free books. Deadline for Application—April 1st Apply Now for Fall Semester 1972 at the NROTC Unit, Room 115 Military Science Building 864-3161 Benefits: Tickets on Sale NOW! Ticket Prices $2.50 2.25 1.75 ROCK CHALK REVUE 1 ★ Bells SALES LOCATIONS ★ SUA Office, Union ★ Kief's PERFORMANCES ON MARCH 3 AND 4 HOCH Auditorium 8:00 p.m.