Wednesday, February 2. 1972 2 people; Federal and state investigators have put together a portfolio of pictures of present and former aides of **HOWARD HUGHES**. It is believed they will ask author Clifford living to try to pick out one as a friend. The book also features a go-between in writing the autobiography of the elusive billionaire. Some 4,000 mourners converged on New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral Tuesday for funeral services for GREGORY FOSTER, 22, stain last Thursday with his partner ROCCO LAUREE, 23, Foster, black, and Laurie, white, fought together as Marines in they had returned to New York to join the police force together, then they died together when their skivers shot them in their backs. Places: SAIGON - U.S. fighter-bombers flew a record one-day total of seven strikes inside North Vietnam Tuesday while South Vietnamese air power claimed a major victory against enemy ground targets. In the attack, 12 U.S. pilots reported triggered at least one large fireball explosion. Things: Men turning 19 years old this year get some idea today of their chances of being drafted next year. THE 1972 LOTTERY will affect some two million men, those born in 1953, but few are expected to be drafted. THE PRICE OF GOLD soared a dollar an ounce in London and Zurich on Tuesday and hit record highs on free markets across Europe. The rush to buy gold helped send the dollar's value down on foreign exchanges. The W. Averell Harriman Foundation has given 24 major works of art, including paintings by PAUL CEZANNE and PABLO PICASCO, to the National Gallery of Art. There are five major works by Cezanne and others by Paul Gaugin, Henri Matisse, Jean Baptiste Chardin, Edgar Degas, Georges Seurat, Henri de Toulouse-Luttrec, Henri Rousseau, Gustave Coubet, and one American, Walt Kissom. The Picasso, "Lady With a Fan," was painted in 1905 during the 90-year-old painter's blue period. Migrant Education Seen as Inadequate TOPEKA, (AP)—The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare has sent a report to the state to update education which substantiates some of the claims made last summer by Manuel Fierro that the state Title I migrant program in Kansas is inadequate. The report is based on investigations made by a five-member HEW team which visited the school July 26-29 at Lakin, Ulysses, Goodland, Holecum, Bonner Springs and Piper. The report was sent to Dr. C. Taylor Whittier, state commissioner of education, by Thomas J. Burns, acting associate commissioner for education for a secondary education in HEW The HEW team was accompanied by members of the state Education Department. Fierro charged that the applications by the schools for federal funds to run the migrant program were misrepresented to specify their aims and objectives." Fierro also contended the programs failed to justify the expenditures or expenses on the money was being spent Ferroer had written HEW sectional Elliot Richardson last July for the investigation and audit into the funding of the Title 1 migrant settlement. He also said the program failed to provide bilingual and bibultural approaches to education, even though about 95 per cent of the migrant children are of Mexican-American About $430,000 in federal Title I funds were involved in the Kansas programs questioned by Fierro. Michigan Prof Gives Lecture On Loneliness Speaking before an overflow Audiorium, Woodyrduff Auditioner, Professor Akipa Kapan from the University of Michigan developed "The Tale of the River." Klaplan said since the time of World War I, American dancer customs have progressed from the "communal" dance to the "temporary" dance to today's dancer customs of no contact, not even eye contact. "We will know deeply and bitterly the feeling of loneliness," he said. He then recited a lengthy story, of phrases from recent song titles, all dealing with loneliness. TOPEKA (AP)—Democrats in the Indiana state introduce Tuesday their plan to restrain senatorial reapportionment in a bill which would set up to 18 seats in the U.S. Senate. "We all have a desperate need for each other, for the most part frustrated because we frustrate ourselves," he said. "Why? Fear. Fear. Still more fear. And yet we will all be lonely together." District Plan Introduced The bill, sponsored by six of the Democratic senators, makes a number of provisions to member districts, a feature in a previously passed bill which would allow In the House Tuesday. Gov. Mike Huckabee will seek Senate reappointment plan containing multi-member districts that cover lack of a failure to govern. After a adjournment, Sen. Harold Herd, D-Dalcoast, Senate minority leader, said he was willing to lead the reapportionment plan was gerrymandered, but said he was not "well enough acquainted with urban areas and location of voters." He's a marked gerrymander to him. Senate Republicans discussed their position on reapportionment at a late-afterfall conference. The senate voted to propose senatorial districts in the Wichita area could place three senators in each district of the Senate in the same districts. Herd said the Wichita House Democrat drew the boundaries in line with his request that each individual "equal population in block form." The boundaries of the districts in Wichita, he said, were drawn by members of the Wichita district, the House of representatives. The population differences between the most-populous and least-populous districts in the plan. Herd said, varied 4.83 per cent. The variation in the Republican-sponsored bill vetooed by the governor was 14.87 per cent. Herd said he did not know when the Senate Reappointment Committee would consider the Democrat's plan. Herd said he hoped the Senate would pass the plan, but was not concerned about passage. "I'm unconcerned because I've forced my family to mult-member district, and population variance, we had an obligation to prevent one," he Herd predicted the plan would ultimately end up an exhibit in federal district court if the court ruled that the state's senatorial districts. In other Senate action, 11 incumbents won a roll call vote. The bills had received preliminary approval on the Senate floor The Senate also received a petition bearing signatures of more than 16,000 people urging the Senate to pass the law, which was passed by the 138th session. A vote on two bills to amend the present law is expected Wednesday in the Senate Judiciary Committee. —Provide for financing of county mental health clinics by the state Board of Health. Bills introduced Tuesday in the Senate would: —Set up a six-man Kansas Industrial Development Commission to help Kansas' resources — Prohibit state agencies from contracting with persons or businesses found in violation of law or solid waste pollution laws. -Give counties authority to own airports. —Expand the prohibition against public intoxication on highways, streets or public places to include intoxication by hallucinatory drugs. If the White House actually had an extraordinarily open-minded under those circumstances, Scherr said, "it would have been an extraordinarily open-minded under those circumstances." -Expand non-support law to include the step-parents of any children under 18 years of age. In the House, bills were —Allow physicians to provide birth control procedures and information to persons under age was ordered after his reporting from President Nixon, Sen. Robert Dole, the Republican national chairman, and White Ocean Energy. —Create a system of state welfare investigators introduced which would; —Require hospitals to keep records on abortion cases. Investigation,Job Offer Questioned by Newsman —Require law enforcement officers to undergo refresher training every five years. Remarking that letters "can conceal more than they reveal," the administration that has invoked executive privilege in declining to testify, he does not believe an argument that the White House to fall in rushes. Republicans to Draft New Bill Consider Member Reduction a letter disputed statements that Schorr was being considered for a government job when the FBI investigation began last Aug. 20. Students Concerned About higher Education in Kansas will meet at 7 tonight in the Parliars in he Kansas Union. Meeting Time Changed the Senate Ways and Means Committee which will hear testimony on the higher education budget this morning. The meeting has been moved from 7:30 p.m. to 7:p.m. to avoid a conflict with the SUA Minority Jinions Forum. TOPEKA (AP) - Senate Democrats decided Tuesday to study a new Senate reappointment plan which has single-member districts, with six members having the size of a legislature. Schorr said the investigation Sen, Jack W. Robinson, Jack Foster, Senate Reapportionment Committee, said he was in complete agreement with the Senate. passed the legislature only to be vetoed by Docking last week Sien, Gee S. Smith, R-Lared, president pro tem, said the Senate GOP caucus voted to elect a new member of the Republican members of the Senate Reapportionment Committee to draft a single-member district plan, possibly more than the present 40 senators. Smith denied that the caucus decision was in retribution to Democratize Gov. Robert R. Brown and his reappointment plan, which Plans for this meeting include: 1. Inviting individual state support for higher education. 2. The "Campaign of the Inviting individual legislators to KU, letter-writing campaigns and videotapes during lateure during its current season. Sen. Dave Owen, R-Johnson County, will give the group an update on state legislative efforts in connection with the Education subcommittee of "The caucus concluded this might be the best time to reduce the number of legislators," Smith says, lawsuing men following the caucus. on Proposed Statute of Student Publications. Thursday Feb. 3 Communication Committee of the Student Senate OPEN HEARINGS THE KRUMHORNS ARE COMING, TOO. University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb.9 new look in bridal trios WASHINGTON (AP)—CBS newsman Daniel Schorl, subject of a White House-ordered FBI investigation, testified Tuesday the Nixon administration had made a great many people aware that it is no longer an honorable thing to be a newspaper." 14 Karat white or yellow gold White House officials refused to appear before the constitutional rights subcommittee of Sen. Sam D. Ervin, D-N.C., but repeated in 836 Kansas Downtown. Topeka in Regionalist Room of the Union 809 Mass. Downtown, Lawrence 9 p.m. SUA Minority Opinion Forums Presents Robin Morgan Revolutionary, Feminist, Editor of SISTERHOOD IS POWERFUL Wed., Feb. 2 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Union on ATLANTIC records also available on 8 track stereo tapes KING CRIMSON reg. $5.98 $3.67 KIEF'S OPEN 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. WEEKDAYS PICTURE YOURSELF IN OUR BODYSHIRT Stretch Polyesters Turtle Necks and Tailored Collar Styles. Colors Red, Navy, Brown, Beige and White— Priced at $7 $9 $10 Prints too at $10 and $12 Freshman Class PARTY Bikales-Weinburg ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK! Admission 1.50 or Freshman Class Card 9 till 12, Feb. 4 NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY