6 Tuesday, February 1, 1972 University Daily Kansan New rules would ease vets money problems Kansan Photo by RICHARD GUSTIN Campus Vets Jim Johnson (left) and Ed Bruns New rules would ease vets money problems . . . City to Study Drug Abuse A committee to study the nature of drug abuse in Lawrence and to make recommendations for prevention and control has been initiated by Mayor Bob Pilliam and the City Committee. The committee consists of 16 representatives from local agencies. A representative from the City Commission said that the commission did not effectively aid did know the dimensions of the problem. He said that the members of the committee were selected because of their contact and knowledge about drug abuse. Peace Corps, VISTA Recruiting KU Seniors The representatives from local medical agencies, schools, law enforcement and other groups met Thursday night to discuss goals of the committee and any issues in the formation of the group. Howard E. Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy and chairman of the committee, said he would be to identify problems in this area and make recommendations to the commission in a report this May. The committee will meet once a Recruiters for the Peace Corp, and VISTA will conduct work in a week back in business, education and engineering placement offices and Monday in the law school of Kansas Union and Strong Hall. As graduation time nears seniors are beginning interviews with prospective employers. The team at VISTA could be that employer. The Peace Corps, an international program and VISTA, a similar domestic program, are combined under ACTION, along with other voluntary programs. Three subcommittees were formed at the meeting to study ACTION is the administrative order Nixon created last July in order groups into one agency, Charlie Hewlett, Peacock and VISAT VISTA, a domestic volunteer Interviews Howell, a former VISTA volunteer, said the Peace Corps was looking for people over 20 year old who would be willing to work in education, math, science, architecture, business, medicine, French, Spanish or who have agricultural backgrounds. The Peace Corps is a 2-year program with 7,000 volunteers. General Services Administration, BS and MS in architectural engineering, BS and PhD in mechanical engineering, BS and PhD in Federal Home Loan Bank Board, BS and MS in financial accounting, economics, money and credit, financial management, countant, financial analytic and economical Ferece Corpus and Vika BA, BS or MA in engineering, management or comparative sales, small business and market economics. Requires MBA or equiv in MBA or an equivalent of the MPA or an equiv for management development. Requires Transportation assistant. Iran Master's degree or foreign equivalent. Capital Area Performed Services (Nasv) BS, MS civil engineering. BS, MS electrical engineering BS, MS mechanical engineering. U.S. citizens only, no summer Federal Home Loan Bank Board See Tuesday, Feb. 1. HUSKINST Haskins and Sells, BS, MBA with accounting major. Summer work for seniors and graduate students. Action, Peace Corp., Vista recruitment. All disciplines and levels of engineering chemistry, geology and physics. U.S. student, summer work. May and August graduates The Jones Store Co. BS, MS, MBA in business; BA liberal art. For store management training program. Long Beach, Knottbach, Harwell, and Horwath: BS, MBA with major or emphasis in accounting and auditing Peace Corps and Vista. See Tuesday, Feb Mossberg said that although the scope of the problem was broad, the committee could do a lot more than what had been done before. Continental Oil Co. Get information in room 209 Summerfield DISCOVER EUROPE ON A BIKE - GOVERNMENT-MADE TAX-FREE MOTOR CYCLE/BIKE LABEL, INC. • LICENSE REGISTRATION & INSURANCE INFORMED the areas of education, law enforcement and rehabilitation. Each member of the committee must be involved in major areas of study, while providing for himself a cross-functional knowledge, and experience in each area. - INDIVIDUAL BOOKMARK OF TAXE MOTOR - CARGO INCLUSIVE TOUR PACKAGES - OVER 15 MARKS OF TAX FREE MOTOR PLEASE DO RETURN SURPAINT FROM ACCESS IN EUROPE TO THE U.S. CITY OF CANADA Tiny Emily takes the fountain, swims and resting after a swim. Each day she goes out and picks up any lost pet. Every day she returns the fountain with her dog. Have your dog go to the fountain at once. Mossberg recommended that a University of Kansas student be appointed to the committee to support his students. Haskell student and former drug users might also be helpful in providing information to the committee. "Applications were up 45 per cent last year for the Peace Corps and VISTA applications have always been high." Well said. program, has 4,500 volunteers and offers a one-year program. VISTA is seeking volunteers who will graduate in law, foreign language, Spanish, liberal arts or who have volunteer experience. The increased interest. Howes, said, seems to be related to the question of why people don't want to the fact that people don't want to be part of the 8 x 5 o'clock job in the workplace. Société Générale Inc. 52 Place du Palais 75008 Paris, France Telephone: (331) 347 6166 Website: www.sg.com/company/société-genérale Notes: ___ ___ ___ "People seem to be more interested in services dealing with people rather than things," Howell said. Almost every landmark on the KU campus has at some time fallen over, and rivalry between KU and the other Big Eight schools. The last addition to those ranks is the KU flag that flies over Fraser What appeared to be a crude "MU" was barely visible beneath the block letters "KU" Monday afternoon. 'MU' Painted On KU Flag In an open discussion on drug abuse at the meeting several agencies and experiences enabling the group to get a broader view of the problem. the culprit would have had to pass three locked doors, the Doshali assistant director of the University Physical Plant. The next meeting will be held in February and will include reports from each committtee. The squad is scheduled to debate colleges in Utah, Missouri, Iowa and Oklahoma within the next month, said Donn W. Parson, associate professor of speech and drama and director of college studies at Northwestern University and the University of Pittsburgh. The University of Kansas will have changed some of its administrative procedures concerning veterans by the fall semester of 1972. Chancellor E. Chalmers Jr. said Saturday. KU to Change Policies To Aid Military Veterans By RICHARD GUSTIN Korean Staff Writer Chalmers said he had did with the university of the Campus Veterans, a student group organized to help the veterans solve veterans problems. Ed Bruns, Leawood, freshman and Campus Veterans president, discussed some of the proposed changes. VETERANS WHO have not saved money to attend a training program through the G.I. Bill to finance part of their education, must take administrative procedures at KU and many other schools may cause an undue financial strain on a veteran who uses G.I. In order to be eligible for school benefits, the veteran must have his enrollment registered with the semester basis. The certification is done as soon as the veteran enrolls each semester. However, even with this speed of enrollment, the mannaus expect his first benefit check to arrive until a month after he has enrolled. By that time, it is too late to meet University fee requirements. It is too small to pay the entire fee. is working with the business office and the housing office in an attempt to produce a schedule by which the tenant can manage and housing payments in installments from his benefit cheek. The housing department requires advance payment that may live in a residence hall. Until such a schedule is devised, veterans who wish to remain in good standing with the Army will be offered money for a semester's expenses. Borrowing the money has been made easier because of recent policy changes in the Office of Public Relations, that to Bruns, that office will loan a maximum of $400 to a veteran attending his first semester at the University without a cosigner of the maximum of $80 with a cosigner AT THE PRESENT time, Bruns said, the Campus Veterans Bruns said the Campus Veterans would eventually attempt to start two programs designed to ease the veterans' first program would be a preference program in which veterans could obtain part-time or full-time employment in local businesses. The second program would be a privately funded institution which would pay one-third to one-half of a veteran's tuition. to aid veterans in the traineeship and to academic life crisis said he was attempting to obtain free psychologic counseling and help veterans cope. Bruns said he thought psychological counseling was important in helping a veteran adjust to a society that did not welcome Vietnam veterans as openly as the veterans of other countries. There are about 2,000 veterans at KU who could utilize the programs recommended by the Campus Veterans, Bruns said. With 44 awards to their credit already this year, the University of Kansas debate squad will be or more honors this semester. Parson said that Pittsburgh is hosting audience debates across Pennsylvania. Each year, two schools are invited to join the Pittsburgh debate. This is the first that KU has been invited. "While the programs wouldn't solve all a customer's problems," said Bruns, "they would solve a great many." Debate Team Plans Trips To 4 States Speaker to Discuss Global Environment Vandalism Declines; Dormitories Profit Residence halls netted $500 profit for the month of December partially because of a decrease in vandalism to vending machines, and another because of vending machine manager for the Kansas Union Concessions. There was only one case of vandalism reported last month and that was in Ellisworth Hall where the machine was broken into. The Kansas Union Concessions furnishes the machines in the residence halls and keeps them clean. Profits are given to the residence halls and the halls' treasurers usually deposit the money in the library fund. The residence halls' funds are accounted to $200, according to Jelly. The University of Kansas Alumni Association and its paper, the Kansas Alumni, have been accused of sex discrimination. In the November issue of the paper, Kansas City, Wash., called the Alumni Association and the Kansas Alumni "openly sexist." The profits are divided on a percentage basis to raise the funds for EliSloh. said. Ellisworth for example, received $8215 from last month's $500 Most of the vandalism results when students get mad at a machine because it malfunctions Betty J. Pattie, managing editor of the Kansas Alumni, said the Kansas Alumni issue the towler had to read little news of women. Alumna Accuses Paper Of Sex Discrimination Richard A. Falk, Milbank professor of international law at Princeton University, will speak for the judge Nelson Timothy The letter stated further that any pages were devoted to speeches or press coverage" and that of the 23 Alumni administration officers only "There are 14 women on the staff of the Kansas Alumni and only four men," Pattee said. out of 13 news stories and pictures, there was no mention of women and that only one article was written by a woman. "Office records in the Alumni Association are currently being coded so that the title Ms. is requesting it." Pattes said. Pattie said that she printed every newsworthy item she found about women. or does not give the product fast enough. Jolly said. But other machines, like the machines and stealing the merchandise inside or prying the contents from them, can do this. I my first lesson, I putter said. The letter to the editor said that Kansas City will be the site of a training center for teachers of transcendental meditation, a mental technique to develop creative intelligence and improve clarity of perception. The center is one of many to be established by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Maharishi Yogi Opens School In Kansas City David Katz, who received his training with Maharihiri in India, will give an introductory lecture p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He will also tell students of the art how they may participate in a museum program in Kansas City this summer. THE FIRST MILITANT PREACHER CLARA'S OLE MAN THE ELECTRONIC NIGGER HAPPY ENDING Feb. 3-12 8 p.m. KIL EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Previously all teachers were required to spend three months in Maharashtra, where they made Maharishi. Local teachers have received their training in Ekses The Kansas Geological Survey report, evaluating salt beds as a potential repository for radioactive waste is now ready to be tested. The report was made for the Atomic Energy Commission. --p.m. Registered Room. Humanities Dinner: 6:30 p.m., English KU EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE 864-3982 THE KRUMHORNS ARE COMING, TOO. The report costs $25 with maps and $10 for the text only. University Theatre 8:20 p.m. Feb. 9 Stephens Lectureship at the School of Law on Feb. 3rd and 4th. Falk will speak on "International Law and the Global Environment—The Challenge" in the Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. "International Law and the Global Envance will be subject to Response" for 3:30 p.m. Friday in the Union He is a faculty associate in the Center of International Studies, one of three major research activities of Princeton's Walt Whitman School and international Affairs. He director of research for the North American section of the World Order Models Project, an undertaking supported by the World Law Fund that seeks to explore how it might be better organized to present future wars in a nuclear age. The Judge Stephens Lectureship, offered about every seven years by the School of Law, was established in 1877 by Stephens in memory of her father. He was judge of the fourth Kansas judicial district from 1877 to 1884 and was instrumental in the establishment of the University Law at the University of Kansas. 2 Cars Collide In Parking Lot Behind Union Two cars collided in X-Zone parking lot, behind the Kansas Union, at 9 a.m. on Friday, KU and Security officials said Monday. A 1971 automobile driven by Jerry L. Harper, Lawrence freshman, received $100 damage to the car and was charged. A 1964 automobile driven by Ronald D. Smith, Newton sophomore, received $200 damage to the car and police officer the car was owned by Edwin Becker of Newton. Parson said he thought the strongest teams were not in the Big Eight. Two weekends ago, KU won awards in three tournaments. At Morningside College in Sioux Falls Iowa junior Bill Hensley. At Omaha, Neb., won third place. Two freshmen, Bill Webster, Mo., and Dodd T hunter, Oklahoma placed fifth out of 4., 100 teams in California. At William Jewell College in Liberty, Mo., Mike Stubbs, Springs sophomore, and David Cohen, Prairieville sophomore, won a superior and scored four wins and one loss. Another tournament with tough competition, according to Parson, is the one that KU hosts. The Heart of America football team will host 9-11 with teams from 54 schools across the national competition. During Christmas vacation, 20 KU debaters competed in tournaments in the Midwest and on the West Coast. KU was the first-place, two fourth-place finishes and two fifth-place awards. Campus Bulletin Denver, Colorado. Interviews: 8:30 a.m. Room 305, Kansas Union. Peace Corps Interviews: 9:30 a.m., Pine Peace Corps Interviews: 9:30 a.m., Pine wood 08th David Wastez Seminar: 9:30 a.m., Council Hall Room: Italian Table; 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark Social Welfare: 11.30 a.m., Alcove C Cafeteria. LSD Institute; noon, Room 299. Law School; 12:30 p.m., Alcove D Social Welfare Practice Committee: 1.00 p.m., Regionalist Room. Social Welfare Policy Committee: 3.00 Cafeteria Social Welfare Practice Committee: 1.00 m in Nationalist Room Social Welfare Policy Committee: 3:00 m, regionally Room: 528, College of Nursing, Fenton, KY. zoom. Delta Sigma Pi: 7:00 p.m. Centennial Room. SUA Board: 7:00 p.m., Governors Room. SUA Board: 7:00 p.m. Governors Room. Physical Therapy: 7:00 p.m., Council Room. Room #1823. KU Synchronized Swim Club: 7:00 p.m. Robinson Natatorium. Abbottson Navalforum: Latin American Film: 7:30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium. Film Festival: 7:30 p.m., 5:15 p.m. Auditorium Film Society: 7:30 p.m., Union Ballroom. Young Democrats: 7:30 p.m., Oread Room. Room: Booth 1: Tue. 7:30 p.m., Park Earley Booth 2: Thu. 7:30 p.m., Clearing Chair Room Humanities Lecture: 8:00 p.m., Woodruff Humanities Lecture: 8:00 p.m., Swarthout Senior Restroom: 8:00 p.m., Swarthout SUA Conference Committee: 8:00 p.m., Pike Austin Student Union: 8:00 p.m., To MEDITATION as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Wednesday, Feb. 2 Seminar—3:00 p.m. and Introductory Lecture by David Katz 8:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union Lions Love take a film about the writer, Eric Cronenberg, into the aid of the writers of HAIR, Jim Ratha and Gerome Bragas, plus the Andy Warhol superstar. Theiva, the proper工具人 make a film about her feelings for the city. Ecliping the aid of the writers of HARA, she becomes a writer in itself. A writer is someone who does not care about the nature of the moment; this collaboration is one of the most interesting aspects this collaboration is that LIONS LOVE cannot be categorized. It is above the means life is, America, being a superman, and a vision of the future that was born out of the love between the characters in it lives through the association Senate Robert Kennedy and the American Red Cross. This is another element of an artisan's mission in those and other events. Their validity remains intact as Mina Vera weaves them into her narrative, creating the kind of spontaneity that has identified LIONS LOVE with the power of the human heart. Agnes Varda came to America with her husband, Jacques Demps (THE UMBRELLAS (CHEW) THE CIRCLE 129). She fell in love with Jean-Claude Filippo. KU FILM SOCIETY Tuesday, February 1 Union Ballroom 7:30 & 9:15 $ 75^{\circ} $ Season Tickets Still Available for $5.00 Use Kansan Classified WE'RE NUMBER ONE! Lawrence's Number One Health Club For Men. The Most Modern Physical Fitness Equipment Massage Sauna Keep Fit at LAWRENCE HEALTH CLUB OPEN TUES 5-9 THURS 5-9 SAT 12-6 2323 RIDGE COURT Phone 842-4044 Want to Know About TRANSATLANTIC FARES and CAMPUS TRAVEL OFFICES - SUA Travel Office - SPONSORED BY: - Foreign Study Office - Dean of Foreign Students Office - Student Union Activities The First In a Series COUNCIL Room — 4 p.m. Thursday, February 3rd COMING FORUMS: Before leaving the states—what to do and by when, travel within Europe I, travel within the U.S.A., travel within Europe II, U.S. camping and hitching, Mexico / Canada on a student budget.