2 Tuesday, June 29.1971 University Summer Kansan Griff & the Unicorn By Sokoloff $ ^{10} $Converglt 1971; David Solomon $ ^{11} $ the rationale for this escalation was an attack by about 500 armed riot on the home of Neville, an regional tax law The burning of the Neville homestead was pictured by administration spokesmen as an attempt to explain members of the "Wet Corn," a Today we shall see that members of Congress also may have been deceived when they sent the executive order authorise under which he sent 13,000 troops into western Pennsylvania for anti-infurition As related in a previous article, the study indicates that officials of the George Washington administration may have misled the American people regarding the militia to put down the rebellion. WASHINGTON (UPL)—Along with a rapidly growing number of other journalists, I have at hand a copy of a secret Pentagon study. This one deals with the origin of the 1794 Whisky Rebellion. The Lighter Side However, the Pentagon papers strongly suggest that the Viet Corn was deliberately provided to Mr. Nguoc Pham in lieu of law to compel payment of the tax. Prior to that, the rebels had confined their protest activities to minor guerrilla incidents, such as tarring and feathering revenue officers who attempted to collect the tax. Secrets of Booze War Some of his followers cited the Viet Cot attack as evidence of a plot to destroy the federal government. Secret memos imply, however that Hamilton was eager for a chance to test the strength of the federal government against local defiance. It is significant that the leading "hawk" in Washington's cabinet was Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, who had proposed the whisky tax in the first place. group of grain farmers and fistillers who were resisting an acrifice toward whisky This brings into question just how sincere, or at least diligent, federal commissions might have RV DICK WEST been in their negotiations with rebel leaders. Whatever the inference, failure of the peace talks prompted the dispatch of troops into the area, thus hammering home the political philosophy espoused by Hamilton. One can only speculate as to what might have happened to the republican had Washington not taken the action. It seems likely, however, that to this very day we are drinking unlaxed booze. "The University as Communicator" will be the tople of the symposium on Issues in Public Symposium July 12 and 13. All sessions of the symposium, sponsored by the KU department of speech and human relations division of the KU department of Speech and Forum Room of the Kansas University. THE SUMMER SESSION University Communication Is Symposium Topic four Midwestern schools, including John J. Conard, director of the University's Center for Business will discuss the University's communication with the general public. Opening speaker for the symposium will be Philip K. Tompkins, professor of rhetoric and communication at Kent State University. The author of "The University of Kent State," he will talk about the university as a communication system at 9:30 a.m. July 12. The conference will feature lectures on various aspects of a university's communications needs by representatives from KANSAN The Summer Session Kanan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Services, in Kaiser St. 509, New York, N.Y., 10232. Mall Lawrence, Kansas every Tuesday and Friday for the duration of the Summer Session Kanan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or enrollment in the Summer Session Kanan are offered to students expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the news organization. In addition, the summer session publications expressed in the Summer Session Kanan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas. Editor Associate Editor Photographer News Adviser—Del Brinkman Kanan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358 During the second day of the symposium, William Carmack, assistant provost and chairman of the University of Oklahoma, will discuss communication between state and federal government. Business Adresse-Mail Adresse Cass Peters... Tom Johnson Hank Young The final speaker will be Paul Cashman, vice president for student affairs and professor of rhetoric at the University of Chicago. The next week, the university's communication with students will be 1:15 p.m. Member Associated Collegiate Press Business Manager Instant Business Manager Ron Kubler A Tragedy in Pakistan one of the greatest human tragedies in history is taking shape in East Pakistan and India. By LOUIS CASSELS BY BLOUIS CANDERES UPI Senior Editor To keep the Pakistani refugees from starving and provide them with rudimentary shelter against the fast-approaching monsoon season would be a sufficiently staggering task. But the problem doesn't end there. An epidemic of cholera has broken out among the ragged masses of humanity huddled outside Calcutta. Cholera kills—and it is a ghastly way to die. Although this disaster has been shaped up for months, only recently has its magnitude been un Such an influx of hungry and homeless people would strain the resources of a rich country. But these refugees are pouring into a country that has a hard time feeding and housing its own population. The problem is that many Calcutta—where poverty and disease already prevail on a scale that boggles western minds. HOUSE AT HAWK'S END, by Claudette Nicole (Gold Medal, 60 cents)—a Gothic, about this girl and this old house and this lonely coast and these strange people and these mysterious accidents and these frightening sounds in the night. Additional refugees are reported to be arriving from East Africa at a rate of 100.00 a day. Book Reviews TLL NEVER BE YOUNG AGAIN, by Daphne du Maurier Pocket, 75 cents)—an early novel, written several years before "Jamaica Inn" and with a hero who is the son of a famous English poet and with his love affair. Church and charitable organizations in the United States now are beginning to respond. But the immediate allocations they are able to make out of their always-skimpy reserve funds are measured in thousands of dollars, which is not even a drop in the bucket of the refuges' needs. derstood in the West. Private fund-raising efforts, if undertaken quickly on a massive scale, may yet make some contribution. But the scope of the aid required and the need for swift action before cholera gets out of hand indicate this is a job which can be done adequately only by governments. Providing money and supplies to help India care for the pathetic here of refugees gathering around the camps in southern Iraq. The United States and other nations also mass-mandering diplomatic pressure on the government of Pakistan, a steady recipient of U.S. economic and military aid, to permit the United Nations or the US to wage war against it into war-torn East Pakistan itself and minister to the millions who've not yet fled across the border. Summer Sun and Summer Studies—a Mismatched Pair The University of Kansas Theatre presents "AS YOU LIKE IT" by William Shakespeare directed by Stuart Vaughan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE MURPHY HALL July 1,2 5,6,7 Students Admitted for $1.00 plus Current Registration For Ticket Information Call UN4-3982 Announcing Our First Bell jeans & casual flares selected from our stock of over two thousand pairs of pants. Clearance Sale Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Reg. SALE PRICE 1/2 Price Values to $15.00 $14.00 $9.40 NOW $12.00 $8.00 $10.00 $6.70 $4.00 $8.00 $5.40 one group tops 25% off tr H L o t a at h re B C R E as at c f o m B N b M k B N 19