2 Friday, June 11, 1971 University Summer Kansan Griff & the Unicorn By Sokoloff THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kanman Telephone Numbers Newroom—UN 4-3466 Business Office—UN 4-4358 The Summer Session Kumau, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service. It E礼站 89.5 New York, N.Y., 10222. Mail application to National Advertising Service, 134 Broadway, Lawrence, Kansas every Tuesday and Friday for the duration of the Summer Session. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the summer session are offered News Advisor—Del Brinkman "Copyright 1971, David Sokoloff." Editor Associate Editor Photographer (918) 657-2222 | www.mississippi.com Case Person Tim Adams Kim Yong The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the University Press. The opinions expressed in the Summer readers' Reason are not necessarily the University Press opinions expressed in the Summer readers' Reason. Business Manager Ron Koester Assistant Business Manager Shilery Blank Member Associated Collegiate Press Calypso The B&G Underground By CASS PETERSON I had to agree that closing down the supply trail might be of some help. When I first visited the KU campus, some four years ago, I remember thinking what a lovely place it was. I remember thinking what a lovely place it was. "Well, after their training is complete, that's what these army specialties, alias BKG employees, are going to do." Cyrus said triumphantly. Last week, while threading my way along Jayhawk Rowdale between that turrulous wooden outgrowth (1 think it's a adewalk) and a determined 48 ft-wide B&G truck, I was thinking the "It's all very simple." Cyrus said. "One of the basic objectives necessary to getting us out of the miness in Indochina is to close down the Ho Chi Minh Trail, right?" Cyrus T. Cementblock, a friend who seems to have all the inside dope on University construction, assures me, however, that construction work on the campus isn't really construction work at all. It might be better to operate masterminded by the Pentagon and designed to train army specialists in guerrilla warfare. "How so?" I inquired densely. The government is to send them in as a task force to reinforce the entire Ho Chi Minh Trail. It will be used to clear out a large area of the supply trains for at least three years." should succeed where less desperate measures are needed. What sort of training are these fellows attaining?* "Remember when all the pedestrian crosswalks were repainted this spring?" Cyrus said. "You'll notice that the main thoroughfares were all painted in red or at quitting time when traffic was heaviest." "Ihmm," I mused, remembering the two hours it had taken me to cross the Nasmish and Sunsidse intersection. "They also painted only one lane at a time, to allow for maximal casualties." "Exactly. And when did the wooden sidewalk go up?" "Just before commencement, when the campus was open to traffic and hordes of students were bringing their parents up to show them the buildings," I said. "Right. And that isn't all." "No?" I said, fearing to ask the inevitable question. "What else?" "The grapevine has it that BBG is going to start remodeling the inside of some buildings." Cyrus said omnipotently. "Then, two or three years from now, the FBI will generally offer to remodel the interior of the house into a secure organization in the country. Two or three weeks of that should be enough to drive anyone out." New Book Tells of D-Day Already praised as "the most authoritative and best single volume on the subject" by Raymond G. O'Connor of Stanley Press, the book has gone into a second printing even before publication. A new book, "D-Day: The Normandy Invasion in Retrospect," was published this week by the University Press of Chicago, making the 27th anniversary of the cracking of Fortress Europe. The Press, which has been hardcover and hardcover and paperback editions simultaneously. The 254-page volume includes charts, Eleven military historians and key participants of the D-Day assault tell of the planning, action and results of the June 6, 1944 invasion. The volume was edited by the Eisenhower Foundation in General Omar N. Bradley has written the foreword MAKE $50 $150 A DAY striping map writing file Write; DeL. L. new invention For Valor Marketing retention for Retention cost plan OR CALL (313) 875-3283 maps, illustrations, and an index. Contributors are: Don Wonk Contributor, Center for Responsive Posey Gopue, director of the George C. Marshall Research Library in Lexington, Va.; Val. Roland G. Rupesthal, assistant historian for the European Theater of World War II; invasion; Robin Higham, professor of military history, Kansas State University; George M. Elsey, special assistant to George Elsey, Morison during World War II. Alfred Goldberg, former chief of the current history branch of the U.S. Department of the Air Force; Vice-Admiral Friedrich Ruge, former naval advisor to Admiral Schrödinger; Maurie Matloff, deputy chief historian of the Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the Army; Research Bureau Needs Its Slides The bureau is attempting to compile a film or DVD of the conference, and other conference activities for distribution training in tool in Latin America. WANTED: A "borrower" with a conscience. The University of Kansas Bureau of Child Research needs him. Hoyt requested that the projector and especially the slides be returned to the Bureau of Child Research in 223 Haworth they should be returned anonymously and said no questions will be asked. Martin Blumenson, historical officer, Third and Seventh Air Force; Col. Alfred F. Hurstman; Col. of the history department at the U.S. Air Force Academy; and Lieutenant General Roberts of history at Purdue University. "The slides are really of no value to whoever took them," Hoyt said. Robert Hoyt, associate director for communications at the bureau, will present only ones of a professional presentation by Frances Howitz, chairwoman of the KU board of charities, husband and family life, at a recent Last week the bureau lost a 35-millimeter slide projector and an important tray of slides of a recent conference in Panama. The items were taken from a warehouse in Haworth hall. inter-American conference on high-risk infants in Panama City, Panama. Copies of "D-Day. The Norwegian Invasion in Japan" are purchased at the Eisenhower Library in the Eisenhower Library, and from the University Press. East 8th & Mass. clothes to put your body where your head is. HUMUNG HUNGRY - LEAVE HAPPY, WITH YOUR MOMS. GO TO THE TOUCHDRIFF GRUFF'S FOOD ARE CHEEK SATISFYING! LOTS OF PARKING SPACE! NO TIPPING! JIFFY SERVICE! QUALITY FOOD! THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Streets ELVIRA MADIGAN Eve. 7:30 8:15 Matteine Sat. Sun. 2:10 Adult 15:10 Child Ends *Ends* Hillcrest THE WONDERFUL REAL ROMANCE OF ARCHY AND MEHITABEL 020 Starts Wed. Walt Disney's "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" Patronize Kansan Advertisers Tuesday, June 15 7:30 p.m. JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION ADMISSION FREE ---