8 Wednesday, April 14, 1971 University Daily Kansan 7-Up TV Ad Stars KU Student By GEORGE VERHAGE Kansan Staff Writer Mandy Patinik's daily apearance in television commercials has made him what a celebrity in his own right. National television beams Paintkin, Chicago freshman He is featured daily in 7-Up commercial and a breakfast break. The idea for the 7-Up commercial, "Teen Angel," was taken from an old rock song of the same name. The song is about the boy who loves music. IN THE COMMERCIAL Patinik portrays Teen Angel, the motorcylist, who comes up this old mall shop hang-out. He appears as a ghost image as he walks through the mall shop where he was. He also reminisces about his girl used to Teen Angel his memoirs about when he was injured. "I got the part in a funny way, 'till he said I was a costumer, who was then contracted by 7-Up to do costumes for the commercial." I had to go through a test film when he discovered that they did not, yet have a DESPITE THE LUCKY turn of events, Patankin was still not assured that he had the part. His test film was made early last Space Chiefs For Soviets Are Named WASHINGTON (UPI)—Soviet authorities, in connection of the pioneering space flight of Yuri Gagarin, lifted some of the secrety Tuesday of the Soviet space organization and its managers. The revelations were contained in an article circulated to correspondents here by the Soviet news agency Novosti. They reported that Leonid I. Breizhvac, the Communist party general secretary, had been directly involved in guiding Soviet space research and rocket development, apparently since 1983. Another disclosure, especially important to Soviet specialists here, is that Konstantin Rudnev met with the minister of instrument making automation, headed the secret organization's 1961 prepared Gazagarin's flight Teen Angel The disclosures seem to con- form with the prevailing giving public credit to space managers and designers, but only after many years have summer 7-Up later decided to run the mobile on a national basis. To go national meant a change of studies and a more important direction; we drove started from seratch and audited auctions. Brezhnev replaced Frol R. Kozlov in 1925 after Kozlov died. At that time, it was generally assumed that Kozlov was the right hand man of Nikita Khrushov who managed the space program. "I was notified in the early pari of September, 1970, that I had the part. Patkin said I had I had a knife that I was rehearsing for the KU production of "Man of La Mancha." The problem was solved when 7:1p flew me to back three times in one week." In the case of the chief Soviet insignia designer, Koryotov Koriyanov detailed his role only after he died during an operation in Moscow in January. Mandv Patinkin The secret space committee has never been officially created, and generally referred to as the "State Commission for the Organization and Execution of State Journalistic accounts. PATINIKN that he spent three days actually making the commercial. On the first day, he met with Mr. Bass and him about the commercial. Another day was spent filming external shots on the third day an entirely filmed The commission, which is roughly the equivalent of the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, have been established before the orbiting of Sputnik 1 in October, 1957. Now that Patinkin appears daily on television, it is difficult for him to go places without being "Everything that I did," Patkinin said, "was done in a studio with a black background. They superimposed the film of me with the exterior of the interior with the commercial," he said noticed. Usually the people do not directly associate him with the 7-Up commercial, he said. Instead, they tell him that he looks Officials Say Miner Led Death Chain CONGONDA, Ill. (UU)—MII company officials said Tuesday that one of seven miners killed by a chain-reaction disaster by going into a tunnel which had been declared off limits pending repair work. David L. Gulley, state director of mines and minerals, said testimony at a hearing into the mining company there was "an out-and-out violation of the law" in failure of Ozark-Mahoning Co. officials to notify state mining inspectors of the situation existed in the flourmacher zone. The miners breathed the lethal fumes Monday shortly after they and other members of a repair crew creamed a fan that served an area 800 feet underground and an area 2,000 feet back from the shaft. Four men were found dead in the tunnel near the spot where miners two days earlier had first detected the odor of gas. Three others were carried out alive by rescue crews. One died shortly after he was taken to the surface and drowned in a Rosaceil hospital. Gulley said, Guy Richard B. Olgivile had ordered a complete investigation and the investigation will be presented to the four-man state mining Board. Gulley said, and it will be up to anyone to prove anything anyone should be prosecuted State rescue teams returned to the mine Tuesday afternoon and the tank was already gas at and near the face of the tunnel was less than had been feared and appeared to be working with existing ventilation. Gulley said inspectors were no longer worried about the danger if an explosion and it appeared as if it had been depreciated, but probably not this week. Wayne Fowler, general manager of Ozark-Mahoning, accompanied the team for compensation and the section where the disaster occurred had been placed off Saturday after miners detected the leak. Production work was called off Monday, company officials testified, and a 18-man crew went on the road to show off the fan and put in a replacement. Shortly after the repair work was completed, testimony at the hearing indicated, Bill Long, one of the victims, went back in the worarms to retrieve his slide stick, an instrument used to measure timbers. When he did not return, his brother, Wayne, the foreman of the crew, followed him to determine why he had not come back. Wayne Long also failed to return and the other miners, in two and three, followed the Longs into the gas affected area. Rescue crews found the dead, and two were taken alive, within 30 feet of the spot where miners had cut three or four test holes Friday, the day before a gas leak. NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) — A school board member opposed to demands of the Newark Teachers Union (NTU) in its 72-day-old strike has resigned from his job as official of another labor union School Official Resigns Job In Labor Union In addition to on the nine member school board, Howard Koehler is assistant to education education and New York chapter of the State, County and Municipal Employees Union, AFL-CIO. The pay bill $2,024.00 Mrs. Lillian Roberts, associate director of the union council, said Bell was in tears as he submitted his resignation, explaining he could no longer work for the union because of his stand in the ballot. Mr. Roberts said he would reject a proposed settlement of the strike last Wednesday. Bell's job with the New York Assistant assists about 400 military officers in high high school. Equivalency diploma. He held the post for year. familiar and ask him where they might know him from Patinkin said he thought it was funny when he just looked at him and looked. SOMETIMES PATINKIN is recognized and asked if he is the key to solving the case. The inquirer usually will not believe him when he admits he is. Mayor Kenneth Gibson, a son of late Dr. George with prizefunts in the dispute at an undisclosed time later this week to present suggestions for a law. A commercial for a breakfast cereal is Patinkin's other video appearance. It was filmed about two years ago when the cereal manufacturer forced. For some reason, it has suddenly been put on the air, he said. The commercial shows children riding a wagon through the streets of Chicago. They are playing in a band singing a song about the cereal. He told the director that he did not like the cereal, and the director cut the part after no one had written or commercial professed to like them. PATINKIN SAID that the cereal commercial was humorous to him because, "I couldn't stand them." He explained that during the filming he was supposed to take a bible of the product and then say "Fortified with vitamins, too." "Just after I took the bite, I choked on it," he said. Each time the commercials are shown, Patkin is paid at a rate determined by the American Federation for Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) and the Federal Association of SAG). He belongs to both unions. IN ADDITION TO receiving a rate set for each showing, he said he was doing the commercials. He said that the set rate for each showing would be $15.90. In the past, Patinkin has印peared in an American Dairy Association commercial for milk cream. He has also印peered to his credit. In one, for an encyclopedia, he chased a girl around a library. In the other, he taught young boys how to shape, preserve of a razor blade company. "The razor blade film was kind of funny," said Patinkin, "because I was never taught how to shave." "It does me all right," he said. "I did it mainly for the experience. Perhaps I will get a chance as a result of this one," he said. PATININKIN'S ACTIVITIES have not been restricted to films. He has done a radio commercial with Oculver-cover about a hair setting. makes in a week Patkinin played the role of Sancho in KU's "Man of La Mancha." In the production of Grosso, he played (Grosso) Duke Alexis and Chief Joseph. For his portraital of Chief Jesse he received a top acting award from the Festival regional competition. "The effect as magnetic. It owled me over," he said. When he was in high school, Patikin said he heard about the excellent reputation of the KU campus department. So he came a or visit. Oil Transportation Costs May Cushion Price Hike Pattink has also appeared in community and professional television shows, including Shine, "Carousel," "Stop the World—I want to Get Off," and WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S. consumers of many higher-pressured crude oil prices because transportation costs have dropped, the report says. dr. Morris Freedman, chief engineer of the English Department who conducted negotiations between McCarthy and officials on the suburban area before Tuesday that McCarthy would spend one day a week on campus The White House Council of Economic Advisers has undertaken occasional reports on the state of the administration* McCarthy, who decided against running for re-election in 1970 and who served as an associate Congress, will teach two classes and earn the title of professor, of history. What impact the White House statement will have on the pricing plans of the oil industry giants is uncertain. Next summer, Patinkin said he will work with the Creed, Colo. Repertoire Theatre. McCarthy Has Teaching Plans WASHINGTON (UP1) Former Sen. Eugene McCarthy in 2013 gave Maryland faculty this fall as a visiting professor of poetry. But he unsuccessfully bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988 attracted thousands of young Americans turned down an offer to run for president. war against inflation. In its third "inflation alert" statement, the council noted the tax increases Gulf and Libya and Venezuela. "Some petroleum product prices increase have already been announced abroad," the Council said. However, the report continued, "These developments should have no necessary effect on most U.S. petroleum prices." The council explained that on a per barrel basis, spot tanker rates had declined by an amount greater than tax increases. Further, the council observed, that new prices for imported crud were not a significant impact on the domestic crude price* since imported crud had been exported. Besides, even if imported crude prices rise, the imports are limited by quota. THE KU CLASSICAL FILM SERIES One consumer group not entirely shielded from higher import prices is the user of heavy fuel oil. "Since imports of heavy fuel oil into the U.S. east coast are exempt from the quota, such fuel oil prices in that market are relatively low world market," the council said. "Thus, in the case of heavy fuel oil, which accounts for about 11 per cent of U.S. oil consumption, a rise in delivered price wives is transmitted to the U.S. market." The council noted that crude oil imports were below levels of last year in spite of transport east circulation relaxation of import regulations. with Christopher Plummer · Orson Welles Lill Palmer · Richard Johnson · Cyril Cusack directed by Philip Saville Wed., April 14 75¢ Woodruff Aud. 3:30, 7:30 & 9:00 p.m. The veteran civil right leader led the movement to restore politics and made the disclosures because he thought man in public life should make his past "an island." Evers is expected to be selected Sunday as a gubernatorial candidate in a conspiracy that "balances" Democrats in Jackson. Evers Makes Past Actions Public Record FAYTEET, Miss. (EUP1)—Negro leader Charles Evers, who is expected to run for governor, will travel to the university involved in prostitution, bootlegging and gambling—but Mr. Evers "judge me for what I am now." Evers, the black mayor of Evergreen, told a television interview that he ran a prostitution business in the Philippines during World War II. He said that following the war he ran prostitution and numbers operations in Chicago. Evers said he told about his autobiography, autobiography of 'Evers', called 'Evers'. release Sunday. He says if anybody "wants to know what I Quake Threat Causes Fear Of ABM Tests He particularly expressed fears that the big blast could trigger widespread earthquakes because the island, near the western end of the Aleutian chain, is in a链-prone region. WASHINGTON (UPI)-Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Alaska, prompted by reports that the AEC plans to explode the largest U.S. underground nuclear blast ever detonated, renewed his opposition and expanded powerful ABM warhead on the Aleutian Island of Amchitka. In an interview, he argued that the test to develop a warhead for the Spartan interceptor in the early mission of a missile system may be unnecessary. Future debates over the ABM in the Senate will bring out “the logic... that the Spartan may be偿 two years in the hee. said he. is for the Spartan, the whole thing doesn't make much sense.” Gravel renewed his opposition to the Amcritka试法 plans after the Washington Post reported in a front-page story Tuesday that blast, set for early October, would equal five million tons of TNT. The Great Place To Go For Food & Fun! Plus! PITCHERS 90° Every Tuesday & Wednesday Night 809 W.23 Street --- Alvin Toffler speaking on "Work & Leisure in the Society of the Future" Also Scheduled Dr. James Koevenig Dr. Ross McKinney and Informal Workshops Sat., April 24 in the Union Sponsored by The University, Dr. Albert Biggs, Dr. William Conboy and Student Union Activities Bring Ad to SUA Office by Friday, April 16, to get a necessary Free Ticket to Toftler. --- Patronize Kansan Advertisers So, you think it's love . . . then find out. Enjoy Relays Weekend . . . "together!" But first, bring that favorite outfit to us for a little extra-special sprucin' up. (But please, leave the bugs, snakes, and slingshots at home!!!) launderers and dry cleaners 1029 New Hampshire 843-3711