2 Thursday, April 1, 1971 University Daily Kansan News Capsules By United Press International Boston: Dump Former Sen. Charles E. Goodall, R-N.Y., said Wednesday that plans for a "dump Nixon movement" would be made by a group of "moderate Republicans" at a state Republican convention in New York to appear at a Ripon Society meeting, Goodall, whose reelection was appealed by the White House last year, said Wednesday that participants in the "high-level national strategy meeting." Manila: Hiiack An American passenger aboard a Philippine Airlines jetliner which returned after being hijacked to Communist China said one of the six air pirates told him more hijackings to the Chinese mainland would follow. Russell Eberleo said one of the hijackers apologized to all 19 passengers and crewmen aboard the twin-engine BAC111 Capital: Agnew WASHINGTON, D.C.-Vice President Spiro T. Agnew portrayed Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Aark., as an arrogant, frustrated presidential candidate who was denied a vote in the Senate and feeding Hand's hope for a divided United States. San Francisco: Teachers Two rival teachers unions combined forces in a strike which paralyzed public schools attended by the city's 89,000 students. It was the first strike in the history of the California Teachers Association, which represents about 25% of teachers in an American Federation of Teachers local with 1,800 members, which had been on strike since last Wednesday Capital: Navy WASHINGTON, D.C.—The Navy, which once relegated Negroes to duty only as officers' stewards, announced this week a campaign to recruit more black officers and men to transform itself into a "model of equal opportunity" by 1976. Philadelphia: Boxcars MNEACONIL-A search for two coal miners trapped dot feet underground was abandoned when救援 team members found that either suffocated or burned to death. Officials then sent rescue teams to wash the fire without attempting to recover the two bodies. Two Penn Central Railroad officials, who refused to identify themselves, testified before a federal grand jury investigating the disappearance of $1 million worth of her money. In a 2015 session, was trying to determine how 277 boxcars disappeared from the bankrupt Penn Central FBI agents company investigators have found more than 100 of them. Gay Libs Complain Of Social Prejudice "A one-dimensional hetero- sexual culture has defined our roles," said John Steven, a Gay Lib member. Homosexuality as a sociological problem rooted in prejudice and discrimination was the viewpoint presented by Gay lesbianism. The Human Sexuality Seminar yesterday. The seminar was sixth in a series sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women. Rejecting role definitions, he said, Gay Lib members seek to affirm themselves as human beings. They total being, whether that essence is at times called masculine or feminine by straight society," he As an organization, he said, the Gay Liberation Front had a goal of freedom and of total acceptance of homosexuals in society. Education is needed, he said, and it will be achieved by "being who we are and who we are becoming." Dr. Sigmond Gundel, en- sawment by the Walkins Mental Health Clin- cled as moderator and the members of Gay Lib answered Asked how a homosexual deserves a lifestyle for himself, Joe said: "I have been replied that, much of homosexuality was promiscuous." John Steven said the lifestyle depended upon how the person related to his own homosexuality. SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UP1) - President Nixon promised to turn six miles of beachfront over to California for a state park Wednesday and announced a nation-wide campaign to convert portions of the island into huge land holdings for public use. Nixon Reorganizes Land The President said he had ordered the revival of all federal laws, including the country to determine which of them could be put to better public use. "This is the first in a series of announcements that will be made over the next few months in all sections of the country. It also expresses property that presently is being used by the federal government in a way that we have determined is not the best use." John D. Ehrlichman, a presidential aide who heads the program to organize announcements shortly concerning Port Derussy on Wakefield Beach in Honolulu and on Oahu, Hawaii. The locations in the Midwest, one in the Southeast and parcel in the New York City, San Francisco Ehrlichman the program was a "process of reversing what has been a very well established tendency on the part of the Black Lawyer To Consider Court System The chief investigator of the grand jury for the Black Panther party in Chicago will speak at Monday in Woodruff Auditorium. Kermitt Coleman, who also serves as the chief counselor for the Black Police Department of Union and chief counselor for the Black Policeman's Association in Chicago, has worked many years with the department. Students in Chicago, said Melvin Jenkins, coordinator of the Black American law students. "Students Coleman, a 32 year old graduate of Marshall Law School in Chicago, the address under the title of "The Black Man in the White Court System" Jenkins said he that he was defending himself at the point of view of a black attorney and black defender in justice in a court situation. Jenkins said that Coleman is probably the best known black attorney for poor blacks in Chicago. "It used to be," said, "that a common saying in Chicago among the poor was 'if you're here, have a problem, see Kermit.'" Coleman's speech is sponsored by BALSA in cooperation with the KU Law School. Concert Sunday By KU Choir The Chamber Choir toured for five days between semesters in northern and central Kansas and alumni groups and community concerts. Included among the group were members of which was a formal concert for the Kansas Music Educators Association in Wichita March 28, 1971. The University of Kansas Chamber Choir will hold its spring concert at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout on Reclital Hall. An assistant professor, who served in a combat role in Vietnam, was willing to talk, but declined to be identified. He said the military opinion and the opinion were similar. He said the military confusions surrounding Vietnam also had clouded the Calley trial. He said the trial could be appealed to the Military Court of Appeals and to the Civilian Commission, which is the civilian, and then to the President. He said a question of how much money he throw it into the federal courts. Ellis said he thought there should be a court martial but it was hard to know the facts. He called Calley was under mental secure when the 1986 was bad time. The Vietnam war served in the U.S. Navy in Vietnam at about the time of the My Lai incident. Jay Ellis, Paola sophomore in engineering, said, "I kind of think they're hitting the wrong man. Who's to say who did it?" "I feel it's necessary to make a distinction between murder and killing. Killing is bad, but murder is inexplicable." Alfredo Fonseca, a junior in business and history, and Ricardo Costa, a Brazilian, were the incident at My Lai. Publicity played big part in blowing it up. "The case is a very unusual one," said Col P Hillierd JR, professor of military science and commander of KU Army ROTC Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said that of a 2p.m. the White House had received some 150-phone calls in Washington. He said that the White House's four Western Union channels were running full blast and were trying to keep doing so through the weekend. She said she thought Calley would be released within 10 years after it was all forgotten. RIEDEL HE HE didn't know what would happen now. Normally a case would go from FT Benning to the 3rd Army Headquarters to Washington, he said. IN SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. President Nixon is being swamped with telegrams from the public, running almost 100-1 in favor of clemency for Lt. Col. William, the white House disclosed. Ziegler was asked whether this was an unusual bombardment of public sentiment, and he replied, with a smile: "I can't blame Calley for what's been done." she said. "IT'S A VERY large number of telegraphs for the White House to receive—almost as high as the presidential address." He said that it was his un- wieldy threat of the telegrams indicate the people who are sending them are against the verdict and for him. The response to a poll by radio station WRIC at Richlands, Va., on the conviction of Calley was so serious that the station broke down for a time and some listeners drove to the station to vote in person. Only three of the calls received by the station favored the station, the station manager said. Officials said more than 150 persons lived in the shaded part of the Peterson Jersey Streets. The complex is in the heart of a low-rent area saturated by students from surrounding universities, Simmons College, Emmanuel College, Boston State, and other nearby junior college. Calley ... In his action today, the President moved to turn over six and a half miles of Camp Pendleton's 18-mile beachfront and 23-acre western corner of the huge Marine base to California for public use. He declined to give President Nixon's personal reaction to the verdict or the sentencing Wednesday to life imprisonment. He said the program so far had touched off some of the "great, classic bureaucratic struggles of the 1960s," and he expected more to come. federal government to keep what land it has and acquire more rather than economize in real estate." Fire That Kills Seven Believed Deliberately Set "This fire was of incendiary origin," said Fire Chief George Owens, the fire-story building, a short distance from Parksville, Park. BOSTON (UPI) — A fast-moving fire, believed to be deliberately set, killed seven persons Wednesday when it ripped through an apartment building and large students and elderly people. A dozen persons were treated at City Hospital for burns and injuries when an elderly collapsed from smoke inhalation. The dead were immediately Campus Bulletin Latin American Studies: Alcove C. Cafeteria, Kansas Union, 10:10 a.m. Psychology Comm.: Curry Room, Union Friday April 2 9 a.m. 4 p.m. From Page 1 Today The dead were not immediately identified. Shortly after announcing the move, the President took a 15. mile stretch of beach area and expressed the hope that camping areas and restaurants would be located on flippers overlooking the beach. University Women's Club: Watkins Room Union, 1 p.m. University Women's Club Program: Pratt Interviews: Room 101, Union, 2 p.m. Psych Colloquium: Forum Room, Union, 4 p.m. Sigma Xi Curry Room, Union, 6 p.m. General Motors Scholars: Walton R. m. The area begins just south of the Western White House and the President's cliff-top house, La Vera. The Secret Service has insisted that a portion of several hundred yards of property be a buffer zone for security reasons. KANSAS UNION General Motors Scholars; Watkins Room. 1, 1ion. 6 p.m. 30 p.m. Waters Room, U.S.A. 30 p.m. Guestroom Rooms, 8-10 30 p.m. nion, 6 p.m. Political Science: Watkins Room, Union. SUA Board: Governors Room, Union, 6:30 p.m. Speech Comm. and Psych.: Room 101, nion, 6:30 p.m. Speech Comm. and Psych.: Forum Room. LEARN ABOUT MORMONISM Speech Comm. and Psych.: Forum Room, 'nion', 7 p.m. p.m. Bahai: Pine Room, Union, 7:30 p.m. African Club: Big Eight Room, Union, 7:30 Delia Sigma Pt: Council Room, Union, 7 p. Dialogue sponsored by L.D.S. Institute LEARN AL MORMON p.m. Latin American Club: Room 305, Union, 7 p.m. p.m. KU Film Society: "Midsummer Night's Dream," Woodruff Auditorium, Union, 7:30 p.m. Dean of Women's Staff. Jayhawk Room. Union, 7:30 p.m. MHG: Regional Room, Union. 7/4 p.m. SIMS: International Room, Union. 8 p.m. UA: Poetry and Folk Music: Upper Lakewood Room, Union. 11 p.m. "The Orchestra". Experimental Theatre Murphy Hall. 8:20 p.m. Auditorium, Grim, 9 p.m. University Council: 108 Blake, 3:30 p.m. Sigma Xi Lecture: Dyche Auditorium. **Rev.** (8th) 11 p.m. KU **Bulwark Society**, Dames," Woodruff Anderson Structural Engineering Conference University of Chicago History Lecture, Big Eight International Folk Dance Party 173 International Folk Dance Party 173 Popular Film: "Ballad" "Hamilton" Film: "Hamilton" Theater: "Riverdale" Friday More than 40 persons were picked from windows or ledges over ladders. Damage was uneven, but the cost was than $200,000. Chief Paul said that the third fire of suspicious equipment and apparently started shortly after midnight when someone collapsed in volatile fluid on a first floor wall. THIS WEEK THE BLUE MAX yukdown Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Free Admission With your KU ID every Friday & Saturday 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Live Music Every Night Except Sunday Patronize Kansan Advertisers established in 1907 NATIONAL SURPLUS SALES no. 2 helmets rope hammocks back packs camping stoves bush jackets trench coats 817 Vermont 843-0624 GI shirts tools parachutes French Foreign Legion sandals gas cans rubber boats Lawrence's ONLY Government Surplus Store signal mirrors paddles LARGEST SURPLUS OUTLET IN THE MIDWEST gasmasks cooking grills combat pants pea coats Vietnam jungle boots bayonets nocket knives vietnam jungle bayonets pocket knives ponchos bunk beds airplane seats first aid kits G1 down sleepin bags rope tents weather balloons knives hoists snake bite kits GI flashlights navy bells camp stools duffle bags Swedish army coats water cans lee work clothes and western wear portable toilets ★Many more items too numerous to mention★ What about your winter clothes? You do not need to lug them home and lug them back next summer. (Remember school starts early) You don't need to worry about it if you take it to Acme Launderers. Acme will clean moth proof, make minor repairs, and store 25-30 garments in a refrigerated box. All you pay for is the cost of cleaning when you pick your clothes up in the fall. Insurance is a nominal fee of $3.95 for $300.00 worth of clothes, 2 per cent extra for additional valuation. There's no better deal than that! So isn't it time you had your clothes stored. Acme Dry Cleaners and Launderers DOWNTOWN 1111Mass. HILLCREST 925 Iowa MALLS 711 W. 23rd 1