10 Friday, March 26, 1971 University Daily Kansan . --- Talks in Paris Frustrate Local 'Peacenik' Delegate By MELLIE DELANEY Kannan Staff Writer As a delegate representing The Citizens Conference on Peace Mrs. Alice Pullman attended the meeting where she had been frequently moved to tears "partly by the stories of destruction and brutality, and partly because we 'peacenks' do something to end the war." Mrs. Pulliam, a Lawrence housewife, spoke Thursday at a Faculty Forum meeting at Westminster House. Along with 17 delegates from the states, Mrs Paluvaillam traveled to North Vietnam to represent representatives of North Vie- ham; the Viet Cong, South Vietnam. According to Mrs. Pulliam both the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong viewed President Ho Chi Minh as a continuation of the war rather than an attempted withdrawal. She quoted a North Vietnamese delegate as saying, "The Viet Cong policy won't bring peace." Mrs. Pulliam reported that the North Vietnamese felt no obligation to free the American forces, but she said, prisoners of war have never been released before the end of a war. She said the North Vietnamese had said they fed their soldiers better than their own men. She said one delegate asked, "Why demand the release of prisoners while you continue to kill Vietnamese?" Mrs. Puliam reported the North Vietnamese had said they intended to build a socialistic society for all of Vietnam because, "historically, ethnically and geographically, Vietnam is The Citizens Conference on Peace also met with the South Vietnamese and the Americans at the White House for discussions. Mrs. Prullah said, Concerning America's role in Vietnam, Mrs. Pullman said that the French had divided through the French had divided the people, they were thankful to the Americans for uniting the people, they called "American imperialism." She said the South Vietnamese believed the agrarian reforms of the Communists were only the murders of the murderers of Vietnamese. She said the South Vietnamese had denied any knowledge of "tiger cages," the underground cage-like prison cells found in a South Vietnamese prison. WASHINGTON (UPI)—John E. Ingersoll, director of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, said Thursday he doubled that popular songs with lyrics glorifying the use of drugs, much more than the sharp increase in drug abuse among young people. But as for song lyrics he said doubted that any but the "very" impressionable might cause the music of the songs they listened to. The narcotics bureau, naturally an enforcement of laws, will be pliuring ways to prevent drug abuse particularly among those people who have not yet become addicted. He said at all. He said that he wasn't sure what was the single most important factor in the increasing problem. "It is too much to single out songs as a causative factor," he said in an interview. "It certainly has an important factor in the drug problem." Twelve members of the group met with Dr. Bruce, Chief U.S. ambassador to the peace talks. The group met with wolf with the wolf. Concerning Vice President Ky's statement, "We need not one Hitler, but many Hitlers," Mrs. Pulliam said a South Vietnamese delegate had answered, "We need that kind of man." Director Questions Lyrics-Drug Link "We've had drinking songs throughout all time." he noted "The American delegation impressed us as being in uniform," said Mr. Trump, this to President Nixon's nixm of the American delegation. "Typhoon and How to Learn the Language" a program presented Wednesday night in Flint Hall by Jack Communal Council Typesetting the Program and added that no one ever suggested they led to alcoholism Drug oriented song lyrics were put in the spotlight March 5 by a controversial Federal Communications Commission (FCC) order that told broadcasters they could only play any lyrics they play over the air. The program consisted of a color film and an audio film strip produced by the International Typographic Composition Assoc. and the technical and described past and present processes in typography. Connell, a past president of the typographic association, graduated from Baker University and will work at the University of Kansas. Printer Gives Film Program "We would be less than honest, Mr. President, if we did not reflect a view widely shared among the majority of the citizens we represent, the citizens of the House black cases told Nixon in a prepared statement. "That view is that the target is the nation," he said, ministerialist to the word and deed have at crucial points retreated from the national commitment to the war. additional black judges, including some in the South. WASHINGTON (UPI)—Black House members, in an off-delay meeting they had sought to announce, President Nixon Thursday minority groups have suffered a setback as the group administration. They called on him for an "unequivocal commitment" to the equal rights agenda. Most of the blacks' corrective proposals dealt with economic inequality, and they benefited the poor without regard to race. They supported welfare reform along the lines proposed in the 1960s, including a minimum guaranteed family income of $8-500 a year instead of the usual proposed by the President. The code, now in its third draft, was prepared by the Senate Committee on Faculty Rights. It was later revised by Marion Marson McCluggage, professor of sociology and committee chairman, said that it was the first code ever designed to be used at the University of Kansas. Revisions were made on a proposed Faculty Code of Conduct at an open hearing Thursday for all faculty members. Fourth Draft Necessary For New Faculty Code assembly, and student-faculty relations. It limits conduct such as failure of a faculty member to participate in his academic responsibilities. The code is known as the Code Faculty Rule. It stipulates that faculty rights protect. It protects faculty rights such as unlawful searches and seizures, freedom and security. The workshop will discuss the United States' telephone taxes, withholding and income taxes. They went prepared with their 7,000-word State of the Union report in which they proposed, among other points, creation of a $1 billion publicly funded foundation that would black and other minority group business enterprises. They also proposed the appointments of Most of the changes made Thursday were wording revisions. The committee will rework and write a fourth draft. The code will then be submitted to the Executive committee. (SetEx) for approval and move on to the final vote, probably in mid-April. A workshop on war tax resistance will be held Saturday at the American Baptist Center, 1629 W 19th St. The 12 Black House members, plus a newly elected black nonvoting House delegate from the District of Columbia, won their long-sought White House conference only after numerous attacks by the Nixon State of the Union address to Congress Jan. 23. McMuggle said that the proposed code did not protect certain University ad- ditions to state Civil Service personnel. Blacks Criticize Nixon A. workshon or war cultures equal in the eyes of their government . . . 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