2 Friday, February 19, 1971 University Daily Kansan News Capsules Paris: Warning By United Press International Hanol's chief delegate to the Vietnam Peace Talks, Xmuan Thuy, accused the United States Thursday of planning to invade North Vietnam and warned that such a move would constitute a threat to Communist China. Although Communist China has been referred to in the United States as a war-weary country, the statement by Thuy was the first time during the talks the Indochina War had been called a threat to Communist China. Capital: Harriman Capital: Reuther WASHINGTON, D.C.—An alligator in the jet plane that carried Auto Workers President Walter Reuther to his death had some parts missing" and one part installed under the wing of a plane he said. The report on the accident said the defective apparatus reinforced the pilot's illusion of height exceeding ground and with no visible lights on the runway. Topeka: Raise One vote in the Kansas House passed and sent to the Senate a bill raising the pay of legislators to $10,000 a year. The bill was vetoed by Governor Bill Bryan Moline, D-Wichita, and Jerry Harper, R-Wichita, on a vote of $642, 83xy three votes were necessary. Miami: Railroads The AFLCIO said that if the government refused to let workers strike against its drivers, it would nationalize the railways's President Nixon has asked Congress for special authority to handle the dispute or permit partial operation of the railroads. Capital: Whiskey WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Defense Secretary Melvin R. Linder, a senior official on Friday one civilian banker to support military intelligence activities in the United States and to make sure they are conducted in a manner which recognizes and preserves individual human rights. Army Under Board Watch WASHINGTON, D.C.—A major distiller first denied and then admitted full knowledge that his agents heaped on high-ranking U.S. officials in Vietnam to make Jim Beam (a former governor of Arkansas) President Mel Peterson of James Beam Distilling Co. confirmed that swanky Saigon liquors were among the most valuable products sold at P&S and service clubs throughout South Vietnam. VASHINGTON (UPI) The shakeup stemmed from charges that the Army, starting in 1967, overstepped its role in violated constitutional rights in spying on private citizens, politicians and political activists. Communications reported Thursday that seven more U.S. aircraft day after the bombing or lost, including three helicopters and two planes in Laos and a $3 million Phantom jet fighter-bomber which crashed while carrying crewmen were listed as missing and at least six more Americans were injured in the other aircraft. Laird's announcement came a week before a scheduled inauguration of a new constitutional rights subcommittee of the Army spying activities connected with civil disorders. He said that during the past two years, they gathered dossiers on political figures and law-labbing during the past two years. Assistant Defense Secretary Robert F. Froehkine, named by Laird to head the new civilian group, told newsmen these charges were exaggerated but substance to justify both concern and corrective action." He declined to elaborate. Frohike said Laurd later decided the defense intelligence agency, charged with gathering information about potentially lethal threats, under the command of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Thus he only placed investigative and counterintelligence activities, formerly performed separately by the Frohike team under Frohike's management. The intelligence reorganization unit called Lard predicted in December but he said he wanted all military intelligence activities placed under In northern Laos, 300 miles above the Ho Chi Minh Trilah offensive, North Vietnamese runners using Russian equipment have been based at Long Cheng, destroying its power plant. New fighting was reported in Cambodia, where a 1,400-man South Vietnam task force opened yet another front near the Gulf of Thailand, forces near the Gulf of Thailand. A report from South Vietnamese headquarters in Saigon and the Vietnamese forces operating in Cao Bang, the town ofSuong north of Highway 7 fought two sharp clashes with the forces, killing 116 soldiers and capturing five. Three South Vietnamese were reported slain and 25 wounded. SAGJON (UPH)—South Vietnamese commanders said that Saigon's Saikon drives into Laos. Saikon ambushed had killed 1,710 communists and that South Vietnamese reconvened to conduct scouting defenses of the Sepone hub of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the objective of the Laos offensives. Nixon Proposes Program To Meet Medical Crisis Sepone is 27 miles inside Laos and marks the deepest penetration in that country yet by South Vietnamese forces. The casualties raised to 1,119 the number of Communists killed in the operations by a 19,500-strike force which has been trying to clear Highway 7 from Kampong Cham to Snoal. Overall Vietnamites losses were placed in 191 killed and 365 wounded. From Page 1 He said a professor's ability to teach is a primary consideration although scholarly research appears to be "tied to the best instruction" and it is a "Measure of recency of one's scholarship." Budget . . . WASHINGTON (UP1)—declaring a "depressing crisis" in the cost of medical care, in the need of national care, and proposed a national health in- Chalmers answered that the professor's need to publish scholarly in order to gain promotion and tenure, had been reversed in the past. Chalmeri said the diverting to EBF money from new buildings could end plans for a new building. "I would, you would, it would, be sad." He noted that KU teaches more upper level undergraduate and graduate students than any other trend was toward upper division classes — having the largest after Chalmers' budget committee chairman, Sen. Tom McCain, Scott, asked the Chancellor to tell them the committee on the deadline for how it affects professors who would rather teach than be used for new buildings in cluding a physical education complex at Emporia State and an art center at Wichita State. "I would point out," he said, "that there is not enough in EBF to pay an architect, let alone to build a $4 million building." surance plan to cover nearly all Americans. The plan includes requirements for health and mandatory, social security-style coverage for the working class. Nixon announced he was throwing federal government support behind a plan to keep people healthy by paying doctors' fees instead of paying for services rendered to those already sick. With this plan, Nixon hopes tourb medical costs that nowconsume nearly 7 per cent of theGross National Product. To improve Medicare, the President proposed an elimination of the fee the elderly must pay to help cover doctor bills—newly scheduled to rise in billions up the difference of $1.3 billion a year by raising the Social security wage base. Nixon's comprehensive health plan, submitted to Congress in 1972, included a price tag of $1.5 billion. The figure was substantially smaller proposed by Edward M. Edward and D. Massa). and other (D.Massa)). Of the total, $1.2 billion would finance free care for welfare families of four persons earning less than $3,000 a year. Nixon said his goal was not to finance a more expensive medical system but to organize a private insurance plans and innovations within the medical industry to incentivize incentives for holding costs down. The total does not include federal loan guarantees of $700 million for construction of medical facilities. Troops Near Trail Hub Painting Orangutan Sells Work for $500 TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI) - Djakarta Kim, the Topeka Zoo's rangitan painter, has sold one of his prize-winning paintings for $500. Not before Gary Clare announced Thursday that an anonymous Tornado toller had paid the painting. Tormento The money from the sale will help pay the artist, who The money from the sale will help pay for Daisy, Jim's mate, who was recently purchased from the Dallas Zoo for $5,000. In the new Cambodian offensive, the force of 1,400 South Vietnam troops pushed across the frontier in a drive against the Marines and the Mekong River Delta four miles southwest of Kompong Trach. Jim recently won a statewide children's painting contest at Hutchinson with two paintings. One was "Tornado," and the other was "Rain." C Clarke says the painting that sold for $500, "looks like a big funnel in the middle with debris飞 flying all over the place." The five-year-old painter was unconcerned about the sale. "He ate a banana, and he bought a $10 bill." "He ate a banana and hugged Daisy, and that was all the response we got from him." Clarke said. Jim won the contest painting under the assumed name, "D. James jrange." The judges didn't know he was an ape. A. U.S. military source训 UPI correspondent Kenneth Braddick that long range South Vietnamese reconnaissance attacks the Sepone area last Tuesday, and were mapping its defenses. KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM FRIDAY, FEB. 19 Afternoon 12:15 Noon Hour Concert 12:30 Noon Time War 13:30 Life of Bedworth 14:30 Bedworth Hall I Musical 15:30 Chancefield Trial by Bale 16:30 This Afternoon (Art Buckwall) Campus & Community Calendar Campus & Community Calendar 17:30 Anything Good at the Movies! (Prof. Evening 7- HBO Broadway Book 8- HBO Series *The Lion and the Jewel* by Wole Soya 9- Gillbert & Sullivan Notebook (Prof. John Gillbert) 10- To Be Amounted Paramount keeps on truckin' Evening 6.05-Music by Candlestick 7. News by Retrospect (Robert Sullinger) 8. Opera by My Holybay (Prof. James Sawer) 9. Faculty Favorites, William Hakes **Discovery Opera Opera. Barber Shevile b, Roessel 3/15. This After-Hour (Campus & Compass) 9/15. Speech on the News (Hell Redlin) 9/30. Anything Good in the Movies? (Prof. Fritz Schlegel) SATURDAY, FEB. 20 Afternoon Morning 7:30 - Pineapple (Campus & Community Calendar) 9:00 - No School Today 10:05 - The Jazz Songs (Gary Shlbert) 1:10 Philadelphia Orchestra Concert 3- The Vapor Huron 4- Los Angeles Philharmonic SUNDAY, FEB. 21 $399 Reg. '5' 8:05 - Music by Candiedlight 8:17 - Bluestrugs (Can Crazy) 8:32 - Basketball KU vs. Missouri 8:15 - Sign Off This Week Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ct THE THIRD DIRECTION SUA FILMS BUTCH CASSDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID Feb. 19-20 7:39 p.m. 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Fri. & Sat. Admission with K.U. ID. 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Sun. 2:00 Adult. 1:50 Hillcrest Coming Hillcrest 1 March 10th "LOVE STORY" HENDRIX CRY OF LOVE Our Price $329 RIVER CITY RECORDS Super Discounts on all Records Open Everyday and Every Evening too!! at 1401 MASS. drop bye