Friday, February 12, 1971 University Daily Kansan News Capsules By United Press International L.A.:Water Drainage Water was drained out of the Van Norman Reservoir at 250,000 gallons an hour Thursday, steadily easing the threat of another catastrophe that could cause a break in its baited dam. The death toll stood at 56, with 37 of the victims at a veterans hospital in the San Fernando Valley where a man died from a broken down dawn. Eight persons were missing in the rubble. Capital: Agreement WASHINGTON D.C.—Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien says his party's potential presidential candidates have agreed in a secret battle to campaign between now and next, the Nixon administration, and each other. Attending the meeting were Sens. George S. McGovern, Hubert H. Humphrey, Edmond S. Muskie, Henry M. Jackson,Edward M. Kennedy, Harold E. Hughes, and Fred W. Koehler. D. Bays of Indiana was unable to make the meeting. Saigon: Laos Battle Three South Vietnamese columns pushing through Laoian jungles drove to the outskirts of the Chi Minh City airport. The U.S. Army carried the column to the U.S. Command early Friday reported mounting American casualties as the Americans confronted the Communist infiltration trail. Chicago: Guardsmen The Indiana house passed a bill to prohibit criminal prosecution of a National Guardman for actions performed while he is under order. The bill also provides for the indictment of an officer in charge of a Guardman named in a civil suit arising out of a callup and for appointment by the governor of a lawyer to defend the officer. This new legislation brought for alleged actions while not under orders. Cleveland: Extradition Sillous Huddleston, president of a small Mine Mine in Tennessee, was ordered extricated to Pennsylvania. An extricated UMWW official Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, his wife and daughter of the late Richard Yablonski, is the fifth of five suspects extricated. Wisconsin: Indictments MADISON-A Federal grand jury Thursday indicted three Army men enlisted on charges of blowing up an electric substation and telephone exchange and damaging a fire alarm. All three men were believed to be the first in which soldiers have been charged in connection with recent bombings. They did not set forth a possible motive and authorities did not speculate as to a motive. The explosions last July 26 in the west central Wisconsin base. Capital: Retraction WASHINGTON D.C.-Sen. Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., said Wednesday he left a draft hearing Monday not to protest the testimony being given by a college freshman, but to attend a previously scheduled meeting with Thurmond and other senior officials in international had misleadingly reported that Thurmond "walked out" of the hearing. UPI regrets the error. Thurmond left the hearing room Monday when Peter Schwarz, an assistant director of the members of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Missouri: Humphrey SPRINGFIELD—Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., said the Republicans have made a "blessed asset" of deficit government spending. Humphrey told newsman that the Democrats struggled with a deficit budget for many years, but now the "Republicans have taken a sinful做法" made it a blessed asset by moralizing defect financing." Pros and Cons of SST Presented to KU Groups Arguments for and against the Supersonic Transport (SST) were presented this week before two KU groups. A panel discussion on the SST was held Wednesday evening at the University of Florida in Human Issues in Technology and Sciences program. The meeting, held at the Weekmen Center, included participants who concrete answers to the myriad questions posed by the SST. Those who agreed, should precede any possible large scale commitment United States SST program. The panelists were Peter Hierl, Stephen Gill, Elizabeth Bickhard, Bethard Ruppert, associate professor of economics, and Jan Roskam, professor of Aerospace Roskam spoke in favor of the SST Thursday at the noon luncheon meeting of the Faculty held at the Westminster Center. ACCORDING TO Rokam, the SST is a passenger plane designed at three times the speed the speed of 500 passengers. The SST has cruising altitude of 65,000 feet and, therefore most of its flight routes are on a short runway. Roskam said government regulations require a super-speed surface land because of the noise it makes when it flies with a bird or its supersonic speed飞扬 is done over the ocean or in polar areas where there are few ROKSMAN SAID that with supersonic transport systems, 7 per cent of pollutants in the atmosphere can be attributed to vehicle emissions. This pollution is in the form of carbon dioxide and water vapor. Compared to the 34 per cent of pollutants that cars throw into the air, Roskam said he thought that this was relatively low. He asked the students to for the pollutants put into the stratosphere;here by the SST to reduce to an equilibrium where the number of pollutants equalled the number going out. Hire? speak against development in Australia? HE NOTED that the amount of water vapor in the stratosphere, the region in which the SST plants to operate, is much smaller than the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere in which we live. Hierl said a degree of cloudiness could occur in the stratosphere which would absorb sunlight and cause the sorption would cause a temperature change in the atmosphere, the results of which are not known. "With the coming of man into the stratosphere, the amount of water that is going to rain," said. "This doubling could possibly produce some unpleasant effects." "It IS ESTIMATED that an additional 60,000 people would suffer from skin cancer." Hierl said. This would occur because the ozone decreases vapor vapor would react with and decrease the ozone content of the stratosphere. The ozone decrease would allow additional radiation exposure. According to Ruppert, the issue of the SST needs to be reassessed along with a restructuring of national priorities. He does not think the questions posed by the current resources be solved with the current available resources unless something is given up. The U.S. petroleum industry spent more than $2 billion on water conservation, according to an anthropology survey. The Petroleum Institute survey. Trapped Air Keeps Man Alive 2 $ _{1/2} $ Days SAN FEGNANDO, Calif. (UPI) — Rescuers were spurred on Thursday when a man was brought out alive after they probed the body of an unidentified individual. Frank Carcioneza, 68, managed to crawl beneath a jink in the kitchen where he审慎 was trapped to keep him alive. He was rescued from the oven. He "looked like he'd been in there one hour instead of fifty-eight and a hull!" said Dr. Donald Yadav, who examined him in a field lab at the University of Michigan. "Personally, I didn't think anybody was going to be left alive. This should spur your awareness," Dr. Vadusky said. mourning morning, two and one half days after the quake struck, papa had dismuthified that any more persons would be found alive in the ruins. the ambulances that had carried away survivors were gone. The coroner's station wagon remained. Men with the word coroner on the backs of their jackets in block letters stood by waiting for the dead. Dr. Solomon Meterz, 70, assistant chief of the medical staff, who kept an almost hourly visit at the scene, said, "When they first started to bring them out, I thought there would be probably 10 or 15 dead at the most, but nothing as bad as this." Mayors Say '72 Budget Not Adequate for Cities SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—The president said that Presidentixon's new budget was a setback for the cities and that his revenue cuts are going to hurt them. They said the administration was sitting on more than a billion dollars already available for the agency and demanded that it be released. Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York, chairman of the legislative action committee of the U.S., said that the number of people was more than $1 billion in the current budget for urban housing, public housing and model cities. But it has been held up by the administration, Linda Harris said. "This is unacceptable," he told a news conference. Lindsay released a detailed analysis of the President's budget for the fiscal year 1972 and described a severe setback for the cities. The analysis said the budget failed by at least $5.7 billion of meeting the critical needs of the cities. In the section on revenue sharing, the budget was misleading about the actual amount of new money that will be for the analysis said. It said the budget raised more questions than it answered about which programs will receive what money and at presently appears to be much the same money in a new package. E-Co Berets - is a social organization - performs community services - exhibits a drill team * is a coed affiliate to * Pershing Rifles is open to all women For those women interested in learning more about the campus group, you are welcome to visit Feb. 14 at 2:00 p.m. or Feb. 14 at 7:00 p.m. in the Library Science Building. For more information contact: BRIAN BORRON 847-9171 Sal Mason 842-8525 Jan Jastenmion 843-6138 --sharp fragments. It also said there have been reports of fires triggered when the sun's rays are agliffed though the clear plastic. SUA Travel Service with MAUPINTOUR During the last few years the students working in SUA have tried to meet the increasing demand for student and faculty advice and information. They have offered vital and practical instruction to those travelling with SUA as well as traveling on a plane. The TRAVEL SERVICE is designed to serve the students traveling by car or bus. Students will be provided procedural capacity. Several students with travel experience will work closely with the SERVICE employees to give an orientation for new students. They are encouraged to abroad. If you would wish to volunteer to serve, please contact us. As students and members of the University, we look to the Kansas State University as an example for student construction. The people at K.U. and especially at the Kansas State University are not only responsible for the The UNIVERSITY TRAVEL SERVICE will maintain 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. working hours. Monday through Friday, students must be on the closed hour, but airline tickets may be picked up at the airport from Maunipour at 90 Massachusetts on Saturday mornings. However, due to the rapid increase in the University's student population, there is a need to abbreve and here at home, the students working with SAF are provided with a new way of accessing resources. Services Offered WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Army said Thursday it is trying to develop a type of radar as a riot-control device that can "see" through buildings, but it is only in the early stages of development. Eurasian Travels, International Student (I.D.) and The Scholar (I.D.). Personal Car Insurance Card in the US and Abroad. F-Min Lanyard. First Lanyard. Loanary Library Cards Main Lounge, Kansas Union 8:30 - 5:00 Monday-Friday 843-1211 Army Builds Arms To Break Up Riots The radar would operate with lower frequency waves than normal. It is still in the blueprint stage, but Col. Lauris Eck of the brigade office said he hoped to have a working model within a year. The Army's Research and Development Office showed newsmen a wide array of riot-fighters in the area, who are working on. Included was a bouncing rubber ball filled with tear gas, that, in another 18 months, may become the standard grenade used against rioters. The tear gas is expelled from a hole in the ball causes it to skitter across the ground like a balloon and is then dispersed over gas over a wide area, and makes it difficult for a roster to grab and move to police or National Guardmen. LORELEI $250 WEDDING BIRD 29.75 Keepsake REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS Exciting Keepake styles—from classically simple to intricately carved. Each with a flawless center diamond. 743 Mass. 843-4366 "Your I.D. card is your pass to instant credit." A beaming that might be fired at rioters was displayed, but researchers said they were still waiting for the weapon was safe enough. FDA Warns About 'Clacker' WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Food and Drug Administration has issued a warning against the toy industry which consists of two clear plastic balls joined by a cord. The toys, usually so the balls bounce off a card. The agency said at least two children and two adults have been injured when the balls suddenly shattered, sewing WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 ONLY AT LAWRENCE SURPLUS The venom of the brown recluse spider is more deadly than that of a rattlesnake's. 276 Pairs! Men's Reg. to $11.00 PERMA-PRESS FLARES $3.00 Wear Since 88 to 92 The agency said it was testing the toy to determine if it should be banned. Waist Sizes 28 to 36 Reg. $1.00 Men's About 40 Pairs! Men's Reg. $17.95 WELLINGTON BOOTS $8.00 STRETCH COTTON CREW SOCKS Men's Reg. to $30.00 PILE-LINED BUSH COATS All Remaining 44¢ $10.00 33 of Thesel Reg. $35.00 Men's BELTED SPORT COATS $11.00 $11.00 Entire Stock Men's Reg. to $1.69 POCKET T-SHIRTS 88¢ See Our $2.00 Pants Table It Is Fantastic! LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Massachusetts St. ST. VALENTINE'S DAY MASSACRE knocked off SUITS . . . from 40. $ ^{0 0} $ rubbed out SHIRTS . . . $ 3^{00} $ and $ 5^{00} $ slaughtered SPORT COATS from 25 $^{00}$ OTHER CRIMES COMMITTED ON TIES WASH PANTS SHOES . . . WASH PANTS . . . ambushed WINTER COATS . from 15 $^{00}$ slashed SLACKS from 9 $ ^{0 0} $ gunned down SWEATERS... 1/2 off