8 Thursday, February 11, 1971 University Daily Kansan 10. 4 Second Generation Winner Karaus Photo ... McBill Boyd, and his mother Mamie Boyd. Second Family Member Gets Journalistic Honor McDill "Huck" Boyd, publisher of the Phillips County School District, member of his family to receive the William Allen White Foundation and Merit in Kansas Wednesday in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Rv GALEN RLAND Boyd's mother, Mrs. Mamie Boyd, 94, who was cited in 1967 watched her son receive the award. Committee Will Grade KU School Boyd was visibly moved by the honor. "This is an unforgettable The School of Engineering was visited last week by a group from the Engineering Council for Professional Development, according to William P. Smith, chairman of the Engineering. The visit was a tour of inspection which takes place every six years. The team of nine engineers, eight from other universities and one from industry, interviewed them to determine the school's departments. They will now report back to their council and their information will be processed in a meeting of the board. The information will be issued to KU next summer. A school which does not meet the "council's standards is given five years' notice." Smith said, but he doesn't feel KU is in danger of such a situation. "I think we rank fairly high," Smith said. The engineering Council for Professional Development is a combination of various engineering societies, such as the American Society for Mechanics and Automation, the American Society for Civil Engineers. Today Campus Bulletin Kansas Editorial Writing Conferences: International Room, Kansas Union, a 4 m. Raytown, Ma., Interviews 102 Union, a 4 m. Red Cross Bloodmobile; Joseph R. Pearson Ball, 9 a.m. Kansas City, Kansas, Interviews: Oread Room. Union. 9 a.m. Oak Park, Illinois, Interviews: Governme M. Park, Illinois, Interviews: Governor's Room, Union, 9 a.m. French Department: Alcove B. Union. French Department: Alcove B, Union, 11:30 a.m. Latin American Studies: Alcove C, Union French Department: Alcove B, Union, 11:30 a.m. Latin American Studies: Alcove C, Union. 11:30 a.m. William Allen White Foundation William Allen White Foundation: Alcove D, Union, 12:00 a.m. Microbiology: Curry Room, Union, noon, Computation Center: Watkins Room Union, 12:15 n.m. University Committee on Administration: Governor's Room, Union, 3:30 p.m. McLean, Headmistress Room, Union, 4:30 p.m. Unison. 12.5 p.m. University Committee on Administration Mentions: Regionalist Room, Union, 3:30 p.m. Physics Colquium: "Coherent Effects in High Conductivity Materials" p.m. Physics Colloquium: "Cohenert Effects in High Energy Interactions in Deuterium." 238 Moldt M. Maldon, 4 p.m. SUA Poetry, Edward Dorn: Big Eight Roam. Union: 4:20 p.m. SUA Poetry, Edward Dorn. Big Eight Room. Onund, 4 p.m. Room. Onund, 2 p.m. First Nighters: Watkins Room, Union, 6:15 p.m. University Theatre; Curry Room, Union. 6:15 p.m. Meeting: Governor's Room, Union, 6:29 p.m. Hill Meeting: Jahvah Room, Upham 15 p.m. U.S. Board Meeting Governer's Room Basic Meeting: JIPHARA ROOM, UNION, 6:30 p.m. Privacy Group Meeting: International Room, Hales, UK 6:30 p.m. Millet Meeting: Jayhawk Room, Union, 6:30 p.m. Patricia Green. Meeting Room. Room, Union: 6:30 p.m. School Publications Meeting: Oread Room, Union: 7 t.m. Room. Union, 7. m. SUA General Membership Meeting: Big SUA General Membership Meeting: Big Eight Room, Union, 7 p.m. Moselle Meeting: Kansas Room, Union, 7 numbers. p.m. Bhai Movie; Forum Room, Ullam; 7:30 10 p.m. Christian Fellowship, Jayhawk Room, Union, 7.30 p.m. P. Ralph Boone, Jr. Fort Bragg Road, 7:30 p.m. KU-Y Spring Camp Meeting: Regionalist Union: 7:30 p.m. Hilfed Meeting: 101 Union: 7:45 p.m. "I shall always be grateful to the William Allen White Foundation, and to this year's selection committee." "Black Comedy": University Theatre. 8:25 p.m. In presenting the award, Henry B. Jameson, publisher of the Abiline Chronicle, said: moment in my life," he said while wiping a tear from his eye. Meeting: 201 Chuoh, 7:35 p.m. German language Lecture: Council Houston, Ida R. Johnson Friday "McDill Boyd, and others like him, are indeed a credit to the profession of journalism. I have never sidebehind him and call yourself a journalist. And, to the younger generations of journalists, he is living proof that everyone does become successful." Boyd ran unsuccessfully for governor in Kansas in 1956 and then for Kansas Board of Regents and is now a Republican. National com-munity candidate. He credited his success as a publisher and civic leader to his parents who taught him the "simple creed" of hard work. Rock Band: Traill Room, Union, 1:30 p.m. Social Welfare Collequium: Forum Room. "The self-sufficiency of man is the great strength of the small and small realms. Even the most primitive tribe knows there is a 'better way' and they want part "And if the industrialized nations of the world, acting in concert, can help them achieve it, we should wear fashion a bridge of understanding across the abyss of earth on earth. That is what mission. This should be our goal." Human Development Seminar: Woodruff Auditorium, 17loon, 2:30 p.m. Ullman, 2 p. fb. Human Development Seminar: Woodruff "And if this be heresay from the conservative heartland of America, lay it to my agrarian brothers and others carries its own reward." INTERNATIONAL FOR LAUNDRY INSTRUCTION. 119 Kobelson, 7 p.m. Boyd has been active in the state Republican organization, chairman of a party chairman at one time, executive secretary for Gov. Edward Arn and has been campaign manager for Sen. Bob Popular Film: "The Informer." Woodruff Auditorium. Lincoln, 7.8 cm. International Folk Dance Instruction: 173 Robinson, 7.o.m. Boyd said there was a crisis in communications today. Members of the press, he said, emphasize the importance of what he said. He said they would be less than human if they did not. He said journalists must strive to be more reliable. Boyd was the 17th Kansas journalist cited in the annual William Allen White Day observance at the School of Jour- His mother, who once wrote all the stories for the Boyds' paper in Phillipsburg, still works every lay on the paper. From Page 1 Quake... and workers held little hope for any more survivors. Sixteen other persons died in other areas in the collapses of the Olive View Santurian, a fenced valley with freeway bridges and as a result of heart attacks brought on by the fright of the minute. Stretches of three freeways, the Golden State, San Diego and Foothill were closed and massive traffic jams developed at rush hours an motorista took surface streets to "We're not out of the woods yet," said Fire Commissioner Lee Hammer. "Winds and earthquake aftershocks are slowly eating away at the lower end of the lake. Waves from the strong winds are undercutting and chinning away at the edges." Creeks were slowly restoring gas service to some 20,000 homes in the northeast San Francisco area, and plained about the turbul, cloudy appearance of water coming from taps but the water was still free. There was considerable damage to the Los Angeles City Hall, a 27-story structure which for years before the advent of steel and glass skyscrapers the city's tallest building. Damage was the report at the Hall of Justice in the building, and countless other public buildings. consumption and was being treated with chlorine. The historic San Fernando Mission, built by the Franciscan padres as one of California's missions, was so badly damaged—in fact, we may have to tear down the old church." The California Highway Patrol said surface streets were heavily clogged due to the fire. Massive rush hour traffic jam snailed surface streets of the San Fernando Valley Wednesday as motorists tried to avoid freewaves closed by Tuesday's earthquake. Five major routes were severed when overpasses collapsed and landslides rumbled down hills Tuesday. The problem of removing the roads from many portions of the roads closed Wednesday. Senate . . . From Page 1 *Students are going to view Senate financial support as their money being used to support education.* In the bill's present form, the right of legal regress is retained by the Student Senate. Should the Senate assume financial responsibility up to the amount stipulated in the bill, it has the right to bring suit against the individual or group for damages covered by the *Perhaps the students will take a more responsible attitude towards demon-** **sion.* Zilim said that more internal group control would result because payment for damages is lower. Pierson's viewpoint differed. He thought that less pressure would be put upon the individual because punishment would be directed toward the group as a whole. "I looks like you're persecuting the student body as a whole," said Pierson, "I don't think the Senate has the right to put the student's homework something the fees have not been allotted for." It was decided that another version of the bill would be written. Named to the committee by moderator Kevin LaGree, Hutchinson junior, were, Pierre, Emerson, Zinn, and Garth Burrs, Hutchinson minor, Pierson, Burrs are not members of the Student Senate. Indochina ... Gene Roberts, Ravenna, Neb., graduate student, one of the bill's authors, said, "We may be five years too late with this bill. The concentration is going out the window at KU." From Page 1 porting the South Vietnamese drive. At least six helicopters, including one carrying four aircraft. UFI correspondent Kenneth Bradwick said the U.S. troops were a force of about 100 men from the 3rd Platoon, Delta Troop, 7th Battalion, 7th Air Cavalry. He said the unit was on the ground in Laos at times during the past three days; operating as members of an aerobase that is located by helicopter in areas where ground forces are needed on short notice. The downed photographers were Kent Potter, 23, United Press International, a native of Philadelphia; Heni Huet, 43, the Associated Press, born in Vietnam of a French father and Vietnamese mother; more than 80 years old; president of Britain, and Keisaburun Shimamoto, a Japanese free lancer on assignment for Newsweek. A U.S. rescue helicopter flew over the scene late Wednesday afternoon and spotted some bodies on the ground, according to field reports. The crew did not see any survivors. The Cambodian attack came after U.S. forces had been caught on a Northwest corner said at least 100 American ground troops have joined the allied offensive in Laos on security missions. U.S. forces were flying over the area. A U.S. Army captain at Kash Sahn told Bradrick that the Americans flown into Laos had gone there to hook shot down helicopters to recovery aircraft and that troops of South Vietnam's elite Black Panther Division provided security for them. Enlisted men at Khe Sahh said, however, they had been in Laos on such missions and had engaged Communist ground troops on at least one occasion. Vote ... From Page 1 18-year-old franchisement is needed to make it law," he said. A mistrust of students by some Kansans and a fear of a "take-over" in college communities will be major factors in opposition to the amendment. Von Ende said anyone over 21 years old who has lived in Kansas six months and at his present address 30 days is eligible to register with the Department as primary and the April 6 general election. Voter registration is conducted in the city clerk's office at City Hall. Registration will end Tuesday and begin again after the primary election. WASHINGTON (UP1)—President of State William P. Rogers Wednesday endorsed a proposal by Sen. George D. Aiken, R-VI, for an alianx conference in Indonesia to promote peace in Indochina. Meeting Endorsed Rogers appeared at the regular midday State Department briefing for newsmen less than an aide in New York, his proposal in a Senate speech. While saying he supported any formal militia, in a recent interview in Indochina settlement, Rogers was not optimistic about the prospect of military action. He had never accepted international inspection, as provided in the 1982 Treaty. calling an all-Asian conference, preferably in a non-western capital like New Delhi. Alken, ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, suggested that India or Japan take the initiative in Gem Theatre BAL DIVIN These officials all if goes all as planned in Laos, "there will have been a dramatic change in the situation in Southeast Asia." Thurs.-Fri. 7:30 $1.00 WARNER BROS. PROUDLY RETURNS CM Warner bros * Kinney company * WARNER COLOR **G** Sat.-Sun. 7:30 $1.00 382. 95 NEW FOR '71 BEST SELLING STEREO FM/AM RECEIVER SYSTEM to topped overpasses, heavy traffic that area was bleak and completely bare. Bassett said the quake affected a 60-mile radius "called Dame" to damage to the Los Angeles area was so severe that the area out of fascination before resuming their normal pattern which go out over the KU Dean Describes Quake COLOR by Deluxe United Artists GR Robert Forster Lanmeen Hutton These "after-shorts" knocked glasses and other brible-a-brac off shelves for hours afterward in the cave, where Basset was staving. Realistic STAC 51C-82-Warman Stereo Receiver System for Eighty-Anderson 2A Speaker Systems in Bonded Walnut Cabinets Garrison SXL-3 Automatic Changer with Custom Base, Elliptical Cartridge and Dust Cover From the time a feeling ".. similar to an ocean wave lifting a rubber raft up, forward and side ways at all once" roses him taut in his skin. A morning, Edward Bassett, dean of the School of Journalism, witnessed a state of "absolute confusion" in the earthquake DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION RADIO SHACK Bassett, visiting Fullerton College on an accreditation tour, said that tremors "not unlike a train passing about a half mile away" passed through his area well after the initial shock had occurred. Related Story on Page 1 Realistic STA-65C 82-Watt AM-FM Stereo Receiver Reg. Separate Parts Price 431.45 1000 Massachusetts - VI 2-1566 In their efforts to communicate and assess the disaster, journalists 'hired' leased and rented equipment on a private plane. The whole proposition was how does one communicate with people affected by the quake, and the answer was 'not very well.' Hours: 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Thurs. Til8:00 Sat. Til5:00 Bassett said, "Only emergency calls were handled, so the only way to reach someone was to call them, or physically go in to see them." Bassett has several relatives living in the Los Angeles area; all of whom escaped injury and major property loss. Lawrence, Kansas House Demos Want Freeze WASHINGTON (UP1)—Speaker Carl Albert and the House democratic leadership need to immediately impose a temporary freeze on wages, and interest to control inflation. At a news conference, Albert was joined by Democratic Leader Hale Boggs, D-La, and Whip Thomas P. O'Neill, D in denouncing Nikon's anti-inflation program as a failure. Miller Will Speak To Local Lawyers Vern Miller, Kansas attorney general, is a peak to a group of labor leaders who are running the programs and goals of his office P. B. Wilson, professor They also announced that a congressional drive would start to extend for two years Nixon's rules on raising the minimum wages and prices. Over rigorous objection by both Nixon and Republicans, the Democratic congress voted wage and price increases; the Republican, 50 percent, power that expires March 31. Miller will speak at a luncheon on Saturday, Feb. 20 in the Kansas Union. Wilson said the program provided a study of the new code from arrest through appeal. "The purpose of this program is to help will both familiarize lawyers with the new proceedings, and serve as an evaluation of the code it developed." The program, sponsored by the KU Law School and the Division of Continuing Education and organized with co-operation from the Kansas Bar Association and the Kansas Bar Association was held February 6 in Wichita. Wilson said that the Institute on Criminal Process is designed as designed for prosecutors, defense attorneys, district court judges and other new Kansas Code of Criminal Procedures which became eff- ect July 1970. In Wichta, Wilson said, Miller discussed generally the policies he would maintain as attorney general. "His address was generally circumspective," Wilson said, "and dealt more with the gambling and bingo laws than any other particulars." Although the programs will be most beneficial to law students, Wilson said, others on campus may also hear particular discussions. Wilson said that Miller did not mention any "Lawrence policy" and he doubted that there would any discussion on that topic here. "All the sessions are open to students, as space allows." NY Curator Will Lecture "Of perhaps the most interest," Wilson said, "will be the space. Saturday morning by Keith M. McNeill, police procedures. He will talk on interrogation, stop and frisk, searches, seizures and arrests. Oscar White Muscarella, associate curator of ancient Near Eastern art, at the Museum, New York, will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday in 112 Blake on the Hasanii Project; Results of the project will be sponsored by the Kansas Society of the Archaeological of the America and is open to the public. 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