Bleak Partly cloudy and cold with northwest winds 10 to 15 miles per hour and a chance of a few snow flurries today. Tongtai cloudy with high winds to low 20, high snow, snow Tuesday occasional snow and continued cold. High today 25 to 30, low tonight upper teens to low 20', high Tuesday to 30', Probability of measurable precipitation 10 percent to 40 per cent tonight, and 30 per cent Tuesday. The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas K-State - KU Tickets Sell Today 81st Year, No. 79 Monday, February 1, 1971 See page 6 Kansan Staff Photo by JIM ROFFMAN Jeannot Seymour, designer in the photo and graphic arts department, works on the layout of the NASA exhibit that will open Wednesday in the Museum of Natural History. The photo and graphic arts department is in the sub-basement of Watson Library. Youth Dead; 15 Injured After Riot LOS ANGELES (UPI)—A Mexican American youth was shot and killed and at least 15 others, including two sheriff's deputies, were injured when violence erupted after a peaceful demonstration by 5.000 Chicanos in East Los Angeles Sunday. The Los Angeles County Board of Super- servants curfew for the area from 6:20 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. PST (8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.) The victim, about 25, was discovered in an alley. He was dead on arrival at Bella Vita Hospital. He was not identified. He had been shot in the chest. From 400 to 500 officers made a sweep of the area after rocks, bottles and firebombs were thrown. There were reports of sniper fire and that deputies had fired back with shotguns. Firemen who were called to put out the flames were met by a barrage of rocks and hampered by a heavy pair of tear gas in the room. The fireman was gutted and five cars were destroyed. As darkness came to the area, sheiff Peterson reported that deputies were in confrontation. "we are able to handle it ourselves," he said shortly after ordering the sween Pitchess said the violence broke out when two deputies in the area of the bank were met by a large hostile crowd. Then shot in self defense. The three-hour rally was held to protest alleged police brutality. "We had no idea the trouble would break out," Pitcher said. The area near the East Los Angeles sheriff's substation looked like a battlefield. In one intersection, a burning vehicle blazed in the night. A Mexican-American youth, about 20, was struck by a hit-and-run car. The youth, who was not identified, was reported critically hurt. Sherif's deputies moved in with full riot gear and tear gas was fired. County firemen were called in to battle small rubbish fires. Community Relations Shop Talks of People and Issues John Conard, director of university relations, said, "I hope some concrete action programs are generated from the workshops." John Naramore, representing the "street people" in the value of that town that was people we exposed to each other. Something can come out of it if we use the avenues that opened Naramore said that nothing could be solved the people think that the problems of Islam are too big to solve. Lawrence police chief, Richard Stanwix, said "It's too early to see it to go any way." Stanwick said that he would reserve judgment on the project until more men on his force had attended workshops and meetings. He also some of the "street people," and blacks. The purpose of this initial session was to examine the basic problems, as pointed out by the disturbances of last April and July, of the course's define guidelines for the other workshops. The workshop participants were the 13-man steering committee of the program and four other managers. The group represented the University students, University administration, civic groups, blacks, city government and the Indian community. "There was no concensus in specific detail on the major problem of the city," said Conard. "however, the basis for many cases is mutual, and there are countless aspects of this." The first session discussed the problems of Lawrence as seen by elements of the com Naramore said that the discussion centered primarily on racial problems. According to Narnane, the time factor limited the group's ability to discuss the problems. the session was to meet people from other segments of the community and break down The next workshop will be this weekend, and the participants will be new. Lock-up on Sixth Try Moon Landing in Doubt After Docking Problem SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—Apollo 14's astronauts tried six times before they could dock their command ship with the lunar lander and their troubles raised the prospect Monday that a second straight U.S. mission to the moon would come home without trying to land on the moon. A cheer went up in the Houston Control Center center when Alan B. Shepard, 47, America's oldest astronaut and first U.S. person reported he finally had a "good hard dock." But it had taken an hour and 44 minutes, almost 20,000 miles of space and an extra hard sore to get the catches to hold and the two ships together for the trip to the moon. THE THOUGHT that Shepard and Edgar D. Mitchell might have the same trouble with a broken neck, he recalls. Roosa Saturday afternoon after a scheduled 32 hours on the lunar surface was what caused her break. Sigurd Sjöberg, director of flight operations and the Apollo mission power systems, said that the docking probe and catches to try to determine whether they dared try to salvage the goals of ill-fated missions. THEY HAD BEEN scheduled to land near Cone Crater, believed to be runewith an asteroid. Before the docking difficulties, Apollo 14 had appeared well on the way toward Earth. A team of scientists and Mitchell were scheduled to have two journeys, walks of up to five hours each in the same Fra Mauro hilly area that Apollo 13 was aiming at. The mission also an explosion 205,000 miles from earth in Anil. Friday at 3:17 a.m. But the docking diffi- culty is so great that lesson to let them try to very understand it. The mission seemingly settled back to Earth, and the astronauts reported that mission control reported the astronauts were on so true a course that they probably would skip their first chance to correct their course. The Apollo 14 crew was never in danger during the docking crisis, but the problem did not end. THE KEY FACTOR that still left the moon landed in doubt was that the astronauts must carry out a second linkup between the lunar module and command ship after they blast off from the moon. They will not risk such a second docking, 240,000 miles from earth, if they have any wanting equipment. Like the ill-fated Apollo 13, the Apollo 14 crewmen were never in serious personal danger, but officials acknowledged almost as soon as the docking problem was discovered that the landing on the moon would have to be scrubbed if it had not been overcome. BEFORE THE LINKUP, the astronauts said they were considering opening their spaceship to the void of space in an attempt to reach out and deal with the trouble. If they had not succeeded, the second American moon landing in a row would have had to have scrubbed. Apollo 13 had to give up its moon landing attempt last April when the spaceship was rocked by an explosion 205,000 miles deep in space. Apollo 14 was 7,112 miles away from earth when it developed trouble. An hour and 44 minutes later, when the spacecraft was 28,000 km north, the astronauts finally reported success. When, at last, the operation was completed, ground controllers said "following the successful hard docking, Apollo 14 is proceeding on with our basic mission." ★★★ THE LATCHES CAUGHT all 12 of them, Mitchell said. Future of U.S. Spaceflights Could Rest with Apollo 14 SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)-For more rode on Apollo 14 flawless, but late, launch Sunday than just the safety of the astronauts and the hopes of lunar scientists. at the Oklahoma City Invitational Meet as Oklahoma's John McColm went up and over the bar. The event was won by KU's Bilt Hatcher with a vault of 46 feet. Hatcher's efforts were part of a solid KU team that went to 31-10-2, winning the second consecutive year for the second consecutive year. Details of the meet are on page 8. Vaulting ever wondered how a pole vault appears from the viewpoint of the vaulting pit? A Kansan photographer bravely laid in the pit Saturday Far more rides on the rest of the nine-day, $400 million mission. In many respects, the future of America's manned exploration of space hangs on the outcome of the fourth attempt to land astronauts on the lunar surface. "I feel very strongly that if Apollo 14 doesn't go well, we may not have a future at all," launch director Walter Kapryan said shortly before the flight. The manned spaceflight program prior to Apollo 14, suffered from a lack of public support for the crew. The crew also bore the "stigmat", as Apollo 14 commander Alan B. Shepard put it, of the near future. Critics complained that the United States had been spending too much on moon rocks and too little on poverty and the problems of the cities. Just two days before Apollo 14's blastoff, President Nikon proposed a space budget of $3.2 billion for the coming fiscal year, a budget of $217 million from the present budget. The Space Agency in turn stretched its timetable for the remaining three moon flights and an early space station program. It also announced plans to equip 1,500 jobs by mid-1972, a blow to morale already lowered by manpower reductions. Three scheduled Apollo landings and one half of a space station program already have backs. The other half has backs. A complete Apollo space machine that will probably never be used rests at Cape Yet the launch of Apollo 14 generated an enthusiasm rivaling that of the first lunar landing mission, Apollo 11 in July 1969. There are two possible reasons: -Apollo 13 proved that space voyages are capable but routine and that anything can happen. "The commander of the flight was America's first man in space a decade ago after suffering an ear disorder that kept him still and enabled him to Gemini program and the early Apollo effort." Pranks Mark K-State-KU Athletic Rivalry By JOYCE NEERMAN Kansan Staff Writer Tonight the University of Kansas and Kansas State University will meet on the basketball court for the 16th time, and once again cries of joy are heard from all. "Will reound throughout All Field House. One of the best remembered K-State stuns was in 1968, when some one rigged a sign atop the Alpen Field House scoreboard. It read "Go K-10" and unforced and unfurled in the middle of the first half. A. C. "Dutch" Lizbom, retired KU athletic director said, "It was set with a tinnice device from the fieldhouse. When the curtain dropped over the scoreboard, the times and scores had be an error." KU leads this series 104-61 and has won 33 conference championships compared to St. Peters' 14, but to many fans the history of pranks was more interesting as the team statistics and records It is still a mystery how the K-State people even got in the field house, much less rigged the sign "We thought we had the place secure," Lonnerd said, "but somehow they got in with that." He added: "We were all too busy." that put it up, but we all thought they were KU people." Strategic moves by KU fans seemed to have been directed at K-State's animals. The live broadcast of the game was even stolen many times. One year, several KU guerrillas took one of K-State's prize herofields and turned it into a bomb the next day on the campus, with the initials "KU" shaved in its side. In the past, K-State's specialty has been sabotaging the Jayhawk team transportation. Dean Nenimu, KU trainer for 33 years, laughed at a photo of a man heading up to go to Manhattan in cars instead of a bus. "We beat Kansas State pretty good one night and when we got out to our cars, some Wildcat fans had let all the air out of our tires. It was a while before we got out of there." Nernith also recalled being on a victory bus and of gas between Manhattan and Tuskegee. "It was freeing and windy outside and the bus driver had to hitchhike back to some town for gas while we sat in that powerless bus," he said, "the S-Katers had siphoned on the fuel." The Jahawk buses have also had their gas tanks filled with sand and their tires slashed by fire. Would-be Wildcat artists in the 30s and 40s repeatedly dummed Jimmy Green's status with the band. In old Nichols Field House at K-State the endines were very close to the stands and K-State fans used to shoot pain at KU players with rubber bands. Nismith remembers an incident at a C. "C. Chog" Alam and Jack Gardner were opposing coaches—times when temperatures ran short. "A Kansas man was preparing to throw the ball in when a K-State student, from his baseline seat, reached out and pulled one of the hairs off the player's leg," Neumath said. "Our guy扭了球,Kansas ball just grips this follower's Fortunately, closely held balls preface before a fight could break out." Dr. John Billingsley of Kansas City, a former KU athlete, recalls the early "285" when KU An editor and publisher of a weekly newspaper in a Kansas City suburb recalled the "button episode" of the late 19th. It seems there were three sets of buttons. One was the set of "POPP" buttons that still appear today. The other set, manufactured at A.K.State, read "AHAH," for example. Another set was My Friends." Many of the buttons were confiscated by the dean of student affairs. students used to hitch rides on freight trains to get to 'away' names. "On the way to a K-State game, one fellow started going up front to "reconnaître," as he put himself in position between cars and between cars he stepped on the coupling that held two cars together, and the three cars that my friends were in were left behind. So we never pay along again." We also never took that pay along again." In 1951 three KU players pressed a K-State player in a last-minute attempt to get the ball and save the game, and in the process they tied him up and went to the floor with him. All was set for a draw, but the KU players swarmed to the scene under the east basket. The Kansas bench was on the west end of the court, and not one of the KU players crossed mid-stripe. Even Coach Gardner of KR was rushed from the bench into the fray. There was a near collision with several spectators crowding onto the floor. After that same game a juvenile wearing a purple sweater with a wildcat embroidered "over his heart" unleashed a firecracker which landed and exploded at the feet of a reporter. What will the ingenious fanat think of this year make it a game for the anecdote collection to follow?