Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 CRC Plans Investigation Of Lawrence Tavern KU's Civil Rights Council (CRC) decided last night to explore alleged discriminatory policies of a Lawrence tavern. The tavern to be investigated reportedly refused service to a Negro earlier this week The Negro involved asked that his name be withheld. A committee composed of Marsha Dutton, Colby junior, Nolen Ellison, Lawrence senior, Ivory Nelson, Lawrence graduate student, and Don Warner, Topeka senior and CRC chairman, will consider an investigation of the situation. In other action, CRC members dismissed a suggestion to circulate a petition among students that would ask the University of Mississippi student council to assist in orientating James Meredith to campus life and call on the administration there to take disciplinary action against those inciting disorder. THE PETITION was CRC's alternative step, Warner said, if the All Student Council here had not passed a resolution Tuesday night with similar wording. After the meeting, Warner reviewed his role in bringing before the ASC the resolution concerning integration at Mississippi, which he authored with the help of Richard Burke, assistant professor of human relations. "It would be in order to commend the ASC." Warner said, "but it sounds like we are commending ourselves." Warner said that this was really not the case and that his praise of the ASC referred to the Council's willingness to act. "OF COURSE WE would have liked to have seen the resolution pass with greater support, but we anticipated the 12 to 11 vote." Warner said after the meeting. Warner said he asked Jo Ann Snyder, Bethesda, Md., senior and ASC secretary, to introduce the resolution at the regular Tuesday night session of the Student Council and she did so. "Any student may ask a ASC member to present the Student Council with a resolution and that is just what I did," Warner said. Miss Snyder was the only ASC member I knew and I asked her to merely introduce the resolution for discussion and vote." Warner said that there was nothing irregular about his name not being attached to the resolution at the time it was being discussed by ASC members. He said that a resolution introduced by an ASC member—even if authorized by a nonASC member—was considered the responsibility of the person making the original introduction. "MISS SNYDER was just doing her job by bringing my resolution to the attention of the other Student Council people," he said. He said the matter had drawn needless criticism and there was some feeling that something unethical had taken place. interested in providing a speaker sometime in November. Activities - (Continued from page 1) "MOST OF ALL," we didn't feel that the Communist lecturer would be as timely as one from the Congress of Racial Equality and the Citizens for Educational Freedom," she said. The Forums Committee announced yesterday that Dr. H. Curtis Wood Jr. will speak on the value of voluntary sterilization at the Minority Opinions Forum, Nov. 19. Dr. Wood, an obstetrician who has been in active practice for 30 years, is the medical field consultant for the Human Betterment Association of America, Inc. HIS CONTENTION IS that many children are being brought into the world and reared today in an atmosphere of moral and economic irresponsibility and that one practical solution to this situation is voluntary sterilization. He has performed sterilizations for socio-economic reasons and for medical research. He is an authority on the medical, social, economic, and legal aspects of sterilization. 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