Balmy Sunny and mild with southerly winds 5 to 15 miles per hour today. Tonight increasing cloudiness, but still a bit cloudy with little change in temperature. High today and Thursday in the 80s. Low tonight up to mid 40s. Precipitation probability near zero today, 10 per cent tonight, 20 per cent Thursday. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Season Starts Right The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 81st Year. No. 61 Wednesday, December 2. 1970 See Page 5 Slow Cars In 2 Years Proposed WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Tran- sport driver for all passenger cars with that all passenger cars started with 1973 models be designed to operate no faster than 95 miles per hour and to sound horns and flash lights. Although the proposed safety standard was not published as any sort of national speed limit, the department said the continuous horns and flashing lights would warn the driver, pedestrians and other motorists that there would be an excess of intense speed "of more than 85 MPH." Speedometers would not be permitted to show speeds higher than 85 MPH under the standard tentatively set by the National Highway Safety Bureau for Oct. 1, 1972. The standard, including the 95 MPH limit on maximum possible speed, would apply not only to motorcycles but also to cars and motorcycles. The only exceptions would be police vehicles and vehicles incapable to take off road. The industry and public have until Feb. 28, 1971, to submit comments, after which the government can make the rule final, modify it or abandon it. The department said the standard is not "intended to affect vehicle performance capabilities needed for safe passing, acceleration and hill climbing." Cars should be designed in the future "to develop vehicle performance capabilities more adequately at low and middle-range speeds," the safety bureau said. Officials said the auto industry would be asked to provide increased acceleration in their vehicles. The safety bureau said studies had indicated that the fatality rate increases "markedly at speeds over 80 miles an hour, and that there was a direct relationship between the severity of injury and vehicle speed." German Consul Caught in Spain A police spokesman theorized that the abduction of Beihl was carried out by Basquie nationals who acted in connection with the attack. The trial of the 18Basques in Burgos, Spain. Spanish Foreign Minister Lopez Bravo, on visit to Bonn, was informed of Behil's kidnapping and announced that he would go back to Madrid later Wednesday. A West German foreign ministry spokesman in Born said Behl was kidnapped on Friday. The abduction of Behl was the third kidnapping this year of a West German disagreement. Binh, about 60 years old, was returning home and had driven his car into his garage when he apparently was overpowered by a dog. He was taken away from the house, the spokesman said. A domestic employee said she saw the car drive out of the garage with Bhihel and several other men in it, join a small red car which they drove on. This license plates and drive rapidly away. sunshine and temperatures in the 70s, Tuesday was a day for shirt sleeves and sleeping rather than overcoats and snowballs. This student took full advantage of the in- element weather and a break from classes to lounge on the grass, collect thoughts and dream away. If spring is in winter, will winter be in spring? The frigid month of December started with All Quiet on the Mideast Front But Peace Table Still Far Away By United Press International Egypt and Israel warned Tuesday that they would not accept any prior conditions for release from detention. The new Syrian regime said it still opposed any peaceful settlement while Jordan's King Hussein embarked on a multi-nation mission and supported for the Arabs against the Israelis. The Mideast cease-fire lines have been quiet for almost four months. But Israel said a naval patrol vessel sank an Egyptian launch ship during an Israeli smuggling in the northeastern end of the Gulf of Suez on Saturday. A spokesman in Tel Aviv said the four crewmen aboard the launch In Cairo, an Egyptian government military vessel that were in military service,沉坠 in Cairo on Monday indicated the Israelis may have attacked one of the civilian fishing boats that frequented the area. Israel's warning was made by Foreign Minister Abba Eba in a speech in Jerusalem on Monday that the United States and with the United States on conditions Israel jails are necessary before returning to the country. "We are not asking for conditions that could be regarded as ultimates that will create a debate about Israel and Iran. Eban told a lunch meeting newsman. It was a apparent reference to Egypt's buildup of Soviet-made antiaircraft firefighters in the Gaza Strip, a ceasefire build up into effect last Aug. 7. Eban also said that as far as israel is concerned, the current extended cease-fire is indefinite. He said, "we do not recognize any attack," September 5, as the end of the cease-fire. the Egyptian position. It said Israel could not impose any conditions for returning to the talks under U.N. mediator Gumar V. Jerring. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said Monday night he would not agree to another extension of the ceasefire beyond the Feb. 5 date unless Israel prepared a timetable for withdrawal from Arab territories occupied in the June 1967 war. The official Cairo radio said Tuesday Sadaf was 'doting the I's and crossing the T's' of King Hussein flew from Amman to Saudi Arabia during the day on a tour which will take him also to the United States, Britain, and Israel. He more "even-handed" approach by the Western nations in the Arab-Iraeb dispute. He also was said to be seeking support from Saudi Arabia and Egypt for a summit in Jerusalem to the question of a separate Palestinian state. Senate Committee Passes Bill To Retain Quota for Shoes WASHINGTON (UPI)—After an overnight hurry of lobbying, three members of the Senate Finance Committee cast the deciding vote to allow shovels made in a House-passed trade bill. The committee voted 8-6 Monday to kill the shoe quotas. But when three senators who missed that meeting - Democrates Albert Kahn, John Koehler, Vance Hartke, Ind., all cast their ballots Estimating that the shoe quota will cost American consumers $1.9 billion year in budget for shoe manufacture, the administration had campaigned against the restriction. It may seek to kill it in Senate hearings. Tuesday in favor of the quota, the issue was decided by a 9-4 vote. Congressmen and senators from New England, where most of the nation's shoe factoryes are located, urged the three abactions to halt an attack on the mittee gathered, a lobbyist from the International Ladies Garnment Workers Union buttoned members in the corridors, and others. In New York before the British-American Chamber of Commerce, Commerce Secretary Frank O'Reilly argued that the bill would touch off an international trade war that would be harming American companies. Security Tight Frisco Erupts In Open Strife Over Ky Visit SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Police used clubs and horses to disperse rock-throwing protesters Tuesday outside a Nob Hill hotel where South Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen Xuan-pa was pleaded with Americans to continue supporting his government against the Communists. "You must make them understand aggression cannot succeed." Ky told the In his speech he was interrupted at one point by a long-heard heckler in the press gallery who stood up and yelled, "This man tells you lies!" Kylian shipped into the city at 3 a.m., and made his moon-laner speech 3,000 hours earlier than the Hotel. He slipped out again late Tuesday for a chicken dinner with Ronald Reagan in the city. Security precautions for the speech were among the most extensive in the history of US foreign policy. Political figures as Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and the late French President Gerald Ford have been a key Outside the hotel, mounted policemen and officers on foot used clubs to chase away from where men are demonstrators peacefully protested Ky's talk. Police said 34 persons were arrested and three policemen injured in a series of skimishes in which rocks, bricks, sticks and pieces of fruit were hurled at police. Offices chased hundreds of young people across the steps of majestic Grace Cathedral. A force of 217 uniformed policemen, about 80 mounted officers and 50 platoonleaders Ky's visit had drawn the anger of numerous antiwar and radical groups here since the day The scene inside the grand ballroom where Ky spoke was one of intense security. At least 50 officers patrolled the area, allowing no one to leave once he had entered the room. One policeman was jumped and beaten by long-haired youths. Another was hospitalized after being hit with a rock. Volunteer medics carried one youth off on a stretcher. Two city buses had their tires slashed, several police three wheeled vehicles were overturned, and rocks smashed windows on a balcony. An ambulance and at least one apartment The violence broke out while most of the antiwar protesters were standing across the street from the hotel, waving scores of Vietnamese flags. "Ho Ho, Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh, NLP is going to win." Police swinging clubs quickly cleared the park. Newsman saw at least one tear gas cannister explode, but police officials said it was not fired by officers. Mounted police repeatedly pushed them back onto sidewalks, but there was no serious trouble until youths in the park started laying rocks and bottles at police on the street. yv, virtually a prisoner of a tight police and security apparatus drawn up to protect him. flew to San Francisco in the dead of night from Washington, demonstrators started protesting. Ky told the crowd of 1,000 at the lunchmen that he did not come to this country “to show how important it is to maintain troops in Vietnam” but stated the troops of the 17 million people of South Vietnam.” "We know that should Communist aggression succeed in South Vietnam our entire nation will lose forever its freedom," said Paul Scholz, the process of Communication is irreversible. "It is for this reason that we have endured war for the last 30 years and will keep on fighting as long as the Communists do not abandon their expansionist designs. “If one should die then it is better to be dead to be under Communist domination.” Ky said, "the tide has turned" in Indochina since 1965. Bomb Threat During Game Causes Search Basketball fans in Allen Field House Tuesday night watched the first half of play unaware that an intensive search for a bomb in a woman's purse was being captured. Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for planning, facilities and operations, said Lawrence police received a telephone call at 8:15 p.m. saying a bomb had been carried into the building and would explode at approximately 9 p.m., according to her caller's voice sounded like a woman's. Mike Thomas, acting director of traffic and security, was paged over the public address system to give game players the beginning and informed of the situation in the help of highway patrolmen in the Lawrence vicinity, campus police and city fire. A pre-planned search procedure was followed. In the meantime, as the KU-Lung Beach State game was in its early minutes of play, KA Assistant Basketball Coach Sam Miranda took over the coat and timeout in the game was called. KU head coach Ted Owens, Miranda, beach State coach Jerry Tarkanian and the game manager to extend the first half until just before 9 p.m. give security personnel plenty of time to make a thorough search of the building before their seats for the halftime intermission. Numerous timeouts were called by the officials to the bewilderment of the 33,000 people who gathered in front of the opener to make the first twenty minutes of play last until just before the bomb was to explode. No bomb was found and most people left the arena at the game's conclusion unaware of what happened. Kansan Photo by HANK YOUNG Jerome Skolnik Describes "The Politics of Violence" ... violence has been used as a political tool Prof Calls Justice System Political The criminal justice system in the United States is oriented toward politics rather than the determination of guilt or innocence, in a guitr of speech Tuesday afternoon in Smith Hall. Skolnik, a sociologist and professor on criminology at the University of California at Berkeley, spoke at the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence. He spoke on "The Death of Violence." "Violence," he explained, "is an ambiguous term whose meaning is identified by the political processes." As an example, he cited Mclair Leib's referral to the recent attacks in North Vietnam as "protective reaction" rather than as violence. The first part of his speech was devoted to defining violence and the difficulty in dealing with it. When the violence commission was appointed, Skolnik said, it was primarily composed of massassinations and crime in the street. The members of the task force, however, believed that they should define violence as accurately measured. And when the police force was allowed to write and publish what it wished resulted in an analysis of violence which differed from what the commissioners felt. He pointed out that the differences among activities commonly referred to as violent are often ignored by those doing the categorizing. He questioned whether verbal disentass, written disentass, rock throwing, skateboarding should all be described by the same term. "Some are not violent and some are clearly violent," Solinki said. He said that the confrontation between President Nixon and demonstrators in San Jose, Calif., just prior to the Nov. 3 election had been averted. He said that it had actually involved shouting and mulling, and that the only evidence of rock-throwing was that the windows of one vehicle were rolled down. "Violence is always some disruption of order, but order is also politically defined," he said. He question whether violence as a form of mass murder was the most costly in terms of human values. "Violence of the poor against the poor is often ignored until it spills into the community of the more comfortable; then it is 'crime in the streets.'" "Violence is not always forbidden or unquirivocely condemned in American society," he said. There is quite a distinction between institutional and non-institutional violence. "American society tends to respect and even applaud violence that is conducted through established channels while deploying it in real life," he said. "Violence is true in all societies, he said." "Violence of a warrior or a general is important and he is a hero; violence of an insurgent against the enemy is dangerous. Abstractions make the political control of protest possible. Speaking of thieves and looters, he explained that while thieves are in the process, looters must face "deadly force." "In a country that has become so passionate about law and order, it shouldn't be necessary to comment on government actions. It is also the government officials themselves." What happened at Kent State and Jackson state is the most precise conception of the percolation process. In the report of the Scranton commission, he said, violence was clearly shown to be a political tool. The report said that the Kent State incident should have been the last time such incidents occurred in National Guardmen in their confrontations with students. It was not, Skolnik said. The appointment of a national commission to investigate the killings implied that the findings would be adopted by the Nixon administration, Skolnik said. "The failure of the federal government to take seriously its commissions and to impanel grand juries is an indication of ranking injustice on the nation's campuses," she shows the criminal justice system as a political system rather than as a system for the determining of guilt and innocence. Kansan Photos by HANK YOUNG Protest Considered . called a "worldwide phenomenon" 1.