Wednesday, November 18, 1970 University Daily Kansan --- Osteopath Is Charged In Abortions TULSA (UP1)—A former Grove, OKa, osteopath who claimed to have performed 3,000 falls in the last 24 hours Tuesday as a co-conspirator in an abortion ring police called the medical clinic's operation. W J. Bryan Henrie, who recently completed a prison term for the death by abortion of a man charged with assault charged with three others Monday night A fourth, admitted man was being sought. Henrie denied he had anything to do with the abortion ring that was raided by police last Thursday night. He said he read about it in a newspaper when they'd get around to it, and apparently referred to his record. Henrie is trying to get a federal court to declare unconstitutional Oklahoma's law prohibiting an abusive mother as the mother's life is in danger. Charged with Henrie were Lola Mae, Daniel, Bob, and Charles V Fettera. William Robert Cloud, 50, Okamu William Robert Cloud, 50, Okamu. Okla They were charged for the loss of freedom on $2,500 lond each. Their hearing were set for the day. Police said they seized enough equipment in the raid on a west Tulsa home to furnish a small set of tools, and then the house after an undercover detective went there on the roof. Detectives contended Henrie told a police woman how to get in and give her an abortion who would give her an abortion Kensan Photo by JIM HOFFMAN Pop machines may go . if Senate resolution passes Senate to Act On Pop Bottles tion, that is baseless, may disguse their beverages in the classroom or plastic cups. If a meeting meets at 4 o'clock in the Kansas Union, the Student Senate or the pop machine question. It will either accept or reject the request. Concessions to "immediately remove all concessions from campus that do not use returnable cups." KU's pop machines may be in danger of extinction, that is unless they dispense their power at once. Other business will include several committee reports, including the Auditing and Finance report, which will recommend passage of an amendment that delineates activity fund expenditures. Two amendments are also to be considered. One, submitted by the elections committee would add a paragraph to the Senate Code concerning the procedure for terminating Student Senate membership of a student senator "whose student status is terminated." One would change the Student Senate bylaws to provide for the notification of persons interviewed for committee positions as to the status of their request. A resolution that states that the Athlete Department and the Kansas Board of Regents have accepted the University's decision to the allocation of activity fees and the use of university facilities will also be considered. It is further noted that the University and (as having) no force with regards to the body; if no comprehensive University Code is adopted, the athlete's right. Count Nearly Complete Bylaw Change Vote Due BY CAROLYN ROTHERY Kansan Staff Writer The final totals on the vote of the proposed revision of the bylaws of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Assembly will be by Nov. 24, according to Delbear University's associate dean, said Tuesday. Shankel declined to give a prediction on the outcome of the balloting, of which his committee is in charge. He said that object had been raised concerning two sections of the bills. Shankel was the chairman of the Representation and Bylaws Committee which prepared the original set of bylaws and has them a number of times under the direction of the college faculty. The two sections being questioned deal with student employment using rights in the Committee on Education Promotions and Tenure and the increased number of instructors added to the College Assembly. The faculty is voting on the decision. There is an objection to any negativeote will be cast. There is no partial vote on individual votes. Two minutes of the October *o* and 29 meetings of the assembly were enclosed with the ballot and the copy of the proposed bylaws and congressions of the major issues of the amended bylaws. The controversy on the Promotions and Tenure Committee centers on an amendment to remove all restrictions on graduation from undergraduate members of that committee. It would allow them "full participation in both policy making and personnel decisions," according to the minutes. The arguments in favor or including this change in the new bylaw state that students are the center of information on teaching competence. The minutes also deal with the idea that it would be reasonable to have students' participation in the committee and not in the others. Also, allowing their participation makes the College's stand on students'. Arguments against the inclusion of this change centered on a debate during a meeting of the congress. Mr. Cannon argued against it said that students might not be in help if they were not familiar with and the discussions might be inhibited by the sensitive material may be debated in discussions of tenure because the access should be limited, they claim. The second controversial section deals with the number of elected representatives in the College Assembly for restraints. College Assembly for instructors. The proposed section reads: "Assistant instructors shall equal assistants shall equal but exceed ten per cent of the total regular faculty. The number of full-time equivalents shall equal the Assembly shall equal the number of full-time equivalents and assistant instructor on the bushcraft." The minutes reported that the College had approximately 300 students enrolled in payroll, mostly in half-time so the amendment "should be on hold." equivalent representatives to the Assembly. The number of teaching assistants equal to ten would be approximately 55. Members in favor of more representation in the board received the fact that an assistant instructor performed the work of a regular instructor, and that assistant instructors had generally conducted themselves It was also stated in the supporting views that teaching assistants and fellowship teachers share the teaching as greatly and therefore did not deserve the same representation. The opposition said that assistant instructor's primary task was to advise and that they should not receive any extra vote. The argument provided for a disproportionate number of graduate students, and separate quotas and that this would encourage against other graduate students. Travel Insurance? assistant instructors and the undergraduate members, to make sure they matched membership would make the assembly unwieldy, the faculty unfortunate. DIXON INSURANCE 842-9210 In a final move before the meeting, the Colleges dismissed the College proposed that the Representation and bylaw Committee be responsible for the completion of the proposal as soon as possible after the completion of The implementation would include special elections for new commission members on the new commission and special elections of graduate student instructors and university presidents, and the four committees. This procedure would be completed no later than the beginning of the spring semester, 1971. Flocked trees, live & artificial trees, wreaths, boughs, roping, Holly, mistletoe, planted plants Christmas decorating items of all kinds. Come out and browse around Pence Garden Center 15th & New York 843-2004 THE NEW (on time) NEW YORK (UPI)--Among cancer's many mysteries is the cancer that never gets large to detect or, perhaps, disappears on its own while still a beginner, yet produces lethal progeny. Dr. Frederick F. Holmes and Terry L. Fouts have confronted cancer scientists with statistical evidence that such cancers occur more frequently. We now think their hope was to stimulate fruitful inquiry. 1971 JAYHAWKER DISTRIBUTION By DELOS SMITH UPI Writer WED, THURS, FRI. NOV. 18,19,20 KUMC Doctors Push Cancer Look They operate a tumor registry at the University of Kansas at Millsaps Medical Center, which recorded cancers in 21,000 patients. Up to last year, 686 wereproxy tumors alone. In many cases, autopsies could notturn them up. STRONG ROTUNDA 9:00 - 5:00 THE YEARBOOK COMETH! on time! (far-out) MOST OF THE patients were dead within two years after discovery of their progeny cancers. But 27 survival or were surviving five years or longer, and 15 died within the next five years. Fourteen of the 27 are now dead but only two have died of cancer. "It must be admitted that the dilemma of the patient with moving cancer of unknown origin is uncommon one." Holmes and Pouta said in Cancer, technical Society of the American Cancer Society. In some instances the parent or "primary" cancer remained too small to be detectable by X-ray techniques or by the autopsy surgeon. they speculated. Another possibility was that the mother of a cancer was unaffected as such and was removed or destroyed, "even years before the appearance of it," for metastatic cancers which begin as a GIANT BLOW-UP 2x3 ft. Poster (black & white) Send any black & white or color photo up to 8x10" (no negatives please) to: RONALD JAYE Poster Service P.O. Box 43 Plainview, N.Y. 11873 Enclose cash, check or money order (no C.O.D. 's) in the amount of $3.50 for each blow up. black moles. "It WOULD seem that any surface of the body in contact with the environment, including the gastrointestinal tract might shough a primary tumor elsewhere, leaving no trace, environment, leaving no tumors elsewhere," they said. To them "the most intriguing possibility" was that the body had to be implanted against the primary tumor but against the primary tumor the victory to secondary one. "Spontaneous regression of cancer, though certainly uncommon, is known to occur," they said. The 27 long-term survivors dramatize this possibility. “Considering the growth rate of even slow-growing tumors,” one is forced to admit that the tumor monologue or hormonal, might be operative in causing temporary depression of the primary tumors. SALE & EXHIBIT OF ORIGINAL GRAPHICS LETCHINGS LITHOGRAPHS SERIGRAPHS WOODCUTS NOV.19 10am-9pm NOV.20 10am-5pm PRINTS BY KANSAS UNIVERSITY ARTISTS MAIN NORTH ENTRANCE KANSAS UNION Our customers have insight. They know that the best way to satisfy their hunger is with our 100% PURE BEEF hamburgers. Why not join those who already know about our hamburgers? Be in sight. The CPA: he's where it's at. 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