Cool Considerable cloudiness, windy and cooler than in the mid-afternoon. Cooler and cooler, Tuesday sunny and warmest. High today in 50°, lows tonight 32 to 38. High today in 60° to 67. Hale chance 30 per cent on 5 days. The University of Kansas-Lawrence, Kansas Frosh Win 81st Year, No. 50 Monday, November 9, 1970 See Page ( Cambodian Campaign Starts; Troops Low PHNOM PENH (UPI)—A task force on Cambodia and Vietnam Tieemese troops opened a campaign south of Phnom Penh Sunday, but spokenmen in Saigon said their strength was only a little over half of the 10,000 men military sources had reported. Ebert Fearful Of KU Unrest Due to Miller Attorney general-elect Vern Miller, a man who has threatened to land "with both feet" in the "Hippie community" of Lawrence, has student leaders worried. Ebert said, "I don't mean to be an alarmist but I think we could be in for a spring like we never seen at KU". He expressed the fear that we could be hurt if disturbances do occur. Bailey moved that StudEx investigate the possibility of obtaining a lawyer to represent him. In other business, it was announced that interviews for positions on the Union Operating Board and the University of Chicago were held at 1 a.m. p. Thursday in the Student Senate Office. Applications for these positions should be made by Tuesday in the Senate office. Also, the membership of the Commission for the Evaluation of Undergraduate Teaching will be determined at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the classroom and Tuesday in any interest should attend this meeting. StudEx directed the Finance and Auditing Committee to contact student organizations and request information on their operational status. The committee will be used to determine eligibility for funding. The South Vietnamese officially announced the operation Monday morning after four days of conflicting reports on it issued by sources in Phnom Penh and in Saigon. Balley was directed to refer old All Student Council statutes that are still standing to the proper committee for review. The committees are then to recommend rewritten versions of the statutes as either amendments to the Senate Code or the senate bylaws. The Saigon spokesmen said that reports from military officials in Phnom Penh Sunday that the operation, code-named "Gun Long," involved 7,000 South Vietnamese and 5,000 North Vietnamese. The total of 10,000 men were not correct. They about 6,500 troops were actually participating. No significant contact was reported in the first 24 hours of the operation, at amateur clearance from the beach immediately south of Pinnom Penh along with a ship which is lead south toward the seacount at Kep. Field commanders described the operation as the biggest by the Allies in Cambodia since the Battle of Kuwait to abtwal of U.S. forces. There is, however, too much than 10,000 Cambodian troopsbd near of Phnom Penh in an operation begin to number to drive out Communists from that area. Kansas Photo by STEVE CROMWELL South Vietnamese marines encountered only scattered resistance about 16 miles south of the Cambodian army and lost one of three wounded in a brief firefight. Two miles far west, South Vietnamese planes killed five Viet Cong in a bomb run, the spokesman said. In other fighting in Cambodia Sunday, military spokesman said Communists bombarded a South Vietnamese Rangers' camp with mortar fire near Smuil in the east and killed one and wounded five others. The three Communist positions, they said, killing 31 of Cong and North Vietnamese troops and suffering five more wounded in the fighting. In South Vietnam, spokesmen in Saigon灯光 remained light and scattered Saturn. Today's Signs The signs of the times are both power and peace. These two concepts represent the student involvement of today. Power is the strength for all to be heard and to create a new culture in human beings in the nation and the world. U.S. Asks Stepup of SALT Talks HELISIKN (UP1)—The United States wants to step up the force of Strategic Armies Limitation Taks (SALT) with the Soviet Union. The SALT is a sign of agreement, diplomatic sources said Sunday. Cherief U.S. negotiator Gerard C. Smith, the sources said, will push for a short a recess as possible when the present third round of Christmas winds up short before Christmas. Kansan Photo by RON HEGGEMEINW begins its advance on the KU campus. The cold mist and night fog are the prelude to the days when motorcyclists become rare, parties move indoors, and fewer photographers roam the campus at night. The warm days of jean shorts and T-shirts are passing. Heavy coats, gloves and long underwear will soon be essentials. 2 Women Speak to NEA The sectional Kansas-National Education Association presented all sides of current teaching issues at its meeting Friday in Allen Field House. Two black women delivered keynote talks at the conference, which was attended by less than half the eligible members of the association. Libby Koontz, director of the Womens' Bureau of the Department of Labor, and F. Kennedy, a radical feminist and New York attorney, were the speakers for the two sessions. Mrs. Koontz was president of the National Education Association in 1969 when she was appointed director of the Wonen's Bureau. "You may say we hate paying welfare, but if you have a blind sister or a double amputee in the family, you know what the payments go for. Only 4 or 5 per cent of welfare money is going to able-bodied people not wanting to work," she said. She attacked the prejudice of people concerning welfare and women's rights groups. Mrs. Kootz also said people failed to remember that some people had earned "A" stands for Abortion, and "B" is for Busing, Birth control, Business delicacy and Bulshish. She said teachers failed to deal with the problems with Courage. "D" is for Democracy and Drugs, but there is no democracy here, because government and business delinquents control the media, she said. Florence Kennedy, who spoke to the afternoon section of the convention, organized the event. Education and Establishment are for "E" which stands for Falsity, Fatalism or tactics. capacities limited by prejudice or education and were unable to be self-supporting. 3" is for juvenile delinquency. She said to justify violence, she said: "Everything is wrong." Importation of drugs was her "I," she added, using drugs rather than those imported from abroad. Governmental delinquency is "G." "H" is for hyporisey in a "dangerous government headed by two dangerous men." "M" stands for misused, which occurs when students are taught the three R's and Quiet is what kids are supposed to be. Relevance is what the kids today are demanding, and "S" stands for Substantive change. spelling but are not taught what will happen when they the 18 and must fight for their "Pp is for Poverty and Paraprofessionals. Miss Kennedy cited a case in which paraprofessionals were better able to raise the readiness of children in the ghetto than the reading specialists. Nigerization is what oppression is all about, she said. Oppression is accepted if it were to happen. Truth, Treason, Treachery, and Traitious hiding of facts are Miss Kennedy's "T. U" afflicted oppressed people is her "U," and Violence is her "V." Washington would like to resume the talks around late February or early March, they "and is the machine your money is building, and support" she said. "should build for our future." The fourth round will most probably be held in Vienna. It may well be that after some two months or so of negotiation in the Austrian capital there would be another recess with the fifth week. The summer rather than the fall, the sources said. United States officials feel that increasing the momentum in this way could produce at least $1.7 billion in tax revenue. "X" stands for X-rated films, which glorify wars against black, brown and yellow people of color. SALT began in Helsinki in November, 1960. That first primal round lasted six weeks. There was then a three and a half month break before the second round in Vienna. Zero Population Growth is her "X." Aphrodite Head Found in Vault Of Art Museum NEW YORK (UP1). The archeologist who last year discovered the original site of the temple of Aphrodite at Cindus has found the head of the fabled statue of the god Love—missing for 1,000 years in the dusty valleys of the British Museum in London. "Conservatively, I can say this in one of the most spectacular finds in the history of classical art," said Dr. Iris C. Love, a professor of archaeology at Long Island University. 5 1/2 Hour Meeting Dr. Love, 37, said she found the marrow needle by Castrostein in the 4th floor of the library and nounced the discovery "because it is much too serious an announcement to hide." End to Boycott Is Considered By Mrs. Meir The marble stone was among 350 craters of archeological fragments that Sir Ibrahim Newton, a British archeologist, built in 1827. The site was later Cundia in southwest Turkey in 1859, after the United Press International Premier Golda Meir met with her cabinet in Jerusalem for five and one-half hours Sunday and reports that Israel may return to the Gaza Strip talks supervised by the United Nations. Nixon Visits With Friends In Bahamas GRAND BAY, Bahamas (UPF)—President Nixon relaxed, fished and talked politics with the leaders of the Conservative Party of New York and the Island of New York industrialist II. Robert Alberts. Conservative columnist and television personality William F. Buckley Jr. joined President Obama's frequent companion C. G. (Bebe) Rebello, at Abilapalan's bluff-top home late in the afternoons. Buckley is the brother of James L. Buckley, who was elected to the Senate Tuesday on the Conservative Party. Ticket, defeating Republican John Carlson and Democratic Rep. Richard Ottinger. Prior to William Buckley's arrival, Nixon led the Packers vice chairman Daniel Mabey and his brother O'Doherty, who flew to Grand Cay from nearby Walker Cay where they had been. Nixon would be expected to seek the Conservative Party endorsement in New York if he were to win. He might backs the candidate of one of the major parties—almost always a Republican—or simply a moderate Democrat. James Buckley is the first statewide winner on the Conservative ticket. Mahoney also said the President wondered out loud why television commentators had asked him as they proclaim James Backley in their coverage of the election returns. Arab leaders continued efforts to settle the Jordanian crisis and revive the Arab Eastern Persian coast. Israeli cabinet secretary Michael Arron told newsmen after the unusually long session that "no new political decisions were reached nor were any new proposals made." He said the cabinet will continue its discussions and Mrs. Meir will deliver a major policy address to the Israeli parliament later in the week. In Cairo, he said the government would lay down the parliamentary resolution the crisis between the government guerrillas in Jordan which sources said had resulted in the "near disintegration" of the Arab Eastern Front against Israel. Dipolmic sources said the remarks indicated Israel may be attempting to offer Egypt and the Soviet Union a face-saving formula by not insisting on a total removal of Israeli territories; changes were moved closer to the Saez Canal in violation of the original cease-fire. The reports that Israel may decide to end its boycott of the talks under the auspices of U.N. mediator Gumar V. Jarreng were funded by weekend public addresses by Dayan and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon. They were the only hope for peace in the Middle East. The game remained silent along the Arab-Israeli front where a defracture has been in effect since the expiration of the 90 day cease-fire initiated by the United States on Nov. 5, and agreed to another 90 day extension but Israel has said it will not fire unless upon first use. Official Arab sources said Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Premier Col. Mosmur Khadady of Libya and Premier Maj. Gen. Jaadar Nuranof of Sudan were killed in a raid on a university in disunity in the Arab world emphasized by the nine-day civil war in Jordan in September. Arab diplomats said the leaders considered the after effects of the civil war of major importance. They noted that the guerrillas and government fighting had resulted in a 12% reduction in ISIS attacks against Israel and provoked a political crisis in Syria and as well as in Jordan. Syria, Syria and Jordan made up the so-called Arab Eastern front against Israel. Nader Workers Charge Slipshod M.D. Practices WASHINGTON (UPI) — A队 of medical and law students working for Ralph Nader said Sunday the medical profession is not doing the public from incompetent doctors. The team called for a presidential board to set up quality control standards for doctors. "The almost complete lack of internal quality controls in the medical profession has allowed a large measure of very poor medicine to be practiced," the team said. The report, "One Physician—One Life," criticized doctors for failing to keep up with the latest trends. The license should be renewed every five years, the report said. Under the present system, each state sets its own standards for staffing, including its own criteria for appointing staff doctors. In a 263-page study directed by Dr. Robert S McCleery, the Nader investigators urged the government to set up a uniform nationwide system for licensing doctors and requiring licensed licenses rather than a state license enabling them to practice in all fields of medicine." "Even if he received his license in 1930 and The AMA is working "almost continually with Congress and the executive branch of government to bring effective quality and cost control in medicine. Borreron said The Nader investigators who compiled the report were: Louise T. Keelly, a second-year law student at Catholic University in Washington, D.C.; Mimi Lam and Russell E. Hillis, both second-year medical students at the University of Chicago; Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and Ference M. Quirin, 1970 graduate of Villanova Law School in Philadelphia. Dr. Walter C. Berreneer, president of the American Medical Association, said some of the recommendations in the report appeared "to have merit while others raise questions." The study group urged Congress to set up a National Board of Medicine because the 'medical professional is not effectively protecting the public from incompetent doctors'." The board would be appointed by the Senate and confirmed by the senate. has learned nothing since, he is free to practice almost totally unimpaired by law," it said. Medical societies also were guilty of not enforcing the laws, and they need to update their knowledge, the report said. Director Says Tension Remains WASHINGTON (UPI) - Matthew Byrne, executive director of the President's Campus, said college administrators are taking "a more realistic stand" about the necessity of dealing with rising student demand. He also said the underlying causes of han spring's violence are still present on many In a UPI interview, Byrne said many college administrators interviewed by the commission around the country "didn't appreciate that the problem was theirs." "They took the position that this isn't going to occur on our campus." Now I think they mean that it can occur on their campus. They're not sure what it means, what's going to happen when it does occur." In reply to questions, Byrne said the Indochina war has been a major source of student alienation and "there would certainly have been fewer of them on the campuses today if the war were ended." "Unfortunately, I'm not able to say that in my opinion there won't be any further progress." Byrne said he was hopeful the relative peace which has prevailed on most campuses is over. But, he said, "there are other problems within our society that the college community is concerned about" and therefore "the problem is solved if we even if the Indochina war comes to an end." "The underlying problems that were present on many of the campuses of this country last spring are still there. Something could trigger it again and it could turn into disruptions, disorders, and unfortunately, maybe also violence." Byrne repeatedly drew a distinction between acts of violence, which be called "inexusable," and peaceful protest activities, which he called "something good . . . something that keeps the intellectual environment of the campus growing." He sidestepped the question of whether the commission's members and staff were disappointed at the fact that President Nixon made a statement in support of its findings, and reasoned that He did say, however, that the test it wrote it not mattered unfortunate if the report is put on the table.