6 Wednesday, November 4, 1970 University Daily Kansan United Fund Goal $26,000 Jane Koch, secretary for the Lawrence United Fund, said Monday that the faculty, staff and administrative workers and officers at the University of Kansas had contributed $10,762.50 to the fund so far this year. Gilbert Ulmer, professor of math and education and chairman for the KU drive, said the goal was $2,000 and he expected that goal to be achieved. The KU fraternities also helped with the drive Monday night by canvassing Lawrence apartment complexes and trailer courts. Alumnus Wills $525,000 The Kansas University Endowment Association announced Tuesday it had received a bequest of $2,500 from the estate of W. Harold Otto Glover. Income from the bequest will be used to establish general scholarships in Otto's name. Preference will be given to students in the School of Engineering who are from Otto's home Wilson County. The first W. Harold Otto Scholarships will be awarded for the 1971-72 University Women Plan Outing Lunch at Stephenson's Apple Farm Restaurant and an afternoon viewing of the Boehm Bird Collection at Halls on the Plaza in Kansas City, Mo. are scheduled Thursday for members of University Women's College and men faculty, university faculty and administrators and women faculty and administrators. Free Universities Meet The philosophie idea behind the free universities being organized around the country was the topic discussed at a conference Saturday sponsored by the Kansas Free University on a farm on the outskirts of Lawrence. Billed as the "Great Pumpkin Orgy" the conference was a gathering of representatives of free education programs in the Midwest and New England. The conference is held at Man in Manhattan, Communiversity in Kansas City; Kansas Free University of Lawrence and schools at Concordia, Neb., and Winfield. Persons from areas interested in organizing a free school attended the meeting. Students Plan Seminar To Discuss Drug Use Three University of Kansas students are organizing a drug seminar to begin in February. The participants include Calif., sophomore; Jack Turcotte, Chattahoake. Teen, Kyle Wichita and Wichita senior are planning the seminar as part of a total program on the needs of KU. The entire seminar series will be organized and arranged by students, Turrette, who organized a similar program in the summer. Both student and faculty speakers will be used in the programs. Providing objective information in much of the myths and balf-truths about drugs was described as the purpose of the seminar by the professor, Dr. Katherine Student she stressed that the seminar would be very objectionable. Miss Wydman said the series would be divided into three programs. The first will deal with how to protect the rights of drug areals, their effects, why they produce those effects and some of the topics on which there are some of the topics to be covered. The legality of drug use will be the focus for the second seminar to examine the legal status of semester A. **A debate** of legalization of marijuana is a topic for this session. Drug use in Lawrence among young people and adults is the result of a long-term seminar on drugs. It will include information out "what to way and how," which is said, Information sources for people who need assistance will be provided. Students at Haskell American Indian Junior College assembled Tuesday to hear reports from two of the last week from the 1970 National Council of American Indians conference in Anchorage, The group hopes to establish a permanent drug information center on campus, Tarcote said. The two delegates, Wanna- Manuel, Pima sophomore from Prescott, Ariz, and Ken Black- bird, Omiah Sioux-Sioux described different sides of the trip and added their impressions. "The most important issues," "were land grants and water rights." The land grant problem stems from the fact that the Indian tribe has a large amount of land reached formal agreement with the government about how much it will be. Originally, their requests ranged as high as 140 million acres. The freeze on土地 transactions exacerbated this becoming concerned. However, the government has made an effort to plus $500 million, 2 per cent of all oil royalties from the land and a substantial industrial development for 12 years. Indians Discuss National Council Although this offer was not satisfactory to many of the Indians, it indicated its willingness to negotiate with the Indians about the land. Blackbird indicated that the land would be renamed. "We had some splits among the two major factions of Alaska," he said. "We were going to ask for them, they would ask for. We Indians are going to have to stick together." Miss Manuel stressed the itinerary and activities in her talk. She said that the most exciting part of the trip for her was meeting the dignitaries who got to know her, who got awfully sick of eating fish." We acknowledged that there was some dissent and criticism from the youth column, but we didn't construct it. "Criticism was constructive." Among the dignitaries present at the conference was Secretary of State Warren G. Hilckel reasured the delegates that the land freeze would remain in effect until a settlement had been reached. He said that some of the land in question would be used by the state, but not without the assistance of the landowners. Bill Burges, dean of instruction for Haskell's general education program, was also sent to the conference. He pointed out the growing interest in the annual conference and the rising attendance figures. 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Even on your worst days and nights, when you may have worn a mapkin, too, you'll apt to All three speakers emphasized the need for informed, involved Indian youth. find this tampon does the job all by itself. We wanted this tampon to be more comfortable than any other Because Modess Tampons *Patent Number 3,241,553* heid in the central United States. Last year, in Albuquerque, there were three people who said they there weren't going to be many because it would be in an urban center. They come, and a thousand of them were from the continental 48. Miss Manager indicated that other things besides business took place at the conference. There were athletic contests, a competition with contests and a competition parade in native tribal dress. are more compact than the ones you're used to, they're easier to insert and more comfortable to wear. And the soft, flexible polyethylene applicator can't stick or pinch or scratch the way cardboard can. Which is nice. 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