Warmer THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Cloudy skies with warmer temperatures this afternoon and tonight. High today in the mid 60s, night in the 50s, and high Wednesday in the 40s. The probability of precipitation through Wednesday HOPE Finalist Huyser Sees Promise The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas See Page 3 Tuesday, October 20, 1970 81st Year, No. 36 Kansan Photo by JOE BULLARD A Kansas City Policeman Quickly Checks the Presidential Motorcade ... as Nixon's limousine heads for Muehlebach Hotel and later GOP rally. Supreme Court Hears Voting Age Arguments WASHINGTON (UPI)—The government's chief lawyer conceded to the Supreme Court Monday that "it's a very close question" whether Congress has the Constitutional right to lower the voting age to 18 by simple legislation. Despite the doubts expressed by President Nixon when he signed the bill June 22, Solicitor General Edwin N. Griswold argued for the government against those challenging actions and grounds that any change in voting could only be made by constitutional amendment. As the high court opened arguments on the validity of the law, Oregon and Texas, two of the states opposing it, said the court would "run the risk of replacing constitutional liberty with congressional liberty" if it upheld the law. Griswold, jingling the change in his pants pocket, recalled that Nixon ordered Attorney General John McCain to commit an assault and told the blackened邦邦 "So I am here and I and my associates are enoughe to羞愧向 me, the statute at law is not." The law also banned literacy tests in 18 states as of June 22 and requires that all states limit residency requirements in central initial elections to just 30 days, effectiv in 1972. One attorney arguing against the constitutionality of the 18-year vote law called the 'justices' attention to a clause in the measure which would allow the court to deal separately with the age provision or the literacy and residency provisions, if it wished. Griswold also told the court that the three problems, while very similar, do not A Kent Stokes spokesman expressed shock that the Mate, a political senator and senior among the militants, had not received the first indication we have ever had that Craig was involved all in the disorders, and truth was everywhere. Morgan was arraigned in Portage County Common Pleas Court Monday and entered a plea of innocent. The judge refused a request by Morgan's attorney that the student leader be released on his own recognizance and ordered Morgan held in lien of $1,000 bond. Kent Students, Professor Arrested After Indictments Morgan's indictment is the result of indicts that occurred May 4, officials said. "necessarily stand or fall together." Jerry H. Rupe, 22, Ravenna, a former fireman at the Court of Appeal charged in the indictment, assists and strikes a fireman, interference with firemen at the scene of a fire, and first-degree KANSAS CITY, Mo...Even the President of the United States finds that society can move fast. Nixon Talks Geography.. KENT, Ohio (UPI) —The Kent State University student body president, a sociology professor and two former students were arrested Monday on indicted hands held by the state grand jury which investigated the failed shooting of four Kent students last spring. Formally dressed in a black morning coat and vest and striped pants, the white-haired former dean of the Harvard Law School has been called "the most difficult of the three provisions to support." Body Student President Craig Morgan, 21, upper Arlington, Ohio, was arrested on a charge of second-degree rol by sheriff Jerry Hutchins in the campus student activities center. President Nixon, introducing Kansas gubernatorial candidate Kent Frittizel to a Republican referendum in Kansas City's Municipal District, reaffirmed as "the most populous of California." Rupe was transferred from the Stark County jail where he was serving a three-month sentence on a conviction of possession of narcotics. The charges against Rupe apparently stemmed from the burning of a Kent ROTC building last May 2, two days before four men were shot and wounded by Ohio National Guardmen. The President then corrected himself. dropped out of Kent last fall, was served an arrest warrant in his cell at the Portage County jail where he was awaiting transfer to a prison. Reformatory on a drug selling conviction. Felder was indicted on charges of first degree riot, attempts to burn property, assault and striking a fireman, and interfering with a firemen at the scene of a fire. The charges against Felber apparently also grew out of the burning of the ROTC building. He was sentenced to 20 to 40 years on the drug charge. "The next governor of California will be Ronald Reagan, he said." The next governor will be Patricia Cuomo. Dr. Thomas S. Loghurth, 42, surrendered at the Portage County Courthouse in nearby Michigan on December 17, 2015. Frizzell blushed and the crowd thundered its approval. President Nixon enlarged his image as a football fan when he told 12,000 Chiefs' fans that he "would to visit the home of the world champions." The remark was greeted by thunderous applause from the surrounding gallery. ★ ★ ★ one pieced inbound to a charge of inciting to riot and was released on $5,000 bond. Conviction on the charge carries a maximum value of $2,000 fine and one to three years in jail. ...and Football Nixon then lamented: "I bet I didn't make any votes in Minnesota with that remark." Richard C, Felber, 21, Akron, Ohio, who Before Partisan Crowd Nixon Asks Election Of a GOP Congress By JOHN RITTER KANSAS CITY Mo.-President Nixon urged voters Monday night to send a Republican Congress to Washington with men in office who would prioritize policy and five other broad areas of interest. Speaking to about 12,000 people at a GOP rally in Municipal Auditorium for John Danforth, who is challenging Miss Seniur Stuart Symington, Nixon said that in 1970 nurses were "deciding the future of America by the makeup of the next U.S. Senate." and BOB LITRAS Kansan Staff Writers Nixon described the progress he said his administration had made toward ending the war and said his policies would end the war "in the right way." "Ending the war isn't the problem," he said. "We have no hope of ending World War II, we ended the Korean War but even though we have endied three wars in this century we have not yet had a generation of modern fighters." Nixon attacked Democrats who, he said, easted "reckless spending" by government and that inflation and the high cost of living were too much, and required a Republican voice in Congress. "What we want to do is to end this war in a way that will discourage other wars." "WHEN I ENTERED office," Nixon said, the government was spending more than the tax on it. "I don't like it." Against a background of congressional impetus and incumbents, including Rep. Linda McCormick, who was named Kent Frizzel and Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas, then attacked the Democratic welfare "Let's get the spenders out of Washington and the savers in." Although government should "provide a floor of dignity" for the poor, he said, "tax-payers should not subsidize leafing" by those who refuse to work. Nixon also said he needed men in the Senate who would vote for his revenue-sharing programs which, he said, would channel efforts from Washington back to the states and cities. He said revenue sharing was important because "the people of Kansas and Missouri know better how to plan their lives than bureaucrats in Washington, D.C." Turning to the other theme of his remarks, Nikon denounced crime and "the senseless killings." THE DESCRIBED incidents of heckling and demonstration that he had encountered, but said Americans were getting the wrong impulse. "The minority who created such incidents. "The younger generation has been given a bad name by a few violent demonstrators," he said. "They do not speak for youth. They do not speak for America." Nikon said he had been criticized for speaking at Kansas State University by those who felt he wouldn't have received as favorable a award of reception at other universities But he hinted that reactions to a presidential visit at other universities would Nixon said “a few hundred people” stood outside his room at the Muehlebach shouting ‘end the war’ . . . in words a little more extrapolated than that, but they were saying ‘end the war’ Kansas Photo by HANK YOUNG A Jovial President Turns Toward GOP Hopefuls . an enthusiastic crowd gave him warm applause throughout the speech Police said they found evidence leading them to "conclude positively" that the house had served as the kidnappers' hideaway. It included a pillow which the "twin" of one of their children had been in body, a typewriter like the one on which FLQ communiqués had been written and scraps of MONTREAL (UP1) - An aroused Canada. Parliament月overwhelmingly backed the government's invocation of extraordinary police powers for the next six months to wipe out the French separatist terrorists who hold one hostage after assassinating another. Canadian Parliament Backs Extra Powers Against FLQ The police consider the find a magic break in the search for the Quebec Liberatio FRI (FIQ) terrorists who seized LaPorte O Oct. 11, five days after they had seized Brits Trade Commissioner James R. Cross, wh apparently is still alive. In Montreal, police found a green-and-white bangalow on an quiet tree-tailed suburban street where they believed slain provincia member Seth McGee had been held and may have been killed Saturday. In the aftermath of LaPorte's slaying Saturday night, opposition faded in Ottawa to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's suspension minister Liberals' libraries under the War Measures Act. The search for three identified kidnap suspects focused south of Montreal following the discovery of the suspected hideout. Police intensified the mantain despite Cross' dictation that the FLQ will not give up and I will be the first death." "There was no sign he had been tortured but there is some sign he may have tried to put in a struggle when he realized what they were going to do with him," the police source said. paper like those used for notes from the auditors. A high police source revealed that La Porte had been strangled, then stabbed through the chest. James DeCoursev DeCoursey Explains View On Abortion, Environment ... at ZPG meeting Lt. Gov. James DeCoursey spoke tuesday night before the Douglas county chapter of Zero Population Growth in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. DeCornewey pointed out that his opponent in the current third district congress race, Larry Winn (R-Kan), had been invited to the meeting, but declined to attend. "He hasn't agreed to be with me any place yet," *DeCoursey* said. He then listed several positions Winn had taken on ecology. He said he would not comment on any other aspects of the incumbent's record because Winn was not there to defend him self. DeCourse came out strong for school education, but said he was opposed to abortions. "I wouldn't introduce any legislation for free assertion, but I don't know how I would respond." DeCoursey said his "biggest hangu" in supporting free abortion legislation is a feeling that someone should speak for the woman who has been removing abortion from the criminal code. After his talk, DeCoursey answered questions from the floor and spent most of the time. time defending his stand on abortion. The argument centered on whether or not a deed should be valid, and the original statement, but emphasized that a great deal of effort should be expended to establish it. "Our biggest problem right now is getting you to go wein to win we will have to hit the tub." DeCourse said he favored continued foreign aid, but thought such aid should be given with the stipulation that countries giving it do more to implement birth control. DeCourteau was asked where he thought the money should come from to finance cleaning up the base camp. The start would be from money allocated for the SST1 the ABM and needed military bases. The candidate was asked how he assessed his chances for victory in view of his liberal stance. He said, "I testased my chances before he entered the race. When he entered, he trailed by about ten per cent. He added that since the campaign underway, he thought he had good prospects." His action gave police and troops the power to arrest without charge, hold without bail and arrest without bail. Congressional Candidate facts sex education Kensan Staff Photo by JIM HOFFMA'14 By a vote of 198 to 16, the House approved an resolution supporting Trudeau's decision to outlaw the FLQ and continuing his ex-commissioner role. The House, they are revoked earlier by Parliament. Members of Parliament from all parts applauded loud and long when Trudeau repeated on the floor what he had told the nation *Sunday night on television* that he determined to stamp out the "small band of twisted men" who sought only to provoke hate. Only members of the socialist New Democratic Party (NDP) opposed Trudeau's action. NPD leader Thomas C. Douglas contented it was possible to deal with terrorism "while at the same time preserving our democratic institutions." The opposition Conservative party, which had opposed Trudeau last week, reversed itself in the aftermath of LaPorte's killing. Evidence emerged that some in the government feared an overreaction of "gigantine thinking" from the public. "What can I tell when someone calls us and says they strongly support our measures to kill all the separatists?" complained a liberal backchanner in Parliament, "I . . . just list politically and hang up. But it worries me very much." In Toronto, about 2,500 students at a York University rally heckled professors who questioned the need for the government's drastic action.