10 Thursday, Oct. 1, 1970 University Daily Kansan Kansan Photo by JOHN EBLING YOU DON'T HAVE to have tickets to get good seats at KU football games, these three boys discovered. The youngsters climbed up the back of the scoreboard at the stadium to watch the Jayhawks in action. Agnew Blasts Smut, Courts, 'Radi-Libs' SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)—Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, taking another swipe at the pornography commission, Wednesday night blamed the courts and radical-liberals for aiding and abetting an ever-increasing assault on Americans' sense of decency. Campaigning for Republican candidates through the Northern Plains and Rocky Mountains, Agnew urged voters to give President Nixon "a Congress that will see to it that the wave of permissiveness, the wave of pornography and the wave of moral pollution never become the wave of the future of our country." Agnew made his remarks on obscenity and pornography during a street rally and dinner meeting at which he urged the defeat of Sen. Frank E. Moss, D-Utah. He never named him except to call him the junior senator from Utah. Republican Wallace Bennett is Utah's senior senator. But Agnew said Moss "is so highly regarded by the radical-liberal cabal that Sen. George S. McGovern designated him to receive along with Sen. Albert Gore of Tennessee, the largest initial gifts from the radic-lib kitty raised to save their seats. Earlier in the day, Agnew said Republican Sen. Charles E. Goodell of New York "has left his party" and characterized him as part of "an awful liberal-radical coalition." At the Salt Lake City street rally, Agnew departed from his text to label a group of about 300 young dissenters in the crowd "social pollution" and told them to re-evaluate their political activities "with your minds, not your butts." On his way to the rally from the airport, he stopped at a construction site and chatted with hard-hatted workers. "It's a real privilege to shake hands with the men who are building this country up," he told them. "You stand together and don't run the old U.S.A. down." Blood Drive Oct. 6 to 8 The annual fall Campus Blood Drive will be in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union Oct. 6,7 and 8. Doug Scheffner, senior from Manitou Springs, Colo., and chairman of the Campus Blood Drive, said the hours for the drive would be 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Oct. 6 and 7 and 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Oct. 8. Pershing Rifles and E-Co. Berets will assist with the drive. The entire process for donating blood takes about 45 minutes, said Mrs. Joanna Byers, executive director for the Douglas County Red Cross. She said students donating blood would be issued an identification card which entitled the student and his immediate family to blood coverage for one year. RELIGIOUS WAR BELFAST — Activist Eamonn McCain commenting on disturbances called "civil rights" violence by some people in Northern Ireland: "This has nothing to do with civil rights. The old primeval instincts have come to the surface. It is a religious war." Mrs. Byers stressed the fact that due to a new Kansas law, anyone 18 years rather than 21 years can voluntarily give blood without parental permission. There are no diet restriction for giving blood, Mrs. Byers said, but the donor must weigh at least 110 pounds. All blood given by students will be taken to the Regional Red Cross Blood Center in Wichita, where it will be typed and processed. Blood is distributed from the Wichita center to the region, which includes all of Kansas and Oklahoma. One of the projects blood is needed for, Mrs. Byers said, is research into blood diseases. KU Law School Co-Sponsors Symposium on Mideast Crisis The Law School will act as a co-sponsor with the American Society of International Law for a Mideast symposium to be presented at a regional meeting of the society Nov. 20-21 in the Kansas Union. John F. Murphy, associate professor of law at KU and chairman of the symposium, said the society was a leading association of international law in the United States and the world. The society is contributing $500 to $750 to the symposium. and political facets of the Mideast crisis. These discussions will be divided into principal addresses, questions and comments from panelists and questions from the public. The symposium will discuss the workings of international law Professor Quincy Wright of the University of Virginia will deliver the keynote address. Murphy describes him as one of the foremost authorities on international law. Wright will present "Legal Issues in the Middle East." Cherif M. Bassiouni of the De Paul University College of Law is expected to address the symposium. Bassiouni has written several law review articles on the Mideast. Murphy said Bassiouni was expected to take a pro-Arab position. Regents to Get Report On Sales of Ammunition John Lawrence Hargrove, director of research for the American Society of International Law will address the symposium and discuss the United Nations role in the Mideast. Prior to becoming director for the society, Hargrove served as the legal adviser of the United States mission to the United Nations. A report on an investigation of the sales of ammunition during disturbances last July to persons connected with the University will soon be released to the Kansas Board of Regents by the attorney general's office, according to Regent Max Bickford of Topeka. The investigation, which covered ammunition sales in the Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City, Kan. areas, was ordered by the regents after reports that Gary D. Jackson, assistant to the dean of men at that time, had allegedly purchased ammunition during the disturbances. Bickford said the final report covering the period of July 15 to 26 had not as yet been submitted, but was expected soon. Commentators will question and elaborate on the principal addresses of the four speakers. The commentators will be Richard B. Bilder, professor at the University of Wisconsin Law School, formerly of the Legal Adviser's Office, Department of State; Robert Thomasek, professor of political science at KU; Clifford Ketzl, professor of political science at KU; and Murphy. The University Committee on Convocations and Lectures has contributed $350 to the symposium. In addition, the Kansas Bar Association has been requested to be a co-sponsor and to contribute $500 to $1,000. Additional funds have been requested from the Vickers Lecture Series, which would also act as a co-sponsor providing a donation is made. It may have taken 300 years, but now, genuine fish & chips are here. Genuine, that is, if they're Alfie's. Only Alfie (that sly rascal) takes the very freshest whitefish and fries it to a just right golden crisp. And serves it up with the crunchiest, lightest chips in the colonies. Plus the tangiest, most tempting secret sauce you've ever tasted. So special, grown men weep for more! Try a bit of tradition for lunch or dinner, today. Verily, there's a grand bit of Great Britain in every bite! Alfie's RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT 6th and Maine VI 2-5500 © 1969, Alfie's Fish & Chips, Inc