University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1970 3 Kansan Staff Photo by MIKE RADENCICH . . . serves individuals and community Tom Fee Collects Used Paper Student Turns Paper into Profit Tom Fee, Horton graduate student, has set up a paper collecting service. He originally began the service to help out the people at the Bess Stone Activity Center. That was about a month ago. Since that time he has expanded the idea to include hiring students to collect the wastepaper and sell it to paper plants. Fee said the price of paper was about 40 cents for each hundred pounds. He said his plan would have several effects. "It will provide money and jobs to students. Also it will provide a valuable service to the individuals and businesses that take advantage of the service. Finally it will keep a lot of unnecessary trash out of the city landfill." Fee said. Fee also said the plan could provide a way to improve the environment if it was used on a large enough scale. Fee said, "I am planning to withdraw from graduate school at KU and take a job in Washington. I hope by then to have this plan going well enough that I can find some people to take it over for me." He said that he has gotten good response but that, "I need more advertising to get the plan to more people." Looking at it from an ecological viewpoint Fee said the plan would save trees through re-use of waste paper. Goldberg's Track Future Remains Undetermined Sam Goldberg may be unable to compete in track this year even if he wins his case filed with the University of Kansas Judiciary against the KU athletic department, according to Charles O'Neal, athletic department counselor. Goldberg, a star decathalon performer who was suspended from the KU track team last spring, was ruled academically ineligible last Friday, O'Neal said, and he also may no longer be enrolled in school. But Goldberg doesn't agree. He said he failed to receive credit for a course last spring because the option sheet he filled out for the course apparently was lost. He also said he had gone to school in California last summer. Goldberg said he was appealing the decision to the athletic department. O'Neal said Monday that he had no knowledge of Goldberg's appeal or of his attending summer school, and that the Registrar's Office had no record of his summer grades. Goldberg may have been dropped from school this semester. On Sept. 19 Goldberg said he was financially unable to pay his fees. He said he had sent the bill into the business office just as if he had still been on scholarship. "I got a statement back stating that my fees had not been paid," he reported. were dropped from school. Registrar William Kelly refused to comment on whether or not Goldberg had been dropped. According to a secretary in the Registrar's office, all students who had not paid fees by Sept. 18 Nixon Asks Calm after Nasser's Death ABOARD THE USS SARATOGA (UPI)—President Nixon called for calm in the middle East Monday night and cancelled a show of American naval power in the Mediterranean out of respect for Egypt's fallen leader. President Nasser's death stole some of the purpose from Nixon's European tour. He had planned to ask the presidents of Spain and Yugoslavia to use their friendship with Nasser to try to get peace talks moving again at the United Nations. Nixon received word of Nasser's heart attack shortly after he arrived by helicopter from Rome where he had a lengthy meeting with Pope Paul VI, unexpectedly visited 26 freed American airliner hostages and received Italy's warmest welcome for any American President since Dwight Eishenhower in 1959. Nasser's death immediately recast the tone of Nixon's five nation visit. Nixon flew here by helicopter after discussing with Pope Paul VI in the Vatican the dangers of a new outbreak of bloodshed in the Mideast. That was before they learned of Nasser's death. But when he learned of Nasser's death, he cancelled the air and sea maneuvers which had been scheduled for Tuesday to demonstrate American determination not to be squeezed out of the Mediterranean by the challenge of an expanding Soviet flotilla. The traveling White House announced that a representative of the U.S. government would be sent to Nasser's funeral. The United States does not have diplomatic relations with Egypt, making it unlikely that Nixon would attend. Total KU Enrollment Up; Projected Increase Down William Kelly, University of Kansas registrar, announced Monday that the enrollment for the fall semester was 19,393 students, an increase of 392 over last fall's record total. Kelly said the final total was in line with recent estimates, but that the increase was less than had been projected a year ago. Kelly attributed the change from earlier forecasts to economic conditions which have caused more students to enter junior colleges or other schools close to home so they can save away-from-home living expenses. Of the total enrollment, 17,947 students are enrolled at the Lawrence campus and 1,446 are enrolled at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. Women's enrollment continues to increase at a faster rate than men's. Of this fall's total enrollment, 7,804 (40.2 per cent) are women. Of this fall's freshmen class, 46.7 per cent are women. Total freshman enrollment dropped from 3,565 a year ago to 3,243 this fall. Senior enrollment, on the other hand, rose from 3,399 to 3,760. The number of Law School applicants has doubled in the past two years and Blades expects the growth to continue into the foreseeable future. He cited high The sharpest enrollment increase is in the Law School, where the total jumped from 285 students a year ago to 385 students this fall. Lawrence Blades, dean of the law school, said the surge had been expected and reflects a national trend. "We've had an equally dramatic increase in the quality of our students," Blades said. He noted that more students applied and more were rejected than ever before. demand and good salaries for law graduates and an increasing interest in the study of law as major factors in the Law School enrollment boom. Other KU schools with sizable increases were the School of Business, which jumped from 518 a year ago to 604 students this fall and the Graduate School which went from an enrollment of 3,232 last year to 3,443 this year. EDUCATION? Do you see yourself involved there? ORGANIZATIONAL and MEMBERSHIP MEETING SEA Wednesday, Sept. 30 7:30 Jayhawk Room, Union SANTANA On Columbia Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. WOMEN — FREE OTHERS — $2.50 Tonight, in a tribute to WOMEN'S INEBRIATION, "Ace" Johnson of The Stables FREELY invites all maidens to visit his establishment and discover their capacity for SFB (student's favorite beverage). In keeping with this joyous occasion, tender female bartenders will tend the bar. So there it is men, a true lecher's heaven. Also for the males is all they can drink of SFB (stud's favorite beverage). Free-flowing ale will gush for five hours (7 to 12) for only $2.50—a consumption rate of a mere 50 cents worth an hour. "Quaff it up" at... THE STABLES