Decent Fair and warmer today and Tuesday. High today 70; low tonight 50. Rain chances near zero per cent through Tuesday. 81st Year, No. 20 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, September 28, 1970 See pages 10 and 11 Kansan Photo hv ROBRIE RORINSON Conflict Melvin Landsberg, assistant professor of English, grapples for the microphone at a rally in front of Strong Hall Friday. George Kimball, Democratic candidate for Douglas County sheriff, took the microphone from Landsberg during the rally, which was held to protest possible U.S. intervention in the Mideast crisis. Game Goes On As Tension Pervades Syracuse Campus By DON BAKER Assistant Sports Editor The game was played without interruption. Both teams got on and off the field without physical or verbal abuse, and no disruptions occurred in the stands of Syracuse University's ancient Archbold Stadium. Hours before game time it was not known if these statements could be made at the game's end. The atmosphere on the Syracuse campus and the city of Syracuse was tense. City and campus officials were still playing with the thought Saturday morning of canceling the game. A tentative decision had been made Friday night to play the game, but Syracuse mayor Lee Alexander made it clear he would do whatever necessary to avoid possible violence, even canceling the game. Precautionary measures were taken including sealing most of the campus off from automobile traffic. Extra city and campus security personnel was ordered, including four mounted policemen. As game time neared, policemen took their stations approximately 20 yards apart, completely circling the outside of the stadium. Inside the stadium a new $10,000 chain fence circled the playing field to keep spectators and possible demonstrators out. KU Student Injured In Apartment Blaze A University of Kansas coed, Kathryn Kihm, Chanute sophomore, was critically injured in a fire at the Renz Apartments, 1301 Louisiana, Sunday morning. She was listed in critical condition Sunday evening at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kansas. A spokesman for Watkins Hospital said four other persons were treated there for smoke inhalation and minor injuries. Lt. Alvin Samuels of the Lawrence Fire Department said four trucks from fire stations one and two responded to the alarm at 8:40 a.m. Sunday. He said 29 persons had to be rescued from the three-story building with ladders. Arson was ruled out Samuelsaid, but he would not comment further on the cause or the origin of the fire. Samuels said the fire began in apartment number five, and spread to the hallways and stairways throughout the building. There was also extensive smoke damage to the entire apartment complex. Samuels estimated total damage to the building and contents at $30,000. Outside the stadium gates as game time neared picketers marched, yelling such things as "Ben is a bigot," referring to Syracuse coach Ben Schwartzwalder. To the west at the next gate, a black protester repeatedly yelled at people entering the stadium that "if you go into that stadium and someone tells See SYRACUSE page 16 Hussein Signs Peace Treaty With Rebels By United Press International King Hussein, Palestinian guerrilla commander Yasser Arafat and other leaders of the Arab world signed a peace agreement in Cairo Sunday to end the civil war in Jordan. The pact provided for an end to all fighting in the ravaged kingdom and withdrawal of all troops—guerrilla and army—from the Jordanian capital of Amman. The agreement came as the international implications of the crisis eased with the release of 38 American hijack hostages the guerrillas had held for 21 days. Thirty-two of them flew home Sunday via Cyprus, telling how they were nearly killed in the crossfire raging around a camp near Amman where they were being held. Some of the Americans said an Arab mob spat at them and screamed insults as they were driven through the streets of Amman. The peace pact, also signed by eight other Arab kings and heads of state, called for the withdrawal of all Jordanian army and guerrilla forces from Amman and set up a "higher committee" to implement the terms of the document. A guerrilla radio broadcast from Damascus, Syria, however, aired reports of new Jordanian army attacks on guerrilla bases in southern Jordan and said guerrilla officials sent a telegram to the assembled Arab leaders in Cairo. The radio broadcast, transmitted three hours after the peace agreement was signed, made no mention of the pact. Under the new agreement, Hussein accepted the "speedy withdrawal" of all army units from Amman and Arafat agreed to the withdrawal of all guerrillas from the capital "and their positioning in places which suit commando action." The Middle East News Agency, the semiofficial voice of the government, said the agreement calls for the release of all prisoners by both sides with security to be maintained under a civilian administration. The city of Irbid, Jordan's second largest, is to return to government control under the terms of the agreement. It had been seized by the guerrillas in the first days of the nine-day war. First shots in the fighting were fired Sept. 17. Hussein and Arafat agreed to a ceasefire last Friday but fighting was reported after that. Dispatches Sunday, even as the Arab chiefs met in Cairo, told of new fighting in and around Amman. Circles Kansan Photo by MOLLY WILLIAMS "Round, like a wheel within a wheel, like the circles that you find in the windmills of your mind." Two students sit framed by a circle as their thoughts revolve as the earth revolves as the universe revolves. . .