University Daily Kansan Friday, Sept. 11, 1970 3 Kansan Photo by RON CARTER HAZY MORNINGS have been greeting early risers lately and this telephoto shot shows the extent of the haze in the valley. Motorists didn't have long to enjoy the view, however, as the sun quickly burned the shroud from downtown Lawrence. This is a view from the top of the 9th Street hill, near Iowa, looking east. Church Leader Opposes Forced Racial Mixing NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — The leader of 6.3 million American Negro Baptists said Thursday the federal government must not force mixing of the races on a percentage basis in public schools. Dr. Joseph H. Jackson of Chicago, president of the National Baptist Convention, U.S.A., Inc., made the statement before 20,000 delegates to the 90th annual meeting of the church. "Our educational system should accept the scientific tests approved by educational psychology," he said. "Students should be classified according to their intelligence quotients and promoted according to their educational achievements." He said he was for "the polarization between the wouldbe destroyers of America and those who seek to save the nation's life. I believe in dissent, but I do not believe in destruction." SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR Allied, Communist Spat Cuts Paris Session Short Bruce said he was not prepared to accept the Communist warning that serious talks could begin only if the United States agreed to pull out and overthrow South Vietnam's president, Nguyen Van Thieu. By RAY F. HERNDON U. S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce and South Vietnam's Pham Dang Lam rejected the demands. Bruce, who at 72 is handling perhaps the most difficult diplomatic assignment of his long career, told Hanoi's Xuan Thuy and the Viet Cong's Nguyen Van Tien their attacks on the Americans were merely leading to a "sterile and endless debate." At a three-hour session, the 83rd since the Paris talks began in a flush of hope and one of the shortest meetings on record, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegates put forward an insistent new demand for a unilateral U.S. military withdrawal from South Vietnam and a new government in Saigon. BY RAPT HERNION PARIS (UPI) — Allied and Communist negotiators Thursday cut short their weekly session after accusing each other of blocking the Vietnam peace talks. They said they could agree only on one thing—getting together again next Thursday. SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR HOPE AWARD NOMINATIONS DUE ENIOR SENIOR SENIOR Fri., Sept. 11 Dean of Men's or Alumni Association Office SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR SENIOR Most Florshein styles $19.95 to $29.95 Most Imperial styles $39.95 The classic University Man approach to fashion has evolved. Still masculine, sturdy, dependable. But newly interested in touches of today such as buckles, broad toes, lighter colors. All of which demands are aptly met with today's Florsheim Shoes. Come in and see. 819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen who are hoping for a new and more productive phase of these talks," Bruce said. "Unfortunately, your statements here last week and again today are disappointing to those Sirhan Is Expelled From Cell by Gas SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (UPI) Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted assassin of Robert F. Kennedy, was routed from his death row cell with tear gas after refusing to return a food tray, San Quentin prison officials said Thursday. The incident Wednesday followed several days of increasing tension on Sirhan's part because of the Middle East situation, Associate Warden James Park said. He said that Sirhan asked to send a telegram to his lawyers. Park refused to divulge the contents except to say it was on the general subject of the Middle East. "The staff made the judgment that the contents of the telegram were not legally urgent," Park said. "We told him if he wanted to write it in a letter, he could send it, but that he could not send the telegram." "This made him very angry and apparently added to the tension he has been under," Park said. "Sirhan refused to return his tray, when it was to be picked up," Park said. "Persuasion did not work. He would not come out of the cell. Gas was used, and he came out without violent incident and is now in isolation awaiting a disciplinary hearing." new york rock ensemble in concert Saturday, Sept. 12 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium "Excellent hard rock side by side with clean and authoritative baroque music . . the interweave of idioms was never jarring or gimmicky; just simply music timeless, anonymous, living music . . " N. Y.Times Tickets: $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 available at: sua office, information booth, kief's, the sound, richardson's bell's