Ebert... From page 1 tions existing on the college campus in 1970." Ebert was also disappointed with limitations imposed by the Regents on the Senate budget. After investigation, at their July 26 meeting the Regents ordered all Senate appropriations to be no less than amounts appropriated last year to the various funds. Ebert said the loss of the $50,000 forced the Senate to cut proposed expenditures and eliminate a contingency fund for possible new programs and activities. The decision meant an additional $50,000 allocation to the Athletic Commission. The original Senate appropriation had been $130,000. "Among other things," said Ebert, "trying to plan the year without a reserve fund is just bad business." Ebert said an attempt to revise the student activity fee would be one of the first considerations of the Student Senate this fall. "We need to make activity fees more equitable—to make it possible for students to make known some preference about where their money goes. Schools... From page 1 buses in order to meet a court order. One parent quipped that his children will be involved in "reading, writing, 'rithmetic and riding the bus." Three rural Mississippi school districts, which became all black when they complied with total integration orders last winter, remained predominantly black when this week's classes opened. All of the 2,700 children showing up for classes Monday in Wilkinson County, Miss. were black. The county's 800 whites fled to a private school system that was established last winter in church buildings. However, Education Superintendent B. H. Papasan said "some" of the 2,800 children in his school district at Tunica, Miss. will be white. Last winter all of Tunica's whites abandoned the public school. A similar report came from Indianola, Miss. where public schools last winter were attended by 2,615 Negroes and no whites. More than 170 whites registered for this week's classes. Mississippi's Attorney General, A. F. Summer, unable to resist the Federal orders in his home state, spent the day in Minnesota looking at schools in Minneapolis and St. Paul. Nearly 600 southern school districts are complying this term with Federal orders to desegregate. They comprise only one fourth of the districts in the South, the others having desegregated earlier, but they include about three fourths of the region's 3 million black children. Also included in the orders are Indians. Several hundred members of the Lumbee tribe reported to their traditional school near Red Springs, N.C. Monday rather than meet assignments to attend schools with blacks and whites. One Indian grandmother complained that whites "won't even let you drink a coke in the drug store at Maxton and now they want us to send our children to their schools." 12 KANSAN Sept. 1 1970 Two Women Enroll in ROTC ROTC at the University of Kansas has gone co-ed. Two Watkins Scholarship Hall freshmen have enrolled in the regular cadet program of the Air Force ROTC. Elizabeth McDonald, Garnett, and Cara Rausch, Conway Springs, are eligible for all the service benefits and scholarships open to men enrolled in the program and will be commissioned second lieutenants upon completion of the regular four-year course. Free University To Organize The Free University will hold an organizational meeting 2 p.m. Sunday at 1116 Louisiana St. when a preliminary list of eight to ten courses will be offered, said Ric Holleran, Free University volunteer worker. Holleran expects 25-30 courses to be offered this semester. Courses have already been scheduled in Alternate Life Styles and Eastern Mysticism. Judo Features Korean Champion A judo demonstration will be held at 7 p.m. tonight at Templin Hall courts. The demonstration will feature Wey-Seng Kim, 1958 All Korea champion and the youngest man to hold the 6th degree black belt. Demonstrations of self defense, sport and women's judo also will be included. KU Positions Held by Students One hundred and five University of Kansas students have been hired as resident assistants in the nine University-owned residence halls. Working in cooperation with the dean of men and dean of women, the resident assistants offer advice and support to the hall's government, social and recreational programs. The assistants, chosen for character, academic record and past experience and efforts in campus organizations and organized living groups, receive a stipend comparable to residence hall room and board costs. Professor Elected 24 Times Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, was reelected to his 24th term as secretary-treasurer of the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism at the annual convention in Washington, D.C., August 16-20. The Association is the national organization of accredited professional schools of journalism. Revue Staffers Sought This year's producer of Rock Chalk Revue, Gardiner Rapelye, Kansas City, Mo., senior, is recruiting a staff to formulate a theme for the revue which will appear Feb. 26-27. Anyone interested in working on the revue staff should contact him or call the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union. Staff interviews and general meetings are in progress in order to meet a general idea deadline Oct.1. The producer encourages all organized living groups to present a script for consideration by the revue staff. KU-Y sponsors Rock Chalk Revue as its main source of income. So light and flexible and comfortable, you can wear them without sox. Or with sox. Sox is great. But soxless is better. Burnt Ivory & Brown Suede Eight thousand dollars FOR A COLLEGE EDUCATION and you do not even know how to . . . READ Free Speed Reading Lesson Raise your Reading rate 50-100% 7:00 p.m. TONIGHT Ramada Inn—Kaw Room Evelyn Wood READING DYNAMICS TELEPHONE 843-6424 Call Now — Class Space Limited