Monday, October 25.1971 University Daily Kansan 3 Meeting at Haskell Attended by Winn By SALLY CARLSON Kansan Staff Writer Indian problems that have been "kicked under the rug and hidden under the bed" are now being recognized in Congress, Sen. Henry Bellman, R-OKla., told a meeting of the United Indian Association of Oklahoma and Kansas. Saturday at Haskell Indian Junior College. About 100 persons heard hearl and Congressman Larry Winn Jr., R-Kan., at the quar Gay Front Makes Plans For Kunstler The Gay Liberation Front legal committee and its Lawrence lawyer, Jack Klinknett, met Friday at the Kansas Union to discuss the work of a visit of William Kuntler, who will represent the group in court. The legal committee expects to meet with Kuntler sometimes on campus and to speak engagement at Washington University in Topeka, Kninknett said. Kuntler will finish plans for court strategy, he said, and most likely will file a lawsuit with the courts at that time. Gay Lib intends to file the case in federal district court at either the High Court or Kan. Kleinkritt said that there was a small possibility that the case would be heard in the High Court, "but I don't anticipate this." Klinkett said that he last spoke to Kuntsler Sept. 25, and that the lawyer had a complete, detailed account of the Front's last two months. The four committee members examined a model petition from a University of Tennessee case library and a forum group to invite speakers Dick Gregory and Timmothy Brown. The petition will be fashioned after it. terly meeting of the 23 united tribes. Bellion said that the United Tribes organization would make working with the government more effective in education and housing. He also said that Indians should have the right to control federally funded schools. "People in general and in Congress, and government, in particular, are becoming aware of the tremendous willingness and eagerness to correct mistakes of the past, better in the past," said Belmine. "Now we're very eager in Congress to give you a full and comprehensive direction that only you can provide." Hilton told the tribal leaders. Winn said that many bills affecting Indian had been set aside. Bill of rights in Alaska Native Climbs land bill was dealt with. That bill was Winn outlined Secretary of the Interior Rogers Morton's Indian Trust Council Authority plan which would help Indians with problems of water rights, self-defense, roads and contracts. William L. Rogers, deputy assistant secretary of Indian Affairs, said that Morton had a "deep, abiding interest in Indian people" and that Morton devoted his time to Indian affairs. Rogers praised the program activity of the United Tribes and said, "There are many things you people by a unified approach." Campus Bulletin Sidney M. Carney, Anadarko area director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, said that there would be further negotiations with the Economic Development Fund for funds for the United Tribes. Russian Table: Meadowlark Cafeteria. The tribal representatives discussed finances, employment programs, a tribal affairs department and Indian health services. TV, FV, Pumi A. Alceve A. Cafeteria, noon. Russian丈. Meadowlark Cafeteria. Ralph Simon of Horton, chairman of the Kiepauco tribe, received the Indian Small Businessman of the Year Award. A contractor who employs seven persons, primarily Indians. Biochemists Hold 14th Conference Jayhawk Quarterback Club: Film Room. Allen Field House, 7 a.m. University Theatre Committee; Alceve I). Cafeteria; 11:30 a.m. Radio, TV, Film; Alceve A., Cafeteria. The boycott was originated and the continuity to be encouraged by the National Black United Front, an activist group in Washington, the Rev Charles Koen, executive director of the front, and Leon McMullen, executive director for "for total liberation" not a handful of jobs or crumbs off to a brochure stating its philosophy. While under the gun of the beacons, black people are supposed to work in white-owned and white-operated businesses in Cairo. They may shop in one or two black-owned or low-income booming communities such as Physics Colloquium: 28. Malott; 4:30 p.m. History Dinner: English Room; 6:30 p.m. Pi Delta Room: Centennial Room; 6:30 p.m. SAU Bridge: Pine Room; 6:45 p.m. noon. East Asian Studies: English Room, 12.30 BUT THE MAIN PROBLEM has been solved. have valued from 2018 in 1990 to 6,100 last year, has been race. about 40 per cent of the capital invested. S. A. Williams, of the physics department at Iowa State University, will give a lecture today on "Structure of Very Light Nuclei. Two Nuclei to Nine Nucels and Back Again" at 4:00 p.m. at Malott. Coffee will be in Room 136. Malott Hall at 3:30 p.m. China Reporter to Talk History Department: Pine Room, 1:30 p.m. The KU biochemistry department was host to the 14th annual West Central States Biochemical Conference Friday and Saturday. Physics Talk in Malott Highlights of the conference were a speech by Gordon M. Tomkins, University of California at San Francisco, and the presentation of scientific biochemists from the Midwest. p.m. History Department: Pine Room. 1:30 The Tutor Match Service sponsored by KU-Y will not operate this fall. The program will be reinstituted in the spring semester. Tomkins spoke on "Regulation of Gene Expression in Mammalian Coli". He explained how extra hormones control the way genes are expressed and that hormones tell a specific gene how to work. p.m. Foreign Studies: Governor's Room, 2 p.m. Student Teachers: Jayhawk Room, 3.30 In an interview before his speech, Tomkins said he was more concerned with the technical aspects than with the technical aspects. "Scientists want more recent information about cell processing in those tissues in the brain. This led me to use it." This gave rise to a new biochemistry which is still making contributions. But I think it's not going to be that way. machine began in the 18th century and became more accepted as time went on. The idea is that more so now than previously. NEWTON (AP) — The United States is in the midst of a revolution because she the Viet-Nam War, see Mark Haffield, R. Ore, said Saadan. Tutor Match Shut Down Farm, Hamlet, Room Forum, 7 p.m. Douglas County Farm Bureau; Ballroom. "DNA determines how the message is sent and received, but the cell communications need to be understood," he said. Contributing to the nation's unsure 'is that the credibility of the credibility of war because the government led and deceived Americans, he Tomkins said the idea of man as a machine led to modern biochemistry and further in-depth area of transmutation of energy. the senator spoke at an institution at Harold J. Schulz as president of Bethle College in North Newton. Approximately 3,000 persons John Rodrick, an Associated Press correspondent who accompanied the U.S. table tennis team on its historic visit to mainland China, will speak at 8 a.m. in Wooldorf Auditorium. He will speak on "The China Nixon Will See: An Appraisal." "When the ancients wondered about the nature of man, mostly all of their ideas were believed to be the result of the first scientific idea of man," said an economic boycott causes or agravates poverty. Introducing poverty to Cario is like bringing out the flame of the fluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, and flanked by Kentucky and Missouri, Cario was beset by unemployment, price problems before the boycott. Auditorium. 8.p.m. Experimental Theatre: "Pigskin!", Museum of Art. Experimental Theatre: "Pigskin!", Murphy Law, 8 p.m. Fine Arts Student Honor Recital: Swear-toe Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 8 p.m. SUA Formation: John Roderick. Woodruff AdDITorium, 8 p.m. Charges and countercharges have flown thick as alleged bullets and firebombs from vocal spokesmen on all sides. EACH FILM WILL BE PRESENTED FOR ONE WEEK ONLY EXCLUSIVELY AT. SUA Quarterback Film; Council Room, 7 p.m. 7 p.m. Southeast Asian Studies: Oread Room, 7 "m." Kansan Writer Cairo, Ill.-The Hewer, a Rodinees statue of a man with a chisel, crushes on Washington across the street from the Mark I. Hatfield Says Revolution On THE AFTERMATH of rhetoric is distortion. No clear or accurate picture emerges from the events occurring after the boycott. What can be said is that fear consumed facts—rumor overreaction. People were shot at. And shot, People left town. People stayed and got hungry. Page and Preston Ewing, Jr., president of the local NAAC chapter, claim "8 of about 700 local white businesses have been involved in the months from the relusual of blacks buy goods and services in Cairns. Hamlet Cast: Governor's Room, 9 p.m. SUA Speaker Reception: Jayhawk Room, 10 p.m. By MIKE THARP Since April 1969, this someone with the disease has been gripped by an economic boycott begin by some members of the black population against their own. Against this backdrop of suspicion, violence and uncertainty, enter the Vietnam Veterans Association (VVAW). The group's national leadership decided to make Carlo Mao a VVAW domestic action programs leader. It was erected in 1906 by the city in memory of William P. Holiday "in token of his uncle, faith in his caires' destiny." Ryan's Daughter In the months following the initiation of the boycott, normally strained relations deteriorated by black people in the community Since many of Cairo's cafes receive welfare income and Aid to Dependent Children, the children have an additional hardship on them Today Cairo's destiny slumps like the gray-green shoulder of another woman without the statue's bronze permanence, without its concrete OCT. 27-NOV. 2 GP WINNER OF 2 ACADEMY AWARDS! Paducah, Ky., or Cape Girardeau, Mo. TODAY THE CITY is a dying testament to the absurdity of bias, to the possibility of ignorance, and, possibly, the abuse of trust. Cairo Destiny Slumping Women's Rush Registration. Dean of Women's Office, 229 Strong Hall; 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Commission on the Status of Women Forum: Big Eight Room, 7:30 p.m. McFlohrized *Swim Club* Robinson Cunliffe, p.m. Conferencing the *Statist of Women* Film Society: "Woman in the Window," Ballroom, 7:30 p.m. Formal: Big Eight Room, 7:30 p.m. American Pharmaceutical Association: Jayhawk Room, 7:30 p.m. DOCTOR ZHIVAGO In July food, medical supplies, clothing and athletic equipment were trucked into Cairo for Humanities Lecture: "How a Historian Changes His Mind," Woodruff Auditorium, 8 p.m. MONDAY Interviews MAT. DAILY 1:30 EVE. 8:00 ONLY!! people. NOW SHOWING MONDAY Roche Laboratories, MS. MBA in sales representative, with liberal arts. Sales representative, with liberal arts. MS MBA with industry experience, MS MBA with industry experience. Farland Industries, Inc. BS in business management. Harris Invested Group, All areas of opening in production, underwriting, capital investment. Pair Waterhouse & Co. BS or MS in international public accounting firms. Parkes Group: BS in accounting, general manager, computer science program. Computer science program. Retail management development program. Company development program. THURSDAY Arthur Anderson Inc. Accountants, Del Monte Corp.: BS in marketing and financial analysis. Price Ridge Corp. Any degree, for sales. Wickes Corporation: Business administration. Price Ridge Corp. Any degree, for sales. Arthur Anderson Inc. San Diego Thursdays. Arthur Andersen & Co. See Thursday Continental Oil Co.; BS, MSA, BA in personnel management, financing, production, marketing. OPTIONAL INNSBRUCK $154.00 SKI PACKAGE In the next two weeks we will present the final 2 films of the "tabulous four" series. Stop by the Kansas Union Office for Details 13 Nights in Hotel Goldene Krone Breakfast & Dinner daily Twin or triple room, share bath (in conjunction with SUA Christmas flight) SUA Travel Service dba Maupintour Travel SUA CHRISTMAS FLIGHT New York to Luxembourg $165 First Payment $80 Due Nov. 8 Remainder Due Nov . 18 Further Information at SUA Office UN4-3477 Open 7 days 10:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. 618 W. 12th "NEW HAVEN" Now serving good food and Budweiser on draught Try our MAU MAUS (malt liquor over ice) Come to the Only Party in Town xxxxxxxxxx Come in and watch old time silent flies! Shown every nite SPECIAL 50c off ollege Republicans 9 p.m. - 12 p.m. sponsoring 544 W.23rd Lt. Governor Reynolds Shultz Any Small Pizza SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house Jayhawk Room of Kansas Union Wednesday October 27 8 p.m. Every Tuesday Nite speaking on 842-2266 xxxxxxxxxx "Radiation Dangers from Proposed AEC Nuclear Waste Sites" Alterations, Upholstery Draperies, Reweaving BE SMART Serving Lawrence Nearly 60 Years Have your NewYork 926 Mass. Cleaners Heritage of GOOD APPEARANCE Have your coats cleaned before cold weather is here. distribution to black residents. The material was donated by organizations and individuals VIAW CHAPTERS around the country (Tomorrow: the Lawrence chapter of the VVAW went to Carlo Oreja 6 and 13. What they did did fit the papers in tomorrow's installment.) One so anxious to grow up... the other, grew up too fast! A Report Card CINDY & DONNA A Report Card on the Love Generation the Young Graduates ENDS, TUE, CINDY - DUSK RATED X-NO Q ONE UNDER JB Sunset MAKE IN THEATRE - West on highway 40 you're curious about terror... UNMAN, WITTERING AND ZIGO EVE 7:25 & 9:20 MATINEE SAT-SUN 2:10 Hillcrest LAST 5 DAYS BILLY JACK TOM LAUGHLIN DELORES TAYLOR Eve 7:35 - 9:40 Matinee Sat Sun 2:05 Adult 1.50 Child .75 Hillcrest A harrowing fiction intellectual and emotional anquish - V. Joseph Canby N.Y. Times From the team that gave you "Z" now gives you . . . "The Confession" EVE 7:10 9:45 MATINEE SUN:200 Hellroest