2 Tuesday, September 21, 1971 University Daily Kansan PEOPLE: ATTY, GEN. VERN MILLER said Monday he would not be able to go to Wichita Wednesday night for the premier of "Doggie Bingo" at the Wichita Kennel Club Inc. A public relations representative for the kennel club, which is sponsoring greyhound racing on a track at Wichita, said Monday the club would offer a form of betting that would conform to the state's bingo law. SEVEN OF THE "DANBURY 11" were transferred from the U.S. Medical Center in Springfield, Mo. Monday to a U.S. prison at Danbury, Conn. Included in the group was Phillip Darygan, the anti-war leader who started a hunger strike at Danbury early this THE LATE DAG HAMMARKJSOK I may have been killed 10 years ago because of a bungled knap attempt, two men who were close to him said Monday. At the time of his death the former United Nations secretary-general was heading for a persecuted group called the province of Kolseo Thomson and the province of Kolseo Union of the Congolese union. Hammarkjsok died when the airplane in which he was traveling crashed in the African bush. PLACES: LONDON - A union-management pay squabble mild panic among London's newspaper-reading millions Monday. Londoners were grouped in front of the offices of provincial papers from across the country, including newspapers and magazines; were diligent in reading the newspapers posted in the windows. OKLAHOMA CITY—The one-man, one vote reapportionment principle has been extended to tombstones here. Monday State Rep T. W. Holiday tracked down the 138 residents of suburban Kansas City and they live at Northwest 4 and Rockwell, the Buryen Cemetery. THINGS: THE SECOND LARGEST BANK in the nation lost almost $39 million through a bookkeeping error earlier this year, but quickly got the chance from the U.S. Treasury to turn the mistake into a windfall. The error occurred when First National Bank of New York paid two thousand dollars for $88.8 million. The bank discovered the error two and a half months later. The error was corrected and the bank got an additional $38.8 million to use free of charge for two and a half months so it could make up for what it could have earned on private loans. It also helped raise the rate increased, giving National City the chance to make money off the government's money that it would have with its own. THE KANSAS CORPORATION COMMISSION decided Monday to take a look behind the scenes at rates being charged natural gas customers in southwestern Kansas by People Natural Gas Division of Northern Natural Gas Co. A rate increase for People was approved in July, but it is being held in abeyance by the federal wage-freeze. Reds Take Large Toll On 3 Indochina Fronts SAIGON (AP) — Communist forces attacked seven students in Cambodia and South Vietnam in Cambodia and South Vietnam and extracted a high price for them. Only in the fighting in the U Minh Forest on the southern end of South Vietnam could the allies claim some success. There, the Saigon commandaid, U.S.-supported South Vietnamese troops killed 207 and nine Vietnamese over the weekend. The command said that 52 of the estimated 600 attacking commands were killed and 7 were captured. Some 55 miles northwest of Saigon, however, enemy savers struck in force at a big South Sea Tay. Tailyn and at two nearby positions. The Saigon command were killed and 64 were wounded. Officials there estimated that 40 per cent of Cambodia's civilian fuel supply was destroyed. Oil company officials said the raid wiped out months of efforts by Cambodia to build up a stockpile of fuel. The efforts began last December when the enemy first cut off fuel supplies that had laid in the river up Highway 4 from a refinery at the port of Kompong Som. NOW FUEL must be sent to the Mekong River from South Vietnam in small tankers or on bargars or on trucks up Highways 1 from the main storage yard at Nha Be in South Vietnam In Laos, the Defense Ministry GREGG TIRE CO. in Vientiane acknowledged that Laotian government forces suffered in the per cent casualties in war with Thailand, the important town of Pak Song on the Bolovens Plateau, overlooking the Ho Chi Minh City. 814 W. 23rd St. 842-5451 Even with Pak Sak retaken military sources said, the town was isolated. An army most of Bolovens Plateau and are entrenched on Highway 23 linking Bak Sak with the Mekong River TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas Supreme Court finished hearing oral arguments Monday on the case of eight war On Poverty workers convicted of robbery in the alleged theft of $140,000 from Wichita Office of Economic Opportunity worker three years ago. In the fighting at Tay Ninh, 10 miles from the Cambodian border, the strike force of North Vietnamese and Viet Cong sappers moved through darkness and cut the barrage to blast their way to the barbed wire perimeters of the South Vietnamese base camp. 'Wichita 8' Appeal Heard The court, opening its fall term, took the case under admissition following arguments in which the charges of racial prejudice and intimidation were renewed from the early days of the Sedgwick County District Court, from where the case was appealed to the high court. The court also heard oral arguments on seven citations of contempt of court lodged by District Judge Robert T. Stephan in the course of the trial against him. County Attorney Keith Sanborn. Sanbarn, whose troubles stemmed from the judge's ruling midway through the trial that the judge said could make objections but could not orally spell out what they were objecting to, appealed the ruling. His chief deputy in the Sedgwick County Attorney's Office, Mr. Sanders, known worth, Sanborn's case for him before the high court. HOLLINGSWORTH said the contemp rulings by Judge Stephan were arbitrary and a breach of the rules of procedure in the case. He cited instances of Samborn's asking for clarification of a ruling by Judge Stephan, and contempt over it, and asking the judge to make a witness who was being 'flippant' to answer and be judged. The judge's interpretation of how The Supreme Court also took the contempt case under advisement. well the witness was answering questions. Rulings by the Supreme Court in both cases aren't likely until later this fall. Nine persons were charged in the case of the poverty war workers in Wichita area who went to Wichita in October 1968 for a meeting to discuss how to involve people in the Job corps program. The nine were accused of using intimidation to force Andrew P. Gutierrez, the Wichita official, to pay them several hundred dollars for expenses and "consulting fees" for attending the meeting. He at the request of the not entitled to any special fees because they were attending the conference as part of their work as War On Poverty workers. Eight defendants were convicted—Vernon S. Pierce, Samuel Humann S. Pierce, Samuel Humann, Notre Dame Newsom, Notre Dame Newsom, Fred M. Johnson, Leonard Harrison and John Crawford who was acquitted—Harold Colo More Funds Allocated For Jobless Kansans WASHINGTON (AP)—Sens James B. Pearson and Bob Dole said Monday that the Labor Department plans to allocate to Kansas a total of $1,829,000 additional in special employment funds under the $1 billion Emergency Employment Act. Earlier Kansas was apportioned $6,840,000. The funds announced Monday are part of a $200 million investment in the company, six per cent or more unemployment for at least three consecutive weeks. The Kansas senators explained the funds will be used to place jobless persons in public service in city and county direction. Of the funds designated MKC to support its programs, Kansas City, Kan., and $1,116,000 to Wichita. The balance of the money will be distributed to the students. Butler, $111,400; Crawford, $61,400; Labelle, $33,000; Montgomery, $73,200; Sedgwick, $85,900; Chisha, $219,900; Summer, $88,000. Common Market 6 Delay Trade Curbs BRUSSELS (AP)—Europaean Common market nations Monday ruled out any immediate trade trubs or other reappraisals against the protectionist measures Nixon orded last month. Foreign ministers of the six-nation community decided it was not time for harsh measures that would prevent a trade war with the United States. Instead, reliable delegation sought to preserve their right to resolute decisions likely by domestic measures to aid their industries hardest hit by the crisis. In addition, the sources reported, a meeting of Common Market foreign, finance and agriculture ministers will convene in early November to work out a more detailed response. 'THE VIETNAM WAR IS NOT SOMETHING TO BE WON OR LOST. IT IS A MISTAKE, TO BE CORRECTED.' The Sophomore Class Presents JOHN FORBES KERRY Leading Spokesman for the Vietnam Veterans Against the War Speaking on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 8:00 p.m. at the Kansas Union Ballroom ADMISSION 50° Tickets Free to Sophomores With Class Cards Advanced Tickets Will Be Sold at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd. and the Kansas Union Lobby FALL DRESSES— REDUCED FALL COTTON KNIT REDUCED TOP—HOTPANTS 40% KNICKERS—BELLS 7 TILL 10 LONG FUN DRESSES---- 40% BOUCLE KNITS PANTY HOSE—2 FOR $2.00 DARK PRINTS— 7 TILL 10 BRAS—$2.00 BIKINIS----.50° FREE PARKING PROJECT. #09 ● 835 MASS. ● V13-4833 MOONLIGHT MAdnEss TONIGHT ONLY 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.Sept.21 OUTERWEAR $ _{1/2} $ OFF Corduroys, Tweeds, Plaids SPORT COATS . $25.00 Tweeds, Plaids, Blazer SWEATERS $7.90 V-Necks, Crews, Cardigans, Sweater Shirts SLACKS . . . $7.90 Solids, Pattern, Flares WASH PANTS . . . $3.00 Many Styles and Colors from H.I.S. and Levi TIES . $3.00 Large Group of All Silk Stripes and Prints OTHER SPECIALS ALONG WITH REFRESHMENTS ALL SALES 920 Massachusetts 842-2700 CLOTHING CONSULTANTS FINAL ALTERATIONS NOT INCLUDED