KANSAN 82nd Year, No.15 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas City to Arrest Beer Drinkers On Sidewalks Monday, September 20.1971 See Page 3 Suez Fighting Nearly Ends Shaky Truce By The Associated Press The Suez Canal was reported quiet Sunday after weekend aerial activity that nearly wrecked the 13-month-old MidEast cease-fire, but Israel warned it would continue to make flights in the canal zone. Israel Defense Minister Hossein bajyan was surprised the police would not surprise if an active Mideast war resumed before the end of the year. Israeli officials said that while Jerusalem would observe the cease-fire it would not allow Egypt to interfere with the Israeli-held east bank of the waterway. This statement followed the downing of an Israeli transport plane by Egyptian soldiers. Cairo said Israel Phantom jets then attacked Egyptian cannels-aile environs. The air force shot back, killing one. The Israelis said only that Egypt fired missiles at their planes while they were over the Israeli bank military situation on the canal has resorted to normal." Kansan Staff Photo by GREG SORBER Egyptian soldiers again were seen without steel helmets, carrying out attacks. The United States and U.N. Secretary-General U Thant both voiced concern at the incidents, and urged preservation of the cease-fire. In an interview published in the newspaper Haaretz, Dayan blamed the United States for what he termed a "matter of the balance of power" in the Middle East. Washington has declined for the time being to resume its supply of F4 Phantom fighter-bombers to Jerusalem, while Carlo Mueller and other members from the Royal Jet Union, the Israelis saw. Turning to possible future Middle East borders, Dayan said the Israelis would not abandon settlements they had established on the occupied territories since the 1967 war. These settlements include a string of paramilitary farms along the Jordan River cease fire line, some of which have already been converted into civilian settlements, and the guest bank town of Hebron. The Strike air-to-ground missile used by Israel Saturday was the weapon's first appearance in Suez Canal hostilities, the Al-Arab reported Sunday from Cairo. In another incident in Jerusalem, a terrorist hurled a grenade into a group of American pilgrims inside the walled old city of Jerusalem Sunday, killing a 8-year-old Arab girl and wounding 12 persons, police reported. KU Coed Killed In Car Accident A 20-year-old University of Kansas coed was killed and three others injured early Sunday morning when their car struck a guardrail two miles south of Lawrence. Dead is Paula Brener of Bazine. Injured in the crash were the driver of the car, Marilly Schoppe of St. Louis, Karla Augusta and Cynthia Strahm of Sabeth. The three are listed in fair condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Student Senate Debates Legal Defense Fund ... Dave Awhrey advocates approval of fund ... Awbrey Flays Senate For Denving Loan BY ROBIN GROOM Kansan Staff Writer Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson graduate student and former student body president, said Friday that the Student Senate Executive Committee's refusal to approve a request for a loan of $750 from the University Self Defense Fund was a "traedey." Last spring the Student Senate allocated $100 to the Legal Self Defense Fund, Randy Gould, former student senator, requested that Gould reconsider his request was not approved by StudEx because Gould, named in a conspiracy charge in Missouri, is charged with a felony and not a misdemeanor and because the loan would deplete most of the funds. "ONCE AN organization has been allocated money by the Student Senate, we trust that organization to put the money to the purpose stated at the time the money was given. We want the $800 was to be used for legal fees. StudEx claims that the money was to be used for minor offenses and by as many people as possible. Yet they can't sub-merge the money into an ironic to me that the minutes from their meeting this summer in which Gould's "the tragedy," said Awbrey, "is that all those people in StudEx are for Legal Self Defense, yet they somehow manage to put up their own administrative roadblocks. They can't see that they are their own enemy. request was denied were missing from the minutes last Wednesday." "One, the largest, is composed of people very interested in doing a good thing. Another group is composed of people with certain political perspectives to get across and they use the Senate as an instrument to publicity to minority groups and issues. Awbrey said he was becoming increasingly dischenged with StudEx. He said the Student Senate was a very representative group. He added, however, that it could be divided into three subgroups. "THE THIRD group is the Senate establishment. It is composed of people in leadership positions. It is a controlling group of about 10 people whose names reappear on the Senate committees over and over again. The majority of its members are seniors and graduate students who bear the pen in office for years. They are entrenched with themselves that they are out of touch with other members of the Senate." Awbrey said StudEx was in the third category. StudEx is the chief administrative committee of the Senate. Everything to be considered by the Senate Awbrey said he thought StudEx's organization was out of proportion. "Everything is all pretty well decided before we go into the meetings. I hate to go in the way StudEx is run is analogous to the way major political parties run. Master Plans Approved For Six State Colleges By GAYLE TRIGG Kansan Staff Writer PITTSBURG—The Board of Regents Friday approved proposals concerning a master building plan for the six state colleges and universities and changes in the schools' budgets which were within the limits of available funds. The Regents voted to sign a contract with Candi-Rillow-Scott of Houston to net as consultants for long-range physical education state university and college campuses. The following is the purpose and goal statement adopted by the Campus Long-Range Physical Planning Committee appointed by the Board of Regents in May After the completion of this first part, the planners will begin development of the master plan and work with local architects on the individual campuses. Criteria will be established along the line of national standards. "To develop comprehensive long-range campus plans appropriate for the Regents' institutions of higher education in Kansas. The plans shall provide for the logical and orderly long-range physical growth and change of each campus. The planning process will recognize the uniqueness of each institution while encouraging a strong sense of community in education throughout the State through formulation of compatible data." THE FIRST PART of the project, which will use $85,000 of the available $225,000, involves the collection of data from each of the schools and a complete detailing of the responsibilities of the schools and local architects in the execution of the total Some of the money designated for data collection will be used by the Council of Chief Academic Officers in determining the requirements of academic programs. In other states the entire plan is usually given to one group of architects. Although it is expected to be more difficult to meet theanners will try to work with local people. IN OTHER MATTERS before the Board of Regents relating to all six state schools, Jess Stewart, Warnego Regent, called for a meeting in October, but she was surprised that a request made by KU Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. to bring KU in line with the other state schools was not appalled. Rules will not be brought up again in October. The proposal called for the elimination of four local rules that made tenure automatic with promotion. All four deletions, Chalmers said, had the approval of the Faculty Senate and the Council of Deans. In action specifically relating to KU, the Regents approved the creation of a Wichita State University branch of the Bank of Chicago, which is related story). The Regents also authorized the Medical Center to appeal to the State Finance Council to increase the spending limit from hospital revenue in fiscal year 1972 from $13,108,074 to $16,088,074. Law Student Tests Drinking Laws Dr. William O. Rieke, vice chancellor for health affairs, said this was not a request for additional funds, but one asking that the hospital be allowed to increase its See Long-Range Progress By BECKY PIVONKA By BECRY FIVONKO Kansan Staff Writer Clifford Roth, Mission Hills law student, and two other University of Kansas students put the Kansas law prohibiting drinking of alcoholic liquids on state property and the enforcement of this law to a test Saturday at alte BU-Baylor The week prior, at the Washington State game, Roth and his wife said they noticed that policemen were walking by people who were violating the Kansas statue No. 41-719 that states, "it is a misdemeanor for any person to drink or consume alcoholic liquids upon property owned by the any 'governmental subdivision thereof' of When Rohm and his wife informed an officer that there were people violating the law, the officer refused to arrest the people and that they were violating the law, he said. THIS PAST week Roth looked up the Kansas statutes pertaining to the consumption of alcoholic liquids upon state property and the statute governing the failure of a police officer to make an arrest. "We felt that if we could have one case where we could have a police officer make an arrest, not of a college student but of an older individual, then we could see whether there would be a double standard in enforcement of the law, because for years under the law, extremely excluded from the stadium for consuming alcoholic beverages," Roth said. He said, "The question is whether police officers, even with the attorney general's newly publicized directives charging them with enforcing this law, would arrest the violators when confronted with the state statutes governing this. "I PERSONALLY feel that all people should be allowed to consume alcohol at football games. The only way we can change the law is by having police officers enforce it and thus direct the public's attention at this seemingly ridiculous law. Then we can all drink at football games without fear of arrest." Saturday at the Baylor game, Roth and two other University of Kansas students observed a group of middle-aged people under the stadium to keep out of the rain. Roth said that the Lawrence policemen refused to comply and stated that they would not determine what procedure to follow. However, they did inform the violators that consuming alcoholic beverages on state property was against the law. They also said that It was observed that one or more of the people were violating Kansas stature No. 41-719, he said. The fine for this violation is not less than $200 nor more than $200 or imprisonment for not more than six months or both the fine and imprisonment. THE PEOPLE were drinking in view of a sign that prohibited alcoholic consumption on state property. Roth then summoned two Lawrence policemen to the scene and requested that they arrest the offenders. After speaking with the Lawrence police inspector, Roth was told that the campus police should make the arrest because the Lawrence policemen only serve on the city police. LATER, I.T. WILLARD Anderson of police campus罪犯 said and said that if people were violating the law, they should be arrested, but since he didn't personally see the actual violation he would not be able to make the arrest. Roth said, "In my opinion the Lawrence police did not want to take the initiative to make this arrest and consequently shifted the responsibility to the campus police." He added that the arrest because their officers were not present when the actual violation took place." About an hour later Roth was told by the superior officer of the two policemen who had failed to arrest the violators, that his arrest was unnecessary in the consumption of alcoholic beverages. However, witnesses have stated that they saw the policemen talking to the violators while they had the alcohol in their hands. "To me the whole event was a great educational experience," Roth said. "I believe that everyone concerned, including the police officers, learned something from it because there there's no question in my mind that there was a failure that led to more lawful learning that even armed with Kansas state statutes, a police officer will follow the instructions of his superiors rather than the law." earnings by $1,390,000. He said the problem they had run into was that repeatedly "budgets are not an actual reflection of our experience." He said the team used the budget figures developed two and a half years ago. Because of the medical center's increased patient volume, it had been able to accelerate programs and had increased its earning power. The legislative labs on both prohibited the use of those earnings. OTHER MATTERS relating to KU which were approved by the Regents were the acceptance of bids for construction of the State Geological Survey Building and the naming of that building in honor of Raymond C. Moore, professor emeritus of geology; the transfer of $80,000 from the Educational Building Fund Appropriation The Regents also approved an increase of five equivalent full-time classified positions on the Lawrence campus to be financed by gifts and research overhead, and a total of 77 positions to the medical center because of the proposed Wichita branch. to a Learned Hall addition for physical sciences and a Visual Arts Building, each receiving $40,000; the construction of a sidewalk on the south side of 15th Street between Engel Road and Iowa Street out of residence hall resources; the formal authorization by the Board for KU to apply for an interest subsidy grant on the proposed student hospital revenue bond issue which would lower the per semester fee on all student funding from restricted fees of an alteration of Powder Hall, costing $4,000. By GAYLE TRIGG Kenson Staff Writer Regents O.K. Proposal For KUMC Branch By GRTEL HIRED Kansan Staff Writer PITTSBURG—The Kansas Board of Regents adopted a proposal Friday to include in its requests to the 1972 legislature a plan to create a Wichita State University clinical branch of the University of Kansas Medical Center. The plan, if approved by the legislature, would provide for an increase in the number of doctors educated in Kansas by 10 percent and facilities in Kansas City, and a different training experience for students. Dr. William O. Rieke, vice-chancellor for health affairs at the University of Kansas, is presenting the plan for Board approval. The Regents also approved the appointment of Dr. Cramer Reed as dean of the Wichita branch. Dr. Reed is presently Dean of the Wichita State University School of Health Related Professions and will continue his duties in that capacity. Paul Wunsch, chairman of the Board of Regents, in announcing the approval of the planned Wichita branch, said "This project should not receive priority over salary increases and other requests which are not part of our request for additional funding over and above the other requests we present to the legislature." Vice-chancellor Rieke said that although specific amounts had not been determined, the costs would have been lower. total costs of all the affiliated programs. He said he expected that 30 to 40 per cent would be needed from the state. The rest would be funded by matching funds, earnings and gifts. He said he anticipated requests from the state to be increased by less than one half the amount he received. The Wichita branch would receive its first medical students in the summer of 1973, when 16 students would be assigned to this program. In subsequent follow fall this number would rise to 40 and in the fall of 1975 it would increase to 80. By the fall of 1976 and each year 12 students would be assigned to 12 full-time medical students assumed by Wichita for the two years of clinical training. Operation of this plan depends on increasing the physical capacity at Kansas City to handle the 200 entering students in the basic sciences and substantially upgrading present hospital and out-patient facilities. Approval of this plan by the 1972 legislature would result in immediate reopening of the University branch in order that the flow of students could be handled by the summer of 1973 and in order that the original class of 200 could be allocated at Kansas City in Dr. James Basham, chairman of the Regents' Medical Center Committee, said the committee was "enthusiastically in favor of the proposal." Kansas Photo by ALBERT SWAINSTON Law Officers Refuse to Make Arrests Clifford Roth reads Kansas Statute No. 41-719.