Wednesday, September 8.1971 University Daily Kansan 9 Students Make Voting Deadline Nixon Sets Up New Drug Panel KU students took advantage Tuesday of their final opportunity to register to vote in the city bond election. will decide the fate of the proposed city-county building. WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House has created several weeks ago a of a Cabinet committee on controlling the international nar- Secretary of State William P. Rogers, the chairman, said there have been three meetings. "in my opinion," Rogers tols reporters, "it is the most important step that has been taken to make sure drugs in the international sphere." Rogers mentioned control efforts in Turkey, Thailand, Laos, Burma and Mexico. He said the U.S. ambassador to Turkey had to come more than 20 other nations to round up support. Rogers briefed reporters at the White House after press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A rumored boycott had only marginal effect on attendance in the school system, half of whose 96,000 pupils are affected by a federal busing order. The school district is everywhere we've checked," a spokesman said. Buses Full Auto Insurers Under Fire Included are people like Francis Barto of Chicago, who pays $749 a year for auto insurance. WASHINGTON (AP)—Americans who have never had an auto accident or a traffic ticket are finding themselves classed as bad risks by insurance companies leery to earn a livelihood. "I am 57, have not had an accident in 30 years," Barto told a Senate subcommittee. "My car paid up $175 without any accident." Clarence Mitchell III, a Maryland state senator, had an accident free record but his in- volvement wasn't renewed his policy. No reason was given. A second company rejected his application, also without giving a reason. Cases such as these explain why health and auto insurance turned up as the top two concerns among American consumers in a poll commissioned by the White House. They also are responsible for nearly $2 billion of Congress to force changes on the mammoth保险 industry. In the case of State Sen. Mitchell, a state investigation commissioner Co., the nation's second largest auto insurer, had designated certain cities more neigHBtive, including "special marketing territories." the company was refusing to write or renew policies unless the vehicles were garaged. The company argued that losses from vandalism and crime made it impossible to make a profit, so Mitchell became an assigned risk and pays $200 for the breach cost $20 on the open market. In every major city there are similar stories. Premiums based on car sales rates run as high as $87 in Los Angeles, $700 in Philadelphia and New York. "It is often assumed in- correct that only drivers with demonstrably poor driving records popular assign-risk plans," a Department of Transportation study of auto insurance said. "Would you agree that where you live has nothing to do with whether or not a person is a good or bad driver?" counsel for the Senate subcommittee asked about the president of State Farm Mutual, the largest insurance company. President Nixon had signed a memorandum setting up the Cabinet committee shortly after leaving Washington Aug. 17 for a country-making trip across the United States to learn at the Western White House. "Where you live may in my behalf have nothing to do with whether or not you are a good or bad willpower and you have a good deal to do with the number of accidents you may be responsible for you will suffer." McHugh replied. There was no explanation of the delay in announcing the action, which Rogers said had come after a meeting with top officials and with ambassadors from some of the nations involved. Frances Barlitt lives in Chicago. If he lived eight miles west in Manhattan, Evelyn his premium would have dropped $8 instead of going up $175. WASHINGTON (AP)—Amtrak, the government agency created to improve passenger train service, announced a contract of 1,200 coach, dome dining cars for about $17 million. Amtrak Buys 1,200 Cars None of the cars, which will make up the entire Amtrak fleet, is new but the best pickings from 3,000 cars used by 24 railroads. conventional passenger cars have been built in this country since 1965. Every car will be reconditioned in the next year, with new interiors, air conditioning and the Amtrak insignia. Roger Lewis Wallace Berry Tops New colors— New stripes— Our selection is the greatest with price tags you'll live. Amtrak president, said. "Passengers on these routes who move around the airport, must maintain equipment today should notice a significant improvement in the weeks and months ahead." By Sept. 15 almost all the equipment on three trains is expected to come from the airport, where the Spirit of St. Louis from Washington to Paris City, the train to New York, the York and Chicago, and the Shawnee between Chicago and New Orleans. BAND OF OUTSIDERS Jean Luc-Godard Sept. 8 7:30 & 9:15 p.m. 75' Admission SUA Classical Film Series Fall Semester, 1971 Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union Sept. 15— Erich, Von Stroheim, Greed Donald Bush, Keaton Donald Crisp Navigator (1924) Sep. 29—Mervyn Leroy, IAm A Fugitive From A Chain Oct. 6—Federico Fellini and Alberto Laftuada, Variety Lights Lights Of the Ves Robert, War of the Buttons Oct. 20—Orson Wells, Citizen Kan ...17—Tod Browning Horror Double Feature, 7:30 The Devil Doll, Lionel Barrymore; 9:00 The Unholy Three, Lon Chaney Nov. 3—Carl Dreyer, Day of Wrath Nov 10—Akira Kurosawa, Rashomon Nov. 17 - Ingmar Bergman Double Feature, 7:30 The Seventh Seal; 9:00 The D.e.v.i.l.s. Eye Juc 1-Gustav Machaty, Ecstaciy, Hedy Lammarti Bruno, Roberto Pinto, Comedy Double Feature, 7:30 Frank Capra, Tramp, Tramp 1-Tramp 1-Harry Lloyd, Grandma's Boy Lloyd, Grandma's Boy Unmanned Soviet Ship Orbits Moon, Prepares to Make Soft Landing Single Admission 75 cents Season Tickets $5.00 Available at SUA Office The exact profiles of the Luna 18's mission were being kept secret, as usual, but Western officials would either deposit another MOSCOW (AP)—An unmanned Soviet space swung into lunar orbit Tuesday and landed on soft landing on the moist surface. Soviets Plan Arms Appeal, Say Diplomats MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union is preparing a new public appeal for a world disarmament conference, diplomats reported The sources said the Soviets had already informed at least eight "friendly" non-Communist states of the proposal. the diplomats said Russia would suggest the conference be called under the sponsorship of the United Nations, states, whether United Nations members or not, would be invited. remote-controlled moon buggy, like Lunokhod 1, or would improve on the soil-scoop operation of last September. It wouldn't be, if we did all it could about it. The gas (and the smoke, sulphur, dioxide, etc.) just might not be there full of oil. Oh, we realize a clothier is not a pollution expert. But neither is anyone who owns a chimney, drives a car or a truck. And no matter. Everyone, we think, is a polluter. So everyone should be fighting it. Including us. And you? LIFE'S A GAS Launched last Thursday, Luna came in to apperceive the moon on Tuesday. A command from earth and pivoted into a circular orbit about 60 miles. the town shop 839 Mass. Street Downtown Tass said the vehicle was laden with scientific equipment which was functioning normally. The Luna 18 experiment is the first major Soviet space effort since three cosmonauts perished on return from a record breaking space endurance flight in tandem with the Salute space station in June. It said the moon car was roving the Sea of Rains taking photographs of lunar surface in scales similar to terrain as accurately as possible. Almost simultaneously with the announcement that Luna 18 had entered orbit, Tass revealed that he was also a member of planetlets into its 11th lunar day. At the same time, Tass announced that another satellite in the top secret Cosmos series had been hurled into earth orbit. It was owing at an angle of 74 degrees from earth's equator. There was no apparent con- trol in the shots he shot and the Luna 18 mission. If You Dig These SUEDE BOOTS Then We Know You'll Be Delighted with the PRICE! Only... Ladies' 4½ - 10. Children's 499 Sizes 9 a.m.—9 p.m. DAILY 1 p.m.—6 p.m. SUN. 1300 w. 23rd St. IKE & TINA TURNER Madison Square Garden, 1970. The most famous in-concert performers—, B.B. King, Ike and Tina Turner, and the Rolling Stones—assemble under one roof to blow minds. They blew minds. But Mick Jagger was one of the "victims". Jagger, overwhelmed by Ike and Tina's three-encore performance, demanded The Stones show start three hours after Ike and Tina. It seems that the stones just could not cope with an audience driven out of their minds by America's most famous live concert experience. Impressing Mick Jagger isn't easy, either. Can you afford to miss like and Tina Turner this Friday? Ask Mick Jagger. Ike and Tina Turner, plus special guest star, David Frye, this Friday, September 10, 8:00 p.m., Allen Field House. Tickets 2.50, 3.00, 3.50 available at the SUA office, Kiefs on the Malls, and the Sound at Hillcrest. Sponsored by SUA.