2 Wednesday. September 8, 1971 University Daily Kansan Miller Praises Licensing TOPEKA (AP) -Atty. Gen. Vern Miller, whose office licensing detectives in Kansas under new legislation, said Tuesday the new law provided for an uprating of the detective's statute. There are now about 25 licensed detectives in Kansas, Miller said. About 40 more who previously didn't have to be in the agency will now have a agency which had a license will now have to be licensed. All persons involved in investigative work, such as investigators for insurance companies, must be under the new law. Licenses in other states won't be good in Kansas, said Lance Burritt, assistant attorney general who is a Consumer Protection Division. The division will conduct an investigation of those who apply for licenses, including those who already hold licenses when they apply to get their one-year licenses renewed. Miller said he knew of no "shady" detective operations in Kansas that might run into the police. He investigates their operations. The new law transfers the duty of licensing detectives from the office of the secretary of state to the attorney general's office and State Panel Reluctantly OK's Federal Plan for New Jobs TO*?EKA (AP)—The State Finance Council gave a somewhat reluctant go-ahead Tuesday to a proposal for the government designed to provide new jobs for the unemployed and under-employed in Kansas and in Gov. Rohit Docking and several council members, stemmed from the work of a range program could become a white elephant on the state's hands if the federal government does not renew a month tenure now existing and public pressure demands that the state pick up the tab when the federal government fades out of the city. James Bibb, state budget director who worked on the program with federal officials, said he had never, in his nearly 20 years in state government, seen any other state-level federal government for any under employed in Kansas and in the nation. The reluctance, expressed by Gov. Robert Docking and several council members, stemmed from the fact that a large range program could become a white elephant on the state's hands if the federal government were to allow it to continue month tenure now existing and public pressure demands that the state pick up the tab when the government fades out of the picture. James Bibb, state budget director who worked on the program with federal officials, said he was joined by others years in state government, seen the pressure applied by the federal government for any programs as was applied to get him go along with this program. "The initial pressure was to get this in operation by September," Bibb said. "They didn't ask where the best place was to do it, but they did and they employed them. I’m concerned about the next application of it." Approved was the spending in Kansas of the state's initial grant under the federal government's million public works program. Kansas has been allocated $6.84 million, with $3.76 million to be administered by the state and $3.08 million to be administered by the city of Overland Townpea, KS, and City and Overland Park and by Johnson County. Approved by the Finance Council was the addition of 48 new positions to the State Industrial Refractory at Hutchinson and the Kansas State Industrial Refractory at Hutchinson and the Kansas State Administration positions being created in the governor's office. 6 new positions were added in Hospital and 7 new positions. created in the state Labor Department. Besides providing for the 46 new state jobs, the initial grant to Kansas of $746,030 provides for the local units of government. The allocations for these jobs are: Sedgwick County, 13 jobs at Juniper College, Dorado, 20 jobs at Dorado, 20 jobs at Parsons, 9 jobs at Parsons, 9 jobs at Zwyer, 79,282 Labette County, 6 jobs at Labette, 6 jobs at Haysville, 9 jobs at Haysville, 9 jobs at Zwyer, 24,133 provides for a bonding scale of up to $10,000 for detectives. The grant, for the first six months, is for administrative costs and job funding. Bibb said federal regulations under the program forbid sub-positions in state or local government, and must be used for unemployed persons. Docking and Bibb said the state and the local units of government would begin employing the new workers immediately. "To say this program is a top priority item of the Nixon administration, we are an understatement. But I think we got it as lean and as effective as we could in the brief time allot to set it up so we can keep it up." State Sen. Tom Van Sickle, a member of the school board, called the program "day CYC" (Civilian Conservation Corps) of the 1930's "New Deal." State Rep. Calvin Strowg, R-Wis., coached the "reluctantly" move approved of the item when the Finance Council voted on it. The vote was Only item on the length Flight. A 2014 parked partisan debate was one a give state approval to the federal financed highway Other money will be appropriated later for use by the cities of Wichita, Topeka, Kansas City and Johnson County. Park and in Johnson County. The work funds are appropriated under the federal Emergency Employment Act of 1971. The Finance Council also approved the use of two grants by the state Board of Health totaling $15 million for dust pollution and dust concentration in certain jobs such as in grain elevators and cement plants. The studies will be made by the en- gagement department of the state Health Department. The request, from the Highway Department, was to increase the amount of land from $50,000 to $1.5 million and add four employees to the federal Highway Safety Co-ordinating Office to administer the request. The need for adding four new positions in the office was chalenged by Van Sickle and Lt. Gov The league's charter pledges freedom of opinion and expression to all citizens "within the framework of democratic citizenship" to stay clear of foreign military alliances—Eastern or Western. 1-Party System Barring Reds Declared in Jordan The reconciliation mission marks the most visible attempt by Hussin to patch up relations with Libya's guerrillas since Hussin's Baddoou troops wiped out the last guerrilla strongholds in Jordan's Sinai. In an address to 200 party founders at the royal palace, Hussein said the league would win from within its own ranks." "Intensive background investigations will be made in connection with the granted a license will conduct their business in an honest and legal manner. Mr. Miller said. We want them to be pious, their moral characters, reputations for honesty and fair dealing and their occupational skills." By THE "Associated Press" The university promised a one-party system in the system in Jordan Tuesday, and sent a five-man delegation to a "reconciliation meeting" with Pakistani guerrilla leaders in Saudi Arabia. Egyptian President Anwa Sadat reacted to that purge by ruling out Jordan as an Arab country and Hussein accused Egypt on Tuesday of ending three years of "cooperation and coordination" Jordan on the Middle East crisis, and urged that it be revived. Ry The Associated Press Following the lead of Egypt and several other Arab states, Hussein banned Communists from Jordanian political activity and established the 'Jordanian state' as the only authorized party. In other Middle East development the Israeli military announced a Egyptian warplane flew over the southern part of the Suez Canal for the second time in 1952, drew Israel an aircraft fire. Reynolds Shulz. Both men voted against the proposal on that basis. However, the item was not voted. And other four members voting for it. Docking said this, too, was a federal program that the federal government had created its way. He said the state had reduced the number of new employees to six, supervise the white-collar workers who indeed people had been insisting upon. Miller also promised stricter supervision of licensed detectives, a fact said he expected to comply with all aspects of the investigation, leading to eavesdropping, arrest, seize and seizure, possession of fire arms, operation of radios and surveillance. The military command also said Israeli troops killed an Arab guerrilla in a clash between irregulars and a patrol in the Sinai desert. The guerrilla was said to be "long sought by security forces." "Detectives must observe the same laws as any ordinary citizen. "The detective does not constitute a law enforcement commission." The attorney general also said that detectives will not be permitted to carry badges, as some law enforcement agencies have issued identification cards "which should always be shown in connection with their work." They must present the those making application complete a form, and pay a $50 application fee. They must file a complaint to operate a detective agency. Bomb Try on Life Of U.S. Envoy Fails PHNOM PENH, (AP) — A bomb set to assassinate U.S. Ambassador Emory C. Swank was sent carcenced on a bicycle into his lousiness Tuesday but the bomb tumbled harmlessly to the street. SAIGON (AP)—Thousands o. South Vietnamese troops pushed toward the Laos border south of Hanoi and entered on the second day of a ncw “spoiling operation” but reported no contact with the North Viet- South Viets Report No Resistance Cambodian police said the bicycle-bomb had been designed to explode on impact with the Some of the Saigon force advanced to eight miles or so from the frontier.官兵 said there was no plan to cross into Laos in the early spring. Objectives of the new sweep are to destroy North Vietnamese supply bases and to stem troop and supply movements into the northwest corner of South Vietnam over outposts of the Ho Chi Minh trail. bicycle carrying a 15-pound plastic charge hidden among leaves of bread behind the seat, was shoved from the alleyway as he drove down the street. The operation is centered to the northeast of Khe San, a major port in the country, by the South Vietnamese into Laos last February and March. It was abandoned in April after the South Vietnamese pulled out of it. The South Vietnamese force totaling about 12,000 in infantry squadrons and rangers with barkers by U.S. bombers artillery and bombers In the 24-hour period up to noon Tuesday, U.S. B32 bombers flew over Syria and northwest of Khe Sath, dumping more than 500 tons of bombs on suspected North Iraq complexes and sumily depots. Elsewhere in South Vietnam, the war continued at the low level of the past week with only 6 clashes, small clashes reported. In Phnom Penh, the Cambodian army announced a new drive on the northeastern front about 24 miles north of the capital. Across the state in Kalamazoo, a court-ordered busing plan was implemented without trouble. A spokesman said Cambodian forces started the push Monday under a ransom note from three Communist-led regiments believed to be in the city. Pontiac Only Busing Hotspot An antithess protest brought the arrest of nine women in Pontiac, Mt. Tuesday but other schools quietly opened in the Midwest and South under court orders leading to rid schools of segregation. In San Francisco, where antibusing sentiment is running Police made the Pontiac arrests after five women chained themselves together at the entrance to a school bus yard in an unsuccessful attempt to detain a citizen under a federal court degreneation plan. Also in Pontiac, a bomb threat briefly forced the evacuation of several hundred pupils from a junior high school. By The Associated Press A school official said that on the dry run Friday parents would be allowed to ride the buses with their children to observe the time involved and to meet the principals and staffs of the schools. high school officials planned to demonstrate busing Friday for parents A court-ordered plan goes into effect there Monday. The defective explosive was discovered when Swank's Cambodian bodyguard stopped and ordered military police to inspect the bicycle and the breadth behind its seat, police said. Administrators have been threatened with a mass boycott by parents opposed to the busing of children. 46,000 elementary school children. Embassy spokesmen said Jamie continued to his office Monday after her life. He learned of the assassination only at mid-morning, then weary. limousine, but had only bounced off and fell to the street. Police said they also are seeking a young bread salesman who delivered the bomb to the alleyway under the bread leaves and disappeared shortly before black immigrant slaves black immigrant came into view. Pickets were the exception Tuesday as southern school counselors offered an under federal court orders that have placed an additional 150,000 pupils aboard buses to meet a deadline flattered by housing patterns. Police sources said the bicycle had been pushed into the street by two young men on motorcycles in an alleyway and onto another street. They were described as being or Vietnamese in appearance. The sources said a full report on the incident will be placed before Marshal Lon Nol, Cambodia's leader. State Asked for Opinion On Teacher Pay Freeze TOPEKA (AP)—Kansas education officials, in an effort to untangle the confusion created by conflicting views on the decision Tuesday to solicit an attorney general's opinion in their attempts to get Kansas public school teachers certified under the federal wage freeze. Officials of the state Department of Education, Kansas-Nashville, have joined the Kansas Association of School Boards agree the attorney general's opinion is their next step in seeking an exemption for state teachers. The announcement Tuesday said Kosignin will be in Canada for "seven or eight days." Details of the work outed, it was understood that Kosignin will spend only two days in Ottawa. The visit repays one that Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau made to the Soviet Union in May OTTAW (AP)—Premier Alexei N. Kosygin will pay a week's visit to Canada beginning next month, the head of government to do so. However, the chief assistant attorney general, who would normally only be able to study an Oklahoma opinion soon to be issued and not commit himself to issuing the opinion the education officials Kosygin to Pay Visit to Canada The Dallas regional office of the Office of Economic Preparation Oklahoma teachers from the freeze on the basis of an Oklahoma attorney general's order to work on a 12-month contract period that begins July 1 and ends June 30 of each year. The OEP orders Oklahoma teachers means Oklahoma teachers were working and subject to call as of July 1971—45 days before the deadline waze price freeze on Aug. 15. John Martin, chief assistan- attorney and general, agreed to hold the okla- onion, but he said he had叫led the Oklahoma attorney general's office and was told the official was on duty until the latter part of this week. "I'm going to study to see whether the Oklahoma opinion has any application to the Kansas situation," Martin said. "I understand the Oklahoma law is very much like the Kansas law. All I promise is to study it, I have promised a ruling on the contract period." What Oklahoma education officials apparently gave the OEP, was a verbal opinion from the field of law and said it had not a formal written opinion. "I'm not committing ourselves to any interpretation of state law as it applies to the application of government's wage-price freeze." Martin had told the state education officials earlier, however, that he did not issue an opinion as to when the legal contract period runs on a regular basis. Marion McGheehby, executive director of the Kansas Association of School Boards, said the contract period for a general's office will issue an opinion that the contract period for Kansas teachers begins July 1. is to take that opinion to the Kansas City regional office of OEP. Many local boards were meeting Tuesday night and were likely to be informed by their decisions on the matter. Last week, the local boards were informed by state officials they believed would increase their increases, based on an interpretation of the freeze City regional OEP office. The ultimate decision on whether teachers get their pay increases, however, rests with local school boards. That interpretation held that if anyone began work before Aug. 15. under a new master or system-wide contract in a school district, then all teachers under that master were exempted from the day freezes. Later last week, however, a Washington official of OEAP said that the interpretation was in error and that individual who worked with the staffed work prior to Aug. 15 is exempt from the freeze. State officials decided against conferring Tuesday with Francis X. Tobin, OEP regional director of the Justice Department of an attorney general's opinion is resolved. They earlier had planned to call Tobin and ask him for an updated interpretation of the law. Hereeze applies to Kansas teachers. Melvin Nelyn, executive secretary of the Kansas-National Education Association said his understanding is that if Kansas Irish, British Chiefs End Talks in Disagreement LONDON (AP) — The prime ministers of Britain and the Irish Republic ended their summit on Monday, amid disagreement and miles apart from any joint action to end the chaos in Britain-ruled Northern Ireland. The basic stumbling block confronting them was the 50-year-old issue of Ireland's partition. Britain's Edward Heath and the Republicans Jack L昂琳 ended the debate on Friday, divided on almost every issue they considered, political sources Lynch insisted that a united Ireland was the only way to restore Northern Ireland, instead Northern Ireland must remain part of the United Kingdom while the majority of its 1% million population wants it. thern them '18th's second city, where a 14-year-old schoolgirl on Monday night; became the 10th and sixth province's provincial two years of terror. As the talks ended, fighting raged on in Londonderry, Nor- British troops, camped on the city's historic walls, came under fire. Beside it, the Roman Catholic enclave which was the flashpoint of the long-drawn feud between priests and pro-publican Catholics. The 54-year-old Lynch, emerging from 11 hours of face-to-face confrontation with the police, said she was asked if the talks had produced anything positive for an immediate settlement in Northern Ireland. British and Irish officials stressed that the meeting was intended mainly as an exploration of minds and that more like would follow. Lynch is said London to meet Heath this fall. will obtain an attorney general's opinion on the contract period, the Kansas City regional OEP office will submit the matter of a waiver to Washington pay increases to Washington for a specific ruling on it. Nearly said he believes Kansas teachers are eligible for their pay raises because (1) the contract with teachers work started before Aug. 15, and (2) the OEP says that increases, teachers must have become eligible to accrue earnings prior to Aug. 15. Kansas teachers are accruing earnings that would be made available during a period prior to that date. The youth, Richard Jones, was ordered to the Shawnee County Jail on charges of assaulting Charles C. Lybarger, Anderson County Juvenile Court judge in KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) - A 14-year-old boy charged with delinquency in connection with a homicide by the young Kansas City, Kan., woman will be transferred to the Men's Shelter for the apnea for psychiatric examination. The announcement of the transfer, was made in Kansas City on Thursday, who was hired by the family of the former owner to assist the protestor in the case. Menninger's To Examine 14-Year-Old Introducing . . . the "U" in K.U. everybody needs a U- neck steelhead sweater — and Robert Bruce gives it to you in a new version with a large ribbed top. The sweater is extra-large ribbed bottom in *inwashable Orion* acrylic, covered of colorful Siennes or L, M, X; Mens Wear 843 Massachusetts Street 843-0454 $17 Sandier has a special treat for Digger fans . . . a new Digger! Rendered in supple suede and trimmed with Hot Line Leather. The whole thing's set on a crepe sole and counters, cut into strips of fans as well as satisfy old ones. Doesn't Sandier always please? (Big Blue or Brown.) Shoes—2nd Floor MENU FOR AFTER 5! & DELIVERY SERVICE The Kansas Union Offers PIZZA—11" HAMBURGER .1.60 SAUSAGE .1.60 PROGRAMMER .1.60 PEEPPERONI & SAUSAGE COMBINATION .1.60 SAUSAGE & MUSHROOM COMBINATION .1.60 The following sandwiches come in a box with a napkin, package of chips, dill pickle meat. ROASTBEEF .75 HAM .75 TURKEY .75 CORNEDBEEF .75 REUBEN .75 SALAD BAKED BEANS .25 POTATO SALAD .25 PUDDING .25 FRUIT JELLO .20 PLAIN JELLO .15 PIE (A big portion) *DREAMS*. .30 *FRUIT*. .30 The vending service of the Kansas Union is now operating a carry-out delivery service on the above food items. This service will be offered between the hours of 5:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. every night of the week except Saturday when school is closed and delivery only occurs on campus at 12:30 p.m. to cover the cost of 75 cents. To place an order online, visit www.kansasunion.com. Your patronage of a Kansas Union service is appreciated.