12 Monday, December 11, 1972 University Daily Kansan B BSU Food Co-op... (continued from page 1) allocation and asked David Dillon, Hutchinson senior and student body president, to write a letter to the BSU advising them that only expenditures for items of "nutritional value" would be approved in the future. There has been some argument over whether the line item restricted ex-ample was sufficient for nutritional value. Vann argued at a meeting of StudEx Nov 29 that the nutritional restriction had not been a part of the item when it was voted on during the meeting. STUDEX DISMISSED Vaim's contention, though pointing out that the final copy of a work is not published. Vann suggested a check of the minutes of the Senate meeting, but although minutes were kept for all Senate meeting last year, the minutes of the May 3 meeting have not been made available. The doughnut affair finally manifested itself in a bill by Gus DilZerega, Lawrence Mead, who asked for restrictive measures against the tax allocation. The bill was presented in handwritten form to Kathy Allen, Tepa junior president, at the Senate meeting Wednesday. During the meeting, BSU representatives Eve Williams, Pratt junior, and Ron Washington, acting assistant director of SES, explained to the Senate that the purchases were used in the SES program as snacks for instructors and students. WILLIAMS SAID the food coop was not operating because the BUH was unable to operate. The bill, which was read to the Senate because Allen, the presiding officer of the Senate, had the only copy, proposed that all U.S. soldiers be sent to SBU food allocation, that the SBU submit to the Senate a new plan for organization of the food co-op which would make it self-sufficient, and that the remaining $43.608 in the frozen until the new was submitted. The bill passed the Senate by a wide margin. The fact that the one we was only worried about, the Senate may have canceled, confusion. One senator, we were in favor of the bill, said after the voting that he had realized the bill would actually take money away from the BSU, he would not have voted for THE PROPONENTS of the bill denied '73 News... (continued from page 6) today fled formal complaints with the U.S. government that the election campaign rhetoric of last year left no doubt that Mr. Trump would support a support of countries other than Vietnam. WASHINGTON, April 30—The minimum wage bill was killed in House-Senate conference after President Nixon an- nounced the need for a new plan would be extended six more months. The Cambodian and Laotian complaints asked why Julie Eisenhower and Mrs. Nixon had not declared their willingness to die for them too, if the U.S. was really fully committed to supportin supporting their independence. Had the bill been approved and an agreement reached, wages would have been lower. NEW YORK, May 15–New York today reported its 73rd hijacking of the year. Brandishing a melting ice cream cone and threatening to it use to it me up the other passenger's hair, 12-year-old Rudi Brandi this morning, hid a New York cab. Mayor John V. Lindsay expressed outrage at this latest incident and called a top-level meeting of city officials to prevent further cab hijackings. Although the mayor would not discuss the results of the meeting, informed sources indicated that FBI agents would be asked to soon give New York police special training in tire shooting. PARIS, May 18—Before a crowd of 200 people, Klausner smiling announced that talks on the Paris nuclear deal had been the peace plan proposed last November were progressing rapidly and that a solution was underway. WASHINGTON, May 20—In response to earlier complaints that Mrs. Nixon and her daughter Julie had shown unnecessary favoritism to Vietnam when they offered to die for Thien, the White House disclosed today that Mrs. Nixon and Julie had sent their children to the Indochinese governments, assuring them that their freedom was also worth dying for. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, has threatened to challenge the constitution. WASHINGTON, June 2-Heine Kissinger today left Washington on his 47th trip to Paris this year. Upon departing, Kissinger noted that those whom peace was just across the ocean. NEW YORK, July 20—Gloria Steinem and Rep. Bella Abzug, DNJ, issued a statement but equally adamant pledges to oppose the commemoration of any exclusively male sexual feat, much less those of a "withed old lion." The pledges came after several influential Californiaans announced the formation of Fraser Day in memory of the prudest 78-year-old "sex simba" who broke summer when he fabled 38 cubs by seven lonely lesions in 16 months and then died. WASHINGTON, Oct. 3—Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Alaska, said today that Daniel Ellsberg had been offered $5 million by the U. S. government to steal the Pentagon Papers from the New York Times. WASHINGTON, Nov. 13—Today Henry Kissinger was arrested on possession of narcotics. The White House immediately issued a statement expressing shock and dismay over the incident, but most Washington officials weren't surprised. "After all," said one defense department official, "we knew that all that damn smiling couldn't have anything to do with the peace talks." SPOKANE, WASH., Dec. 31—Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, who vowed he would not die while President Nixon was in the White House, today went for a five-mile hike in the mountains near his wife, Katherine, before returning to Washington, D.C., where a heavy work desk awaits him. PALM SPRINGS, Dec. 1—Bob Hope said today that his would be the merriest Christmas ever, even though this would be the last time he and his performers would entertain the troops overseas. The entertainer said that he expected the war to be settled by next Christmas, but then he says a lot of things. "I think the people who are making this motion realizes that it is a puritative move," she said. "I am not ashamed to say that I believe in all." The bill in itself sets a precedent for the Senate by marking the first time that the body has taken back part of an allocation after it was allocated. that it was for the purpose of punishing the Bitch out Washington told the Senate that the man had been wrong. What the action of the Senate will mean is not clear. The BSU has declined to comment on the bill or on the organization's programs in general. Use Kansan Classifieds The Kansas Union Bookstore's CHRISTMAS RECORD SALE DEC. 11 - DEC. 22 Single LP's and up to 8 Record Sets by the World's Most Famous Composers and Artists. Here's some examples (SAVINGS UP TO 50%) Come and see these fantastic collections now. Last year several selections were sold out in the first few hours of the sale. Cannobole Addderley Cheat Athias Eddy Arnold Quartet Judy Collin Herrie Mann Ray Charles London Symphony Orchestra Manitas Plata Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Maria Callas Jojot Kriste Andres Segovia Woody Goughue Pase Seuer Yusel Lautef Modem Jazz Dairtet Glen Campbell Rod McKenna Stan Gezit Al Hirt Benny Goodman Wes Montgomery Le McCann Janant the Afrankin Verd Van Riese Gerry Mulligan Lluís Nyuro Dris Heeding Count Basie William Steinberg Leadbelly Bill Evans Monte Rosa Ahmed Jamal Gary Yarbrough Lawren Lewis