2 Friday. October 20. 1972 University Daily Kansan Fund Impoundment Seen As Nixon Tax-Stay Option WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon is considering a combination of vetoes and incentives to hold fiscal 1973 spending to $25 billion in an effort to avoid a tax increase, a top White House alderman said. John D. Ehrlichman, the President's chief domestic adviser, told newsmen that it was a mistake to say that Nixon might be forced to impound some of the apprehensions order to hold the line on spending. Ehrlichman said he thought a tax increase could still be avoided next year. But he said it would be difficult because the president supposed $200 million lid on spending. Nixon is determined to hold the current fiscal year at $250 million. An impoundment, or withholding, of funds is one of the two methods. "I would think that it would not impound the device," President's lead by veto shots, he said, adding that impoundment appears to be the only option. No decision has been made, Ehrlichman said, and none probably will be until Nixon is re-elected. He advisers to consider the alternatives. He said recommendations may be forthcoming. Earlier in the day, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz said the President might decide to impound funds to try to avoid a The White House side said impoundment of funds by the President was "an open legal question." Although Shultz believes the President has an interest in the case, Ehrlichman said there were strong legal arguments on the other side. The major failure of Congress was not doing something about the increase in federal spending, he said. He would rate the performance of Congress in the poor state of Texas for its legislation that has been sent to the White House in the past two years. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Central Intelligence Agency stole the Soviet Spunkit to examine it minutely while it was on world tour in 1988, according to a new study by a former intelligence agent. Agent's Book Critical CIA Accused of Sputnik Theft Patrick J. McGarvey, in "CIA—The Myth and the Madness," published by the agency, relates, "The Spurish display was stolen for three hours by a CIA team which completely dismantled it, took samples of its structure, photographed it, and released them to its original place undetected." The country where this occurred, McGarvey told a reporter, was among details in line 15 of the report out when he submitted his manuscript to the CIA. Review by the CIA was required under his secrecy agreement signed when he joined the agency, he said. OTHER THINGS McGarvey said he was revealing for the first time include: - Intelligence bickering nearly provoked Chinese Communist entry into the Vietnam War in 1966. -Richard Helms, CIA director, taps the phones of his subordinates. The FBI tried to enlist the daleize Stokely C Carmichael, the black civil rights activist, in his durings during his travels on 1963. --The ill-fated Pueblo mission and capture by North Korea was unnecessary since all the targets it was working against were already adequately covered by other intelligence sources. THE CIA had no comment on McGarvey's book. And in giving him the go-head, the agency said McGarvey if any claim was made would be able to approve your book or confirm the accuracy of any information contained therein, it will be officially denied and we will not make that other action may be appropriate under the circumstances." Mgarvey is a 14-year veteran n intelligence, three years with the National Security Agency and national Security Agency and the nasal intelligence Agency between 1987 and 2016. Top-Secret Plane Sent to Find Boggs ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A top-secret, 300-mile-per-hour reconnaissance plane was being pressed into the search Thursday for a missing U.S. House Democratic Leader Hale Hogs and three others aboard. The Air Force said in a tense statement that the classified aircraft were recently surveying more than 60,000 square miles in an hour, was being flown to Alaska from Beale Air Force Base in Alabama. The plane was called into the four-day-old search to take advantage of beaulough's square-mile search area, the Air Force said. The improved weather was exacerbated by a cold and over-weather arain late Thursday. Meanwhile, expert Army mountainters tramped through a canyon to pass a Pass southeast of here after Air Force helicopters and search planes landed at timberline because of heavy fog, which began to break up Thursday. Air, land and sea searchers married on the ground and still still have no trace of the grap that vanished Monday on a 680-mile flight from Anchorage to With Bogs on the twin-engine Bachit, Alaska's only U.S. House member; his aid, Russell pilot, pilot, D. Jon E. Poinhardkis the entire route effectively by plane. The campaign trip was one that Begich and Boggs probably did not have to make. Begich polled 87,900 votes to 16,500 for his two Republican opponents in the August Alaska primary election. But as he said, he would have no trouble in his reelection bid. The clear weather gave search planes their first look at much of the desolate mountain areas northwest of Juneau. An Air Force major was asked how long it would take to cover "Under perfect conditions, two days," he said. "But this is the first really good shot we've had at it." Geneva to Host SALT II The search centered around Portage Pass, 50 miles southeast of Anchorage. Although the pass is at a considerable distance to tower to 7,000 feet on each side. Jonz filed a flight plan 12 minutes out of Anchorage, just ahead of a high-speed visual navigation. There was no further radio contact, and experienced Alaskan pilots, as well as members of the crew, improbable that Jonz would have continued the full flight without making to make further radio contact. WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House announced Thursday that round 2 of the Strategic Partnership would start in Geneva Nov. 21 with the aim of "reaching a more comprehensive agreement on climate action." Round 1 of the talks, which began in November 1969 and ended last May, produced agreement on an antiballisticaty security and on a five-year ceiling on numbers of offensive missiles. Round 2 of SALT promises to be long and difficult, administration officials said. But they voiced general optimism about prospects for a broader, permanent act to limit offensive weapons. Defensive-missile limits are fixed under the present treaty at two ABM sights each for the United States. The next round will focus on potential new curbs on long range nuclear strike weapons These include bombers, not covered by the current agreement, and land and submarine missiles. Administration officials said U.S. goals included destroying all weapons in weapons and on numbers. The President's press secretary should continue to announce the date for starting SALT 2 in a brief statement released here and in Moscow. It agreement reached during the meeting in Moscow last May, to continue active negotiations for limitations of strategic offensive arms, the governments of the United States and the U.S.S.R. will resume the talks on this issue in 1972 in Geneva, Switzerland* U. S. disarmament chief (Craig Williams) negotiating team in the first round, is scheduled to lead the American side again when the U.S. takes control of North Korea. Round 1 of the talks were held alternately at Helsinki and Vienna but Ziegler said Geneva was picked for Round 2 because of the inconvenience and expense of continuously switching the site. The announcement is the third within less than a week involving the union and the National Union. Last Saturday a maritime pact was concluded. On Wednesday trade and lend-lease agreements were signed. Pearson Sees War Issue Paramount in Youth Vote MANIHATTAN, Kan. (AP)—The biggest question facing young voters when they go to the Nov. 7 how they will apply the lessons of Vietnam, U.S. Sen. Roberts said here Thursday night. "And we were correct to do so. But we came to understand, that the German military of Munich applied to a guerrilla war in a small, poor nation may be successful." "My generation applied the bitter lesson of apprehension, the Munich lesson, in Turkey and Greece and Berlin in the years immediately following World War II. The aggressor was an ideologically bishop, Soviet Union intent upon expansion," Pearson said. Pearson, who prepared his remarks for a K-State Home Economics Council forum here, said Vietnam war had been the dominating factor in the lives of the young voters who the lives of the young voters who the lives of the young voters this year. "in my judgment," Pearson said, "the toughest question is whether he became politically aware during the frustrating, hopeful and tragic decade of the 1960s, how he might apply the lessons of Vietnam. McGovern Attacks Nixon On Commitment to Law 'Now the question arises whether the nation will shrink from foreign involvement in the Middle East, or continue to into another endless war, war "I cannot answer these questions. Answers can only come from the generation of the 1960s. My hope is that this generation will prove that the difficulty in learning lessons of history lies not so much with the principle learned as with its application." "Will young Americans oppose future foreign entanglements as my generation opposed the spectre of appeasement? "Will 11 million young Americans take as their guiding principle no more Vietnames? CHEYNEY, Pa. (AP)—Sen. George McGovern challenges Richard Nixon's commitment to the U.S. Constitution Thursday, the day before the President was to travel to Philadelphia, because of the historic document, to sign a revenue-sharing bill into law. McGovern at first decided to bcpass the dinner, to which Nixon and Democratice vice presidential nominee Sargent Shriver also were cited, but changed his plans before the big charity dinner. MecGovern, after a quick change of plans, also was headed for his first face-to-face confrontation with the Republican ticket as he and Vice President Spiro T. Agenwen both accepted the 27th annual Al Smith dinner in New York. Then, appearing at Chneyne State College with black New York Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm, McGovern remarked that his plan to sign the revenue-sharing bill in Independence Hall. Following his Cheyne appearance, McGovern was asked by reporters if he had any new specific evidence that Nixon U.S. Woman Marries Vietnamese McGovern was to attend an Al Manuel Rojas game. Then he was to fly back to Washington to spend the night before returning to New York The organization for junior men includes initiate Robert W. Holmes, the founder of Phi Delta, David D. L murfin, Phi Delta Theta, and John D. Shello, Beta Theta, and Wichita, and Tau Omega of Fairbairn, Neb. McGovern said, "Well if he isn't involved he's lost control of his organization." "There are many problems," she said, "like the smelling of garbage that surround the four-story apartment and the room with Han and the Kids and himself was involved. WASHINGTON (AP)—The nation's economy grew less vigorously while still looking ahead, but the government began rising again, the government said Thursday in the July through September report on the federal budget (GNP). Four University of Kansas students will be initiated into the honorary organization the OWLS in which he, Paul Clark, president, said. The Nixon administration halled the report, which analyzes the market value of the output of the nation's goods and services, as well as the economy is still expanding and will meet its targets for 1972. GIA DINH, Vietnam (AP) — Judy Linebaugh lives in a two-bedroom apartment overlooking a pig slaughterhouse just outside Saskatchewan, where a world of Lyons, Mich., where she grew up. At 25, one of a handful of American women who have married Vietnamese men, Mrs. Huynh Hanh doesn't share the softness of their life among the many Americans in this war-ravaged country. In the four years since she moved to Vietnam, after graduation from Michigan State University, she was one of only two other such couples. "They're used to GIs with Vietnamese girls—this is the reverse," she observes. FOR A WOMAN who is neither fluent in the language nor accustomed to the kitchen, there is far from easy. Her only extravagances are two small refrigerators in the kitchen and a full-size sink that fits in the bathroom. Her husband drives their Jeep-like Vespa car to work, leaving the kitchen empty. OWLS Choose Four Initiates Inflation Up Last Quarter Mrs. Han says she wants to bring her children up as Americans. Khol, who was born in the United States, is citizen by both countries. When their second child was expected, Mrs. Han dipped into her savings to pay for a plane ticket home. She will miss months ago in the United States. UAW to Strike At GM Plants In Three Cities "I don't think I want to live there again," she said. "It's too big. Life is simple here. My life is very peaceful. That thing when there's a war going on, but the war doesn't affect us much." At night in their simply furnished living room they can hear helicopters and also the artillery fire outside the city—offen close enough to shake the apartment but she pays scant attention. "I want to teach my children how to do homework," donnie America she said. "like freedom. I want them to know it, to learn it." too many and creative. "THERE'S NO backyard, no place for the children to play. There's no hot water in the building. I get mad when the dog off, especially on hot days like today, because the woman won't work." people stare or want to touch the children's white skin. I get tired of it. KHIOL THEIR 2-year-old son, scarcely notices the soldiers who guard street corners near their home. DETROIT (AP) -- The United Auto Workers issued three new notices of intent to strike at General Motors plants Thursday. But for Mrs. Han, these complaints are minor. She has no interest in leaving Vietnam and she will go back to the United States. A SUPPORTER of President Nixon's Vietnam policies, she helped has registered at the American embassy for an absentee ballot. Nixon's book, "Six Crises," is one volume in the Hanes bookcase. The UAW forced GM it intended to authorize local strikes in five working days at plants in Arkansas, Mo., Louisiana, and Kansas City. Ms. "He's used to them; he sees soldiers all the time," Mrs. Han said. Mrs. Han said her children were bigger than most Vietnamese their age. She attributes that the girl ate more meat than Vietnamese. UAW Vee President Irving Bluestone said the disputes, in a recent brief waltons, were over productions standards. Because she doesn't share commissary or post-exchange expenses, she often sells American families here, most of the American products she sells. She buys from the market. She figures she spends about 7,000 plasters, or $1 a plaster. family. He heads the investment department in an industrial development bank and works part-time for a new firm that promotes management training among the Vietnamese Hispani. He has degrees in architecture, plasters, or $230 a month, good wages by Vietnamese standards. HER HUSBAND often does the grocery shopping. As a Vietnamese, he can more easily bargain for better prices. "I want to bring up my children in such a way as they can be self-confident and independent," she said. "To me that' important." Judy Han said she might like to send their children to study in New York, where they live in Zealand, where she and her husband met when they were teenagers. The Hamilton facility is a stamping plant, and the two Missouri plants are operated by the University Assembly Division (GMAD). He has two jobs to support his but the rate of inflation, which had dropped to 1.8 per cent in the second quarter, started up again and averaged 2.2 per cent during the third. The administration said that figure was still low. According to the Commerce Department, a 5.9 per cent rate in the third quarter, lower than the extremely rapid 8.4 per cent pace of growth. In dollar terms, GNP advanced by $132.5 million seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.62 trillion. This compared with an increase of $30.3 billion in GDP in the same period. our Treasury Secretary Geroge P. Shultz told newsmen that the report was good evidence of solid, strong expansion of the economy. But it also expected continued strong expansion in the next year. Griffy Says Try Giant Meal GIANT HAMBURGERS 54° ONLY GIANT FRENCH FRIES or 35¢ GIANT ONION RINGS MEDIUM DRINK Bulstone was a deadline of midnight, Oct. 27, was set at the 8.00am. Loomers' plant for about 8,000 workers; he was set for April. Oct. 26 was set for the Hamilton facility's 2,400 employees; and a deadline of 9 a.m. Oct. 27 was set for the Leeds employees with companies 3,000 UAW members. GIANT ONION KINGS MEDIUM DRINK REG. $1.09 TARTUFFE Oct 19, 21-28 8:00 p.m. K.U. EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE UN4-3982 Do you have a low lottery number or military obligation? Check out the KANSAS NATIONAL GUARD Saturday, Oct. 21 9a.m.-1 p.m. Summerfield Hall Hawklet COUPON COUPON Clearasil Acne Medication Sale 66 $ ^ { \mathrm{c}} $ Regular tinted or vanishing formula 8.02, tube Manufacturer's Suggested Price 98c Sale 66¢ Good thru 10/23 With Coupon Limit 1 Sale 77c Dry Ban Anti-Perspirant COUPON COUPON 4 oz. can Manufacturer's Suggested Price $1.27 Vaseline th 77 Good财 10/23 With Coupon Limit 1 Sale 77c Intensive Care Lotion Good thru 10/23 With Coupon Limit 1 10 oz. size Manufacturer's Suggested Price $1.19 Sale 49c Squibb Aspirin Good thru 10/23 With Coupon Limit 1 5 gr. 250 tablet size Manufacturer's Suggested Price 89c xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Return ARDEN BOOTH Republican to the STATE SENATE Senate Committees: Public Health and Welfare; Federal & State Affairs; State and Local Affairs. Join! Interim Committees: Ecology; Welfare Labor & Industry Matters. Legislative Concern: Penal Reform, Alcoholism, Farm Labor, Tuition Grants, School Finance. Paid for by "Return Booth to Senate Committee" Travis Glass chairman With a group called QUANTRELL Friday, Oct. 20th - 1972 Doors Open at 8:00 a.m., Continuous Music from 8:30 RED DOG INN 642 Mass. St. Advance Tickets on Sale at RED DOG OFFICE—7TH & MASSACHUSETTS KIEF'S RECORDS—IN THE MALL $2.00 Advanced $2.50 at the Door