2 Fridav. September 22, 1972 University Daily Kansan Council OKs Mail Ballot By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer A controversial mail ballot issue was resolved Thursday when the University Council passed a measure that would have limited a number of Council members present at the meeting to request a mail ballot. The measure was passed despite opposition from the 11 student representatives. A similar measure was passed in last week's meeting to allow students with disabilities to attend All-University Senate composed of the members of the University of Oklahoma, the College of Arts and the University Senate of the KU Medical Center on the Kansas State University. "The student input will be decreased with the use of the in- president Dave Dillon, Hutton President Dave Dillon, Hutton know if the mail ballot will be that big of a deal because it just won't be used on that many students." THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL have required that at least five of the 39 University Council faculty members be from the College of Arts and Sciences. The proposal to allow the five representatives from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was defeated because appointees said the measure was "a slight attempt at reform." University Council by schools" One member said the measure was unnecessary because since there were usually about five members of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences elected to the University. Council呵 Each school is now allotted at least one representative on University Council and the other members are elected at large. SEVERAL MEASURES were unanimously adopted to revamp the power structure of the University Senate and the University Council. The revisions would enable the University Senate to have a more body and the University Senate to become a reviewing body. An amendment was approved which would call the University Senate at least once during each academic year. An agenda for each semester includes a regular member before a regular before a valuable pre- formal meetings. HERMAN LUJAN, presiding officer of University Council and associate professor of political science, would be able to understand that the University Senate would meet in the spring The proposal is to guarantee that at least one of the 10 students in University Council would be a graduate student. University Council by students was referred to the student council for further consideration before it is to be considered by the university for further consideration. Section 3 of Article VI concerning membership in the The last three sections of Article I, which provide for an All-University Senate, were adopted by the University Senate and all-University Senate would have the governance of the University Senate as the residence and Kansas City campus. A MEASURE was adopted to insure that women and minority group faculty members would be admitted to the Faculty Senate in the University Council. The Faculty Committee would oversee this project. An amendment was passed to allow the University Council to call a special meeting of the Lawrence campus University Senate at any time. To be discussed is a measure which would include in the membership of the faculty a committee of contented members of the faculty of the rank of instructor with full-time appointment and those graduate Student Senators who hold appointed positions as instructors or teaching assistants. A proposal is to change quorum requirements for the University Council and Faculty Council from a majority is also on the agenda. The University Council will consider an amendment to increase the number of methods of amending the Senate Code. The University Council recessed until Oct. 5. The Faculty Council will meet next Thursday to elect the three Lawrence and one University of Kansas Center faculty representative to the Search committee to select a new chancellor. Lebanese Army Hits Group of Guerrillas By The Associated Press A Lebanese army patrol clashed with a group of Palestinian guerrillas Thursday, a day after Arab mediation efforts were said to have achieved between Lebanon and the guerrillas. Reports reaching Cyprus said two army soldiers and one civilian shot in the exhange of fire at village 80 miles south of Beirut. The clash came as letter bombs addressed to Israeli officials continued to turn up in Africa, and South America and Europe. Police in Brussels said they intercepted two more bombs before they got to the Israel Embassy. Police said the two bombs were of a different one that killed an Israeli diplomat in London on Tuesday. The Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires received five explosive envelopes, but security teams dismantled them. In Canada, letter carriers are demanding government protection over terrorist threat and suggest check of all mail from Arab from the Netherlands, where men in recent broms were postmarked. No guerrilla organization noclaimed responsibility for the murder-by-mail campaign, but police said that some of the letter containing the coffees of the Black September killed the organization the Munich murders. In London, The Daily Express reported that King Hussein of Jordan had called his three sons to school in Ijsh schools, fearing reprisals the guerrillas because of his condemnation of the murders at the hospitals. The Jordanians Embassy would not comment on the report. Uganda Truce Reported Rv Associated Process Marvin Class Goes Bats After Visit from Creature By SUZANNE OLSON Kansan Staff Writer "Minor panic" reigned over an architecture photography class Sept. 12 as a result of a mistake in the flight plan of a local bat. The class, which meets the basement of Marvin Hall, was disrupted temporarily when a bat flew down the hall and into the "It was about 8:30 and we were just sitting around when all of a sudden somebody yelled 'here you are!' The girl was Lauderdale, Lexington, Mo., senior, said. "The bat flew around the room for about 10 to 15 minutes while the girls went into hysteresis. Then it finally flew out." LAUDERDALE said the door was shut hastily and he last sighted the bat flying down the hall. "The effect of the bats' visit on my class was one of minor panic." Jackson said "never about the room in a state of panic." Hobart Jackson, assistant professor of architecture and teacher of the class, said the bat was about the size of a robin. He identified the incident in his classroom as a small catastrophe. Jackson said the bat probably entered the building through one of the basement windows, which have no screens and often are left open. Although he admitted that there were some likely places for the bat to up on the third floor of Marvin's apartment, he actually built in the building JACKSON said this was his last job. He and his team in Marvin an underdale spoke to various other times when either he or fellow students had come over. "There are bats living in or around Marvin," Lauderdale said. "I don't know where they live, but there are a lot of them there." Another reaction to the bat's flight came from Mana Gomez, Venezuela senior. Describing her initial reaction as being "scared to death," Gomez spoke of the attack on the bat to get rid of the bat. "Nobody would catch the bat or knew how to catch it," she said. The teacher said to keep quiet when he saw her not work. Someone tried turning out the lights hoping it would be safe, but it was all of a sudden, it flew out. GOMEZ said that this was not her first experience with bats in Marvin. Last semester a bat slept on a light fixture above her desk, but she finally was removed by a fellow student, who caught it in a box. No reports of bates have been filed to the building and grounds of the University, cording to Harry M. Buehlich, director of the Physical Plant. "There have been no problems with bats as far as I've been concerned," Buchholz said. Bats usually do not sleep in trees. They, usually hang around under the eaves or in trees." "BATS FOUND in the United States are all insect predators," he said. "They are seen most frequently this time of year because insects are not as abundant and tend to congregate on bright lights. The bats are sighted while swooping down to feed." common and only one or two are the kind that frequent buildings. The rest live in bushes, he said. Watkins guessed that the bat sighted in Marvin was probably one called 'the big brown bat' or 'the scary bat', as there were 300 to 500 insects a night* "THESE BATS are part of our ecology," Watkins said. "They cause problems only when they become too abundant and create odors from their droppings. They create araid them and when people afraid of a species their immediate solution is to kill them." Watkins strongly discouraged the killings of bats because it made them vulnerable to the ecology of Lawrence. To kill off the bats destroys the natural check on insects and then exacerbates their need to have be employed, he said. "Bats should be treated as individuals, not as a species," Watkins said. "We should rid the individual bats that are causing the problems, not declare war on them, but bat species of Lawrence." "Otherwise," Watkins said, "you will have a wall full of dead bats." Most bats do not normally attack humans, he said. There have been several bites that batites in Kansas but, he said, he knew of no such reports in Iowa and the rest of the country. war on Uganda, but reports of moves toward peace came from other quarters. "bats are by and large very beneficial to our community." Wren says the bat that takes over the birds is not to control the number of insects. Amin accused Britain of conspiring with President Julius Nyerre of neighboring Tanzania to overthrow him and said he had commanded railway troops in the Ugandan border. Watkins stressed the importance of learning and hoped that people would learn to accept them and appreciate their worth in a sense. Radio Uganda, however, broadcast the contents of a President William Tolbert of Liberia indicating that Amin had given assurances that Ugandan would not cross into Tanzania. The government-run Voice of Kenya radio said Uganda also asked Tanzanian towns, adding that Tanzania pledged in return to pull back its troops deployed there in two eastern African countries. The radio, quoting Somali news, showed that this temporary treaty would lead to a period of peaceful negotiations between the two countries. Ainis announced Sunday that his country was being invaded by Tanzanian forces. It was believed that the attack was led by his allies seeking to reinstitute former President Mibon Obte The Ugandan army turned back the attack. Mopping-up operations were reported con- temporarily Thursday in southwestern Uganda. Radio Uganda said both Amin and Nyerere recuse themselves from taking the Sokon Tour to Guinea, and that Toure laid the blame for the conflict on Britain. African leaders sought to defuse the confrontation between Uganda and Tanzania. Nzo Kagera, a spokesman for the Organization for African Unity, met with President Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya in the morning and diplomatic sources said that Mr. Kenyatta to mediate in the conflict. Uganda had said Wednesday it was ready to order preemptive evacuation from head off another invasion. And Tanzania said it might be forced to take its troops off a defensive base in Uganda hails its air strikes. A Uganda military spokesman said the situation throughout the country was calm. There appeared to be no basis for the scare. transport planes that took off from Libya for Uganda on Wednesday with arms and 400 troops to help Amin. At least 30 foreigners were released after two days imprisonment in Uganda. In London, the British Foreign Office said all the Britons released late Wednesday night have been quite "well treated." But seven freed Britons, all newsmen, called the cell they were in a "black hole of Calcutta," a reference to an odious, stifling room in which the 18th century ruler of Bengal imprisoned British soldiers. Don Wise, roving correspondent for the Daily Mirror, said when he interviewed the captive alongside prostitutes, drunks, thugs and thieves. We were still about 40 Americans and Europeans believed being held. One corresponded described how Uganda soldiers "pinned a man on the ground while a woman beat him with arawhide whips—10, 20, 50 times until he was wounded and writhed and the blood ran. He said that about 30 soldiers "laughed, enjoying the spectacle." Sudan stopped five Libyan House Republicans See Veto for Product Bill WASHINGTON (AP)—House Republican sources claim President Nixon will veto a compromise bill on household product safety if it looks too much like the Senate's sweeping version. "If they want a bill, they'll havy to have the House bill essentially as it is," a senior GOP Congressman said Wednesday. "The house Bill is more acceptable, but he will the Senate bill." Republican sources in the House said they abandoned the Nixon Administration's substitute measure after GOP Congressmen won an understanding that Democratic handlers of the bill would stick by key portions of the House. Republicans promise talks with the Senate. This means the concept of independent status for a proposed regulatory group survived a law that mandated administration favored vesting product-safety authority under the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) within the State Department's Health, Education and Welfare. The act was written by Roy and co-sponsored by Rep. Paul Rogers, D-FLA, chairman of the public health subcommittee. TOPEKA (AP) — Rep. Bill Reynolds, a member of the tenancy organization act was approved unanimously Wednesday by the public health sub- Under the legislation, which was passed 138 to 50 by the House Wednesday, a new federal commission would be created to ensure safety standards or ban a product from the marketplace. This independent panel's authority would extend to a wide range of everyday products—from machines to football helmets. "There are two essential features of a health maintenance organization (HMO): it brings together the comprehensive range of medical services in a single organization so that patients can have convenient access to all them." Health Bill Approved The House bill specifically excludes food, drugs, cosmetics, motor vehicles, tobacco, firearms and weapons in the munition. The House shouted down an attempt to add guns to a state's gun register that is being regulated by the commission. --- Manufacturer's Suggested Price $1.69 SALE $1.19 With Coupon Limit 1 BREVONI An aid in the relief of acne pimples and blackheads Manufacturer's Suggested Price 99c SALE 67c One-Size PANTY HOSE With Coupon Limit 1 COUPON COUPON SALE 79° With Coupon Limit 1 Manufacturer's Suggested Price $1.29 FRESH DEODERANT Scented & Unscented CONTAC 10 CAPSULES Manufacturer's Suggested Price $1.69 SALE 99¢ With Coupon Limit 1 Fight for Teacher Benefits Pledged by Aides to Docking John Ivan, administrative assistant, addressed a meeting of the teachers at Retired Teachers, saying "We are anxious for you to compare Gov. Docking's record in the area and his benefits, benefits, and that of his opponent." Retired teachers have been told by an assistant to Gov. Robert Docking that the governor equitable the retirement benefits for school teachers who retired prior to the merger of the teacher retirement and Kansas Public retirement programs." "His opponent again aban- dened the retired teachers and falked to vote on the cost-of-living release, which passed," Ivan said. "his opponent abandoned the retired teachers and failed to support this important landmark legislation which made the law for them to program one of the better programs in the country." "Being absent and not voting was also his opponent's approach of important laws in other areas related to citizenship, retired citizens—the original homemade property tax relief and expanded version passed in 1972." "Gov. Dowding fully supported efforts prior to 1970 to improve the Kansas teachers' retirement system, which ranked low among other states," he added. 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