Wednesday, August 30. 1972 W University Daily Kansan Attendance Drops As Busing Begins OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — School officials said Tuesday they still weren't able to gauge the number of cases they cocalled to protest imprintment of interracial busing in Oklahoma City.市点 spot checks indicated lower attendance in schools and center of antihassing sentiment. The classroom boycott was called by busing foes to coincide with a strike by the Monday under a new federal court integration order. Busing to coincide with the national schools was nearly doubled under the order, to between 29,000 and 38,000. Although many schools reported attendance, nine students at a fourth grade center, had only 26 of an expected 567 pupils attending CRESTON HILLS had 204 of a43 protection 372; Dyers had more duretion 305; Boulter had 205; Polk had about two 305; protection 330 enrollment; Lincoln more than 206 of 217; Hayes 205, of 304, and Johnson Elmore 205. Douglas-Kennedy High, which for the first time was expected to for the first time was expected to met, had fewer than half of the anticipated pupils Monday. The cheek was made Tuesday, but that enrollment seemed about the same as Monday. John Marshal High, however, had 2.803 in attendance Monday with a projected enrollment of 2.798. SCHOOL OFFICIALS blamed some of the absenteeism on confusion about school assignment changes and on busing mixups. Mrs. Raymond York, an ant-busier member of the city school board, criticized Tuesday what he called a law which permitted Gov. David Hall to send his children to the schools the average citizen couldn't. Hall's three children were permitted to transfer to schools in southern Kentucky, west part of the city after the governor allegedly received kipnap threats. The governor's dominantly black northeast area. "IT IS MOST unfortunate that the governor of this state doesn't have a sense of respect for us, and rest of us must. His children are no dearest to him than mine are to him." A check of court decisions and lawbooks indicated that she received the same rights to teach the boys at home. Court cases dating back to 1922 show parents have been proactive in changing the nature of public schools as long as other means of education are-proven makes the same guarantee. York, who was held in contemn of federal court two years before being an integration order, was sent to a Monday to enroll her two younger sons in their neighborhood where she would teach them at home. ABOUT 60 PERSONS, mainly mothers and children, picketed the State Capitol in the rain Tuesday to protest busing. One of the leaders, Mrs. Lois Raynor, said the group would re Foster Etes, president of the Oklahoma City Board of Schools, announced Tuesday to President Nixon, asking him to fulfill his pledge to stop the assignment of school counselors across town for racial purposes. turn to the Capitol Wednesday in the hope of gaining support for a lawmaker's schools. She said she also planned to present officials about obtaining a parade permit for a demonstration in Baltimore City's Federal Court House. The circuitault said the dual system the system "has been installed in Memphis and that failure to provide a unitary system is the fault of the school." The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal in Virginia implemented meanwhile ordered a business-desegregation plan involving nearly 1,400 Memphis THE COURT, in a 21- decision, affirmed "in its entirety" a busing order issued in April by the District Court of U.S. District Court in Memphis. The decision, written by Judge Anthony Cilebrezwe of Cleveland, Ohio, came in a case which entered the courts in 1980. The order is effective with the fall term of school, which started Monday. "It is clear," the opinion said, "that far from having achieved a military system, the board has to perpetuate the dual owl system. The Appeals Court directed the university to prepare a definite timetable providing for the establishment of a full university school system in the city. News Briefs By The Associated Press Docking Campaign Costs TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Docking has filed his statement of personal expenditures in the Aug. 1 primary election campaign, listing only the $200 filing fee for the office of governor. The law requires candidates to file their statement of personal campaign expenditures within 30 days of the election. Morris Kay Docking's statement last Saturday, listing expenditures of $1,444, including the $200 filing fee. Campaign organizations are not required to file their list of expenditures until Dec. 31. U.S. Embassy Bombed ATHENS-A bomb exploded in the U.S. embassy Tuesday but no one was injured, an embassy spokesman said. The building was evacuated after the blast. Thirty minutes before the explosion an anonymous person telephoned The Associated Press office in Boston that a bomb would go off in the embassy "in a few minutes." The embassy declared no attacks by groups opposed to the army-backed Greek regime. They charge that the U.S. government keeps the Greek regime in power. When a blood sample is drawn, a battery-operated, mobile unit—called the needle—pushes to the bed where it reads the number on the wrist band and the number on the tube containing the blood. The writing is done with a hot electric wire which heats the blood in the tube's heat-sensitive label. Food Aid to Vietnam The sample then goes to the kit containing typing and cross-matching with blood among those made blood among the Red Cross for transfusion. WASHINGTON-The United States will pour $7.2 million into South Vietnam's war budget under a new Food for Peace agreement announced Tuesday by the Agriculture Department. Department officials said South Vietnam would get a total of $8.78 million worth of wheat, feed grain, oil seeds, dry milk, tallow, tobacco and cotton. System Prevents Transfusion Error WASHINGTON (AP)—Georgetown University Hospital announced Tuesday development of an automated system to "prevent human error in linking the blood" for transfusion purposes. The system starts with the identification wrist bracelet given with hospital patient at admission with his individual number on it. The hospital's announcement described it as a "streamlined identification system to save lives by preventing clerical errors and most common fatal errors which occur in blood transfusions." The development was achieved by researchers at Georgetown's campus, and Mr. Robert headed by Dr. Robert W. Chambers, associates professor of history. Tony T. Dechant, president of the National Farmers Union, said some wheat exporting firms had "been privacy to advance information" in the federal grain export subsidies and credit arrangements. The system, employing three special devices, sounds an alarm if a mismatch of blood is imaged. If the transfusion procedure Dechant mentioned four individuals, including former Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Clarence D. Palmyb, who resumes spring for a job with Continental Grain Company of New York. "The private club atmosphere that has been created by grain trade officials moving in and out of the Department of Agriculture administration constitutes a hateful error the worst kind." Dehdan said. Palmby led trade talks in Moscow last April, which helped set the ground work for the agreements. After those procedures are completed, the number is again read and transferred by a second machine to the proper blood bag Ambassador To France Steps Down SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. Abbott resigned as U.S. ambassador to France, citing reasons of health, Western White House said Tuesday. received from the Red Cross, and the tagged transfusion bag then goes to the operating room or needed wherever. There, the number on the patient's wrist and the number on the blood bag are checked by a nurse. Then the announcement said. Union Leader Says Grain Deals Secret WASHINGTON(AP)—A farm leader charged Tuesday that the U.S. government has shutting of grain trade officials in and out of government jobs have not to advantages for some businesses with the Soviet Union. The former IBM executive had received a surprise April 16, 1970, and told President Nixon in a letter dated Aug. 16 the Park climate aggravated his Continental and a number of other export finches that live in the Arctic officials believe it is $1-billion Soviet order of U.S. grain, most meat, during the winter months. On July 8, the White House announced an arrangement in which the Soviet government pected to buy $750 million worth of grain, mostly feed, during the war. Since then, however, the Russians have bought huge and fast cars and the first year order could exceed the total credit package. Dechant also mentioned Clifford G. Pulvermacher, former Director of the Department's Export Marketing Service, who retired this summer and took a job with Bunge. Inc. New York, another large export firm. Further, Dechant will, William Pearce, a White house trade repretoire author for Cargill & Company, Minneapolis, another export firm envisioned by Dechant, the figure mentioned by Dechant is George Shanklin, now assistant sales manager for the Export Sales Service, formerly with Burberry. Dechant's comments followed a report which appalled all concerning the food industry, including bread prices and alleged involvement of former government officials. On Monday, Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal, D-N.Y., said he would ask the Civil Service Commission For the finest in dining and drinking with friends. 806 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas and the office of inspector general in the Agriculture Department to look into the matter of what industry takes grain industry jobs." Located through the south doors of the Union next to Dyche Nathaniel E. Kossack, the department's inspector general, said Tuesday he had not seen McHall's request and, in the meantime, his investigation into the activities of Palmby and Pulvermacher. Landon Chides McGovern KANSAS CITY(AP)—Alf M. Landon, the Republican nominee for president 36 years ago, said that the economy and war or peace in the world were the two major issues in the presidential campaign, and hided Democrat Sen. George W. Bush, who landed ininton was inconsistency. The 84-year-old patrilarch of the Kansas Park, addressing the Mercury Club here at the luncheon, was advised of McGovern's newest welfare rescue proposal shortly before he spoke. "McGovern seems to be having as much trouble in taking a firm stand on his fiscal proposals as he did in picking a vice-presidential running mate," he said. Schmitz On Ballot In Kansas Landon, who remains active in business and maintains a keen interest in politics and world affairs, is an advocate of Democratic Congresses since the New Deal days of Franklin D. Roosevelt. He has been a "America's present disastrous inflationary whirlpool" because he had continued to overspend. Hall also presented to McDonald the withdrawal certificate from Gambia Gov. George C. Wallace and Couture of Muskego, Wis. He compared Nixon's "realistic, steady foreign policy" of sub- tition to "containment of communism" and competition for the policy of TOPEKA (AP)—The Conservative party of Kansas placed on the Kansas November general election ballot Tuesday the names of U.S. Rep. John G. Schlumberger of California and Thomas J. Anderson of Tennessee for president and vice-president, respectively. containment by force," with what McGovern has proposed. Ry C. Hall, Manhattan, chairman of the Kansas Conservative party, presented to Lavina McDonald, assistant secretary of state for elections, the certificates of nomination for and Anderson from the American party of the United States. Landon, Kansas governor for two terms in the 1930s who lost the presidential race in 1936 to Roosevelt, said Nixon's "bold" stance against the peace that will last more than one generation is working." He concluded: "As far as I am concerned, there is only one issue in this case: the peace of our family. My grandchildren will not have to go to war. As far as the economy is concerned, we cannot solve their own problem." MARRIED STUDENTS Concerned About the $400.00 Maternity Deductibler Since the new Student Blue Cross and Blue Shield policy requires YOU to pay the first $200.00 of Maternity HOSPITAL expense PLUS the first $200.00 of Maternity Doctor's expense, you may be interested in a plan that pays Hospital and Doctor's expenses from the VERY FIRST DOLLAR. 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