KU
kansan
79th Year
A student newspaper serving KU
WEATHER SUNNY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, September 13, 1968
KU Scene...1968
The image contains six black and white photographs, each depicting a different scene.
1. A group of students in a discussion.
2. An athlete leaping into the air in a basketball game.
3. A person sitting at a desk with a cup and coffee.
4. Two people sitting on a bench under a tree.
5. An individual resting their head on a table with a cup and saucer.
6. A couple sitting together on a bench.
These images likely represent moments from an educational setting or a community event.
---
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
On the gap...
The generation gap has made the big time. J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, has added college campuses to his list of dangers to American life.
"It would be foolhardy for educators, public officials and law enforcement officers to ignore or dismiss lightly the revolutionary terroism invading college campuses. It is a serious threat to both the academic community and a lawful and orderly society," Hoover warned in a press statement a week ago.
This has a tendency to put all generations upfight. Older people, who swear by Hoover and the law and order ideal, immediately see the specter of anarchy in every student request for voice in college and national affairs. They insist students should stick to studying their books.
College students feel beleaguered and complain that adult society is ignoring the voice of the future.
And the generation gap widens even more.
All of this makes university life confusing to the freshmen and the oldtimers.
Should students have more voice in campus management or should university learning be unstructured? Or is complete administration guidance necessary and should students go to college, tote books and keep university convention intact? Or is the answer somewhere in between?
If it sounds scary, don't be alarmed; more frightening dilemmas wait beyond the diploma.
This year's freshman, born in approximately 1950, have had much exposure to the notoriety of student demands for voice and student riots. They also have heard the arguments of the growing ideal of law and order above all else.
But before choosing to be a flaming campus liberal or a staid conservative or a combination of both, take a long cool look at what you're thinking.
But do believe in what you believe. If you decide to accept the values you were weaned upon, whatever those may be, know why. If you decide to rebel, whether it be conservatism or liberalism, know why.
The charge of hypocrisy aimed so often now at the older generation's values might have less validity in the next if both the liberals and the conservatives of tomorrow were sure of the ideals they're forming in college by Allison Steimel - Editorial Editor
The Hill With It by john hill
The silver-haired man walked up to the Campanile and put a dime in the slot.
"Good evening, Mr. Phelps," began the tape-recorder from deep inside the Campanile, addressing the man who strangely resembled the father on the old "Fury" show who had to ride out to save Joey and Packy whenever the tiger escaped from a traveling circus each week.
"To be concise," said the considerate tape-recorder, "KU enrollment is a mess. Your assignment, should you choose to accept it, will be to have your Enrollment Impossible forces enroll a student who needs required courses to graduate and have him actually get those courses. As usual, should you or any of your Enrollment Impossible forces be caught, the Chancellor will disavow any knowledge of your existence."
Somewhat awed by the awesome task, Phelps looked at some photographs and enrollment instructions.
"The photograph you are now looking at is a cross between a gorilla and a porcupine," the tape-recorder said.
"But what do you get when you cross a gorilla and a porcupine?" asked Phelps, wishing Fury could help.
"We don't know, but it would probably get through those lines pretty fast. Do you have any other questions?"
"Yes. I understand the MWF abbreviation, but what does the R in the TR listings mean; "
"That's for the classes to be held on Rursday. God-like, the administration has created a new day."
“Oh, and another thing.” the recording continued, “Campus cops, wearing helmets and carrying billy clubs will form a ring around the tables where the required courses are being hoarded by those liars behind the tables. Any students attempting to fulfill his requirements will be mayor-daleyed back away from the table. Any questions?”
Phelps carefully weighed the decision in his mind.
"Tape-recorder," he finally said, addressing the tape-recorder, "we've had some pretty difficult assignments, which we've overcome, not to mention getting used to that snare drum in the background all the time. But we choose not to accept this mission. It's just too impossible."
"Jim," began the tape-recorder, in a sad but fatherly way, "we never told you what would happen if you ever refused an assignment, did we?"
The tape-recorder thought for a moment, and then got a sly grin on his face, neither of which is easy for a tape-recorder.
Phelps panicked and turned to run, but self-destructed in five seconds, leaving only a wisp of smoke to hear the Campanile serenely tolling the hour over the KU campus.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, for students enrolled at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, gender or race are expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Published by Sigma Delta Chi,
Professional Journalism Fraternity
Alan T. Jones—President
Ron Yates—Vice President
Rose Rowland—President
Allen Winchester—Treasurer
The regularly published Daily Kansan for the 1968-69 school year will begin Tuesday, Sept. 17.
1968-69. Boards or bullets
Enrollment system archaic
Enrollment procedures are often criticized. Even attempting to organize a smooth enrollment system at a university the size of KU is a major stumbling block.
But enrollment, a teeth-gnashing experience for most, certainly can be made less frustrating in the future.
Paying attention to information, signs, bulletins and people who are in the enrollment areas to aid the student, can facilitate enrollment immensely. But when you can't find the signs! For example, many students reached the last table with class cards in disarray and with no idea of what to expect when they at last reached the end of the line. This information was posted last year in the stairwell to the main floor of the union.
This year, because the College-within-the-College occupied this hallway, students had to find other ways down from the class selection areas. Although signs were posted, many students did not see them and hence the final confusion.
More confusion arose over the definition of graduating seniors. The registrar's office was swamped with calls from first semester seniors wondering if they had to abide by the alphabetical schedule which applied only to freshmen, sophomores, and juniors.
At the class card tables often the lines were
long for a particular subject, say Political Science I, and ridiculously short for other upper division courses in the same field. Some people manning the less frequented subject lines logically should have been placed to help those enrolling students in the more popular and larger courses.
Students enrolling early must realize that class openings have to be held back for those enrolling later. Some people are going to have to take classes with miserable hours but if a person is unfortunate enough to enroll late he should not be totally deprived of a chance for a decent schedule.
One of the principal problems was handling those CWC students who came in the north doors of the Union instead of the south doors, where the CWC enrollment was held. Many tried to go past the regular checkpoints instead of reporting to their specified area. Signs should have been placed outside the north doors.
Much of the confusion of enrollment is avoided on other campuses by pre-enrollment scheduling. After an abortive attempt at partial pre-enrollment last year the University has decided to wait before it is attempted again.
A systematic approach, one which will make pre-enrollment feasible and not end in the confusion that resulted last year, is necessary. Hopefully the University will not wait too long before attempting this program again.
GENUINE IMITATION
FAKE ALLIGATOR
$16.95
GENUINE IMITATION
FAKE ALLIGATOR
$16.95
Lady Bostonians
Beautiful imposters! Handsome slip-on casual in supple,
antiqued, alligator-print calfskin. Rich mahogany for color ...
tassel and laced collar for fashion ... handsewn vamps for com-
fort and fit. A "steal" at the price. Come choose your pair today!
M'Coy's
SHOES
813 Mass. St.
Phone VI 3-2091
Lady Bostonians
M'Coy'S SHOES
4.
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Sororities announce
Diane Louise Aplin, Solomon;
Karyn Lee Baker, Wichita; Susan S.
Bick, Shawnee Mission; Mary Kay
Miller, Marianne; Judith Fay Bula, Hays; Alice Beatrice
Carter, Richards-Gebaur A.F.B., Mo.;
Nicki Jean Claycap, Strain; Maureen
Leslie Cleveland, Omaha, Nebr.; Janet
Jones, Lori White; Beth
Louise Dbowbe, Prairie Village.
Alpha Chi Omega
Rosalynn Lee Finney, Topeka;
Constance Gilham, Hg. 3d Bde.
4th Arrnd. Div; APO 09133; Mary Ann Hewitt, Ottawa; Kathleen Donnel Hoopman, Prairie Village; Nancy June Hornsby, Lawrence; Susan Virginia Ingraham, Leawood; Marilyn Kay Johnson, Manhattan; Kate Kasmar, Sarah (Sally) Jane Lesow; Mae Illene Lisdorm, Clay Center;
(See Sororities page 15.)
Janilynn Long, Anita, iA; Muriel
Ann Marshall, Atchison; Judith All-
i
WELCOME STUDENTS
SCHEDULE OF SERVICES
Sunday
Bible Study 9:30 a.m.
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.
Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Bible Study 7:30 p.m.
FOR TRANSPORTATION CALL:
VI 2-0276
VI 2-8162
VI 3-3210
CHURCH OF CHRIST
25th & Missouri
At
McConnell Lbr., We've Got:
- Lumber and Plywood cut to order
- Do-it-yourself shelving materials
- Homecoming Supplies including standard 1" poultry netting
Visit our newly opened Concord Shop
For
- Canvas
- Stretcher Frames made to order
- Oil and Acrylic Paints
- Unusual Gift Ideas
- Painting Classes
- Painting Classes
Mon. thru Thurs.—7-9 p.m.
We're open Mon. thru Fri. Till 9 p.m. on Thurs.
McLonnie Lumber
844 E.13th
Where Can You
VI 3-3877
Find
All of These?
Indian Dahl
Indian Dahl
Tahini
Nori
Bircher muesli
Black Beans
Rose Flower Water
Wisconsin Cheeses
Raw Honey
VI 2-6238
Raw Honey
Black Strap Molasses Dietetic Foods Low Sodium Foods Foods for Alergy Diets Books Hoffman Hi-Proteen Min & Mineral Supple
Vitamin & Mineral Supplements
7 Grain Bread
7 Grain Bread
DOWNTOWN HEALTH
AND FOREIGN FOODS
"Best Foods in Town"
20 E. 9th VI 2-2771
THE MUSIC OF CINEMAS
THE BATH HOUSE
CRITICAL
THIS MOTION PICTURE
SHOULD BE KEPT OUT OF
THE REACH OF CHILDREN
CAUTION:
20th Century Five presents
DEBORAH DAVID
KERR NIVEN
in FRIDER COOK'S
Pictures with
MIL
SMA
A KARN HARPER PRODUCTION Color by Dee Lunc.
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065
GO! JAYHAWKS
FIGHT! JAYHAWKS
WIN! JAYHAWKS
Lawrence, Kans.
SOAP ON A ROPE!!
The Bath House also has the most complete line of toilet and bath articles in Lawrence. Stop in and see us as soon as possible and ask about our bridal registration service.
This great new idea for gifts, souvenirs, or personal use can only be found at the Bath House, and the best thing about it is, it's usable. The special KU imprint remains as long as you use it and makes Soap On A Rope ideal for KU students.
841 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.
"Like 'The Graduate,' it condemns all middle-aged status, sex and scotch! Will no doubt intrigue the under-30 protest set!" —Kathleen Carrall New York Daily News
Burt Lancaster
The Swimmer
TECHNICOLOR'
Suggested For Mature Audiences
NOW!
MATINEE—SAT. & SUN.
Granada
THEATRE ... telephone VI 3-5780
EVENINGS----7:15-9:15
NOW!
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATER + West on Highway 40
OPEN 6:30 — SHOW STARTS DUSK
No.1
Paul Newman
"COOL HAND LUKE"
TECHNICOLOR
Academy Award Winner George Kennedy
No.2
John Wayne
"GREEN BERETS"
David Jannsen Pat Wayne
TECHNICOLOR
---
0
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
Graduate students feel draft pressure
Thanks to Uncle Sam and the Selective Service System, the KU Graduate School table has seen less business this year than in previous enrollments.
The Graduate School could possibly lose several hundred students since the Selective Service's decision Feb. 16 to rule out draft deferments on the basis of graduate study in any field except the medical specialties cited by law.
Since the ruling does not affect graduate students already in their second or subsequent year of graduate study, many graduate students have returned to KU. However, there has been a drop in 1968 graduates and graduate students who entered the school last fall.
Just how great a drop in enrollment the school will experience will not be known until enrollment has been completed,
but it may be heavy among 1968 graduates.
This drop will be partly compensated for, however, by the return of many Vietnam veterans who are entering the school.
On the national level, Pentagon authorities estimate 68,000 graduate students will be satched up by the draft. However, experts like Mrs. Betty Vetter, executive director of the Scientific Manpower Commission in Washington, D.C., predict more than twice the Pentagon's estimate. They say the total will be more like 175,000 men pulled out of graduate schools.
In the meantime, graduate students across the country can only worry about their futures.
The Selective Service System's decision was brought about primarily by cries that a moneyed few could keep out of the service indefinitely. A young man
could enter a graduate school and leave not only with a higher degree, but with a wife and family and perhaps an "essential occupation," all of which would diminish his chances of being called into service.
Congress passed a law in July, 1967, which continued graduate deferments in medicine and the ministry, but left it up to the National Security Council to determine what other "essential fields" would receive deferments.
Their answer: none.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Those KU graduates and first year graduate students who have not yet been drafted are walking on thin ice. They still may be called up. If this happens, they will be dumped into the 19-to-26-year-old draft pool, most of them as the oldest men in it.
WAREHOUSE #1 Back-To-School
Special
WAREHOUSE SPECIAL
Hollywood Bed, 3/3 or 4/6
$49.00
Coffee Tables & Step Tables
$9.95 & $7.95
or
3 in a carton $21.95
3/3 or 4/6 Inner Spring or
Mattress Box Spring
$79.00—Now $44.00
Extra Heavy Bed Frames $12.95
3/3 or 4/6 6 in. Foam Mattress
and Box Springs
$119.00—Now $58.00
60x80 Queen Size
$179.95—Now $119.95
Bunk Beds—$159.95
Now $99.00
Sofa Bed—$179.95 Now $99.00
700 MASS.
Hide-a-bed—$199.00
Now $157.00
5-pc. Dinette Set—$79.95
Now $54.00
Coffee Tables and Step Tables
$24.95—Now $19.95
Free Parking—Open All Day Saturday
VI 2-7409
A New Church for A New Age
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
1 block west of Holiday Inn
Worship 9 & 11 a.m.
Church School 9:45 a.m.
Student Reception
This Sunday September 15 9:45 a.m.
— Pastors —
Harold M. Mallett Reinhold Schmidt, Jr.
CHEAP THRILLS
BIG BROTHER & THE HOLDING COMPANY
CROSS THRILLS
BIG BROTHER
HOLIDING COMPANY
JANIS SOPRANO
MUSICAL
...CHEAP!! reg. 5.79
$3.99
KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO
Malls Shopping Center
---
65c PITCHERS
Friday, September 13th
11:30-12:30 2:30-3:30 7:30-8:30
GASLIGHT TAVERN
Cold Beer Sandwiches French Fries Fast Service
C
- Next Door to the Union
frivibyob 1098 odmotqs 13, 809
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Press draws praise and criticism
The Fourth Estate, the press, was attacked on two fronts last month for entirely different purposes.
While news coverage of the Democratic convention in Chicago was being subjected to harrassments, nearly 500 journalism educators meeting at the University of Kansas examined means of making all news coverage more effective.
The 51st annual convention of the Association for Education in Journalism (AEJ) moved beyond the recruiting and training of responsible journalists into areas of how to handle ticklish news-public relations situations.
The journalism administrator was studied in relation to the academic revolution, then was reversed and explored as the student protest movement in relation to mass media and communications teachers.
Lloyd Norman, Pentagon reporter for Newsweek, and Robert Pearman, national-world editor for the Kansas City Star, discussed press coverage of the Vietnam war, noting that 19 correspondents have been killed. Roscoe Born, associate editor of the National Observer, Washington, D.C., spoke about "wolfpack" reporting as substitute for thorough research. "The Use of Political Polling in Political Reporting" and "Problems in the Coverage of Civil Disorders" are two more of the many topics discussed.
Dr. Walter Menninger of Topeka, a psychiatrist and member of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, spoke on "The Roots of Violence: Some Implications for the Mass Media."
"Dehumanization allows people to do things to other people because the others are not 'people,'" he said. "To the hippies and yippies in Chicago, police are not people; they are cops. And to the police, the demonstrators are scum."
He cited one of the nation's ills as "the insecurity of so many people who have to believe we are always right, that we have never ered in our relations with other governments and that we are error-free."
He called violence a communication of last resort that generally occurs when more civilized communication fails.
Sitting on a four-member panel to consider the student protest movement at the convention's final session, Dr. Menninger said, "Too often professors teach subjects, not people.
many professors are not trained to get feedback from their students." Although the panel included no student, it unanimously sided with the student voice in this movement.
The Rev. Ronald Sundbye of First United Methodist Church, in Lawrence, suggested many adults are too repelled by the appearance of some students to listen to them. As a result, they have no understanding of what students are trying to say.
Several convention commentators—including John Colburn, editor and publisher of the Wichita Eagle and Beacon—pointed to the humanities as the aspect of journalism education that needs greatest attention. Colburn included the basic sciences in his indictment.
Many films are offered this year
Movie fans in the KU family will have lots of options this year.
So far 121 dates have been scheduled by the established campus film series: Student Union Activities' classical series, 24; SUA's popular series, 82; SUA orientation week programs, 4; the Universities series, mostly foreign films. 11.
The total will be boosted by the new KU Film Club's offerings, which were extensive in the spring semester. tee of the Highway Research Board of the National Science Foundation. Also several academic departments now occasionally sponsor films.
Ask Any Upperclassman...
At K.U.
ACME'S FIRST
IN
Student Laundry & Dry Cleaning
Acme
Laundry and Dry Cleaners
MALLS
SHOPPING
CENTER
VI 3-0895
DOWNTOWN
1111
Massachusetts
VI 3-5155
HILLCREST
SHOPPING
CENTER
VI 3-0928
Acme
If you could read 1200 words per minute... what would you do this term besides study?
Think we're kidding?
Not at all. Hundreds of Kansas University students who have taken the Reading Dynamics course read at this speed and up to ten times faster than the rate at which they began . . . with absolutely no loss in comprehension.
What's the gimmick?
No gimmick. You're taught to develop a skill whereby you learn to read much faster, with equal or better comprehension, and are able to recall the material you've read whenever you need it. And you can apply this skill to all types of material, textbooks, novels, technical material, newspapers, etc.
No more cramming
Just think how great it would be if you could cover a week's homework in one day! With all that leisure time you could read more books for pure pleasure, write that long overdue letter to your congressman, explore the mystique of meditation . . . (or, if you really can't think of any other way to spend your free time, you can always read the books you want to read, just for pure pleasure).
Free demonstrations
Learn how you can acquire this amazing skill by attending a free demonstration at the Kansas Union. The schedule is listed below. At this demonstration you will get all your questions answered about Reading Dynamics . . . and find out how many of your fellow students have applied the Reading Dynamics technique to improving their grades, enhance their education, and gain the time to really enjoy college life!
Plan to attend one of these free demonstrations
these free demonstrations
Monday, September 16: 7:00 & 8:30 p.m. ___ Kansas Union*
Tuesday, September 17: 7:00 & 8:30 p.m. ___ Kansas Union*
Wednesday, September 18: 7:00 & 8:30 p.m. ___ Kansas Union*
Thursday, September 19: 7:00 & 8:30 p.m. ___ Kansas Union*
Classes meet once a week for eight weeks
Saturdays, 9:00 to 12:00 a.m., Beginning September 21
Mondays, 3:00 to 6:00 p.m., beginning September 23
Tuesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 24
Wednesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 25
All classes meet in the comfortable, well-lighted Reading Dynamics Institute, located in the Wesley Foundation Building, across from the Student Union. Clip out the coupon below, pick a time that fits your schedule, and have fun becoming a Dynamic Reader this fall.
Eradyn Wood
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
EST. 1974
1314 Oread Road
Wesley Foundation Building
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) VI 3-6424
TO: Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute
Wesley Foundation—1314 Oread
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
I understand that I am under no obligation and that no salesman will call.
Please send descriptive brochure
Name ...
Name ...
Street ... Phone ...
City ... State ... Zip ...
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Salary increase shown
Latest placement bureau statistics at KU indicate a general increase in average salary for the 1968 bachelor's degree graduates over comparable 1967 salaries.
The increase, if any, varies according to the field of study. In the School of Business, salaries for B.S. degree graduates averaged as high as $675 per month, a 9 per cent gain over the 1967 average. Those Master of Business Administration grads averaged $890 per month, also a 9 per cent increase.
Bachelor's degree graduates in engineering also could expect—and got—larger beginning salaries. But the $27 monthly increase over the average for February graduates isn't as dramatic as the Business School's 9 per cent.
From June to June, however, the picture improves somewhat with an average salary differential of $58. That's based on an average of $781 per month for this June's grads. A master's degree last June would boost the average income to $925 monthly; a doctorate, to $1,123 monthly.
Of 67 journalism school graduates, 14 (21 per cent) went to work with newspapers, usually either in advertising or in newsp editorial departments. They represent an 8 per cent increase over the nine (13 per cent) hired by newspapers last year. Beginning monthly salaries for that 21 per cent averaged about $496, nearly an 8 per cent increase over last year's average of $460. The lowest newspaper salary was $400 compared to last year's $360; the highest, $600, the same as last year's high. Business ranked second in attracting journalism graduates (9 per cent); radio-TV, second (8 per cent).
The military trend affecting the School of Journalism coincides with that in the Business School, which had 31 per cent graduates with military commitments this year, compared to 8 per cent last year.
But graduates of the two schools differ considerably in where they work. About 40 per cent from journalism stays in
Kansas compared to about 10 per cent from business.
About 75 per cent of the
business grads, however, does stay in the Midwest, about 25 per cent going to Missouri.
Looks great...
writes great...
is great!
EBERHARD FABER'S NOBLOT DESK SET with your college emblem
Two famous NOBLOT Ball-Point Pens—one black, one red—set in modern chrome holders on deep-lustre black base.
$298
Handsome, handy, perfect for your desk.
(with emblem)
at college bookstore only
Pick up an Eberhard Faber TR 35™ porous point pen, too. With Perma-Moist®
Point. Writes with a thin, strong line every time! Eight colors. 69¾
EF
EF EBERHARD FABER
® WILKES BARRE, PA. • NEW YORK • CANADA • GERMANY • VENEZUELA • COLOMBIA
searching for an unusual gift
for a special person?
Search No More!
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking on The Malls
THE MALLS
shopping center
ACRES of Plaza PARKING
Tempo — Jennings Donut Shop — Maupintour — Blaine and Jesse’s — Mall's Barbershop — Kief's — Andrews Gifts — Herb's Studio — George's Hobby Shop — Laundromat — Dry Cleaners — TG&Y — Rexall Drugs — Safeway Topsy International
23rd and LOUISEANA
1711 West 23rd
— WATCH FOR OUR BUS—
THE MALS
THE MALLS shopping center ACRES of Free PARKING
THE FRIENDLY FOLKS AT HILLCREST Shopping Center
9th and Iowa
SAY...
Welcome to Lawrence
RANEY HILLCREST DRUG
BLANE and JESSE'S SALON
RUSTY'S HILLCREST FOOD CENTER
Insurance Counselors CHANEY ASSOCIATES
HILLCREST HARDWARE
DUCKWALLS
HILLCREST BOWL, INC.
HILLCREST BARBER SHOP
SEARS ROEBUCK & CO.
MUNICIPAL AIRPORT
WEST TURNPIKE INTERCHANGE
EAST TURNPIKE INTERCHANGE
AUTHORITY
LAVERAGE COUNTRY CLUB
CENTennial SHOPPING CENTER
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
OAK HILL CEMETERY
MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY
LAVERAGE HIGH SCHOOL
HARVELL INDIAN INSTITUTE
CLIP & SAVE
THIS CITY MAP
Courtesy of
Hillcrest Shopping Center Merchants
Hillcrest Theaters 123
UNIVERSITY STATE BANK
MILLER & MIDYETT Realtors-Insurors
STATION "B" POST OFFICE
OPTOMETRIST
HILLCREST MEDICAL CENTER
THE SOUND RECORDS and STEREO COMPONENTS
KIRSTEN'S SPORTSWEAR
DR. HAROLD PIPPIN Chiropractor
ACME HILLCREST Cleaners and Laundry
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
N. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Hitt promoted Kelly becomes KU registrar
For the 3,000 new freshmen at KU this semester, enrollment is a strange and tedious process. Getting admitted to the University is bad enough, but having to stand in endless lines to enroll seems unendurable.
But new freshmen are not the only ones new to the enrollment process. A reorganization in the Office of Admissions and Records over the summer has brought about a change in several positions.
James K. Hitt, former director of the Office of Admissions and Records and longtime registrar, was appointed as director of records and system development.
William L. Kelly, who has served as assistant registrar since 1961, took over as registrar. Max F. Fuller, former associate director of admissions, was named director.
The Office of Admissions is now a separate entity under the general supervision of the dean of student affairs, William M. Balfour.
Provost James R. Surface said the change provides direction to the new and growing area of information gathering and analysis created by the capabilities of data processing and the University's Computation Center.
Hitt has served as KU registrar since 1940 except for four years during WW II. He holds both bachelor and master's degrees from KU in mathematics and taught at Dodge City Junior College and Wichita State University before coming to KU.
Kelly, in addition to his duties as registrar, is also director of the 60-piece KU Pep Band. He teaches classes in wind and percussion instruments for the Fine Arts School and gives private instruction in several areas.
Fuller, a candidate for his doctor of eduction degree, holds a degree in education from KU. He was appointed as associate director of admissions in 1965 after teaching and counseling in high school for four years.
Parents Day announced
Parents Day, honoring parents of new students at KU, will be Oct. 5 when the Jayhawkers play the University of New Mexico football team in Memorial Stadium.
The Band Day program has been set for the same date.
Offices of the schools in the University enrolling freshmen will be open during the morning. Parents will eat at the residences of their sons and daughters or at a special buffet in the Kansas Union. A Parents section has been reserved in Memorial Stadium.
DON'T BE A NO-ACCOUNT STUDENT AT K-U...
ROCKCHA
JAYHAWK
MUSEZ
GOOD
1965
OPEN A CHECKING
ACCOUNT AT
NUMBER ONE
IN LAWRENCE
Get your very own Jayhawk checks personalized to prompt a proper response from people when you want 'em cashed!
Most students prefer the dime- check plan, where they needn't maintain a minimum balance. Some bank at Number One downtown, 8th and Massachusetts. Others like our foot-of-the-hill patio and motor bank. Still others never come in at all—they bank by mail. (Our Bankit service)
And we offer the incredible credit card, BankAmericard. It buys 'most anything.
1st
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE
8th AND MASSAGNUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 88044 • VI 3-0152
DRIVE-IN BANK AT 9th AND TENMESSEE ST.
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FRESHMEN
Qualify for a Commission in the U.S. NAVAL RESERVE through the FOUR YEAR NAVAL ROTC CONTRACT PROGRAM
ADVANTAGES
- Six week paid summer training program at advance level
- Free uniforms
- Free textbooks for NROTC classes
- Monthly subsistence allowance at advance level
- Five different duty options available Surface, Aviation, Marine Corps (ground & aviation). Supply, Engineering
- Exempt from draft
- Proud service with rich heritage and traditions
ELIGIBILITY
- U.S. citizen, l'7 yrs of age and not more than 21
vrs. of age by June 30, 1968.
- Physically qualified. Waivers for defective vision to 20/100 correctable to 20/20
- Agree to undertake Navy Specified University Courses and Navy Professional Courses.
for further information, contact
NROTC UNIT, ROOM 115 MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING, Telephone UN 4-3161
The staff at Ray Christian Jewelers would like to extend a cordial welcome to all of the KU students returning to Lawrence and especially those enrolling for the first time. Remember, Ray Christian is Law-
STUDIO CINEMA
CARATTE
DIAMONDS
DARIEN $300
WEDDING RING 87.50
CATALINA $250
ALSO TO 1650
WEDDING RING 125
KAYLA
MAJESTIC $500
ALSO $250 TO 1975
For the love of your life
Your engagement ring is priceless so be sure you choose wisely. Every Keepsake engagement diamond is flawless, of extra fine color, and precise modern cut.
REGISTERED
Keepsake
DIAMOND RINGS
Ray Christian
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
809 Mass. Special College Terms VI 3-5432
Friday, September 13, 1968
1 2 3 4 5
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Director recalls many changes in film library
During the 32 years he has been director of the Film Library and Visual Instruction Bureau, Assistant Professor Fred Montgomery has seen many changes in visual aid.
Montgomery retired from the Bureau July 1 to devote full time to teaching visual aid courses and administration courses to graduate students. He will still be associated with the department, but will no longer deal with the budget, personnel or with the selection of films.
Montgomery graduated from KU in 1925 with a major in education and a minor in political science and history. He was a high school teacher at McPherson, Kans., for three years where he taught history and coached debate. He taught one year at Lawrence High before acting as principal at Paola, Kans., before coming to the visual aid bureau.
HE REMEMBERS a letter he wrote in 1953 predicting the advent of smaller film and video tape, both of which have come true.
Montgomery also recalls the first film strips and 35 millimeter silent black and white movies at the beginning of his career and how progress has moved to sound and color and more compact equipment.
Five pass CPA exam
Five KU graduates were among 36 persons who passed the certified public accountant examination given last May in Lawrence and Wichita. The exam was given to 209 persons in Kansas and 15,000 throughout the nation.
The KU graduates were: Richard H. Baker; a 1965 graduate from Wichita; Arthur V. Neis, a 1964 masters recipient from Overland Park; Will G. Price III, a 1967 graduate from Wichita; Roger Alan Rieper, a 1967 graduate from Ann Arbor, Mich.; and William B. Taylor, a 1967 graduate from Chanute.
Penneys
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
Slip-ons by Towncraft . . . Classic Campus Transportation
BEEF ROLL STYLE slip-on with handsome black spruce grain leather uppers, light in weight, long wearing Neolite $ ^{ \textcircled{*} } $ soles and heels. Sizes $ 6 \frac{1}{2} $ to 13. 12.99
HI LO MOC SEAM slip-on with genuine handsewn fronts. Smooth black leather uppers. Soles and heels of tough Neolite. Sizes 6 $ _{1/2} $ to 14. 11.99
COUNTRY CLUB
WEEK
SEPT 9 DINKS SERPS RED DOGS THURSDAY
SEPT 10 SERPS RED DOGS WEDNIGHT
SEPT 11 TAPTERS THURSDAY
SEPT 12 RYE FRIDAY
SEPT 13 FLIPPERS SATURDAY
AT THE RED DOG INSTA
FRI.—THE RYE
SAT.—THE FABULOUS FLIPPERS—8 P.M.
THE MALS shopping center
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
Tempo — Jennings Donut Shop — Maupintour — Blaine and Jesse's — Mall's Barbershop — Kief's — Andrews Gifts — Herb's Studio — George's Hobby Shop — Laundromat — Dry Cleaners — TG&Y — Rexall Drugs — Safawy Topsy International
23rd and LOUISIANA
1711 West 23rd
— WATCH FOR OUR BUS —
THE MALS
THE MALS shopping center ACRES of Free PARKING
shopping center
ACRES
of Free
PARKING
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
Air Conditioned
BOWLING WINTER LEAGUES NOW FORMING
12 Modern Lanes
Winter Leagues
Sept. 22-Sun.-KU Faculty 6:00
Sun.-Mixed League 8:30
Sept. 23-Mon.-AJBC Junior Bowlers (8-12 yrs.) .. 4:00
Sept. 25-Wed.-All Star Scrotch ... 6:30
Wed.-Fraternity League ... 6:00
Wed.-Independent League ... 8:30
Sept. 26-Thurs.-Open 6:00
Thurs.-All Campus League 8:30
ACW ING.
Special * 4 games for $1.00 Saturday & Sunday till 6:00 p.m.
Jay Bowl Student Union
UNITED MINISTRIES
presents
"The Confrontation In Chicago: Issues for the New Generation"
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1968 - 5:45 p.m.
H H H
The United Methodist Church sent observers to the Democratic Convention in Chicago. They have come back with hours of tapes, hundreds of photographs and some disturbing observations. These observers will speak:
Rev. Van Anderson,Associate Director Methodist Metropolitan Planning Commission
Mr. Larry Agnew, Planning Director Regional Health & Welfare Council
Rev. Phil Lawson, Executive Director Methodist Inner-City Parish
Several University of Kansas students who were in Chicago will respond to these observers.
Wesley Foundation
1314 Oread Across Street from Kansas Union
5:00 p.m. Evening Meal-50c
5:45 p.m. Program
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
University funds to 63 students
Greater University Fund Scholarships: Cartrell Cross, Many, La., sophomore; Walter Pentz, sophomore, Ottawa; J. Gary Barnes, Overland Park, sophomore; Walter Ross, Leawood, senior; James Yost, Pittsburgh, sophomore; Patricia Scott, Topeka, junior; Steven Davis, Lyons, senior; Maxine Berry, Kansas City, junior; Chester Day, Chanute, senior; Daniel Lyons, Kansas City, sophomore; Kathleen Currey, Kensington, sophomore; Rodney K. Odgers, Seneca, sophomore; Beverly Schwarz, Marysville, sophomore; Linda Krell, Sioux Falls, S.D., junior; Candus Hedberg, Topeka, sophomore; Kelvin Flory, Pomona, sophomore; Carolyn Graham, Orrick, Mo., junior; Christine Haefele, Topeka, senior; Linda McCrerey, Honolulu, Hawaii, junior; Sandra Patterson, Walsh, Colo., sophomore; Stephen L. Reed, Wichita, senior; Connie Sickles, Lawrence, junior; Beverly Sendecor, Rhodes, Iowa, junior; David Wooster, Topeka, sophomore; Salley Wertzberger, Kingman, senior; Jeffry Lough, Salina, sophomore; Charlotte Moss, Burden, junior; Janie L. Johnson, Wichita, senior; and Mavis Benton, Kansas City, senior.
Freshman receiving University Fund Scholarships are: Stephen Ukman, University City, Mo.; Linda McKinney, Wichita; Debra Jorner, Salina; Glen Meyer, Tampa; Eric Elder, Wichita; Sharon Herrman, Goodland; Suzanna Verbeck, Kansas City; Janice Comstock, Shawnee Mission; Andrew Curry, San Antonio, Tex.; Rosemary Schmidt, Kansas City, Mo.; Michael Bradley, Wichita; Rosella Voiles, Helena, Mont.; John Shuss, Parsons; Howard Henry, Kansas City, Mo.; Andrew Massey, Mickerson; Jacquelin Caldwell, Lake Wales, Fla.; Mary Barron, Olathe; Richard Kovich, Kansas City; Lawrence Walter, Salina; John Redwine, Greensburg; Chuck Schmidt, Hays; Elain Henrichs, Wichita; William Cox, Kansas City; Donald Anderson, Russell; Kenneth Norton, Garden City; Sarah Taylor, Wichita; Charles Black, Lawson, Mo.; Alfred Baker, San Jose, Calif.; James Foley, St. Joseph, Mo.; Paurelay Fellina, Shawnee Mission; John H. House, Raytown, Mo.; Jane D. Foreman, Leavenworth; Barbara Sjeahan, Topeka; Janet Klari, Independence, Mo.; and Jo Lynn Johnson, Hutchinson.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
ATTENTION Social Chairmen
The log cabin at
Oak Lodge
is available each night except Sunday for parties, socials, & dancing
Location 13 miles south of Lawrence on Highway 50
For Information Call 913-594-3349
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Enjoy
Happy Hour
11-3 every Sunday
5 CENTS OFF
on all food items
TACO
GRANDE
1720 West 23rd Street
NEWCOMERS ON CAMPUS WEST CAMPUS 1424 Crescent Road
Come in and see our fine selection of fall and winter fashions. Campus West has all the outfits you will need for those sporty and dress-up affairs.
For the Fall-Look in suedes, leathers and knits stop in and browse. You'll always be well dressed in an outfit from Campus West.
OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT WITH CAMPUS WEST —
the most conveniently located shop on campus.
Professionally Handcrafted
Leather Goods
★ Leather Clothes
★
★ Watch Bands
★
Sandals
★
★
Purses
Moccasins
★
★ Belts
★
Primarily Leather
8121/2 Mass. VI 2-8664
THE MALS shopping center
ACRES of Free PARKING
Tempo — Jennings Donut Shop — Maupintour — Blaine and Jesse's — Mall's Barbershop — Kief's — Andrews Gifts — Herb's Studio — George's Hobby Shop — Laundromat — Dry Cleaners — TG&Y — Rexall Drugs — Safeway Topsy International
23rd and LOUISIANA
1711 West 23rd
-WATCH FOR OUR BUS—
14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
PRESIDENT
ROBERT AANGEENBRUG
Director named to KU center for region study
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Robert T. Aangeenbrug has been appointed acting director of KU's Center for Regional Studies succeeding Dr. David L. Huff, who has accepted a position at the University of Texas.
Aangeenbrug came to KU as assistant professor of geography from the Boston University faculty in 1966 and for the past year also has been a research associate of the Center. He earned the Ph.D. degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1965.
A specialist in urban transportation, his principal publications are in the areas of transportation forecasting, regional perception, and population analysis.
He recently was elected to the Urban Information System Committee of the Highway Research Board of the National Science Foundation. He also is involved in a preliminary evaluation of the 1970 U.S. Census and has been a consulting economic analyst for the Port of New York Authority.
Two of his articles in this year's Kansas Business Review, a monthly publication of the Center, have stimulated unusual readership interest—"Population Changes in Kansas 1880-1960" and "Regional Perception and Its Effect on Industrial Location."
Aangeenbrug recently participated in a seminar in Guatemala on analysis and regional geography for Central American geography professors.
After graduation from Connecticut State college in 1958, he taught in New York schools for three years before beginning graduate work at the University of Wisconsin.
Enrollment madness
Approaching the KU campus from the north you may see a sign advertising a local new-left bookstore and psychedelic poster shop, the Campus Mad House. In a way, this sign reflects the mood of KU this fall.
The Kansas Union is undergoing remodeling with the addition of tunnel under Mississippi Street reaching to Zone X parking lot. Work is being completed on the Biological Life Sciences building next to Summerfield Hall, and a new humanities building next to Flint Hall will begin to rise out of the hole in the ground left by the razing of old Robinson.
Add to this activity, the infus of an expected record 16,580 students-3,000 of them bewildered freshmen.
The full extent of the madness doesn't strike the new student until he braves the congested halls, long lines and sadistic enrollment assistants at the tables in the Kansas Union ballroom, who never have anything but a 7:30 Saturday class.
Amidst the choked hallways, reams of paper and countless cards, the student wonders what is happening to him. Is he engaged in some ghastly nightmare which might smother him if given the chance?
Within ten minutes, what seemed to be a well planned schedule falls in crumpled disarray. Missed classes and confused students are commonplace and the situation seems hopeless.
After an abortive attempt at pre-enrollment last year, the University has gone back to the same system used in the past. There have been some improvements, however.
People in the College-within-ACollege enroll together after consulting their advisers. Start and stop times have been added to the registration cards and a TR has replaced TT to stand for Tuesday and Thursday classes. It was explained that the TR is used at many other universities because it leaves more room on the computerized enrollment cards for pertinent information.
The computer is unable to distinguish Tuesday from Thursday when both are represented by a T. Consequently additional information must be put on cards to explain this to the computer taking up valuable space.
Some Tuesday and Thursday classes have been lengthened to two hours for greater variety in scheduling.
All of this does little to lessen the lines in the Kansas Union or to diminish the frustration which comes with closed classes. But for better or worse this is the system and it will remain until a valid method of pre-enrollment is initiated.
If enrollment procedures ever change, as they may indeed do some day soon, there will be ever more reason for students to celebrate during Country Club week. Until then, students will have to be content drowning the sorrows and frustrations of new classes in the local pubs each night.
PLAY AT ALVAMAR HILLS LUSH 18 Hole Championship Golf Course
LOCATION MAP . . .
1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles west of the Holiday Inn.
PHONE VI 2-1907
ALVAMAR KASOLD IOWA 23 RD
Student and Faculty 9-hole green fees:
Rental clubs available
$1.50 weekdays
1. 75 weekends and holidays
★ Driving range
★ Complete line of golf merchandise
$ \star $ Individual and group lessons supervised by John Bonella, golf professional
★ Also featuring John (Wagon Wheel) Wooden's famous sandwiches, hot dogs, beer, pop and chocolate milk.
PARIS
then stop!
dreaming about your future?
A civilian career with the Army Recreation or Library Program in Europe or the Far East.
Here's a once in a lifetime opportunity for adventure and challenge.
If you are single, a U.S. citizen and have a degree in
Recreation
Recreation
Social Science
Arts and Crafts
Music
Dramatics or
Library Science
WRITE FOR A BROCHURE
SPECIAL SERVICES SECTION IRCB
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D. C. 20315
FREE BEER & EGGS BREAKFAST at THE LIBRARY
for
The house that consumes the most
Bud & Coors on tap
2500 W. 6th St.
See Don at the Library
(Behind Don's Drive In)
VI 2-8912
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
Sororities-
(Continued from page 3.)
son Martyn, Clay Center; Suzanne Celeste McConas, Concordia; Janet Claire Murphy, Dighton; Carotyn Lee Nichols, Overland Park; Kathryn Lea Nichols, Kansas City, Mo.; Teryl Jean Obliala, Overland Park;
Priscilla Rockling New Orleans, Lamarville Swazir, Marysville; Melinda A Shafer, Joyeet Ann Shner, Olathe; Sharon A. Sosnoki, Hutchinson; Pamela Ann Sarnell, Walt Walker, Jane Walle, Kansas City, Alen Elizabeth Williamson, Hopkinsville, Ky.
Alpha Delta Pi
Judith M. Abbott, Salina; Mary Louise Bartlett, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. Carly Kaysen, Oakland; Kay Bush, Wichita; Pamela Kay Ellis, Chanute; Shirley Ann Griesel, Kenyon; Jill Griesel, Haynes; Leawood; Carling Huffaker, Mission; Janice Marie Jones, Macon, Mo.; Mary Jane King, Shawnee Mission; Rita Sue Matousek, Cuba;
Karen Jane McGurel, Urbana, Ill.; Marsha Lee McKay, El Dorado; Carol Le Odehnall, St. Louis, Mo.; Marjorie Schmidt, Overland Park; Janet Jo Schmidt, Joan E. Shellenerberg, Manhattan Theda J Vaughn, Overland Park.
Alpha Gamma Delta
Linda Kay Allen, Overland Park; Janet Lynn Anthony, Fort Scott; Jack Stewart, Leawood; Bishop, Leawood; Sharon E. Boyle, Lawrence; Kathryn Ann Colton, Omaha, Nebr.; Lucy Elizabeth Court-Jefferson; Cynthia Annale Ekhoff, St. Charles, McOllen
Janis Claire Finot, St. Louis, Mo.; Susan Carol Gauen, Evanston, Mll; Mary Ellen Gerrity, Overland Park; Comnie Lynn Giger, Slater, Mo; Theo Glortosio, Oak Park, Ill.; Patricia Brown, Oak Park, Ill.; Marilyn Lee Huff, Kansas City; Jo Lymn Johnson, Hutchinson; Katherine Louise Kirk, Hutchinson;
Marcia Le Kraft, Northfield, Ill.; Jamie Louise LeClerc, Lions; Sally Janssen, Northfield, Ill.; jean Jean Maschoff, Glendale, Mo.; Vicki Lynn Moore, Wichita, Elizabeth Overland Park; Linda J. Phelpe Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Sandra I. Read, Alexandria, Va.; Patricia Ann Rich, annel Ann Robinson, Overland Park.
Carol Louse Smith, Salina; Janell Diane Smykil, Arkansas City; Claudia Kay Wellborn, Overland Park; Susan Elizabeth White, Hutchinson.
Alpha Owlhuron F1
Debra R. Corkhill, Topeka; Lydia Joe Evans, Evan W. Campbell; Ham camp, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Lynette Snyder, Elmhurst, Ill.; Constance Louise Witt, Wichita; Muriel Wood, Pittsburg.
Alpha Phi
Rebecca Anne Altenbernd, Lawrence; Martha Jane Atlas, Shawnee; Elizabeth Ann Barker,peka; Deborah Ann Barker, Alexandria, Va.; Anna Lucille Beightel, Mary Martha Collins, Overland Park; Donna Kay Cummins, Conway, Ark;inda Margaret Curry, Arkansas City; Shiron Jean Dawson, Camdenton. M
Lynn Alice Packer, Wichita; Diana G. Pike, Wichita; Brenda L. Pine, Yvonne; An Marie Rees, Amarillo, Park; Susan Schroeter, Shawnee Mission; Carol Ann Songer, Lincoln; Susan Lee Stapleton, Fort Scott; Patricia Englewood, Colo.; Mary Martha Switzer, Englewood; Susan Temme, Leewood; Susan Millard Treadwell, Wilmette, Ill.; Sally Williams, Ottawa; Karen Kary Worswick, Stockee; Karen Lynne Wrenn, Stockton, O., Susan Lewirl Wurl, Omaha, Nebr.
Mary Katherine Dean, Phillipsburg; Ema Marie Edgar, Prairie Village; Mary Jane Walker, Bloomington; Katherine Dianne Fo, Bloomington; ill.; Janis Ann Herman, Coffeeville; John A. O'Connor, Karen Sue Landers, Fort Lee, N.J.; Linda Sue Maloney, Rockeland Park; Jane Anne Meinke, Lawrence; Judith Nelson, Gail Lynn Nelson, Fort Smith, Ark.;
Chi Omega
Diana Lynn Barrow, Kansas City;
Gina Blakales, Shawnee Mission;
Katherine Suzanne (Suzy) Boceil,
Kansas City; Marilyn Clark, Shawnee
City; Kathleen Mackenzie City;
C; Jane Dalby, Joplin, Susan
Nancy Gay Floerke, Leaward; Susan
Collins Freed, Terre Haute, Ind.
Laura Lee Friesen, Clay Center; Jennifer Anne Gille, Topeka Lauren;
Jennifer Anne Gille, Topeka Lauren;
Linda Lee Halens, Topeka; Linda
Anne Hale, Shawnee Mission; Ann
Beth Hefley, Manhattan; Brenda Lee Metzler, Delmar, N.Y.; Susan Lea
Moreland, Hope, Topeka Myers;
Moreland, Hope, Topeka; Topeka; Lee D. Rothermel, Winnetка;
Ill; Jan Sheldon, Independence; Loretta D. Stringer, Overland Park;
Brenda Colleant Wart, Parsons; Jo Werner, Kansas City, Mo.; Sally Joe
Lawrence, Chiita; Jane Marie Wilson
Delta Delta Delta
Kerry Beth Anderson, Tulsa, Okla.
Becky Sue Barber, Kansas City, Mo.
Diane E. Boomer, Winchester, Mass.
Carolyn Bowers, Ottawa, Deborah
Lee Cramer, Winnetka, Ill.; Paula
Virginia Dwyer, Ray Town, Mo.;
Louise Elaine Ewing, Independence:
Barbara Marr Haigh, Hinsdale, Ill;
Stephany Ann Harrison, Oklahoma
City, Okla.; Deborah J. Herron, Kansas
City; Sheryl Ann Hocking, Salina;
Bryce Miller, Jacksonville, Mo.
; Janice Kristine Johnson, Gales,
burg, Ill.; Joyce Kay Kaltwasser,
Kirkwood, Mo.
Kay Ellen Kronsnoble, Glen Elyn,
Ill.; Marcela Jeanelle LaGue, Mission;
Eumee Ann Macy, Cherney, Wyo.; Emune
Elaine Messley, Kansas City, Mo.
Jamel eater, Kansas City
Jaucey Hucker, Milte, Hinseed,
I'll; Nancy Omo Mornar, Hutchinson;
Margaret Mary Mykland, Kansas
Martha Jane Noland, Kansas
Cassie
Linda K. Olson, Tulsa, Okla.; Barbara Mae Payne, Salina; Terry Laryn Shaw, St. Louis, Mo.; Jo Ann Taylor,ence; Carolyn Vander Velo. Emporia.
Delta Gamma
Evans, Leawood; Valerie B. Fladear, Deerfield, Ill.; Janet Lynn Fox, Park, Chelsea; Jennifer Park; Cathine Rushing Glimmer, Tulsa, Okla.; Connie Jane Glancey, St. Charles; Miree Diane Patricia Gray, Shannon M., Susan Marie John, Leawood:
Caroline Anderson, Evanston, Ill.; Virginia (Ginny) Faye Anger, Wilmette, Ill.; Carolyn Sue Dammann, Shawnee Mission; Jerrie Jennan
Patricia Johnson, Overland Park; Shannon L. Mandie, Wichita; Constance Ann Mattson, Omaha, Nebr.; Diane Elizabeth McCrossey, Shawnee Mission; Cheryl Kristine Mehan, Leah Anderson; Carolyn Sasley, Cas City, Mo.; Linda K. Schmitt; Hutchinson; Janice C. Spikes, Garden City; Catherine Steinmitz; Parsons; Jo Ann Tarkington, Evanston, Ill.; Karan Sue Uthoff, Webster Groves, Mt. Vernon; Sam Wells, Shawnee Mission; Ann Marie Wolf, Prairie Village; Teresa Wolf, Whitby
Gamma Phi Beta
Laura Jennifer Ashton, Lawrence;
Patricia Elizabeth Bailey, Whitewater;
Dee Ellen Burrows, Lawrence; Carla
Ann Crites, Hays; Gaye Darling;
Bradley Hays, Gaye Darling;
Sing, Salina; Janet Gayle Dobbins,
Wichita; Barbara Louise Feldmann,
Webster Groves, Mo.; Mary Wakeman
Northfield, Ill.; Mary Lou
Henderson, Ill.; Pamela Dima
Kay James, Topeka; Pamela Stout
Kulp, Shawnee Mission.
Carol Jean McCone, Kansas City, Maryland; Jane Ann Reece, Scandia Park; Jane Ann Reece, Scandia dred L. Richardson, Bartlesville, Oklaho. Maura D. Robinson, Leawood; Lee Annette Reece Rockill, Wichita; Cynthia Kay Shuth, Overland Park; Deborah Dent Vee Ann Stephens, Shawnce Mission, Deborah Kay Weaver, Great Bend:
Terrie Webb, Clearwater; Marilyn Jane West, Overland Park; Susan Williamson, Ballwin, Mo.; Janet Claire Ulmer, Lawrence.
Kappa Alpha Theta
Marilyn F. Abell, San Diego, Calif.; Julia Fay Blakeslee, Independence; Jillene De Moines, Ia.; Sally Fowler Brant, Newton; Barbara Ann Bruner, Newton; Kathryn Louise Bruning, Overland Park; Jane Bertolini, Sandra Ajdela; Sandra Louise Darche, Topeka; Elizabeth Dewell, FT. Worth; Tex. Debra Dianne, Freeland, Wichita; Jane Bertolini, Clare City, Mo.; Kristina Haus, Fl Collins, Colo.; Kathryn Anne Henry, El Dorado; Margaret Humphreys, Ashlea Keinshmidt, Bartlesville, Okla
Martha Ireia Mangelsdorf, Shawnee Mission; Mary Evelyn Martz, Cameron, Mo.; Mary Leigh McClain, Michita; Catherine Lynn McConnell, Morris; Sarah Piney Morris, Morris, Leawood; Mary (Betty) Elizabeth Menke, Webster Groso, Mo; Debbie Nelson, Topeka; Patricia Sue Nichols, Hutchinson; Sydney L. Jenberger, Junction City; Melissa Janberger, Thiam Town; Rosemary Socks, Independence; Barbara Steiger, Palos Verdes Peninsula, Calif.; Marlene Su Vandguny, Americus; Syivia Luray Waxse, Oswego; Mary Ellia Williams, Kansas City, Mo.
Mary Jane Baker, St. Joseph, Mo; Nancy E. Boyce, Chase Ch戴, Md; Cynthia Ann Burnett, Parsons; Lynn (Kay Butler, Cheney; Elizabeth Bays, Kansas City; Marsha Ruth Cloud, Santa City; Joanne Ruth Cloud, Marsha Lynx Dixon, Topeka; Linda Edith Fairman, Wilmette, Ill.; Jeffrey Angoudie, Midland, Tex.; Elizabeth Ann Hartley, Shawnee Mission; Cathryn Priest Henry, Shawnee Mission;
Kathryn Louise Hoefer, Shawnee Mission; Susan Kandet, Wichita; Mary Camille Kocour, Kenilworth, Ill.; Jan Carole Marcasson, Prairie Village; Carol Anne Massey, Oklahoma; Patricia Moritz, Beloit; Kathryn Estelle Newcomer, Omaha, Nebr.; Roberta L. Patterson, Wichita; Susan E. Petefish, Lawrence; Catherine A. Sethman; Debra Sue Tharp, Iola; Kathryn Thornton, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Mary Carolyn Voss, Bartlesville, Gila County. Neeson mission: Ruth Ellen Warren, Emporta; Molly Rebecca Williams, Sioux Valley; Janet Gay Winn, Overtark Park.
Pi Beta Phi
Deborah Mary Anderson, Prairie Village; Marilyn Gay Bowman, Merriam; Kathryn Ann Bricker, Bonner Lake; Katrina Ann Landis, Land Park; Connie Sue Cerne, Lawrence; Susan Hunter Cray, Atchison; Cynthia Ann Fossey, Watertown; St. Mary Ann Landis, Margaret Alice Haarlow, Hindale, Ill.; Harrief Ann Henley, Dodge City; Mary Lohman Kerr, Mission; Kandee Mullen; Shawnee Mission; Carol Naccarato, Overland Park; Marsha Lin Norman, Joplin, Mo.; Barbara Ann Paulsen, Shawnee Mission; Cynthia Ann Paulsen, Mission; Mary V. Pfuetze, Hindale, Ill.
Barbara K. Reed, Tulsa, Okla.; Janet Selders, Mission; Christine Long Stephenson, Setauket; Marilyn Lester, Hills; Hill; Kate, Shawnee Mission; Kay Wallace, Wichita; Annette Louise Westmann, Kansas City; Nancy Lynn, White, Stanford, Conn.; Ellen Yaum, Ft. North, Tex.; Lee Yaun, Ft. Worth,
Sharon Lucile Manley, Kansas City, Mo; Kay Suzanne Meyer, Shawnee Mission; Martha Anne Mosier, Carlsbad, Calif.; Carolyn Pike, Wichita; Karyn K. Plishin, Lawrence; Deborah Simpkins, New Canaan, Conn.; Mary Elizabeth Sturgeon, Dodge City; Joyce Ann Thompson, Topping, Brentwood, Mo.; Linda Louise Westphall, Wichita; Marlene Marie Wise, Kansas City.
Bebecca Cole Ashley, Edina, Minn; Mytle Isaac Burkle, Kansas City; Maureen Drennan, Leewood; Judie Maureen Drennan, Leewood; Judith Maureen Flauser, Kansas City; Eleanor Sue Goldsmith, Gardena, Anchorage; Linda Martiney, Green Anchorage; Linda Martiney, Kansas City; Mary Elaine Hibbert, Topeka; Kathleen McKenzie, Waimea, Jefferson County; Mackenzie, Kentville, Calif.
Sigma Kappa
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University of Nassau are offered to students with regard to color, creed, or national origin.
1967 Yamaha: 100 cc, 1200 miles—like new. Call VI 2-3733. 9-20
FOR SALE
1857 VW with sun roof. Careful
installation and care of the
Call Kit V2-8851 for more information.
1955 Chew. 2 DRHIT BelAire, 6 cyl.
Good. Good local trans. VI 3-8749. 8
Twin Beds and Mattresses. Excellent condition. Can also be used as bunk beds or trundle beds. $40.00 or offer.
VI 2-7763. 9-20
TRAVEL TIME
---
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your
Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
Is Your Sports Car Turned On?
If Not,
If Not, We Conduct Tune-Ins Daily!
Triumph - Toyota
Sales - Service
Parts & Accessories for All Imported Cars
1209 E. 23rd St.
Competition Sports Cars
VI 2-2191
YOU'RE MY KIND OF PEOPLE...
... SORRY ABOUT THAT.
And Micki's is still here to serve KU students and faculty by typing those term papers, projects, etc. Micki's also offers Notary Public service and Xeroxing.
Don't wait till the last minute. Save yourself all that time and effort. Inquire today!
MICKI's secretarial service is 4/U! VI2-0111----901 Ky. St.
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge? And you can't come to Flint Hall?
Send your copy 2 days in advance and include check or cash to:
Barry Arthur University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall
Address
Name ...
Phone ...
Days to run
Message
Classified Rates
1 time —25 words or less—$1.00—Add. words $.01 each
3 times—25 words or less—$1.50—Add. words $.02 each
5 times—25 words or less—$1.75—Add. words $.03 each
- Send check or cash with order.
- Use this form or type.
- Copy must be 2 days in advance.
HELP WANTED
Salesman--Aggressive and personable.
Student wanted for our Sales Staff.
Earnings can be over $100 per week as you represent 88-year-old nationally respected life insurance company on campus. Phone—VI 3-7798. 9-18
Wish to employ man or woman for
playground playground playground
supervision for elementary
lawrence 11:30-12:30. Phone VI 3-
4868 or VI 3-3283 for appointment.
Secretary - Typing and shorthand re-
cording alert and information
Phone VI 3-7798 9-18
One concerned coed to share the expense of the Sunday New York Times. If more than one concerned coed exists, extra papers will be arranged. Contact Steve at VI 2-2175 for information. 9-20
Part-time driver for morning
parttime jobs at Duncan. VI 2-0544. Ask for Dunne Gle. b-29
Men—Part time or full time. Above average pay. Show our products in Lawrence area. No experience needed. Call Sam Jian now. V9-25206.
NOTICE
United Child Care Center, 945 Vermont, for pre-school children of working children. 945 Monh. For further information call VI 3-7134 or VI 2-3728 evenings.
All people interested in folk dancing or leading folk dancing, contact Milton Rosenberg at Math Dept. on or 1419 Ohio, No. 8, ED-2919, 1991.
Exclusive Representative
of
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelr
L. G. Balfour Co.
Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Novelties
- Lavaliers
- Sportswear
- Paddles
- Badges
- Guards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Portraits of Distinction
Also
- Passports
- Applications
- Lettermen
- Seniors
- Seniors
Please call for appointment
摄
Hixon Studio
Portraits of Distinction
Bob Blank, Owner
21 Mass. VI 3-0330
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
18 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-292
SENIORS!!!
Studly individuals that you are
Don't Miss the Class of 1969
BLAST-OFF PARTY
featuring
PERCY SLEDGE and his 10-Piece Band
FREE BEER!!
FREE ADMISSION TO SENIORS!!
studly individuals that they are
$1.00 Admission to all Un-Seniors
GET YOUR TICKETS DURING ENROLLMENT
CAMPUS BUS SCHEDULES
---
SPECIAL NIGHT BUS SERVICE TO CAMPUS AND DOWNTOWN
Ellsworth to Campus and Downtown
6:30 p.m., 6:50, 7:30, 8:10,
8:50, 9:30, 10:10, 10:50
Naismith and Oliver to Campus and Downtown
6:25 p.m., 6:45, 7:25, 8:05,
8:45, 9:25, 10:05, 10:45
Union Bldg. to Downtown and G.S.P.
6:40 p.m., 7:00, 7:40, 8:20,
9:00, 9:40, 10:20, 11:00
G.S.P. to Downtown
6:42 p.m., 7:02, 7:42, 8:22,
9:02, 9:42, 10:22, 11:22
G.S.P. to Campus and Ellsworth
6:15 p.m., 6:35, 7:15, 7:55,
8:35, 9:15, 9:55, 10:55
9th and Mass. to KU Dormitorias
6:10 p.m., 6:30, 7:10, 7:50,
8:30, 9:10, 9:50, 10:30
Effective September 16
NO Service Sundays or Holidays
CLIP AND SAVE
BUS SCHEDULE FOR CAMPUS EXPRESS
Leave Ellsworth via Lewis to Campus and Downtown
*On the hour, 10, *20, 30, *40, 50 minutes past hour
7:00 a.m. to 6:50 p.m.
Leave Oliver and Naismith Dorms to Campus (transfer for Downtown)
°10 and °40 minutes past hour, 7:10 a.m. to 5:40 p.m.
Leave 19th Stewart for Campus (transfer for Downtown)
*On the hour and *30 min. past hour, 7:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Leave G.S.P. and Corbin to Campus
On the hour, 15, 20, 35, 45 and 55 minutes past hour
7:00 a.m. to 6:35 p.m.
Leave G.S.P. and Carbin to Downtown 2, 22 and 42 minutes post hour, 7:25 a.m. to 7:05 p.m.
Leave Campus to Ellsworth and Lewis (Daisy Field)
5, 10, 25, 40, 45 and 50 minutes past hour,
7:05 a.m. to 6:45 p.m.
Leave Campus to Oliver, Naismith and 19th and Stewart
25 and 55 minutes past hour, 7:25 a.m. to 5:25 p.m.
Leave Campus to G.S.P. and Downtown
On the hour, *10, 20, *25, 40 and *50 minutes past hour
7:20 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Leave 9th and Mass. (Downtown) to KU and Dormitories 10,30 and 50 minutes past hour,6:50 a.m.to 6:30 a.m.
$ ^{0} $ Indicates Campus Only No service Sundays and Holidays
CLIP AND SAVE
---
SPECIAL SUNDAY CHURCH BUSES FOR DOWNTOWN CHURCHES
Leave Oliver Hall
10:00 a.m., 10:20 a.m.,
10:30 a.m.
Leave Ellsworth
10:10 a.m., 10:30 a.m.,
10:40 a.m.
For Information Call VI 2-0544
Leave Campus
10:15 a.m., 10:35 a.m.,
10:45 a.m.
Leave G.S.P:
10:20 a.m., 10:40 a.m.,
10:50 a.m.
Buses Return After Church Service
CLIP AND SAVE
LAWRENCE BUS CO., INC.
Religious Activities at the University of Kansas
Assembly of God—Chi Alpha
13th and Massachusetts
Darrel D. Madsen, Chaplain—V1 3-6990
Sunday Study—9:45 a.m. Worship—11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Supper—5:00 p.m.
Baptist Southern—Baptist Student Union
Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread Bill Marshall, Director—VI 2-1996 Services at local churches—9:45 a.m. Supper at Student Building—5:00 p.m. followed by evening services at churches
B'nai B'rith Hillel Counselorship (Jewish)
917 Highland Drive (Jewish Community Center)
Counselor: Herbert Friedson—VI 3-8043
Catholic, St. Lawrence Student Parish
(Newman Club)
1915 Stratford Road
Father Brendon Downey, O.S.B., and Father Donald Redmond, O.S.B.
V1 3-0357
Masses at St. Lawrence Chapel—8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
at Hoch Auditorium—9:30 and 11:00 a.m.
Parish Barbecue—Sunday, September 15 at 5:30 p.m.
(Dinner Entertainment)
K
Christian Science Organization Dr. Richard MacCann, Faculty Advisor—VI 2-1431 First Meeting: Tuesday, September 17, 7:30 p.m. at Danforth Chapel
Church of Christ, South Side
25th & Missouri
Wilburn C. Hill, Minister—VI 3-0770
Bible Study—9:30 a.m. Worship—10:30 a.m.
Evening Worship—6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Evening Worship—7:30 p.m.
U
Church of The Nazarene, First
(Bresee Fellowship)
Dale E. Galloway, Pastor—VI 3-3940
Services—10:45 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Episcopal (Canterbury Association)
Student Center: 1116 Louisiana-VI 3-8202
Worship at Trinity Church, 10th & Vermont—
7:30, 9:00, 10:45 a.m.
Intervarsity Christian Fellowship
(Interdenominational)
829 Mississippi—VI 3-3506
Dr. Benjamin Friesen, Sponsor
Clarence Classzen, President
Discussion meetings, Friday evenings at 7 p.m.
KU-Y (YMCA-YWCA)
Kansas Union—Rooms 110-111-112
Tom Moore, Executive Director
Mrs. Michele Edwards, Program Director
Membership Meeting—Thursday, September 26, 7:30 p.m.
in Big 8 Room
R
Lutheran, Lutheran Students Association
(American Lutheran Church & Lutheran Church in America)
Kansas Union—Room 107
Don Conrad, Campus Pastor-VI2-4425
Worship at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church—10:30 a.m.
at Trinity Lutheran Church—9:00 and 11:00 a.m.
Lutheran, University Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod)
Norman Steffen, Pastor—V1 3-6662
Sunday Study—9:45 a.m. Worship—11:00 a.m.
Student Fellowship—5:30 p.m. m.each Sunday
Church and Student Center—15th & Iowa
Oread Friends Meeting
John Bowles, Clerk—VI 3-9105 Unprogrammed Meeting for Worship—Sunday—10:15 a.m. at Danforth Chapel
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints
Latter Day Saints
1900 University Drive
Dr. David Kohlman, Advisor—VE 3-2759
Worship—9:30 and 10:45 a.m.
II Student Supper—September 15 at 6:00 p.m. at the church
United Ministries in Higher Education
The Cooperative ministry of:
American Baptist, Disciples of Christ, Presbyterian, United Church
of Christ and the United Methodist Churches
Campus Ministers
Jerry Catt, VI 3-1018 Rafael Sanchez, VI 3-4933
Otto Zingg, VI 3-4933
Morni Leoni, VI 3-7151 Tom Rehorn, VI 3-7151
A
Campus Centers
United Campus Christian Fellowship, 1204 Oread (across from the Rock Chalk); Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread (across from the Union), 5 p.m. Sundays, Supper and program; American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th (West of Oliver); Sundays: 9:30 a.m. Creative Dialogue and 5:30 p.m. Supper and Program
Sunday Worship Service
Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont, 10 a.m.
First Methodist Church, 946 Vermont, 9:20 a.m.; 10:50 a.m.
First Baptist Church, 8th and Kentucky, 11 a.m.
Central United Methodist Church, 1501 Massachusetts, 10:30 a.m.
First Presbyterian Church, 23rd Street at Iowa, 9 and 11 a.m.
First Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky, 8:30 a.m.; 10:45 a.m.
Sponsored by Kansas University Religious Advisors
The Great American College Bedspread may send you to college free!
MEDICAL STUDENTS IN NEW YORK
You've been taking us to college for so many years, we created this contest because we finally felt it's our turn to take you.
To enter, go to the domestics department — might as well call it the bedspread department — of any of the stores listed in this ad (there's one near you). Fill out an entry blank and drop it in the ballot box. $ ^{*} $
Naturally, if you're not already an owner, we're hoping you won't fail to observe Bates Piping Rock, the Great American College Bedspread, draped or made up on a bed near the contest area.
You know how Piping Rock got to be a college bedspread?
One reason is because it comes in 18 different colors, which covers one of the colors of practically every school arourid. Let's say your colors are red and white. O.K., you get a red bedspread and white sheets, and that's it.
Another reason is that our No Press finish makes this spread machine washable and dryable without ironing. In an hour. Or roughly as long as it takes to get through a homework assignment if you don't knock yourself out
Bates
CONTENT RUNS FROM 5 TO 10.
Piping Rock in 18 college colors. In sizes; twin, $10.98; double,
$12.98; and bank, $9.98. Prices a bit more in the West.
Matching draperies available.
112 West 34 St., N.Y. 10001
FULL DETAILS AT STORES. Piping Rock is a Bates T.M. Reg.
The Jones Store, Kansas City Macy's, Kansas City Weavers Inc., Lawrence
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Theater season opens, casting set
A theater rally and auditions for parts in the University Theatre's 1968-69 season will be held early next week, according to drama department officials.
A rally for students interested in participating in this year's season will be held 7 p.m Sunday in the University Theatre.
Auditions for parts will be held 7 p.m. Monday and Tuesday. Audition materials will be provided, however students may present a prepared two-minute scene if they wish.
open to all KU students.
The rally and auditions are
Casts will be chosen for all of the University Theatre's major productions at the audition, with the exception of the opera.
Included in this season's repertoire are Edward Albee "A Delicate Balance," Neil Simon's
"Odd Couple," and William Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." The musical "Kismet" will be the season's first production.
Former KU politician
Patronize Kansan Advertiser.
named sociology prof
A former KU student politician and Summerfield Scholar will return to the University of Kansas this year as an associate professor of Sociology.
William Robert Arnold graduated from KU in 1955 when he was president of the Student Religious Council and the Allied Greek-Independent party.
Douglas County State Bank
"The Bank of Friendly Service"
Member F.D.I.C.
9th and Kentucky
VI 3-7474
BANK
OPEN A "D.C." personal checking account.
- "D. C." checks cost LESS than money orders—only 10c!
- No minimum balance.
- Your name printed FREE on all "D. C." checks.
- 20 checks—only $2.00!
GO JAYHAWKS!
Pick up your own "Jayhawk Helmet Bank." It costs only $1.30. Support your team while you support your pocket!
KU
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday; September 13, 1968
OLD AND NEW
STANTON, Mo. — (UPI) — What's new in a 100 million-year-old cave?
At Meramec Cavarns on U.S. 66 here, daily newspapers and the latest magazines are available.
Provost announces grant
"We don't want the tourists to believe we are thoroughly old-fashioned," says Lester B. Dill, director.
The Ford Foundation has made a $200,000 grant to the University of Kansas for a comprehensive program of research on Central American development problems, Provost James R. Surface announced this summer.
A coordinated, university-wide
program of training and research on Central America will be developed. Emphasis will be on using experts from many subject areas in the approach to development problems and on stimulating research competence in Central American universities.
continuing seminar on Central American development problems and projects involving faculty and graduate students from both Kansas and Central American universities.
The KU program will include a
Schweppe named
One of the first projects will be a comparative study of local governments.
A recently appointed member of the business school faculty has been named chairman of the committee on computer science.
Earl J. Schweppe, a former consultant to the federal systems division of International Business Machines, will be a professor of computer science in addition to his committee duties.
The New
SUA POPULAR FILM SERIES
THIS WEEKEND!! SEPT.13,14,15
Julie Christie
in Stanley Kubrik's (director of 2001)
Oskar Werner
"FAHRENHEIT 451"
THIS IS YOUR SUA FALL FILM SCHEDULE COMING
Sept. 13, 14, 15 Fahrenheit 451 Julie Christie, Oskar Werner
Sept. 20, 21, 22 -- Time Lost, Time Remembered
Sarah Miles, Cyril Cusak
Sept. 27, 28, 29, Dead Heat on a Merry-go-round
James Coburn, Camilla Sparv
Oct. 6, 7, 8 ___ Zorba the Greek
Anthony Quinn, Irene Papas
Oct. 13, 14, 15 ___ Our Man Flint
James Coburn, Lee J. Cobb
Oct. 18, 19, 20 Citizen Kane
Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten
Oct. 25, 26, 27 Behold a Pale Horse
Gregory Peck, Omar Sharif
Nov. 1, 2, 3 ___ Anatomy of a Murder
James Stewart, Lee Remick,
George C. Scott, Ben Gazzara
Nov. 8, 9, 10 Umbrellas of Cherbourg by Jacques Dewey, with Catherine Deneuve
Nov. 22, 23, 24 One Potato—Two Potato
Barbara Barrie, Bernie Hamilton
Nov. 15, 16, 17 ___ Shenandoh
James Stewart, Doug McClure
Dec. 6, 7, 8 Gambit
Michael Caine, Shirley MacLaine
Dec. 13, 14, 15 ___ East of Eden
James Dean, Julie Harris
Jan. 10, 11, 12 The Deadly Affair
James Mason, Maxmillian Schell, Simone Signoret
Jan. 31-Feb. 1, 2 -- Dark at the Top of the Stairs
Robert Preston, Dorothy McGuire
Feb. 7, 8, 9 A Reison in the Sun
Sidney Poitier, Claudia McNeil
Feb. 14, 15, 16 ---- A Countess from Hong Kong Marlon Brando, Sophia Loren
Feb. 21, 22, 23 Lolita
James Mason, Sue Lyon, Peter Sellers
Feb. 28-Mar. 1, 2 ___ Texas Across the River
Dean Martin, Joey Bishop
Mar. 7, 8, 9 ------ The Jokers (English comedy)
Michael Crowford, Oliver Reed
Mar. 14, 15, 16 Blow-up by Antioninni David Hemmings, Vanessa Redgrave
Mar. 21, 22, 23 ... Darling
Julie Christie
Apr. 11, 12, 13 The Silencers
Dean Martin, Stella Stevens
Apr. 18, 19, 20 The Pownbroker
Rod Steiger
Apr. 25, 26, 27 Night of the Generals
Peter O'Toole, Omar Sharif
May 2, 3, 4 **Charade**
Carey Grant, Audrey Hepburn
May 9, 10, 11 ___ Privilege
Jean Shrimpton, Paul Jones
May 16, 17, 18 ___ Barefoot in the Park
Jane Fanda, Robert Redford
SUA POPULAR FILM SERIES SHOWS AT 7:30 AND 9:30 FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY DYCHE AUDITORIUM DMISSION 40c ADMISSION 40c
CLIP AND SAVE
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Track stars represent KU at Olympic trials
KU track star Jim Ryun, coach Bob Timmons, and three other Jayhawkers arrived at South Lake Tahoe, Calif., last weekend for the final Olympic trvouts, which began Monday.
In four recent tuneup meets Ryun has run the 880 in 1:47.9 at Flagstaff, Ariz., the mile in 3:59.0 and 3:55.9 at Eugene, Ore., and Walnut, Calif., and the 1,500 meters in 3:43.0 at South Lake Tahoe.
Bornkessel, who graduated last year from Shawnee-Mission North high school, Johnson County, Kans., clocked 49.8 two weeks ago at South Lake Tahoe, knocking more than a full second off his previous best for the 400-meter hurdles.
Ryun, who holds world records for the mile (3:51.1) and 1,500 meters (3:31.1), as well as the unofficial mark for the half-mile (1:44.9), is said to be in top form following a seige of mononucleosis early in the summer.
Members of the 1969 Kansas varsity squad who will be competing for the right to go to Mexico City this fall are: Ryun, Whitica, senior, 800 and 1,500 meters; Stan Whitley, Washington, D.C., senior, long jump; Karl Salb, Crossett, Ark., sophomore, shotput, and Dick Bornkessel, Shawnee Mission, freshman, 400-meter intermediate hurdles.
The only time in Big Eight history the race has been run faster was when former Kansas ace Cliff Cushman finished second in the 1960 Rome Olympics in 49.6.
Salb, who is also in his first year at KU, recently pushed his career best for the shot to 64-3½ with a second place finish behind Neil Steinhauer at Eugene, Ore.
Whitley spanned 25-7.at the South Lake Tahoe meet, just missing his best mark of 25-81/2 which he set last June. He reports he is no longer bothered with an ankle injury that plagued him throughout the 1968 collegiate season.
In addition to the four current Jayhawks, two former KU track stars will bid for further Olympic honors. Al Oerter, discus champion at the last three Olympic meets, will try for his fourth trip to the world games. Billy Mills, surprise winner of the 10,000 meters at Tokyo four years ago, is hopeful of a chance
Gridder qualifies for two awards
Mike Ccoy, a 210-pound sophomore offensive guard from Hiawatha, has qualified for two of KU's highest scholarships on the basis of his freshman academic record.
DUFFERS DEFENDED
DUFFERS DEFENDE
DETROIT — (UPI) — Golf rules discriminate against duffers, says the United States Duffers' Association.
McCoy, an electrical engineering major, qualified for the Summerfield and N. T. Veatch awards. The Veatch award is made to top students in the School of Engineering. Because McCoy is already on a full KU athletic scholarship, NCAA rules prohibit him from receiving additional financial aid.
McCoy's GPA's last year were 2.69 first semester and 2.82 second semester.
Coach Pepper Rodgers stationed McCoy at No. 2 tight guard as backup man to Kenny Wertzberger, a Lawrence senior who played regularly at that spot last season.
The 1,000-member group wants the rules changed to allow a golfer to shoot out-of-bounds or to improve his lie without a penalty, according to the Encyclopedia of Associations, published by Gale Research Company, Detroit.
to defend that title at Mexico City.
The U.S. trials at South Lake Tahoe run from Monday of this
week to next Monday and follow the exact schedule of the Olympic games, to be held in Mexico City October 13-20.
Football coach Pepper Rodgers, preparing to start his second year at KU, likes to point out that the Jayhawk squad is made up mostly of Kansans.
Kansans anchor grid team
This is counter to the normal trend of far-flung recruiting in college football, he points out.
Eight of the 11 players on the
top offensive unit and five of the top 11 defenders for the 1968 season are from Kansas. There are 13 other native Kansans or Kansas Citizens slated for backup duty.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
VANELI
Clunkers via Europe
The he-male brogue of the past becomes the she-male brogue of the future. VANELI-EUROPA pulls the switch.
It swaggers the imagination in burnished saddle brown leather. Some styles in navy and black leather. Sizes to 11 twenty dollars...
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
Experience-KU's strongest
Experience seemed to be the key word at the University of Kansas last week as coach Pepper Rodgers and his staff assembled the 67-man 1968 football squad for the start of fall drills.
Rodgers' second Jayhawk squad, which met here August 29 to begin practice, includes 24 lettermen, 15 of whom are seniors with two letters apiece. Included in this group are most of those who played key roles in KU's spectacular restoration last autumn when the Jayhawks tied for second in the Big Eight at 5-2 after failing to win a conference game the previous year.
The Hawks began drills without pads August 30 and started two-a-day drills in full practice gear three days later. This means that they will have had only three weeks of practice when they meet Illinois at Champaign September 21.
Heading the list of veterans are a pair of 1967 all-Big Eight stars, defensive end John Zook and quarterback Bobby Douglass.
The Jayhawks are extremely strong "up the middle" this year.
At center will be Dale Evans, 210-pound junior from Russell, Kan., who as a rookie last year played nearly every down on offense.
According to coach Pepper Rodgers, Evans was "one of the most under-rated players on our squad" last year.
"We think he'll be as good a center as there is in our conference."
At quarterback the dayhawks boast one of the nation's best in 212-pound senior Bobby Douglass, a hard- running, rifle-armed southpaw who led the Big Eight in total offense as a Junior.
Last season the Eldorado dynamo ran and passed for 1741 yards, missing the conference total offense record by only eight yards as he sparked the Jayhawks to a second place tie with Colorado.
Fullback could wind up as Kansas' strongest position from both a quality and quantity standpoint.
Listed No. 1 to start fall drills next week is Mike Reeves, a 205-pound junior from Concordia, Kan., who shared regular duties a year ago with departed C.J. Hixon. Reeves gained 243 yards to rank third among KU's rushers and his 5.3-yard average per carry was nearly twice that of either Douglass or tailback Junior Riggins, the only other Jayhawk to outgain him.
Contending with Reeves for the job will be John Riggins, swift, 225-pounder from Centralia, Kan., and Rick Rucker of Olympia, Wash., two of the brightest of numerous sophomores.
Returning double letter winners include Zook, Douglass, Junior Riggins, Rick Abernethy, linebacker; Tommy Anderson, safety; Tommy Ball, defensive halfback; Keith Christensen, offensive tackle; Mickey Doyle, linebacker; Bill Greene, defensive tackle; Bill Hunt, defensive halfback; John Jackson, wingback; Dave Morgan, safety; Don Shanklin, tailback; Orville Turgeon, defensive tackle; and Ken Wertzberger, offensive guard.
Abernethy missed all last season with a shoulder injury after lettering as an offensive back in 1965 and as a defensive halfback in 1966.
WEEJUNS
...naturally
Golden Grain
Brown
Cordo
Black
Amber
$18.95
Bass®
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
WEEJUNS
...naturally
$18.95
Bass
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
WEEJUNS Golden Grain Brown Cordo Black Amber naturally
Other returning lettermen are:
Evans; Reeves; Bill Bell, placekicker; Grant Dahl, offensive tackle; Dick Fortier, linebacker;
Emery Hicks, middle guard; Pat Hutchens, line backer; John Mosier, tight end; and Vernon Vanoy, defensive end.
Coaches run
To condition themselves for the rigors of football practice Kansas coach Pepper Rodgers and his aides began running a mile a day in Allen Field House the last two weeks of August.
The joggers capped their running program with a five-mile relay matching the offensive coaches against the defensive coaches. To balance out the five-man teams Rodgers inserted himself in the defensive lineup.
10
DOUGLASS A KEY MEMBER OF JAYHAWK OFFENSE
DOUGLASS A KEY MEMBER OF JAYHAWK OFFENSE Bob Douglass, who will quarterback the Jayhawks this season, led the Big Eight in total offense last season with 1,741 yards and won the conference Back of the Year award. Douglass, a 212 pound senior from ELDorado completed 82 of 173 passes for 1,326 yards and rushed 175 times for 415 yards.
For Busy Students on the Go—
In by 9:00—Out by 5:00 Same Day Service We're TOPS
Shirts on Hangers or Folded 5 for $1.39
Handy Drive-Up Window
TOPS
CLEANERS
LAUNDERERS
SHIRTS
OR DANGERS
9/13 9
TOPS
Wardrobe Care Centers
Oops
CLEANERS
LAUNDERS
5 SHIRT S
ON HANGERS
$1.39
EASY
PARKING
Two Convenient Locations:
1517
West 6th
- and -
1526
West 23rd
OPEN 7:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M.
*A division of Lawrence Launderers & Dry Cleaners, Inc.
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Illini may not have size, but they're 'hungry'
When the KU football team opens its season against Illinois University Sept 21, in Champaign, Ill. they will be facing a team with that proverbial "tean and hungry" look—especially after a disappointing 4-6 season in 1967.
Jim Valek, Illinois football coach has indicated his concern over the leanness of his team and probably wishes that the "hungry look" might be transformed into some sorely needed weight. This year's Illinois team shows an overall lack of size, particularly in the interior offensive line. It averages 213 pounds.
Senior co-captain Tony Pleviak, at 6-3 and 226 pounds was in on 83 tackles and broke up six pass attempts during the 1967 campaign.
At the other tackle is Mickey Hogan, a 6-5, 204 pound junior. In spite of his weight, which is considerably lighter than many defensive tackles, Hogan was involved in 53 tackles in 1967.
Both Pleviak and Hogan are proven pass rushers. Pleviak led the Big Ten in tackles for losses, with 14 stops for minus 60 yards. Hogan had nine tackles for 48 yards in losses, recovered three fumbles and broke up two passes. In two seasons, Pleviak has thrown 27 ball carriers for 140 yards in losses.
The picture is brighter for the defensive line. KU will have to contain what many Big Ten observers consider to be the finest set of defensive tackles in the conference.
Another Illinois standout is fullback Rich Johnson, a 6-1, 207 pound senior who has gained 1,085 yards in two seasons with the Illini and could move into second place behind Jim Grabowski in the list of all-time Illinois ground gainers.
Last season Johnson was the Big Ten's number two rusher
Northwestern when he piled up 159 vards.
with 604 yards in 153 carries-a 3.9 yard average. He also led his team in scoring with six touchdowns. He went over 100 yards in four starts, his best effort on the ground coming against
Valek must depend heavily on senior Quarterback Bob Naponic if his team is to provide a passing punch to go along with the solid ground game. Naponic, who
stands 6 feet and weighs 186 pounds, was injured in the opening game at Florida last year and saw only limited action the rest of the season.
As a sophomore, Naponic completed 70 of 162 passes for
998 yards and four touchdowns. As a junior seeing only limited action, he completed 13 of 29 aerials for 126 yards and one touchdown.
Twenty-two lettermen return to a comparatively young squad.
Sandy's...
Sandy's ...
welcomes KU Students
Speedy Service
&
Quality Food
OUR HOURS ARE
11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Weekdays
11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sat. & Sunday
Sandy's
2120 West 9th
Phone – VI 2-2930
Sandy's
omes KU Students
Sandy's
Sandy's
Sandy's
Sandy's
FOR THAT SPECIAL OCCASION A Wiglet Or 100% Human Hair WIG!
● Special Orders
● 36 International color samples
Now you can switch your hair style to suit your mood.
Do your own hair styling and save!
Wiglets Only $495 Human Hair Wig $1895
DUCKWALL'S
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
9TH AND IOWA
Special Orders
36 International color samples
Now you can switch your hair style to suit your mood.
Do your own hair styling and save!
Wiglets Only $495 Human Hair Wig $1895
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9TH AND IOWA DOWNTOWN—10TH AND MASS.
THE VILLAGE SET THE IN LAWRENCE BOUTIQUE SHOP
Always FIRST with the WIDEST selections of the LATEST fashions
...FEATURING.
Lanz . . . Ladybug . . Pendleton Jonathan Logan . . Gay Gibson Country Set. . Village Set. Don Sophisticates etc.
Open Thursday evenings for your shopping convenience.
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts VI 2-1400
LOOKING FOR A BOOK?
use this map of the text book department to locate major subject areas
WEST CIV. 1 & 2
TO CHECK OUT LANES
BUSINESS ECONOMICS EDUCATION
ENGL. 3 ENGLISH ENGLISH
AMER. HUMAN STUDIES DEV.
ENGL. I JOUR. LING. S HUMANITI
OTHER LANG. SPAN. & PORT.
GERMAN FRENCH
PSYCH. SOC. ANTHRO.
ART BOOKS LOCATED ON UPPER LEVEL
WEST CIV.
1 & 2
BUSINESS ECONOMICS EDUCATION
ENGL. 3 ENGLISH ENGLISH 2
TO CHECK OUT LANES
AMER. HUMAN STUDIES DEV.
ENGL. 1
JOUR. LING. S
HUMANITI
UP
OTHER LANG. SPAN. & PORT.
GERMAN FRENCH
PSYCH. SOC. ANTHRO.
ART BOOKS LOCATED ON UPPER LEVEL
kansas union
1
here is a shelf tag for each course, which gives the course number, the author and title and instructor if two or more instructors teach the same course but use different books. A required book is a must for the course. A recommended book is one which the professor feels would be a useful and valuable addition. It is not a must; its purchase depends upon the student's interest. Recommended books will be on the text shelves during semester opening but will be designed as "recommended" and the shelf tag will be orange instead of white as it is for a required
school openings, to provide for changes in courses, text books are returnable WITH RE-PT during the free drop period. They are returnable for full value only if they are in NEW edition. Do not write your name in a book if there is any question that you might change the verse, and do not make notes in it. If you have written your name in the book or made any es, the book is a used book and you can be refunded only one-half the new retail price.
ing the balance of the year, with the exception of the last two weeks of any semester, text ks in new condition are returnable with receipt up to 10 days after purchase.
ext books are accepted for return during the last two weeks of any semester, regardless of sale of purchase.
EDUCATION MATH.
ENGL.
2 CHEM. PHYSICS
GEOG., GEOL., & METR. ENGR.
AN
PHIL. & REL.
ANTH.
1
SPEECH HUMAN REL.
MANITIES
ORT.
CH BIO-SCIENCE
BOTANY BIOLOGY EAST & WEST
CIV.
THRO. HISTORY POL. SCIENCE
nsas nion BOOKSTORE
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857
CLOSET NEEDS
Shop Thursdays 'Til 8:30 p.m.
OPEN A WEAVER'S CHARGE ACCOUNT
storage chests
SPACE SAVERS
Attractive space adders. Wood frame and fiber-
board with washable exterior. Non-warp partitions,
reinforced throughout.
5 drawers, $12\frac{1}{2} \times 13\times 34^{\frac{3}{4}}$ high ... $7.98
4 drawers, $22\frac{1}{2}" \times 13\times 28"$ high ... $8.98
(Not Shown)
5 drawers, gold Quilted LoBoy 21x12x28"
high or Hiboy 15x12x34" high.
each $10.99
under bed
V
metal chests
Keep clothes, blankets and linens fresh and safe. Gold or silver rust-resistant vinyl aluminum finish, plated trim. 35"x18"x6"
42"x18"x6" w/lock $7.98
Canvas Laundry Bags—$1.29 to $2.25
SPECIAL! $5.98
ideal
12 Pocket Shoe Bags—$1.00 to $4.50
IDEAL SHOE RACK
. . Keeps your shoes off the floor . . . ready for convenient selection. Rigid construction. Chrome plate for beauty.
IDEAL WOMEN'S 9-PAIR
SHOE KEEPER
Holds women's shoes in small space. Wedge-lock construction for durability. Flastic capped tubular legs.
Also available: Ideal 12 pair
Loop Shoe Keeper $2.88.
Ideal Men's Shoe Keeper for
6 pairs of shoes. $1.88
A
Adjusts to fit wide and narrow doors. 12" sturdy hanger bar will carry heavy loads. .79c
IDEAL OVER-DOOR
HANGER
Swing Down Over-
Door Hanger ... 88c
IDEAL MULTIPLE
SLACK RACK
TIE RACKS
For the well-dressed young American. Conquer closet space with this Slack Rack. Hang 5 slacks or shorts in space for one. Has hook for belts.
Only 88c
The most useful tree on campus is the Blouse Tree. Holds six blouses or shirts on form fitting, swinging arms. Extra long plastic tips prevent garments from slipping.
SKIRT ADDA-HANGERS
Hang one of these Adda-
Hangers from another to
save space. Adjustable plastic
tipped pins hold skirts,
shorts or slacks gently but
securely. 3 to a set. 88c
D
A
IDEAL BLOUSE TREE
IDEAL
?
IDEAL SKIRT AND BLOUSE ADDA-HANGER
Individual hangers keep skirt, blouse and belt together for instant wardrobe coordination. And you can hang one from another to conserve closet space. Cushion tip clips are adjustable.
2 for 88c
A hand is pointing to a shirt hanging on a hanger.
H
IDEAL 4-TIER SKIRT RACK
Have room to spare with this 4-tier skirt rack—hold 4 skirts on one hanger. Adjustable pins are vinyl tipped to eliminate snagging. There are loops to hang belts. Folds for traveling.
NOTIONS-MAIN FLOOR
IDEAL 38"
GARMENT RACK
GARMENT RACK tubing. Equipped with racks for hats and shoes. Rigid slide-n-lock construction allows quick assembly without tools. Has free rolling casters. $7.98 Without shoe rack & casters. $5.98
IDEAL
IDEAL GARMENT RACK
VI 3-6360
Chrome plated 1½" steel tubing. Expands from 42" to 70". Has a full width shoe shelf and spacious hat rack; umbrella and purse hooks. Moves on free rolling casters. Easily assembled with no tools. $13.98
Traditional Hand-Sewn Elegance Begins With Taylor-Made ...
The Taylor-Made Shoe
242-Burnt Ivory. Strap with Hand Forged Brass Buckle Chukka...
231-Burnt Ivory "Beefroll" Saddle Classic, Genuine Hand-Sewn Front...
91, 92-Black or Chestnut Brown "Cobble Stitched Saddle" Classic Slip-On Moc.
518-Deep Burgundy "Beefroll" Saddle Classic Slip-On Moc and Pinked Collar...
Sizes to 14
Priced from twenty dollars
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
837 Massachusetts
THE Taylor-Made SHOE
VACATION AND TRAVEL GUIDE
TRAVEL BY AIR
TRAVEL BY WATER
With The Confident Knowledge That All Arrangements Have Been Made Perfectly
...
...
Come See Us First at MAUPINTOUR
Airline Tickets Theater T
Student Tickets Car Rental
Steamship Tickets Student T
Hotel & Resort Reservations
Passport & Visa Guidance
Many Other Travel Aids Services
★ Theater Tickets
★ Car Rental & Purchase
★ Student Tours
---
V
© KCRW INC.
Visit Us For Complete Travel Arrangements
Deanna Bell Diane Kunce Marilyn Keene Sylvia Mennerick Susan Brungarot Chris Mullen WALT HOUK,MANAGER
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE in the Malls Shopping Center
8:00 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Mon.- Fri.
Sat. till 12 Noon
Students traveling for Job Interviews, please ask about our Credit Arrangements.
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Kansan survey shows etiquette for pubs
College life presents a number of social problems for students, especially those who have just left the apron strings of home.
As a public service to freshmen the University Daily Kansan is presenting the results of an extended survey of local night spots, designed to give direction and substance to the freshman socialite.
No one likes to be out of place, like wearing a tux at a pot party or getting caught with penny loafers at the Rock Chalk. So, for those of who wish to pick the crowd and atmosphere that best suits their taste here are the social "ins" for those close-to-campus recreation areas.
How to Act at the Rock Chalk Cafe:
How to Act at the
For men:
Rock Chalk Cafe:
For men:
1. Tease your hair and don't shave.
2. Rip the filters off a pack of Winstons and twist the cigarettes so they look like joints.
3. Wear knee-high moccasins and a peace button and say "Oh, Wow!" a lot.
4. Sit on the sidewalk and swear about police brutality.
For women:
1. Wear blue jeans or granny dresses
2. Clutch your date and cry "I'm afraid, I'm afraid," like you're on a bummer.
3. Bring a box of pretzels and hand them out to all the people sitting around.
4. Wear a long fall and wire-rimmed glasses.
For men:
how to Act at the Jayhawk Cafe:
Jayhawk Cafe:
For men:
1. Wear a short-sleeved button-down dress shirt, madras shorts and a fraternity pin.
2. Wear sandals or penny loafers without socks.
3. Have a conservative haircut but grow long sideburns.
4. Buy a quart of Bud and smoke Winstons while you stand in the aisle and try to look cool.
For women:
1. Put your hair up.
2. Wear a sorority pin on culottes that ride way up when you sit down.
3. Wear sandals.
4. Talk about the new pledge class.
5. Ignore your date.
6. Sip your beer but act like you don't really enjoy it.
How to Act at the Wheel:
For men:
1. Move out of your fraternity house without permission and get fined $100, but don't pay it.
2. Wear T-shirts and blue jeans. Try to pick up a chick but don't really care whether you succeed or not.
3. Get drunk Friday afternoon.
For women:
Additions made to music faculty
The music faculty of the KU school of fine arts this summer announced the appointments of four new instructors.
Irwin Spector, on leave from the University of Illinois at Normal, was appointed visiting professor of Music history.
George R. Boberg, will be an assistant professor of percussion and assistant director of bands. Boberg earned master's degrees from the Illinois State University and the Manhatten School of Music.
Steven Smith, who studied at Baylor University, the Eastman School of music and the Mo-zarteum Academy in Salzburg, Austria, will be an instructor in piano.
Frank Neil Brown, who played professionally in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, will be an instructor of trombone.
The school had previously announced the additions of Charles K. Hoag and Franklin Mitchell to its faculty. Hoag will be an assistant instructor of music theory and Mitchell will be a visiting lecturer, teaching a course in organ design and construction
1. Go with your Kappa or Theta pledge class.
2. Sit all at one table and ignore the guys yelling wise remarks.
3. Be cool.
How to Act at the Stables:
For men:
1. Be an independent or a Sigma Nu or a Kapka Sig.
2. Dress grungy.
3. Ignore the truck drivers who make surly remarks about your hair.
4. Play pool and dangle a cigarette from your lips so you look like Paul Newman.
5. Pick up some Lawrence chick and have her back in half an hour.
For women:
1. Sit alone at the bar and try to look sexy and bored.
2. Smoke lots of cigarettes and tilt your head back when you exhale.
3. Have your own private beer mug hanging on the ceiling.
How to Act at the Gaslight: For men:
4. Wear clothes two sizes to small and lots of eye makeup.
1. Wear a paint-stained smock or else a corduroy jacket.
2. Grow a beard even if it does itch like hell.
3. Carry around a copy of James Joyce's Ulysses and look intellectual.
4. Be an economics or philosophy instructor.
5. Try to decide whether or not to join SDS.
6. Form a University within a University.
For women:
1. Try to act hippie but don't be willing to do all that nasty stuff.
2. Be liberal in choice of dates.
DASH and
DRAMA
By
Bobbie Brooks
Full Fashioned
Turtleneck
WOOL SWEATER
$10.00
Leather—
Tabbed Kilt in
Red, Black & White
$16.00
Jay
SHOPPE
FREE PARKING
PROJECT 800
• 835 MASS.
• VI3-4833
SMART CAMPUS FASHIONS
LAWRENCE BUY CLEANERS
Lawrence's Leading Laundry & Dry Cleaners Welcomes KU Students!
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners Now at 1029 New Hamp.
KU
featuring:
Drive-up Window
Off Street Parking
Extended Hours to serve you:
7 a.m. - 7 p.m. (Mon. - Fri.)
7 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. (Sat.)
daily pickup & delivery to all KU dorms, fraternities and sororities.
14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
B & G kept busy on work projects, weather helps
KU Building and Grounds crews completed three major projects this summer. Harry Buchholz, Director of Building and Grounds said his force was kept busy:
- Remodeling the former print shop area in the west end of Flint hall.
- Paving the road leading to Sudler house, north of 11th Street at West Campus Road.
- Laying sod in the area around the New Spencer Library.
The Flint hall remodeling included installation of new TV labs for the radio-TV program and new ceramics and industrial arts work areas for the department of design.
Buchholz said he feels the campus is in generally better shape than in previous years. He said this was due to favorable weather.
Staff positions open on Greek publication
Staff applications are now being accepted for the "Greek Column," the IFC newspaper for fraternities and sororities, according to John Hill, Prairie Village senior, editor.
The "Greek Column" appeared as a special rush week edition Sept. 1, and fraternity and sorority presidents are asked to select a house representative and contact Richard Louv, Wichita sophomore, associate editor, at Phi Kappa Theta, Hill said.
Politics gets the business
In the face of KU's tradition for political apathy, one of the biggest attractions at the SUA Activities Carnival Monday in the Kansas Union was politics.
Three of the most active student political organizations, the Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR'S) the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the Independent Student Party (ISP), had displays at the gathering.
All three drew large crowds. In fact, it seemed at times the largest crowds in the second floor area were gathered around these booths.
Despite the much publicized "lack of interest" in the GOP national ticket, the CYR table was always crowded.
By the end of the evening, the group's supply of Nixon-Agnew campaign buttons and bumper stickers was almost gone.
A large number of students visited the table, bought CYR memberships, and left wearing Nixon buttons, suggesting there was some life in the GOP ticket.
The Republicans had no competition from KU's seldom active Young Democrats.
The competition came from the SDS table, which was almost directly adiacent.
SDS members, sporting long hair, blue jeans, and old army jackets, passed out literature on the draft, police brutality during the Democratic National convention, and other subjects.
Several pages of names were
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
I
SKI COUNTRY TURTLENECK
in Washable Wool and Kodel BY CAREER CLUB
Your choice of many striking colors:
White, Heather, Stripes,
Black, Blue & Gold
$10.00 and up
at
RossDISNEY
MENS WEAR
811 MASS.
VI 3-3160
taken for the SDS mailing list.
Visiting Indian prof to instruct at university
Always the crowds were large, but as many students seemed to be looking for a good view of a real SDS-type hippie as in joining the group.
Several leaders of the closely associated ISP group were also in the general area.
In last spring's elections, ISP made some notable gains.
If it is not as powerful as the better-established University Party, it is certainly the more ambitious of the two.
It seems 1968 might prove to be an interesting political year at KU.
A former visiting professor at the University of California at Berkley and professor at Panjah University, India, will be a visiting professor at the University of Kansas this fall.
T. P. Srinivasan has authored one book.
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857
WeaverS Inc.
Weaver's Inc.
Sewing Lawrence...Since 1857
OPEN A WEAVER'S CHARGE ACCOUNT
Study Lamps
Decorative and versatile back-to-school lighting in a class by itself . . . designed to throw a better light on every subject. Smartly styled in a choice of styles and colors. High intensity, desk and 3-way floor lamps.
$3.88 to $23.00
BACK-TO-SCHOOL NO-IRON BEDSPREADS ARE SALE-PRICED AT WEAVER'S NOW!!
- Famous Names
- Decorative
READS
CED
- Low, Low Prices
"OVATION" by Cannon . . . strictly tailored to the trim, decorator preferences of today's student . . . whether for use in dormitory or smart room at home . . . is this attractive plaid bedspread. Blue/green, Orange/brown, Red/gold. Twin.
Reg. $9.98 SALE $7.99
"MONTICELLO" by Cannon . . . decorative check with interwoven metallic thread. Washable. No ironing. 99% cotton, 1% other fiber. Apple red, nugget brown, verdant blue.
Twin, reg. 8.99 . . . . . . SALE $6.99
"PIPING ROCK by Bates . . . great choice for home or dorm. Rounded corners. Lint free. Completely washable, drip-dry. Huge range of wash-fast decorator colors.
Bunk, Reg. $10.99 SALE $7.99
Twin, Reg. $11.99 SALE $8.99
Full, Reg. $12.99 SALE $9.99
ENTER BATES FIRST ANNUAL "SEND ME TO COLLEGE CONTEST"
Anyone can enter, anyone can win, only a student can use the GRAND PRIZE: ONE YEAR'S FREE TUITION AT THE COLLEGE OF WINNER'S CHOICE.
Register thru Oct. 5 in our Linen Shop, at Lawrence's Only Participating Store!
Friday, September 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
Scholarships awarded to 171 students
One hundred seventy-one University of Kansas students have been awarded full or partial scholarships for the 1968-69 school year.
Eighteen different scholarships were awarded including the Watkins and Summerfield Scholarships, the Fulbright-Hays Fellowship for study abroad, the Kansas Contractors Association Scholarship, the Elizabeth M. Hoyt Scholarship in Business, the Skelly Oil Company Scholarship, the Emil Dade Scholarship in Business, the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Fund Award, the Kansas Association of finance Companies Fellowship, the Laverne Noyles Scholarship for descendants of World War I veterans, the Donnelly Memorial Scholarship, the Ahrens Scholarship in Engineering, the Avery Scholarship in Engineering, the Laird Dean Scholarship, the National Defense Education foreign language fellowship, and Greater University Fund Scholarships.
The recipients are:
Watkins Scholarships for girls:
Diana Beyer, Lyons, junior; Julia Blakeslee, Independence, sophomore; Kathleen Currey, Kensington, sophomore; Candus Hedberg, Topea, sophomore; Carla Hendricks, St. Francis, sophomore; Linda Hofman, Overland
Park, sophomore; Nancy Jorn,
Oberlin, sophomore; Rita Matousek,
Cuba, senior; Patricia Melvin,
Shawnee Mission, sophomore;
and Marilyn Pond, Cherryvale, senior.
Summerfield Scholarships for boys: Ivan Conover, Satanta, senior; Eric DeGroff, Kansas City, sophomore; Ron Doyen, Ottawa, sophomore; William Edwards, Wichita, junior; Gregory Endsley, Wichita, sophomore; David Harsha, Topeka, sophomore; Samuel Henry, Concordia, senior; Richard Hornsbay, Lawrence, senior; Thomas Koetting, Prairie Village, sophomore; Harold Mark, Yates Center, sophomore; Norman Mueller, Marion, sophomore; Michael T. McCoy, Hiawatha, sophomore; Andrew McDonald, Garnett, sophomore; James Orr, Topeka, senior; Kent Palmberg, Topeka, sophomore; Walter Pentz, Ottawa, sophomore; Lawrence Rosen, Topeka, sophomore; James Springer, Hoisington, sophomore; and Roger Sternberger, Harper, senior.
Fullbright-Hays Fellowships for study abroad: Peter Feuerle, Lawrence, graduate student; Michael Gatley, Marysville, Calif., graduate student; and Wayne McWilliams, Topeka, graduate student.
Kansas Contractors Association Scholarship: James Banks, Topeka, sophomore; John Gallagher, Overland Park, junior; George Milleret, Lawrence, senior; and James Orr, Topeka, senior.
Elizabeth M. Hoyt Scholarships in Business: Richard C. Lucas Jr., Lakin, senior; Mrs. Leslie J. Mitchell, Lawrence, junior; Bruce Morgan, Chanute, freshman; Christopher G. Petr, Topea, sophomore; Joyce E. Schulte, Lawrence, junior; Errol D. Steinmetz, Kansas City, freshman; and Michael Welch, Lincoln, Nebr., junior.
The Skelly Oil Company Scholarship in Business: Brent K. Waldron, Denison, Iowa, senior.
Emil Dade Scholarship in Business: David E. Menaugh, Kansas City, senior.
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company Fund Award: Randy W. Tongier, Coffeyville, senior. Kansas Association of Finance Companies Fellowship: Mrs. Virginia S. Manley, Saddle River, N.J. senior.
Laverne Noyes Scholarships:
Steven B. Davis, Lyons, senior;
Douglas Henson, Raytown, Mo,
sophomore; Donna Kuhmann,
Glendive, Mont., medical student;
Steven Sparrow, Bedford,
Mass., junior; Steven Townsend,
Garden City, sophomore;
Charles R. Mingle, Guymon,
Okla, sophomore; and Michael
D. Spence, Fort Scott, freshman.
Donnelly Scholarships: Linda Bryant, Lawrence sophomore; Elizabeth Butler, Ottawa, junior; Ronald Domsch, Atwood, sophomore; Sandra Crumet, Lawrence, senior; Robert Erwin, Wichita, sophomore; Pamela Pratt, Topeka, junior; Craig Martin, Wichita, sophomore; James Knoop, Olathe, junior; Thomas Jones, Topeka, junior; Martha Williams, Lawrence, sophomore; Nancy Taylor, Lawrence, senior; Mary R. Sauer, sophomore, Lawrence; Katharine L. Reed, Lawrence, senior; and Virginia A. Wulfkunle, Lawrence, senior.
Ahrens Scholarship in Engineering; Bruce Bodecker, Benton, freshman; Michael Freeman, Kansas City, freshman; Harold Hubrig, Topeka, freshman; Gregg Reynolds, Ottawa, freshman; Randall States, Toronto, freshman; and Paul Womble, Kansas City, sophomore.
Avery Scholarship in Engineering: Gary Adkins, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Richard Rasmussen, Jetmore, junior; and Eric Studky, Lawrence, sophomore. W. Laird Dean Award Fund: Constance L. Poff, Horton, senior.
National Defense Education
foreign language grants: Bert Wayne, Abilene, graduate student; Eugene Corcoran, Mergate, graduate student; Thomas Palmerlee, Lawrence, graduate student; John Whalen, Alexandria, Minn., graduate student; Stella Clark, Pensacola, Fla., graduate student; Charles Collins, Easton, Colo., graduate student; Richard Salisbury, Oswego, N.Y., graduate student; James Skinner, Reston, Va., graduate student; Kenneth Thompson, West Line, Mo., graduate student; Hans Brisch, Lawrence, graduate student; Jack Cannon, Pittsburg, graduate student; George Jerkovich, Lawrence, graduate student; Walter Kolonosky, Shamokin, Pa., graduate student; Maul Steeves, Lawrence, graduate student; and John Studkey, Lawrence, graduate student.
EARLY IMMUNITY
KIRKSVILLE, Mo. —(UPI) — Twelve-year-old Susan Spain-hower credits her brother, Craig, 15, for her perfect school attendance record during the first six years of grade school.
Susan has not had any children's illnesses during her school years. She explains: "Craig brought everything home when I was a baby."
WEEJUNS
... with love
$15.95
Brown Smooth
Blue Grain
Green Grain
Amber Smooth
Brown Grain
Smooth Tassel
Arensberg's
=Shoes
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
Bass
power motor
Arensberg's
= Shoes
in person
BELAFONTE
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE SAT., SEPT. 21 8:00 p.m.
Tickets - $2.00 - $2.50 - $3.00
Tickets will go on sale Monday, Sept. 16 at the Information Booth and the SUA Office in the Kansas Union.
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 13, 1968
Scholarships awarded
Five KU engineering students have been awarded Frank Lansing Gilmore scholarships for the 1968-69 academic year.
The Gilmore scholarship fund was established by the late Frank L. Gilmore, an 1898 graduate of the KU School of Engineering who became a leading electrical engineer and developer of utilities in Mexico.
The Gilmore scholars are:
to be visiting professor
Expert on Soviet policy
The University of Kansas will host a visiting professor of history from Russia this year.
Computer geologist to KU
Official Bulletin
FRIDAY September 13
S. T. Utechin, a widely published author and research authority in Russia, will be a visiting associate professor of history at KU this fall.
fellow and $1,000 for field and research expenses, will be used to study the use of computers in solving geological problems.
Enrollment. All day, Kansas Union.
Band try-outs. All day, 228 Mur-
University Orchestra and Choir Auditions, 10-11, 1-4, Murphy Hall. Popular Film, "Fahrenheit 451." 7 & 9-30 p.m., Dybe Auditorium.
Charles W. Ondrick has been appointed to the Pan American Petroleum Foundation's newly-established post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Kansas for the 1968-69 academic year
SATURDAY
September 14
Open House. All day, Kansas Union.
Foreign Language Proficiency Examination. 8 a.m., Carruth O'Leary.
Free Film. "Under The Yum-Yum Tuna." & 9:30, Forum Room.
Kansas Union.
Popular Film. "Fahrenheit 451." 7 & 9:30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium.
SUA Dance. 8 p.m., Kansas Union
The fellowship, which provides a stipend of $7,000 for the
Ondrick, a native of Brooklyn, received M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at Pennsylvania State.
SUNDAY September 15
September 10.
Carillon Recital. 3 p.m., Albert Ger-
George F. Bryan, Atchison sophomore; Roger Carter, Lawrence freshman; Carl R. Goode, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Stephen J. Reynolds, Parsons junior; and Steven L. Stanton, Dodge City junior.
Theater Rally. 7 p.m. Murphy Hall.
8 p.m. 9:30 p.m. Dockyard Auditorium.
MONDAY September 16
16xrd All-University Convocation.
Opening Exercises, 9:30 a.m., Hoch
TUESDAY September 17
College Faculty Meeting. 4:30 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union.
SUA Membership Meeting. 7:30
p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom.
WEDNESDAY
September 18
e Payment. All day.
Classical Film. "Man in the White Suit." 7 & 9 p.m., Dyche Auditorium.
P-to-P Membership Meeting. 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom.
Ulton Bank
THURSDAY
September 19
September 20 Fee Payment. All day.
September 19
Fee Payment. All day.
FRIDAY
September 20
Popular Film, "Time Lost, Time Remembered," 7 & 9:30 p.m., Dyche
Theatre, Creed Group. "Ten Little
Nations." 8:20 p.m., University The-
dium.
SATURDAY September 21
High School Journalism Conference.
All Joy, Kansas Union.
AFC Football, Illinois; 1:30 p.m. Urbana.
Peace Corps Placement Test: 1:30
Popular Film. "Time Lost, Time
Rumbled," 7 & 9:30 pm. Dyche
Bamberton.
SUA Concert. Harry Belafonte. 8
Allen, Field House.
SUNDAY
September 22
p. Theatre, Crew Group. "Ten Little
Indians." 8:20 p.m. University The-
me.
22nd Annual Museum of Art Open House. 1:30-3:30 p.m., Lawrence Architectural Display.
Carillon Recital. 3 p.m., Albert Ger-
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST CO.
Welcomes Students and Faculty
OLDEST AND MOST CONVENIENT BANK IN TOWN
TWO DRIVE-IN WINDOWS PLUS CUSTOMER PARKING AREA
SPECIAL OR REGULAR CHECKING ACCOUNTS WITH SPECIAL DESIGN FOR KU STUDENTS
LAWRENCE
STATEN ISLAND
MOTOR SUPPLIES
LNB
7th & Massachusetts
Member F.D.I.C.
VI 3-2110
MIDNIGHT CLOWN
BANDOLINOS
You want a fashion look that takes over the campus. Take your cue from the new Bandolinos. Shapes of things to come—when you want to look a "look" ahead of everybody else. We have the advance news in fashion . . . we put it at your feet. Sizes 5 to 11 both styles. Colors—black, powder, camel, navy, brown.
Priced from fourteen dollars.
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
I
The
University World
SPECIAL FALL CLOTHING SUPPLEMENT
MISTER
GUY
Clothing in this window is characteristic of college men of good taste. Natural shoulder clothing with a flair for color and subtle refinement. The new shaped clothing as shown here will add new dimension when combined with the classic basics of your well planned wardrobe.
Men's New Clothing
Tradition Prevails
Each year, the question always comes up. "What's new in clothes on the campus?" As in previous years, the styling changes are mostly in detailing for the man who holds to the classic, natural shoulder look.
In suits, there are many minor changes which appeal to the active man about campus. For instance the new fall suits at Mister Guy feature wider lapels, slightly deeper center vents in the back and many new shades in glen plaid and other patterned fabrics.
The traditional three-button suit is still the mainstay, complete with cuffed trousers in the traditional, classic plainfront styling. The front roll on the three-button suits goes down to the middle button for casual, yet dressed-right look.
Although there is a great deal of talk about the double-breasted sport coats and suits, this style is not an important part of the wardrobe. It is regarded as an "extra." The well-dressed man avoids side vents and gimmicks. Only center vent double-breasted models should be considered.
One of the most exciting trends this year that offers a great deal of variation for the traditional dresser is the so-called 'sport suit.' This is a suit made of the heavier, 'tweedy' fabrics and is really not designed to always be worn as a suit but as separates.
For instance, the three parts
of a sport suit - the coat, the vest and the trousers - can mix with other trousers and coats for a casual, yet correct look. It is perfectly correct to wear the coat of a sport suit with odd slacks. Or, you can wear the vest of a sport suit with odd slacks and a blazer.
Any way you look at it, the sport suit offers flexibility and tonation to the man who knows the rules in the first place. You can't call the sport suit a replacement for any of your other basic suitings, but you can sure add flexibility with the sport suit for it is almost a wardrobe in itself when worn with other accessories.
Patterned suits will probably be stronger this year than at any time in many years. When patterns are mentioned, this means the stripes - pin strips or chalk stripes - and plaids. The stripes will be seen in navy, dark brown, grey and putty tones. Glen plaids will be seen again in black and white, grey tones or olives. These suits will be in worsted and hard-finished twills and saxonies.
As always, the navy blue suit will be important. The navy pin stripe is just as correct as a solid navy and will be very popular this fall. Your navy suit, whether a solid or stripe, can be a year round suit in medium weight. This makes it perfect for a dance after a football game in October, or for a Saturday night.
Blazer is Still Tops
In sport coats, the navy blue blazer is still king of the hill. The man who can't afford many sport coats can get real enjoyment out of a navy blazer and will enjoy wearing it several times a week. The versatility of the navy blazer can best be demonstrated through the wide maze of accessories that can turn it into a new outfit every day. Almost any shirt and tie combination gives an entirely fresh - yet correct - look to the basic navy blazer.
The patterned sport coats will be lighter this fall and the patterns will be increasingly larger. The Shetland fabric is the leader in this coating. The basic sport coat, like the suit, will have a three-button front, rolled to the second button, and wider lapels.
The back vents on sport coats will remain in the center and will be deeper to continue the trend set last year. There will be some vertical patterns in the tweeds and Shetland-type coats and these will certainly be in good taste.
If you must go for a double-breasted coat, make sure it has the soft natural silhouette, center vent, wide lapel and long roll to the lapel as in the single-breasted basic models. Don't get a double-breasted coat as a replacement of a basic coat, for the double-breasted coat cannot be considered a basic part of the wardrobe.
Campus Leaders Discuss Clothing
A Kansas City senior returning from an intercollegiate fashion conference reported a rapidly growing interest in men's clothing and its effect on their personal and professional futures. "As a regular Mister Guy customer, I'm a confirmed traditionalist myself," he said, "but I was amazed to find such a high percentage of the really top guys from all the best schools also wear traditional clothing. Discussing clothes with these fellows made me realize the tremendous effect a really good shop can exert on an area."
A men's clothing manufacturer confirmed this. "The one thing that impresses us is the way you fellows from Kansas City are becoming real leaders in traditional clothing."
Bert Pulitzer, president of a leading New York neckwear company, spoke in the same vein. "Here in New York, we are just beginning to sell our wider shaped tie, but Mister Guy in Kansas City has been selling them in quantity for over a year."
Yank Price of Sero Shirtmakers, pointed out that his company always confers with industry leaders like Mister Guy before finalizing their new lines.
John Angus, with Pringle of Scotland, commented on their very successful new lambswool sweater shirt. "Jerry Berkowitz, of Mister Guy, wanted a sweater that would be classic in look, but versatile and lightweight enough to be worn as a casual shirt. We made it, and it's great."
Representatives from other sections of the country talked about some of the other fine shops they patronize. The one thing that seemed to come out time after time was the great preference for the small traditional shop and the personal attention and advice they can give. In an informal poll this preference for dealing with a natural shoulder specialist drew over 90% of the votes. Big stores or even so-called traditional departments in conventional stores just don't have the overall approach you get from a specialist they all agreed.
The Campus Look
From a fashion standpoint, what really is happening on campus these days? Has the hippie movement made any significant inroads in the university fashion scene?
Are the nation's college men tuning in on Nehru, Cardin and the other extreme styles being bantered about by columnists and worn by show business personalities?
Solidly Traditional
The answer is a resounding NO! The campuses are still solidly traditional. The strongest conclusion drawn from all college surveys shows the average college man wants to learn and practice the fundamentals of good fashion and good grooming via the Traditional route.
A few uninformed freshmen arrive on campus with an unuseable collection of wild items from their high school wardrobes. But in short order the NATURAL SHOULDER Tradition takes over to serve as a four year training ground for his coming professional life.
With the exception of slightly longer hair and sideburns, the hippie influence has been unnoticeable. Durable press slacks have knocked out jeans on most campuses and other "collegiate" items are now set
The typical weekday campus uniform consists of a button down dress shirt (always) worn under a V-neck or crew neck sweater or sweater shirt. Turtleneck sweaters are making big inroads in certain areas (see Regional Clothing Guide).
Patterned slacks or new beefy twills are color coordinated to the sweater. The new british tan loafers or boots complete the outfit.
For dressier occasions, college men add a sports jacket (generally a rich plaid) and a bold tie in the new wider widths. Vested suits in the new country look are becoming the newest symbol for the campus leaders of good taste.
aside. Sneakers are passe', pajamas virtually unheard of, and even the sweatshirt seems to be fading (pun) away.
So, in spite of the hippie penchant for slovenliness - or perhaps because of it - the essentials of good grooming have moved up several notches in collegiate significance during the last few years. College men may be applauded for not giving way to tasteless extremes and maintaining their tradition of good taste.
Page 2
The University World
Fall '68
Speaking Out On Men's Fashions
College men are increasingly aware of fashion and the importance of being well dressed. They are rapidly acquiring the good taste necessary for becoming the fashion leaders of tomorrow. Here in Kansas City their leading influence is Mister Guy. The men at Mister Guy have established a unique reputation for their strict insistence on good taste in male attire. Fads come and go, but Mister Guy remains true to traditional values of good taste. The salesmen at Mister Guy spend hours with an interested customer, explaining their "philosophy of dressing", and it was this that prompted this interview with a panel of managers from the Mister Guy stores.
Question: Trent, what does the average new college student want to know about clothing?
Answer: Well, he usually asks,
"What's new?" It's too bad, too,
because this isn't really what's
important.
Question: What do you mean, this isn't important, Trent?
Answer: Well, just because something's new doesn't mean
BENETTON
JOHN BISHOP
it's in good taste. All the magazines are always trying to push something new because they want news, and most of their tips come from some manufacturer trying to create obsolescence.
Question: So, if newness it.
self isn't the answer, what should the first consideration be, Trent?
Answer: We advise our customers to think about building
ALL RES
TRENT SLUSHER
a wardrobe instead of just buying clothes. Now, you can't do this overnight, but if you buy with a plan you will acquire a wardrobe that will always have the right thing to wear for the right occasion. The first things that are needed in the wardrobe are basics — this is the foundation to build on.
Question: Jack Ring - why don't you explain what you mean by starting with basics?
Answer: Well, let's start with suits as an example. If you don't have a suit, you might think you could buy almost anything wrong: You really have very little choice. You may like a glen plaid, and they are very fashionable today, but if you don't
THE CABINET
JACK STREATOR
have a suit, you should not buy a glen plaid first. Your only logical buy would be a dark navy blue or grey suit, either solid or chalk stripe. This is a suit that will perform for those important occasions when nothing else is appropriate. Another thing is a patterned suit has a lot of identity. If you wear it on Friday night and again on Saturday, it is obviously the same suit. On the other hand, with the dark blue or grey I mentioned, you can make it look very different by changing shirts and ties, etc.
With Success Came Growth
Eight years ago this fall the first Mister Guy store opened in a little storeroom in North Kansas City. From his small beginning, Mister Guy grew to the midwest's largest operation specializing in traditional natural shoulder clothing.
Mister Guy stores now number four (watch for number 5) with outfitting establishments in Corinth Square, 63rd and Brookside and Lawrence, Kansas, added to the original North Kansas City store. All the stores are different and yet all share an informal decor that has become a trademark. Customers all comment on the warm and comfortable atmosphere that makes the stores seem like a friendly fraternity house. "Mister Guy is more than a place for me to shop," a customer told me, "It's the kind of a place where I feel at home - where I can kill a little time with pleasant company."
The relaxed unbusinesslike atmosphere is no accident. The young men who work at Mister Guy really are just one of the guys. Trent Slusher, the old man of the organization (at 26) remembers how uncomfortable he felt when, "I would go into a clothing store and some old man would jump on my back and tell me what I should wear." Nobody at Mister Guy gets treated that way. You get help if you want help, but if you want to wander and look, no one will pressure you. On the other hand, when you want advice, Mister Guy is the place to get it. The men there know traditional clothing and will spend
as much time talking and explaining as you want. From seniors to freshmen, more Kansas City college men count on Mister Guy than on any other clothier.
Question: Well, let's say I buy the basic suit you recommend. Then where do I go from there?
MISTER
GUY
Thru this door and the doors of the other Mister Guy shops lies a comfortably informal atmosphere with a store full of selected styles for the college man. The shops are all designed specifically for the men they serve.
Answer: My next suggestion
JACK RING
would be either a sportsuit or sportcoat. Again, we start by looking at what you already own. If you don't already own one, I'll strongly recommend a navy blazer. You can wear this several times a week and never get tired of it. You can put all kinds of accessories with it, combinations of colors, shirts, ties, trousers and shoes. This can be almost a miniature wardrobe itself. Now you're ready to build. Bold plaids, clear tone herringbones, muted country suits — all great looks, but all special purpose, now and then kind of clothes. You can alternate these with your basics and add to this collection each year for more variety. In other words, blend the things that are new and in today with those basics that are always in.
Question: John Bishop - you fellows constantly refer to traditional clothing. What do you mean by this?
Answer:Well, to us traditional clothes are clothes that have a history of good taste. They have been accepted over the years because we have learned that they reflect the good taste of their wearer. I think good taste is the key to the whole thing — this is why we don't want to get mixed up with the high fashion approach. In high fashion clothing, every year you have to have something new — and you have to try so hard to find something new you usually end up with something ridiculous, at the best in doubtful taste. This doesn't play any part in our kind of clothes, because we ask not only it is new, but more specifically, does it go with the things we already have in our wardrobe — does it fit with our way of dress — is it consistent with the appearance we want to be remembered for?
Question: John, what about some of the people on television or in show business that wear high fashion clothes? They're pretty well known celebrities - don't they have good taste?
Answer: These people wear some of these things like a costume - and costumes don't need to have the criteria of good taste applied. We tell our customers their clothing should call attention to the man - not the clothes. Traditional clothing is associated with people who dress well, but not ostentatiously.
Question: If good taste is the key to traditional clothing, what is the key to good taste. John?
Answer: There are a lot of measures, but to me the main one is to avoid looking as if you're trying too hard to be well dressed. You can pick up Esquire or Playboy and buy all the things that are obviously new this season. And everyone can tell that's just what you did — there is nothing of your own taste involved. Now we expect our customer to take the time and effort to select, coordinate and accessorize his wardrobe. But he wants all of his wardrobe to be consistent and go together for an overall impression. One example of trying too hard is over-coordination. As an example, the magazines will show a burgundy blazer with a pink shirt and navy slacks. Then they put a navy and burgundy tie with burgundy socks and a burgundy belt, and a burgundy pocket square. This is obviously over-coordination - and obviously anyone wearing an outfit like this is trying too hard to be noticed.
been trying to get a w here for some time now. Did you have something to add to what John was saying?
Answer: I wanted to add that you shouldn't try too hard, but you shouldn't go to the other extreme either. Some people think because they're slobs, they are showing their independence and contempt of good taste. There's a good middle ground that we would call an understated or studied casualness in approach.
Question: Jack, I heard you telling someone that he should dress so that he can forget his clothes. What do you mean by that?
Answer: If you are confident of your taste and have selected your wardrobe carefully, you'll know you will look right and you don't have to be concerned about it. It's like being in a familiar or comfortable enifronment, gives you a great confidence in yourself and lets you concentrate on what you're doing. Obviously, this helps you accomplish and enjoy yourself that much more.
Question: Here's the last question, Jack - How much is it going to cost me to dress in good taste?
Answer: The most inexpensive way is to dress correctly — to avoid mistakes. If you follow the philosophy that we have talked about today, it is pretty inexpensive. We get our customers to start out with a few basic things, they can start to collect the extras. Those special occasion clothes with special flair that puts their individual stamp on their wardrobe. After four college years to develop your taste and wardrobe, you'll find yourself a more confident graduate with a big head start on your future.
Fall'68
The University World
Page 3
Bet On A Better Sweater
It's A Classic Year
I will only use the text that is clearly visible. I will not add any images or graphics. The image provided is a black and white photo of a person sitting in front of a tree. No other information about the person is present.
SWEATER SHIRT — An important new trend in sweaters introduced by Mister Guy and loomed in Scotland by Pringle. Worn over a shirt open as shown or buttoned up by itself.
N
V-NECK — Saddle shoulder and completely full fashioned in an array of 14 new colors by Pringle of Scotland. Colors were coordinated to sport coats and pattern slacks exclusively for Mister Guy.
Color and coordination go hand in hand with the classic sweaters that dominate the coming fall season. Your favorite saddle shoulder V-necks from Pringle of Scotland are found only at Mister Guy, and in stock this year in fourteen great Pringle colors. You'll find navy and other old favorites, of course, but you've got to buy some of the new colors like moss green or almond gold to complete your wardrobe. Mister Guy has also imported a true Scottish turtleneck in colors carefully coordinated to our Scottish plaid sportcoats and slacks. These sweaters have a look all their own and in no way should be equated with cotton or banlon cheaply made turtlenecks. Another great look for the coming season is Mister Guy's mock turtleneck with tipped trim made for them in England. This style is casual and easy to wear - makes a great coordinate with pattern
Sweater Shirts Come On Strong
slacks but should not be worn under a sport coat.
Another classic favorite is the authentic fisherman knit done in natural unbleached wool. The real fisherman knits like those found at Mister Guy have a weight and depth of texture that is unmistakeable. This year they have added a full turtleneck style to their old favorite crewneck. This sweater has a rugged look that gets better the more you wear it. Wear it with boldly patterned or solid slacks and under a corduroy coat for the first chilly days.
I am grateful to you for your help. I will do my best to keep you and your family safe in the event of an emergency. I will be at your side whenever possible. I am sorry that you are missing from this moment.
Sweater Shirts Come On Strong
Designed for Mister Guy by Pringle of Scotland, this saddle shoulder three-button front with casual collar sweater is a real winner. Nobody makes this sweater like Pringle and the cheap copies that will probably show up later this year will be a pale imitation. The color selection at Mister Guy is not copyable.
Jaeger of England fashioned this lamb's wool mock turtle sweater in five great new leather colors exclusively for Mister Guy. Campus leaders are latching onto this new sweater in a big way.
TURTLE NECK — An old Scottish classic knitted as only the Scots can knit. The neck is not so high as to be bulky or so low as to look skiimy.
B. B. LEE
1837-1937
FISHERMAN KNIT -- A special Mister Guy import. Ruggedly masculine this authentic fisherman sweater can be one of the most used items of your casual wardrobe.
Page 4
The University World
Fall '68
A Knotty Question:
Which Tie
Corbin Buggy Whip Worsteds are versatile trousers
Fall'68
The University World
Page 5
Outerwear Takes To
PETER B. WILSON
10
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 17, 1968
Hubert causes CYD split
Hubert Humphrey's nomination for president has apparently caused a split in KU's Collegiate Young Democrats (CYD).
The fall election has placed the CYD in an awkward position. Although the club constitution requires the members to support the national party nominee, it says nothing about actively campaigning for him.
Bob Kolar, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, sophomore and president of KU-CYD, said the club will officially support Humphrey as a matter of party loyalty. Kolar said Humphrey backers will channel their support in the Youth for Humphrey movement recently initiated on campus.
Members of the club gave varied responses when asked if they still supported the party and Humphrey.
He denied any danger to club unity as a result of a split between Humphreyites and members of alternative factions.
One former member, when asked if he would continue working for the party, said, "Bobby was my man, then 'Clean Gene'—but I'll be damned if I'll work for that s.o.b. they nominated in Chicago."
Joan Irvine, Roslyn, N.Y., junior and vice president of the club, said, "Morally I cannot support Humphrey. I strongly support Docking, the state ticket and the party. But not Humphrey."
Bob VanCleave, Kansas City law student and one of the founders of the Kansans for Kennedy movement, said he retained no bitterness from the outcome of the national convention. "I think Humphrey is a dynamic man. Initially I supported Kennedy because of his charisma and political philosophy. When he was killed, I thought a long time and finally decided to throw my support to Humphrey."
Campaign for Nixon planned
KU Youth for Nixon plan a low key fall campaign aimed at unifying and informing students of the qualifications of Republican Presidential hopeful Richard Nixon.
Some house-to-house canvassing and two rallies are also planned, Embry said.
Dennis Embry, Great Bend sophomore and group chairman, said campaign plans are incomplete, but both the Nixon group and the Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR) will distribute posters and bumper stickers supporting Nixon.
Embry, who attended the Republican National Convention in August, said the purpose of the Nixon group is to inform students—not smear the other parties.
The Nixon group operates independently from the CYR. Youth for Nixon hopes to affiliate with the Youth Division of United Citizenship for Nixon-Agnew, a national organization.
Embry said Nixon regards the advice of youth to be essential for a unified country.
Arms shipment
Khartoum (UPI) Military sources in the Sudan said Monday the first segment of a Soviet shipment of fighter planes, tanks, anti-aircraft guns, artillery and radar systems will arrive in Port Sudan next week and go on display next month. Sudan concluded an arms agreement with the Soviets last week.
Soldiers drown
New Delhi, India (UPI) - A search party today probed the rapids of the Kali River in northern Uttar Pradesh state today for 28 soldiers believed killed when their vehicle plunged into the river* Monday. No bodies were found.
"The outcome of the Democratic national convention has not hurt our club," said Kolar. "We've lost a few members but
our membership drive is going excellent. Regardless of presidential preference, one goal unites the club—the re-election of Robert Docking. Docking is a dynamic political figure with whom the youth of the state can identify."
Is Your Sports Car Turned On?
If Not,
We Conduct Tune-Ins Daily!
Triumph - Toyota
Triumph - Toyota
Sales - Service
Competition Sports Cars
Parts & Accessories for All Imported Cars
VI 2-2191
1209 E. 23rd St.
STILL THE MOST UNIQUE RESTAURANT
IN LAWRENCE
There has to be a good reason why students and faculty alike continue year after year, to patronize us. It could be our warm, friendly atmosphere, fine food, "Old World" decor, or just the fact that we're different. Our four dining rooms, furnished in birch, cherry, walnut, and oak, are perfect for dinner dates, meetings, and even wedding receptions. But, whatever the reason may be, we're glod you've made us the most popular restaurant in Lawrence. We've been that way for 20 years.
If you're new in Lawrence, we'd like to get acquainted with you. If you already know about us, you will be glad to know that we're still here. We haven't changed!
Phone VI 3-1151
LIBUSE KRIZ
1301-11 Mass. St.
Notes for School
Fashion '68
For Social Study or Socializing Come to the Happening Place of Fashions
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
VI 2-1400
Tuesday, September 17, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Thant backs a Hanoi demand
Paris (UPI)—Secretary General Thant Monday endorsed Hanoi's demands for an immediate and unconditional end to U.S. bombings of North Vietnam as the "first essential step" toward paving the way for peace talks.
The chief North Vietnamese spokesman at the Paris Vietnam War talks said earlier that "influential statesmen" in the United States backed Hanoi's negotiating position. He dismissed as "inaccurate" public opinion polls showing most Americans do not.
Nguyen Thanh Le also said he "hoped" Thant would support Hanoi's demand that the United States call an "immediate and unconditional" end to air strikes against the North.
Thant threw his support behind Hanoi following an hourlong meeting with French Foreign Minister Michel Debre.
"The first essential step to be taken to move the problem of Vietnam from the battle field to the conference table must be the immediate and unconditional cessation of bombing of North Vietnam," Thant said.
The U.N. Secretary General has made similar statements before. But his statement Monday coming on the heels of Hanoi's public request for support appeared to strengthen the North Vietnamese delegation's hand at the talks here.
the tanks here. Thant was in Paris for an international conference on human rights. He did not meet with either the U.S. or North Vietnamese bargaining teams as he did during his previous visit. The North Vietnamese demand has deadlocked the Paris Vietnam War talks with the United States since they opened on May 13.
Le shrugged off a recent poll that showed 53 per cent of American citizens agree with President Johnson's demand that North Vietnam give something in return for a complete halt to U.S. bombing attacks.
"We pay no attention to the so-called Gallup or other public opinion polls," Le said.
On the contrary, he claimed "broad circles of the American public, influential statesmen and newspapers" back Hanoi in demanding the United States end the bombing unconditionally.
SHORT REIGNS
NEW YORK — (UPI)— Dave Sullivan and Emile "Spider" Pladner had the shortest reigns as champions, holding their titles for only one month, 16 days. Sullivan was featherweight champion in 1898 and Pladner the flyweight titleholder in 1929.
BIG BROTHER & THE HOLDING COMPANY
CHEAP THRILLS
CHAP THRILLS BIG BROTHER
HOLDING COMPANY
...CHEAP!! reg. 5.79
$3.99
KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO
Malls Shopping Center
He announced his retirement at the White House after meeting with President Johnson, who named Webb's deputy, Dr.
Webb said he would step down Oct. 7, only four days before the scheduled launch of the first manned Apollo space craft.
Washington (UPI)-James E. Webb Monday announced his retirement as head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and predicted the United States "is going to remain second for some time" in the space race with Russia.
Thomas Paine, 46, as acting NASA chief. Webb agreed to remain as a consultant until Jan. 20.
NASA's Webbresians
Webb said Russia was ahead in the space race and the United States "is going to remain second for some time."
"We are not conducting the program at a level" which would bring the United States abreast of the Soviet Union in space, he said. Under questioning, Webb said he was "not satisfied with the program, or that we, as a nation, have not been able to go forward to achieve a first in space."
Happy Holidays!
The center diamond of every Keepsake engagement ring is guaranteed flawless (or replacement assured).
DULCIE $175
WEDDING RING 62.50
BELAIR $625
ALSO $250 TO 2100
WEDDING RING 100
Rings true
REGISTERED
Keepsake
DIAMOND RINGS
Ray Christian
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
809 Mass. Special College Terms VI 3-5432
CAMPUS BUS SCHEDULES
---
SPECIAL NIGHT BUS SERVICE TO CAMPUS AND DOWNTOWN
Ellsworth to Campus and Downtown 6:30 p.m., 6:50, 7:30, 8:10, 8:50, 9:30, 10:10, 10:50
9th and Mass. to KU Dormitories
6:10 p.m., 6:30, 7:10, 7:50,
8:30, 9:10, 9:50, 10:30
Naismith and Oliver to Campus and Downtown
6:25 p.m., 6:45, 7:25, 8:05,
8:45, 9:25, 10:05, 10:45
CLIP AND SAVE
Union Bldg. to Downtown and G.S.P.
6:40 p.m., 7:00, 7:40, 8:20,
9:00, 9:40, 10:20, 11:00
G.S.P. to Campus and Ellsworth
6:15 p.m., 6:35, 7:15, 7:55,
8:35, 9:15, 9:55, 10:35
G.S.P. to Downtown
6:42 p.m., 7:02, 7:42, 8:22,
9:02, 9:42, 10:22, 11:22
Effective September 16
NO Service Sundays or Holidays
...
BUS SCHEDULE FOR CAMPUS EXPRESS
Leave Ellsworth via Lewis to Campus and Downtown
*On the hour, 10, *20, 30, *40, 50 minutes past hour
7:00 a.m. to 6:50 p.m.
Leave Oliver and Naismith Dorms to Campus (transfer for
(Downtown)
*10 and *40 minutes post hour, 7:10 a.m. to 5:40 p.m.
Leave 19th Stewart for Campus (transfer for Downtown)
*On the hour and *30 min. past hour, 7:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Leave G.S.P. and Corbin to Campus
On the hour, 15, 20, 35, 45 and 55 minutes past hour
7:00 a.m. to 6:35 p.m.
Leave G.S.P. and Corbin to Downtown
2, 22 and 42 minutes post hour, 7:25 a.m. to 7:05 p.m.
Leave Campus to Ellsworth and Lewis (Daisy Field)
5, 10, 25, 40, 45 and 50 minutes past hour,
7:05 a.m. to 6:45 p.m.
Leave Campus to G.S.P. and Downtown
On the hour, *10, 20, *25, 40 and *50 minutes past hour
7:20 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Leave Campus to Oliver, Noismith and 19th and Stewart 25 and 55 minutes past hour, 7:25 a.m. to 5:25 p.m.
Leave 9th and Mass. (Downtown) to KU and Dormitories
10, 30 and 50 minutes past hour, 6:50 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
◦ Indicates Campus Only. No service Sundays and Holiday
CLIP AND SAVE
SAVE
15 Rides for $2.00 Save 25c on Campus only
For Information Call VI 2-0544
LAWRENCE BUS CO., INC.
SPECIAL SUNDAY CHURCH BUSES FOR DOWNTOWN CHURCHES
Leave Oliver Hall
10:00 a.m., 10:20 a.m.,
10:30 a.m.
Leave Ellsworth
10:10 a.m., 10:30 a.m.,
10:40 a.m.
Leave Campus
10:15 a.m., 10:35 a.m.,
10:45 a.m.
Leave G.S.P.
10:20 a.m., 10:40 a.m.,
10:50 a.m.
Buses Return After Church Service
CLIP AND SAVE
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 17, 1968
Enrollment increases; fees out Wednesday
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
trar.
"While there were a few minor foul-ups," Kelly said, "we are quite pleased with the way this year's enrollment went. More than 16,000 people were enrolled in three days."
Kelly said students should receive their fee statements by Wednesday. Any student who has not received his fee statement by Friday should come to the Office of the Registrar in Strong Hall.
Estimated student enrollment for this semester is 16,540. "This includes those who enroll late or drop out," Kelly said.
The deadline for paying fees is Sept. 25. Students who haven't paid by this date will be charged a late fee of $10.
It is too early to determine the
ate enrollment. Because teachers need class rosters, however, this information hasn't been computerized yet.
Kelly said some seniors were confused about enrollment because the timetable stated graduating seniors could enroll at any time during the three-day period.
"Some people thought this applied only to those seniors graduating in January," he said, "but others were waiting outside the Kansas Union early Wednesday morning."
Kelly said there were no plans concerning re-establishing the pre-enrollment system, but the matter was being studied and discussed. He said the Colleges-within-a-College program was satisfactory and will be continued next year.
KU traffic remedy sought
At least one area of campus traffic congestion might be remedied by installing traffic lights this year, E. P. Moo马au, director of Traffic and Security, said Monday.
- As of late Monday, 8,560 students and 2,450 faculty and staff members had registered cars. Total car registration is expected to top last year's figures by 500 to 700 cars.
- Moomau may suggest installation of traffic lights at 15th and Naismith Drive for two reasons:
- Traffic will be increased in the Murphy Hall area after the new apartment complexes west of N Zone on 15th St. are completed.
Mooma said the increase in car registration roughly parallels the increase in student population.
Another area of congestion is the bridge behind the Kansas Union on Mississippi St., Moomau said. The one-lane bridge, being used during construction of a tunnel, will cause early-morning congestion at the entrance of X Zone parking lot.
Moomau said there will be good access to and from X Zone by Sept. 28, date of KU's first home football game.
Daisy Hill parking is sufficient, Moomau said, with the use of the residence hall lot west of Iowa St.
searching for an unusual gift
for a special person?
Search No More!
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking on The Malls
Andrews Gifts
I
Film society plans up in air
Plans for this year's KU Film Society have not yet been settled, Richard MacCann, associate professor of radio, TV and film said Monday.
MacCann and Cote said the group will discuss a move to change the society to a closed organization.
Interested film fans will discuss the type of films to be scheduled and will hammer out society organization Thursday.
The group will meet after showings of Student Union Activities films beginning at 7 and 8:30 p.m. at Dyche Auditorium.
MacCann requested that persons interested in working in the film society leave their names at his office. 217 Flint Hall.
"It isn't necessary to attend the movie to come to the discussion. Any interested person should attend," said Ron Cote, last year's Film Society president.
The film society, founded at
KU last year, brought both old well-known and newer, underground, experimental movies to the campus. Members received a newsletter and attended films free of admission or at a discount.
PAPER SHIPS SAIL ELECTRONIC SEA
If you don't sleep... don't worry about the READING MEANY!
WEST COVINA, Calif —(UPI)
A bounding main on computer tape is helping marine engineers develop a new type of ship that can maneuver like a helicopter. The new concept is being studied by Honeywell engineers here using a DDP-124 computer that simulates the ocean complete with waves, current and wind.
It's only a paper ship sailing over an electronic sea but it's expected to yield new designs for special-purpose ships, barges and semi-submersible drilling platforms.
I am the most beautiful girl in the world. I love life and happiness. I am always happy and joyful. I am a dreamer and a理想家. I am a woman of great importance and great value
Kandee Klein
models a
Stanton Junior
Petite jumper
with traditional
white shirt
and ascot.
Available in
sizes 3-13
$31.00
Jay
SHOPPE
FREE PARKING
PROJECT 835 MASS VI3-4833
FREE PARKING PROJECT F00 835 MASS. VI3-4833
Jay SHOPPE
Tuesday, September 17, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Czechs defy Russ muzzle
CORE split is minimized
Prague (UPI)—The muzzled press Monday defied the Soviet
Dirksen seeks court limit
St. Louis, Mo. (UPI) - National
Security Agency of Social
Washington (UPI)—Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, R-Ill., acting on a major issue in the controversy over Abe Fortas' nomination to be Chief Justice moved Monday
the 1st Amendment protection."
the 1st Amendment protections. Several conservatives either senators oppose the Fortom nomination or the ground that he has vowed with a Supreme Court
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., supported the Dirksen amendment. He said there was "no excuse for Fortas, who voted 35 out of 38 times to overturn
With the cry that the nation had not "capitulated," the two most important Communist Party newspapers printed relatively outspoken comment that indicated the new press laws would not extinguish all disagreement with Moscow.
The criticism apparently was in keeping with Premier Oldrich Cernik's promise there would be "room for criticism."
Thirteen of Czechoslovakia's top economists proclaimed in the newspaper Rude Pravo that the radical economic reforms of Sik that displeased the Kremlin remained "the most effective path of development for the Czechoslovak economy."
Sik, father of Czechoslovakia's pre-invasion plans for economic recovery from years of stagnation under Stalinist economy, was in Belgrade when Soviet-led Warsaw Paet troops invaded Czechoslovakia. He was forced to resign as deputy premier and has not yet returned to Prague.
constitution ratified at the meeting.
Roy Innis, newly elected national director, said, "It is very easy for anyone to declare militancy verbally." He said, "We will let history decide who is more militant."
Innis, speaking at a news conference after the weekend convention, made the comment when asked to respond to reports that some of the 150 delegates had walked out because they felt CORE's new approach was not radical enough.
He acknowledged that some Chicago delegates had left, but emphasized that others had stayed and some had been elected to the national board.
would prohibit any federal court from reviewing, reversing or setting aside a jury ruling whether the matter was obscene in a criminal action under any U.S. obscenity law.
He proposed a similar restriction on federal courts in the case of a court decision under state or local obscenity laws for prosecution of persons charged with possession or sale of pornography.
"For a great many years during the prosecution of obscenity cases, the defense has almost invariably been related to the 1st Amendment protection of freedom of speech," Dirksen said in a statement.
"This proposed amendment merely affirms that there is some limit to freedom of speech and
Dirksen support firmation.
Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said it was Congress' responsibility to enact tougher antismut laws, not to condemn the Supreme Court or Fortas for rulings under existing law.
Hysko said acceptance of the obligations “does not mean that we have capitulated or that we gave up our effort for a full restoration of Czechoslovak sovereignty.”
The economists, who had worked alongside Sik in developing the economic reforms, point-by-point refuted sharp attacks by the Soviet news agency Tass that Sik’s ideas would bring unemployment.
The Reading Meany will Getc’ha if YOU don’t Watch Out!
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
“BEST FOREIGN FILM”
“The BEST MOVIE I HAVE SEEN THIS YEAR!”
—Richard Schickel, Lite Magazine
“PRIMAL SEX...EARTHY HUMOR...WONDERFULLY SLY...CHARMING AND POIGNANT COMPREHENSION OF THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SEX.”
“A GIRL TELEGRAPHER WHOSE SEDUCTION IS SURELY ONE OF THE GREAT COMIC EROTIC SEQUENCES IN FILM HISTORY.”
“CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS”
Directed by Jiri Menzel · A Carlo Ponti presentation
Distributed by Sigma III A Filmways Company.
Across From Municipal Auditorium
DICKINSON
DOWNTOWN TOPEKA
8th and Quincy
Starts Wednesday, Sept. 18
through Sept. 24th
Week Nites
7:00 and 9:00
Saturday and Sunday
1:15-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00
College Students $1.50
The Reading Meany will Getc'ha if YOU don't Watch Out!
---
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER
"BEST FOREIGN FILM"
"The BEST MOVIE I HAVE SEEN THIS YEAR!"
—Richard Schicket, Life Magazine
"PRIMAL SEX...EARTHY HUMOR
...WONDERFULLY SLY...CHARMING AND POIGNANT COMPREHENSION OF THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SEX."
"A GIRL TELEGRAPHER WHOSE SEDUCTION IS SURELY ONE OF THE GREAT COMIC EROTIC SEQUENCES IN FILM HISTORY."
"CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS"
Directed by Jiri Menzel · A Carlo Ponti presentation
Distributed by Sigma III A Filmways Company.
Across From Municipal Auditorium
DICKINSON
DOWNTOWN TOPEKA
8th and Quincy
Starts Wednesday, Sept. 18
through Sept. 24th
Week Nites
7:00 and 9:00
Saturday and Sunday
1:15-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00
College Students $1.50
for the gambling urge—state-run lotteries, casinos and race tracks —but it still has problems with the "numbers racket." Police recently arrested 434 persons within three days for collaboration in numbers gambling.
Across From Municipal Auditorium
DICKINSON
DOWNTOWN TOPEKA
8th and Quincy
TOPS Wardrobe Care Centers
TOPS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
1517 W. 16th----1526 W. 23rd
In By 9—Out By 5
Same Day Service
Shirts on hangers or folded
5 for $1.39
"PIGSKIN PICKS CONTEST"
Winner of this week's contest will receive $10 worth of dry cleaning service. 2nd & 3rd place winners $5 worth of dry cleaning services.
CIRCLE YOUR CHOICE AS WINNER
CIRCLE YOUR CHOICE AS WIN.
Arizona at Iowa State
Colorado State at Kansas State
Oklahoma State at Arkansas
Oregon at Colorado
Missouri at Kentucky
Utah at Nebraska
Oklahoma at Notre Dame
Air Force at Florida
So. Methodist at Auburn
Baylor at Indiana
California at Michigan
Texas A&M at L.S.U.
Syracuse at Michigan State
Rutgers at Princeton
Slippery Rock at Waynesburg
— Pick Scores —
Kansas ___ at Illinois ___
Denver ___ at K.C. Chiefs ___
Name
Address
CONTEST RULES
To enter: Clip this slate out of the paper or pick it a free entry blank at either TOPS store—1517 West 6th—1526 West 23rd, mark or write out choices and send them to TOPS Pigskin Picks.
2. Mail entries to TOP5 Pigskin Picks, 1517 West 6th, or being in personally at either location. No entries accepted postmarked or delivered after Noon Friday.
1. Print name and address plainly on entry.
3. Winners will be posted in both TOPS stores Monday, and will appear in next week's contest in the paper.
4. Only one entry per person each week.
5. Winners will be judged on most correct guesses and on closest scores of KU and K.C. Chiefs games. In case of tie, earliest postmark decides.
4
er
THE COMMUNITY DIVISION II
8301, TI sndmotq2, yobaz
T
THE TOTAL LOOK AT
The 821 Regimental Shop
(2ND FLOOR OBER'S) in the tradition of good taste
E
9
T1
LOOR OBER'S)
in the
adition of
food taste
Tuesday, September 17, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
CHEAP THRILLS
BIG BROTHER & THE HOLDING COMPANY
GRAPH THRILLS BIG BROTHER &
TIME HOLIDAY COMPANY
...CHEAP!! reg. 5.79
CHAP THROWS BIG BROTHER HOLLING COMPANY JANE OWENS WOLFEL
$3.99
KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO
Malls Shopping Center
SUA
CLASSICAL
film Series
FALL 1968
THIS WEEK
September 18th
MAN IN THE
WHITE SUIT
Alec Guinness & Joan Greenwood
7:00 & 9:00 p.m.
Dyche Auditorium
SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES 1968 Fall Schedule
September 18 MAN IN THE WHITE SUIT (Guinness, Britain)
*September 25 SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT (Bergman, Sweden, 1955)
October 2 SHERLOCK JR. (Buster Keaton, U.S.A., 1924)
*October 9 REPULSION (Roman Polanski)
October 16 THE BLACK PIRATE (Douglas Fairbanks, U.S.A., 1926)
October 23 IKIRU (Kurosawa, Japan, 1952)
October 30 LE BONHEUR (Varda, France, 1965)
November 6 SUNRISE (Murnau, U.S.A., 1927)
November 13 NIGHTS OF CABIRIA (Fellini, Italy, 1957)
November 20 MY UNCLE (Jacques Tati, France)
*December 4 THE INNOCENTS (One Showing Only 7 p.m.) (Clayton with Capote, Britain, 1961)
December 11 EXTERMINATING ANGEL (Bunuel, Mexico, 1962)
December 18 “M” (Lang, German, 1931)
- Union Ballroom
DYCHE AUDITORIUM
Shows at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Single Admission: $ .75 Season Ticket: $6.00 -Tickets on sale at the door on night of performance and in advance at the Union Information Center.
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the offering are offered to all students without guard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
1967 Yamaha: 100 cc, 1200 miles—like
new. Call VI 2-3783.
9-20
1955 Chev. 2 DRH BetAire, 6 cyl.
auto. Good local trans. VI 3-8749. 8
1957 VW with awn roof Careful maintenance and partially rebuilt. Call VI 2-8581 for more information. 9-20
Twin Beds and Mattresses. Excellent condition. Can also be used as bunk beds or trundle beds. $40.00 or offer.
VI 2-7763. 9-20
Beautiful 175cc motorcycle with accessories and helmet. Better than new! George Richardson, VI 2-8875 or UN 4-4273. 9-23
Bronze '67 Camero. 1 owner, 15,200 miles. 250 engine, straight six carpets, radio, whitewalls, and wires VI 2-8491 or Mrs. Nash at UN 4-231 VI 2-8491
Used Conrad Electric Bass Guitar.
Good shape with cord, strap,
and case. Not much for a bass. Call VI 3-
6305 after 5 p.m.
Suzuki 250ec 107 SCrambler, good
condition, or weekends VI, 250ec
after 5.30 or weekends
1963 Sunbeam Alpine—good engine—new paint—new top, $700 1967 756c Bridgecraft—excellent engine-Board Car MP4, UN 4-3976 After 5 I-V 3-2500
Motorcycle. 1966 Triumph T 100 R.
500cc. Excellent condition, low mileage,
reasonable. Call VI 2-4239 after
6:00 p.m. or weekends. 9-23
HELP WANTED
Salesman—Aggressive and personable.
Student wanted for our Sales Staff.
Earnings can be over $100 per week as you represent 58-year-old nationally respected life insurance company on campus. Phone—VI 3-7798. 9-18
Wish to employ man or woman for noon time lunch room-player in Lawrence, 11:30-12:30. Phone VI 3-4686 or VI 3-3263 for appointment.
Secretary- Typing and shorthand re-
phone VI 3-7798 alert and re-
phone VI 3-798 9-18
Men—Part time or full time. Above average pay. Show our products in Lawrence Call Sam Jordan now VI 2-5206.
One concerned coed to share the expense of the Sunday New York Times. If more than one concerned coed exists, extra papers will be arranged. Contact Steve at VI 2-2175 for information. 9-20
Part-time driver for morning
vehicles. Mail resume to:
Vil 1-0544, Ask for Duane Ogle. 9-20
Part time help wanted for packing and moving of household goods by untutile mover. Experience preferred. Call VI 3-0380, a.m.5:00- p.m. for interview or Saturday till noon. 9-23
Male part time noon hour or one eight hour shift. Good pay. Name your hours. Apply in person at Sandy's Drive-in. 2120 W. 9th. 9-23
NOTICE
United Child Care Center, 945 Vermont, for pre-school children of working or non-working families. 3-Mon for further information call VI 3-7143 day or VI 3-2712 evening
MUSIC LESSONS — specializing in guitar and 5 string banjo. These classes are being taught by instructors who are or have been entertaining professionally. Start any time. Beginners or otherwise.
ALSO instruction for all hand instruments, piano, recorder, melodica, and rock and roll drums.
Haynes-Ray Audio and Music Co. VI
2-1944. 9-23
All people interested in folk dancing or leading folk dancing, contact ton Rosenberg at Math Depth 213 or Kongling or 1419 Ohio, No. 8, ED-2191. 9-27
515 Michigan St. Bt.-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours. The new barn has a mud pad'd barn. Heating and electricity unquestionably available. VI 3-4023 11-1
WANTED
Want to get in a car pool from Johnson County to Lawrence. Can drive if necessary. Call after 6:00 p.m. at DU 1-5104. 9-23
SERVICES OFFERED
Need 1 or 2 junior or senior men to share spacious duplex. Inquire at 2422 Cedarwood after 2:00 p.m. J. Anderson, D. Drogosh, P. Kovac. 9-19
Ride or riders to share ride Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday from Prairie
Village-Overland Park area. Call
Ml-9-6632. 9-23
Sewing and alterations by exper-
ienced, stressmess. All work done
quickly, with reasonable skill.
Skirts, skirts, what have you? Call
843-1348 - 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
9-23
Kansan
Classifieds
Work
For You!
TRAVEL TIME
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
Exclusive Representative of
- Badges
- Guards
- Novelties - Favors
- Lavaliers
- Rings
- Sports
- Muscles
- Lavaliers
- Rings
- Sportswear - Mugs
Sportswear
- Poddles
- Trophies
Cups Awards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Andrews Gifts
Gift Box
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
LET
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your
Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now!
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 17, 1968
The Wescoe years
...
A. M. Sotrani
Peoples Voice splits
(Continued from page 1) no one person could speak for Voice. Each person, as an individual, must speak for himself, they added.
The only other thing on which everyone agrees is that Voice will now investigate all types of problems both in the University and in the community at large. No major protests or other activities are planned for this fall, they said.
Instead, the group will be split into committees, each of which will study a specific problem. These study committees will represent a revival of the "Free University," a collection of discussion groups under the general direction of Voice.
Voice was formed last year to help the student body gain a
larger "voice" in campus affairs. It first received general recognition when it presented a 1700-signature petition to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, calling for University reforms.
These protests are generally credited with prompting the formation of the Committee of Twelve to bring about more student representation in the University.
Voice later threatened a sit-it in Strong Hall if its demands were not met, but instead it held a general meeting on Strong's front steps.
The program for tonight will include a presentation by Voice members and general discussion on the goals of Voice, the walkout, and the Counter-Convocation.
Chicago protest march planned for September 28
Portuguese ruler near death today
He was placed in a breathing apparatus and doctors performed a tracheotomy to open his throat and ease his breathing, an indication his breathing functions might be impaired or paralyzed.
Salazar's surgeon, Dr. Vasconcelos ques, said Salazar had shown one slight signs of improvement but did not describe them
Other medical sources said he showed some signs of lucidity today when he was visited by Donha Marinha de Jesus, the woman who has been his housekeeper for half a century. She left his bedside in convulsive sobs.
Chicago (UPI)—A spokesman for the American Liberties Union said Monday the city of Chicago's radio-television report on Democratic convention week disorders was a distorted account that "smacked of Joe McCarthym."
The medical sources said Salazar pressed her hands and looked at her.
Lisbon (UPI) — Premier Antonio de Oliveira Salazar, 70, who has ruled Portugal with an iron hand for 36 years, hovered on the brink of death today. Doctors said he appeared to rally slightly from a deep coma brought on by a stroke Monday but was still critical.
Despite these reassuring words, Portuguese in all walks of life waited anxiously for the next medical bulletin. They also speculated on a successor should Salazar die or be incapacitated by the stroke.
Don't Let the Reading Meany
BLOW
YOUR
COOL!
While reaction to the Sunday night show ran the gamut from condemnation to praise, plans were announced for a march of
Several Chicago business leaders praised the show-Mayor Richard J. Daley's answer to charges of police brutality-as a fair presentation that helped put the rioting in perspective for the American people.
ATTENTION Social Chairmen
cago" that was fought between antiwar demonstrators and police.
The log cabin at Oak Lodge
thousands down Michigan Avenue Sept. 28 to protest police tactics in the "battle of Chi-
is available each night except Sunday for parties, socials, & dancing
Location
13 miles south
of Lawrence
on Highway 50
For Information Call 913-594-3349
in person
BELAFONTE
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
SAT., SEPT. 21 8:00 p.m.
Tickets — $2.00 — $2.50 — $3.00
Tickets will go on sale Monday, Sept. 16 at the Information Booth and the SUA Office in the Kansas Union.
Become A Dynamic Reader This Fall
Learn how you can read 3-10 times faster than you do now. See how it works. Attend one of these FREE Demonstrations.A $25 scholarship will be awarded to some lucky person.
Demonstration Schedule
Monday, Sept. 16: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m. . . . . . Kansas Union $^{\circ}$
Tuesday, Sept. 17: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m. . . . . . Kansas Union $^{\circ}$
Wednesday, Sept. 18: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m. . . . . . Kansas Union $^{\circ}$
Thursday, Sept. 19: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m. . . . . . Kansas Union $^{\circ}$
Monday, Sept. 23: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m. . . . . . Kansas Union $^{\circ}$
Tuesday, Sept. 24: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m. . . . . . Kansas Union $^{\circ}$
$^{\circ}$ Check bulletin board for room number
Class Schedule
Saturdays 9:00 a.m. to 12 Noon, beginning September 21.
Mondays 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., beginning September 23.
Tuesdays 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 24.
Wednesdays 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 25.
Optional practice sessions with instructor: Mondays and Thursdays,
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.; Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and
Fridays, 4:00 to 6:00 p.m.
For More Information
Call
WESLEY FOUNDATION BUILDING
1314 Oread Road
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone: 913 VI 3-6424
E. WALTON MIDDLE
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
1314 Oread
Lawrence, Kansas
Phone VI 3-6424
KANSAN
79th Year, No.2
Wednesday, September 18
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Voice declares KU too moderate
by Pam Smith and Steve Haynes
Peoples Voice leaders last night emphasized the need to radicalize the KU student body—"idiot masses" as they were termed by at least one member.
They discussed goals for the year without setting any priorities.
The group met at a "Counter Convocation" at the Wesley Foundation in answer to Monday's regular Convocation, which members said was made up of "platitudes and generalities which anyone could agree with."
Dissention in Voice ranks was obviously responsible for lack of agreement. The big question was "How radical should Voice be?"
Some members called for demonstrations and "other actions."
Mike Warner, Lawrence graduate student and a moderate, cautioned, however: "You don't tell students that they are not cool and that we are. You
talk with them and work with them. You ask them about their draft status."
Warner was retorting to derisive comments about "non-hip" students—"fraternity types with penny loafers and no socks"—persons who will not support Voice goals, members said.
Howard Kahane, associate professor of philosophy, also urged greater efforts to communicate with the student body.
The group continued its disagreement over the walkout at the University Convocation Monday.
Bob Stone, Prairie Village sophomore, said the walkout was a mistake. Kahane said he also doubted that it was the best course of action. Others disagreed.
(See Peoples Voice speaks, page 16)
★ KU prof disagrees
A faculty member sympathetic to Peoples Voice said Tuesday night that one of the group's main demands-50 per cent student representation on administration committees-is not the solution to unsatisfactory University administration.
Howard Kahane, associate professor of philosophy and one-time advisor to Students for a Democratic Society, spoke at the "Counter Convocation" at the Wesley Foundation.
Partially blaming the faculty for student apathy, Kahane said: "I have a very low regard for my fellow faculty members, and an even lower regard for the administration." But he added:
Student government report due this week
The long-awaited committee report on restructured KU student government will be released before the end of the week, according to Ambrose Saricks, associate dean of the Graduate School.
The committee, headed by Saricks, was appointed last spring after petitions circulated by "Voice" were signed by more than 1,700 students. The petitions demanded a re-evaluation of the present student-faculty government system.
The committee consists of 12 persons, evenly representing faculty and students. It has been in session three times a week throughout the summer and into the present fall semester.
After the report is officially released it must be voted on by the All Student Council (ASC) and the Faculty Senate Council.
If two-thirds majority of both councils vote for the report, it must then be ratified by the student body and University Senate, respectively.
"If we had 50 per cent representation on the University Senate ... we would have the same kind of Mickey Mouse we have now ... since the students would have to vote on them."
Sanricks noted "the determination of an increasing number of young people to have an effective voice in university policy."
Although not yet released for publication, the committee's report was read Sunday night at a closed meeting of the Peoples Voice, two members of which have drafted a dissenting report
---
WEATHER
Variable cloudiness and continued cool today through Thursday. Light west to southwest winds today. Highs should be in the lower 70s and low tonight in the upper 40s. Precipitation probability today, tonight and Thursday is 10 per cent.
...
UDK News Roundup
Russia warns Germans
Moscow (UPI)—The Soviet Union warned today it was ready to take "the necessary effective measures to curb the dangerous activities of neonazism and militarism" in West Germany.
The warning was contained in a commentary in the Communist party newspaper Pravda and did not mention the word "invasion." Russia has at least 20 army divisions poised along the West German border.
Russia has blamed West Germany for fomenting anti-socialist factions in Czechoslovakia and accused Bonn of supplying the Czechoslovak "counterrevolutionaries" with arms, ammunition and advice.
Mental exam to be given
Lincoln, Neb. (UPI)—Duane Earl Pope of Roxbury, Kan., originally sentenced to die in the killing of three employees during a Nebraska bank holdup, will start undergoing a psychiatric examination here Thursday.
Cardinals lose no hitter
San Francisco (UPI)—Gaylord Perry, allowing only two walks, fired a no-hitter past the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday night and pitched the San Francisco Giants to a 1-0 victory.
The gangling right-hander, who frequently has lost tough luck decisions, because of his team's inability to deliver runs when he was hurling, turned back the Cards 48 hours after they had cinched their second straight National League pennant.
(Continued on page 16)
Salsich: fired or not?
Faculty forum:
Fired for honesty
Salsich speaks at McCollum
'If you can't teach, clean'
Salsich, ROTC heads debate military
Marines to return: opinion swells
Salsich reappointed
'Free' university born on Tennessee
What happened to Ham?
Salsich is gone forever!
By John Gillie
Ham is gone.
Hamilton Salsich-assistant instructor in English for two years, founder of the Free University, gadfly-in-residence and an always controversial figure, has accepted a full-time teaching post in the University of Western Michigan. He and two other instructors from KU are teaching here now, according to friends.
"We did offer Mr. Salsich a reappointment last year." said James A. Gowen, acting head of freshman and sophomore English last semester.
"And I also understand that Ambrose Saricks had asked him to help on a University Senate committee last summer. He refused the appointment for unspecified reasons," Gowen commented.
Salsich left without fanfare or annoy accusations.
"He told me verbally he would not return," Gowen said. "He reported a vague dissatisfaction with graduate studies, KU and universities in general."
Bruce Little, an English instructor with Salsich last year, said, however, that Salsich had expressed bitter disappointment with KU.
Litte said the University of Western Michigan allows Sr ich to teach in "an absolutely ree and flexible program."
"He can teach anything under the sun." exclaimed Litte.
It was Salsich's outspoken criticism of "the system" that brought his name to the headlines.
Learning "how to fit in, get along and play it cool reduces man to an animal," Salsich said in a public forum last year. "We have a good many Pavlov's dogs here," Salsich proclaimed.
Last fall Salsich was the principal founder of the Free University.
Now that Salsich's desk in
And it was Salsich who was a power in the Student Voice (now Peoples Voice), an organization which demanded and got a promise of a greater student say in university policy-making committees.
The military's presence on the campus in the form of ROTC and defense contracts drew protests from Salsich. He organized a demonstration to support these views and compiled grievances to present to the university administration.
Lindley Annex sits empty, he draws praise.
"He made his students and a lot of other people on this campus aware of what it's all about," said Erik Chaek, teaching fellow in English and a friend of Salsich. "I hate to think of who can take up the slack," Chaek said.
Provost Francis Heller, a man who often found himself defending university policies in the face of Salsich's criticism, said, "It is in the nature of the academic institution that some will call for accelerated exploration of new directions.
"Hamilton Salsich was a remarkably articulate spokesman who made his points very well. I think it is fair to say that we maintained a cordial relationship marked with mutual respect. Mr. Salsich made some very significant contributions to the university," Heller said.
James Gowen, Salsich's superior in the English department, commented, "I think that he did focus on some meaningful grievances. But, as is the case with many campus radicals, he didn't remain to follow up the implications of his own ideas."
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
/
Wednesday, September 18
Senate nears vote on Fortas
Washington (UPI)—After almost three months of wrangling, the Senate Judiciary Committee got down to voting on the controversial nomination of Abe Fortas to be chief justice of the United States.
The vote appeared certain to assure floor consideration of the appointment--but amid signs of increasing opposition that threatened to lock the Senate in a drawn-out talkathon during this "rump" final session of the 90th Congress.
It has been a virtual certainty
for weeks that a coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats would filibuster against letting the nomination come to a floor vote.
Sen. Robert Griffin, R-Mich., originally garnered 19 signatures among his fellow Republicans against Fortas, and claimed to count 20 or 21 Democrats opposed to cutting off debate invoking cloture to bring the nomination to a vote.
He now estimates 45 senators are opposed to confirmation itself.
Many senators oppose cloture because they favor the Senate tradition of unlimited debate, but would vote to confirm Fortas if a vote could be arranged
The Judiciary Committee has until Friday to file reports with the Senate on the nomination. These are expected to include strong minority views against Fortas, setting out arguments that have been raised in numerous hearings since the committee received the nomination June 26.
The committee took its vote
still frustrated over futile efforts to re-question a number of present and former administration officials as well as Fortas.
Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford, Treasury Undersecretary Joseph Barr, and White House counsel W. Divier Pierson all declined the committee's invitation to testify.
Federal marshals told the committee they were unable to find former White House aide Richard Goodwin and magazine writer Daniel Yergin to serve
subpoenas commanding their appearance.
The committee wanted to question all these men about reports that Fortas continued his role as a presidential adviser even to the extent of helping draft legislation and preparing a State of the Union address—after becoming an associate justice of the Supreme Court.
Such activity, critics contended, violated the constitutional doctrine of separation of powers.
Few students show up for Humphrey meeting
Only 15 students attended an organizational meeting of Young Citizens for Humphrey at the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house last night.
While the group was enthusiastic, the small turn-out caused apprehensions about prospects for a successful campaign at KU this fall.
Ed Cates, state coordinator of the Humphrey supporters, noted that the task would be difficult, but added, "it is obvious that Humphrey has more appeal to youth than Richard Nixon. For the student who is both idealistic and liberal, Humphrey is the only hope."
Cates also stressed the importance of KU to Humphrey's statewide success. "KU is the largest and most impressive school in the state. If the movement at KU is successful, other schools will follow suit," he said.
Mike Dickeson, Atchison junior and chairman of the KU chapter, stressed the need to channel enthusiasm for Humphrey into the community of Lawrence as well as into the KU campus.
Poll shows Nixon leads
NEW YORK-(UPI)-With almost one-fourth of the nation's voters apparently undecided, Republican Richard M. Nixon is no more a "shoo-in" for the presidency than Thomas E. Dewey was in 1948, a veteran polltaker said Tuesday.
Albert E. Sindinger, president of Sindlinger & Co., said a telephone survey of 1,866 voters in 48 states conducted by his organization Thursday through Sunday indicated 23.1 per cent of the voters were undecided.
ber of supporters of third party candidate George C. Wallace who do not think he actually can win the election.
Sindlinger said another factor making the outcome of the election uncertain is the large num-
"I think that those who believe Nixon is a shoo-in now are the same who thought Dewey was in 1948," Sindlinger said.
Dewey was defeated by Democratic president Harry S. Truman that year despite predictions that he would win over Truman by a wide margin.
Sindlinger reported in his latest poll that 17.8 per cent of those questioned said they "most want to see" Wallace elected president if the election
were held now but only 4.3 per cent said they thought he "will actually be elected in November."
"The question is whether those who favor Wallace will vote for him," Sindlinger said.
He said the difference in percentages between whose who favor Wallace and those who think he can win indicated "there will be a lot of soul searching" by many Wallace backers before November.
The same poll showed Nixon winning 34.5 per cent of the vote and Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey taking 24.6 per cent.
The unsquare squares
We make square-toed moccasins, loafers, buckled shoes, brogues, and oxfordes. A whole new line of square-toed shoes for a whole new line of not-so-square people.
NUNN BUSH
Black Calf $30.00
Other Nunn-Bush Styles from $19.95
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Godard is Back
Godard on Love
The Married Woman
Thurs. Sept. 19 7-8:30-10 Dyche $.75
Godard on Violence
Band of Outsiders
Tues. Sept. 24 7-9 Dyche $.75
Advance Tickets Union Desk
Black Calf
$30.00
Other Nunn-Bush Styles
from $19.95
Black Calf $30.00
Other Nunn-Bush Styles
from $19.95
Bunny
Black's Royal
College Shop
Godard is Back
Godard on Love
Godard is Back
Godard on Love
The Married Woman
Thurs. Sept. 19 7-8:30-10 Dyche $.75
Godard on Violence
Band of Outsiders
Tues. Sept. 24 7-9 Dyche $.75
Advance Tickets Union Desk
Band of Outsiders
8
Wednesday, September 18
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Czechs seek Moscow truce
Prague (UPI)—The Presidium of the Czechoslovak Communist party met Tuesday to consider sending a top-level delegation to Moscow to soothe Kremlin fears over a proposed party congress, Communist sources said.
The party sources said the Moscow meeting was considered because the Soviets had threatened to block the calling of a congress of the Czechoslovak Communist party scheduled for early October.
The Kremlin was said to fear strongly liberal delegates-supporters of national party leader Alexander Dubcek who would be able to solidify the already firm national resistance to the Soviet-led military occupation.
It was not known if the Presidium reached a final decision on making a trip to Moscow, the sources said, but they said a delegation made up of Dubeek, Slovak party chief Gustav Husak and Presidium member Josef Spacek was tentatively selected.
At the same time, the national writers union broadcast on television an angrily-worded protest against Soviet bloc "gross distortions and slander" against Czechoslovak writers.
The writers joined a growing intellectual protest started Monday by a group of economists who protested attacks on economic leader Ota Sik.
Another development saw Parliamentary president Josef Smrkovsky swear in 94 judges of special rehabilitation courts. The action put into practice a law to rehabilitate victims of the Stalinist terror trials which was started soon after the liberal regime took office last January. Smrkovsky said the law would prevent a return to "pre-January conditions."
And in other action, the country reopened its borders to foreign tourists and Czech sources said the Soviet occupation troops were under orders to "keep out of sight."
1
KU COED RELAXES
Tuesday afternoon's practice session of the KU football team drew many spectators like this KU coed who sat solemnly on the grass near the practice field at Allen Field House, including the Kansan staff photographer who took this picture. The practice even drew "roving spectators" who passed by the field on their way to the dorms on Daisy Hill.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Wallace to KC today
Third-party Presidential candidate George Wallace arrives today in Kansas City, Mo., for a fund-raising dinner and rally.
He will arrive at 1:30 p.m. at the Kansas City Municipal Airport.
Wallace will then speak at a $25 per plate fundraising dinner at 6 p.m. at the Hotel Muehlebach and will finish his Kansas City campaign with a major address at 8 p.m. in the American Royal Exposition Building. Entrance to the rally is free.
(Editor's Note: The Kansan will send a full staff of reporters—Allison Steimel, editorial editor; Rea Wilson, feature editor; Steve Haynes, staff reporter, and a Kansan photographer to cover the Wallace appearance in Kansas City.)
Ant anti-Wallace rally is planned outside the Muehlebach Hotel. Organizers hope to attract 500 anti-Wallace demonstrators.
Professors get research grants
Four KU professors have been awarded one-year research grants by the U.S. Public Health Service.
Goes to Indiana
They are J. Eugene Fox, professor of botany; Robert G. Carlson, associate professor of chemistry; Gary L. Grunewald, assistant professor of medicinal chemistry; and Harvey P. Friedman, research associate in comparative biochemistry and physiology.
He is Kent I. Tool, an instructor and assistant to Dr. Frank Pinet in operation of the Business Placement Bureau and the summer Executive Development Program.
A member of the KU School of Business has been named director of the placement bureau at Indiana University Northwest Campus, Gary.
Staff introduced
Almost 100 new staff members were introduced at the faculty meeting of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Tuesday afternoon in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Robert Cobb, associate dean of the College, presided at the meeting.
SMAK IT TO 'EM
That's the way we WELCOME you new Jayhawks and returning students to the new SMAKS DRIVE-IN. You serve yourself and save time and money . fast service . reasonable prices.
Eat in our dining room in booths or at the counter.
---
RANCH FRESH HAMBURGERS . . . 19c
Hamburgers are ranch fresh, from beef off Smaks ranch in Kansas . . . processed in Smaks own commissary, served on buns baked in Smaks own bakery and rushed fresh daily to the drive ins.
SMAKAROO . . only 64c
. . . the sandwich that's a meal . . . 3 toasted buns . . two big ranch fresh hamburger rounds covered with melty cheese. Come in. You'll see this is not the ordinary self service drive in. You'll taste that it's not the ordinary drive in food. You'll see, taste and enjoy the difference!
TASTY
SMAKS
19¢
HAMBURGERS
er.
(Formerly Allen's) Just south of Allen Field House.
HOME OF THE RANCH FRESH HAMBURGER.
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 18
Wescoe and Voice
President Lyndon B. Johnson used a surprise attack last April when, after a long televised speech on Vietnam, he ended with an announcement that he had decided not to run again.
The speech worked. In the utter shock that followed, many looked with a less-jaundiced eye at Johnson's handling of the office of the Presidency. Since he isn't campaigning this fall, Johnson hasn't had the extensive personal criticism that was piled upon him last winter. The charge of his every action being politically-oriented has lost force.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe his resignation Monday was also a surprise and although probably not intended to do so, will likely soften the reaction of student protestors.
About 50 students connected with the protest group, Peoples Voice, walked out during Wescoe's address. As they left, they distributed half-sheet fliers explaining their reasons for the walkout.
Voice should have stayed. Wescoe's speech turned out to be neither rhetorical nor meaningless, especially not to Voice.
"Therefore we walk out during the Chancellor's meaningless rhetorical exercise," the flier read.
Perhaps some of the various members of Voice are pleased with the Chancellor's announcement. But the dissident students of KU could do much worse. And most of the leaders of Voice would surely admit this.
Wesco base his opening address on change and stressed his own and KU's role in change.
"Although I would hesitate to admit it, I think if I were to be classified when a student and later as a faculty member and now administrator (whatever that may mean) that classification would read, in lower case letters, 'rebel.' My pride in the accomplishment of change rests in the change being wrought through intellectual persuasion, through the presentation of inconvertible facts," he said.
Despite Voice's allegations that Wesco and the administration of KU treats its students with "paternalism," the Voice members would have to admit that Wesco has not veered away from dialogue. Last year's protests and petitions about student voice in university committees now composed completely of faculty members demonstrated the Chancellor's willingness to talk it over.
Instead of reacting with the strong-handed tactics of Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University who resigned in late August, Wescoe announced the establishment of a student-faculty committee to discuss the need for student representation in University affairs.
"I feel now that the processes of student government can swing into action," he said.
The KU student body will no doubt remember Wescoe's open lines of communication during the coming school yearand realize that his willingness for change and discussion are becoming priceless in a nation that is taking an increasingly hard line toward student rights.
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
Kansan record review
Rock/jazz: good
bv Bob Butler
If you haven't heard Eric Andersen's album, "More Hits from Tin Can Alley," you owe it to yourself to find a copy and give it 45 minutes of your time. I've heard lots of fine albums lately, but this is one of the best.
ERIE Andersen started his career with Bob Dylan and Phil Ochs in Greenwich Village in the early 60's. Back then he was a straight folk singer. Actually, he still is, but he has seen fit to augment his superb guitar playing with drums, bass, banjos, honky-tonk piano and trombones. The result is the story of a day in Tin Can Alley, a bitter yet strangely hopeful picture of slum life.
Andersen has adopted a musical style that combines folk rock and dixieland jazz. It is sometimes quiet, sometimes raucous—always satisfying. But when coupled with his biting lyrics it becomes brilliant.
The album's closing lines:
"Smokestacks coughin' a couple blocks away,
Air's so dirty the sheets are turnin' gray,
It looks like midnight, it's the middle of the day,
Down in Tin Can Alley—where the little kids play."
Andersen can be a devasting satirist, as in his put down of the Hugh Hefner syndrome in "Rolling Home":
"I don't want a lot of money
I don't want a Playboy bunny
Jest a love to call me honey
Late at night."
There are few albums I would guarantee for every listener. This is one of them. Eric Andersen is an angry young man, but at least he cares. If only some of flag-waving "law and order" politicians could understand what a slum is like, then perhaps they would understand also why it's really not so terrible to see one burn down.
Paperbacks
"Torn from the headlines," as the movie ads used to say—that's a new paperback by Robert Lewis called MICHEL, MICHEL (Crest, $1.25). Not the biggest headlines, but those that pack the emotion and cause bridge-table discussion, because "Michel, Michel" is about a struggle for possession of a child, a struggle between a Jewish refugee family and the Catholic Church.
The child's parents were Jews, victims of the Nazis, and the child is raised as a Catholic. Then the aunt, in Israel, claims the boy and the battle begins. It's a big book, and a literate one, whose author has a Ph.D. in Romance languages and literatures from Johns Hopkins.
It's sort of a step down to Lew Louderback's THE BAD ONES (Gold Medal, 75 cents), a paperback original also torn from the headlines—headlines of the 1930s. Capitalizing on interest in "Bonnie and Clyde," and even presenting the lovely Bonnie (Marjorie Main, not Faye Dunaway) on the cover, cigar and all, the book deals with the hoodlums of those good old days—Bonnie and Clyde, John Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd,
Now back in time, quite a distance, to the days of decadent Rome. ROGUE ROMAN (Gold Medal, 75 cent), by Lance Horner. This is a humdinger. Wow. There's this handsome slave named Cleon, from the Near East, who is trained to be a lover and gladiator. Cleon gets all mixed up with the royal family and the fall of Rome. A natural for Embassy pictures. And the book isn't really written in English, which makes it easy for the script writers.
Baby Face Nelson and Ma Barker.
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI)—Filming has begun in Moscow on "Tschaikovsky." the first American-Soviet co-production with Dimitri Tiomkin producing for Warner Bros.
SOVIET-AMERICAN PIC
Letters to the editor
FESTIVAL ENTRY
HOLLYWOOD - (UPI) — MGM's "The Legend of Lylah Clare" is the American Entry in Spain's 1968 San Sebastian Film Festival.
Union thanks KU students for patience
To: The Editor of the University Daily Kansan
Those of us at the Kansas Union want to express our thanks and appreciation to the students, staff, and faculty for their patience and perseverance relative to pedestrian traffic during enrollment at the Union.
Our temporary walks, fences, bridges, and steps were designed and installed for your safety.
The general contractor (B. A. Green Construction Co.) has been plagued with an unusually rainy summer. Working long and late, often doing work a second time after rains had washed it out, Mr. Green has made a sincere and determined effort to have streets and walks ready for all your activities related to the first home football game on September 28.
Frank R. Burge Director
Wallace target
Voters' fears
The unpredictable action of a frightened voter in the secrecy of a voting booth could determine the outcome of this year's presidential election.
The frightened voter is not a political activist; nor is he a rank-and-file party member. More than likely he was an Eisenhower Republican, wavered between Kennedy and Nixon in 1960, and cast his fate with Johnson in 1964. He is now perplexed by the Vietnam protests, campus disorders, and the black man's discontent. He does not regard himself a racist, but is covertly and sometimes overtly critical of the revolt that threatens his middle or lower-middle class security. The frightened voter may well be the eye of the hurricane backlash.
The frightened voter is dubious of the racist stigma attached to the third party candidacy of George Wallace, but at the same time, he is unimpressed with the familiar faces he sees in the Republican and Democratic parties. His skepticism is a prime target of Wallace's American Independent Party.
The frightened voter does not figure in the nearly 20 per cent of the electorate currently siding with Wallace. His vote may very well be governed by one of those imponderables that campaign managers understand only after they lose.
The ponderables are dealt with by strategists before a campaign is off the ground. A candidate's stand on basic issues is calculated in anticipation of the electorate's predictable responses. But occasionally a sleeper issue will arise and be subsequently reinforced by unexpected events. The sleeper this year is the law and order issue and the burgeoning campaign of Wallace has unfortunately been able to capitalize on this issue.
Such an imponderable was the bloodletting that scarred the Democratic national convention in Chicago. The apparent result was to hang another albatross around the neck of Hubert Humphrey and present Wallace—and to a lesser extent, Nixon—a feast that whet his political appetite.
It is significant to the Wallace candidacy that what troubles America was dramatized on the stage of Chicago. For it is in the big northern cities where the frightened voter abounds—and it is in the big northern cities where unexpected Wallace support could throw the election into the House of Representatives.
Polls indicate that Wallace is ahead in the five deep-south states with the distinct possibility that he could carry most, if not all, of the 13 southern states. With the former Alabama governor's support growing in the border and midwestern states, the big-city North and East could provide the key to Wallace's presidential aspirations.
One more imponderable event could have the frightening effect of bringing out unexpected support for Wallace. A major civil disorder the week preceding the election could persuade many frightened voters to go the Wallace-route November fifth.
Richard Lund-Quist Editorial Assistant
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Executive Sam
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Haney
Assistant Managing Editors Pat Crawford, Charla Jenkins, Tim Jones,
Steve Morgan, Allen Winchester
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor Alison Steimel
Editorial Assistant Richard Lund-Quist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCrenley, Don Westerhaus, Sandy
Zahradnik Marilyn Zook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager Karlyn Sanders
Promotion Pam Flatton
Circulation Manager Jack Hurley
Classified Manager Barry Arthur
BBBDDRRRRRR
BANG BANG BANG
FWZZZZINNN
TABLE 72 PRELIMINARY CHECK
Bromby
PROGRESS?
Quotes
About the Candidates
George Wallace: "The people in all walks of life in these United States are tired of the way the pseudointellectuals are writing them guidelines telling them what to do."
A Wallace position paper: "Can a former truck driver who is married to a former dimentore clerk and who is the son of a dirt farmer be elected President of the United States?"
The Alabama Journal, writing of the George Wallace campaign: "This is not the kind of campaign that wins national elections. But unhappily, it is the kind of campaign which sets class against class, race against race, people against government, workingman against intellectual, the deprived against the middle class and blurs our vision of the common goals which all men of good will seek."
Wednesday, September 18
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
The lighter side
Views of Chicago riots Which version is right?
Bv Dick West
(UPI Columnist)
Washington (UPI) I am beginning to get a vague impression that there may be some disagreement over the clashes between demonstrators and police during the Democratic convention.
It is nothing I can put a finger on, but little things I read and hear lead me to believe that two sharply contrasting versions of those incidents have emerged.
If you happen to be among the 76 people in the United States who have not yet denounced one side or the other, it is high time you became actively opinionated.
To help you decide which side to castigate, I have prepared a synopsis of the two versions, one of which will surely make you see red.
A small group of wholesome, well-mannered, clean-cut college kids gathered in Chicago to observe the convention first hand. They felt the experience would help them make better grades in political science class this fall and perhaps win a good citizenship award.
Being lovers of fresh air and sunshine, they met in Grant Park to hold seminars and compare notes. The atmosphere was one of scholarly repose.
But suddenly a hostile army of truncheon-wielding policemen descended upon the apple-cheeked youths and demanded that they disperse.
"Certainly, sir," their leaders said. "We have the greatest respect of law and order, particularly as exemplified by the Chicago police force, and we would never stay where we aren't wanted."
As they quietly disbanded, the brutal cops, who loved nothing better than to beat up innocent and defenseless students, fell upon them with clubs and tear gas.
Israeli guns shell Jordan in retaliation
By United Press International
Long-range Israeli guns shelled a heavily populated city in Jordan Tuesday in what Jordanian officials said was retaliation for an Arab guerrilla rocket on an Israeli border town.
Israeli officials said Jordanian forces fired Czech-made Katusha rockets at the Israeli town of Beisan Monday night. It was the first reported use of rockets on the Israelia-Jordanian front lines.
The Jordanian army, however, disclaimed any knowledge of a rocket attack on Beisan and said the attack probably was carried out by Arab guerrillas.
A hostile army of disciples of Joseph Stalin and the Marquis de Sade swooped down upon Chicago, bent not only upon disrupting the convention but upon seizing the entire city for use as a base for overthrowing the U.S. government by force and violence.
They marched unopposed as far as Grant Park, where they were confronted by a handful of
courageous policemen, who appealed for reason and fair play.
The savage mob turned upon the kindly cops and committed unspeakable atrocities. Their cowardly behavior mocked all decency and set back civilization 1,000 years.
Only the swift arrival of a tiny band of reinforcements saved the country from a Communist takeover.
Women may invade Princeton campus
Princeton, N.J. (UPI)—After 222 years as an all-male sanctuary, Princeton University may soon become a happy hunting ground for about 1,000 women looking for either a B.A. or a Mrs.
A 10-member committee, headed by Dr. Gardner Patterson, has recommended that Princeton lower the barriers and admit women as undergraduates to the 222-year-old university. The recommendation was contained in a 56-page report submitted by the committee Friday and released today.
In setting the figure at 1,000, Patterson, a professor of economics and international affairs at Princeton, noted that the advantages of coeducation are lost if the ratio of men to women is more than three to one. Princeton currently has 3,200 male undergraduates.
The report estimated the cost of providing accommodations for 1,000 women would be between $24.2 and $25.6 million, figures which the committee said were "surprisingly reasonable."
Princeton President Robert Goheen endorsed the committee's findings and told reporters that the report was drawn up after Sarah Lawrence College turned down an informal merger proposal.
One of the reasons cited for the proposed change in the school's status is that Princeton is not drawing as many top students as it has in the past.
"All too often we sense that we are seeing very good applicants from a school but not the top ones," the report said. "Moreover too often many of the students who apply and who we would like to have at Princeton go elsewhere."
'Nixon needs no debate Agnew tells Convention
Casper, Wyo. (UPI) -Richard Nixon's running mate said Tuesday he did not think Nixon should debate Hubert Humphrey because the GOP ticket was well out in front of Humphrey and Edmund Muskie.
Vice presidential candidate Spiro T. Agnew, who keyed the Texas Republican Convention in Fort Worth before flying to Wyoming for an evening rally, said he thought it was generally considered poor tactics to debate an opponent when "you're so far ahead."
"I don't think Mr. Nixon needs to debate," Agnew said after meeting with campaign aides in Casper. "Mr. Humphrey is doing a good job of debating himself."
In Fort Worth, Agnew told the Texas Republican Convention that the United States must gain new respect for its leadership before this country can lead the way to a lasting peace.
"Richard Nixon is the one man who can gain the respect
"Mr. Humphrey sees things primarily in terms of government power," Agnew said, "while Mr. Nixon sees things primarily in terms of people power."
for leadership the nation needs," Agnew said.
Varsity
THEAIR ... Telephone VI 3-1065
CampusBusSchedule
TO CAMPUS AND DOWNTOWN
Varsity
THEATRE ··· Telephone VI 3-1065
The hanging was the best show in town!
6:30 p.m., 6:50, 7:30, 8:10,
8:50, 9:30, 10:10, 10:50
Ellsworth to Campus and Downtown
Naismith and Oliver to Campus and Downtown
G.S.P. to Campus to Ellsworth
6:15 p.m., 6:35, 7:15, 7:55,
8:35, 9:15, 9:55, 10:35
G.S.P. to Downtown
6:42 p.m., 7:02, 7:42, 8:22,
9:02, 9:42, 10:22, 11:22
6:25 p.m., 6:45, 7:25, 8:05
8:45, 9:25, 10:05, 10:45
9th and Mass. to KU Dormitories
6:10 p.m, 6:30, 7:10, 7:50,
8:30, 9:10, 9:50, 10:30
Union Bldg. to Downtown and G.S.P.
6:40 p.m., 7:00, 7:40, 8:20,
9:00, 9:40, 10:20, 11:00
G. S.P. to Downtown
SAVE 25c—15 RIDES FOR $2.00
Campus Only
Lawrence Bus Co., Inc.
Clip and Save
Effective September 16
NO Service Sundays or Holidays
$25.00
CLINT
EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM
HIGH"
CLINT EASTWOOD IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
MATINEE 2:30
EVENING 7:15 - 9:30
Muskie talks to labor
The candidate's next stop was St. Louis Tuesday night.
New York (UPI)—Vice Presidential Candidate Edmund S. Muskie led an unofficial task force of Democratic luminaries Tuesday on a pilgrimage for votes from labor and the elderly.
During a one-day visit to New York, the Maine senator conferred with AFL-CIO President George Meany, addressed a convention of the 35,000-member International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers (IUE) and talked to the Golden Ring Council of Senior Citizens.
Meeting: 7:30 p. m. Sept. 18
Muskie told the 800 delegates to the IUE convention, expected to consider endorsing a presidential ticket later this week, that Republican presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon was "the same Nixon" who served as vice president during three recessions.
Declaring that there werer "only two men" who stood a chance at winning the election, he urged support for Democratic candidate Hubert H. Humphrey.
shooting are urged
to attend.
K. U. Rifle Club
Room 15 Military Science Bldg.
All interested in
who cares about a
35 year old virgin?
V
[SUGGESTED FOR MATURE ADVANCES]
joanne woodward in the PAUL NEWMAN production of rachel,rachel
TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVENARTS
7:15 - 9:15
Two Showings
Granada
THEATRE...telephone V13-5789
TONIG
The Facts of Life
MOM
and DAD'
SEE
BIRTH
of
a
BABY
The Facts of Life MOM and DAD
TONIGHT!
TONIGHT!
The Facts of Life
MOM
and DAD'
SEE
BIRTH
of
a
BABY
TONIGHT!
HIT NO. 2
"SHE
SHOULDA
SAID 'NO!"
Films that Dare to Tell the Truth!
HIT NO.2 "SHE SHOULDA SAID 'NO!'
Films that Dare to Tell the Truth!
Sunset
DRIVE IN TULSA BE - West on Highway 40
Sunset
Box Office Open 6:30 Show At Dusk
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 18
49
IF YOU CAN'T TACKLE EM. PUSH EM
The Jayhawks worked on their passing attack and at the same time got some pass defense practice in during Tuesday's practice. This week was declared "Illinois Week" as the team prepares for its game against the Illini Saturday.
(Kansan photo by Mark Bernstein)
Olympic team loaded with stars
South Lake Tahoe, Calif. (UPI)—"It has to be one of the finest teams ever taken to an Olympics," said Payton Jordan today in describing the record-setting crew of track and field stars he saw in action at the U.S. trials.
"I think the boys adjusted well to the altitude, once they got it out of their minds, and started to concentrate on the events themselves," co ntinued the head coach of the U.S. men's Olympic team. "Some very fine athletes didn't make it but I think the very best ones did."
The eight day competition would up Monday on a sunny and bright afternoon with Jim Ryun, the world record holder, winning the 1,500 meter run in 3:49.0, well off his 3:33.1 record and Ed Caruthers of Santa Ana, Calif., shading high schooler Reynaldo Brown in the high iump.
World Records
The two events proved antici-micacy after Geoff Vanderstock, Bob Seagreen, John Carlos and Lee Evans had set world records. Vanderstock took the 400 intermediate hurdles record down to 48.8 seconds, Seagren vaulted 17-9. Carlos ran the 200 meter dash in 19.7 and Evans the 400 meter run in 44 seconds flat.
Dick Fosbury also jumped 7-3 to join Caruthers and Brown, a 17-year-old high school student from Compton, Calif., in the Olympics. Martin Liquori, a 19-year-old soph from Villanova, finished second to Ryun in the 1,500 in 3:49.5 and Tom Von Ruden of the Army was third in 3:49.8.
Other former olympians who will make the trip to Mexico City next month will be hammer throwers Ed Burke, Al Hall and Hal Connolly, Frank Covelli in the javelin, Willie Davenport in the hurdles, Tom Farrell in the 800-meter run, Randy Matson in the shot put, Al Oerter and Jay Silvester in the discus, Mel Pender in the 100-meter dash, John Pennel in the pole vault, Ralph Boston in the long jump, marathoner-steeplechaser George Young and walker Ron Laird.
Most of the athletes in the trials spent from four to seven weeks at the 7,377-foot-high Echo Summit training base.
this altitude is good enough for a proper adjustment," said Jordan, "we'll have about two more weeks of altitude training before the games, so we should be all right on that score."
Coach unhappy with practice
Head football coach Pepper Rodgers was not pleased with Tuesday's practice, saying that the "boys looked tired." Thursday's practice will be the last one in preparation for this Saturday's game with the University of Illinois at Champaign.
think about 10 weeks at
When asked if anyone had been "looking good" in practice, Rodgers singled out split-tackle Larry Brown. Brown, a sophomore from Starke, Fla., stands six feet four inches and weighs 212 pounds.
When Rogers was asked about an Illini scout's comment that KU has tremendous team speed, he replied, "All of our little men look fast, but our big ones look slow."
Rodgers said that a starting fullback for the upcoming game had been selected but declined to say who it would be.
Bulletin
Detroit (UPI)—The Detroit Tigers clinched their first American League pennant in 23 years Tuesday night when Don Wert, a.198 hitter, lashed a baseloaded two-out single to right field in the ninth inning for a 2-1 victory over the New York Yankees.
---
RIGHT AND LEFT
ST. LOUIS —(UPI)— Ken Holtzman, Chicago Cubs pitcher, is a southpaw. His brother, Barry, just signed by the St. Louis Cardinals, is a right-hander. The brothers live in suburban University City, Mo.
Campus WEST 1424 Crescent Road
Beauty Mist Annual Hosiery Sale
Sept. 9-23.
Dress Sheers Regularly $1 Pair Sale Price $.79 6 Pairs Only $4.70
Save 20% on other styles
Panty Hose Regularly $2.00 pr.
Sale Price $1.59 pr.
This is it—the hosiery sale you've waited for. Nationally advertised Beauty Mist stockings at great, once-a-year savings! Beautiful, luxuriously sheer, the choice of smart women everywhere. Now be smarter than smart—scoop up a wardrobe of elegant Beauty Mist Stockings in your favorite fashion shades at these irresistible sale prices!
THE READING MEANY'S LURKING...
ON THE KU CAMPUS
"I.
What were you doing 18 years ago?
We were moving! Ken Whitenight was an administrative manager in a chemical manufacturing company in Princeton, New Jersey...Al Hack was with an insurance company in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Both Al and Ken had decided to chuck their jobs and open a traditional store for men. At that time they discovered KU and were much impressed with its great potential growth and they made their move toward the Midwest.
They knew each other from their younger days together in school and before and they determined to pool their efforts and talents. Both men were tremendously excited by the then emerging natural shoulder clothing and "button-down" look. Both had gone to school in the east, Ken at Penn, Al at Penn State, and they had long been aware of the attitude of traditional good taste toward attire that pervaded the east coast. They brought their taste and new ideas to KU and began to express their ideas at the University Shop, our first shop, which opened 18 years ago in 1950.
The U. Shop with its traditional approach was an instant success and they soon expanded by opening the Town Shop, downtown. Al managed the shop on the hill and Ken the new shop on Massachusetts Street. They still maintain this arrangement.
It was only logical that the traditional ideas of simplicity, good taste and fine tailoring that were demanded in the men's shops should also be a much
desired commodity for the women as well. It was in this spirit that the Country House was added to provide that same expression of good taste for the young women of KU. The Country House is located at the back of the Town Shop and is three years old this fall.
Ken and Al started more than 18 years ago diligently searching for and finding the best of the traditional clothing lines both in the U.S. and abroad to provide not only the right look but the best buy for their many customers. Over the years the process of acquiring stock for the three shops has been one of both discovery and invention. The seasonal search has invariably resulted in new ideas and new directions and in showing the men and women of KU the right fashion first.
We are all still conducting this search and we're coming forth this fall with the most exciting collection of color, pattern and traditional fashion that we've ever had in the shops.
Won't you take a look through the next three pages and get acquainted with the shops, the clothing, and most importantly, the people who make the whole thing tick? Better still, stop in all three of the shops and let us get to know you personally. We're looking forward to it.
Ken Whitenight
Al Hack
Pete Whitenight
THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Uptown VI 3-5755
THE University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr.
On the Hill
VI 3-4633
HOLIDAY CARE
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
V1 3-5755
Clothing in traditionally good taste . . . for men and women.
BARBERSHOP
HOTEL
of KANSAS
AI Hack . . . the leader of the U. Shop "A team." Al is a most knowledgeable clothing man and he'll be glad to help you with your needs.
Here are some of the great and varied clothing and accessories lines that we buy for both men's shops: Pendleton, Puritan, Hubbard and Lee trousers, Cricketeer, Stanley Blacker, Deansgate, Cole Haan shoes, Corbin trousers, Gant and Holbrook shirts, Reis-Renleigh & Risilio ties, Byford and Towne & King sweaters, London Fog, Zero King and Woolrich. As you can see, we definitely believe in letting you know what you're buying.
THE University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr.
On the Hill
VI 3-4633
The "A" Team...
Bill Hess . . . wearing one of our great alpaca golf sweaters is checking out one of our new Stanley Blacker coats.
9
X D
SALVATORE
Gary Kostner . . . picking out a new trouser to go with his Cricketeer sport coat.
10.5.1962
Rod Wilson . . in one of the rich earth tone twill suits which we are showing at both shops.
Town Shop
Downtown . . our 839 Mass. location presents a warm and friendly atmosphere in which to shop. We're glad to have you come in to browse.
APRIL 27, 1965
Ken Whitenight. . owner and manager of the downtown shop is here on the phone reordering more twill slacks.
Our two men's shops were the first to bring the traditional look to the men of KU and we are still the leader in new ideas. Nearly every item in the shops offers some new ideas in fabric cut or shape We make a real effort every season to find the best of the new ideas and to present them to you . . . not all that far out stuff but good solid fashions. Stop in soon and see for yourself.
1970
Pete Whitenight...assistant manager and buyer is wearing one of our great country suits from Deansgate while checking over our fantastic sweater stock.
THE Town Shop
839 Mass.
Uptown
V13-5755
Jeff Baxter... in his new Clubman Gurkha tweed sport coat is choosing a tie from our large selection of clubs.
1937
Don Colhour. . a member of the crew at the T-Shop is shown wearing one of our large groups of fishermen's knits.
Davide Cappella
Doug Webster . . . wearing his Stanley Blacker hounds tooth tweed in crisp fall colorings in checking in our Gant Woolsters.
TOMMY HOLLAND
The Country House
The Town Shop
Our newest addition . . the Country House is now three years old. This is the project 800 entrance, off Vermont Street. It's a delightful little shop just packed full of new ideas.
MARILYN MONROE
Meet Marlene Heinrich . . our new manager. She is sharp and full of great ideas to help you select your wardrobe.
M
Clothing by MILLIE
Crestwood
Laundry
It happens here . . . every day we get in fresh new merchandise and we display it here. It makes window shopping fun.
The Country House is our new pride and joy. The interior decor is rustic and colorful. The shop is loaded with great looking sportswear, dresses and outerwear from the best lines available in this type of attire. It's the people who make the shop however, and we have the sharpest, most knowledgeable and helpful crew in the shop that you'll find anywhere. In fact, we think they're incomparable. Stop in soon and get acquainted. We'll enjoy meeting you and we think you'll enjoy the shop.
Ladybug
Denise
Miss Pat
Tami
Pendleton
Loden Frey
London Fog
Davey Bags
Patsi
Vintage Americ
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
VI 3-5755
Janice Mitchell . . one of our charming and helpful assistants is here showing one of our stock of Young Pendletons.
FASHION
The crew . . .
Patty Treat . . a new member of the group-a nice addition-is here modeling one of many sharp Miss Pat styles.
B. J. D.
Ladybug . . . our most featured line, we carry lots of it, is modeled here by Janice showing one of their great sweater & skirt looks.
HILARY MCCARTNEY
Wednesday, September 18
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Amendment proposal of Senate would restrict actions of court
Washington (UPI)—Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), told the Senate Tuesday a proposal to restrict the Supreme Court in obscurity cases was the harshest penalty congress could employ "short of impeachment."
Threatening to prepare more limitations on the court, McClellan said the amendment offered by Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen was a "far harsher and more severe indictment of the court than even refusal to confirm Justice Abe Fortas as chief justice.
Approval of Dirksen's amendment would reveal a lack of confidence in the court, McClellan claimed, and Dirksen and Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield both predicted the Senate would approve it.
The amendment would bar federal courts from upsetting obscenity decisions by trial courts and state appellate courts. Dirksen said 90 per cent of the senators would support his proposal that he tacked onto the gun control bill.
His rider would prohibit the Supreme Court or other federal appellate courts from reviewing, reversing or setting aside decisions by federal trial court juries on what is or is not obscene.
It would also bar any federal court from overturning such decisions by local or state trial courts or by state appellate courts.
"To deny Fortas' promotion would be a much milder rebuke than enactment of this legislation curbing the court's jurisdiction," McClellan said, "It is the harshest punishment we could employ short of impeachment. It clearly reveals a lack of confidence in at least five members of the court in cases involving morality."
McCellan said the Dirksen amendment was "in no way german" to the gun control bill to which it was offered.
If the Senate chooses to use the gun control bill as a vehicle to restrict the higher court, McCllan said he would offer
several other restrictive amendments. But he urged that standard procedures be followed and a separate bill be introduced and hearings held on the court's responsibilities.
McClellan then sent three amendments to the desk and said he would have others to offer if the gun bill became the "vehicle for problems arising out of Supreme Court decisions."
One of his amendments would extend Dirksen's proposal to prohibit the court from reviewing state civil cases involving pornography.
Another would limit its jurisdiction to hear appeals in state cases involving confessions.
The third would restrict the court from overturning or reviewing state cases involving search and seizure.
New York (UPI)—Settlement of the five-day strike by New York City teachers appeared remote Tuesday as the administrator of a rebellious Brooklyn school district rejected a demand to take back 100 unwanted teachers.
Strike settlement appears to be remote
Supt. of Schools Bernard E. Donovan had issued the directive in a telegram to Rhody A. McCoy, administrator of the predominantly Negro and Puerto Rican Ocean Hill-Brownville district. Acceptance of the order would have partially satisfied conditions set by the teachers unions to end the walkout.
A spokesman for the board of education said McCoy telephoned Donovan late in the af-
ternon and quoted the local board official as saying, "No. I will not give public assurance that the 100 teachers would be reassigned."
Donovan said later the matter was "grave" and he would consider his next step Tuesday night or Wednesday morning.
After Donavan had issued his directive to McCoy earlier in the day, the head of the teachers union expressed his approval.
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
8 E 9th VL2.002
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
Is Your Sports Car Turned On?
If Not,
We Conduct Tune-Ins Daily!
Triumph - Toyota
Sales - Service
Parts & Accessories for All Imported Cars
Competition Sports Cars
1209 E. 23rd St. VI 2-2191
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Forever beautiful
Forever perfect
SIERRA $175 CROWN $450 JUDD $300
WEDDING RING 50 ALSO $150 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 125
REGISTERED
Keepsake
DIAMOND RINGS
For lasting pride and satisfaction, choose a Keepsake diamond ring, guaranteed perfect (or replacement assured). Keepsake, the ring of your dreams, is now awaiting your selection at our store.
Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Reg
GOODS OR PERFORMANCE BATTERIES
GOODS OR PERFORMANCE BATTERIES
GUARANTEES
OR ADVISEMENTS
Ray Christian
"The COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432
BOWLING
Air Conditioned
WINTER LEAGUES NOW FORMING
Winter Leagues
Sun.—KU Faculty League (2 Alternate Leagues) 6:00
Sept. 22—Sun.—Mixed League 8:30
Sept. 23—Mon.—All Star Scratch League 6:30
Sept. 25—Wed.—Fraternity League 6:00
Wed.—Independent League 8:30
Sept. 26—Thurs.—Open 6:00
Thurs.—All Campus League 8:30
Oct. 7-Mon. AIBC Juniors Bowlers (8-12 vs.) 4:00
Jct. 7—Mon.—AJBC Junior Bowlers (8-12 yrs.)
Free Practice and Instructions
Sept. 23 and Sept. 30
Special * 4 games for $1.00
12 Modern Lanes
Saturday & Sunday till 6:00 p.m.
@ NEW ICE
Jay Bowl Student Union
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 18
Ft. Riley infantry units may be assigned to Europe
Washington (UPI)—The United States is considering a plan to send 12,000 combat troops, possibly including a unit from Ft. Riley, Kansas, to Europe early next year on a temporary basis for allied maneuvers, Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford said Tuesday.
The move was understood to be one of several contemplated by the administration in an effort to assure the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and especially the Soviet Union that the United States was prepared for counter increased Soviet pressures in Eastern Europe.
The Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia has brought increasing pressure on the Johnson administration, especially from West Germany, to respond with a reciprocal show of force reaffirming U.S. commitments to the defense of NATO countries.
Combat Units Return
The administration apparently has decided to accelerate the return to Europe for training exercises of several combat units withdrawn to the United States last summer on a stand-by basis for NATO duty if needed.
The units are reported to be four F-4 Phantom Jet fighter squadrons from Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico and Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho, as well as two mechanized infantry brigades from the
$25,000 grant given to KU for new X-ray
A $25,000 donation by a 1907 graduate of KU provided funds to replace the 36 year-old X-ray equipment at Watkins Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Grace Blair Emmett, a Lawrence resident, made the gift in August, 1967. The new apparatus will cut the development of chest X-rays required for each incoming student from 24 hours to four minutes.
The new equipment is housed in three rooms at Watkins. The main photographic equipment room, lying beyond a bronze plaque door honoring Mrs. Emmett, can be converted to do fluoroscopic work, if necessary.
The other rooms are used for the new automatic developing equipment which can now turn out the finished X-ray in much less time. This improvement will more than double the capacity of service to students, according to Dr. Raymond Schwegler, student health service director.
Journalism day slated Saturday
Approximately 500 high school journalism students will be at KU Saturday for the 50th annual High School Journalism Day Conference.
244h Infantry Division at Ft. Rilev, Kan.
The faculty will give lectures on high school publication problems, and will offer suggestions on improving newspaper and yearbook makeup, financing and sales.
The conference, presented early in the year to aid high school newspaper and yearbook production, is sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism faculty.
They were returned to the United States from Europe last summer on the announced condition that they were to join NATO maneuvers next summer.
The students will bring copies of their newspapers and yearbooks for display in the Kansas Union. This year the display will be supplemented with exhibits from commercial yearbook companies.
Along with lectures by journalism faculty members, the students will receive a tour of the University of Kansas Printing Plant where the various stages of both letterpress and offset newspaper production will be explained.
Clifford, while not characterizing the move, told newsmen it was "possible" that the Defense Department would decide to advance the maneuvers to a date "sometime after the first of the year," presumable early next spring.
Increase Temporary
"This would only be a temporary increase for the exercises," Clifford said after a private meeting with Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff before the Senate Defense Appropriations Subcommittee.
The total troops involved would be a minimum of 20,000 and a maximum of 40,000 men, Clifford said.
The U.S. Air Force and Army troops strength in Europe now totals about 300,000 men, of whom 21,000 or more are stationed in West Germany. The Pentagon is continuing a program of returning 35,000 to 40,000 administrative and supply personnel home each year to
reduce overseas costs of support for themselves and their dependents.
Reluctant At First
It is believed that the administration was reluctant to counter the effect of the Czech invasion immediately out of the belief that such action would only serve to heighten tensions in Europe and lend credence to Soviet charges of a military threat from NATO and West Germany in particular.
On Vietnam, Clifford said he doubted the U.S. political campaign would affect the Paris talks between the United States and North Vietnam. He said there was "general agreement" on Vietnam between Hubert H. Humphrey, the Democratic nominee, and his opponent, Richard M. Nixon.
The secretary held his prediction that enemy forces in Vietnam were planning a third major offensive. He attributed its delay to he "exceedingly effective" effort by Gen. Creighton Abrams, the U.S. war commander, in spoiling enemy plans for an offensive by a series of anticipatory counter attacks.
Clifford said, "They still have the ability to launch new attacks."
The Saddle rides again...
Dexter Style
PASCAL HENRY
Dexter Style
Arensberg's
= Shoes
DEXTER
$19.95
Leave it to Dexter to come racing forward with pace-setting style. Rugged, masculine, anxious to go wherever you're going in great campus fashion. Ride in to
VI 3-3470
819 MASS.
HAVE YOU SEEN THE READING MEANY ??
I don't know. It's just a face with spikes and wide eyes.
ACME LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS
Says: - Welcome New Jayhawkers Faculty and Students
"Acme Cares"
We will be happy to take care of all your Cleaning and Laundry SEND IT ALL TO ACME
A
AND
BCM INC.
Call VI 3-5155 for FAST Pick up & Delivery or take advantage of our 10% Discount on Cash and Carry Laundry and Dry Cleaning
ACME LAUNDRY DRY CLEANERS
DOWNTOWN 1111 MASS.
Three Convenient Locations
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
MALLS 711 W.23rd
14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday. September 18
Car tax proposed
City may require permit
By Bob Kearnev
Slowly, too slowly for the old professor, the line of parking permit applicants moved forward.
The professor grumbled aloud, his patience thinned by the hour-long wait outside the Traffic and Security Office window.
But the price may go even higher.
"I guess this is the price you have to pay for having a car on campus." he philosophized.
Boosters of a special $10 Lawrence vehicle tax have high hopes for its passage in the Nov. 5 general election. It's the second time the issue will go before the Lawrence voters.
The measure was crushed in its first bid-Aug. 8, 1967-by an overwhelming margin-4,549 to 1.813.
The tax, proposed by the City Commission, would affect every KU student and staff member driving a car on the city's streets.
Blame for the initial defeat of the tax was attributed to a lack of voter education. At the same time, the opponents of the tax hammered at three major points:
- City Officials intentionally set the election for a time when many of those being taxed, KU students and staff, were away from Lawrence.
- The special tax was directed at KU students.
- No tax distinction would be made between a multi-ton truck and a lightweight motor scooter.
The first charge, city officials contend, has been remedied by including the issue on the November ballot when a larger turnout is expected for the presidential voting than for the Aug. 6 primary.
Mayor John H. Emick has answers to the second and third points. "This tax is definitely not aimed at the students but at the vehicles," Emick said. "In fact, the students will greatly benefit."
By law, all revenues from the vehicle tax would be allocated for street maintenance.
It will benefit them, now and in the future, to have streets to carry the traffic and to have the through streets we need in Lawrence. Emick said.
Emick cited the installation of three traffic lights on Iowa Street, especially the one at 15th Street, as examples of benefits to students.
Without that light, traffic would be clogged all the way up the hill on 15th. says Emick.
The measure, in the eyes of its advocates, represents an equitable way of taxing KU students for the costs they cause for street maintenance.
Emick also points out that trucks are already heavily-taxed, and that motor scooters or cycles are as much, if not more, of a traffic control problem as automobiles.
The mayor's commitment to the elderly people of Lawrence, especially those on fixed incomes or Social Security, is perhaps the number one reason Emick is pushing the vehicle tax.
The street improvement
SELECT aids in college choice
A computer program has been developed to help prospective college-transfer students select new colleges or universities.
Called SELECT, the program determines the 10 to 15 schools in the country which best match a student's interests, aptitudes and financial requirements.
The student's specifications are compared with more than two million data entries on approximately 3,000 colleges and universities in the United States.
SELECT does not guarantee admission, but it advises applicants of colleges where they stand the best chances of acceptance.
"Why is it, when we build streets, the property owners carry the load of the tax?" Emick asks.
budget has been eliminated, and the street maintenance budget was chopped from $100,000 to $45,000. Actual improvements were budgeted at $65,000 last year.
Emick said the wheel tax would provide enough revenue to build the needed streets. At the same time, the property owners would save 3 to 4 mills on the levy, he said.
"That's a pretty good sum for those people on fixed incomes," said Emick.
"Of course, I can't speak for all the commission, but the
property tax is as stiff and steep as possible. Some of the older people are forced to go on welfare or to their children for support.
"Not many people like to vote in a new tax. But if enough people get the right information, I believe it can pass."
To date, there have been 11,129 car registrations at KU, including 8,619 students and 2,510 staff members. Ian Davis, manager of the Traffic and Security Office, expects more.
The tax, therefore, would take as much as $111,290 from KU pocketbooks.
And $10 of that would come from the troubled prof waiting in line.
All Belafonte LP's
on RCA
REGULAR $4.79 KIEF'S
JUST $2.99 STEREO
on the Malls
in person
BELAFONTE
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
SAT., SEPT. 21 8:00 p.m.
Tickets—$2.00—$2.50—$3.00
Tickets will go on sale Monday, Sept. 16
at the Information Booth and the SUA
Office in the Kansas Union.
Belafonte LP's
Weaver's JUST $2.99
in person
BELAFONTE
Record Dept.
AVOIDING THE READING MEANY IS A 24 HOUR A DAY JOB
Wednesday, September 18
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
1218 Conn., Law, Wt. Ph. VI 3-2921
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
8 E. 9th VI 2-0021
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
Andrews Gifts
Plenty of Free Parking
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Is Your Sports Car Turned On?
If Not,
We Conduct Tune-Ins Daily!
Triumph - Toyota
Sales - Service
& Accessories for All Imported Cars
Competition Sports Cars
1209 E. 23rd St. VI 2-2191
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
of
Exclusive Representative
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Guards
- Novelties
- Loyoliers
- Favors
- Lavaliers
Rings
- Luvallers
- Sportwear
- Sportswear
- Muns
- Paddles
- Trophies
Cups
- Awards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Fri. Night at the Red Dog
THE BRED DOG BOY
THE BEATLES
THE
Dog Dog Boo!
The Fabulous Red Dogs
Don't Miss It
THE Red Dog Inn
CHRISTOPHER CARTER
Don't Miss It
Bell Dog Box
The Red Dogs Appearing At The Midwest Pop Music Festival
Make it to The Red Dog
Fri. Night Sat. - Direct from L.A. The Lincoln Park Zoo
FOR DETAILS ON THIS, MAJOR MEDICAL, AN OTHER PLANS OF HEALTH AND LIFE INSURANCE
Mutual of Omaha
The Company that runs
FOR SALE
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
university campus are served to
all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha
MOTION OF OMAHA INSURANCE COMPANY
HOME OFFICE OMAHA MEMBERSHIP
1967 Yamaha: 100 cc, 1200 miles—like new. Call VI 2-3733. 9-20
CONTACT:
1957 VW with sun roof. Careful maintenance and partially rebuilt. Call VI 2-8581 for more information.
1955 Chev. 2 DRH BetAlre, 6 cyl.
auto. Good local trans. VI 3-8749-8.
1035 Elm
Concord Shop
Beautiful 175ce motorcycle with accessories and helmet. Better than new! George Richardson, VI 2-8875 or UN 4-4273. 9-23
Bronze '67 Camero. 1 owner, 15,200 miles. 250 engine, straight six. Carpeted, whitewalls, snow fires. V2 I-24891 or Mrs. Nash at 3256. 9-23
1963 Sunbeam Alpine—good engine,
new paint—new top, $700. 1767 175cc
excellent—excellent condition
$550 Cobb, UB 4-3976. 9-23
VI 2-9350.
Used Conrad Electric Bass Guitar.
Good shape with cord, strap, and case. Not much for a bass. Call VI 3-6305 after 5 p.m.
9-23
Motorcycle: 1966 Triumph T 100 R,
500cc. Excellent condition, low mileage,
reasonable. Call VI 2-4239 after
6:00 p.m. or weekends.
9-23
V. G. Miller
KI 2-2793
1966 Dodge Coronet 500, 383, 4 barrel, Metallic Silver with black vinyl top, ET Mags. Call Chuck at VI 3-8490. 9-25
At
McConnell Lbr., We've Got:
"Very" portable typewriter, $20.00.
Please call or see after 5 p.m. VI 3-
3585. 9-25
1964 Alfa Romero 1600 Guilla. Good condition. $950. Call VI 2-0337 after 4 p.m. 9-25
Suzuki 250ce 67 Scrambler, 87
Stanford 67 VI-Scrambler, 9-12
after 5-30 or weeks
Motorcycle—1966 Ossa, 1500 miles,
$295. Call VI 2-6642
9-20
- Do-it-yourself shelving materials
- Stretcher Frames made to order
For
Twin Beds and Mattresses. Execem-
condition. Can also be used as bunk
beds or trundle-beds. $40.00 or offer.
VI 2-7763. 9-20
- Homecoming Supplies including standard 1" poultry netting
- Lumber and Plywood cut to order
- Canvas
1966 BSA 650 for sale, $700 or trade
for used car and cash. Call VI 2-7090
between 5 and 7 p.m. 9-25
- Oil and Acrylic Paints
- Unusual Gift Ideas
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha
Visit our newly opened
- Painting Classes
Mon. thru Thurs.—7-9 p.m.
We're open Mon. thru Fri. Till 9 p.m. on Thurs.
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
- Painting Classes
TRAVEL TIME
1ET
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your
Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
BSA Starfire 1968, 700 miles, like
new. Call Larry at VI 2-153-9-25
100cc Yamaha. Low mileage, excellent condition, helmet included. $215.
1201 Oread, Apt. 2. VI 3-4312. 9-20
HELP WANTED
Salesman—Aggressive and personable.
Student wanted for our Sales Staff.
Earnings can be over $100 per week as you represent 58-year-old nationally respected life insurance company on campus. Phone—VI 3-7789. 9-18
Secretary—Typing and shorthand required. Must be alert and efficient. Phone VI 3-7798. 9-18
Wish to employ man or woman for noon time lunch room—playground supervision for elementary school in Lawrence, 11:30-12:30. Phone VI 3-4686 or VI 3-3263 for appointment. 9-20
Part-time bus drivers for morning shift. Must be 21 yrs of age. Phone VI 2-0544. Ask for Duane Ogle. 9-20
Men—Part time or full time. Above average pay. Show our products in Lawrence area. No experience needed. Call Sam Jordan now. VI 2-5206. VI 9-20
One concerned coed to share the expense of the Sunday New York Times. If more than one concerned coed exists, extra papers will be arranged. Contact Steve at VI 2-2175 for information. 9-20
Part time help wanted for packing and moving of household goods by reputable mover. Experience preferred. Call VI 3-0380, a.m. 5:00-5:00 p.m. for interview or Saturday till noon. 9-23
Male part time noon hour or one eight hour shift. Good pay. Name your hours. Apply in person at Sandy's Drive-in. 2130 W. 9th. 9-23
College males to work evenings at Plaza Hut No. 1 on West 23rd St. College, New York. Good pay and fringe benefits. Contact Ed Sapp, manager, at VI 3-156.
NOTICE
United Child Care Center, 945 Vermont,
monting for pre-school children of
children aged 7-12 years. Mon call
Fri. for further information on
VI 3-7134 or VI 2-3728 evenings.
MUSIC LESSONS — specializing in guitar and 5 string banjo. These classes are being taught by instructors who are or have been entertaining professionally. Start any time. Beginners or otherwise. A100
instruction for all hand instruments, piano, recorder, meiodica, and rock and roll drums. CALL
Haynes-Ray Audio and Music Co. VI
2-1944 9-23
All people interested in folk dancing or leading folk dancing, contact Milton Rosenberg at Math Depot Bromsgate or 1419 Ohio, No. 8, ED-27-1991.
515 Mieghian St. St.-B-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $28; rib order. $1.50; Brist sandwich. $8.5; chicken. $1.15; Brisket sandwich. $7.5; Hours. 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most 'barn' in the state. The lamb's barn, Hickory, is unquestible, unless available. V I 3-4023 11-1-1
HORSES BOARDED—New facilities, reasonable rates, close in-south location, indoor and outdoor arenas. Call VI 2-3353 or VI 3-1626. 9-25
Ace Furniture and Antiques is now open in their new building at 510 N. Fourth Street, where we help you furnish your apartment and home. This week's special is waste baskets for the summer; 7 days a week 9-25 10:00 to 6:00
Ironings in my home. Please bring
827 Walnut St. Lt. 10
837 Walnut St. Lt. 10
Ace Furniture and Antiques is now
open in their new building. 9-20
K.C. Commuters—Would like ride or
share driving. Classes from 7-30 to 11-30
from 9-45 to 13:00. Map: Via Tonganoxo or Bonner Springs.
T A 7-4018, K.C. K. 9-25
Professional Model needs qualified Coeds to register with her newly formed modeling agency, "Model's Guild." Registration fee—$10.00. For a confidential interview call VI 2-8634 for appointments. 9-25
WANTED
Want to get in a car pool from Johnson County to Lawrence. Can drive if necessary. Call after 6:00 p.m. at DU 1-5104. 9-23
Ride or riders to share ride Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from Prairie Village-Overland Park area. Call MI 9-6632. 9-23
Need 1 or 2 junior or senior men to share spacious duplex. Inquire at 2422 Cedarwood after 2:00 p.m. J. Anderson, D. Drogosh, P. Kovac. 9-19
SERVICES OFFERED
Sewing and alterations by experienced seamstress. All work done quickly, and reasonable. Conts. sewing what you have your machine. 8:34-1238 a.m.-8:39 p.m. 9-23
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 18
Presidential Roundup
Nixon sees Humphrey-Wallace conspiracy
(UPI)-Hubert H. Humphrey got his first strong campaign boost from President Johnson Tuesday and told howling student protesters in Buffalo, N.Y., he would be a "free man" in seeking peace in Vietnam.
Richard Nixon, the Republican presidential candidate, suggested that Humphrey's southern campaign leaders may be secretly helping George C. Wallace to keep southern states out of the Nixon column and throw the election into the House of Representatives.
Wallace meanwhile accepted his nomination at a Texas state convention of the American Party of Texas and said he represents "the majority thinking of the people."
In his first public praise of Humphrey since routinely congratulating him on his nomination in Chicago last month, the President released a telegram he sent to Texas Democrats calling Humphrey "a fighter and a patriot." He urged the Texans to "win this one for America" by working for Humphrey's election.
"I'm a free man," Humphrey told student antiwar demonstrators during a question and answer session at Canisius College in Buffalo.
Win For America
"I will do whatever needs to be done," the vice president said, "but I want to make it clear I have no control over the events between now and January."
Nixon told a news conference at Anaheim, Calif., that it was "vitally important" to keep the presidential election out of the House. The constitution prescribes that if no candidate gets a majority of the electoral college vote, the House chooses the winner on the basis of a majority vote of the 50 state delegations.
Collusion Seen
Nixon spoke of "reports we get from the south now to the
effect that there may be some collusion developing between Democratic leaders in the south and Wallace supporters—for the purpose of supporting Wallace, not for the purpose of supporting Mr. Humphrey."
Wallace told an airport rally at Wichita Falls, Tex., that Tuesday night's Washington state convention of his third party would mark the 50th state in which he has met requirements to get on the ballot.
The Christian Science Monitor said Nixon already is seriously considering his cabinet choices.
The Monitor said Nixon's "early thinking" includes New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller
for defense secretary; former Pennsylvania Gov. William Scranton for Secretary of State; Michigan Gov. George Romney
See
Nixon leads, Page 2 Other related stories, page 5
for commerce secretary; Massachusetts Gov. John A. Volpe for secretary of labor or transportation, and perhaps Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass., for Attorney General.
News Roundup (Continued from page 1)
GOP candidates lead fair straw vote
Hutchinson, Kan. (UPI)—The Wichita Eagle and Beacon's straw poll at the State Fair showed Republican candidates as front runners for all positions Tuesday.
The count in the presidential contest was Richard Nixon 1,012, George Wallace 687, and Hubert Humphrey 419.
U. S. Senate: Robert Dole 1,317, William T. Robinson 670.
Governor: Rick Harman 1,158, Robert B. Docking 878.
Lieutenant Governor: John Conrad 1,152,
James Dcoursey 772.
Attorney General: Kent Frizell 1,319, Jerry Muth 647.
Peoples Voice speaks
(Continued from page 1)
During the one and one-half hour meeting the only area of general agreement was the need to radicalize the student body.
The University is "oppressive, unjust and does not live up to its role as a
community of scholars," several members said. Students should be made to rebel against this situation, they agreed.
The group did agree with Stone when he called Voice members "God's chosen ones"—selected to radicalize KU.
Turn Away Cards indicate demand
Trying to determine which courses are most sought after by students, University administrators are using Turn Away Tally Cards to measure the demand.
The cards, which include the title of the desired course and the replacement course, were available at class-card tables during enrollment and may be picked up at admission and records windows three and four through Sept. 27.
Tom Tatlock, assistant director of admissions, called the cards a great step forward. "They will enable us to know what courses are in the greatest demand, so that steps can be taken to alleviate the problem," Tatlock said.
No definite plans will be made until the cards are turned in, he added.
Gene Haun, assistant registrar of the Colleges within a College, said nearly 1,000 cards have been turned in.
Agnew may stop at KU this fall
Spiro Agnew, Republican vice-presidential candidate, may speak at KU this fall. The Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR) announced last night.
Powell also announced that Rick Harman, Republican candidate for Governor, will attend the KU-Oklahoma State football game October 19, and will lead a parade through the campus.
After a CYE Executive Board meeting Tuesday evening, publicity vice-chairman Jim Powell said, "Mr. Agnew's appearance is fairly certain."
The CYR will hold a joint meeting with the Douglas County Republicans at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Pizza Hut number one. An organizational meeting will be held September 25 in the Kansas Union.
People to People
Membership Meeting
Wed. Sept. 18
8:00 p.m.
Union Ball Room
Second administrator in three days resigns
The University of Kansas lost its second high administrative official in three days Wednesday when the resignation of Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education was announced by Chancellor W. Clarke Waecoe.
Wescoe announced his own resignation only two days earlier at KU's 103rd Convocation ceremonies.
Although Anderson could not be reached for comment Wednesday evening, an official bulletin said he will remain at the University and continue teaching in the area of higher education. He hopes to devote some time to consulting small colleges.
No successor to his post had
been named as of Wednesday evening.
"What Dean Anderson has done for the University and for the School of Education is literally phenomenal." Wescoe said after the resignation had been announced. "The University and the state are in his debt. When he completes the coming year he will have served as dean for 16 years and presided over a period of unprecedented growth in the School of Education."
"The University is twice fortunate that Dean Anderson will remain with us' to develop new areas of excellence in the School of Education," Wescoe concluded.
Anderson came to KU from Iowa State Teachers College
(now the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls) in 1948 as an assistant professor. He was promoted to associate professor in 1950, to professor in 1952 and to dean in 1953.
He has been president of the National Association for Research in Science Teaching, president of the American Educational Research Association and chairman of the board of directors of the Council for Research in Education.
Anderson has provided the University with annual projections of enrollment so accurate that other Kansas institutions call upon him for their planning.
Anderson has been active in research, focusing on statistics, testing, and predictive studies.
Alone and with others, he has published 134 articles and summaries, nearly 100 of them since becoming dean.
He traveled abroad for the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education, the U.S. State Department, and the North Central Association.
Early in his career, Anderson was a science teacher, principal, and superintendent in four Minnesota public schools.He later was director of the University of Minnesota High School and principal of the Campus High School of Iowa State Teachers College.
Anderson has received the Outstanding Achievement Award of the University of Minnesota, election to Sigma Xi as the fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, selection by the National Science Foundation as a visiting scientist in the American Psychological Association program, and an award of recognition for outstanding service to the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PETER B. MAYER
Anderson
Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, September 19,1968
Columbia U. erupts again
New York (UPI)—Student rebels, clashing with nightstick-swinging guards, interrupted fall registration for classes at Columbia University Wednesday and hundreds of them later met in a campus buildling in defiance of a university ban.
university About 150 of the students tried to barge into the university gymnasium to register youths suspended from the school because of last spring's bloody clashes on the campus.
There were no arrests but university Proctor William Kahn said disciplinary action would be taken against students who were recognized by security officers and campus officials.
SDS Activity Banned
Several hours later the university's Committee on Student Organizations announced a ban on the use of university facilities by the campus chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) which organized Wednesday's protest.
But despite the announcement, about 400 students marched into the
Schermerhorn Science Building Wednesday night to attend a meeting of the International Assembly of Revolutionary Students. The session was sponsored by SDS.
A university spokesman said there were no immediate plans to evict the students. Only one university guard was seen at the building.
Failed to Abide
He said the committee took action against SDS because the group had violated an earlier agreement to abide by university rules governing campus demonstrations.
During the afternoon confrontation, one guard hit a demonstrator across the back with his night stick. Students began shouting "Chicago" and tried to grab nightsticks away from other guards. Gus Reischbach, a member of SDS, was hit in the face with a nightstick.
No one appeared seriously injured in the melee and after five minutes the students backed away and the 10 uniformed guards regrouped.
The demonstrators remained stationed outside the door of the registration hall until Kahn announced that "registration has been temporarily closed." They then withdrew to a grassy area and gradually dispersed.
Troubles Last Spring
The trouble last spring erupted over student demands that the university halt construction of a gymnasium on Harlen Park land and sever its ties with the Institute of Defense Analyses. Hundreds were injured and hundreds arrested when city police twice cleared demonstrators holding siege in university buildings.
Student rebels demand as their price for campus peace this fall that Columbia end its "racist and militaristic policies" and grant amnesty to all students involved in last spring's outbreaks.
Acting president Andrew Cordier said he will listen to proposals but "I will not listen to any demands."
Wallace warns radicals
By Steve Havner
Kansas City-George Wallace, third party presidential candidate, told a cheering crowd here last night "the radicals and anarchists had better have their day now.
Wallace, speaking to 10,000 persons at a rally at the American Royal Exhibition hall warned "after November 5th, they will be through."
Twelve demonstrators were being removed from the hall by police as he spoke.
And the police were everywhere.
WEATHER
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts variable cloudiness today through Friday. Light variable winds today. Highs near 80, lows tonight lower 50s. Chance of rain today 30 per cent, tonight 10 per cent. Friday 20 per cent.
He said the only trouble police encountered was minor disturbances. No arrests were made.
Wallace quipped that if any demonstrator laid in front of his car, it would be "the last car he laid in front of."
Guarding Wallace himself were about 50 federal officers. They refused to disclose their numbers.
Police Chief C. M. Kelly said he had about 100 men assigned to keep order during the Wallace stay.
"These are the kind of people we are sick and tired of," the Governor said of the demonstrators.
He was referring to an incident in Los Angeles in which radical demonstrators blocked President Johnson's automobile.
Of the Vietnam war Wallace said he would relay heavily on the judgment of the joint chiefs of staff.
"I will ask them if they believe that a military settlement can be reached." he said. He did not elaborate.
He also repeated his earlier pledge to "throw under some jails" those who called for a communist victory in Vietnam.
He went on to criticize President Johnson for not making federal troops more readily available to riot areas.
Those Wallace people
See page 16
By Rea Wilson,
Feature Editor
"The amount of red tape involved in getting federal troops is ridiculous." je exclaimed.
"After all," he said, "we got federal troops in Alabama, Mississippi, and Arkansas and didn't even ask for them."
Wallace, calling his campaign a grass roots movement, said "The major parties don't care about the common people."
Wallace aides said that last night's rally was his most successful in recent weeks.
UDK News Roundup
'No Vietnam win or loss'-Muskie
San Francisco (UPI)—There will be "no winner and no loser" in the Vietnam war because the conflict must be settled by negotiation, according to Democratic vice-presidential candidate Edmund S. Muskie.
5. Muskie. "We must realize that in order to effect these negotiations, we must make concessions," he told the Commonwealth Club Wednesday in one of several campaign addresses in San Francisco.
several camping to address the California Legislature in Sacramento today before taking his campaign to Salt Lake City, Utah.
Mail order gun control bill survives Senate turnabout
Washington (UPI)—The Senate, in a sharp turnabout from the stand it took before Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated, has overwhelmingly approved legislation to limit sales of rifles, shotguns and ammunition.
The bill, after three days of debate on a host of amendments, passed on a roll call vote of 70 to 17 Wednesday after the Senate beat back a liberal drive to require federal registration of all guns and licensing of their owners.
The bill now goes to a conference committee to reconcile differences between Senate and House versions of the measure.
versions of the measure. The final Senate version would ban mail order sales of ammunition and rifles and shotguns to anyone but dealers. Congress already has approved similar restrictions on handguns.
Clark, Hoover part on violence stands
Washington (UPI)-Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, the nation's two top law enforcement officers, are miles apart on "law and order."
Their differences on the police role in riots and public demonstrations surfaced dramatically Wednesday during the first round of closed hearings before the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence.
Hoover praised Chicago authorities for their success in the face of "chaotic circumstances" in preventing the Democratic National Convention from being disrupted or any lives from being lost in demonstrations.
Clark deplored police violence "in excess of authority" as the most dangerous of all, "for who will protect the public when the police violate the law?"
(Continued on page 16)
2901.91 audiosis2_qubroadT
THIS FRIDAY NIGHT At The Red Dog
Dog Dog Day
PANEL
THE FABULOUS RED DOGS
Dal Dugbo
FATAL ATTACKS IN THE 1970S
"The finest group I've ever heard, with no exceptions." Mike Willman, UDK Advertising Mgr.
---
DeDugay
第十四届中国电影艺术节
1987年6月15日 第十四届中国电影艺术节在北京人民大会堂开幕
Ped Dog Dog
Coming
★ The Who
★ Rising
Suns
★ Serfs
★ Broadway
Clique
★ Hot Nuts
DANCE TO
the
Red Dogs
"OUTSTANDING AND
THEY ARE WILD"
Coming
Hot Nuts
★ Ike & Tina Turner
Flippers
The RED DOGS Appearing At The Midwest Pop Music Festival
★ Renegades
Percy Sledge
SAT. NIGHT - DIRECT FROM LOS ANGELES
8 p.m.
Don't Miss It
THE LINCOLN PARK ZOO
8 p.m.
Don't Miss It
Thursday, September 19,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
CAROLINE SALOMON
The Manly Look
Monica Flinner, Manhattan senior, steps out into that perpetual Hill wind wearing the "in" look, the man-tailored ensemble.
Manly look is'in' for girls, that is
"Haberdashery" is a new trend in women's fall fashions.
"Haberdashery," meaning men's furnishings, suggests the man-tailored clothes worn by KU women.
The total look of "Haberdashery" begins with a suit, jacket, vest or sweater. Styling of these items is man-tailored, with large lapels, open-vent backs, more pockets and longer lengths.
Added to the jacket or vest is an A-line, a slightly pleated skirt or a culotte skirt. Many of these skirts are leather or hardware trimmed.
Slacks are also important to the look. They too are mansyled, fit loosely, and many are cuffed.
Accessories often include a man's shirt. Ties and buckled or scarfed collars are characteristics of these shirts. Leather racing gloves, knee socks or opaque tights and "clunky" wing-tip shoes complete an outfit.
One or two-inch wide heels and heavy soles help make them
comfortable and practical for hill-climbing.
Coeds interviewed agree the clothes are perfect for almost all casual events-from class to dates, and especially football games.
Susan Brimacombe, Kansas City, Mo. junior, finds them "comfortable, easy to coordinate and stylish."
Coordination and versatility of outfits is important and the total look of "Haberdashery" makes them a breeze.
"The style is flattering to more girls. The total look is versatile and can be suited to more occasions with minor changes of accessories," Leslie McElfresh, Osage City junior, said.
Street segment on Mississippi to be blocked off
The stretch of Mississippi Street behind the Kansas Union will be completely closed to automobile traffic from September 22-27.
The wooden bridge which has been carrying northbound traffic over the Union addition will be dismantled.
While the street is closed, paving and construction work at the Union's new pedestrian tunnel will be completed.
The blocked-off area will run from the corner of 11th and Mississippi Streets on the north to the junction of Mississippi Street and Baumgartner Drive behind the Union.
The Stadium parking lot (Zone X) will be open to the public as usual, and can be entered from the south via Memorial Drive.
Julian Bond is slated to speak during National Affairs Week
Julian Bond, 28-year-old Georgia civil rights leader, is scheduled to speak at KU at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 21 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The Negro state legislator's appearance here will highlight National Affairs Week, scheduled for Oct. 21-25 by Student Union Activities. Theme for the week will be "Challenges to a New Administration." Jay Mason, Hobbs, N.M. sophomore, is chairman.
Julian Bond was catapulted into national prominence last month after his nomination for
Although plans are not yet definite, Alf Landon, former Kansas governor and 1936 Republican presidential candidate may also appear during the week. Mason said he hopes for Landon to give an overall perspective of the 1968 election.
vice president at the Democratic National Convention. Earlier he had led the integrated group which successfully challenged the all-white delegation of Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox.
In 1966 the Negro pacifist was refused a seat in the Georgia House of Representatives because of his opposition to United States involvement in the war in Viet Nam and his support of draft card burners.
An Atlanta federal court, however, upheld the right of the Georgia legislature to refuse to seat Bond on the grounds that his public statements were a denial of his lawmaker's oath to uphold the state and U.S. constitutions.
"I admire the courage of anyone who burns his draft card," Bond was quoted as saying in Time magazine in 1966.
He was charged with treason by white legislators, 1,000 demonstrators marched on the Atlanta state capitol in protest and Bond's lawyers filed suit in federal court to force the house to reverse its decision.
Bond is scheduled to arrive in Lawrence the afternoon of Oct. 21. If he arrives early enough he may be able to speak to classes. Tentative plans call for Bond to spend the night in Lawrence and depart the next morning. His destination after leaving Lawrence is not yet known.
Other topics to be discussed during National Affairs Week include "Problems in the Cities," Oct. 22 and 23: "Problems in Foreign Affairs," Oct. 24; and "Methods of Conducting Elections," Oct. 25. Films and panel discussions by faculty members will be included each day.
Administrator's novel could spawn TV series
A University administrator and English instructor has written a novel being considered as the basis of a television series.
Parts of the book were first published in magazines as early as 1955. The book was published in 1962 by Bantam
The writer, James Gunn, is the administrative assistant to the Chancellor for University Relations and is an English instructor.
The book, "The Immortals," depicts a world overemphasizing length of life rather than the quality of life. It involves such phenomena as heart and other organ transplants.
Books, which released a third printing several weeks ago.
Scriptwriter Robert Specht of Los Angeles has written a prospectus for a television series from the book. A network commitment is being sought by Paramount Studios to air the series beginning next fall.
Gunn described a new story he has written as "hopefully the start of another book." That book, "The Listeners," is a novelette about a century-long project to pick up signals or other communication from outer space. It appeared in September issue of Galaxy Fiction Magazine.
Kansas City, Mo.
SATURDAY, OCT. 5
ARENA 8:30 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
Kansas City, M. B.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
at Auditorium Box Office
$2.50, 3, 3.50, 4, 5
Mail Orders now. Send self-addressed
sample to auditorium cashiers check
or money order to Aud. Box Office.
Exclusively an Warner Brothers Records
IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary
CHELSEA WEST
M
MONK STRAP
The classic styling by Cole-Haan that has been so widely copied in British tan with a bronze buckle. This shave fits all needs, from sports clothes to the vested suit.
MISTER GUY
920 MASSACHUSETTS
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 19,1968
Only twenty-four?
KU now has a Negro history course—for 24 students.
Negro history is becoming an important issue in today's educational circles. It deserves the attention it's getting in the United States.
For the past centuries, since Negro slaves were first brought from Africa, the history books studied b has been omitted and that this omission has been detrimental to the Negro as a person and to the nation as a whole. American children have excluded any mention of black historical f
excluded any mention of black historical figures. Students from grade school through college have at least heard the story of George Washington chopping down his father's cherry tree, although historians know it is probably a fable.
But they have not read in their texts the number of Negro Revolutionary War soldiers who fought for their country on Bunker Hill.
Within the past year and a half the American people have become aware of the part of their history that has omitted—and that this omission has been detrimental to the Negro as a person and to the nation as a whole.
The KU black history course was initiated this semester after protests from KU students and civil rights groups last spring.
The course is needed badly, not only to show the Negro student the pride he can and must justly have in his race's part in American history, but also to teach the white students the need for realizing how long that pride has been severely neglected.
But only 24 students will gain this realization through serious study of Negro history this semester. The instructor, William H. Tuttle, said he limited his enrollment to students who had had five hours in history and who had his consent.
"I want to have a discussion course rather than a lecture," Tuttle said. "It reflects my philosophy of teaching."
This is understandable.
It is also understandable to presume KU has a drastic shortage of teachers qualified to instruct the course.
But only 24, when the need in America today for pride in its black citizens, knowledge of their role in America plus understanding between races is so vital.
Over the summer, CBS presented a series of programs on Negro history. The Kansas City Star begins a 20-page tabloid section on the subject Sept. 29. The section will later be distributed to area schools.
Many other education and civic organizations all over the United States are expanding and exploring Negro history for the betterment of students and citizens.
When the area is so vital and so pressing, can KU afford to limit serious study of black history to such a small group?
Can't a large institution of higher learning do more?
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
Paperbacks
A group of scholarly paperbacks, of somewhat more pretension than the usual John MacDonald thriller, has come along. As students and their teachers go into the fall semester with serious ambitions they might take a look at some of these.
The first is edited by Theodore Roszak and is called THE DISSENTING ACADEMY (Vintage, $1.95). Several scholars in this work present essays that criticize the teaching of humanities in our universities. It is nice to see such a volume. And it may provide ammunition for the young dissenters who are having so much to say these days about the quality of their education.
Next is Walter W. Heller's PERSPECTIVES ON ECO-NOMIC GROWTH (Vintage, $1.95), in which another group of scholars takes a look at the American economy and its prospects. Growth and economic policy, the 1964 tax reduction and its impact, monetary and fiscal policies, growth as an objective of government policy, growth and world leadership, growth and human welfare, investments in human capital, technological and economic advance, and fixed investment are the subjects treated.
I. M. Parsons has compiled an anthology called MEN WHO MARCH AWAY: POEMS OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR (Compass, $1.65). This one certainly carries the reader back to a time when war could be celebrated (but also reviled). The poets include Richard Aldington, Edmund Blunden, Rupert Brooke, G. K. Chesterton, Walter de la Mare, Wilfrid Gibson, Robert Graves, Thomas Hardy, Rudyard Kipling, A. E. Housman, D. H. Lawrence, Wilfred Owen, Isaac Rosenberg, Siegfried Sassoon, Osbert Sitwell, Charles Sorley, Edward Thomas and W. B. Yeats, plus a few others.
One called THE ENJOYMENT OF CHEMISTRY, by Louis Vaczek (Compass, $1.65) is an informal treatment of the subject and one that possibly will prove of interest even to the layman. For most it will prove quite specialized.
Last of these new titles is Hannah Arendt's BETWEEN PAST AND FUTURE (Compass, $2.45). The book is a consideration of political philosophy, in eight essays.
The paperback industry sometimes seems like a giant foodchopper, devouring everything that comes along (like television), publishing for the sake of publishing, making a work popular one month and obsolete the next. This set from Fawcett this month may bear out such a point.
But brought out of obsolescence is Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.'s THE BITTER HERITAGE (Premier, 75 cents), which was published not long ago and now appears in revised edition. One often wonders when and if Schlesinger really teaches any more. This is his consideration of the United States in South Vietnam, 1941-1968. Back, that is, to our entering the war in Asia. Schlesinger is no Fulbright-like dove, but he is extremely disenchanted with the war, like most of us, and gives a historical view of how we came to be so involved.
A prison novel appears in Malcolm Braaly's ON THE YARD (Crest, 75 cents). The book has been praised for its authenticity, for Braaly has been a prisoner himself, and has spent considerable time on the road as well as in such sumptuous hotels as San Quentin.
One that has not been in paperback before but reflects American absorption with the past is J. W.
One that has not been in paperback before but reflects American absorption with the past is J. W. Schultz's MY LIFE AS AN INDIAN (Premier, 75 cents). This is the true story of a man's time among the Blackfoot Indians, his marriage to an Indian girl, his life within the tribe.
Finally, for all of us, a new Peanuts. It is THIS IS YOUR LIFE, CHARLIE BROWN! (Crest, 50 cents). What else need be said?
Dots and dashes
Observations and comments on the political scene from the Kansan editorial desk.
But in this election, when the two regular party candidates, Humphrey and Richard Nixon plus third party candidate George Wallace, draw relatively little support from the young, Humphrey's announcement hardly seems necessary.
Presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey has announced that he favors lowering the voting are to 18.
The candidates this year are either skirting or opposing the issues that many idealistic-minded young Americans advocate.
It is likely that a great number of disenchanted 21-year-olds who have just reached the age of emancipation will forego their voting rights this year because of the candidates' positions.
Neither Humphrey, Nixon nor Wallace have any hopeful plan for ending the Vietnam war soon and all of them now stress law and order, at times almost disregarding help for the cities and the poor.
Some observers say Richard Nixon came into a vacuum in the Republican Party. If so, it is small indeed compared to the vacuum he has stepped into in the national arena.
The GOP had heard too much of what was wrong with it. The party wanted a soother and a healer and Nixon provided the tonic. Similarly, the nation is tired of hearing what is wrong with it and is responding to Nixon's tactics. Whether the poised, self-confident Nixon is a facade or a permanent fixture remains to be seen. Perhaps his awaited political blunder will never be staged. But for the present, the new Nixon image remains shaky ground on which to cast a vote.
While Nixon has been a practitioner of the soft-sell, running-mate Spiro Agnew has been the lash of the GOP whip. When Nixon gave surprisingly passive comment on Chicago's demonstrations, Agnew lashed out at hippies and yippies. As Nixon modified his oratory to include law and justice, Agnew stalked the hard-line of law and order.counseling, hearing confession or saying public mass. Father Fenlon, Which line most nearly represents Nixon's position is the voter's dilema.
The editors
Peoples Voice
Opinion forum
Editors note: Consistent with the belief that, given equal play, truth will triumph over falsehood, the Kansan presents a non-partisan forum dedicated to the proposition of free speech. Ideas, institutions and issues will be attacked; people will not. The positions expressed in this column will be representative of the author and not necessarily the Kansan. This week's author, Jay Barrish, graduate student from Kansas City, Mo., has been instrumental in the Peoples Voice movement.
By Jay Barrish
Too many Americans are on the fence playing games of retreat and acquiescence. This University and community owns ills which must be examined and corrected. The red and black man in Lawrence are suffering oppression, harassment, and paternalism. Students are told that meaningful dialogue has been a tradition of this university, yet they are not told that the exercise labeled dialogue is meaningless since students have not and do not own equal representation in the decision making bodies of this university.
It is true that ultimatums and demands are made of the establishment, but it must be understood that demands would not be necessary if equal representation, dignity, and respect were the reality. My perception dictates that those who presently own the decision making apparatus should accept the principle of equal representation and responsible participation or be willing to deal with those who must take their issue to the streets. Reason and the power of the intellect can only be meaningful under conditions of equality. At the request of the Kansan I shall offer my own analysis of the group framework (known as Peoples Voice) That shall be instrumental in dealing with areas of social and community injustice.
The idea of Peoples Voice is to provide a non-elite, non-bureaucratic framework for those who see issues within the university and Lawrence community which they believe should be fully examined, communicated to others, and dealt with by individuals who share a common interest. Ideally, implicit in this type of structure is the absence of group pressure and compliance as would exist in most organizations.
Hopefully, this type of atmosphere would emanate from the coordinating role of the organization and its emphasis on the individual. The group will not seek to impose on its members the traditional loyalty that demands one to sacrifice personal feelings and principles for the goals of the majority of the group. In accordance with this, the tactics and strategy of community action will differ depending on the people who are initiating change and the issue in question.
The implications of such a group structure are very significant. On some issues, large numbers of students, faculty, and Lawrence residents will be aligned to seek reform. On other issues, many will not feel that their participation is warranted; in fact, they may deplore the actions of those seeking reform.
It must be explicitly clear that each individual is behaving of his own volition on a particular issue. Hopefully, this will produce full and more meaningful participation from all community residents when they choose an issue about which they feel strongly.
Further, because Peoples Voice is merely the vehicle for communication, coordination, and action of those who feel inclined to be involved in a given issue, the particular action of individuals on any given issue should not reflect on other group members who did not participate. The actions of individuals will not represent a group policy, but rather an individual choice.
One of the outgrowths of such an organization as Peoples Voice is therefore the reality that since the group will try to emphasize the interests of INDIVIDUALS, there can be no real group spokesman. I do not speak for Peoples Voice, I speak for myself.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Managing Editor ... Monte Mace
Business Manager ... Jack Haney
Assistant Managing Editors ... Pat Crawford, Charla Jenkins, Tim Jones,
Steve Morgan, Allen Winchester
City Editor ... Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor ... Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor ... Alison Steimel
Editorial Assistant ... Richard Lund-Quist
Sporty Editor ... Ron Yates
Feature and Society Editor ... Rea Wilson
Copy Chiefs ... Judy Dague, Linda McCreery, Don Westerhaus, Sandy
Zahradnik, Marilyn Zook
Advertising Manager ... Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager ... Katy Sanders
Promotion ... Pam Flaton
Circulation Manager ... Jack Hurley
Classified Manager ... Barry Arthur
Member Associated Collegiate Press
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Educational Advertising Services
A DIVISION OF
READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, ING.
860 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017
H
---
Thursdov, September 19,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Experiment tried in English course
An experimental freshmen-sophomore English program is being developed by Dennis Quinn, director of Pearson College and associate professor of English.
In this program, his students are studying Greek and Roman classics rather than the normal curriculum of literature of the 1920's.
"I am not criticizing KU's freshmen English program, nor am I saying that all English 1 classes should be like those of Pearson College," Quinn said. "I am trying to develop an organized, structured program for English 1, 2 and 3 on a small basis."
Quinn's idea it to divide premodern literature into three classifications:
- Greek and Roman literature, which is being taught in English 1.
- Medieval literature which is being taught in English 2.
- Renaissance literature which is being taught in English 3.
Reading rather than the learning of basic composition will be stressed. The workload given the students should be comparable to the other colleges, though, Quinn added.
"The readings for this schedule are more formidable. They are also educationally more valuable," he noted.
Andy Williams booked for KU
Vocalist Andy Williams will appear at the annual homecoming concert at 8 p.m. Nov. 2, in Allen Field House Jeff Rockwell, Wichita senior and SUA Special Events chairman, announced.
Tickets will go on sale two weeks before the concert and ticket prices are $4, $3.50 and $3. Interviews for the homecoming committee will be next week, Rockwell said.
"We've tried for a long time to get Andy Williams," reported the Special Events chairman, "but he has always charged too much money in the past." Rockwell explained that this year Williams lowered his tour price and also that this is his first year to make college tours.
The Special Events committee has been negotiating with Williams' agent since May. The contract was signed a week and a half ago.
ATTENTION Social Chairmen
The log cabin at Oak Lodge is available each night except Sunday for parties, socials, & dancing
"What must be kept in mindis a gradual development of this program on a small, simple scale. An elaborate structure is not necessarily desirable," Quinn continued.
Location 13 miles south of Lawrence on Highway 50
Presently, there are only two graduate instructors teaching the sections of Greek and Roman classics.
The Pearson College English program is modeled after an experimental group of two or three years ago. These test groups were called English 1X.
For Information Call 913-594-3349
The graduate instructors for these early experimental sections were allowed to choose their own texts and proceed as they wanted. The emphasis was upon reading and understanding the material. No formal writing instruction was given.
The results of this early experiment showed that English 1X students could write as well as the students from the regular English 1 classes, where heavy emphasis had been placed upon formal composition lessons.
"According to this new plan, I have students reading historical texts as well as the normal fiction. Ideally, philosophical works should also be read, but I realize this might be too much at first," Quinn said.
In the future, Quinn hopes a major in literature will be offered which will combine history, philosophy and fiction. Then, he said perhaps "students could see some continuity and connection in their college studies."
VANESSA STARS
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — "The Sea Gull" will start Vanessa Redgrave, James Mason and Kathleen Widdoes.
The director of Watkins Hospital, Dr. Raymond Schwegler, Wednesday blamed budget restrictions for a shortage of doctors at the student hospital.
Schweegler said he needs two additional physicians, but lacks sufficient funds to hire them.
Doctor shortage plagues Watkins
He emphasized that he will not hire unqualified doctors.
The higher salaries of other area institutions, Schwegler said, attract the qualified doctors.
"Our salaries can't match theirs," he said.
Art museum to initiate new program
A membership program has been initiated as part of the 40th birthday celebration of the University of Kansas Art Museum.
"This program will give more people an opportunity to participate, stimulating interest and pride that will make the museum a more effective instrument of public education," Bret Waller, museum director, said.
Membership will be open to anyone who is interested and will include a student rate. Students may join for $2.50 per year.
Membership funds will be used to purchase works of art for the museum, with emphasis on quality rather than quantity. "Private support is the only means of reaching this goal," Waller said.
In 1928, Mrs. W. B. Thayer donated her art collection for display in Spooner Hall. Since then, private support has played a major role in the development at KU of one of the nation's outstanding campus art museums.
Additional information about the membership program can be obtained from the museum.
Why would Bic torment this dazzling beauty?
Why?
To introduce the most elegant pen on campus.
Expensive new Bic® Click® for big spenders 49¢
BIC CLIC
Only Bic would dare to torment a beauty like this. Not the girl... the pen she's holding. It's the new luxury model Bic Clic.. designed for scholarship athletes, lucky card players and other rich campus socialites who can afford the expensive 49-cent price.
But don't let those delicate good looks fool you. Despite horrible punishment by mad scientists, the elegant Bic Clic still wrote first time, every time.
everything you want in a fine pen, you'll find in the new Bic Clic. It's retractable. Refillable. Comes in 8 barrel colors. And like all Bic pens, writes first time, every time...no matter what devilish abuse spills students devise for it.
Waterman-Bic Pen Corporation, Milford, Connecticut 06460
Watkins budget is only $18,0\cup 0. It makes no profit on drugs or services.
Drugs are sold at wholesale prices, 25 per cent below the commercial rate.
Rooms cost students $15 a day rather than $35 charged by city hospitals. And 80-90 per cent of the clinical services are free to students.
Dr. Schwegler said he hopes students will adopt a more positive attitude toward Watkins and acquaint themselves with its facilities.
staff that serves them. He pointed out that Watkins presently employs qualified doctors of internal medicine, pediatrics, dermatology, psychology and psychiatrics.
Hopefully, enough interest shown by students may stimulate action toward acquiring a larger budget.
Schwegler said too many of the students are unaware of the functions of the hospital and the
Doctors from Lawrence Memorial Hospital and Mentingers in Topeka serve as visiting physicians and medical consultants.
Seriously ill or injured persons are transferred to better-equipped centers, and often specialists are called in.
But the added doctors and the money to hire them is needed badly, Schwegler emphasized.
"We are completely student-oriented and are working toward their welfare," Dr. Schwegler said. "We need their help to improve the hospital which is their own."
TONIGHT!
BOLD! VITAL!
Don't Dare Miss...
MOM
AND
DAD'
SEE
BIRTH
of a
BABY
NORMAL
and
CAESAREAN
SHOCKING!
It's Amazing.
HIT NO. 2
"She
SHOULDA SAID
'NO'"
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
Ends Saturday
Open 6:30
Show At Dusk
BOLD! VITAL!
Don't Dare Miss...
MOM
AND
DAD'
SEE BIRTH
of a BABY
NORMAL
and
CAESAREA
TONIGHT!
Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40
SHOCKING!
It's Amazing.
HIT NO. 2
She
SHOULDA SAID
NO!
who cares about a 35 year old virgin?
joanne
who cares about a
35 year old virgin?
joanne
woodward
in the PAUL NEWMAN production of
rachel,
rachel
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES
TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS..SEVEN ARTS
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Two Showings
7:15 - 9:15
TONIGHT
AT THE
VARSITY
The hanging
was the best show
in town!
CLINT
EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM
HIGH"
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Matinee 2:30
Evening 7:15-9:30
SHERIFF
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V1-1065
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 19,1968
Illinois attack similar to 'hawks
Illinois University and the University of Kansas have not met on the football field since 1929 ... and KU got the worst of that meeting, losing 25-0.
This Saturday at Champaign, Ill., many consider KU the favorite, but the Jayhawks might be in trouble if they take the "Fighting Illini" lightly.
Leading the Illinois attack, which is remarkably similar to KU's quarterback oriented offense, will be senior quarterback Bob Naponic. Naponic was out his junior year with a knee injury after a successful sophomore year when he completed 70 of 162 passes for 998 yards and rushed an average of 1.7 yards a carry.
"Naponic is a tremendous leader for our offense," Illinois coach Jim Valek said early this week. "He has great poise, and outstanding abilities. His attitude is outstanding. He leads the sprints at the end of every practice, and is superbly conditioned."
Illinois, say the pre-season guessers, should not finish higher than 7th in the Big Ten.
But with personnel like the 6-0,186-pound Naponic, senior
12
Illini Quarterback Bob Naponic
runback Rich Johnson, who was second in Big Ten rushing statistics with 604 yards on 153 carries, and sophomore split end Doug Dieken, a 6-5, 220-
31
Illini Tackle Tony Pleviak
pounder who caught four passes for 91 yards in the final intrasquad game of off-season practice, Illinois could surprise a few people.
Saturday, KU will have its hands full in containing two highly rated defensive tackles. Senior co-captain Tony Pleviak, 6-3 and 226 pounds led the conference in tackles for losses with 14 stops. He was in on 83 tackles and broke up six pass attempts.
mickey Hogan, a 6-5, 204-pound junior who plays next to Pleviak at tackle, last year recovered three fumbles, broke up two passes and had nine tackles for 48 yards in losses. In all, he was involved in 53 tackles.
Much of coach Valek's worry comes because of a lack of depth on the offensive line.
"We're really 'thin' in the off- offensive line," Valek said, "and we feel that at best we can come up with only one extra man at center, guard and tackle."
KU is behind in the series with Illinois three games to one.
College football: 1869-1968
By STEVE SNIDER UPI Sports Writer
New York (UPI)—College football officially is entering its 100th season and the school that won the first game way back there in 1869 still takes a serious view of the sport.
Rutgers University of New Brunswick, N.J., a 6 to 4 winner over Princeton in that very first game played at Rutgers near the site where College Football's Hall of Fame now stands, long ago went off the big time but football fever runs high on its modest level.
A year ago, Rutgers had a sophomore quarterback who managed to operate fairly well despite a bad shoulder. Bruce Van Ness, everyone said, would be a whiz-bang if it weren't for that injury.
Recognizing he had a highly valuable property who could be a meal-ticket for two more years, Coach John Bateman saw to it that Van Ness went into off-season surgery.
Van Ness now is better than ever, with everything pinned back in place.
"And I went along to watch," says Bateman. "I sat in one of those glass observation booths, looking straight down on him. Believe me, I counted all the sponges and instruments to make sure the surgical team didn't leave any inside him."
"His right shoulder is stronger than the other one now," says John with a sigh of relief.
Not that Ness will put Rutgers in the top 10 or 20 or even 30, but Rutgers, which hopes to keep near the Ivy League level, at least figures to have a little serious fun with its passer in the pink.
Rutgers, as well as Princeton, almost took the game too seriously in the beginning.
Rutgers won the first game on Nov. 6, 1869 but Princeton won the return match a short time later. They wanted to play a third and were denied permission.
Word of the Princeton-Rutgers games, which were played under rules borrowed mostly from soccer, spread throughout the east and there was no stopping the development of a sport that gradually took shape as American football.
Over-emphasis has set in, the professors ruled, and nothing good will ever come of this madness.
"We have no record of playing any games in 1870," says a Rutgers spokesman "but that was the only season we missed."
Other teams played in '70, though, and rules changes came so quickly that the colleges pinpoint the start of our present sport as the 1869 date.
It's possible if the early professors had their way completely, outlawing this type of game.
Notre Dame might still be a little college in the midwest hardly known outside the state of Indiana.
Soccer, however, was permissible. So maybe Notre Dame and Southern California would be battling this year for the soccer championship of the nation instead of the right to be No. 1 in a game we call All-American.
Pepper confident for Illinois opener
Head football coach Pepper Rodgers said after Wednesday night's practice that he feels more confident of the football team before the Illinois game this season than he felt before the 1967 season opener against Stanford.
The varsity players have been practicing so long for Saturday's game, Rodgers said, that the concentration of the players has leveled off. He added, however, that the Illini are probably encountering the same problem.
Rodgers said that kicker Bill Bell will play against Illinois even though he has not worked out in a week because of toe injury. Bell practiced today but Rodgers said he was not kicking as well as usual.
Two no-hitters in just 48 hours
San Francisco (UPI)—"This is the year of the pitcher," Willie McCovey recently observed and the 48 hours just passed have been the clincher.
Ray Washburn of the St. Louis Cardinals achieved a 2-0 no-hitter Wednesday afternoon against the San Francisco Giants less than 24 hours after the Giants' Gaylord Perry had no-hitted the Redbirds.
Lucius Allen faces narcotics sentence
Buffalo, N.Y. (UPI)—Marvin Bass, former head coach at South Carolina, and Bob Celeri, ex-California quarterback, Tuesday were named by new coach Harvey Johnson to complete the Buffalo Bills' coaching staff.
Both masterpieces were recorded at Candlestick Park and marked the first time since 1917 that such gems had been accomplished back to back.
Los Angeles (UPI)—Sentencing was scheduled for Oct. 17 for Lucius Allen, 20, star guard of the 1967-68 UCLA Bruin NCAA basketball championship team, who pleaded guilty Tuesday to a charge of maintaining a place where narcotics are used.
Buffalo staff set
Bass, who will be offensive line coach, and Celeri, who will handle the Bills' receivers, join holdovers Tony Sardisco, Richie McCabe and John Mazur. Jerry Smith retired when head coach Joe Collier was fired Sunday.
Allen, former all-Kansas star at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan., appeared before Superior Judge William A. Munnell.
At the time of sentencing, Munnell will decide whether the charge will be a felony or misdemeanor. He also will rule on a companion charge of possession of marijuana.
Allen was arrested May 23 with four other persons, two of whom pleaded guilty Tuesday to
knowingly being in a place where narcotics are used. They were given 30-day suspended jail sentences, fined $200 each and placed on probation for one year.
Another defendant was placed on probation for two years when he appeared two weeks ago. Charges against the fifth defendant were dismissed.
The five were stopped by traffic policemen for allegedly speeding. Police said they subsequently found a packet of marijuana in the car.
Allen, who had one more year of eligibility at UCLA, dropped out of school shortly before his arrest and joined the National Guard.
Jayhawk speed awes Illini scout
University of Illinois scout Jim Brown had high praise for KU's tremendous speed after observing a Jayhawk practice session last week.
Brown singled out quarterback Bob Douglas and backfield speedsters Don Shanklin, John Jackson and John Riggins as threats in Saturday's game. In his scouting report Brown said, "Douglas runs and throws equally well, and has top-notch receivers in Jackson, John Mosier and George McGowan."
"They certainly aren't a grind-it-out' club," Brown summarized.
Brown was impressed with the kicking of Bill Bell, and with both offensive and defensive lines, stressing the huge defensive ends Vernon Vanoy (6-8, 250) and John Zook (6-4, 230).
Brown described KU's offense as "interesting," and predicted the game to be a battle between high-powered offenses.
"Kansas came on strong late last season," Brown reported. "In my opinion they are a real 'sleeper,' not only in the Big Eight, but also nationally."
Uniforms picked for KU's opener
Here's the way the Jayhawks will be decked out for the season opener at Illinois: Short-sleeved white jerseys with blue numbers and two red stripes on the sleeves; silver gray pants; royal blue helmets; short white sox. For home games the jerseys will be royal blue with white numbers and white-red-white stripes on the sleeves.
Patronize
Kansan Advertisers
The best shoe for Natural Shoulder?
It's here from FLORSHEIM!
$26.95
Brown Calf
Black Calf
There is no more appropriate shoe for the natural shoulder man than this classic Florsheim brogue. Every stitch is exactly right. Everything is in perfect proportion. And that it's Florsheim means that it's better.
Most Florsheim styles $1995 to $2795 / Most Imperial styles $3795
Arensberg's
= Shoes
Arensberg's
= Shoes
Thursday, September 19,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Speaking of Sports...
by Ron Yates, Kansan Sports Editor
Saturday, September 21. The day when the untested top twenty football teams in the nation make the pre-season predictors look good ... or bad.
For most major college football teams, this Saturday will be the season opener and what a day it should be.
season opener and then Notre Dame meets Oklahoma, Southern Cal. meets Minnesota, Texas takes on high-scoring Houston and Florida invades Tallahassee for a game with Florida State.
Armed, therefore, with a few facts and hopefully a stadium full of luck, here are this week's predictions:
There is a knack to predicting the outcome of football games. It's called luck, sprinkled with a few facts here and there.
The Big Eight
Notre Dame 24, Oklahoma 13—The Irish have too much for the Sooners, although it could go the other way if Notre Dame's untested defense can't do the job.
Nebraska 21, Utah 7-Huskers should show more offense here. Kentucky 18, Missouri 10-Always a battle, but the Cats have an edge at home.
Oregon 20, Colorado 17-Picking an upset here on the Buff turf. Kansas State 21, Colorado State 10-Cats should handle this weak Ram team.
Iowa State 27, Arizona 21-Cyclones looked good against Buffalo last week. Majors might be the tonic at ISU.
Kansas 20, Illinois 17-If speed can overcome the Illini defense. Other Games
Southern California 28, Minnesota 17—Simpson the difference here, although he will need a lot of help in getting the holes in a good Gopher defense.
Indiana 20. Bavlor 10-Hoosiers still tough.
Penn State 31, Navy 17—The Lions roll this year.
2d-30. The Citadel 2d—Odets should have no problem
Army 24, The Clauder 3—Cadets should have no problems. Purdue 35, Virginia 10—Boilermakers will turn on the heat at home.
Texas 26, Houston 21-Houston offense slowed by Longhorn defense.
LSU 24, Texas A&M 13-LSU will surprise a good Aggie team. UCLA 17, Pittsburgh 7-Pitt goes down swinging, but goes down hard
Arizona State 30, Wisconsin 17-ASU continues to make noise in the West.
Michigan State 14, Syracuse 13—State gets the edge at home. Alabama 31, Virginia Tech 10—The Crimson Tide floods Tech. Oregon State 27, Iowa 7—Beavers dam-up Iowa.
New discus record set
The distance was 6 feet 1 inch better than Silvester's 218 feet 4 inch distance which is currently pending as a world record.
Reno, Nev. (UPI) - Jay Silvester, the U.S. Olympic team's discus star, broke the world record Wednesday with a throw of 224 feet 5 inches in a tune-up exercise.
K-State gridders sore, but ready
Manhattan, Kan. (UPI)—Kansas State coach Vince Gibson said Wednesday his squad is "sore and bruised" but will be ready for Colorado State in its season opener Saturday.
"The work's over now," Gibson said. "We're going to rest and get ready. We'll be ready to play. It's going to be a heck of a ball game."
Gibson said the Wildcats are not set at three positions for the game. He is still trying to decide between senior Ken Eckardt and junior Arvyd Petrus at defensive tackle.
Nicklaus, Palmer tourney favorites
Their combined 1967 accounts of better than $262,600 was by far the heftiest of any of the 122 teams entered in the 72-hole competition. The tournament will be played over both Quail Creek and Twin Hills Country Club courses the first two days and at Quail Creek the final 36 holes Saturday and Sunday.
Oklahoma City (UPI)-Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer, the defending champions who rank second and fifth in this year's earnings, ruled strong favorites Wednesday on the eve of the third $200,000 PGA team championship.
The chief challenges to the champions were expected to come from such well heeled teams as Billy Casper-Gay Brewer, Miller Barber-Don January, George Archer-Bobby Nichols, Lee Trevino-Homero Blancs, Tommy Aaron-Charles Coody, Bob Charles-Bruce Devlin.
The Ohio bear and the general of Arnie's Army won this team effort in 1966 at Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. with a best ball of 256. 32 under par.
Campus Bus Schedule!
SPECIAL SUNDAY CHURCH BUSES FOR DOWNTOWN CHURCHES
Leave Campus
The Fencer's Club was organized in the fall of 1957 to give KU students an opportunity to compete in a "minor sport." KU women have been involved in fencing training, practices and competition since 1962.
Leave Oliver Hall Leave Campus
10:00 a.m. 10:15 a.m.
10:20 a.m. 10:35 a.m.
10:30 a.m. 10:45 a.m.
The KU Fencer's Club opened practices Monday with a few members scheduled to enter an individual tournament Sept. 29 at Robinson sponsored by the Amateur Fencers League of America (AFLA).
Leave Ellsworth Leave G.S.P.
10:10 a.m. 10:20 a.m.
10:30 a.m. 10:40 a.m.
10:40 a.m. 10:50 a.m.
Dual meet competition will begin in January when KU crosses blades with Iowa State. Other teams on the 1969 schedule include the Universities of Iowa, Chicago, and Illinois, and the Air Force Academy.
Buses Return After Church Service
Last winter the Fencer's Club dropped all eight dual meets. The team of Ken Muller, Kansas City, senior, Tom Fenton, Barrington, Ill., senior, and player-coach Steve Keeler represented KU in the Nationals last season and placed 19th out of 42 teams.
Lawrence Bus Co., Inc.
Fencers begin drills for Sept.29 tourney
A valid target in a sabre match is the area from the torso to the hip bone including the arms, head and back. A fencer will receive credit for a touch if either the tip or the cutting edges of the blade land in this area.
Electric scoring devices have been developed to eliminate human error in the judging of foil or epee bouts. The weapon is wired to a central machine. The button at the tip of the blade is pressed in when a touch is made. The light and buzzer of the central machine record any touches.
Clip and Save
A touch is considered valid in men's epee when the tip of the weapon contacts any part of the opponent's body. In men's foil a fencer must land the point of the blade on the rival's torso which includes the back but excludes the arms and head.
Nine men from each team participate in the three events of a dual meet. The three weapons used in these events are the foil the sabre and the epee. Although all three weapons have 35-inch blades, they differ slightly in structure and in weight.
The epee weighs about a half pound more than the other two weapons partly because of its rigid, heavy triangular blad. There is a large bell guard at the epee's handle.
in all three events a contestant wins after he has scored five valid touches against his opponent. Only four valid touches are required to win a match in women's competition.
The foil weighs about one pound. Its quadrangular blade becomes smaller from the handle to the tip. The sabre also weighs one pound and has a triangular and flexible blade. The large guard of the sabre curves around the hand to protect the fencer's knuckles.
Since an accurate way to determine any touches in a sabre match has not been devised, a jury of Judges and Director referee the match. The Judges look for touches and call them to the attention of the Director. He makes the final decision unless the two Judges watching one contestant agree on the call.
Devaney demotes Patrick
Lincoln, Neb. (UPI)-Two changes were made Wednesday in Nebraska's starting offensive lineup.
Coach Bob Devaney named quarterback Ernie Sigler, who engineered the Cornhuskers' comeback win over Wyoming Saturday, and halfback Mike
Devaney said he hopes to use quite a few substitutes this Saturday as he did last.
Green as probable starters for Saturday's encounter with Utah.
Sigler replaces Frank Patrick and Green moves in ahead of Joe Orduna. No other changes were made in the lineup.
CR
Compound your suit interest
Cricketeer sets you apart from the other guys in the crowd. The look is texture and Cricketeer gives you extra fashion dividends. Bold plaid pattern on this textured oxford weave wool worsted suit. The new compound mixture colorings pay off in good fashion know-how. The vest gives you added interest
FROM $70.00
CRICKETEER
University Shop on the hill
The Town Shop
839 Mass. downtown
Hand hospitalized
Traditional Wear for Men
Detroit (UPI)—Defensive end Larry Hand, the latest in a succession of injuries to befall the Detroit Lions this season, is scheduled for surgery today to repair torn ligaments in his right knee, injured in Sunday's loss to Dallas,
AMERICA'S
GREATEST
SLACKS
"HAMILTON HOUSE"
TROUSERS
$18 TO $26
HUBBARD SLACKS
$10 TO $20
"BREECHES"
PERMANENT PRESS
$8 TO $10
Hubbard
FEATURING BLENDS OF FORTREL COTTON
Town Shop DOWNTRON
TOWN Shop
DOWNTOWN
UNIVERSITY Shop
WE WOULD not LIKE YOU TO MEET THE 'READING MEANY'
What is a Reading Meany? Well let me tell you what he is and what he can do to you. A Reading Meany is . . . having an outside reading assignment in every class you're taking. A Reading Meany is . . . term papers, research projects and reports. A Reading Meany is . . . getting ready for mid-term examinations. A Reading Meany is . . . working on a thesis. A Reading Meany is . . . final examinations. And the "granddaddy" of the Reading Meany is . . . the Western Civ. examination.
When the Reading Meany gets on your tail you start missing things. First of all you'll miss sleep and lots of it. Next you'll miss dates, parties, football games, etc.
Don't despair. There's a way you can avoid the Reading Meany. Enroll in The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Course this week and become a Dynamic Reader. You will learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now. You'll learn new study skills. You'll learn how to recall the material you have read.
Learn how you can acquire this skill by attending a free demonstration at the Kansas Union on the dates listed below. Get all
the answers to your questions and find out how hundreds of K.U. students have applied the Reading Dynamics technique to improving their grades, enhance their educations and gain the time to really enjoy college life.
Plan to attend one of these free demonstrations
At each demonstration a drawing will be made. The winner will receive a $25 scholarship . . . Plan to attend, YOU may be a winner.
Thursday, September 19th: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m..Kansas Union $ ^{*}$
Monday, September 23rd: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union $ ^{*} $
Tuesday, September 24th: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union $ ^{*} $
- Check bulletin board for room number
Classes meet once a week, for eight weeks
Saturdays, 9:00 to 12:00 a.m., beginning September 21
Mondays, 3:00 to 6:00 p.m., beginning September 23
Tuesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 24
Wednesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 25
DON'T LET READING ASSIGNMENTS GET YOU!
PLEASE RESERVE SPACE for me in the class beginning on a ( ) definite ( ) tentative basis.
NAME
ADDRESS
ADDRESS
CITY
STATE ___ ___ ZIP CODE
I would like to receive additional information. PLEASE SEND BROCHURE. I UNDERSTAND NO SALESMAN WILL CALL.
ENROLL TODAY
WESLEY FOUNDATION
BUILDING
1314 Oread Road
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone: 913 VI 3-6424
Evelyn Wood
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
EST.1990
A Reading Meany
A Reading Meany
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 19,1968
SDS, Voice union may be attained
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) discussed Wednesday night a possible merger with Peoples Voice.
Mike Warner, San Diego, Calif., graduate student, moderator at the initial SDS meeting, said SDS members had consulted Peoples Voice about the merger.
Another SDS speaker told the approximately 100 students that SDS members should consider the merger during the next few weeks.
He suggested Voice work on campus problems, SDS on national problems.
Warner also suggested the joint publication of a newspaper to serve both groups' interests.
SDS spokesmen said the merger could be total or partial, depending on membership preferences.
Warner said it was time for SDS members to move from personal decision making "toward confrontation." He said SDS must become a "self-conscious radical organization."
The goal of SDS, said John Berthrong, Norman, Okla., senior, is the "entire restructuring of American life from the top to the bottom." American society has "gone sick and is perverted," he added.
While SDS is operating without officers, members will probably decide on the governmental organization Sept. 25.
Warner suggested all committees work on a rotation leadership basis-including the central committee.
One SDS speaker said SDS needs participants, "not leaders and followers."
Religion school thrives despite ..
An established school with no alumni usually can't exist for long, but the Kansas School of Religion has maintained such a seemingly untenable position for 47 years.
Dean William J. Moore explained that the school offers courses to KU students for credit toward graduation. The school graduates no students, however.
Thus, the school is totally responsible for student recruitment and financial support usually alumni programs.
The School of Religion is interdenominational. It now receives financial support from 11 religious bodies including Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish groups.
Despite the complete lack of endowment funds, the school has increased its staff and improved its academic status.
The full-time faculty has grown from one to five members. Because most faculty members hold appointments in other KU departments, the school is now able to offer a master of arts in religion degree.
Moore said he hopes to "build up an endowment fund and develop a lively annual giving program."
Belafonte ticket sales selling still available
Tickets for Saturday night's Harry Belafonte concert have been selling fast, said Carol Elliott, Mission junior and ticket chairman.
An expected 10,000 persons will hear Belafonte in the 8 p.m. performance at Allen Field House. Although an official count was not available Wednesday, ticket sales are more than halfway to the 10,000 goal.
Among other topics discussed were:
Miss Elliot said tickets are still available in all price ranges = $2,
$2.50 and $3. These can be bought at the Information
Booth and at the SUA Office in the Kansas Union.
- A benefit featuring a rock band to raise funds.
- An SDS library.
- Organizing SDS chapters in high schools.
- Possible support of Kansas Health Workers Union which struck at two Kansas institutions this summer.
- Participation in draft resistance, Black Power advocacy, opposition to the Vietnam war and picketing of General Lewis Walt, who SDS speakers said would visit Lawrence and KU in November.
Forms needed for deferment
For want of slips of paper, a student can lose his draft deferment.
Kenneth Ivers, assistant dean of men, made that warning yesterday as he explained a draft information circular now being distributed by his office. Attached to the circular are the slips—two short forms which must be sent to draft boards.
Ivers said the University has sent no deferment information to local boards.
Students already holding deferments must send—along with their enrollment cards—the blue form along with their class schedules. Students requesting deferment for the first time must send both that and the other form—also available in the circular.
Ivers emphasized, "If the student doesn't send in the information, no one will."
The circular, now being sent to all fraternities and residence hall men, will be available in the Dean of Men's Office, the Registrar's Office, the Kansas Union Concession Stand or from men's residence hall directors.
Former KU radiology prof dies in Chicago
Dr. Nels M. Strandjord, former professor and chairman of the radiology department at the University of Kansas Medical Center, died Sept. 11 in Chicago.
Dr. Strandjord served as a medical volunteer in Asia and Africa and was chairman of the Medical Center department of radiology from 1965 to 1967.
English Leather
ALL-PURPOSE
LOTION
NET 8 FL OZ MADE IN U.S.A.
Skippers do it!
English Leather
For men who want to be where the action is. Very intrepid. Very masculine. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION. $2.50, $4.00, $6.50. From the complete array of ENGLISH LEATHER men's toilers.
Cardinal O'Boyle punishes six priests
Washington (UPI)—Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle Wednesday punished six more rebellious priests for refusing to recant their "statement of conscience" opposing the Papal ban on birth control.
The punishments, including suspension from priestly duties, were handed out to the priests after individual confrontations before the Cardinal.
The most severely punished was the Rev. John Fenton, assistant pastor of St. Mary's Church in Rockville, Md., who was barred from preaching, teaching, counseling, hearing confession or
saying public mass. Father Fenlon, however, was permitted to remain in the parish house.
On Aug. 31, O'Boyle gave the same punishment to another dissenting priest, the Rev. T. Joseph O'Donoghue, assistant pastor of St. Francis Desales church in Washington. But he was ordered out of the parish house and is now living with a parish family.
The latest punishment were announced by the association of Washington priests.
The Rev. John E. Corrigan, chairman of the association which has supported the dissenting priests, was one of the priests punished. Corrigan was barred from hearing confessions or teaching and preaching on the subject of birth control.
A total of 51 priests in the Washington archdiocese said publicly in a "statement of conscience" that Roman Catholic couples may responsibly use artificial birth control in some circumstances on the basis of individual conscience.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
All BELAFONTE LP's on RCA
Regular $4.79
now just $2.99
KIEF'S
record & stereo
On the Malls
in person
BELAFONTE
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE SAT., SEPT. 21 8:00 p.m.
Tickets - $2.00 - $2.50 - $3.00
Tickets will go on sale Monday, Sept. 16 at the Information Booth and the SUA Office in the Kansas Union.
BELAFONTE LP's also available for $2.99 at WEAVER'S RECORD DEPT
---
Thursday, September 19,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Motorists: slow down; campus cops are watching
KU students have obeyed traffic regulations fairly well during this first week of school, E. P. Moomau, campus police chief, said Wednesday. He warned, however, that campus patrolmen are watching for infractions and are keeping an especially close eye on the automobile/pedestrian scene.
Moomau also cautioned students to observe the posted speed limits. "We don't want to make any arrests," he said, "but we will if necessary."
"The pedestrian has the right of way on many parts of the campus," Mooomai said. "We strongly urge drivers to watch for persons crossing the streets." Pedestrians, for their part, should use the marked crossing zones.
The spirit of Peoples Voice seems to be catching. The latest proposal for student participation comes from the Watson Library director, David W. Heron.
Despite the presence of many new students on campus, the number of violations has been
Library director urges more voice
Heron suggested Wednesday the possibility of establishing a student library committee similar to the one proposed for student participation in the University Senate. Peoples Voice has been asking for 50-50 participation in University policy making affairs.
"This committee," says Heron, "would serve as a vehicle for systematically channeling student complaints and suggestions."
Ways of teaching must be changed dropouts charge
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.—(UPI)—Take it from 400 dropouts. Today's methods of public education must be revised in order to head off the soaring number of high school quitters.
This was the conclusion reached in a study by the Institute For Research on Human Resources at Penn State University.
"Today's schools are not reaching lower-class students because their traditional practices only aggravate these conditions," says Dr. Jacob J. Kaufman, head of the institute, and Dr. Morgan V. Lewis, research associate, co-authors of the report.
Good teachers must tailor the subject matter to fit the student, aiming to instill the desire to learn and to provide the tools for acquisition of further knowledge.
The study, involving 400 dropouts from two school districts in Pennsylvania, was supported by the U.S. Office of Education (USOE).
"Rigid behavior rules and curriculum standards alienate the students, making them hostile and uncooperative," the report stated.
"It is necessary to develop new standards to replace the old ones such as the expectation that students must reach certain levels of development at specific times, or that students have to spend most of their time listening, reading and writing."
"To make appropriate educational experiences for disadvantaged students, it is necessary to make basic changes in school organization and curriculum, $ ^{8} $ Kaufman and Lewis said.
Teachers and students should share in the planning, the two suggest. Teaching of necessary skills should be done as they are needed at the level of development of the student.
held down. "We have not had to issue as many tickets as might be expected at the beginning of the year." Moomau said. "By and large, the students have followed the parking and traffic rules well."
The chief added, however,
that a number of tickets had
been issued for improper parking
in the dormitory parking zones.
Moomau said there has been no problem with student drivers trying to get onto Jayhawk Boulevard during the school day. "Students seem to understand why we can't allow daytime traffic there and make few efforts to get in." He added that persons with legitimate reasons for entering—such as an emergency case to Watkins Hospital—would be admitted to the restricted area.
More than 11,180 vehicles have been registered by students and staff with the Traffic and Security Office, Moomau said. This does not include late enrollees, who are expected to bring the number of registrations to an all-time high.
The sale of zone parking stickers is beginning to taper off, Moomau said, and the lines of persons in the Hoch Auditorium lobby are becoming less lengthy.
"On Wednesday morning, between 8 a.m. and 8 a.m., we had no customers at all," Moomau noted.
KU-Y meets Wed. to plan programs and committees
KU-Y, which sponsors community service activities for University students, will have a membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room to discuss Y programs and available committee positions.
KU-Y sponsors such activities as the Youth Friendship program, which pairs college students with underprivileged children in the Lawrence area; Children's Hour, which recruits volunteers to work with the Lawrence Headstart program; and Special Activities, in which KU students work with mentally retarded children at Cordley School in Lawrence.
Tom Moore, KU-Y staff director, said more than 200 students have been involved in KU-Y at one time.
Moore said it is estimated that 16,000 man hours of volunteer service will be given through this year's service programs.
to finance service programs and pay the salaries of a fulltime and a part-time staff member, KU-Y will sell mums at football games, work at concession stands during the games, plan an International Gift Fair at Christmas time and sponsor Rock Chalk Revue.
Open door is in effect at Wesley Foundation
An open door policy at the Wesley Foundation has attracted no fewer than 12 groups to the Methodist organization's meeting rooms.
Patronixe Kansan Advertisers
The groups range from the African Club to the Kappa Phi Methodist Girls Society, from the China students club to the Hindu Society.
One of the foundation's more frequent users is Peoples Voice.
Associates said that while Rev. Tom Rehorn Jr., a foundation advisor, played a significant role last spring in Voice activities, he shows no favorites. The foundation allots its meeting rooms on a first-come-first-served basis.
Peoples Voice's frequent meetings there have nonetheless caused problems for the foundation.
Since Voice is not a religious group, some critics contend that it should not meet at the Wesley Foundation, Rev. Rehorn said.
"Many people feel if Voice didn't meet here they wouldn't exist." he continued.
"But I feel I have given them some place on campus to meet which is open for the public to come and debate, whereas if the meetings were off campus or in an apartment, there might not be this chance."
Mrs. Morni Leoni, another
foundation director, says the campus ministry should be where the action is. Peoples Voice is an "action group," she said, so the foundation welcomed them.
"There is no conflict as far as our church is concerned," said Rev. R. Dennis Bowers, associate pastor of the First Methodist Church, one of the foundation sponsors.
"We feel that all kinds of organizations should be able to meet freely and say what they want."
"However," Rev. Bowers continued, "we don't feel the foundation should be used as headquarters for negative activities which are trying to hurt the campus."
The Wesley Foundation feels that any group has the right to be heard. For this reason any group can use their building. The advisors believe this helps the foundation become involved in the total life of the University.
LOCATION SHOOTING
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Jerry Lewis and Peter Lawford hied off to Lisbon, Portugal, for a single week of location shooting for "Hook, Line & Sinker."
VAN ELI
FOR THE MAN ON CAMPUS
ANOTHER FIRST–direct from Europe. Loafers or buckles in rich antique leather – square toes, block heels. Priced from twenty-eight dollars.
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
837 MASS. VI 3-4255
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 19,1968
It just wasn't their day
Hubert pleads, Nixon is booed
By United Press International
A group of migrant farm workers in California Wednesday gave Richard M. Nixon a taste of the noisy, hostile opposition Hubert H. Humphrey has been getting around the nation from antiwar demonstrators.
Meanwhile, in Chicago, leaders of the demonstrators who battled Chicago police during the Democratic National Convention said they will picket every rally of Nixon, Humphrey and third party candidate George C. Wallace from now until election day in November.
The laborers, mostly Mexican-Americans angered by Nixon's opposition to their boycott of California grape growers, booed, heckled and picketed the Republican presidential candidate in his worst reception since he won the nomination six weeks ago.
At one point, the demonstrators surged into a rear balcony of the Fresno Convention Center shouting "We want Humphrey" but their chant was drowned out quickly by 5,000 Nixon supporters on the floor below.
Humphrey, who spent most of the day working with advisers to lift his campaign out of the doldrums, chided Nixon for refusing to urge speedy approval of a treaty aimed at stopping the spread of nuclear weapons.
The vice president termed Nixon's on position on the non-proliferation treaty "evasive" and warned that a delay "could mean killing this treaty forever."
"It could mean the end of our long and patient efforts to hold back the flood of nuclear destructive power to nations around the globe," the Democartic candidate said. "I don't think we can afford to play political games with anything so serious as the spread of nuclear weapons."
* *
In Washington, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey reportedly conceded to House Democrats Wednesday night that he needs them more than they need him in the coming election.
"Take me on your coattails," the Democratic presidential candidate was quoted as urging the congressmen in a unity appeal.
According to those present at the closed session in the House Ways and Means Committee room, Humphrey said he had seen some surveys which show Democratic House members running ahead of him in their districts. But he said the lesson of politics is that the ticket, from top to bottom, tends to rise or fall together.
About 200 House Democrats attended the session and gave
In an obvious reference to this trend, Humphrey was reported to have paraphrased Benjamin Franklin's comment at the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
Humphrey repeated ovations. Some of them, particularly from Southern districts, have indicated they plan to campaign for their own re-election independently from the party's presidential ticket.
"If we don't hang together, we will hang separately," he told the congressmen. "If we lose this election I won't be the only one at the end of the yardarm."
This year, for the first time, students in the School of Business can declare joint business and non-business majors.
Business students discover possibilities for joint majors
"The opportunities that may open up because of these joint majors are quite a challenge to the imagination," H. K. L'Euyer, assistant dean of business administration, says.
As an example L'Ecuyer cited one student with majors in business and art history. He wants to be an antique dealer, L'Ecuyer said.
After completing minimum business and general education requirements for a B.S. in business, a pre-business student may
take about 33 hours of non-business electives, L'Ecuyer explained.
These hours may be concentrated in one major area to complete the additional major, he said.
Most of the students declaring additional majors select areas which require the least additional hours, L'Ecuyer said.
This is largely because of the newness of the joint major, he explained.
The joint major will be shown on all permanent records, including the commencement program and the diploma.
THERE'S NO PLACE IN
THIS WORLD WHERE I'LL BELONG,
WHEN I'M GONE, AND I WON'T
KNOW THE RIGHT- FROM THE WRONG-
WHEN I'M GONE, AND YOU WON'T FIND
ME SINGIN' ON THIS SONG, WHEN I'M
GONE. SO I GUESS I'LL HAVE TO DO
IT- WHILE I'M HERE!
SP 6123 - THE PLEASURES OF THE NAPOON
SP 6148 - TAPS FROM CALIFORNIA
PHIL OCHS
9TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS
Weavers Inc.
Sexwing Lawrence . . . Since 1857
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857
Pure camel hair coat
extraordinary!
$55
The sophisticated smart casual
coat that is best in pure camel
hair is now offered at a most
extraordinary price! Ideal
weight of fabric adapts to the
weather. Camel color. Sizes
8-16.
COATS—2ND FLOOR
air coat
y!
The New
SUA Popular Film Series
THIS WEEKEND!! SEPTEMBER 20, 21, 22
in Desmons Davis
Sarah Miles
Cyril Cusack
"TIME LOST, TIME REMEMBERED"
Sept. 20, 21, 22, Time Lost, Time Remembered N
Sarah Miles, Cyril Cusack
Sept. 27, 28, 29
Sarah Miles, Cyril Cusack
Sept. 27, 28, 29
Dead Heat on a Merry-go-round
James Caburn, Matilo Spary
Oct. 6, 7, 8
Zorba the Greek
Anthony Quinn, Irene Papas
Oct. 13, 14, 15
Our Man Flint
James Caburn, Lee J. Cobb
Oct. 18, 19, 20
Citizen Kane
Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten
Oct. 25, 26, 27
Behold a Pale Horse
Gregory Peck, Omar Sharif
10, 4, 3 Anatomy of a Murder
James Stewart, Lee Remick,
George C. Scott, Beverly Cameron
Nov. 8, 9, 11 Unbeliefs of Cherrubs
by Jacqueline Dempsey, with Catherine Deneuve
Nov. 15, 16, 17 Shenandoah
James Stewart, Doug McCrae
Nov. 22, 23, 24 One Potato—Two Potato
Barbara Borrie, Berne Hamilton
Dec. 6, 7 Gambit
Michael Caine, Shirley MacLaine
Dec. 13, 14 East of Eden
James Dean, Julie Harris
Jan. 10, 11 The Deadly Affair
James Mason, Maximus Schel,
Simone Sipapo
Jan. 31-Feb. 1, 2, Dark at the Top of the Stairs
Robert Presston, Dorothy McGuire
Feb. 7, 8, 9 A Raisin in the Sun
Sidney Potter, Claude Kline
Feb. 14, 15 16 A Countess from Hong Kong
Marton Branda, Sophia Loren
Feb. 21, 22, 23 Lolita
James Mason, Sue Lyon, Peter Sellers
Feb. 28-Mar. 1, 2 Texas Across the River
Dean Martin, Joey Bishop
Mar. 7, 8, 9 Ivy High comedy)
Michael Crawford, Oliver Reed
Mar. 14, 15, 16 Blow-up by Antoninii
David Hemmings, Vanessa Redgrave
Mar. 21, 22, 23 Julie Christie
Apr. 11, 12, 13 The Silencers
Dean Martin, Stella Stevens
Apr. 18, 19, 20 The Pawnbroker
Rod Steiger
Apr. 25, 26, 27 Night of the Generals
Peter O'Toole, Omar Sharif
May 2, 3, 4 Charade
Carley Grant, Hepburn Heapn
May 9, 10 Carey J. Heapn
Jane Shrimpton, Paul Jones
May 16, 17, 18 Barefoot in the Park
Janie Fonda, Robert Redford
A POIGNANT LOVE STORY FILMED IN THE CELTIC SURROUNDINGS OF IRELAND.
Grand Prize Winner at Sebastian International Film Festival Shows at 7:30 and 9:30 Friday, Saturday and Sunday Dyche Auditorium
Admission 40c
Admission 40c
---
.
Thursday, September 19,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
McKay says artsies need class changes
While some sculpture classes meet in Memorial Stadium this fall, others meet in nearby Bailey Annex. Across campus in Sudler House, students study occupational therapy.
Three blocks away, the jewelry and silversmithing departments are housed in the Mechanical Engineering Building. Weaving classes meet next door in the Radio Broadcasting Building.
From his cube-size office in 13 Strong Hall, John S. McKay coordinates these widely scattered departments. He is Associate Dean of the School of Fine Arts—a position created in the school last spring.
"Sculpture is badly housed," McKay said, and there is "great need for more studio space in Strong Hall. This fall we turned away 50 to 100 students enrolling in Introduction to Drawing because there were no more sections or rooms." The new dean estimates that there are 750 to 800 undergraduate and graduate art students.
Mckay not only has "housing problems," but also finds present cataloging of courses and credits confusing to students.
The new dean would like to see a basic foundation program in the School of Fine Arts in which all freshman art students would take the same basic courses. Students would take general courses their first two years selecting a particular department of study their junior year.
"The artist has to be educated in a general sense; a designer has to know something about society."
One aid to coordination, believes McKay, would be a new visual arts building. This year a faculty committee is to study the curriculum and recommend changes.
Some facilities are adequate, stressed McKay, but a new building would not only be more convenient, but also more economical because equipment could be shared.
Besides serving as Associate Dean in the School of Fine Arts, McKay is vice president of the
National Association of Schools of Art which is the association of professional art schools and the accrediting agency in the field of art. With the addition of KU last spring, association membership reaches fifty.
Before moving to Lawrence July 1, the new administrator served 14 years as Ass't. Dean of the School of Fine Arts at Washington University in St. Louis.
He is a graduate of the University of Illinois where he studied industrial design. Later he attended graduate seminar and institute of design.
McKay is married and has two children: a 19-year-old son attending Arkansas State University and a daughter, 21, who has worked for Trans-World Airlines.
University residence halls, despite a population drop of nearly 3 per cent, are still filled to near-capacity. J. J. Wilson, director of housing, announced Wednesday.
Residence halls still nearly full
An unofficial count, Wilson said, showed a decrease of 160 from the 1967 fall population of 4.670.
Fewer rooms are available this year because former rooms have been converted to offices for dean's representatives and College-within-a-College personnel. Wilson didn't know how many rooms have been converted.
The conversion of Ellsworth and Oliver to co-educational status has decreased the flexibil
ity of those halls in accomodating students, Mrs. Donna Shavlik, assistant dean of women, explained.
The need to house freshmen women and upperclass women separately creates an added problem for the housing office, Mrs.Shavlik said.
Although there might be vacancies in those dorms, she said, an overflow of men students can't be housed on a women's floor.
In the case of women students, for example, freshmen must observe closing hours. Upperclass women have no such restrictions.
Different living areas are also
assigned to each College-within-a-College. While giving students a chance to interact with others of common social and academic interests, this adds to the housing dilemma.
The KU Film Society plans to show movies filmed in the 1940's and earlier and will feature three silent films throughout the year.
Vigo is one of the most tragic figures in French cinema, explained Cote, dying in his early twenties after having made only three short films.
Wilson cited two other factors influencing this year's population drop:
- The newly-instituted rule allowing junior women to live in off-campus housing.
- The proportional increase in the number of graduate students over the number of undergraduates.
There will also be an open discussion with coffee and short films for all interested persons tonight at 8:30 and 10 p.m. in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union.
Film society will present French flick
A 45-minute film officially banned by the French government for 10 years will be shown at the formal organizational meeting of the KU Film Society Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
It is Jean Vigo's classic "Zero for Conduct" filmed in 1935. Banned until 1945, the film is about life in a French boys' school and it had a profound effect on the French New Wave, says Ron Cote, last year's Film Society president.
Back to school...
Back to CASA DE MONTEZ HOME OF AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD
23
STUDENT SPECIAL
Deliciously prepared Cheese and Onion Enchilada, Fluffy Fried Rice, Creamy Fried Beans topped with Cheese, Jumbo Choice Beef Taco covered with Monterrey Jack Cheese, Chile Verde, Taco Sauce, Guacamole Dip, Hot Fritos, Choice of drink—soft beverages or coffee. $195
You must show your Student I.D. Card to get this price.
Quality
Quality Food For Selective People!
- ENCHILADAS
* CHILE RELLENO
* STEAKS • CHICKEN
- TACOS • TAMALES
- CHILE VERDE
- SHRIMP
- BURRITOS
- GUACAMOLE
- BEER
(Mexican & America)
CASA OF MONIQUE
SYMBOLS OF QUALITY
Casa DeMontez
A little bit of Old Mexico
807 Vermont—V1 2-9475
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
THE MONTEZ FAMILY
Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here
O
The show, which will continue through Oct. 18, features 12 abstract paintings which Vaccaro created within the past year.
Bolt drama will be given
Twelve KU students will be known as the Creede Repertory Theater for two days.
The group, which comprised the entire staff of the repertory theater in Creede, Colo., last summer, will present Robert Bolt's "A Man For All Seasons" at 8:20 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Murphy Hall's Experimental Theater.
Paintings by Nick Dante Vaccaro, associate professor of drawing and painting in the School of Fine Arts, are now on display at the Jewish Community Center Gallery in Kansas City, Mo.
The drama department requested they perform one of their summer plays and the group chose this play, which is a re-creation of the turbulent era of England's Henry VIII and his controversy with the Roman Catholic Church.
Vaccaro previously has been awarded purchase prizes from the San Francisco Museum Print Exhibit, the Montgomery Museum of Fine Art (Alabama), and the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Texas.
Tickets are available in Murphy Hall box office for $1.50 and $.75 with a KU ID card.
Painting exhibits
NEW RELEASES FROM
AM RECORDS
THE HEAT OF THE BRASS
HERB ALPERT &
THE TUCKA BRASS
SERGIO MENDES
& BRASIL '66
Iook,
Around
AM
BELL MUSIC CO., Inc. 925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644
RANEY RECORD RIOT
HERB ALPERT
TIUANA BRASS
!!GOING PLACES!!
FOUR TOPS SECOND ALBUM
CANT HELP MINDY UP + FREES GAVE ME JOB - NORMAL JOURNAL
MUSIC BY THE BEATLES & BOWWITCHERS
TABLING BY JOHN MARRIS
COPYRIGHT 1982 BOWWITCHERS INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Second Album
FOUR TOPS
(Motown)
GOING PLACES
Herb Alpert
(A & M)
— No Limit per Customer —
HERA ALPERT PRESENTS
SERGIO MENDES 8 BRASIL'66
AM
PERFORMANCE
SERGIO MENDES
& BRAZIL '66
(A & M)
GAREWELL TO THE SECRET GOLDEN CRAFT
THE BANNER AND THE PAPRS
BANANA BANK
MUSIC BY JOHN SCHNEIDER
TERROR TRIBUNE (COLUMBIA BAY AND CHURCH OF THE SEA)
INFINITY OF LOVE (COLUMBIA BAY)
FAT FUCKING MAN (COLUMBIA BAY)
JUDGE OF FAITH (COLUMBIA BAY)
SUPERMAN (COLUMBIA BAY)
THE DOWNING BANK (COLUMBIA BAY)
PRESENTED BY MARK HAMILTON, JIM ROBERTSON, MATT KERRY, JOSH WELZER, AND ALEXANDRE LEVITO
THE MAMAS & THE PAPAS (Dunhill)
The Mamas
& The Papas
Deliver
MEDICATED
TO THE ONE
I LOVE
claudine
AM
41C
CLAUDINE Claudine Longet (A & M)
THE MAMAS AND THE PAPAS DELIVER (Dunhill)
ALSO
WATCHOUT-Martha and the Vandellas (Gordy)
GREATEST HITS-Ray Charles (ABC-Paramount)
THE FABULOUS IMPRESSIONS (ABC)
THE GENIUS HITS THE ROAD-Ray Charles
(ABC-Paramount)
THE LONELY BULL-Herb Albert
(A & M)
LIVE-The Temptations
(Gordy)
Manufacturer's list from $3.79 up!
Quantities limited!! Rush for best selections
- AND MANY MORE
RANEY DRUG STORES PLAZA CENTER DOWNTOWN
Raney Downtown 921 Mass.
only $2.09 each
Raney Hillcrest 925 Iowa
Raney Plaza 1800 Mass.
Thursday, September 19,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
The Creede Repertory Theatre
presents
"A Man For All Seasons"
by Robert Bolt
Friday & Saturday - Sept. 20, 21 in the
Experimental Theatre
Time—8:20 p.m.
Tickets—$1.50 or 75c with KU ID
Tickets are now on sale at the Box Office in Murphy Hall. For information call UN 4-3982.
VAN DENHAM
Sandler of Boston's Bandpiper the
swashbuckling boot you first met in Mademoiselle. Dashing up to the knee from sculptured boxy toe and extended sole. Side-zip it on and be off in pile lined comfort all winter long.
Antique Walnut $26.00 Shoes-2nd floor
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver'S Inc.
Sewing Lawrence . . . Since 1857
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
newspaper or other media to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
1967 Yamaha: 100 cc, 1200 miles—like new. Call VI 2-3733. 9-20
1957 VW with sun roof. Careful maintenance and partially rebuilt. Call VI 2-8581 for more information. 9-20
Twin Beds and Mattresses. Excellent condition. Can also be used as bunk beds or trundle beds. $40.00 or offer. VI 2-7763. 9-20
Beautiful 175ce motorcycle with accessories and helmet. Better than new! George Richardson, VI 2-8875 or UN 4-4273. 9-23
Bronze '67 Camero. 1 owner, 15,200 miles 250 engine, straight six. Carpeted, yellow walls, snow tires. VI 2-8491 or Mrs. Nash at 3256. 9-23
Used Conrad Electric Bass Guitar.
Good shape with cord, strap, and case. Not much for a bass. Call VI 3-6305 after 5 p.m. 9-23
Suzuk 250ce 67 Scramble, good
invited. included VI. 52-
after 5:30 or weekends
1963 Sunbeam Alpine - good engine-
new paint - new top, $700. 1967 175cc
machine - excellent condition
$350 Cobb, UN 4-3768. After F
V 2-1350.
Motorcycle; 1966 Triumph T 100 R,
500cc. Excellent condition, low mileage,
reasonable. Call VI 2-4239 after
6:00 p.m. or weekends.
9-23
1964 Alfa Romero 1600 Gullu. Gulla
4 alfa. $350. Call 2-0337
9-25
1966 BSA 650 for sale, $70 or trade
Call VI 812-345-8800 between 5 and 7 p.m.
9-25
1966 Dodge Coronet 500, 383, 4 barrel, Metallic Silver with black vinyl top, ET Mags, Call Chuck at VI 3-8490. 9-25
"Very" portable typewriter. $20.00.
"Call us or see after 5 p.m."
9-25
Motorcycle—1966 Ossa, 1500 miles,
$295. Call Vi I 2-6642. 9-20
BSA Starfire 1968, 700 miles, like new. Call Larry at VI 2-5343. 9-25
100cc Yamaha Low mileage excel-
cells 2040 Opt Apt. 3, 1040 T 3-4312, 9-20
1201 Orchid Apt. 2, 1101 Orchid Apt.
9-20
1956 Chev. 2 dr, 265 cu., auto. Depend.
$150. Call I51 V-24-629.
1951 Chevy for sale. '58 eng., radio, very clean, dependable, excellent mechanical shape. One easy low price mechanical shape. 1341 Mass. 6-8 p.m. VI 3-26 8834
HELP WANTED
Wish to employ man or woman for noon time lunch room-playground lawrence 11:30-12:32 Phone VI 3-4686 or VI 3-3263 for appointment.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Portraits of Distinction
Also
- Passports
- Applications
- Lettermen
- Lettermen
- Seniors
- Seniors
Please call for appointment
- K-Portraits
摄
Hixon Studio
Portraits of Distinction Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-03301
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Headquarters
Kustom and Fender Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
Men—Part time or full time. Above average pay. Show our products in aweance Call Sam Jordan now. 9-20 5206.
One concerned coed to share the expense of the Sunday New York Times. If more than one concerned coed exists, extra papers will be arranged. Contact: Steve at VI 2-2175 for information. 9-20
Part-time bus drivers for morning
vehicles. Bus for VI 2-0044, ask for Diane Ogle.
p 260
Male part time noon hour or one eight hour shift. Good pay. Name your hours. Apply in person at Sandy's Drive-in. 2120 W. 9th. 9-23
Part time help wanted for packing and moving of household goods by reputable mover. Experience preferred. Call VI 3-0380, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. for interview or Saturday till noon. 9-23
College males to work evenings at
Pizza No. 1600 in New York with
your own days and hours.
Good pay and fringe benefits. Contact Ed Sapp, manager, at VI 3-316-2745.
NOTICE
United Child Care Center, 945 Vermont, for pre-school children of age 3-17 years on the Friday. For further information call VI 3-7134 or VI 2-3728 evenings.
MUSIC LESSONS — specializing in guitar and 5 string banjo. These classes are being taught by instructors who are or have been entertaining professionally. Start any time. Beginners or otherwise.
Haynes-Ray Audio and Music Co. VI 2-1944. 9-23
instruction for all hand instruments,
medica, and rock and drum rolls.
All people interested in folk dancing or leading folk dancing, contact MI 13 Rosenberg at Math DE 13 E. Strong or 1419 No. 8, Ed. 13-991.
1. 9:27
2. 9:27
515 Michigan St. St-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib shak to go. $3.25; Rib order, $1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.85; chicken, $1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Fall is the season for barn boards. So plan ahead to have yours at the most cost-effective angle installed. Heating and electricity unquestionably available. VI 3-4023 11-1
HORSES BOADED—New facilities,
reasonable rates, close in—south
location, indoor and outdoor arenas.
Call VI 2-3353 or VI 3-1626. 9-25
Ace Furniture and Antiques is now open in their new building. 9-20
ironings in my home. Please bring
827 Walnut St. Lot 10
or bring 825-Walnut St.
Ace Furniture and Antiques is now
inported in their new building at 510 N.
West St. and what we have, to help you furnish
your apartment and home. This week's special is waste baskets for
weeks of 7 days a week from 10:00 to 6:00. 9-25
K. C. Commuters—Would like ride or share drive. Classes from 7:30-11:30 daily until 2:40, then until 7:45. Tonganoxie or Bonner Springs. T 4-7018, K.C.K. 9-25
Professional Model needs qualified Coeds to register with her newly formed modeling agency, "Model's Guild." Registration fee $-10.00. For a confidential interview call VI 2-8634 for appointments. 9-25
WANTED
Want to get in a car pool from Johnson County to Lawrence. Can drive if necessary. Call after 6:00 p.m. at DU 1-5104. 9-23
Ride or riders to share ride Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday from Prairie
Village-Overland Park area. Call
MI 9-6632. 9-23
Need 1 or 2 junior or senior men to share spacious duplex. Inquire at 2422 Cedarwood after 2:00 p.m. J. Anderson, D. Drogosh, P. Kovac. 9-19
Roommate wanted - undergraduate,
Oklahoma. Ohio. $37.50 a month.
Call VI 3-2263. 9-223
Modern roommate over 21 years old.
Modern female. Call VI 2-6159. 10-2-82
FOR RENT
Lovely room available in private home for responsible university students, staying with children (ages 15 and 13) on occasions. Call VI 3-9150 for interviews.
SERVICES OFFERED
Sewing and alterations by experienced seamstress. All work done quickly, neatly, seamless. Coats, skirts, skirts, what have you? 843-1348 a 8 a.m.-9 p.m. 9-23
LOST
Lost dog. Yorkshire Terrier, tan,
short coat, oversized name. Name:
Elmer is no collar. Lost Monday near
Miss. Mass. If found please call
91-2-9922
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 19,1968
News Roundup (Continued from page 1) Guidance system cause of blowup
Cape Kennedy (UPI)—Space agency investigators Wednesday blamed a faulty guidance system for the flaming blowup eight miles above the Atlantic of a $5 million Delta rocket carrying a $6 million commercial communications satellite toward orbit.
The failure Wednesday night was a severe financial blow-$11 million-for the Comsat Corp., made up of United States shareholders and 61 partner nations.
The communications firm had counted on the satellite to relay color television reports on the Olympic Games from Mexico City to Europe next month. But, a "jack-of-all-trades" satellite owned by the government now is expected to provide that coverage.
Nam Bo offensive scheduled by Reds
Saigon (UPI)—Allied intelligence sources said today the Communist high command has scheduled a third offensive against Saigon for next Monday, a Communist "resistance" celebration day.
U. S. intelligence officials said they give the expected Communist offensive only a 50 per cent chance of materializing.
Captured Communist documents quoted by the sources said the guerrillas first would send 600 saboteurs into the heart of Saigon in teams of three to blow up military installations and launch a wave of terrorist attacks.
At the same time U.S. spokesmen announced that allied troops bracing for a long-anticipated nationwide offensive have seized 90 tons of Communist arms over the past week—enough to equip 1,800 troops for as long as one year.
The documents also detailed plans for about 1,500 troops to strike military outposts on the edge of the capital in advance of an all-out thrust against the city by elements of three Red divisions in the grounding area.
Monthly, the target date listed in the documents, is celebrated by the Communists as "Nam Bo Romance Day" in commemoration of the date the Viet Minh guerrillas opened their war against French in 1946.
Specimen said most of the weapons seized in the past week were found in jungles about 60 miles north of Saigon. The hauls included 850,000 rounds, small arms ammunition and 5,496 rocket launches. There were also 15 tons of rice for Colin'sist troops.
By Rea Wilson
Kansan Feature Editor
Speech pulls potpourri mob
Kansas City-In the middle of the Kansas City stock yards, 10,000 persons were herded into the exhibition hall to hear George Wallace, third party presidential candidate, bray Tuesday night.
Many spectators at the Wallace rally in thy American Royal exhibition hall appeared to be white, middle class, middle aged, blue-collar workers.
Some spectators, most of whom were wearing Wallace buttons and Wallace straw hats, said they supported Wallace because "he speaks the truth."
Others said they were for Wallace because "he is for the American way and the Constitution."
and the Constitution. Wallace supporters demonstrated their feelings for the former governor of Alabama during his speech by raising their arms in the air and shouting
Often Wallace supporters got carried away with their enthusiasm.
Wallace "not racist"
Kansas City—George Wallace, American Independent Party Presidential candidate denied here yesterday that segregation is an issue in his campaign.
"I have never made a statement about anybody because of what they were," he said at an airport news conference.
"I am not concerned with blacks or just black militants," Wallace said. "There are probably more white militants than black militants. I am concerned with law and order."
Most people of all races support law and order, he said. This has been a primary Wallace campaign issue.
ATTENTION VOTERS
To vote in the November general election, KU students must register with the Lawrence city clerk by Oct. 15.
There are two voting requirements besides the 21-year-old age restriction:
One 17-year-old Jewish youth said he was almost "pounded" by one Wallace supporter for not contributing to the Wallace fund.
- Residency in Lawrence for 30 days.
- Residency in Kansas for six months.
City Clerk Vera Mercer adds that students must declare themselves a resident of Lawrence by signing an oath.
A woman who was participating in the anti-Wallace demonstrations at the rally left the exhibition hall because "Wallace supporters were throwing garbage at me."
The City Hall is located at 11th and Massachusetts.
Few Wallace supporters were of minority groups. Most Negroes at the rally were there to look or to participate in anti-Wallace demonstrations.
"We decided to leave early so we
After this incident about 40 students from the Kansas City Art Institute walked out in the middle of Wallace's speech.
could get some police protection," said a member of this group.
One Negro youth was led from the hall by police for exposing his pocket knife. He was instructed to go home and not to re-enter the hall.
Other anti-Wallace demonstrators were escorted out by police.
When Wallace arrived at the airport yesterday morning, a woman, who called herself Lucky Lou, crashed security lines to present Wallace with a bouquet of sunflowers.
"I was the only person there from Kansas. No one else from Kansas would admit they were for Wallace," she said. "But, you should have seen the people from Missouri when I held up them sunflowers."
Lucky Lou was also at the fund raising dinner before the rally and at the rally,cheering and standing for her candidate.
"I couldn't afford to buy him any fancy flowers, so I picked sunflowers from my back yard."
Wallace
WANTED
YOU
TO COME THIS THURSDAY NIGHT AND SEE OBER'S NEW
821 Regimental Shop
OPEN EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8:30
821 Mass.
Phone VI 3-2057
UDK by United Press International News Roundup
Muskie visits Kansas today
Topeka-Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, Democratic vicepresidential candidate, is expected to arrive here early today for a day-long tour of the Sunflower state.
The 54-year-old senator's campaign plane was scheduled to arrive at Forbes Air Force Base at 1 a.m.
Communists hit Loc Ninh
Saigon—Communist troops today drove into the heart of Loc Ninh, a key provincial capital on the Cambodian border, and withdrew after battling in the market place with South Vietnamese defenders, military spokesmen reported.
The assault on Loc Ninh was one of a series of battles that erupted today between Saigon and the Cambodian border.
Dissent voiced against proposal
By Richard Lundquist Assistant Editorial Editor
Equal student-faculty representation and immediate social involvement keynote the dissenting report of the Student Faculty Committee on University Governance, released today.
The dissenting report criticizes the committee's report for incorporating students "as an institutionalized minority with power only to advise—not make final decisions affecting their lives."
"The proposed student-faculty ratios of the University Senate 95 to 550 (approximate figures), the senate council 13 to 42, and SENEX (Senate Executive Council) 3 to 6, do not fulfill the concept of participatory democracy," according to the dissenting report.
A consensus with the proposals for general reorganization of the Faculty and Student Senates, and the voting procedures is stated by the dissenting report. But the report goes on to recommend the following amendments.
1. Election of all members, including faculty members, of the University Senate on a constituency basis.
2. Equal faculty-student representation in the University Senate, Senate Council, and SENEX, and all University Senate committees and boards.
3. Fifty per cent student representation on the Academic Programs Development Committee (APDC) and the University Planning Council (UPC), both Chancellor's Committees.
4. That the position of Chancellor be filled by an individual elected from the University Senate.
5. That there be voting members of the University Senate represented on the Board of Regents.
6. The policies of the Memorial Union Corporation should be controlled by the University Senate.
7. The policies of the Physical Education Corporation should be controlled by the University Senate.
8. That each school and department formulate its particular policies through committees with equal representation of students and faculty.
9. Non-tenured faculty should be fully represented as faculty members in the Faculty Senate.
10. The Associated Women Students (AWS) should be abolished.
11. The superfluous offices of the deans of men and women should be abolished.
The second "critical failure," according to the dissenting report, is the refusal of the committee's report "to deal immediately with the issue of the social responsibility of the University." To redirect the social responsibility of the University, the dissenting report urges the "immediate adoption" of the following proposals.
1. The creation of tutorial programs at both the high school and
See opposition report page 16.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.4
Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, September 20, 1968
Would abolish ASC
KU senate proposed
Abolition of All Student Council and creation of a Student Senate whose members would sit on the University Senate was proposed today by the committee selected to study greater student representation at the University of Kansas.
If adopted, the revolutionary proposals would mean for the first time in Kansas University history students would have membership on the University Senate.
The governing powers of the University Senate include organization, administration of the University, academic work and its evaluation, requirements for graduation and degrees, class and examination schedules, the school calendar, student financial aid, school activities and human relations.
The proposal, contained in a report released Thursday, was among a host of sweeping recommendations for student participation in the governing of the University, including representation by University Schools instead of by living groups.
The ASC meets Sept. 24, the Senate Council two days later, and the University Senate Oct. 29.
A committee of six students and six faculty members was created last spring after Student Voice, now called Peoples Voice, demanded 50 per cent student representation on University committees involving student affairs. A sit-in was threatened if the demands weren't met, but did not occur.
Ambrose Saricks, a co-chairman of the 12-member committee, said the proposals might go into effect before the end of the semester if voted on and approved at the early meetings of the governing bodies.
Before becoming effective, the proposals must be passed by the University Senate Council and the University Senate, by the ASC and by a student referendum.
The percentage of student membership in the University Senate and its various councils and committees is less than that sought by Voice who asked-50 per cent on all committees—which Saricks said was opposed by a majority of the committee. Saricks said 50-50 membership has
been recommended on many of the University Senate committees.
He said that amount of representation was "too big a step" and required more study. Saricks also said he doubted such a proposal would be approved even if recommended.
LOOK OUT ILLINOIS
The measure would increase the size of the student government body from the 35 members of the ASC to 95 members of the Student Senate. A special election to select the additional 60 student representatives would have to be held if the recommendations were approved before next spring's student elections.
At present, the University Senate is made up of the Faculty Senate, whose members are tenured faculty and library staff, and administration officials such as the Chancellor, the Provost, and Vice-Chancellors. The Chancellor, Provost and some vice chancellors have faculty status.
Presiding over the proposed Student Senate would be Dean of Student Affairs, William M. Balfour.
Included in the Student Senate would be the Deans of Men and Women, President and VicePresident of the student body, and the presidents of the Association of University Residence Halls, the Pan-Hellenic Association, the Interfraternity Council, the Unorganized Housing Association, and the special representatives of each University school and three special representatives to the Senate Council.
Representatives from University schools would be chosen according to each's enrollment, with one representative for every 200 students.
75 72 63 67 37
Hamilton Salsich, former KU instructor now at Western Michigan University at Kalamazoo, gave the report qualified endorsement.
"I think Kansas has got a long, long way to go yet," Salsich said, "but when you think that it is the University of Kansas that may make these changes, as backward as it has been as far as student rights go. I think it's a big step."
WEATHER
Fair to partly cloudy and mild today with warming temperatures. High today in the high 70s or low 80s. Chance of precipitation less than 10 per cent.
KU fullback John Riggins breaks through a wide hole in the line during a practice scrimmage. Rumor has it that holes will be larger in the Illinois line.
Regents begin a chancellor hunt
The Kansas Board of Regents Thursday took the first step toward selecting a new chancellor for the University of Kansas by forming a four-man committee to report back a list of candidates.
Committee chairman Arthur H. Cromb of Mission Hills said the group will work jointly with a committee yet to be appointed by the Faculty Senate.
Faculty Regents chairman C. N. Cushing named to the committee Cromb; Henry A. Bubb, Topeka; Eldon Sloan, Topeka; and James J. Basham. Fort Scott. All are members of the Board of Regents.
The action followed the Regents' official acceptance of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's resignation. Wescoe announced Monday at the 103rd Opening Convocation he was resigning after nine years as chancellor to begin "a second career."
Wescoe stated after the meeting, held at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, he would remain associated with KU "in a fund-raising capacity" to continue contacts he has made as chancellor.
Cromb said the procedure to be followed would be the same used this spring to select Clark D. Ahlberg as president of Wichita State University. The Regents' committee and a committee to be formed by the Faculty Senate will both compile lists of possible candidates, Cromb said. The two committees will then meet jointly until three names or less remain in consideration. These names, Cromb said, will be presented by his committee to the Regents for a final decision.
Several committee members expressed concern that a replacement for Wesco may be difficult to find. Sloan said there were currently "several hundred" university administrative vacancies in the United States and competition for qualified men was great. The chancellor's salary may have to be raised to attract a qualified candidate, said Bubb, but no immediate increase is planned. "The salary will depend on the man," he said.
Neither Cromb nor Cushing were willing to predict when a new chancellor would be found. "The president of WSU resigned in March and his successor was appointed in July, but we were lucky," said Cromb.
The Board of Regents also accepted the resignation of M. C. Cunningham, president of Fort Hays State College. Cunningham resigned effective "either July 1, 1969, or not later than September 1, 1969," because of his age of 65 and because "it is timely and most appropriate that a younger person with new ideas and more vigorous energy take over the administrative duties of the Presidency."
AAA1. 05 and photos. 2 vehicles.
Douglas County State Bank
"The Bank of Friendly Service"
Member F.D.I.C.
9th and Kentucky
VI 3-7474
DOWNS COUNTY STATE
BANK
OPEN A "D. C." personal checking account.
- "D. C." checks cost LESS than money orders—only 10c!
- No minimum balance.
- Your name printed FREE on all "D. C." checks.
- 20 checks—only $2.00!
- Try our bank by mail service
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE
FOR YOUR AUTO
ANTENNA.
GO
BIG BLUE
KU
PLEASE TAKE ONE
LET'S SUPPORT THE TEAM!
GO JAYHAWKS!
Come in and get a free auto pennant while you pick up your own "Jayhawk Helmet Bank." It only costs $1.30. Support your team while you support your pocket!
KU
Friday, September 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Physics lab appeals to English lady
She sure doesn't look like a physics lecturer.
But, said Jennifer M. Davis, physics one and two lecturer, it is rather old fashioned to think of all physics teachers as gray old men.
Still, it's surprising to see this blue-eyed English beauty in a physics lab. One disbelieving male student asked her, "Who's really teaching this course."
Asked if she had ever modeled, Mrs. Davis laughed. "I'm very flattered," she replied. "I used to be told I should be a model, but I prefer physics."
Has her attractiveness ever caused any problems with her students? "Not in the past," she said. "I taught at a girls school in England."
Mrs. Davis and her husband arrived here from London Sept. 11. Mr. Davis, a lecturer at the University of London, will do research in pharmacy at KU, said Mrs. Davis.
They will return home next year. "I think we shall hate to go back," Mrs. Davis said in her British accent. "It's much more pleasant out here than in London. Things aren't quite as hectic."
Mrs. Davis said she was pleasantly surprised by the KU campus. "Everyone told us Kansas was flat," she explained. "I expected the campus to be flat and desolate with concrete buildings."
"I am very pleased for the opportunity to get a close look at the American educational system," Mrs. Davis said. "I have heard very much about it."
When their academic work is completed, Mr. and Mrs. Davis will tour the U.S., she said.
Being forewarned about the Kansas heat, they have no intention of lingering here during the summer. "We hope to be out of Lawrence before it gets really hot," she said.
New history prof
He is Robert William Greaves who was a visiting professor at KU in 1965-66.
Greaves will teach courses in "Constitutional History of Great Britain" and "Great Britain 1830-1886," and direct readings courses for undergraduate honors and graduate students.
Money shortage delays KU humanities building
By Mike Shearer Kansas Staff Reporter
Kansas University's new humanities building faded further into the future yesterday.
Meeting at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, the Kansas Board of Regents voted to send the humanities building blueprints back to the drawing board for the second time because of inadequate funds.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the building, to be built on the site of old Robinson Gymnasium and Haworth Hall, will probably be delayed "at least six months" because of an approximate $1.2 million shortage.
Bids received from contractors all exceeded KU's $5.8 million allotment for the building.
Wescow said "inflationary trends" and "two-year old assessments" were responsible for the delay.
Henry Bubb, a board member, attributed the delay to the state architect's office and to the political appointment of state architects by governors.
Bubb said past governors and not the present governor were to blame for the system of choosing state architects.
He said, "I would hope this governor and future governors would take the state architects out of politics at least as far as schools are concerned.
"We're going to lose $1 million by putting this off another six months."
The University had originally planned a 25-story structure to house humanities offices and classrooms, but in late March, designers realized the building would exceed the $5.8 million allotment.
The administration and architects then decided to shrink the building to 15 stories and set Sept. 1 as a tentative starting date.
Wescoe said State Architect William R. Hale and consultants had suggested re-designing the building again when they realized the 15-story building would also exceed the $5.8 million.
Wescoe said he did not know what changes the designers would make to economize the building, but he added, "I personally think the tower cannot be reduced any further."
Although he said he felt the delays in the building's construction as his "greatest disappointments as chancellor," Wescoe did not blame the state architects for the delay.
and better quality buildings in Kansas than anyplace else," the Chancellor said.
"I think we get more buildings
Several board members said they would favor keeping the basic design created by Hale and Woodman and Van Doren, a Wichita architectural firm.
In other Regents action concerning KU:
- The degree of Master of Education, which Wescoe said was obsolete, will be eliminated when students currently enrolled for the degree complete their requirements.
Topsy's
OLD FASHIONED POPCORN
AND ICE CREAM
great
taste treats
for
everyone ...
candy apples • popcorn balls
caramel corn • pecan fudge
Malls Shopping Center
VI 2-7175
Open 11-10—Till 11 on Fri. Sat.
The board authorized appointment of an associate architect to prepare preliminary plans for the proposed student union satellite building to serve the Daisy Hill area.
- Remodeling of Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall, to accommodate a pipe organ, and remodeling of Flint Hall's photography teaching laboratories were approved.
Twelve KU women have been awarded Pi Beta Phi Educational Foundation Scholarships.
- The board authorized a program of exchange courses between KU and the University of Missouri at Kansas City, Mo., so that students might take certain
The recipients are Mary K. Beck, Council Grove; Louise A. Bednar, Topeka; Frances L. Craig, Garnett; Sandra S. Crumet, Lawrence; Doris F. Eisenbrandt, Moran; Patricia S. Grover, Hays; Terri L. Hammond, Hoisington; Jo Lynn Johnson, Hutchinson; Linda J. McDonald, Great Bend; Katherine L. Reed, Lawrence; Irma L. Stephens, Pratt, and Catherine L. Weir, Wichita.
Twelve Pi Phi scholars named
advanced courses in the other university without paying additional fees.
- Several remodeling and repair projects as well as land acquisition for the KU Medical Center were approved.
- The board agreed to extend the retirement benefits of the recently deceased Prof. Ethan Allen.
YOU'RE MY KIND
OF PEOPLE...
...SORRY ABOUT
THAT
And Micki's is still here to serve KU students and faculty by typing those term papers, projects, etc. Micki's also offers Notary Public service and Xeroxing.
Don't wait till the last minute. Save yourself all that time and effort. Inquire today!
MICKI's secretarial service is. 4/U! VI 2-0111----901 Ky. St.
Sheaffer's big deal gets you through 29 term papers,3 book reports,17 exams, 52 quizzes and 6 months of homework. Sorry about that.
Sheaffer's big deal means you can write twice as long. Because you get the long-writing Sheaffer dollar ballpoint plus an extra long-writing 49¢ refill free. All for just a dollar. How much do you think you can write?
The world's longest writing dollar ballpoint pen. SHEAFFER write?
$100
SPECIAL OFFER
FREE
EXTRA REFILL
SHEAFFER.
THE GOOD
BALLPOINT
writes longer,
smoother
© 1968 W. A. SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY, FORT MADISON, IOWA, A TEXTRON COMPANY
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 20, 1968
'Us folks' against 'them'
"He speaks the truth."
"He speaks straight to the people."
He speaks straight to the people,
"He tells us what we want to hear."
He tells us what George Wallace, presidential candidate of the American Independent Party, calls his supporters "us folks," carefully implying that he's just like them.
His "folks" believe that he will save the people from "them."
More than 10,000 of his folks cheered him Wednesday night at the American Royal in Kansas City, Mo.
They cheered as he told them:
"If you folks in Kansas City want to bus your children all the way to St. Louis to go to school, that's fine. But when I'm president, I'll turn back to Kansas City and Missouri the absolute control of the education of your children."
And then he talks about a law now in Congress concerning open housing. His voice grown louder as he tells "his folks" how the Congress of the United States is plotting to take away the freedom of the people to control their property.
"They're going to make a law to put you in jail if you don't want to sell your property." he tells them.
Wallace's voice shifts into a yell as he starts on his biggest selling point—law and order.
To him, as well as most of "his folks," Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren almost singlehandedly caused the complete breakdown of law and order. So Wallace dates the violence in America to eight years ago when Warren was appointed.
"They ought to give it back to us for free," he says as he invokes images of an orderly pre-Warren society. "They took it away from us."
"If you walk out of this hall tonight and someone knocks you on the head, he'll be out of jail before you're out of the hospital and on Monday morning they'll try the policeman instead of the criminal," he says, his finger iabbing the air.
And on he goes until his voice becomes a scream and the audience is screaming with him and waving their arms in the air.
Buried somewhere in the maze of "they" and "us folks," Wallace always mentions, "I have never made a statement about anybody because of what they were."
"I'm not a racist," he says over and over.
I'll not a racist, the sea.
Race is not an issue of my campaign, he said Wednesday at the Kansas City airport. Although most Negroes in Alabama might argue about Wallace's statements on his lack of prejudice, Wallace's campaign is definitely not "whites against blacks" but "us folks against them."
Dots and dashes
Rumors around Capital Hill have it that Lyndon Johnson's first strong endorsement of Hubert Humphrey came only after the presidential hopeful privately endorsed Lady Bird's barbecue sauce recipe.
* * * * *
The way George Wallace's campaign funds have swelled in recent weeks, the Alabamian should be first in line for a treasury department appointment.
$$
* * * * * *
$$
Perhaps there is some validity to the charge that Abe Fortas has aided the growth of pornography. Without the help of Fortas, it is doubtful that pornography would have been screened for members of the Senate.
$$
* * * * * *
$$
Columnist Max Frankel of the New York Times gives these two quotes from Hubert Humphrey. "Most of us are going to spend our time in the future.' But the politics of joy must have plummeted to a new low when vice president Humphrey was quoted as saying, 'My father used to tell me, 'most of your troubles are in your mind.'"
quotes...
"Some among us say the Negro has made great progress—which is true—and that he should be satisfied—which is neither true nor realistic."
Robert F. Kennedy
"A woman in Saranac, New York once boarded the Kennedy
family's private plane by mistake, and was taken aback to find therein Mrs. John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy and a number of assorted children. 'She was a very nice woman', said Robert later, 'but she thought it was very crowded for a commercial plane.'
Robert Kennedy
kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Executive Staff
Executive Stan
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Haney
Assistant Managing Editors, Pat Crawford, Charla Jenkins, Alan Wineson
Steve Morgan, Aller Winchester
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor Alison Steadman
Editorial Editor Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Shane Woods
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCrerey, Don Westerhaus, Andy
Zahradnik Marilyn Zook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Promotion Pam Fluton
Circulation Manager Jack Hurley
Classified Manager Barry Arthur
H
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017
"They look down their noses at us," he says and the people cheer.
"Those bureaucrats," he says and the people cheer. "Those press people and TV men," he says and the people cheer.
He simplifies the lines between "them" and "us folks," and says his people must save the country.
Wallace has transferred the race prejudice he has always been associated with into class prejudice and called it "law and order."
And ironically while calling for law and order, he is urging the people to hate "them." He whips the lower and middle classes who do not picket or riot or write angry books into the violence prevalent in America today, labels it righteous indignation and masks hate by calling it "law and order." Alison Steimel
Editorial Editor
ALEXANDER BUSHMAN
George Wallace
the rock hound
Doors' best By Will Hardesty
The Doors' latest effort, WAITING FOR THE SUN on Elektra, may be their best album to date. It incorporates the beautifully eerie Doors' sound with some new rhythms and effects to produce one of the finest albums of the summer.
WAITING FOR THE SUN gives all of the Doors a chance to show their musicianship while performing their own songs.
The album begins with "Hello, I Love You." This song seems to show off the new attitude of the album. "Hello" still has the cocky Doors wording, but is a little more subdued, asking and their-worldly—"Hello, I love you / Won't you tell me your name?
"Love Street" can only be described with the antique phrase "nice lilting melody"—what else could you call a song which has Jim Morrison singing "la-la-la la la la-la." It gives Ray Manzarek a chance to show off his superior ability on electric piano.
"Not to Touch the Earth" is typical of the Doors' first two albums—surrealistic and Dylanesque. This gives a hint of the Lizard King theme. Originally, the album was to contain a song on the Lizard King. The song was to be the "long song" which the first two albums contained. However, it ran too long and may be an album all its own. The WAITING FOR THE SUN jacket was designed to incorporate the song with a picture of the Lizard King and the words of the song on it.
"The Unknown Soldier" inspired a movie short of Morrison being executed by a firing squad. The song is a denunciation of modern society and the war it produces and condones. "Black is white, the news is read / Television children fed / Unborn living, living dead / Bullet strikes the helmet's head / And it's all over the unknown soldier."
Kansan movie review
'Rachel' Woodward's finest
bv Scott Nunlev
"Rachel, Rachel" is Joanne Woodward's finest performance. Doing more than merely aging an American Georgy girl, Woodward creates an outstanding film heroine who is unique and yet who displays an unsettling number of universal scars.
Approaching the last half of her life, Rachel is an unloved agrarian goddess. Or rather an agrarian goddess dethroned, as drained of the divine lifeblood as any of her mortician-father's dolls.
At morning she begs for the death in sleep and at night she pursues sexual release only in order to die again. The natureland of her reveries is lush with fields and flowers—but the real streets and yards and playgrounds of her world are deep in dust.
At the film's heart (and at its most vulnerable spot), the zombie goddess dies and is reborn in the fever of a revivalistic service. The healing word is "love," of course, the operative concept of any rejuvenation. Love released within Rachel, love once lying dormant and denied.
It is only at this moment—during the rejuvenation rites—that the movie's allegory threatens to intrude. Estelle Parsons struggles valiantly with weighty statements given to her more in a role as High Priestess than as Calla, the dummy-lonely schoolteacher.
The religious service itself is only an intellectualized shadow of the familiar country meeting; but it moves quickly, accomplishes its role in the film, and should not seriously alienate the enapt viewer.
Here, as with the entire movie, it is Joanne Woodward herself who provides the fascinating characteriza-tion, the lovely-ugly life that powers the success of "Rachel, Rachel." There is not an instant of camera study of Rachel that does not reveal Miss Woodward's total control of her part. Each shy glance, each bored breath supplies flesh to the tired bones of this unloved but lovable spinster.
Rachel's triumphant reign is brief, unfortunately, herrebirth a transient if magical affair.
Flowers bloom for her in reality-men and farms and farm animals blossom too. The high summer ritual of haying finds Rachel smiling from the loft.
But this is not the world of Breughel. Eligible young men (like luckily-married sisters) today turn from the rural and vanish into the urban. And this goddess, after all, is a bit over-aged: at 35 she is caught between the chilled generation of her mother's cabal and the heated flux of the new adolescents.
Rachel ultimately is Nowhere, belonging to neither youth nor age and allowed only a short Grand Ball before her midnight.
The directing of husband Paul Newman carefully skirts the syrup-tography that many of the candy-coated exterior scenes threaten to become. With dull interior sets, Newman builds a pattern of photographic contrast that amplifies Rachel's own honey-and-gall misery.
But Newman's most successful development is his extension of the familiar flashback technique.
Not only Rachel's childhood, but her "Juliet" like fantasies as well spring with surprise-energy into the simple narrative. In fact, there is an even more subtle category of heightened flashbacks as Rachel's nostalgia colors the mere recollection of childhood scenes.
These intrusions, like gusts, sweep into the film and blow fresh oxygen into the lungs of the audience. With an unfailing taste, Newman blends revery and reality so smoothly that at points—as Rachel caresses her principal or adopts her pet student, for example—the viewer is left momentarily to his own gasps.
(If this technique can be criticized, it is perhaps on the grounds of inconsistency. Why does "Rachel, Rachel" open so well in this introspective vein and then abandon its use? Has the promise of change in Rachel been that complete, that abrupt?)
Mr. and Mrs. Newman have created a film that certainly deserves its critical praise. In many ways "Rachel, Rachel" seems to be the most successful American usage of that disjointed, life-invoking cinema usually reserved to the European New Wave.
Friday, September 20, 1968
147
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
'Negro History' limited to 26 after big demand
By Steve Nafus Kansan Staff Reporter
Despite a great deal of student interest, the course in the history of the American Negro was opened to only 26 students this semester because the instructor preferred a small discussion group to a large lecture class.
"I wanted a small class so that there could be a discussion among equals. I think the instructor tends to look down on his students in a lecture situation. I wanted maximum participation from everyone in the class," said William M. Tuttle, assistant professor of history.
Commenting on the absence of other sections of the course, Tuttle said only two other members of the history faculty had done any research in the area, and one of them, Donald R. McCoy, professor of history, is presently doing special research on civil rights during the Truman administration at the Truman Library in Independence, Mo.
This lack of qualified instructors, according to Tuttle, is due to the newness of universal interest in the field.
"Such courses have been taught for years at Negro universities, but have only recently begun to find their way into the curriculum of white institutions. The graduate schools are presently developing specialists in the field of Negro history, but it will be a few years before enough qualified instructors will be available," said Tuttle.
Tuttle's current research interest is racial violence, especially the Chicago Riot of 1919, and for this reason he was asked by the director of Oliver College to teach a course in Negro history to Oliver College students. Before that course could be arranged, Tuttle was requested to open the course to all the students at the University. He agreed to the latter, but his class
load limited him to only one section, and he imposed a strict limitation on the number of students he would accept.
Only students who had had five hours of history and who had Tuttle's consent could enroll in the course. Tuttle said he accepted students on the basis of background in other history courses and their genuine interest in the course. He said he gave preference to those who could not take the course in the future. But far more than 26 students tried to enroll.
W. Stitt Robinson, chairman of the department of history, said his department was interested in the large potential enrollment in the class, and would consider it when planning future developments.
Tuttle appeared pleased that so many people were interested in his course in spite of his preference for a smaller class. He did observe, though, that the greatest interest from white students came only after it was announced that the course would be taught.
"I must have personally turned down 50 students, and quite a few others were turned down at the enrollment tables at the Kansas Union—quite a few," Tuttle said.
Tuttle was referring to the protest petition given by representatives of the Negro students to the KU Human Relations committee last May. The petition protested the absence of a Negro Pom pon girl, the lack of courses in Negro history, the lack of Negro athletic coaches and the lack of Negro faculty members.
When questioned about the single section of the course, Tuttle replied, "It may seem like tokenism, but I do not think it is. This course was being planned in March, even before the petition."
University fees due Wednesday penalties dealt for late payments
To avoid a $10 late payment fee, students must pay their University fees before Wednesday according ato William L. Kelly, registrar. Cancelled enrollment results if payment does not reach the business office by Oct. 4.
Optional fees are $6.50 for the
Higher fee statements include fees for those who returned the optional fee cards at enrollment. Optional fees include payment for the Jayhawker, class dues, and Blue Cross-Blue Shield coverage.
Undergraduates and graduate students who are residents of Kansas pay $170.50 while nonresidents pay $400.50. This payment completes registration.
Jayhawker, and class dues of $3 for freshmen, sophomores and juniors, and $12 for seniors. Additional $54.00 per year for single students and $187.50 per year for married students provides Blue Cross-Blue Shield coverage.
Allen "satisfactory"
F. C. (Phog) Allen, 83-year-old former KU basketball coach and athletic director, underwent surgery at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., Wednesday.
Hospital officials reported Allen was in satisfactory condition Thursday. A Lawrence osteopath, Allen retired as KU basketball coach in 1956.
To supplement the present history faculty, Francis Heller, dean of faculties, and Robinson have been in contact with Professor Lorenzo Greene, who is presently employed at Lincoln University in Springfield, Mo., a predominantly Negro school. Greene, is Negro, is "well established" in his profession, according to Heller.
--profound concern in the selection of the new chancellor of the University of Kaaas. We urge the Board of Regents to include representatives of the faculty, the undergraduate students and the graduate students on the search committee which will be appointed to recommend candidates to succeed Chancellor Wescoe."
Heller reports that nothing has been definitely arranged yet, but Greene will visit the KU campus next spring for further discussion.
In the meantime, Tuttle has given his students an 11-page bibliography of current literature on American Negro history compiled by Allan H. Spear of the University of Minnesota. One of Tuttle's goals for the course is for his students to determine whether African family patterns, folklore and religion survived in the oppression of the American system of slavery.
Throughout the semester, guest lecturers will discuss specialized areas of study such as Supreme Court decisions on segregation or the psychological effects of slavery.
Disruptive students denied federal aid?
Washington -Under a compromise higher education act agreed upon by a U.S. Senate- House conference committee Wednesday, college students participating in campus disorders may be denied government loans and grants.
In the final version of the $7.2-billion bill, the committee included a directive to schools to refuse federal aid for two years to any student convicted of a crime which the institution finds disruptive.
The administration is free to decide whether to keep federal funds from students who take part in conduct which should disqualify, the committee said.
This provision replaced house wording which would have directed schools to deny federal aid to students engaging in disruptions.
Campus Bus Schedule BUS SCHEDULE FOR CAMPUS EXPRESS
BUS SCHEDULE FOR CAMPUS EXPRESS
Leave Ellsworth via Lewis to
Leave Ellsworth vld Lewis to Campus and Downtown
*On the hour, 10, 20, 30, *40,
50 minutes per day, hold*
*60 o'clock, hold* 50 o'um
Leave Oliver and Neismith Darms
at 10 a.m. and 40 minutes post hour,
or 10 a.m. and 40 minutes before.
Leave G.S.P. and Corbin to Campus
on the hour, 15, 20, 35, 45 and
55 minutes past hour
7:00 a.m. to 6:35 p.m.
Leave 19th Stewart for Campus
(transfer for Downtown)
*On the hour and @30 min. past.
hour: 7 o'clock a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Leave G.S.P. and Corbin to Downtown
Leave 9th and Mass. (Downtown)
to KU and Dormitories
10, 30 and 50 minutes past hour,
6: 50 a.m. to 6: 30 p.m.
On the hour, *10, 20, *25, 40
and *50 minutes past hour
7:20 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Leave Campus to Oliver, Neismith and 19th and Stewart
25 and 55 minutes past hour,
7:25 a.m. to 5:25 p.m.
Give G.S.P. and Corbin to
Downtown,
2, 22 and 42 minutes past hour,
7:25 a.m. to 7:05 p.m.
Lewis and Billworth and
Lewis (Daisy Field)
5, 10, 25, 40, 45 and 50 minutes
past hour, 7:05 a.m. to 6:45 p.m.
Leave Campus to G.S.P. and Downtown
- Indicates Campus Only * No service Sundays and Holidays
SAVE 25c—15 Rides for $2.00
Campus Only
Lawrence Bus Co., Inc.
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Clip and Save
The hanging was the best show in town!
Slides and Spanish refreshments will highlight a reunion for members of the Spanish Summer Language Institute. The reunion will be from 2-5 p.m. Sept. 29 at 905 Emery Road, apartment 10B.
Student aid asked in chancellor hunt
The executive committee of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors yesterday telegrammed the KU Board of Regents asking them to allow a student-faculty committee to aid in the search for a successor to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
Guests at the reunion will include Cary L. Brower, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, and Michael Doudoroff, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese.
The group of 24 KU students toured Spain for three weeks this summer. They studied in Barcelona for one month and traveled individually during the final ten days of the trip.
Such a committee, if approved, sets a precedent. During the 1960 search for a new chancellor an advisory committee of faculty members met with the Board of Regents. There was, however, no student representation in the search for Franklin D. Murphy's successor.
Dr. Roy P. Laird, president of the association, stressed the need for initiating such a committee.
CLINT
EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM
HIGH"
"This is an important transition time in the life of American universities in which there is a major thrust for wider participation of faculty and students in university government. A committee such as the one proposed is a positive step in this direction." Laird said.
The text of the telegram was as follows:
CLINT EASTWOOD IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
"The members of the Executive Committee of the University of Kansas Chapter of the American Association of University Professors wish to express their
Spanish reunion set
MATINEE 2:30
EVENING 7:15 - 9:30
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
who cares about a
35 year old virgin?
who cares about a
35 year old virgin?
joanne woodward
in the PAUL NEWMAN production of
rachel,rachel
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES
TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS
Two Showings
7:15 - 9:15
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
who cares about a
35 year old virgin?
joanne woodward
in the PAUL NEWMAN production of
rachel,rachel
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES
TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS W
Two Showings
7:15 - 9:15
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
TONIGHT!
'The Facts of Life
MOM
and DAD'
TONIGHT!
HIT NO. 2
'SHE
SHOULDA
SAID 'NO!'
SEE
BIRTH
of
a
BABY
Films that Dare to Tell the Truth!
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
Box Office
Open 6:30
Granada
THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-5788
TONIGHT!
The Facts of Life
MOM and DAD
TONIGHT!
HIT NO. 2
"SHE SHOULDA SAID 'NO!'
SEE BIRTH
of a
BABY
Films that Dare to Tell the Truth!
Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
Box Office
Open 6:30
Show At Dusk
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 20, 1968
Illinois and KU met last during wild 20's
Will history repeat itself?
When KU and Illinois take the field Saturday it will mark the fifth time the teams have met. The four previous times turned out to be winning years for both schools.
Back in 1892, Kansas beat the Illini 28-4 at Lawrence. That year KU finished 7-1 and Illinois won 9 lost 3 and tied 2.
Oklahoma City (UPI)—The Hills of Michigan, brothers Dave and Mike, pitched and putted their way into a two-stroke lead in the first round of the $200,000 PGA team championship Thursday with a blistering nine-under-par 31-31-62.
Illinois won 30-0 in 1916 at Champaign finishing the season 3-3-1 while the Jayhawks were posting a 4-3-1 record. The following year the Illini won again at home, 22-0, and finished with a 5-2-1 record with Kansas' final record 6-2.
Another interesting sidelight is that Kansas has won only five openers in the past three decades, and only one of those victories has been away from home.
The fourth meeting was also at Champaign, in 1929, where Illinois won 25-0 on the way to a 6-1-1 season, while KU finished 4-4.
Hill brothers lead in PGA
Defending champions Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer made a run at climbing to the top, but fell short with a seven-under-par 31-33-64.
The Hills and Nicklaus and Palmer, as did nine of the top 10 tandems, got in their opening round licks in the half of the field that played the comparatively short and easy 6,700-yard, par 35-36-71 Twin Hills Country Club score.
Dave Hill, the eldest of the brothers by two years at age 31, did the most par-wrecking with five birds and an eagle, but brother Mike kicked in with a pair of 15 and 10-foot birdie puts and, in Dave's words, "made three great pars" to stave off disaster.
Dave started things on the back nine, two, with a 16-foot birdie on the 10th. He canned a four-footer on the 13th, reached the green on the 559-yard 16th in two shots and dropped a 10-footer for an eagle, then wedged to within almost "gimme" distance for his final birdie on the 18th.
Dave got the family bid with a 20-foot putt on the first hole, Mike contributed his birdies at the fourth and sixth holes and saved a par with a 14-footer at No. 8 before Dave pitched to within four feet and sank it to make the turn in four-under-par.
The field was bunched closely back of Nicklaus and Palmer as the 124 teams prepared to change courses Friday to determine the 60 low teams and ties who will play the final 36 holes at the 7,100-yard par 36-36-72 Quail Creek Country Club course.
KU track team meets with coach in closed session
The KU track team conducted a closed meeting last night with head coach Bob Timmons.
After the meeting Timmons said that the wearing of moustaches by track members was discussed. It was decided, Timmons said, that the Negro track men could wear moustaches because of tradition.
Timmons agreed to work on a list of undisclosed requests presented to him by some track members earlier in the day.
Of those five victories, four have been at the expense of the same school—Texas Christian The only away from home opener the Jayhawks have won since 1937 was at Fort Worth against Texas Christian in 1951.
The last time KU won an opening game anywhere was in 1964 when the Jayhawks shaded Texas Christian, 7-3, at Lawrence.
KU's probable starting team
Split End 81 Geo. McGowan 180
Split Tackle 70 Larry Brown 125
Split Guard 67 Dave Alkins 215
Center 55 Dale Evans 209
Tight Guard 65 K. Wertzberger 210
Tight Tackle 76 K. Christensen 164
Quarterback 90 John Bollard 214
Quarterback 10 B. Douglas 215
Tailback 23 D. Shanklin 168
Fullback 45 Mike Reeves 211
Wingback 28 John Jackson 175
Left End 84 Vernon Vanoy 260
Left Tackle 61 O. Turgeon 251
Right Tackle 73 Steve Lawson 252
Right End 83 John Zook 253
Linebacker 62 Emery Hicks 232
Left Halfback 20 Tommy Ball 181
Right Halfback 18 Bill Bailor 160
Right Safety 31 Andy Anderson 160
Right Safety 31 David Morgan 192
Golfer named
Uniform numbers and official playing weights listed.
New York (UPI)-Shelley Hamlin of Fresno, Calif., was selected Wednesday to replace Phyllis Preuss on the U.S. women's golf team for the world amateur championships in Australia Oct. 2.
Miss Preuss, of Pompano Beach, Fla., Miss Hamlin's Curtis Cup teammate, withdrew because of illness.
Athletic Guy
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI)— Gov. Harold E. Hughes of Iowa was a well known high school athlete before he came to prominence in politics.
Hughes in 1938 won the state high school discus championship and in 1940 he was an allstate football guard. Hughes attended Ida Grove High School.
C
PEPPER: "NOT DISPLEASED"
KU football coach Pepper Rodgers observed the action on the practice field Thursday afternoon as his squad prepared for its season opener against Illinois in Champaign, Ill., Saturday. Rodgers said he was not satisfied with the Jayhawks, but he wasn't "displeased either."
KU winds up drills
KU wound up its drills for Saturday's opener against Illinois in a 48-minute practice session Thursday afternoon.
Coach Pepper Rodgers said he was not satisfied with the team, but that he was "not displeased either."
play, but apparently has changed his mind.
"Our timing is better," Rodgers said.
Carl Salb, sophomore, who was a shot putter for KU's freshman track team last year, will make the trip as a middle guard. Earlier Salb had indicated that he didn't feel he was ready to
Rodgers singled out three Illini as players to watch in Saturday's game. They are fullback Rich Johnson, quarterback Bob Naponic, and defensive tackle Tony Pleviak.
"We are as healthy as we could be." Rodgers said.
Only Dick Fortier is injured and can not make the trip.
A 48-man squad will leave JRP at 1:00 p.m. today for the trip to Champaign. Sixteen varsity members will not make the trip.
Roscoe is gone
Warrensburg, Mo. (UPI)—A spokesman for a Central Missouri State College fraternity Thursday asked for help in finding the school's mule mascot, Roscoe.
Members of Sigma Pi fraternity discovered the absence Wednesday.
Giant Poster from any photo
PARKS CARE
2 ft. x 3 ft.
only $1.95
($4.95 value)
*Send any black & white or color photo (no negatives) and the name "Swingline" cut out from any Swingline package (or reasonable facsimile) to: POSTER-MART, P.O. Box 165, Woodside, N.Y. 11377. Enclose $1.95 cash, check, or money order (no C.O.D.'s). Add sales tax where applicable.
Poster rolled and mailed (postpaid) in sturdy tube. Original material returned undamaged. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Get a
Swingline Tot Stapler
98¢
(including 1000 staples)
~per size CUB Desk
r only $1.69
Unconditionally guaranteed.
At any stationery, variety, or book store.
Swingline® INC.
LONG ISLAND CITY, N.Y. 11101
Sandy's ...
Speedy Service & Quality Food
Special Fri. & Sat. only
3 Hi Lows (double cheeseburgers) for only $1.00
Sandy's
2120 West 9th
Phone – VI 2-2930
Friday, September 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Green Bay may spoil early Viking dreams
Minneapolis (UPI) -The maxi test for Minny comes up this Sunday.
The ambitious Minnesota Vikings, entertaining title thoughts after scoring a record 47 points in their first game last week, come face-to-face with reality in the form of the Green Bay Packers, who have ended more pleasant dreams than an alarm clock during the last decade.
The game pits the only two unbeaten teams in the National Football League's Central Division and probably will be the last time this season any team meets Green Bay on an equal footing. The Packers are favored by eight points.
The Vikings, who compiled a dismal 3-8-3 record last season, have two things going for them: an amazing record on the Packers' home field and a vastly improved quarterback in Joe Kapp.
Minnesota has won three of its last four games on Packer sod, including an incredible 10-7 decision last year despite the fact that Kapp completed only two of 11 passes. They did it with ball control that time and plan to do it again, although Kapp's one year of NFL experience appears to have done him a world of good.
He completed 16 of 20 passes, including 11 in a row, against Atlanta last week.
"They were very impressive in beating Atlanta," said Green Bay Coach Phil Bengtson, whose team flogged Philadelphia 30-13. "And, yes, we do seem to have a little trouble beating the Vikings.
"Their backs-Bill Brown and Clint Jones are running real well. Gene Washington is a greatly improved receiver. And Joe Kapp is much smoother than he was a year ago.
Lawrence Lions will be good again
by Jack Pauley Kansan Sports Writer
Lawrence High School will once again have a good football team says Lion Coach Al Woolard.
Woolard cited better speed and some good pass receivers for his optimism. Twelve lettermen, including seven regulars from last year form the nucleus for this year's squad.
Top college prospects include Mike Cerne, a 180 pound senior fullback; Larry Dillon, 161 pound senior quarterback; Larry Kimball, 172 pound senior halfback; and senior tackles Geary King and George Schuler, 206 pounds and 220 pounds respectively.
"Cerne will undoubtedly be one of the most sought after athletes in the United States next spring," Woolard said.
Shawnee Mission North, Shawnee Mission East and Topeka figure to be Lawrence's toughest opponents during the season. All three games are away.
"Anyone who wants to play football at Lawrence High School is allowed to play," Woolard said. "We pick 55 or 60
for the varsity, while the rest play on the Little Lions squad. They have their own 8-game schedule."
Woolard, in his 19th season at Lawrence, said his players grow up dreaming of the day when they will play for KU.
Few of Woolard's football players go out of state to play college football. He could think of only three at the present time-two in Florida and one in Colorado.
Woolard recalls when he coached John Hadl, now quarterback for the San Diego Chargers and a former Lawrence High School and KU star.
"Hadl played on some Lawrence teams which helped run up a 49 game winning streak between 1956 and 1960. He graduated in 1957."
Discussing the new round-robin football tournament being considered for Kansas high schools Woolard said that if everyone else wants it, then so does he.
He originally came from Oklahoma where they have such a tournament. It works there, so he doesn't see any reason why it won't work in Kansas.
P
DETROIT: Shirtless Dick McAuliffe (right) joins others in dunking pitcher Denny McLain (left) in a whirlpool bath in the clubhouse Tuesday after the Detroit Tigers clinched the American League pennant by beating the New York Yankees, 2-1. (UPI TELEPHOTO)
Joe Willie's grade improving
New York (UPI)—Joe Namath's passing grade gets better with each season.
Namath, who passed for more yards than any other quarterback last season, retained his ability to eat up distance with his throws as he leads the pack today with a 10.4 average gain. The New York Jets quarterback was No. 1 in 1967 with an 8.16-yard average gain per throw.
New York's Don Maynard, who caught eight passes in last Sunday's victory over Kansas City, leads the league with 203 yards gained on receptions. Sid Blanks of Houston has snared the most passes, nine, in two games.
Dick Post, a second-year man, tops the ground gainers with 140 yards. The San Diego running back has carried the ball 16 times for an 8.8 average.
Kicking specialist Jan Stene rud of Kansas City is the leading
Wasn't His Day
NEW YORK (UPI)—Oscar Walker of Buffalo became the first National League baseball player to strike out five times in a nine-inning game on June 20, 1879.
This Sunday Begins a Fall-Sermon Series:
"When Always Is Heard A Discouraging Word"
Rev. Ronald L. Sundbye preaching
We invite you to come hammer out with us the possibilities of extending and deepening those "borders of our lives."
"Like a poem poorly written we are verses out of rhythm, couplets out of rhyme in syncopated time. And the dangling conversation and superficial sighs are the borders of our lives." — from "The Dangling Conversation"
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
10th and Vermont
Services at 8:30
9:30
11:00
"It is not for us to foretell the day, but the day will come when men will be called to utter the Word of God in such a way that the world is changed and renewed. There will be a new language, perhaps quite unreligious, but liberating and saving, like the language of Jesus, so that men are horridd at it, and yet conquered by its power..."
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
scorer with 27 points, achieved on eight field goals and three extra points.
Rookie George Atkinson of Oakland leads in punt returns with a 41.0 average on 205 yards in five attempts.
Dennis Parte 'of San Diego is the best punter with a 58.5-yard average, Bob Neff of Miami tops the kickoff return leaders with a 60.5 average, and Ken Houston of Houston heads interceptions men with one theft for 66 yards.
New
from
Roblee..
.
the
Brawny Handsewn $ ^{*} $
The handsewn loafer that's as rugged as it is good-looking. the Osage, by Roblee. Notched welting around the thicker, longer-wearing sole. Genuine handsewn vamp . . . beef-rolls . . penny slot. A hefty brute of a slip-on that's light and comfortable on your feet.
ran & dark brown
ROBLEE.
Sizes to 13
$18.00
M'Coy's
SHOES
813 Mass. St.
Phone VI 3-2091
M'Coy's
SHOES
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 20,1968
James Logan now in private practice
by Rebecca Massey Kansan Staff Reporter
James K. Logan, whose parents didn't even own a car until he was a junior in high school, sat surrounded by books and family photographs in his plush, paneled and carpeted office of the Tower Building, Olathe, Kansas.
9
James K. Logan Practicing law in Olathe.
Logan, former dean of the KU School of Law, turned in his resignation this spring, which became effective July 1. Then he ran for U.S. Senator in the Democratic primary and lost.
He is now a practicing lawyer in the Payne and Jones professional corporation, a ten-man firm in Johnson County, "the fastest growing county in the state," according to Logan.
"Private practice is a different life—much quieter in a sense. I'm a corporate tax and estate lawyer dealing with decedents estates. These are also the areas in which I taught. They're very technical but I have a statutory mind—I absorb detailed laws and regulations better than most people. I think they're some of the same characteristics a good senator needs to have."
r ett dean's position was political
Logan felt his position as dean was in a sense a political one.
"You've got to keep all the constituents happy," he said.
"Eight to ten years is about all a person can be effective as dean."
Also, he was coming to the choice of being an administrator or working in law.
In his words, "Being an administrator never appealed to me that much. The only thing that ever competed for my affection for law was politics." And he felt the best way to prepare for a political life was to go into private practice.
Asked if he originally planned to run for public office this year, Logan said, "In a sense it was impulsive. A few days after Martin Luther King's assassination I decided to run for office. I saw Bill Robinson running in the
Democratic primary for the Senate and I knew there was a tremendous array of opposition."
Logan was also a strong supporter of Robert F. Kennedy. In fact, if Kennedy had been elected, Logan would have been his farm adviser. After Kennedy's assassination Logan said, "I was emotionally involved at that time. If these people weren't to have dined in vain then qualified people should do something. On June 10 I filed for office with no press conference, no financial support or organization."
Race definitely worthwhile
"I knew the task I faced, but I felt the race was worthwhile. We had seven weeks before the primary. The last six weeks I spent on the road, 6-7 days a week trying to convince Democrats I didn't have two heads. We almost carried it off. If I had gotten in a month earlier we would have won—if my opponent had spent a little less money; fantastic costs were involved. I was prepared for not winning—less disappointed than my followers. I thought I was going to win during the campaign, but was prepared to lose."
Asked if he would run again for the Senate or the Kansas gubernatorial, he was vague in answering. "I've got a good-sized deficit from this campaign—$10,000. It will take a while to pay that off. Friends, law school classmates, professors helped me, but I can't depend on them again. In order to run there would have to be some other source of money. You can't go into a campaign lightly, and I won't be out of the hole two years from now."
According to Mrs. Carrie Feinstein, Logan's press secretary during his campaign, the Democratic party wants him to run for governor in two years. But Mrs. Feinstein would like to see him in the Senate. "Jim is a fascinating man—terribly bright. He needed and wanted to run for the Senate. He is an egoist, but he has to be to be good. He's bright and he knows it. He strikes you with a warmth and sincerity. He looks, watches, and learns. He will win the next time. He was obviously disturbed—disappointed that he had lost the election. He's coming back—the man is too good and too needed not to run."
If this is the kind of paper you would like to be reading, we will send it to you right away at half the regular price of $24.00 a year.
There is a good reason why these "pros" read the Monitor: the Monitor is the world's only daily international newspaper. Unlike local papers, the Monitor focuses exclusively on world news — the important news.
At last count, we had more than 3,800 newspaper editors on our list of subscribers to The Christian Science Monitor. Editors from all over the world.
The Monitor selects the news it considers most significant and reports it, interprets it, analyzes it—in depth. It takes you further into the news than any local paper can.
Clip the coupon. Find out why newspapermen themselves read the Monitor — and why they invariably name it as one of the five best papers in the world.
Half-price to college students and faculty: the newspaper that newspaper people
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITO
FOCUS 1.8. quals: Where and how?
read...
The Christian Science Monitor
1 Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Please enter a Monitor subscription for the name below.
I am enclosing $... (U. S. funds) for the period
checked. □ 1 year $12 □ 9 months $9 □ 6 months $6
Name ...
Street... Apt./Rm. #...
City... State... Zip...
□ College student ... Year of graduation
□ Faculty member ... P.CN-65
And Logan said, "I suppose I'll run if I feel the state and country need me. It depends on whether I can afford to do it financially, how well I like private practice, and how much my family needs me."
Vietnam the situation there will have changed. "If the war is still going on four years from now, the people will throw the President out on his ear," he said.
Logan will be going to Stanford to teach as a visiting professor in the spring semester. The contract was signed last year before he knew he was going to be in politics. Had he won the senatorial election he would have been released from contract, but now they insist that he come.
If he did run again he would keep his present farm policy, which calls for elimination of acreage and production controls for farmers. In Vietnam, he says, "I'm convinced that we've made a mistake. We ought to gradually withdraw. We've got to make the South Vietnamese negotiate realistically—take over their own war. We are the Big Brother image—fighting, negotiating, controlling." But he believes by the time he is once again able to state his political position on
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
A New Church for A New Age
1 block west of Holiday Inn
Worship 9 & 11 a.m.
Church School 9:45 a.m.
Student Reception
This Sunday September 15 9:45 a.m.
— Pastors — ·
Harold M. Mallett Reinhold Schmidt, Jr.
We clean your outers to make you look inner!
LIVINGRICE DRY CLEANERS
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners Now at 1029 New Hamp.
featuring: Drive-up Window Off Street Parking Extended Hours to serve you: 7 a.m.- 7 p.m. (Mon. - Fri.) 7 a.m.- 5:30 p.m. (Sat.)
daily pickup & delivery to all KU dorms, fraternities and sororities.
KU
GO BIG BLUE Press Out The Illini!
Don't let the Reading Meany Blow Your Cool!
THE CARTOONER
y
Don't get so hung up on reading assignments this semester you don't have time to do your thing. Enroll today in the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course. Become a Dynamic Reader, and breeze through reading assignments. You'll learn to read at speeds 3 to 10 times faster than your present rate. And that's not all . . . You'll learn how to comprehend reading material at a rapid rate (even technical material). You'll learn how to recall the material you have read at test time. You'll learn new study habits, and how to read for pleasure at a rapid rate.
The Reading Dynamics Course is more than rapid reading . . . It's a whole new experience.
Plan to attend one of these free demonstrations
At each demonstration a drawing will be made. The winner will receive a $25 scholarship . . . Plan to attend, YOU may be a winner.
Thursday, September 19th: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union*
Monday, September 23rd: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union*
Tuesday, September 24th: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union*
* Chester bulletin board for room number
Classes meet once a week, for eight weeks
Saturdays, 9:00 to 12:00 a.m., beginning September 21 Mondays, 3:00 to 6:00 p.m., beginning September 23 Tuesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 24 Wednesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 25
DON'T LET READING ASSIGNMENTS GET YOU!
PLEASE RESERVE SPACE for me in the class beginning on a ( ) definite ( ) tentative basis.
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
CITY___
STATE ___ ___ ZIP CODE
I would like to receive additional information. PLEASE SEND BROCHURE. I UNDERSTAND NO SALESMAN WILL CALL.
For additional information contact:
WESLEY FOUNDATION
BUILDING
1314 Oread Road
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone: 913 VI 3-6424
*
Evelyn Wood
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
EST.1959
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 20, 1968
U-HAUL
JAYHAWK RALLY ON DAISY HILI
The 1968-69 Pom pon squad and yell leaders lead enthusiastic Jayhawks in a spirited chant at the Traditions Rally and dance at Templin during Orientation Week.
Yell team warns Big 8, revamps cheer style
Pom pon girls and yell leaders hope to make "Beware Big Eight—This is the Year of the Jayhawk!" a campus watchword during the 1968 football season.
The slogan, however, is only one of the innovations in this year's cheering style.
Bob Hartman and his fellow yell leaders are emphasizing gymnastics this fall by revamping standard cheers with new gymnastic stunts.
A miniature trampoline, "the mini-trim," which has a webbed jumping area of about 6 square feet, will be used especially for kick-off cheers, Hartman said Wednesday.
Shirley Gossett, head Pom pon girl, explained her squad has devised complementary motions for the gymnastics. In their new routines, the girls are working for more movement on the field instead of the traditional straight line. Miss Gossett said, "We'll try to move into more formations than in past years."
The yell leaders decided to experiment with gymnastics because two members, Mark Hannah, Overland Park sophomore, and Colin Martin, Rapid City, S.D., sophomore, have competitive gymnastic experience, Hartman said.
"We hope to move toward a completely gymnastic squad for next year." he added.
"We're all going to be gymnasts before the year's over," Hartman laughed. He said the team has already learned such stunts as back handsprings and pitch-ups.
For the first time, yell leaders will be stationed in the stands at football games. Miss Gossett explained, "Both groups will be working to develop a closer contact with the fans."
According to this publisher, most people, regardless of their present reading skill, can use this simple technique to improve their reading ability to a remarkable degree. Whether reading stories, books, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire pages in seconds with this method.
To acquaint the readers of this newspaper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing rapid reading skill, the company has printed full details of its interesting self-training method in a new booklet, "How to Read Faster and Retain More," mailed free. No obligation. Send your name, address, and zip code to: Reading, 835 Diversely, Dept. 167-019, Chicago, Ill. 60614. A postcard will do.
A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique of rapid reading which should enable you to increase your reading speed and yet retain much more. Most people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately
Like the yell leaders, the Pompon girls have been practicing for their first appearance Sept. 28, when the Jayhawks meet Indiana. The girls will be featured during halftime.
"Everyone learned the basics and traditional routines in May, but practices were suspended for the summer," Miss Gossett said. Work on new routines began Sept. 5.
Away from home the Pompon girls will perform only when accompanied by the KU band. Miss Gossett explained that they found performing to organ music at the National Invitational
Hatman said that the yell leaders, Pom pon girls and the band will cheer at Alumni Association-sponsored pep rallies for most out-of-town games.
Are You A Slow Reader
Other yell leaders are John Gelissel, Prairie Village junior; Scott Curry, Prairie Village senior; White Prairie Village sophomore; Craig Pedicord, Corpus Christi Tex. junior; Rick Meyer, Bonner Springs senior; and Paul Clendening, Prairie
Four home pep rallies are scheduled for the 1968 season two more than last year. Hartman said the squads hope to have a torchlight rally, probably for homecoming.
Along with Miss Gosset, Pom pon girls include Mary Williams, Kansas City sophomere; Bari Robinson, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Karen Larsen, Kansas City senior; Janet Merrick, Mission junior; and Gwenaeus Klein, Mission junior; and Gwenaeus Steffen, Hutchinson junior; and Gwennaeus Steffen, Hutchinson junior.
Tourney in New York last spring upsatisfactory.
Deborah Youngstrom, Des Moines,
Iowa, junior; Elizabeth Fronto,
Topeka junior; and Connie Cerne, Lawrence sophomore are alternates.
Vietnam veteran enrolls in KU engineering school
by Alan Hansberry Kansan Staff Reporter
"We were walking down this trail, and we were ambushed. It was the first time I'd been under actual fire. I was the fourth man from the point."
Another nameless Vietnam skirmish had begun. For one GI, however, the road from high school dropout to the college campus has also begun.
The GI, Gary Renner, Overland Park freshman, realized for the first time since joining the Army he would have time to complete his high school education. Within weeks he had passed the Army's Education Development test, and had applied to the University of Kansas.
"As I rounded a bend a VC came at me with a bayonet. I dodged aside but caught it on my left arm. I pulled the trigger on my weapon and killed him." Wounded, the soldier spent the next four days in an Army hospital
Memories of the "land of the all night generator" influenced him to undertake a college career.
He said draft protesters and anti-Vietnam demonstrators bothered most GI's fighting in Southeast Asia.
Renner said, "I've got to sweat over here, why don't they" was the predominate attitude most fighting men held. "The GH's want them over there." He said, "Nobody likes to be drafted."
Renner remembered, "What got me was the race riots."
CONSERVATION
The ex-soldier will study engineering this fall after completing 16 months in Vietnam.
UNITED NATIONS —(UPI)— The Council of Europe has decided to launch two conservation measures -a clean water campaign this year and a Nature Conservancy Year in 1970, the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) reports.
THE KU B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL counselorship invites you to the
HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES
Sun., Sept. 22
Sun., Sept. 22
Rosh Hashanah Eve. ... 7:30 p.m.
Mon., Sept. 23
1st Day Rosh Hashanah ... Morning 9:30 a.m.
Tues., Sept. 24 ... Evening 7:30 p.m.
2nd Day Rosh Hashanah ... Morning 9:30 a.m.
Tues., Oct. 1
Yom Kippur Eve. ... 7:30 p.m.
Wed.. Oct. 2
... 9:30 a.m.
Yom Kippur Day ... 9:30 a.m.
Breakfast will follow at the conclusion of Yom Kippur Day.
For transportation call: Nancy Friedman VI 1-21340 Al Blumenthal VI 2-6600
Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland
CAROLINE
$350
ALSO FROM
247
WEDDING
RING 75
MAN'S RING
125
REGISTERED
Keepsake'
DIAMOND RINGS
You'll never forget the day you choose your Keepsake. Its matchless beauty and elegant styling will always remind you of your most wonderful moment . . . your engagement day.
Rags enlarged to show detail.
PROFESSOR OR PERFORMANCE OVERSEAS
Good Housekeeping
GUARANTEES
TREATMENT IN ROMANIA TO COMPARE
GOOD KNOWLEDGE KEEPING
GOVERNMENT IN RETURN TO COMMUNITY
Ray Christian
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
Special College Terms
809 Mass.
VI 3-5432
A new lightweight wing-tip?
It's here from FLORSHEIM!
Black and Brown
New, smooth and flexible.
Smoothly styled Florsheim with just the right touch of detailing—slightly broader toe, lightweight Ped-Flex construc-tion. Very smart in finely grained calfskin with medallion perforated wing-tip.
here from FLORSHEIM!
Arensberg's
=Shoes
$28.95
Friday, September 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
People-to-People seeks exchange among students
People-to-People (P-to-P) has overhaul its organization to narrow the communication gap between the American and the 650 foreign students at the University.
The changes were discussed at the organization's membership meeting Wednesday evening in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Referring to the gap, Clark Coan, dean of foreign students and P-to-P advisor, said, "There is very little relationship between foreign students and American students in class. This is one of the greatest recognized problems.
"We're trying to achieve more cultural exchange," he said.
"The gap has been overlooked in the past," said Frank Hummer, Topea senior and P-to-P chairman.
This is the aim of a new discussion system of the contact committee. About seven American and foreign students will meet for discussions. The number of groups will depend on the interest shown.
Cricket Appel, Webster Groves, Mo., senior and P-to-P vice-chairman, said the groups would appeal to the graduate foreign students, who comprise two-thirds of KU's foreign student population.
While several programs have been abolished, English in Action will be retained. Instead of single pairings for language help, small groups will be formed.
New York (UPI)—The Ford Foundation announced Thursday a $1 million doctoral fellowship program designed to help young Negro men and women become college teachers.
Ford Fellowships to aid Negroes
Grants of $186,700, affecting Missouri, also were announced.
The foundation said the program is intended to supplement college teacher fellowship programs already in existence, and was prompted by evidence that these "color blind" programs do not assist enough young Negro students.
Less than one per cent of doctorates are held by Negroes, the foundation said, and less than one per cent of doctoral candidates now in graduate schools are Negroes. The new program, which will be initially funded at $1 million, would double the number of black doctoral candidates, according to the foundation.
Fellowship meets
The Associate Professor of Radiation Biophysics, Ben Freisen, will speak on "Claims of Christ" at the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship meeting at 7 p.m. today at 829 Mississippi St.
Spencer Library waits for air conditioning unit
The Spencer Research Library will not open until early October, David W. Heron, library director, said Thursday.
Because of a malfunctioning of the building's air-conditioning system, the University has not accepted the building from the contractors. Heron said.
Alexandra Mason, in charge of special collections, said due to the nature of the collection the library must be kept at a constant 70 degrees with 55 per cent humidity.
Until the adjustment is made the special collections cannot be moved. The collections, which contain many rare and otherwise valuable books, are sitting, boxed, in the Watson Library basement waiting for transfer.
Heron said the new building is "impressive and beautiful," and will help focus attention on special collections and university research facilities.
The 700,000 volume capacity alone should draw more collections and top quality students and faculty, Heron said.
C. P. Snow book substituted in Western Civ
The Western Civilization comprehensive exam will remain primarily the same as it was this summer, according to Donald Marquis, assistant director of the Western Civilization program.
It will still be four parts: one full-hour essay, two one-half hour essays, one section of multiple choice and one section of matching.
"Few changes have been made in the Western Civ. program since its major revamping last year," noted Marquis.
The readings remain the same except for the substitution of C. P. Snow's book "The Two Cultures: A Second Look," rather than Marshall McLuhan's "Understanding Media."
"Since C. P. Snow is coming to KU next semester, we thought it might be interesting for the students to read his book, and perhaps go hear him speak," Marquis added.
No other change in the readings has been made, except a few changes in the selections chosen from each book, he said.
As to whether or not the comprehensive exam would become pass-fail, Marquis explained, "It is not eligible for the pass-fail system because it does not fit the requirements. To take something as pass-fail, it must have to classify as a course, and secondly, you have to sign up for it at enrollment. Since the Western Civ. comprehensive exam is not a course and you don't enroll in it at the beginning of the semester, it doesn't qualify."
The Castle Tea Room
IN LAWRENCE
STILL THE MOST UNIQUE RESTAURANT
There has to be a good reason why students and faculty alike continue year after year, to patronize us. It could be our warm, friendly atmosphere, fine food, "Old World" decor, or just the fact that we're different. Our four dining rooms, furnished in birch, cherry, walnut, and oak, are perfect for dinner dates, meetings, and even wedding receptions. But, whatever the reason may be, we're glad you've made us the most popular restaurant in Lawrence. We've been that way for 20 years.
Phone VI 3-1151
If you're new in Lawrence, we'd like to get acquainted with you. If you already know about us, you will be glad to know that we're still here. We haven't changed!
1301-11 Mass. St.
LIBUSE KRIZ
Chancellor Wescoe announced Monday the Spencer dedication will be October 8 but this does
not mean it will be open to the public.
The $2 million library, financed by private gifts, will be open to all students.
Library tours set for October
Watson Library tours for new students are planned for early October, Terrence Williams, director of readers-services, said Wednesday.
Williams explained the tours were planned to familiarize students with the library.
FRIDAY NIGHT At The Red Dog
DANCE TO
the
Red Dogs
OUTSTANDING AND
THEY ARE WILD
THE RED DOGS APPEARING AT THE MIDWEST POP MUSIC FESTIVAL
THE
D.C. HOA
FABULOUS
RED DOGS
Duck Dog
Don't Miss Them
Direct from L.A.
SAT. NIGHT
Direct from L.A.
THE LINCOLN PARK ZOO
CLAIM LOST
CHILDREN
HERE
COMING!!
★ The Who
★ Ike & Tina Turner
★ Hot Nuts
★ Flippers
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 20, 1968
Columbia's acting president sags "no repression"
New York (UPI)—Andrew W. Cordier, 'Columbia University's acting president, told a student rally Thursday there would be "no repression whatsoever" on the troubled Columbia campus.
Cordier made the remark at a rally of 300 students called by Moderate Students for a Restructured University to protest the denial of campus facilities to the more radical Students for a Democratic Society (SDS).
SDS led the protest demonstrations last spring which resulted in hundreds of arrests, violent clashes with the police and the suspension of classes for two months. It also caused a disruption of fall registration Wednesday.
There was fear the SDS would try to continue the disruptions Thursday, but the rally was peaceful and registration for Columbia's 17,500 students proceeded without trouble.
Cordier's surprise appearance at the rally brought a flood of questions from students, including one about campus repression.
"Repression is not a word in my vocabulary," he said. "It never has been and it never will be."
During his brief remarks to the rally, Cordier said "What we want from this campus is, to be sure, the dynamic, forward-looking, progressive institution which engages in strenuous efforts to have a program which corresponds to the temper and needs of our time."
The remarks were greeted by shouts of "Talk about the issues. The issues."
Nixon promises waltz if elected
Springfield, Mo. (UPI)—Republican presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon delighted a Missouri audience Thursday by evoking the image of the opposing party's elder statesman—former President Harry S. Truman.
Nixon told a Springfield fairgrounds rally: "I think you'll be interested to know that while I have differences with the very distinguished Missourian who was president of the United States, we have one thing in common. I play a piano too."
"And I make this pledge," Nixon continued, "that when we enter the White House, we're going to hear the Missouri Waltz played in the White House again."
Humphrey, Nixon talk about youth, dissenters
By United Press International
Hubert H. Humphrey, still beset by anti-war demonstrators, got a welcome public endorsement Thursday from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and two other leading Senate critics of administration war policies—George McGovern and Wayne Morse.
Richard M. Nixon, Humphrey's opponent for the presidency, meanwhile promised to bring dissenters back into the political mainstream if he is elected.
In his best day yet while campaigning, Humphrey was endorsed by Kennedy in Boston and by McGovern and Morse in McGovern's home state of South Dakota.
Morse said that between Humphrey and Nixon, there was "no question" whom he would choose. He promised to campaign strongly for Humphrey.
Humphrey and Kennedy campaigned together in Boston for the Democratic ticket and were greeted by what the vice president called the largest crowd he had had in any campaign. Estimates ranged from 5,000 to 20,000 persons at an outdoor rally at a busy Boston intersection, and thousands more lined the streets for a motorcade.
The crowd included hundreds of chanting antiwar demonstrators who tried to shout down Humphrey and Kennedy, both of whom denounced the hecklers in strong language.
Kennedy told the crowd, "I have no hesitation in urging support of the vice president for election as president." He said Humphrey had "been in the forefront of every vital domestic problem before the United States in the last 20 years."
But neither mentioned their differences over the Southeast Asian conflict.
Humphrey told the rally that Nixon was the same man whom John F. Kennedy defeated for the presidency in 1960. "We
know what he (Nixon) stood for then and we know what he stands for now," Humphrey said.
Nixon pledged to scrap government by census if elected and to give dissenters an opportunity to present their views on how the nation should be run.
"In a Nixon administration, America's citizens will not have to break the law to be heard," Nixon said in the text of a nationwide broadcast Thursday night. "They will not have to shout or resort to violence."
In other developments:
But he also said that as president he would represent "the non-shouters and the non-demonstrators, rather than losing them in the wail and bellow of what too often passes today for public discourse."
George C. Wallace—The third-party candidate was in his home state as Alabama staged a "Stand up for George Wallace Day" to try to raise $1 million to finance his campaign. The activities in Montgomery included a $500-a-plate luncheon, a $25-a-plate dinner and a $10-a-present rally.
Spiro T. Agnew—Nixon's running mate said he thought the AFL-CIO was "dangerously close" to violating federal regulations limiting political activity by labor unions. Agnew said he
referred to a statement by AFLCIO President George Meany that union officials would be put to work full time in behalf of Humphrey's candidacy.
Interview—The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that Humphrey said in an interview that as president he would do "whatneeds to be done to obtain a peace in Vietnam." The copyrighted story said Humphrey's remarks were "the strongest suggestion yet that he would not be tied to the course of President Lyndon B. Johnson in Vietnam,
Fashions designed especially for you will be informally modeled from 1-4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21. See you at the Village Set.
922 Mass.
VI 2-1400
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
VI 2-1400
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
V1 2-1400
You're in charge of building the float, decorating the house and dressing up the party. So you need Pomps, the flame-resistant decorative tissue. You can decorate anything beautiful with Pomps, inside and out, and do it faster, easier, better. Pomps don't cost much. They're cut 6" x 6" square, ready to use, come in 17 vivid colors that are virtually run-proof when wet. Buy Pomps at your bookstore, school supply dealer or paper merchant. And ask your librarian for our booklet "How to Decorate With Pomps." If she doesn't have it, just tell her to write for a copy. Or, order your own copy. Send $1.25 and your address today to The Crystal Tissue Company, Middeltown, Ohio 45042.
Social Chairmen... the circumstances call for Pomps.
emphasizing steps that would allow troop reduction there by the United States."
Debate—The House Commerce Committee reversed itself on Wallace and voted to invite him to participate in any special television debates between Humphrey and Nixon.
Last week the committee voted to suspend the "equal time" provisions of the federal broadcasting code to permit debates only between Humphrey and Nixon without giving equal time on the same program for other presidential candidates.
pomps
Nixon, GOP's top other nominees in State Fair poll
Hutchinson, Kan. (UPI)—Republicans continued sweeping the Wichita Eagle-Beacon's straw vote at the Kansas State Fair Thursday; Richard Nixon again in front and Hubert Humphrey third.
GOP presidential nominee Nixon collected 1,534 votes while third party candidate George Wallace led Democratic Vice President Humphrey by 980 to 609.
And for governor, Republican Rick Harman of Shawnee Mission was in front of incumbent Gov. Robert Docking, Democrat, by 1,748 to 1,240.
All Belafonte LP's
on RCA
REGULAR $4.79 KIEF'S
JUST $2.99 STEREO
on the Malls
in person
BELAFONTE
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
SAT., SEPT. 21 8:00 p.m.
Tickets - $2.00 - $2.50 - $3.00
Tickets will go on sale Monday, Sept. 16 at the Information Booth and the SUA Office in the Kansas Union.
Belafonte LP's Weaver's JUST $2.99
Record Dept.
Self-Service Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES
Self-Service Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 802 W. 23rd OPEN Open Evenings 9 to 9 Mon. to Sat. Free Parking 1 to 6 Sundays
Anti
slack 99
Antique Brown or Black
$9.99
Sizes
6½ to 12
D Width
CASUALS for leisure living!
$3.99 &
$4.99
Antique Brown
Black
Burgundy
and Amber
$3.99 &
$4.99
Antique Brown
Black
Burgundy
and Amber
T
Amber, Black, Brown
$999
Leisure time activities are more fun with the day-long comfort of casuals. These style leaders are but a few from HARVEY'S complete line of dress and school wear.
WOMEN'S MEN'S
$4.99
Tennis, Casuals, & Basketball
Sizes 41/2 to 10 Blue, White & Black
Sizes 61/2 to 12
White & Black
2/$5.00
Others $3.99 - $4.99
$6.99
DRESS UP
$6.99
DRESS UP
Little Heels
or
Flatties
Sizes 4½ to 10
$3'99
Slip-ons
and
Ties
others $6.99 up
802 W. 23rd
FREE PARKING OPEN 9 to 9
M
$9.99
Slip-ons
and
Ties
$9.99
Slip-ons
and
Ties
SHOE
others $6.99 up
16
Friday, September 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University developing into
vocal groups on the campus," according to Pete Woodsmall.
"One camp sees a prospective Communist behind every beard, and the other sees a future dean
"Never before have fraternity members been so caught up in what is going on outside the
Alderson in his speech on the fraternity and the community. He challenged fraternity men
Balfour's remark came Thursday night at the Interfraternity Council seminar entitled "Fra-
Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Research Tenure and Related Problems Scholarly Publications Cooperation with Jr. Colleges Cooperation Among Instit of Higher Learning
Academic Procedures and Policies Organization and Administration Fiscal Affairs
Board of Disciplinary
Appraisal
Human Relations
Leachies and
Computers
Film Series
Libraries
Financial Aid to
Students
Foreign Language
Parking and Traffic
Calendar
Student Rights, Privileges
and Responsibilities
Disciplinary Committee
Student Union Activities
Student Court
Publications
Finance & Auditing
Health & Houring
Elections
The traternity system at KU is finally developing a social conscience and should continue to attempt to influence matters which affect it and the University, he added.
Donald Alderson, dean of men, and Terry Bullock, a Topeka lawyer devoted to the improvement of the fraternity system, were other speakers at the seminar sponsored by the IFC as an answer to "certain
Eight IPC- Panhellenic Conference and the Greek Week Leadership Seminar, departed from the theme of the seminar to deliver a stirring speech on the state of the fraternity system today. He claimed that fraternities fall short of the goals set by their founders many years ago. He also said it is time to get rid of the whole concept pledges and pledge training.
university levels for students who have been deprived of educational equality by financial and/or racial discrimination.
2. The University must play a leading role in expanding educational fields of study in the public school system of the community to include a presentation of the cultural history of the black and Indian people.
3. The immediate creation of a Department of African Studies within the University to include courses in history, culture, language, etc.
4. The hiring of additional University personnel from minority
(and others who share their sense of the meaning of God's Word and Sacraments for Life) SOMETHING' NEW FOR THE NEW SEMESTER
AT
7. specific representation for those minority groups (particularly black students) historically discriminated against and unrepresented in the University community.
8. A complete study with action provisions of the plight of the
deal with all areas of discrimination and human torment
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH & STUDENT CENTER
15th and Iowa, The Rev. Norman Stetten, Campus Pastor The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod
deal with all areas of discrimination and human corruption. Two additional proposals are recommended by the dissenting report "to deal with the ever-increasing role of the military in
(50 C) at 5:30 p.m. and discussion on "How to Make Things Happen," led by Steve Gerding, President.
AND—a new series of worship services with theme and method:"Celebrate Life"will begin.
---
---
GT
---
HE VESTED SUIT
___
FAVORITE OF ALL MEN.
Available in twills, stripes, plaids, tweeds and the great country look. Always with three buttons, we feature a wider lapel, slightly shaped waist, and a deeper center vent.
MISTER
333
Committee explains recommendations
In Havana, Swiss diplomats said the 727 was freed for the return trip to Colombia Sunday night. They said the DC4 was expected to be returned home sometime Monday morning. Reliable sources in the Cuban capital said the 727 was diverted by only one person but no other details were available.
The 727 arrived at Barranquilla Colom-land at Camaguey in central Cuba. The other, a DC4 with 57 persons aboard, landed at Santiago de Cuba.
In Havana, Swiss diplomats said the 727 was freed for the return trip to Colombia Sunday night. They said the DC4 was expected to be returned home sometime Monday morning. Reliable sources in the Cuban capital said the 727 was diverted by only one person but no other details were available.
The 727 arrived at Barranquilla Colom-land at Camaguey in central Cuba. The other, a DC4 with 57 persons aboard, landed at Santiago de Cuba.
In Havana, Swiss diplomats said the 727 was freed for the return trip to Colombia Sunday night. They said the DC4 was expected to be returned home sometime Monday morning. Reliable sources in the Cuban capital said the 727 was diverted by only one person but no other details were available.
The 727 arrived at Barranquilla Colom-land at Camaguey in central Cuba. The other, a DC4 with 57 persons aboard, landed at Santiago de Cuba.
In Havana, Swiss diplomats said the 727 was freed for the return trip to Colombia Sunday night. They said the DC4 was expected to be returned home sometime Monday morning. Reliable sources in the Cuban capital said the 727 was diverted by only one person but no other details were available.
The 727 arrived at Barranquilla Colom-land at Camaguey in central Cuba. The other, a DC4 with 57 persons aboard, landed at Santiago de Cuba.
In Havana, Swiss diplomates said the 727 was freed for the return trip to Colombia Sunday night. They said the DC4 was expected to be returned home sometime Monday morning. Reliable sources in the Cuban capital said the 727 was diverted by only one person but no other details were available.
The 727 arrived at Barranquilla Colom-land at Camaguey in central Cuba. The other, a DC4 with 57 persons aboard, landed at Santiago de Cuba.
In Havana, Swiss diplomates said the 727 was freed for the return trip to Colombia Sunday night. They said the DC4 was expected to be returned home sometime Monday morning. Reliable sources in the Cuban capital said the 727 was diverted by only one person but no other details were available.
The 727 arrived at Barranquilla Colom-land at Camaguey in central Cuba. The other, a DC4 with 57 persons aboard, landed at Santiago de Cuba.
In Havana, Swiss diplomates said the 727 was freed for the return trip to Colombia Sunday night. They said the DC4 was expected to be returned home sometime Monday morning. Reliable sources in the Cuban capital said the 727 was diverted by only one person but no other details were available.
Overdose kills
The 65-year-old novelist took a massive overdose of barbiturates and died a few hours later, according to the results of an autopsy performed Sunday.
The 65-year-old novelist took a massive overdose of barbiturates and died a few hours later, according to the results of an autopsy performed Sunday.
The 65-year-old novelist took a massive overdose of barbiturates and died a few hours later, according to the results of an autopsy performed Sunday.
Weather
Warm and humid with continuing showers was the forecast.
Members also agreed that Voice should define problems within the community, educate the student said "the establishment needs to be toppled" to solve these problems. He added that he did not feel that it won the Academy Award as the best picture of 1945.
By Linda Loyd
The estimated 10,000 persons fledge Saturday at Amani Field House were waiting outside at 8 p.m.—concert time—because, inside the 41-year-old Belafonte cheeseburger and root beer float, Belafonte's sound manager, John Scheib, predicted that Belafonte would be late. "He's never made a concert on time yet!"
"We're going to open the doors," someone finally remarked to Belafonte. "There are thousands of people out there."
“What the World Needs Now” skyrocketed on national survey charts, sang several songs from you.”
Also appearing with Belafonte were gospel singer Delores Hall fore the concert. He was to arrive at the field house by 6 p.m.
Students into wild applause during their version of “Sinner You're Gonna Be Sorry.”
Not only was the audience forced to accept a delayed concert, but also stifling heat and poor acoustics of the field house. "My wife and I couldn't hear a thing downstairs," one scent.
A quarter of an hour later, Harry Belafonte strolled into Allen Field House, hands in pockets, wearing an open-necked navy pullover and navy slacks.
“Hi, ya John,” he greeted the sound man in his usual husky voice.
Belafonte arrived in Lawrence (Continued on page 12)
Muskie criticises opposition
See Editorials, page 4
Lavhawks won Illini
See pages 6, 7, and 9
KUOK starts new year
See page 5—
Call VL 3-5155
10% DISCOUNT
and Dry Cleaning
5 SHIRTS - $1.39 On hangers or folded!
Bring in and pick up at one of our 3 convenient locations
ACME
ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners
Three Convenient Locations
DOWNTOWN HILLCREST MALLS 1111 MASS. 925 IOWA 711 W.23rd
Surprise party thrown. Campaigning
I was completely surprised thought I was going to a coffee. I had no idea that the coffee would turn out to be a surprise residence and could come and go as she liked.
"It was just like one big happy toomed to an active life, so the one she's leading during her husband's campaign is not new given in her honor Thursday night, at the home of Mrs. Dan McCarthy.
During a tour of the downstairs area of the old nurses' that although the pace is hectic and tiring, she has trouble getting to sleep at night.
Bend and moved to Lawrence. I liked living in the nurses' quarters. I have stayed here because of the services Longist being with The future home of Miss Wilhelm, at 941 Louisiana, marks a transition in further expansion for Welling Hospital. The pay over the long time residence of "Willy" and of many past nurses, and will become a con-help," she said.
She said that both she and the senator are interested in histor-
The department of Speech and Drama decided at the last minute Friday to offer a class in the Nigeria. Richard Scharine, administrative assistant in the theater said, and "accept it all as business." Both of the oldest children take an active part in their School 20 as striking teachers picket nearby. TS 20 is being staffed by teachers who do not support the strike and is one of the few city schools open. (UPI Telephoto)
official residence for many nurses around 1938, when the hospital was first built. At that time, there were about ten nurses living in the annex.
at 11:30 a.m. for two hours credit and will be offered until the Christmas holidays.
Those interested should contact Dr. Adedeji early this week.
professor of psychology at KU this year.
He is William D. Winter, professor of the Counseling Center at San Jose State College.
Ine, Turner, Kan., will receive a public hearing at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Wyandotte County Courthouse, the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights announced
his race and because he had previously filed a complaint with the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT SAN FRANCISCO
ST
he Plaid Sport Coat
The country look is in plaids, checks, tweeds window panes, twills, and refined patterns. Styled for us with a broader lapel, slight waist shape, a deeper center vent, and naturally with three buttons. Co-ordinate these with our specially selected slacks and sweaters.
MISTER GUY
920 MASSACHUSETTS
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 23, 1968
Senate a beginning
The students' voice has been heeded at KU.
Greater student representation in University affairs is one of the fiery issues now not only in the United States but in the world.
Last spring, Student Voice, now renamed Peoples Voice, demanded 50 per cent representation on University committees involving student affairs at KU.
As a result of the protests, a twelve member committee of six students and six faculty was formed to study the question of student representation. The report includes a Senate Code which would abolish the present All Student Council and substitute a Student Senate.
However, the proposals of the report do not provide 50 per cent student representation originally asked for.
This Student Senate would be part of the existing University Senate, and have voting powers in the organization, administration, and much of the academic matters of the University.
The Student Senate would have 95 members as compared to the 550 faculty and administrative members in the present University Senate. This, then, is roughly 15 per cent student representation.
A minority report on the committee's study was also issued and this report demands the original 50 per cent representation.
The proposed 15 per cent representation is a small percentage. But as members of the committee have pointed out, student representation in University governing is a big step.
The Senate Code which contains the majority report must be passed by the present University Senate Council, the University Senate, the ASC and the entire student body.
Later, after the idea of student representation has been clearly established at KU, the vast percentage difference between student and faculty representation on the Senate should be cut down.
The proposals should not mark the end of the quest for student representation at KU but they do set up a feasible and expandable beginning.
It would be better now to try to push these proposals with their small percentage of student representation through now instead of having the whole plan rejected because of the fear of student radicalism.
The future of student representation here will be up to students to work toward greater involvement and representation and up to the faculty and administration to be receptive to the proposals.
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
the rock hound
Maestro on record
Bv WILL HARDESTY
HOROWITZ ON TELEVISION by Vladamir Horowitz on Columbia is the soundtrack recording of the maestro's television performance.
To ask or even to doubt that Horowitz can play piano well is something like asking if Cream can play hard rock. His playing shows his master's touch.
Music on the album includes such things as a Chopin ballad, nocturne and polonaise, two Scarlatti sonatas, Schumann's Arabesque and Traumerei from "Kinderscenen," a Scriabin etude and Horowitz' own variations on a theme from Bizet's "Carmen."
Horowitz was skeptical about doing a TV show, but made a couple of practice sessions. He then said he was convinced the music came through as the "prime concern," and agreed to do the "special" which was programmed Sunday. He says the program, which was video-taped on Feb. 1, 1968, "is taken from the music that I have included in recitals in recent years."
All in all, if you can get into classical music, this is a good album.
An in all, if you can get into classical music, this is a good album. An album and group which is starting to get some of the play and recognition deserved is SPIRIT by Spirit on Ode.
This is a very jazz-oriented album, but the group does a good job. It is a heavy, electronic album with 11 solid songs on it. Particularly good are "Uncle Jack," "Mechanical World," and "Elijah." A good investment.
The proposed changes in the University Senate of KU to include student representation are complex and sometimes confusing.
Letters to the Editor
Also the minority report and its reasons for dissension will be discussed.
The Daily Kansan editorial page will concentrate on the report this week, try to explain it and comment upon its possible effect on KU.
quotes...
Peoples Voice Chancellor's Selection
"Whatever their differences with us, whatever the depth of their dissent, it is vital—for us as much as them—that our young feel that change is possible; that they will be heard; that the cruelties and follies and injustices of the world will yield, however grudgingly, to the sweat and sacrifice they are so ready to give.
Senator Robert Kennedy
To the Editor:
Please permit me to set straight some misconceptions generated by your coverage of the recent Peoples Voice Counter Convocation.
I did not say that I have a low regard for my fellow faculty members. What I said was that I have a low regard for my fellow faculty members with respect to their participation in the making of University policy. I did not attack their academic ability, because in fact I believe them to be quite competent in their professional fields. In particular I think that my colleagues in the Philosophy Department are exceptionally qualified in their field.
Your article tended to make the students who participated in the Counter Convocation look
VOICE
RAH!
V
Percy Waldo
Smythe
foolish, whereas in fact they are serious students deeply concerned about the evils of our society. In addition, you entirely misrepresent what took place by taking remarks out of context, while failing to get at the core of what transpired. For instance, you entirely failed to mention that Professor Michael Maher presented a lucid and very penetrating resume of his view of the ideal university, along with a nice summary of the many ways in which, in fact, KU fails to be ideal.
"I'm specifically for human rights, freedom, love, peace. The chancellor spoke to the idiot masses only in platitudes and generalizations!"
Finally, let me remark sadly that the contrast between the UDK report of the Counter Convocation and the far superior one in the Lawrence Journal World nicely illustrates my remark (unreported by you) that perhaps there are some areas of university management for which teachers and administrators are better prepared by way of greater experience and training than are students.
Sincerely,
Howard Kahane
To the Editor:
When a minority group on campus such as Peoples Voice receives such an unjust representation as it did in Wednesday's UDK, it is no wonder that the majority of KU students tune out to their protests. As a "non-hip" student curious about Voice and its programs, I attended last Tuesday night's meeting and would like to comment on what I saw.
There were a few members present who were arguing for radical changes in the University, but the emphasis was certainly not on radicalism, nor was that the mood of the meeting. I heard several members sincerely concerned about communicating with "straight" students on issues relevant to the University and to the students themselves. The method of communication was the main topic of discussion and I was encouraged to hear a concern for people as people and not part of the "idiot masses." (This was contrary to my original conception as an uninformed student that all members of Voice were militants and anarchists.)
After taking part in only one
meeting of Voice, I would definitely support its justification on this campus. Sure, there is dissention within, as there is in any organization, but at least the first step has been taken to overcome it.
In conclusion, it is my feeling that Voice does have something to say to KU students. I would hope that neither those involved in this movement or those uninvolved will tune each other out. Any effective changes made must be the result of a two-way type of communication in which the attitude is to "search for the truth" that is supposed to be characteristic of a university.
Sincerely,
Donna Woodard
Tulsa, Okla., Senior
To the Editor:
At the same time that KU students are pressing for important procedural changes in the Kansas University decision-making structures, a crucial substantive matter with procedural implications is taking place—the recruitment and selection of a new chancellor. Obviously, the decision about what policy orientations, background experiences and "qualities" are to be esteemed in a chancellor (and consequently, what "kind" of person is recruited) will be made largely by the selection committee.
Presently, the selection committee consists of four members of the Board of Regents of the University of Kansas. By whatever method and for whatever reasons members of the board are chosen, none of the current KU board members seem to have the University as their full-time business. Perhaps the most widely known member of the board (and also a member of the selection committee), Mr. Henry Bubb, is recognized for his banking activities and his virtual instrumentality in the Citizens for Reagan movement. Yet the startling feature of the chancellor selection committee is the absence of both faculty and student representation. If it seems dated that there are no students on the committee to add their voices, surely it must be blatantly anachronistic that there are no faculty members contributing to the selection process.
James R. Killingsworth
Dots and Dashes
Richard Nixon's truth squad, set up to spy on Hubert Humphrey, will probably eventually feel it's looking into a mirror. This year all the candidates' "truths" are almost identical.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $o a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Executive Staff
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Haney
Assistant Managing Editors, Pat Crawford, Charla Jenkins, Alan T. Jones,
Steve Morgan, Allen Winster
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor Alison Steimel
Editorial Editor Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Sharon Woodson
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCreray, Don Westerberg, Sam
Zahradnik, Martlyn Cook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Promotion Fannie Mae
Circulation Manager Jack Hurley
Classified Manager Barry Arthur
图
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Educational Advertising Services
A DIVISION OF
READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC.
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017
Monday, September 23, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
STATE OF TEXAS
WASHINGTON: With the campaigns in full swing, preparations are now being made for the inauguration ceremonies in January. Work has begun to erect the presidential platform and television tower on the east front of the Capitol building. (UPI Telephoto)
Freshmen compete for Frosh Hawks
A mass of surging bodies rushing toward six defenseless women!
This was the scene Saturday afternoon in Allen Field House when freshman women were interviewed for Frosh Hawk membership.
Six Jay Janes members conducted interviews from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. for those women interested in joining the freshman pep club.
Comments from the freshman women waiting for an interview revealed that most considered the Frosch Hawk organization a good way to show their support for the Jayhawks and to meet other freshmen.
"I think this might be a good way to get to know people," said Patty Morales, Overland Park freshman. "I also want to show school spirit by doing something for KU," she said.
"Frosh Hawks is one of the best ways for freshmen to become involved in campus activities. It also provides an opportunity to meet freshmen from other living groups which one would not ordinarily meet," Kris Hadel, Leawood freshman, said.
Ann Ladewig, Kansas City,
Kans. freshman thinks it would
be more fun to go to the games with the Frosh Hawks than with a date. "One could yell and cheer with a bunch of girls. You usually don't do that with a date," said Miss Ladewig.
Most of the women interviewed did not understand how elimination could be made after only a few minutes conversation.
According to Mrs. Carl Dorris, advisor to the Frosh Hawks, it is extremely difficult for those conducting the interviews to eliminate anyone.
"When interviewing the prospective members," said Mrs. Dorris, "we ask them about ideas they have which would benefit the Frosch Hawks. Questions about their high school activities which might indicate their interest and qualification for an organization like this are also asked," she said.
"We look for girls with lots of spirit and dependability, because we are trying to eliminate those who want to have an activity but who do not want to participate," said Mrs. Dorris.
Announcement of those women accepted for Frosh Hawk membership will be made Monday.
HHH says troops could start home if he is elected
Bv United Press International
Hubert H. Humphrey Sunday again held out the prospect that American troops could start coming home from Vietnam early next year if he is elected president.
Republicans reacted by saying Humphrey's Vietnam statements were adding to "the public confusion."
Humphrey told a television panel in Cleveland that if he is elected he would talk to South Vietnamese officials about a withdrawal to begin possibly as soon as early 1969. Earlier in Columbus, Ohio, he said that as president he would hope to start reducing troop strength in Vietnam "sometime in the near future."
John M. Mitchell, national campaign director for the Republican ticket, issued a statement in New York accusing Humphrey of "shooting from the lip" on Vietnam by suggesting that withdral of U.S. Forces could begin soon.
Mitchell called on the VicePresident to hold a news conference to clarify his views on the Vietnam War. Mitchell said "every time Mr. Humphrey talks on Vietnam, he only adds to the public confusion. Mr. Humphrey is shooting from the lip again."
During a television panel show in Columbus, Humphrey said:
"My view, speaking for myself, is that with the progress taking place in South Vietnam on the part of the Army of South Vietnam, which is doing a magnificent job, we ought to be able sometime in the near future to systematically reduce American combat forces in South Vietnam."
But he insisted that "I only want that to happen if it does not jeopardize our own troops there or the safety of that country."
KUOK, campus radio station,
began broadcasting at 4 p.m.
Friday with a marathon 56
hours of music and news and a
promise of improved reception.
KUOK starts broadcast year
Dave Winegardner. Atchison senior and the station's student director, said the AM station of the University will also air a new format "aimed right at the student."
KUOK's closed circuit broadcasting system has undergone several technical improvements and, said Winegardner, reception will rival Kansas City's most powerful stations.
The closed circuit system covers all of Daisy Hill, Oliver Hall, Naismith Hall and Watkins Hospital.
TIP IT...TAP IT...
ONE DROP FRESHENS
BREATH INSTANTLY.
Bináca
CONCENTRATED
GOLDEN BREATH DROPS
KU-Y, which offers programs such as Operation Tutor Match to bring together tutors and students, will have a membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room.
Resumes of Y programs and available committee positions for interested persons will be discussed.
KU-Y offers tutoring plan
Bináca*
CONCENTRATED
GOLDEN BREATH DROPS
KU-Y provides such community service activities as the Youth Friendship program, which pairs college students in the role of big brother or sister with underprivileged children in Lawrence; Children's Hour, which recruits volunteers to work with the Lawrence Headstart centers; and Special Activities, which gives college students the opportunity to work with mentally retarded children at Cordley Elementary School.
According to Tom Moore, KU-Y staff director, more than 200 students at one time have been involved in community service, and it is estimated that 16,000 man hours of volunteer service will be given through this year's community service programs.
To finance the service programs and pay the salaries of a full-time and a part-time staff member, KU-Y will sell mums during the football season, work at concession stands at games, plan an International Gift Fair during the Christmas season and sponsor Rock Chalk Revue.
Other programs include Model UN and Freshman Senate for persons interested in politics, and Freshman Camp, where freshmen meet and talk with each other.
Winegardner explained that since KUOK's signal is carried on each hall's power lines, a radio automatically receives KUOK at 630 kc. when plugged in.
He added that portable radios need only have their antennas near a plugged-in appliance cord for good reception.
Aureliana
After Oct. 1, private transmitters and phone lines will be installed in four or five fraternities.
American Student Information Service has arranged jobs, tours & studying in Europe for over a decade. Choose from thousands of good paying jobs in 15 countries, study at a famous university, take a Grand Tour, transatlantic transportation, travel independently. All permits, etc, arranged thru this low cost & recommended program. On the spot help from ASIS offices while in Europe. For educational fun-filled & profitable experience of a lifetime send $2 for handbook (overseas handling, airmail reply & applications included) listing jobs, tours, study & crammed with other valuable info, to: Dept. M, ASIS, 22 ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Lux.
Work in Europe
Winegardner said he hoped the expanded schedule will become a permanent weekend happening. The station's usual daily hours are from 4 p.m. until 2 a.m.
The weekend marathon, which ended at midnight Sunday, is part of the new station format designed by Rich Shaffer,
Hutchinson junior and station manager.
Bill Hitchcock, West Springfield, Mass., sophomore and KUOK music director, disclaimed "teenybopper" music, and said KUOK's selections are "a lot more sophisticated . . our market is solid and consistent."
Hitchcock compiles his own "Top 63" hit survey by "easing the local bars, record shops and dorms listening for what the student likes."
A new feature. "Double-Gold," two past hits, will be heard after each newscast.
The station director said he also has tentatively planned two live marathons for this semester from McCollum and Ellsworth Halls.
It's not who you con...it's how you do it!
PAUL NEWMAN
The Secret War of
HARRY FRIGG
It's not who you con...it's
PAUL NEWMAN
The Secret War of HARRY FRIGG
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
20th CENTURY FOR PRESENTS
PAUL NEWMAN
FREDRIC MARCH | RICHARD
DIANE CILENTO
"HOMBR
Presents" COLOR by Delicious
Ends Tuesday!
Open 6:30
Show Starts At Dusk
ENDS TUESDAY!
The hanging was the best show in town!
CLINT
EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM
HIGH"
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045
do it!
20TH CENTURY FOR PRESENTS PAUL NEWMAN FREDRIC MARCH | RICHARD BOONE DIANE CILENTO "HOMBRE"
It's not who you con...it's how you do it!
PAUL NEWMAN
The Secret War of HARRY FRIGG
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR®
AND
20TH CENTURY FOR PRESENTS
PAUL NEWMAN
FREDRIC MARCH | RICHARD BOONE
DIANE GILENTO
"HOMBRE"
Ends Tuesday!
Open 6:30
Show Starts At Dusk
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
ENDS TUESDAY!
The hanging was the best show in town!
CLINT EASTWOOD
IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
who cares about a 35 year old virgin?
joanne woodward
in the PAUL NEWMAN production of rachel, rachel
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES
TECHNICOLOR® FROM WARNER BROS. SEVEN ARTS
ENDS TUESDAY!
Granada
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5783
20TH CENTURY FOR
PRESENTS
PAUL NEWMAN
FREDRIC MARCH | RICHARD BOONE
DIANE CILENTO
"HOMBRE"
Premium * COLOR by Deluxe
Ends Tuesday!
Open 6:30
Show Starts At Dusk
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
]
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE + West on Highway 40
SHERIFF
The hanging was the best show in town!
CLINT EASTWOOD IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
Varsity
THEATRE... Telephone VI 3-1065
CLINT EASTWOOD IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI1-1065
who cares about a 35 year old virgin?
who cares about a 35 year old virgin?
joanne
woodward
in the PAUL NEWMAN production of
rachel,
rachel
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES
TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS. SEVEN ARTS
ENDS TUESDAY!
Granada
THEATRE...telephone VI3-5788
ENDS TUESDAY!
Granada
THEATRE...telephone VI3-5789
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 23, 1968
Jayhawks fly high
If Dick Eutkus watched the KU-Illinois game Saturday, he must have cried a little. The Chicago Bears linebacker and former All-American, played for the Illini about four years ago when defense was king.
Defense could still be king at Illinois, but the way the Jayhawks played offense Saturday in their 47-7 romp over the Illini, it appeared as if the king might have taken a powder.
The Jayhawks didn't grind out massive yardage against the Illini, but if you can score fast and from far away, the total yardage statistics have a tendency to become less important than the score.
KU wound up with 383 total yards (210 rushing and 173 passing), while Illinois had 359 total yards (183 rushing and 176 passing).
If you look at the statistics, it would not seem possible that KU could have beaten Illinois 47-7.
Illinois ran 82 plays from scrimmage compared to KU's 56. Illinois had 20 first downs to KU's 12. The difference here, however, is that KU was able to score almost every time it controlled the ball, and even when it wasn't on offense KU scored twice—once when sophomore defensive back Dale Holt intercepted an Illinois pass and ran 75 yards for a score and again when Craig Martindale, a sophomore end, recovered an Illinois fumble in the end zone.
During the first 20 minutes of the game, it appeared as if the game was headed for a defensive battle. Then things started getting hot.
KU racked up three scores in the second quarter. First, quarterback Bob Douglass hit sophomore tailback Don Autry with a 44-yard strike with 7:08 gone in the second quarter. Then Shanklin squirted through the Illinois line for a score from the 2 yard line with 11:43 gone. KU's last score in the first half came on a 6-yard run by Douglass with 38 seconds left in the second quarter.
Illinois came out to play at the beginning of the third quarter and Illinois quarterback Bob Naponic pushed the only Illini score over on a one yard run with 3:70 remaining in the quarter.
After that it was the Jayhawks all the way.
Pro standings
PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL
National League
Western Conference
Coastal Division
W. L. T. T. Pct. Pts. O.P.
Baltimore 2 0 0 10 .55 30
Los Angeles 2 0 0 10 .50 30
San Francisco 2 1 0 1.500 45 44
Atlanta 2 1 0 1.500 45 44
Central Division
Minnesota 2 W. L. T. Pet. Pts. O.P.
Green Bay 1 2 0 1.000 73 20
Dreault 1 1 1 0.500 45 80
Chicago 0 2 0 .500 55 80
Eastern Conference Capitol Division
W. L. T. Pct. Pts. O.P.
Dallas 2 0 0 1,000 87 20
Boston 2 0 1 0,000 87 20
Washington 2 1 0 .500 55 64
Philadelphia 1 2 0 .500 55 64
Century Division
W. L. T. T. Pct. Pts. O.P.
Cleveland 1 1 1 0 500 31 38
New Orleans 1 1 0 1 500 38 39
Pittsburgh 0 2 0 0 30 37
St. Louis 0 2 0 0 30 71
American League Eastern Division
W. L. T. 1 W. L. T. Pct Pts O.P.
New York 2 1 0 0 Fct 67 74
Boston 1 2 0 0 67 54
Houston 1 2 0 333 59 66
Baltimore 1 2 0 333 59 66
Buffalo 1 2 0 333 66 98
Western Division
W. L. 2 T. Pet. Pts. O.P.
San Diego L. 0 T. 1 0.000 95 27
Oakland 0 0 T. 1 0.000 85 27
Kansas City 2 1 0 .667 79 43
Cincinnati 2 1 0 .667 79 43
Houston 2 0 0 .000 12 58
Yesterday's Games National League
Dallas 28, Cleveland 7
Baltimore 28, Atlanta 7
Chicago 31
Minnesota 26, Green Bay 13
New York 34, Philadelphia 25
Miami 26, San Francisco 35, St. Louis 17
New Orleans 37, Washington 17
Kansas City 34, Denver 2
Cincinnati 34, Buffalo 23
New York 47, Boston 3
American League
AFL Games Played Saturday Oakland 12 Miami 21 San Diego 30 Chicago 14
Donnie Shanklin, senior tailback, scooted 41 yards on a well-executed inside reverse.
Then, on the last play of the third quarter, Douglass hit senior end Jim Hatcher with a 45-yard scoring bomb.
The last two KU scores were handled by the Jayhawk defense. One came on Holt's interception, the other on Martindale's fumble recovery in the end zone.
Donnie Shanklin led all ground-gainers with 93 yards on five carries. Halfback Bob Bess and split end Doug Dieken, both of Illinois, led all receivers with Bess pulling in five for 52 yards and Kieken grabbing five for 32 yards. KU's leading receiver was junior split end George McGowan who caught three for 40 yards. Hatcher caught one for 45 yards and a touchdown and Autry caught one for 44 yards and a TD.
Kansas Illinois
First downs 12 10
inward yardage 20 18
Passing yardage 173 176
Return yardage 152 25
Passes 8-14 18-34
Punts 9-39 6-44
Fumbles lost 1 2
Yards penalized 1 2
Kansas 0 20 13 14-47
inward yardage 0 20 1 7 0
Kansas—Autry 44 pass from Douglass (Bell kick)
lai Kansas—Sharklin 2 run (Bell kick)
Kansas—Douglass 6 run (kick)
(tailer)
Illinois—Naponic 1 run (McKissle
Kansas—Shanklin 41 run (kick
failed)
taken
Kansas- Hatcher 45 pa s from
Dallas (Ball, kick)
Kansas-Holt 75 pass interception (Bell kick)
Kansas--Martindale recovered fumble in end zone (Bell kick)
RUSHING
Kansas--Shanklin 5-93; Reeves, 6-51; John Riggins, 7-45; Douglass, 12-13; Utrio, 6-10; Ettinger, 2-4; Junior 1-3; Bucker, 3-0.
Illinois- Johnson, 14-64; Huston, 5-54; Bargo, 5-2; Naponic, 8-25; Kmiec, 2-6; Burns, 5-4; Jackson, 6-2; Bess, 3-0.
PASSING
PASSInu
Kansas—Douglas, 12-7-164; Ettin-
car 2-1-95
RECEIVING
Illinois—Naponic, 30-17-162 (three interpented): Burns, 4-1-14.
Kansas-Hatcher, 1-45; Autry, 1-44;
McGowan, 3-40; Mosier, 1-23; Jack-
Heney, 2-26.
Illinois—Bess, 5-52; Jackson, 3-34;
Dieken, 5-32; Wislow, 2-30; Johnson.
PINTING
Kansas—Bell, 3-48.0; Morgan, 6-
353 Illinois—Bess, 1-72; Bareither, 5-384. 4
Big Eight
Big Ten
Kansas 47, Illinois 7
Missouri 6, Missouri 6
Kansas State 21, Colorado State 0.
Arizona 21, Iowa State 12.
Notre Dame 45, Oklahoma 21.
Cobrashee 21, Colorado 21.
Cobrashee 28, Oregon 7.
Arkansas 32, Oklahoma State 15.
Missouri Valley
SCHAYES NAMED
NEW YORK (UPI)-Dolph Schayes, former Syracuse Nationals scoring leader, was appointed supervisor of officials in the National Basketball Association Thursday by league commissioner Walter Kennedy.
Kennedy also announced that Mendy Rudolph, starting his 16th year as an NBA referee, will head the newly created post of chief of staff officials.
Arkansas State 46, Drake 14.
Kansas 44, Illinois 7.1
Tennessee 52, Maryland 7.9
Indiana 40, Baylor 36.
Iowa 21, Oregon State 20.
Michigan 17, Purdue 16.
Southern California 29, Minnesota
CLEVELAND (UPI)—Rain washed out the final meeting of the year between the Washington Senators and the Cleveland Indians Thursday.
Indian officials said the game would not be made up, regardless of the Tribe's chances to advance in the American League standings.
NO MAKEUP
THORPE BAY, England (UPI) -Yankee Flyer, the U.S. challenger, won the fifth race in the best of seven series for the Little America's Cup for seaclass catamarans Thursday.
Britain leads the series 3-2. The sixth race will be held today.
YANKEE WINNER
Southeastern
Purdue 44, Virginia 6
Southern Methodist 37, Auburn 28.
Florida 23, Air Force 20.
Louisiana Tech 20, Mississippi State
Kentucky 12. Missouri 6.
Southern Methodist 37, Auburn 28,
Georgia Tech 17, Texas Christian 7,
Indiana 40, Baylor 36,
Rice 35, Washington 35 (tie).
Southwest
Atlantic Coast
Clemson 20, Wake Forest 20 (tie).
Florida State 24, Maryland 14.
North Carolina State 38, North Carolina 6.
Boston College 44, Virginia 6.
Pacific Eight
Purdue 44, Virginia 6.
Washington State 14, Idaho 7.
Colorado 28, Oregon 7.
Massachusetts 20, Ohio 7.
California 21, Michigan 7.
Southern California 29, Minnesota 7.
Stanford 68, San Jose State 20.
Washington 35, Rice 35 (tie).
Major Independents
Big eight roundup
While KU was destroying Illinois in their non-conference battle in Champaign the other Big 8 teams fared well. Matching KU's 47-7 trumpeting of the Illini was the other sunflower school, K-State, whipping Colorado State 21-0 at Manhattan.
Penn State 31, Navy 6.
Michigan State 14, Syracuse 10.
State of Texas 12.
Notre Dame 45, Oklahoma 21.
Army 34, Citadel 14.
Far Eastern 14.
Florida State 24, Maryland 14.
Georgia Tech 17, Texas Christian 7.
In other Big 8 non-conference battles Nebraska trounced the University of Utah 31-0 in Lincoln. In Boulder, Colorado, the Golden Buffalooes of CU crushed Oregon, members of the Western Conference 28-7.
In South Bend, Indiana, the story was not so bright for defending champions Oklahoma, as they were smothered by powerful Notre Dame by the score of 45-21. Perhaps the biggest upset of the day as far as the Big 8 is concerned was Missouri's defeat at the hands of Kentucky. The Wildcats turned back the always-tough Tigers by the tune of 12-6 in a defensive battle.
Despite seven lost funbales, Arizona defeated Iowa State 21-12 in Ames. Saturday night Arkansas handed Oklahoma State a 32-15 setback although the game was much closer until the last quarter.
BELLAMY SIGNS
FARMINGDALE, N.Y. (UPI)
-Walt Bellamy, 6-11 center of the New York Knickerbockers, signed his eighth pro contract Thursday.
Nichols- Archer team to win PGA
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)—Victory-hungry Bobby Nichols and big George Archer surged out of a tie for fifth place with three opening birdies and went on to win the PGA Team Championship with a final round 31-34-65 and a 72 hole total of 22 under-par 265.
The triumph was worth $20,000 each to Archer, the 6-foot-6 Gilroy, Calif. rancher who started the day as the tour's sixth leading money winner, and the 31-year-old Nichols, the 1964 PGA champ who hadn't won a tour title since the Minnesota Classic in late summer 1966.
The victory by Archer, just eight days away from his 29th birthday, boosted his season's earnings to $127,130 and into fifth place in the standings as he-legged past Arnold Palmer.
Palmer and Jack Nicklaus, defending team champions, faltered and finished far back at 14-under-par.
Mexico wins pair
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)—Mexico defeated South Africa 10-2 Sunday to become the first team to win two games in the World Softball Tournament.
Sheaffer's big deal gets you through 29 term papers,3 book reports,17 exams, 52 quizzes and 6 months of homework Sorry about that.
write? The world's longest writing dollar ballpoint pen. SHEAFFER
Sheaffer's big deal means you can write twice as long. Because you get the long-writing Sheaffer dollar ballpoint plus an extra long-writing 49¢ refill free. All for just a dollar. How much do you think you can write?
$100
SAVE 40%
SPECIAL OFFER
FREE
EXTRA REFILL
SHEAFFER.
THE GOOD
BALLPOINT
writes longer
smoother
© 1969 W. A. SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY, FORT MADISON, IOWA, A TEXTRON COMPANY
$100
SAVE 40%
SPECIAL OFFER
FREE
EXTRA REFILL
© 1968 W. A. SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY, FORT MADISON, IOWA, A TEXTRON COMPANY
Monday, September 23, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
45 15 52 55
JAYHAWK LINE MOVES OUT
Jayhawk quarterback Bobby Douglass prepares to hand off to fullback Mike Reeves during the KU-Illinois game Saturday in Champaign. The Jayhawk offensive line provided plenty of blocking for this play. KU went on to stun the Illini 47-7.
Second stringers make Chiefs move
by Bob Kearney Kansan Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Bench warmers brought to Kansas City's lethargic offense a speedy recovery Sunday.
The Chiefs, sparked by reserve quarterback Jacky Lee and third string fullback Bob Holmes, scored four touchdowns in the second half and trounced the Denver Broncos, 34-2.
Lee combined with flanker Otis Taylor on TD passes of 20 and 14 yards. Holmes blasted 68 yards on 11 carries, scoring twice on runs of 17 and 6 yards.
A crowd of 45,821 saw the Chiefs take a 6-2 half time margin on Jan Stenerud's ninth and 10th field goals of the young season. Stenerud split the uprights from 47 and 36 yards.
But for the second straight week, the Kansas City offense failed to score. Remembering the 20-19 loss to the New York Jets, the fans booed quarterback
Len Dawson and chanted "We want Lee" throughout the first half.
Coach Hank Stram inserted Lee and Holmes in the third quarter. Kansas City promptly covered 56 yards in five plays with a 28-yard reverse by Frank Pitts setting up the 17-yard touchdown burst by Holmes.
Denver's only points came in the first quarter when linebacker Chip Myrtle tackled Jerrel Wilson in the endzone for a safety.
Lee completed seven of eight passes for 99 yards. Dawson had connected on 10 of 15 aerials for 137 yards but was unable to move the Chiefs inside Denver's 30.
Stenerud's 10 points hiked his league-leading total to 37, which includes 10 field goals in 11 attempts. His only miss was a 53-yard try last week against New York.
KU women begin sports
Dolores A. Copeland, sponsor of the Women's Recreation Association, said Friday the 1968-69 session of women's intramurals at the University of Kansas has passed the planning stage and heavy participation is expected.
There is a wide selection of events beginning this month and extending until the middle of May. First on the agenda is kick-ball, a combination of soccer and softball. It begins late in September and lasts until the latter part of October. Beginning in October are the tennis singles which will again be taken up in April with the possible addition of doubles if enough interest is shown.
In November swimming, badminton, and basketball will begin. After Christmas vacation co-recreational badminton and co-recreational volleyball start. Miss Copeland said the latter is the most popular part of the program. Volleyball for women is set for the second week in February.
Miss Copeland said each sorority and women's dorm will receive intramural information through the mail.
Notre Dame ... a good start
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)—Notre Dame got off to a "good start" for its football season against Oklahoma, but coach Ara Parseghian said he was "still apprehensive" about the future.
"I didn't envision the type of game we played," he said.
"I expected one with the score much closer. We grew up a little bit against Oklahoma," he continued, "and now, we're going to get an even tougher opponent"—Purdue on Saturday.
Xerox Copy Service
- Bulletins
- Club news letters
- Theses
843-0763
Special Quantity Rates
M & M Office Supply
710 Mass.
843 0763
TWA's Group Therapy
Free time and far off places. Going alone or with favorite people. Being open and doing your thing.
Hacking around Central Park...worshipping sun, surf and Big Sur...the total sounds of the Fillmore, East and West...friends, old and new...Hare Krishna from coast to coast...laughing, learning, caring.
Being able to take weekend vacations because you're under twenty-two. Clever enough to stay away from the crowds of old people on their holidays.
Taking advantage of your TWA 50/50 Club Card to roam the US for half the regular fare.
Calling us or your travel agent...then following good vibrations on TWA.
up up and away! TWA
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 23,1968
Art museum takes a look at the past
Sunday afternoon marked the opening of a look into the past of Lawrence.
The University of Kansas Museum of Art held its 22nd annual open house presenting a photographic exhibition of 19th century houses in the Lawrence area.
Denys Peter Myers, principal architectural historian with the Historic American Buildings Survey, the Office of Archeology and Historic Preservation, and National Park Service, presented an illustrated lecture on 19th-century American domestic architecture, to 400 persons in Dyce auditorium. Slides of Lawrence homes were included.
A century ago, Lawrence suffered devastation at the hands of Quantrill's raiders. Nearly 75 business establishments and 100 homes were burned. But the city was rebuilt by its citizens.
Journalists visit campus
"And yet today," said Bret
Despite rain and thunder, 700 journalists from 67 high schools took part in the 50th Annual High School Journalism Conference in the Kansas Union Saturday.
Clyde M. Reed, editor and publisher of The Parson Sun, spoke on the challenge and fascination in journalism during the general session.
"Kansas and the nation need leaders who are not satisfied with the present and are unafraid of the future," Reed said. "They are the ones who are fascinated with people, and never become bored with themselves and surroundings. The fascination of journalism is that one never knows what the day will bring when he goes to work."
Speaking to the young journalists, Reed emphasized the importance of working for excellence on high school newspapers and yearbooks.
Waller, director of the museum,
"one wonders whether modern indifference will accomplish what Quantrill's fury could not:
The total eradication of 19th-century Lawrence."
The exhibition was designed to stimulate "public awareness of the value of this architectural heritage," Waller said, "and of the importance of its preservation."
The exhibition was prepared by students, townspeople, and faculty members all sharing a common love of Lawrence's old architecture and a concern that it should be appreciated by the public.
The 50 houses represented featured many styles ranging from the early stone dwellings to the Victorian mansions of the 1880's and '90's.
Black Panther allowed to speak
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—The Board of Regents of the University of California have rejected a demand by Gov. Ronald Reagan that they ban Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver from lecturing at the Berkeley campus and voted to permit the militant "minister of information" to appear one time in a classroom.
At a stormy open session at UCLA, the regents turned down Reagan's emotional plea that the people of California were as aroused as any time in his memory at the prospect of Cleaver instructing students at a university supported by their taxes.
Reagan said bringing in Cleaver "made as much sense as it would have to invite the late Tommy Manville as a marriage counsellor." Reagan warned that approval of Cleaver's appearance could lead to a legislative investigation of the University of California "from top to bottom."
The regents voted 10 to 8 for a motion proposed by President Charles Hitch, head of the nine universities in the system, which in effect would permit Cleaver to make one appearance.
It voted down, 9 to 9, a motion backed by Reagan which stated that Cleaver not be permitted to participate, instruct or teach any course on a campus of the University of California.
Cleaver originally had been appointed by a faculty committee to deliver 10 lectures over a 10-week period at Berkeley.
Who Expect The Finest Wear
One of Reagan's most vehement backers was Superintendent of Public Instruction Max Rafferty, Republican candidate for U.S. senator, who characterized Cleaver as a "racist bigot" and said if he was approved it would demonstrate the California educational system was in need of complete reform.
The regents supporting the Hitch proposal to let Cleaver appear once made it plain they opposed him as a qualified lecturer, but felt it was a dangerous course to have the regents start naming individuals who could not appear as guest lecturers.
Peace policy defended
A former South Vietnamese ambassador to the United States will defend U.S. peace policy in Vietnam Nam at the Student Union Minority Opinions Forum, Sept. 30, in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
HIGGINS SLACKS
Tran Van Dinh has written for the Christian Science Monitor and The Nation and also fought with the liberation forces against France in Indo-China, a position contrary to that held by the United States.
FEATURING BLENDS OF FORTREL® COTTON
Sears gives $2,000 grant to KU
The University of Kansas has received a grant of $2,000 from the Sears, Roebuck Foundation for a social work development project in the inner city of Kansas City, Mo.
PETER HAWKINS
Prof. Paul R. Brotsman, who is in charge of the project, accepted the gift from E. M. Hay of the Lawrence Sears catalog store.
Brotsman, assisted by graduate students, will use the grant for supplies and special materials in programs with families in the north central and west side of the city.
function more effectively and to encourage self-help."
This is achieved through individual contacts, informal classes in basic home skills, group meetings, organized youth activities, and health instruction.
NEW YORK: Mrs. Richard Nixon seems to be winking at a friend as she and her husband leave the Americana Hotel to attend a $1,000 a plate fund raising dinner. The dinner was one of 23 held across the nation Friday and hooked by closed-circuit television. (UPI Photo)
An effort will also be made to improve communications and cooperation among families in the west side neighborhood through a periodic newsletter.
"Our goal," Brotsman said, "is to assist heads of families to
The grant is the fourth the Sears, Roebuck Foundation has contributed in support of this program. Clay Devitt, Kansas City, Mo., is local administrator for the foundation.
Come To The SKI CLUB
MEMBERSHIP MEETING
Tuesday, Sept. 24
7:30 - Kansas Union Forum Room
Mr. Charles Brinkman representative from Aspen will speak and show films of Aspen.
Our ski trips to Aspen, Vail & Winter Park will be discussed.
Monday, September 23, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Hawks pepper Illinois
64
55
62
8
It lacks about so much
I will always be grateful for your presence.
22
Don Autry scores!
Encouragement from the bench
Photos by Mark Bernstein
19
Happiness is another T.D.
OIS 7 TIME 4 2 PENALTY
ORS 47 OUTS LEFT 3 7 BALL ON 3
In the bag . . . but Pepper still intent
83
John Zook blocks another one
KK 2
Aw, come on, ref
74
"Crunch" . . . Naponic is nailed
Are YOU Protected Against the READING MEANY?
These Dynamic Readers are. Here's what they say about the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Course...
Don't get bogged down by the Reading Meany. Get Protection. . .
Enroll in the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Course TODAY!
Plan to attend one of these free demonstrations
At each demonstration a drawing will be made. The winner will receive a $25 scholarship . . . Plan to attend, YOU may be a winner.
Monday, September 23rd: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union*
Tuesday, September 24th: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union*
* Check bulletin board for room number
Classes meet once a week, for eight weeks
Mondays, 3:00 to 6:00 p.m., beginning September 23
Tuesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 24
Wednesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 25
DON'T LET READING ASSIGNMENTS GET TO YOU!
PLEASE RESERVE SPACE for me in the class beginning on a ( ) definite ( ) tentative basis.
NAME ___
ADDRESS___
CITY___
STATE ___ ZIP CODE___
I would like to receive additional information. PLEASE SEND BROCHURE. I UNDERSTAND NO SALESMAN WILL CALL.
For additional information contact:
For additional information contact:
WESLEY FOUNDATION BUILDING
1314 Oread Road
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone: 913 VI 3-6424
1
Gary Asconio: It has increased my enjoyment of reading. It will help me considerably in keeping up with the numerous business and news periodicals.
Judy Lemley: Not only, do you increase reading speed, but you learn study skills and build up confidence and motivation.
Beg. rate: 448 End rate: 1700
Beg. comp: 65% End comp.: 89%
Beg. rate: 377 End rate: 1238
Beg. comp : 79% End comp : 72%
Kim Liu: The course is beneficial to those who enjoy reading and to those who read a great deal.
Beg. rate.: 368 End rate: 2762
Beg. comp.: 79% End comp.: 74%
John Casey: The course makes long reading assignments more pleasant; shorter ones a breeze.
Beg. rate: 614 End rate: 2520
Beg. comp.: 44% End comp.: 76%
S. W. R. M. C. A. B.
PETER WILSON
Dr. J. Bunker Clark: It is not only a course in how to cover reading matter quickly, but it is especially valuable for creating a systematic and effective method for attacking study materials.
Beg. rate: 489 End rate: 1611
Beg. comp.: 77% End comp.: 85%
Evelyn Wood
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
EST.1958
DANIEL C. RENNICK
Dr. Charles Michener: The recall pattern method is excellent for keeping track of information. I am using it in a modified form to "outline" the chapters of a book I am writing, which I then dictate onto tape.
T. M. F. G. S. P. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. R. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T. T.
Beg. rate: 328 End rate: 1860
Beg. comp.: 72% End comp.: 76%
Peter Bussler: In addition to saving time, Reading Dynamics also helps to remember the material better and to get the main points.
Ellen McGee: It really works! It is such a relief to be able to read thoroughly and enjoy any book you like without feeling you have no time.
Beg. rate: 325 End rate: 1700
Beg. comp.: 82% End comp.: 83%
Beg. rate: 260 End rate: 3504
Beg. comp.: 82% End comp.: 78%
James Elrod: It takes work, lots of it, and may seem very frustrating at times, but the reward in the end is well worth it.
Beg. rate: 278 End rate: 1450
Beg. comp: 59% End comp: 76%
Sharon Elrod: It helps me get a lot of pleasure and outside reading done. I even read technical material a little faster.
Beg. rate: 282 End rate: 1415
Beg. comp: 53% End comp: 85%
Jorge Mestas: It is worth the money when one takes into consideration the time saved while reading. It is a must if one goes to college.
Beg. rate: 366 End rate: 1655
Beg. comp.: 58% End comp.: 88%
Robert Middleton: I feel that the course provides the conscientious student a method of greatly improving both his reading speed and comprehension. Application of the techniques allows for maximum efficiency in all types of reading.
Beg. rate: 116 End rate: 4350
Beg. comp.: 85% End comp.: 80%
Monday, September 23, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
KONNAH WAN MENURU ANGST
FUGS
THE FUGS • It Crawled Into My Hand, Honest
Reprise Album RS 6305
BELL MUSIC CO.
925 Mass.
VI 3-2644
At
McConnell Lbr., We've Got:
- Lumber and Plywood cut to order
- Do-it-yourself shelving materials
- Homecoming Supplies including standard 1" poultry netting
Visit our newly opened
Concord Shop
- Canvas
- Stretcher Frames made to order
- Oil and Acrylic Paints
- Unusual Gift Ideas
- Painting Classes
Mon. thru Thurs.—7-9 p.m.
We're open Mon. thru Fri.
Till 9 p.m. on Thurs.
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
ATTENTION Social Chairmen
The log cabin at Oak Lodge is available each night except Sunday for parties, socials, & dancing
Location
13 miles south ot Lawrence on Highway 50
For Information Call 913-594-3349
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center
VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
18 Car Row, Pet Path VL-3-2
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Kustom and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Exclusive Representative
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
- Badaes Guards
- Novelties
- Favors
Portraits of Distinction
- Lavaliers
- Rings
- Rings
Sportswear Mugs
Paddles
- Paddles
- Trophies
- Cups
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
- Awards
Al Lauter
- Passports
Also
- Applications
Hixon
Building
- Seniors
Studio
Please call for appointment
Portraits of Distinction
Bob Blank, Owner
1933
- Application
- Lettermen
721 Mass. V1 3-0330
BACK TO SCHOOL
Mister Donut
Hey Mom & Dad
BACK TO SCHOOL FREE GIFTS BOOK COVERS
PSYCHEDELIC BOOKCOVERS IN 4 DIZZY COLORS
FREE with purchase of our PSYCH-A-DELICIOUS DOUGHNUTS
Mister
FOR DETAILS ON THIS, MAJOR MEDICAL, AND
FREE
BOOK COVERS
523 WEST 23RD
TRAVEL TIME LET
FOR DETAILS ON THIS, MAJOR MEDICAL, AN OTHER PLANS OF HEALTH AND LIFE INSURANCE
Eudora, Kans.
1035 Elm
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
V. G. Miller
Mutual of Omaha
The Company that puts
K12-2793
Make Your
Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now!
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
WANT ADS
CONTACT:
Mutual of Omaha
The Company that pays
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha
MUTUAL OF OMAHA INSURANCE COMPANY
HOME OFFICE: OMAHA, NORRIS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in
various sections are offered
to all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
Mobile home 10x57, washer, dryer,
A.C., W-W Carpeting, garbage
disposal. Radio-stereo system, utility
shed, fenced lot. Call Darlene
Ascanio at UN 4-4291 or VI 2-7332 after
5.
9-27
FOR SALE
200 mm F/4 Super Takumar lens-
virtually unused, original box, case,
and strap. $150. Call VI 2-6481, evenings.
9-27
50cc Honda with helmet. Best offer
over $140. Electric starter, automatic
driver, mud cake,addle, leg guards.
foot mounts, gaskets. V-97
6901 or U-4 3533-2. V-27
Beautiful 175ce motorcycle with accessories and helmet. Better than new! George Richardson, VI 2-8875 or UN 4-4273. 9-23
Bronze '67 Camero. 1 owner, 15,200 miles. 250 engine, straight six. Car, radio, whitewalls, snow tree Call VI 2-8491 or Mrs. Nash at 9-2356.
Used Conrad Electric Bass Guitar.
Good shape with cord, strap, and case.
Not much for a bass. Call VI 3-
6305 after 5 p.m. 9-23
Suzuki 250ce "67 Scrambler, good
after 5:30 or weekends.
After 5:30 or weekends.
1963 Sunbeam Alpine—good engine—
new paint—new top, $700. 1767 175cc
excellent—excellent condition
$350. Pam Cobb, UN 4-3476. After 5
I 2-9350.
Motorcycle: 1966 Triumph T 100 R
500cc. Excellent condition, low mileage,
reasonable. Call VI 2-4239 after
6:00 p.m. or weekends.
9-23
1964 Alfa Romero 580 Gulla.
condition. $550. Call VI 2-0337
gullies. 9-25
9-25
1966 BSA 650 for sale, $700 or trade
Call VI 218-343-1180 between 5 and 7 p.m.
9-25
1966 Dodge Coronet 500, 383, 4 barrel,
Metallic Silver with black vinyl
et. ET Mags. Call Chuck at VI 3-
8490.
9-25
"Very" portable typewriter, $20.00.
"Case call or see after 5 p.m. In
case call" 9-25
BSA Starfire 1968, 700 miles, like new. Call Larry at VI 2-534- 925
1956 Chev. 2 dr. 265 cu. Aut. Dependable. $150 Calv II 4-2649. 9-24
1951 Chevy for sale. '58 eng., radio,
very clean, dependable, excellent me-
chanical shape. One easy low down
mechanical 1341 Mass. 6-8 p.m. V-26
6834.
1961 Mercury Meteor, 6 cyl, standard trans., very good mechanically, 4 good tires. Leaving the country. Must sell. Call VI 2-8891 for more information. 0-244 8-724
Bargain Sale—Two Smith-Corona portable typewriters reduced to sell. One almost new Galaxie model, with carrying case—excellent condition. Mail in box at Smith-Corona carrying case. Call VI 2-9321 after 5:00 p.m. or weekends. 9-24
1963 Impala SS. Bucket兵机 4-speed,
lowest bid. Call VI 3-4578.
9-27
1963 Bucl Special V-8. 4-door, auto.
Bullet Carrier V-8. 4-door,
Call 842-7456 for 5:30 p.m. 9-27
Rust swnet coat -full length with
contrast tape 9-17
Call Jann at 843-1619.
condition 9-27
4 track car stereo and tapes. Also 15
tapes for the radio. Call 9-71-1785,
5:00 p.m. VI 3-1785.
HORSE for sale. American bred 71-9-
year-old Chestnut geling. Perfect for
the pleasure ride. Entrance please ride.
Horse, saddle, $250 - $225.
VI 3-7596 after 5 p.m.
9-27
1967 Triumph TR-6 Motorcycle
Bought new in May. Very low mileage.
Inquire by calling VI 3-5095 or UN 4-2352 and ask for Joyce. 9-27
1956 Corvette, 327, 3-speed, two tops,
$550. Call VI 3-5738. 9-24
HELP WANTED
Part-time from 11 a.m. till 2 p.m.
Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week.
Start $1.25 per hr. apply in person to Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 W. 23rd. 9-28
part time help wanted for packing and moving of household goods by reputable mover. Experience preferred. Call VI 3-0380, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. for interview or Saturday till noon. 9-23
Male or female part time noon hour or evening shift. Good pay. Name your hours. Apply in person at Sandy's Drive-in. 2120 W. 9th. 9-23
NOTICE
Try something different this weekend.
Have a weiner roast and hay rack ride at Lapta's Barn. Call VI 3-4032 for more information.
9-27
If you think that you have modeling potential, but don't know what the demanded qualities are or how to get started, let a professional model is acting as an assistant help plan in modeling your place and potential in the modeling business. Call Model's Guild for further information. VI 2-8634. 9-27
MUSIC LESSONS — specializing in guitar and $ 5 string, banjo. These classes are being taught by instructors who are or have been entertaining professionally. Start any time. Beginners or otherwise.
ALSO instruction for all hand instruments, piano, recorder, melodica, and rock and roll drums.
Haynes-Ray Audio and Music Co. VI
2-1944. 9-23
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q — outdoor
pit, rib slab to go. $3.25; Rib order.
$1.50 Bristack sandwich. $8.5; chicken.
$1.15 Brisket sandwich. $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
All people interested in folk danceing or leading folk dancing, contact Ton Rosenberg at Math DEPT 213 or Long of I419 Ohio, No. 8, VI-27 1991. 9-27
HORSES BOAREDED—New facilities,
reasonable rates, close in—south
location, indoor and outdoor arenas.
Call VI 2-3353 or VI 3-1626. 9-25
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most in barn and electric capital's barn. In barn and electricity unavailably available. VI 3-4023 11-11
K. C. Commuters—Would like ride or share drive. Classes from 7:30-11:30 dalys on Friday until 3:00 No. Springs at 7-4018, K.C.K. 9-25
Professional Model needs qualified Coeds to register with her newly formed modeling agency, "Model's Guild." Registration fee = $10.00. For a confidential interview call VI 2-954 for appointments.
Ace Furniture and Antiques is now open in their new building at 560 W. 39th St. we see what we have to help you furnish your apartment and home. This week's special is waste baskets for 7 days a week from 10:00 to 6:00.
Car pool forming from Overland Park area. Will come early and stay late. Call Ray at TU 8-4399 after 7:00 p.m.
9-27
Bookcase Special. Three shelf, 24-in-
by 32-in., unfinished white pinelite
of Kaw Bridge and right 1 block to Brewer
wood products. VI 2-8145. 9-27
WANTED
Male roommate to share furnished apartment. $67.50 pays rent, all utilities, and phone. 524 Fireside Drive, No. 9. Call III-3917. 9-27
Want to get in a car pool from Johnson County to Lawrence. Can drive if necessary. Call after 6:00 p.m. at DU 1-5104. 9-23
Female roommate over 21 years old. Modern call MV 2-6159. In Dai- 10.2
Roommate wanted — undergraduate,
female
M 3-2263. Ohio $7.30 a month
9-22
RIDE TO K.C., MISSOURI to the vicinity of 16th and Main. Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call VI 3-1467. 9-27
Girl to cook evening meal five days a week. Pay plus meal included. Apply 2541 Redbud Lane, Apt. No. 4 after 5:00 p.m. 9-27
ARTIST MODELS wanted, $1.15 to
$2.50 per hour. No experience neces-
sary, male or female. Phone UN 4-
4401. 9-27
Need an upper classman or graduate student to share neat and clean apt. Come see at 1605 Tennessee after 6 p.m. 9-27
Drummer needed immediately. Must have experience in playing hard rock and soul. Call Richard Music Co., VI 2-0021. 9-27
Singer wanted for an established band. Must be experienced in singing motown, rhythm and blues. Please call Rich, VI 2-3834 p.m. 9-27
FOR RENT
Lovely room available in private home for responsible staying, with children (ages 15 and 18) on occasions. Call VI 3-9150 for interviews.
FURNISHED APARTMENT for graduate student. $100. Utilities paid. No pets. Garage available. Very quiet. V 3-1209, 1633 Vermont. 9-27
SERVICES OFFERED
Sewing and alterations by experi-
enced seamstress. All work done
on clothing. Make dresses, skirts, what have you? Call
843-1348 - 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
9-23
LOST
Lost dog. Yorkshire Terrier, tan,
short coat, oversized male. Name:
collar. Lost Monday near
18th and I. Mass. If found please
9-2 1992.
TYPING
Themes, Theses. Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI 2973
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 23, 1968
Voice split
could work within the present system.
Other members agreed, saying Voice should continue to work within "the establishment," as it had in drafting the new Senate Code.
Although discussion was lengthy and sometimes heated, no decision was reached.
Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo. senior, said he hoped committees to study the problems mentioned would start work this week.
More than 50 persons have offered to serve on these committees.
The committee on student government will devote itself to explaining the Dissenting Report of the Student Faculty Committee on University Governance, the so-called "minority report," to the student body.
Members plan to speak to as many campus groups as possible
Belafonte show
(Continued from page 1)
Following the famous singer into the field house were his seven musicians carrying two guitars, three drums and an electric bass.
Meanwhile, the Delores Hall singers arrived on the scene in purple-striped and orange-plaid bell-bottom style pants. Jackie De Shannon sat on an adjacent row of bleachers in casual brown slacks, a patterned crepe blouse and leather boots. As she sat sipping her coke, her straight blonde hair falling loosely past her shoulders, Miss De Shannon spoke freely about her singing career.
"I've just finished a new album 'Laurel Canyon' in Los Angeles," she said flashing a sincere smile. "What groups are big around here? I prefer something soufful—lyrical."
"College students are my favorite audience," she explained. "They are so open and free." The KU concert was Miss De Shannon's first performance with Belafonte. She will travel with him until Oct. 6 as they tour colleges throughout the country.
country.
A few minutes later as Miss De Shannon was called to the stage, Belafonte sat across the platform eating a hamburger and exchanging iokes with singers.
jones Leaning back in the metal chair, he casually explained why he was making a college tour.
"College students are the best of all audiences. There's a basic thrust that young people have. They're terribly committed and are open to new ideas."
are open to new a cross section of all music in the world," the well-traveled singer explained. He spent his boyhood in Jamaica where he learned to appreciate Calvdo.
Calypso.
Although Belafonte refused to comment on his civil rights activities, his sound manager recalled that a year ago Belafonte played Caesars Palace in Las Vegas giving 11 benefits in 14 days for Martin Luther King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).
Conference (SCUCI)
In Houston, someone planted a couple of gas bombs in the arena, Scheib said. "That's about all the trouble we've had."
CARRY IT...
ONE DROP FRESHENS BREATH INSTANTLY!
Binaca
BINACA CONCENTRATED GOLDEN BREATH DROPS
(Continued from page 1)
The publicity committee might publish a Voice newspaper of some sort to publicize the group's actions.
Part of the disagreement between members was attributed to the nature of the group. Atkinson said because Voice was not a structured group, "everyone is a leader, therefore all statements are valid." Yet, he felt Voice must act.
An eight-pound, 1,000 page reproduction of Shakespeare's First Folio, the result of almost two years' effort by a University English professor, will be published Oct. 11.
Members also discussed what some felt was poor press coverage of Voice meetings. It was decided that a "press agent" should be appointed and a secretary should keep minutes of all meetings. Some members suggested closed meetings.
Valuable folio to be published
"The Norton Facsimile: The First Folio of Shakespeare," by Charlton J. K. Hinman, is the first successful word-by-word comparison of the copies.
The task was made possible by the professor's invention, the Hinman Collator, which superimposes the image of a page from one copy on top of a page from another copy.
Preparation for the book was extensive. A half-ton camera had to be moved into the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., to photograph the pages chosen by Hinman.
For security purposes, a library staff member was present at every exposure of a first folio. The publisher paid his salarey.
Only 13,500 copies are being printed. Hinman's book will sell for $65 through 1968, and $75 afterward. Previously, good copies of the "First Folio," printed in 1623, have sold for as much as $25,000.
Hinman, a lifelong Shakespearean scholar, has been teaching at KU since 1960
Top KU administrators have refused comment on the proposed Senate Code, except to say the "committee had done a good job."
No comment on proposal
Provost James R. Surface said because the report was not addressed to the administration, it was not appropriate for him to comment. He did say he expects "vigorous debate on the committee's proposals."
Francis Heller, dean of faculties, said the report was of "major importance to the University," but declined comment on the code. Heller termed the report a "remarkable effort."
William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs, said he did not want to prejudice discussion of the report by making any comment. "A great deal of careful work and study has gone into the report," he said.
Film Society plans closed meetings
The KU Film Society plans to operate as a closed society this year, but this does not mean that every film shown will be for members only. Ronald Cote, assistant instructor in math and the society president last year, said.
Film enthusiasts met with club planners Thursday night to hear about organization of the society's second year at KU.
"Many films, such as those from the Museum of Modern Art in New York, cannot be rented except for showings to closed societies." Cote said. "In order to get these films, we would show them to members only."
John Tibbets, Lansing senior who has worked in the planning of the society, said the $5 membership assures a person of being admitted to all film society showings at no entrance charge and entitles the member to a newsletter about scheduled films.
Films will be mostly pre 1940's and are tentatively scheduled for showings on Sunday evenings and afternoons, Cote said.
Lack of federal funds has made doubtful the approval of proposed remedial programs for inadequately prepared graduate students entering chemistry or economics at KU.
Proposed funds doubtful
The departments of chemistry and economics have submitted their proposals under the Department of Health, Education and Welfare Educational Professionals Development Act.
enough success is still possible, William P. Albrecht, dean of the Graduate School, has his doubts.
"Expectations of seeing this thing implemented shouldn't be raised unduly." Albrecht said.
Partially to free the chemistry program from dependence on government funds, Richard Middaugh, assistant professor of chemistry, has been investigating the possibility of a joint program which would incorporate a few midwestern universities.
The economics department proposal was essentially designed to meet the needs of disadvantaged black students from small southern colleges, said Ronald R. Olsen, department chairman.
"we would then be in a position to go out for broad-based support from industries and foundations," Middaugh said.
Both the chemistry and eco- nomics proposals request support for five to 10 students. Participants would receive Master of Science degrees in two years, spending the first year in primarily undergraduate courses and intensive tutorial programs.
Students in the chemistry program would serve as part-time teaching assistants in their second year, Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, said.
Bricker said an informal program for one student was in operation at KU last spring. Supported with four to five hundred dollars from various sources, the student involved is now enrolled in the regular graduate chemistry program and is apparently doing well, Bricker said.
Middaugh and Olsen both think scaled-down programs may be possible next year even if HEW funding is unavailable.
A program similar to the KU proposals was run last year by the chemistry department of Southern University at Baton Rouge, La.
To meet specified federal guidelines, both KU plans are designed as teacher-training programs. Middaugh said his multi-university program need not specifically be structured for this purpose, while both Bricker and Olsen said qualified students would be encouraged to earn a Ph.D. degree rather than immediately begin teaching.
Muskie criticizes Wallace, Nixon
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, Democratic vice-presidential candidate, at a Topea press conference Friday, called third party presidential hopeful, George Wallace, "a threat to all Americans."
The senator from Maine told a crowd of 450 enthusiastic supporters at a banquet in Kansas City, Kan., Friday night that Wallace's strength in labor unions posed a real danger to the labor movement.
Muskie spent the bulk of his time during his whirlwind tour of Kansas criticizing his opposition-former Alabama governor George Wallace and Republican presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon.
"The Wallace record is clearly anti-labor," he said. "He has
vehemently opposed all prolabor legislation for the last quarter of a century."
Nixon, Muskie said, has been unwilling to debate anyone, including Wallace, adding, "Maybe they don't have any points of disagreement."
Muskie also expressed concern over continual references made by Nixon to the "Humphrey-Johnson administration."
"Why do we never hear of the Nixon-Eisenhower administrations?" he said. "Nixon should be held accountable for the years 1952-60 during which the nation suffered three recessions and first got involved in Vietnam."
NEW RELEASES FROM
AM
RECORDS
THE BEAT OF THE BRASS
HERB ALPERT &
THE TIJUANA BRASS
AA385F4132 60
SERGIO MENDES
& BRASIL 66
Look,
Around
AM
BELL MUSIC CO., Inc.
925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
79th Year, No.6
Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, September 24, 1968
UDK News Roundup
by United Press International
Call forces jet landing
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.—An American Airlines 727 jetliner with 80 persons aboard made an emergency landing at Capital airport Monday after the airline had received an anonymous call that eight sticks of dynamite were aboard the plane.
Authorities said the jet made a safe landing but 12 persons were injured when they jumped down a canvas chute to evacuate the airplane. Most of the injured passengers suffered ankle sprains when they hit the concrete runway.
GM increases car prices
DETROIT-General Motors Corporation Monday announced an average 1.6 per cent increase in prices for its 1969 model cars-substantially under the 2.9 per cent increase announced by Chrysler Corporation a week ago.
President Johnson promptly called the GM move "a step in the right direction" and said he hoped Chrysler would roll back its larger increases in line with the world's largest automotive manufacturer.
Guard protests call-up
FT. CARSON, Colo.-A petition protesting "illegal mobilization" of Kansas and Iowa National Guard units into the Army has been signed by 1,000 enlisted men in the 69th Infantry Brigade, it was reported in the Denver Post today.
The petition will be turned over to the American Civil Liberties Union in Denver, a spokesman told the Post. There are about 4,500 men in the brigade.
Officials at the 69th Brigade Headquarters said they knew nothing about it.
--on North Vietnam, said the General Assembly could be asked to vote on a resolution on the question.
ASC will consider Senate Code plan
The code is the means for implementing recent proposals for a complete overhaul of KU's student government.
The proposed new University Senate Code takes its first step toward adoption tonight.
Provisions of the code include the abolition of the All Student Council (ASC) and the establishment of a new three-senate structure.
The code will be presented to the ASC during a meeting at 7:00 p.m. today at the Kansas Union.
It will not be voted on until about Oct. 8, said Joe Goering, Moundridge senior and vice president of the student body.
Goering said the probable timetable for adoption of the code is:
- Today—ASC first reading.
- Thursday—Senate Council discussion and vote.
- Oct. 1—ASC meets with Student Faculty committee to discuss the code.
- Conference committee made up of University Senate Council and ASC members to iron out any differences between the two bodies (if needed).
- Further ASC and Senate Council votes (if needed).
- Oct. 20-student body vote.
- Oct. 29→University Senate vote.
- November—Board of Regents approval.
Goering stressed that this timetable is tentative, but felt the code would be ready for regents approval by the end of October.
Secretary General wants UN vote on Viet bombing
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)—Secretary General U Thant of the United Nations Monday suggested a General Assembly vote on ending the American bombing of North Vietnam and drew an angry response from U.S. ambassador George W. Ball.
Ball paid a personal call on Thant after he made the suggestion at a news conference and sharply criticized his discussion of the matter.
"We don't regard the discussion of Vietnam at the Secretary General's press conference as in any way helpful in furthering the serious and sensitive negotiations in progress in Paris," Ball told newsmen after his session with Thant. "I made this clear."
Ball said Thant's statement on the bombing was made "with no advance information or consultation with us," and added: "I don't know whether there was any with North Vietnam."
Thant, stung by criticism of his three-year campaign to get the United States to stop all air attacks
Ball said the United States was "not discouraged about efforts to find a peaceful solution" to the Vietnam War in the Paris talks with North Vietnamese diplomats.
Unofficial U.S. reaction was quick and sharp. One U.S. diplomat
He said voting will be on the proposed Senate Code, not on the report of the Student Faculty Committee on University Governance (the "majority report") or the dissenting report of the committee (the so-called "minority report").
Clif Conrad, Bismarck, N. D. senior and president of the student body, he was he optimistic about ASC passage of the new code in a form similar to the one presented by the committee.
ASC rules require that any proposal be considered at least twice before adoption.
Rusty Leffel, Mission Hills junior and fraternity district ASC representative, said the code was too big to be rushed through ASC. "It is important that all students be given ample time to consider this action," he said.
Alpha Kappa Lambda is officially the plaintiff in the case, representing a majority of the Greek houses on the campus. Defendants are the Douglas County Treasurer, the Board of County Commissioners, and the State Board of Tax Appeals.
Leffel also said he expected the ASC to adopt the code.
Kansas statute states that organizations do not have to pay real estate taxes if they can prove they exist "exclusively for educational purposes."
Rick von Ende, assistant instructor of political science and chairman of the ASC, said he questioned the wisdom of having a Dean of Student Affairs preside over the new Student Senate.
If won, could save each $4-5,000
In a pre-trial motion Sept. 20, County Attorney Dan Young sought to dismiss the suit. The final decision on whether to hold trial is expected within the next two weeks.
Other topics before the ASC tonight will include a resolution commending Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe for his 18 years of service to the University.
Greek houses here now believe they can claim this exemption, which would result in a savings of $4,000-5,000 per year for each house.
Fraternities and sororities at KU have brought suit in Douglas County District Court contending they are exempt from real estate taxes.
The appointment of a committee to set up a lecture series comparable to the Landon lecture series at K-State will also be discussed, von Ende said.
If the motion is overruled, the case will go to trial in late October or early November. However, if the motion is sustained,
KU Greeks file tax suit
the plaintiffs may take the case to a higher court.
"Chances are good that if the motion to dismiss the appeal is sustained the case will be taken to the State Supreme Court," said Bob Sears, Chairman of the Interfraternity Council Judicial Council.
(Continued on page 8)
A similar case in which KU Greeks claimed they were exempt from personal property tax was defeated in District Court last spring.
Sears, a second-year law student from Kansas City, Kan., is assisting the firm of Kansas City tax attorneys who are handling the case for the plaintiffs.
WEATHER
Considerable cloudiness this forenoon becoming partly cloudy this afternoon. Mostly fair tonight and Wednesday, cooler tonight. High today 70's low tonight near 50. Precipitation probabilities 5 per cent today, less than 5 per cent tonight and Wednesday.
TOMORROW'S WEEKEND
CAUGHT IN A KANSAS DOWNPOUR
A KU coed runs for cover in the Kansas Union during one of the many showers that have plagued the campus and made walking between classes a very unpleasant experience during the past few days.
Avg
1908 22040302 54
Don't let the Reading Meany do HIS thing
g
if he does, you could find yourself in a bad way. For instance, you could find yourself dozing off in class because of lack of sleep. You could find yourself missing all that's happening on campus. You could find yourself falling further and further behind in your class work. And you could find the old GPA slipping steadily downward.
Well don't let the Reading Meany do HIS thing. Arm yourself by enrolling in the Reading Dynamics Course TODAY! Learn how you can stay ahead in your reading assignments by learning to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now. Learn new study skills, visual skills and comprehension skills. Learn how to recall the material you read, any time you want to. Learn how you can read for pleasure and enjoyment at rapid rates.
The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Course is more than speed reading . . . It's a whole new experience.
Take it TODAY, and go and do YOUR thing.
Plan to attend one of these free demonstrations
At each demonstration a drawing will be made. The winner will receive a $25 scholarship . . . Plan to attend, YOU may be a winner.
Tuesday, September 24th: 7:00 p.m. & 8:30 p.m...Kansas Union*
* Check bulletin board for room number
Classes meet once a week, for eight weeks
Tuesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 24
Wednesdays, 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., beginning September 25
DON'T LET READING ASSIGNMENTS GET TO YOU!
PLEASE RESERVE SPACE for me in the class beginning on a ( ) definite ( ) tentative basis.
NAME___
ADDRESS ___
CITY ___
STATE___ ZIP CODE___
I would like to receive additional information. PLEASE SEND BROCHURE. I UNDERSTAND NO SALESMAN WILL CALL.
For additional information contact:
WESLEY FOUNDATION BUILDING 1314 Oread Road Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Phone:913 VI 3-6424
Evelyn Wood
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
EST. 1958
Tuesday, September 24, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Tower residents loud on criticism
Most residents of Jayhawk Towers, north of Allen Field House, like the plush furnishings of the apartment complex, but they dislike the small kitchens and the construction work all around them.
E. R. Zook, manager of Jayhawk Investments, said the Towers were designed to cut down on noise and to speed the cleaning.
Zook claimed the irregular shape of the complex created two-bedroom apartment "pods," separate from every other "pod" on that floor. Thus, he reasoned, a loud party down the hall would not disturb other students' study.
Some tenants agreed that the apartments were quiet, but others protested they could even hear the people next door brushing their teeth. One resident said the only reason the Towers are quiet is that few people live there now.
Nearly all the tenants can tolerate the noise of the workmen who are just finishing some minor detail work on the interior of the first four towers. Some residents, however, are unhappy to be charged a full rate of rent when several of the promised services are not available.
Several students, who wished to remain unidentified, complained about the delay in the installation of telephones, laundry facilities, the lack of lighting in the rooms and the poor working condition of the air conditioning system.
Zook commented that the present problems are small ones and are to be expected in a new building of any kind. He said the buildings were scheduled to be ready for occupancy by the beginning of the semester this year, but the rains of August and September delayed the construction process.
The present two buildings should be ready in a month, according to Zook, and the last two should be ready for occupancy by the beginning of the spring semester.
spring set. Several tenants commented on the placing of the kitchen facilities. A mini-size stove, refrigerator and sink were set against one living room wall, without even a divider to hide them from sight.
Many tenants thought the whole complex "poorly planned," and at least one thought the lack of a directory in the lobby was atrocious.
Zook replied that the management of the Towers wanted to interfere as little as possible with the lives of the tenants, and released no room numbers to anyone.
"The whole concept here is to get away from the institutionalized aspect of the dormitory. We treat students as adults who can arrange their own affairs," Zook said. For the same reason, he said, men and women are not compelled to live on separate floors.
Despite a few grumblings about the quality of the apartments not matching the price, most tenants agreed that the accommodations are a lot better, and more convenient than a dorm.
Two-way radio unit planned for hospital
In the past, time has been wasted while ineffective communications have confused delivery of seriously injured patients.
A two-way operative radio system, to be installed in mid-November, will open communication channels between Watkins Hospital and the Citizens Ambulance Service.
The radio, authorized by the All Student Council last spring, will operate from a central base on Iowa St. and will cover a radius of 45-50 miles. Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, said yesterday.
"The radio is an essential measure in tightening communications, and, to my knowledge, is being attempted in this area for the first time," Schwegler said.
"If the system works out, I can ultimately conceive of a second unit," he added.
Schweegler explained that such a system will enable ambulances to warn the hospital of emergency cases en route. The hospital can redirect them if a doctor is not free, or if the particular case is too serious to be treated at Watkins.
Transmission from the hospital to the ambulances will operate from a small portable instrument that can be plugged into a jack similar to those required by telephone, Schwegler said. Cost of the unit is estimated at $200.
Delivery of emergency patients will be facilitated by "on-the-road communications" to aid in directing patients to necessary hospital centers.
In the event of a major emergency, ambulances will set up a radio network from vital points in Lawrence. Emergency information and instruction will flow between ambulances and the hospital.
When asked if Lawrence Memorial Hospital would acquire a unit also, Schwegler said he felt the system was good enough for both hospitals to undertake and that officials at Lawrence were interested in adopting the radio.
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
KIEF'S
5th DIMENSION
"Stone Soul Picnic"
RECORD & STEREO
Stereo LP—Reg. $4.79
Mallis Shopping Center VI 2-1544
$2.99
NU tickets now on sale
Student tickets for the KU- Nebraska football game in Lincoln October 12 must be obtained by Friday, sports information director Jay Simon said Monday.
Giant Poster from any photo
*Send any black & white or color photo (no negatives) and the name "Swingline"cut out from any Swingline package (or reasonable facsimile) to: POSTER-MART, P.O. Box 165, Woodside, N.Y. 11377. Enclose $1.95 cash, check, or money order (no C.O.D.'s). Add sales tax where applicable.
Rugby team to hold sign-up session
KU's rugby team will conduct an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at 1301
Poster rolled and mailed (postpaid) in sturdy tube. Original material returned undamaged. Satisfaction guaranteed.
2 ft. x 3 ft.
only $1.95
Swingline Tot Stapler
Get a
I am not a monkey. I am a boy.
Snap On 90
Bc
98¢
(including 1000 staples)
Larger size CUB Desk
Stapler only $1.69
Unconditionally guaranteed.
At any stationery, variety, or book store.
Swingline INC.
LONG ISLAND CITY, N.Y. 11101
SATURDAY, OCT. 5
ARENA 8:30 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
Kansas City, Mo.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
at Auditorium Box Office
92.50, 3, 3.50, 4, 5
Mail Orders Now. Send self-addressed
pamped-envelope to cashiers check
or money order no Auction Box Office
Louisiana St., Apt. 2, Mac Crowther, president and team captain,
said Monday.
Exclusively on Warner Brothers Records
IN PERSON
Peter, Paul
and Mary
Even the Greatest Shoes Have to Come Off Sometime. Even Maine Aires
KARATE TIME
$12.00
But off or on they're g
Updated. Spi
leatha
Other Maine Aire Loafers
$11 to $13
4A to C widths
McCoy'S
SHOES
813 Mass. St.
Phone VI 3-2091
GODARD ON VIOLENCE
BENNETT KIRKMAN
BAND OF OUTSIDERS
CHANGE IN TIMES
Due to the overflow audiences at the Godard showings on Thursday, we are changing times to all for 3 showings of BAND OF OUTSIDERS
Tues., Sept. 24 7 - 8:30 - 10
Dyche-$.75
42
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 24,1968
Careful, don't muff it
Tonight the All Student Council will present to its members the means of its self-destruction.
The Senate Code of the Report of the Student Faculty Committee on University Governance will be read for the first time in the ASC meeting. The proposed Senate Code will abolish ASC and establish a Student Senate as a part of the University Senate in its place.
The proposed Senate Code is seventeen-and-a half typewritten pages long. It covers all the structural changes in the proposed plan for increased student representation at KU.
Therefore, since the code lays down fine points as powers and privileges in language such as:
"Subject to and in accordance with the control of the Chancellor and the Board of Regents as provided by law, the Student Senate is empowered to formulate such rules and regulations as it shall deem wise and proper for the control and government of such affairs of the University as directly and primarily affect the students of the University and to take such steps as it shall deem necessary for their implementation and administration."
the code is quite complex.
According to an ASC schedule outlined by Joe Goering, ASC vice-president, the actual ASC vote on the code won't be until the Oct. 8 meeting.
An ASC member has remarked that the code was too big to be rushed through and that all students should be given ample time to consider this action.
This is true.
But let's not muff the most important measure coming before ASC for this year and possibly for years both in the past and future.
The ASC has been famed in the past for its ability to remain inactive, for its propensity to skirt the issue.
in this case, the council will have a very direct
hand in shaping the future of the proposed changes by its discussion and possible amendments to the code.
Therefore, a word of caution to all ASC members:
Listen well to the reading of the Senate Code and then read the code, the corresponding majority report of the committee and also the important dissenting minority report.
Think about it and discuss it thoroughly with fellow students.
And when the time comes to discuss the code, avoid picking the wording apart and arguing over petty points.
But, on the other hand, don't avoid discussing in detail the advantages and disadvantages of some of the significant points.
The designation of the Dean of Student Affairs as presiding officer of the Student Senate, instead of the Student Body president as in ASC, is one of the most important areas of possible disagreement with the code.
The ASC and eventually the student body will vote only upon the Senate Code, and not on either the majority or minority report.
However, for the purpose of ASC, the minority report with its proposals of 50 per cent student representation, recommendations on the election of University Senate members, student representation on the Board of Regents, the jurisdiction of some departments, the abolishing of the Associate Women Students and the offices of Deans of Men and Women, and the University's community involvement is votal discussion material.
Even if the Senate Code isn't altered by the minority report this fall, the eventual University Senate will probably be affected in the future by the minority proposals.
Alison Steimel
Editorial Editor
the black artist
'You wondered'
by John Marshall
You would have been stupid if you didn't loosen your tie, or undo a few buttons Saturday night while watching him there, on the square hunk of wood in the middle of the basketball court. It was the man there, the hunched, humble shoulders, the smile, cord in left hand, a twist . . . turn around . . . Uuuh, Thank You. He was there as the black artist himself, and he said so if you remember the words "our kind of people."
Alone on the stage, and than a curt bow, both hands clutching the mike, white or red or brown or black V-cut blouse bending slightly, sweat dripping from the straining face as he stood there, feeling.
It was like John Scheib said, "Man, he's a genius. I mean he likes perfection. He likes to be perfect about what he says, and how other people understand him. That's what he's doing up there, telling people about how he feels."
Scheib sat there during the show and looked at the dials, the plates, the sound indicators for each speaker and wondered about his job as sound director.
"You know, it's kind of like you're controlling—no, you're holding, crudling—a man's emotions, his feelings about everything. You take a man's art, his soul, his feelings, and them run them through these wires and out through the speakers, and it makes you feel like some sort of . . . of tink . . . between the artistry and the people."
You could see it in that fat lady there, in Section F near the end, fanning herself, wiping misty glasses, tapping a foot in the alce, mouthing a few words, and always watching and looking.
But Saturday night, John Scheib did his job well. They all did it well.
And in David Iskin who is a housepainter from Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Sleeps rolled up, the garbled fingers tapping a silent rhythm to "Rock Island Line," . . . and his wife Esther, sitting quietly, lips parted, barely moving, but moving to the sounds coming out into the first balcony.
And there was the gray-haired lady selling cokes near section E who said it was the first time in four years that she had run out. "Usually, we have stacks and stacks left after a show is finished.
Boy, they really must be hot out there. But then who wouldn't get a little worked up over an entertainer like that."
But the stage was there, that hunk of wood in the middle of Allen Field House with the lights, blue, red and yellow. Then the smile again, the strain in his eyes as he thinks about how he feels when that sound comes out through those speakers.
The three young black students from Kansas City were there, looking into the blue stage. "Man, what do you mean has he some soul? Sure . . . but in a different sort of way. I mean soul is feeling. And for every black man it may be something different—and the same thing goes for the black artist. The key is in being yourself. Being uninhibited—no, extremely uninhibited."
So, you might think, there was more than just a man or an entertainer up there on that wooden block. It was emotion. Emotion which for some was hard to recognize fully. A blonde coed, front row, section E said, "You know, it's like he's not really there, like you're watching him on the tube or something and it can't be real. It's really different."
A black artist was there last Saturday, giving his own, very personal testimony in his own smooth, quiet, rhythmic way. He was, through the art he gave to the 10,000 or so people in the big gymnasium, trying to say somethin' trying to bring each one of us midwesterners a little closer to the black artist. And maybe to black people.
The man there, black artist, humble, saying that he felt uninhibited, was something that is rare for most midwestern blonde coeds. And midwestern students in general.
And when it was over two hours later, you wondered whether anyone really understood what had come through John Sheib's speakers. "Sure I liked it. I thought his rhythm section was tremendous, and that guitar player was fantastic. Colored people always do the best kind of job with that sort of thing . . . The man who said that is a senior at the University of Kansas and will get a college degree in June.
You wondered
Aimed at vacuum?
'New politics'
The movement that came out of New Hampshire with Senator Eugene McCarthy as its symbol may have had to struggle for breath in Chicago; but it is doubtful that what was dubbed the "new politics" heard its death knell there.
Whether the new politics has been shelved temporarily or is being absorbed by old party networks is not yet evident; but if it still lives—it could be thriving by 1972.
lives it could be thriving by 1972.
If talk of '72 appears to be political poppycock aimed at confusing an already confused electorate, a glance at recent presidential campaigns is noteworthy. It has become obvious since 1960 that presidential nominations are not won at the national conventions, or even a few months prior to the convention. In fact, only one of the conventions since 1948 has taken more than one ballot to nominate its candidate. Nominations are shaped and structured in the "out" party at least four years prior to the national party convention.
The formula practiced by John Kennedy in 1960 and proven by Barry Goldwater in 1964 was reaffirmed this year by Richard Nixon. Nominations take shape at the grass roots level: begin at the precinct level; place key supporters in local party posts; win a few key primaries and persuade party leaders before the convention.
The ambitious young supporters of Senator Eugene McCarthy would do well to take a lesson from this formula. Should Hubert Humphrey lose, as seems increasingly probably, the advocates of the new politics would be in an advantageous position. Certainly the old guard in the Democratic party would be forced to turn a more receptive ear to the voice that struggled to be heard at the Chicago convention.
Four years of strategist work within the framework of the Democratic party could yield more of the Don Petersons of Wisconsin and Julian Bonds of Georgia. Near the end of his campaign, McCarthy hinted at such long-range developments.
True, he probably was providing a cushion for his inevitable defeat; but more importantly, he was pointing to political reality. There just may be a power vacuum waiting to be filled in the Democratic party after the November election.
Richard Lundquist Editorial Assistant
Letters to the Editor
To the Editor:
Voice complaints
I would like to congratulate the UDK on its ability to manage the news. I never realized this trait until the articles by Pam Smith and Steve Haynes Wednesday, September 18. This piece of literary excellence on the campus group known as Peoples Voice merely reinforced the biased, uninformed opinions which the majority of the paper's public already holds. My main complaint deals with the sentence, "During the one and one-half hours meeting the only area of general agreement was the need to radicalize the student body." What a statement! Not only is it wholly ambiguous, but the use of the word "radicalize" here and again later merely reinforces the general opinion of the group. Voice. By the use of this word, the paper has done a fine job reiterating the supposed objective of Voice—Burn! Overthrow! Anarchy!
What I question is why the paper does not publish the whole of the presentations Tuesday, or at least enough of each (side) so that the average, uninformed student (about Voice) can form an opinion based on all the facts. Or at least they could publish enough of each dissertation to give an idea of what was really said, and the ideas behind
them. I will admit that in one or two cases this was done, especially when referring to specific individuals. But the Kansan takes quite a responsibility when it speaks for the group as a whole, and I question the validity of a single quotation being applied to "several members." All that the paper has to do is find the lad with the tape-recorder, unless of course, he is a reporter, and then the paper is to be truly chastized.
True, Voice wants to "radicalize" the student body, but not to burn or kill. I have yet to even hear anyone even suggest a crucifixion on the chancellor. They are concerned with issues, each member in his own way, and there is not a "Voice-Policy" on any one item. Some of these issues are the military on campus, the draft, the plight of the Indian in Lawrence, and white racism -yes, there is white racism at KU.
These people are radical, but they think, and though not always right or in the best way, they act. So I implore the UDK, if they are to present this issue to the public again, which they must, and any other issue, please give a fair representation of what transpired.
Yours truly,
John A. Naramore
kansan
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom-UN 4-3864 Business Office-UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 89044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, areed or national origin. Options expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas at the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Executive Star
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Haney
Assistant Managing Editors, Pat Crawford, Charla Jenkins, Alan T. Jones,
Steve Morgan, Allen Winchester
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor Alison Stelmel
Editorial Editor Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Sharon Woodson
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCrerey, Don Wendell, Sally
Zahradnik Marilyn Zook
Morgan Mike Willman
Advertising Manager
Tuesday, September 24,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Hicks voted best lineman in Big 8
A late switch from middle guard to linebacker took nothing from the defensive savvy of KU's Emery Hicks.
The 5-foot-11, 230-pound junior was voted Big Eight Lineman-of-the-Week by the UPI. Hicks was credited with seven unassisted tackles and three assists in the Jayhawks' 47-7 rout of Illinois.
Coach Pepper Rodgers calls Hicks "as quick as Granville Liggins and as strong as Wayne Meylan," comparing him to the All-American middle guards of last year.
Hicks was moved to linebacking duty just a week before the Illinois game, with 5-11, 174-pound Pat Hutchens going to cornerback and 6-1, 214-pound junior college transfer Al Jakobic to middle guard.
Hicks edged a pair of sophomores—Kansas State defensive end John Acker and Nebraska linebacker Jerry Murtaugh—in the balloting by newsmen.
Acker, a 5-10 and 205-pounder, played a key role in K-State's 21-0 victory over Colorado State—the Wildcats' first
FIRST BLOOD
MORGANTOWN, Ky. — (UPI!)
The first blood shed in Kentucky during the Civil War was spilled two miles west of here in Butler County. Granville Allen, of the 17th Kentucky Infantry, was killed Oct. 27, 1861, in a skirmish between the Blue and the Gray within a few miles of his home.
shutout since 1955. His six unassisted tackles prompted assistant coach Bob Frazier to call Acker's "the greatest start for a sophomore."
Murtaugh broke up one pass and helped on six tackles as Nebraka's defense throttled Utah, 31-0. Coach Bob Devaney said Murtaugh graded the highest of any Husker lineman.
Also nominated for the honor were Tom Dearinger, Oklahoma State offensive end; George Dimitri, Iowa State defensive tackle; Mike Schnitker, Colorado defensive end; Jim Anderson, Missouri offensive tackle, and Steve Zabel, Oklahoma offensive end.
Soccer starts its 1968 season at KU. possibly next week.
KU soccer team to start 1968 practice
KU's Soccer Club has met informally for some practices. Official practice starts this week, said Herve Penzec, assistant instructor of French and Italian, and one of the team organizers.
Since the team does not belong to a conference it plays a flexible schedule. Three games are tentatively scheduled for this year, two with K-State and one with Saint Benedicts College, according to Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and Soccer Club advisor.
Last season the soccer team lost two of the eight games it played, against Park College and the Kansas City Kickers.
The athletic department gives no financial support to soccer at KU.
Were soccer interest to grow meaningfully in the next two to
three years, Wade Stinson, athletic department director, said financial aid would be considered but that he considers financial support to soccer highly improbable.
The Soccer Club does have a small budget allocation from the University, according to Shenk. He said anybody interested in playing with the team should go to room 122, Robinson Gymnasium, Wednesday at 4:30, or contact him. Any KU student is eligible to play.
YOU'RE MY KIND
OF PEOPLE...
... SORRY ABOUT
KU's soccer team has displayed an international lineup in the past. Shenk attributs the
small number of American players to the minor role soccer has played in American sports.
According to Penzec more Americans have showed up this year than in the past, about one third of the team. *
. And Micki's is still here to serve KU students and faculty by typing those term papers, projects, etc. Micki's also offers Notary Public service and Xeroxing.
Fidele Waura, Gabon, Africa senior, soccer player and team organizer, said practice sessions will be conducted in two groups at 2:30 and 4:30. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. And that large practices will take place at 1:30 on Saturday. Anybody interested in playing with the team should go to the practices, said Waura.
Don't wait till the last minute. Save yourself all that time and effort. Inquire today!
...SORRY ABOUT THAT
MICKI's secretarial service is 4/U!
VI 2-0111----901 Ky. St.
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West at Highway 49
ENDS TONIGHT!
`It's not who you con...it's`
how you do it!
PAUL
NEWMAN
The Secret War of
HARRY
FRIGG
CCC
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE · TECHNICOLOR®
AND-
WEDNESDAY
"THE GRADUATE"
Open 6:30----Show At Dusk
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
PAUL NEWMAN
"HOMBRE"
PRESENTS: GAIL GOYET CALIFORNIA
Powersum* CSLDR By Deluxe
A.
Granada
HEATRE ..Telephone VI 3-799
Granada
HEATRE...Telephones V13-5783
Ends Tonight!
joanne
woodward
in the PAUL NEWMAN production of
rachel.
rachel
Evenings—7:15-9:15
joanne woodward
SWEATERS
Styled by Jantzen and Robt. Bruce
V-Necks
Cru Necks
Turtle Necks
You Name It!
$12.00
to
$23.00
Lamb's Wool
Alpacas
Bulky Knits
You Name It!
All Colors
You Name It!
Campbell's
formerly Diebolt's
843 Mass.
VI 3-0454
WILD IN THE STREETS
Shelley Christopher Diane
WINTERS ★ JONES ★ VARSI
AMERICAN INTERNATIONALS
V-Necks
Cru Necks
Turtle Necks
You Name It!
$12
Campbell's
[ ]
6
8291.4C rodmeton2 vibranuT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 24, 1968
Band to perform at Indiana game
The University of Kansas Marching Band opens its season Saturday at the KU-Indiana football game in Memorial Stadium.
While awaiting the arrival of the new uniforms, some band members will appear in blue blazers, black pants, and white turtleneck sweaters. The rest of the band will wear the familiar red, blue and black uniforms.
Kenneth Bloomquist, director of bands, said a record 153 musicians will perform. Because of the increase in the band size, members will appear in two different uniforms.
The 32 new band members, said Bloomquist, provide formation variety and enable him to use all of the available talent.
A student-staff committee will choose new uniforms by Oct. 1, but the uniforms will not arrive until December, according to Bloomquist.
Except for a period in the 1940's when there was a shortage of males, the band has remained an all-male group.
"We can demand more in the way of length of practices and adaptation to weather conditions from an all-male group," said Bloomquist.
The night before the KU-Nebraska game, the band will perform at an alumni rally in Lincoln, Neb., and at a high school football half-time ceremony in Omaha, Neb.
In addition to performing at all home games this season, the band will travel to the University of Nebraska and to Kansas State University.
After marching season ends, the band will divide into three separate groups, Bloomquist said.
Last year's Concert Band will be called the Symphonic Band, and the Concert Band will be made up of last year's Varsity Band. A third group, the Wind Ensemble, will be formed this year.
Master of Education degree is phased out
No more students will be accepted as candidates for the master of education degree after those presently working toward it have completed their study.
A resolution eliminating the master of education degree was approved by the Board of Regents Friday. Reasons for the resolution were explained today by Kenneth E. Anderson, retiring Dean of the School of Education.
"The master of education degree served its purpose at one time," Anderson said. He explained that because of increased emphasis on research in education, the degree has become obsolete.
Discontinuation of the master of education degree will free funds, classroom facilities and personnel, making them available for other courses. Anderson said.
Last year the master of arts in teaching degree, for students obtaining a state teaching certificate on the graduate level, was offered for the first time. Anderson said this degree will replace
the old one.
The School of Education Graduate Council, which initiated the resolution, has retained two masters degrees for those who received teaching certificates on the bachelor level.
The master of arts in education is designed for those who plan classroom teaching careers. For this degree the student concentrates on a liberal arts field, such as English or mathematics.
Students specializing in guidance counseling or school administration receive the master of science in education degree. This degree entails a research-oriented curriculum.
Hey Mom & Dad
BACK TO SCHOOL
FREE
GIFTS
BOOK COVERS
PSYCHEDELIC BOOKCOVERS
IN 4 DIZZY COLORS
FREE with purchase of our
PSYCH-A-DELICIOUS
DOUGHNUTS
Mister Donut®
523 West 23rd
Framed prints of fine paintings are on display this week in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. Part of the Picture Lending Library operated each semester by Student Union Activities.
Prints on display
Fox urges any KU students interested in going into medicine after attaining their undergraduate degree to come and talk with him.
Fox to be pre-med adviser
C. P. A. EXAMINATIONS NOV. 6-8, 1968 - 24th EDITION
Most effective direct GUIDES to PASS EXAMS for candidates who can afford to waste time and must concentrate with frequency analysis; has aided thousands, NOW in our NEW 24th EDITION REPORT:
* ANALYSIS OF EXAMINATION TRENDS
Based upon careful analysis of frequency of each question topic relative to current material, and recent coverage analyzed to give you the highest possible percentage for passing now the May 1968 Exam.
EFFECTIVE FIELDFLOW
Carefully screened analysis of which previous examination questions and current material intimate key referents related to the most important question topics is your goal to ease
- ANSWERING FOR MAXIMUM POINTS
The Castle Tea Room
- Speeds by frequency topic trends
* Highlights leading tests review
* Highlights key areas related previous examinations
* Speeds Current Matter Review
ALAN BURNETT
All concisely analyzed in report bullet form
* LAW * TINERY * AUDITING *
Order by mail sip on per Subject 24th Edit
GRANTED to Leaver for PASSING This Exam at RETURN
Or Print **FA C exam Course** Labled & Brochure
ADDRESS
C.P.A. EXAM REVIEW GUIDES
45 UNIVERSITY, N.Y., N.Y. 10003
STILL THE MOST UNIQUE RESTAURANT
IN LAWRENCE
There has to be a good reason why students and faculty alike continue year after year, to patronize us. It could be our warm, friendly atmosphere, fine food, "Old World" decor, or just the fact that we're different. Our four dining rooms, furnished in birch, cherry, walnut, and oak, are perfect for dinner dates, meetings, and even wedding receptions. But, whatever the reason may be, we're glad you've made us the most popular restaurant in Lawrence. We've been that way for 20 years.
If you're new in Lawrence, we'd like to get acquainted with you. If you already know about us, you will be glad to know that we're still here. We haven't changed!
LIBUSE KRIZ
1301-11 Mass. St.
Phone VI 3-1151
1
B. S.U.
presents:
"An Introduction to the Gospel of John"
given by
Dr. William B. Coble
Professor of New Testament and Greek, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24----7:30 P.M.
Baptist Activities Bldg., 1221 Oread
DRESSING IN A TRAVELING CASE
PACK THE KNACK
It's built into every one of our sports coats . . . the knack of expand-
ing a suitcase-wardrobe, with changes of furnishings and trousers.
Pack one, wear one, for your next weekend away.
THE
Town Shop
DOWNTOWN
THE
University Shop
ON THE HALL
THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN
THE University Shop ON THE WALL
Tuesday, September 24, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
8a9 A$admote2 yobzau7
a
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
service. Daily minimum offered
to all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Mobile home 10x57, washer, dryer,
A.C., W-W Carpeting, garbage
disposal, Radio-stereo system, utility
shield, fenced lot. Call Darlene Ascani
at UN 4-4291 or VI 2-7332 after
5.
9-27
200 mm F/4 Super Takumar lens-
virtually unused, original box, case,
and strap. $150. Call VI 2-6481, even-
nings. 9-27
50cc Honda with helmet. Best offer
over $140. Electric starter, automatic
all in one needle, leg guard,
foot restraint gasket gaskets. V 1-2
691 or U 4-35333.
1964 Alfa Romero 850 Gulla. Good
after p.m.
$550 Call VI 2-0337
a day.
1966 BSA 650 for sale, $100 or trade
between 5 and 7 p.m.
9-25
1966 Dodge Coronet 500, 383, 4 barrel, Metallic Silver with black vinyl pin. ET Mags. Call Chuck at VI 3-8490. 9-25
"Very" portable typewriter, $20.00.
call use or see after 5 p.m. 9-11
35c
BSA Starfire 1968, 700 miles, like new. Call Larry at VI 2-543. 9-25
1956 Chev. 2 dr, 265 cu., auto. Dependable. $150. Call VI 2-4269. 1-4269.
1951 Chevy for sale. '58 eng., radio, very clean, dependable, excellent mechanical shape. One easy low down model! 1341 Mass. 6-8 p.m. 6834 9-26
1961 Mercury Meteor, 6 cyl, standard trans., very good mechanically, 4 good tires. Leaving the country. Must sell. Call VI 2-6891 for more information.
1968 "SS" Corvette Bronze Camero
396 coupe. Excellent' condition with
low, low mileage. Packed with power
and handling. Available with positraction. List $4,148.00. I'll sell it to you for $3,000. Must sell immediately, so call VI 3-5479 today!
1963 Impala SS. Bucket sett 4, speed-
lowest bid. Call VI 3-4578. 9-27
Bargain Sale—Two Smith-Corona portable typewriters reduced to sell. One almost new Galaxie model, with carrying case—excellent condition with carrying case. Call VI 2-9321 after 5:00 p.m. or weekends. 9-24
Rust suede coat - full length with
condition 9.
Call Jann at 843-1619.
1963 Buick Special V-8. 4-door, auto
Cali Buick 842-7456 at 5:36 p.m.
9-27
4 track car stereo and tapes. Also 15
9:00 p.m. V 31-1745. Call
800-264-6900.
HORSE for sale. American bred 7½-
year-old Chestnut gelding. Perfect for
English oak, pleasure rides. Phone:
saddle, saddle — $225. Phone
I: 3-7596 after 5 p.m.
9-27
1967 Triumph TR-6 Motorcycle
Bought new in May, Very low mileage. Inge by calling VI 3-5095 or UN 4-3252 and ask for Joyce. 9-27
1956 Corvette, 327, 3-speed, two tops, $950. Call VI 3-5738. 9-24
Beautiful 1963 Pontiac Bonneville convertible. Arctic white, power, new 2005 model. Call to appreciate. Call 723-3434, Linwood, Kansas. $10 to call. $850. 9-30
19" G.E. Table T.V., New picture
tube, $40. B&H 35mm Slide projector
and 2 trays, $25. *x*2*314 Mamiga
Preset Camera, 160 W Omega Cam-
pack, 125 Pentax w/ Lefla. Leica
$75. Sales Lyke Shoemaker at UN 4
3837.
9-30
1957 Triumph TR-3. New tires and
chassis. Vi 2-6000. Room 1024. 9-30
HELP WANTED
NOTICE
Part-time from 11 a.m. till 2 p.m.
Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week.
Start $1.25 hr. apply in person to Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 W. 23rd. 9-28
Try something different this weekend.
Have a weiner roast and hay rack
ride at Laptap's Barn. Call VI 3-4032
for more information. 9-27
If you think that you have modeling potential, but don't know what the demanded qualities are or how to get started, let a professional model who is acting as a sales person help you in the place and potential in the modeling business. Call Model's Guild for further information VI 2-8634 9-27
All people interested in folk dancing or leading folk dancing, contact MILON Rosenberg at Math. Depth E. Strong or 1419 Ohio, No. 8, VI 2-79
515 Michigan St. St.-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $25; rib order.
$1.50; rib sandwich, $8.5; ½ chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday.
Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most barn party you can afford's Heating and electricity unquestionably available. VI 3-4023 11-1
HORSES BOARDED—New facilities,
reasonable rates, close in–south
location, indoor and outdoor arenas.
Call VI 2-3353 or VI 3-1626. 9-25
Ace Furniture and Antiques is now open in their new building at 510 N. Wacker Road, Suite 302. What we have to help you furnish your apartment and home. This week's special is waste baskets for recycling. We offer 7 days a week. 9-25 10:00 to 6:00.
Car pool forming from Overland Park area. Will come early and stay late. Call Ray at TU 8-4399 after 7:00 p.m.
Topsy's can help you lose weight. Jog down here every day. Think of all the weight you'll lose jogging. Or to putty and you fill up on our good Caramel corn, Cheese corn, Candy apples, fudge and ice cream, you might be into the certainly the jogging and flexing the will power will do you good. But if you give into some of our goodies, think of all the fun they bring you. You are tummy ticklers. Topsy's Old Fashioned pop corn and ice cream shop in the Mall's Shopping Center. You can jog down any night from 10 and 11 on Friday. 9-26
Portrait Photographs — black and white only. VI 2-4326. 9-30
K. C. Commuters—Would like ride or share driving. Classes from 7-30 on later, with 8-14 with earlier. Via Tonganoxie or Bonner Springs. AT 7-4018, K.C.K. 9-25
Bookcase Special. Three shelf, 24-in.
by 32-in., unfinished white pine, $9.88
by 16-in., fresh wood set net of 28-
Bridge and right side of 28; Bwester
wood products, VI 2-8145. 9-27
WANTED
Male roommate to share furnished apartment; $67.50 pays rent, all utilities, and phone. 524 Fireside Drive, No. 9. Call VI 3-3917. 9-27
Female roommate over 21 years old. modern. Call VI 2-6159 in Dai-20
RIDE TO K.C., MISSOURI to the vicinity of 16th and Main. Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call VI 3-1467. 9-27
Girl to cook evening meal five days a week. Pay plus meal included. Apply 2541 Redbud Lane, Apt. No. 4 after 5:00 p.m. 9-27
ARTIST MODELS wanted. $1.15 to
$2.50 per hour. No experience neces-
sary, male or female. Phone UN 4-
4401. 9-27
Need an upper classman or graduate student to share neat and clean apt. Come see at 1605 Tennessee after 6 p.m. 9-27
Drummer needed immediately. Must have experience in playing hard rock and soul. Call Richard Music Co., VI 2-0021. 9-27
Singer wanted for an established band. Must be experienced in singing soul, motown, rhythm and blues. Call Rich, VI 2-3356 p.m. 9-27
Female counter girls: part time help
Sandra Kowalczyk in 1499 West. 23rd.
Smaka Dnacka in 1499 West. 23rd.
Man with experience needed to in-
flict fencing around yard VI 2-6085, 9-24
FOR RENT
FURNISHED APARTMENT for graduate student. $100. Utilities paid. No pets. Garage available. Very quiet. VI 3-1209, 1633 Vermont. 9-27
Lovely room available in private home for responsible university student with a year stay (with children (ages 15 and 13) on occasions. Call VI 3-9150 for interview.
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elec. Located near Oliver Hall VI. 3-2873.
TYPING
Reward for finder of AO$ \pi $ sorority pin, lost either in Hoch or between Hoch and AO$ \pi $ house. Phone VI 3-6060. 9-26
A gold ladies' wrist watch—possibly
Carrie Call Lewis, room 408. 9-26
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1544
PERCY FAITH "For Those in Love"
LOST
KIEF'S
EVERYONE'S F
Event and Park
Field Pit and
Free Parking at
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal
Transportation
18 Cohn, Low, Pet. Ph. V1-3-2
EVERYONE SAYS
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
1218 Conn., Low, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
图示:飞机飞行
RECORD & STEREO
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
LET
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
Stereo LP—Reg. $4.79
TRAVEL TIME
$2.99
FOR DETAILS ON THIS, MAJOR MEDICAL, AND
Make Your
OTHER PLANS OF HEALTH AND LIFE INSURANCE
CONTACT:
REPRESENTING
V. G. Miller
1035 Elm
Mutual of Omaha
Eudora, Kans.
The Company that pays
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha
K12-2793
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omah
MUTUAL OF OMAH INSURANCE COMPANY
HOME OFFICE | OMAH NARRABA
Exclusive Representative
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Novelties
- Lavaliers
- Sportswear
- Paddles
- Cups
Also
Portraits of Distinction
- Applications
Please call for appointment
Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
- Passports
GOVERNMENT
- Application
- Lettermen
- Seniors
- Lettermen
- Services
Hixon Studio
Portraits of Distinction Bob Blank, Owner
- K-Portraits
STATE OF KANSAS
EMPLOYEE HEALTH PLAN
Student Union
Families
Important Benefits
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
for State Employees and Their
Have You Attended A Meeting?
If not you are invited to attend one of the following—
Wednesday, Sept. 25.
10:30-12:00—Individual Consultation—Forum Room—
Student Union
12:30- 1:30—Insurance Review—Forum Room—
9 a.m.-9 p.m.
2:00- 3:00—Insurance Review—Forum Room—
Student Center
3:00- 4:00—Insurance Review—Forum Room—
7:30- 8:30—Insurance Review—Room 112—Blake Hall
Thursday, Sept. 26.
10:30-12:00—Individual Consultation—Forum Room—
CALL COLLECT 913-CE 3-0553
4:00- 5:00—Insurance Review—Forum Room
Student Union
3:00- 4:00—Insurance Review—Forum Room—
Student Union
12:30- 1:30—Insurance Review—Forum Room—
Student Union
2:00- 3:00—Insurance Review—Forum Room—
7:30- 8:30—Insurance Review—Room 112—Blake Hall
Telephone Consultation Service
ENDS TODAY:
CLINT
EASTWOOD
HANG'EM HIGH
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Matinee 2:30
Evening 7:15 & 9:30
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
20TH CENTURY TUX PRESENTS
WALTER MATTAU
ANNE JACKSON
PATRICK O'NEAL
GEORG AXEL ROEDS
in GEORGE AXELROD'S
PORTRAIT
"THE SECRET LIFE OF AN AMERICAN WIFE"
color by DeLuxe SMA
STARTS WEDNESDAY
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 24, 1968
Campaign trail
HHH called a spender
Rv United Press International
By United Press International Richard M. Nixon said Monday that Hubert H. Humphrey would make "the most expensive president in American history" if he were elected, and that the United States and especially the American working man could not "afford" Humphrey.
Nixon told several thousand persons in front of a Milwaukee hotel that in the past three years every pay raise received by the average American working man has been wiped out by rising prices and rising taxes.
Humphrey Monday deplored the "disproportionate" share of attention given to hippies, Yippies, Black Panthers and other protesters by the news media and said it was the obligation of politicians and the news media to "portray the true story of America."
"The true story of America is the millions of mothers and fathers and sons and daughters who are working their hearts out—to have a family, to have a home, to go to school and to take a vacation and to be decent, tax-paying, productive citizens—the ones I appeal to for my help," Humphrey said.
Republican vice-presidential candidate Spiro T. Agnew, in Kahului, Hawaii, angrily denied Monday he had committed racial slurs by using the terms "Jap" and "Polack."
Agnew termed ridiculous an accusation by Rep. Spark Matsu-
naga, D-Hawaii, that he had insulted a newsman of Japanese descent on the Agnew campaign plane Friday.
The governor had asked,
"What's the matter with the fat Jap?" in a reference to Baltimore Sun reporter Gene Oishi, who was asleep in a nearby seat.
Agnew said he considered Oishi a friend and, "I referred to him in the same way that athletes joke with one another. I don't think he took any offense."
He said he inadvertently referred earlier to another group by a slang term. "My Polish friends never told me that when they used the term 'Polack' it was not in the most friendly fashion," Agnew said.
Third party candidate George C. Wallace, meanwhile, said he would announce his vice presidential running mate early next week. Wallace said his choice would be "a real surprise for everyone," and a "very prominent, well known personality."
Official Bulletin
Fee Payment. ALL DAY. Business Office, Strong Hall.
TODAY
Extension Conference. All Day. Kansas Union.
KANU Highlights. 2.03 p.m. M. Favor-
tion of Dr. John Dept.
of Chemistry. KANU, 9.15 FM.
Lecture. 4 p.m. Prof. Alexandre V. Soloviev, "Authenticity of the Lay of the Host of Igor." Room 101, Kansas Union. (In Russian.)
KANU Highlights. 7 p.m. Lecture.
"mullism in Literature." KANU. 91.5 WS.
**SUA FILM. 7 & 9 p.m. "Band of**
**Jean-liuc Godard. Dyhe**
**Auditorium**
Sigma Fs1. 7:30 p.m. Get acquaintance. Meeting Pine Room, Kansas Union.
Fisher Fs. 7:30 p.m. Get acquainted
meet me at KUodes Club. 7:30 p.m. Kansas
KUodes Club. 7:30 p.m.
Christian Science Organization. 7:30
pm, Danforth Chapel.
Linguistics Colloquium. 7:30 p.m.
James E. Hoard. "Underlying Vowels
and Consonant Length in English. 108. Blake.
SUA Ski Club Meeting. 7:30 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
Latin American Club Meeting. 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room, Kansas Union.
Fee Payment. All Day. Business
Office, Strong Hall. (Ends at 4 p.m.)
Poetry by KU Poets. 4:30 p.m. Fo-
r Korea, Korean Union.
KU Soccer Club. 2:30. 3:30. & 4:30.
5:30 p.m. Practice. East of Robinson
Classical Film, 7 & 8 "Miles
Summer Night." Kansas Union
Balloon.
KANU Highlights. 7 p.m. Opera
Wagner's "Das Rheingold." KANU.
KANU
KU-Y Membership Meeting. 7:30 p.m. Big Room, Kansas Union.
Lecture. 7.30 p.m. Dr. A. J. N. den Hollander 'Higher Education' pean heart American 'A' Study in Cultural Conditioning. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
seniorship hall candidates are Sherry Lyn Love, Topeka sophorem, Douthart Hall; Victoria Miller Hall; Christine M Hafele, Topeka senior, Sellards Hall, and Janlee Wagner, Richmond junior, Watkins Hall.
Nalismith Hall representatives are Janis Lorraine Dings, Arkansas City junior; Gail Jansen, Denver, colle sophomore; Sharron Sweeney, Kobe Bryant; Joshua Clemente; Susan E. Hinson, Mission sophomore, and Cathy Lynn Robinson, Mission sophomore.
KU pick for Royal Queen to be chosen
The annual American Royal Livestock and Horse Show is Oct. 10-12 in Kansas City. If the KU candidate is named queen or princess, she will be presented to the citizens of the Kansas City area at a Coronation Ball and will reign over a week of activities Oct. 13-19.
Thirty-six campus beauties have been nominated by upperclass women's organized living groups to represent KU in competition for 1968 American Royal Queen.
Preliminary judging to select the KU representative is at 2 p.m., Sept. 29 in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. The coeds will be judged on beauty, poise, charm and intelligence.
Women participating in the contest must have a cumulative 1.00 grade point average and must have attended KU for at least one semester
Barbara A n n Russell, Chicago Heights, III, junior, Alpha Chi Omega; Sharon S. Monroe, Great Bend senior, Alpha Delta Pi; Nanegary G. McDuffey, Alpha Delta Pi; Gamma Delta; Mary B. MacQuiddy, Omaha, Neb, senior, Alpha Phi; Sandra Lee Moore, Olathe senior, Alpha Omieron PI; Loretta D. Stringer, Overland Park sophomore, Chi Omieron PI; Dighton junior, Delta Gamma.
Lewis Hall candidates are Brenda Brangardt, Wichita sophomore and Carla Juniper, junior Contestants from McCollum Hall are Nanee E. Brackett, Kate E. Cox, Jennifer Loren, Thomas Hammabal Mo, Sophie Carol Z. Eubank, Mission junior; Linda D. Culbertson, Coffeyville senior; Leissa Louise Lee, Kami sophi-
Representing Hashinger Hall are Diane Allene Allen, Hutchinson sophomore; Marilyn Jo Silverman, Mission junior; Linda Diane Cloud, Kansas City senior; Mary Joe Potter, Salina senior; Karma Lee Dillon, Elisabeth Linder, Michael Hincley, St. Joseph, Mo., junior; Eva L. Martin, Toneka junior.
Pamela A. Brackett, Prairie Village senior, Delta Delta Delta; Pamela S. Kulp, Mission sophomore, Gamma student, Delta Delta Delta; Pamela S.凯尔基, Kappa Alpha Theta; Lynette Kay Butler, Cheney sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Sandee Lennon, Mission senior, Pi Beta Phi; Harriet Stue Frank, Kansas City Junior; Sig-
KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO
KIEF'S
SOUND TRACK
"Hang 'em High"
Malls Shopping Center
VI 2-1544
Stereo LP—Reg. $5.79
$3.99
A
At least there's no mystery about where she found her Denise...at the Country House
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
V13-5755
Thant suggests vote
(Continued from page 1)
asked "What the hell does he think they're trying to do in Paris?" (where preliminary talks with the North Vietnamese have been going on since April).
"I am not equating the two situations," he said. "There are arguments against withdrawal in both cases.
Thant, subjected to blunt questioning on the eve of the opening of the 23rd General Assembly, refused to put the Society invasion and occupation of Czechoslovakia on a par with the Vietnam War.
"If the Russians are bombing and napalming towns and villages in Czechoslovakia, you please wait and see what I have to say."
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Games for weekend
9/27-28
TOPS
Wardrobe
Care
Centers
TOPS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
1517 W. 16th----1526 W. 23rd
In By 9—Out By 5
Same Day Service
Shirts on hangers or folded
5 for $1.39
"PIGSKIN PICKS CONTEST"
Winner of this week's contest will receive $10 worth of dry cleaning service. 2nd & 3rd place winners $5 worth of dry cleaning services.
Circle Your Choice As Winner—
Iowa State at Brigham Young
Kansas State at Penn State
Colorado at California
Missouri at Illinois
Nebraska at Minnesota
North Carolina State at Oklahoma
Clemson at Georgia
Michigan at Duke
Miami (Fla.) at Georgia Tech
L.S.U. at Rice
Boston College at Navy
Purdue at Notre Dame
S.M.U. at Ohio State
Texas at Texas Tech
Wyoming at Air Force
Edinboro State at Slippery Rock
— Pick These Scores —
Indiana ___ at Kansas ___
K. C. Chiefs ___ at Miami ___
Name
Address
CONTEST RULES
To enter: Clip this slate out of the paper or pick up a free entry blank at either TOPS store—1517 West 6th—1526 West 23rd, mark or write out choices and send them to TOPS Pigskin Picks.
1. Print name and address plainly on entry.
2. Mail entries to TOPS Pigskin Picks, 1517 West 6th, or bring in personally at either location. No entries accepted postmarked or delivered after Noon Friday.
3. Winners will be posted in both TOPS stores Monday, and will appear in next week's contest in the paper.
4. Only one entry per person each week.
5. Winners will be judged on most correct guesses and on closest scores of KU and K.C. Chiefs games. In case of tie, earliest postmark decides.
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS
1st—Mike Blair
2nd—Jeff Lange
3rd—Tom Wilson
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No. 7
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
Senate Code action postponed by ASC
BY TOM WEINBERG Kansan Staff Writer
Discussion of abolition of the All Student Council (ASC) and the establishment of a new three-senate structure was postponed at the ASC meeting last night.
The ASC felt their representatives needed more time to study the proposed ASC Senate Code and the newly proposed minority report.
The proposals for reform in student government were contained in a majority report issued last week by a 12-member student and faculty committee. The committee was created to study ways of implementing greater student participation in University administration.
in University The minority report is in basic disagreement with the Senate Code on student representation.
The minority report, sponsored by Liz Atkinson and Bill Berkowitz, asks for fifty per cent student representation. The ASC Senate Code proposes 15 per cent representation.
Joe Goering, Moundridge senior and vice president of the student body, explained that it would take two-thirds approval of ASC to pass the code. Also required to make the proposals effective are passage by the student body, University Senate and the Faculty Senate.
At 8 p.m. Thursday, a panel discussion is scheduled in the Kansas Union on the proposed Senate Code.
Three meetings are tentatively scheduled in connection with both the Senate Code and the minority report next week.
At 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Voice will meet to discuss the minority report at the Wesley Foundation.
*At 8 p.m. next Wednesday, the American Association of University
Smoking slows
WASHINGTON (UPI) Health fears and higher prices may be cutting down the number of American cigarette smokers, the Agriculture Department said yesterday.
The department forecast cigarette production in the 1968-69 marketing year at about 571 billion, or about the same as in 1967-68.
"The smoking age population is increasing and consumer incomes are at record levels," the department noted in a summary of its tobacco situation report.
"However, increasing cigarette taxes and the smoking-health publicity apparently are reducing cigarette use per person and possibly the number of smokers.
"Cigarette consumption per person 18 and older this year is expected to average slightly below the 4,280 of last year," the report said.
professors is sponsoring a debate in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
At next Tuesday's ASC meeting, the twelve man committee that worked on the proposed Senate Code will answer questions for ASC members.
Four resolutions were also passed last night and one postponed until next week. They would:
- Extend freedom of speech at the University of Kansas.
- Establish closer relations with other student governments and greater understanding of the student movement.
- Commend Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe for his 18 years of service to the University.
- Set up a lecture series at the University of Kansas.
The resolution extending greater freedom of speech at the University condemned the administration of the Midwest Music and Art Camp for allegedly prohibiting all conversation between campers and university students.
Three ASC members appointed to a committee to study the situation are: Bob Stone, Mike Warner and Joe Goering.
The resolution to establish closer relations with other student governments proposed that a special committee be established to consider hosting a conference for student government leaders of the midwest region.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe was formally recognized as "a friend of
(See ASC page 12)
UDK News Roundup
by United Press International
Fortas debate to begin today; vote doubtful
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Senate opponents of Abe Fortas' appointment to be chief justice were determined today to talk to death even the motion bring his nomination up for debate.
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said he was prepared to fight for his surprise formal motion to take up the debate today on President Johnson's nomination of Fortas.
Fortas' opponents immediately vowed a filibuster. One of their leaders, Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., said he doubted the motion would ever get to a vote.
Holland's Princess gives birth to second son
UTRECHT, Holland (UPI)—Crown Princess Beatrix of Holland gave birth by caesarian section today to a son who became third in line to the Dutch throne. His name was not immediately announced.
Doctors said both mother and son were in good condition.
It was the second child born to Beatrix and her husband, German-born Prince Claus van Amsberg. Prince Willem-Alexander, born April 27, 1967, was the first male born into the Dutch royal house in more than 100 years.
BEARD DISCRIMINATION
These two KU students were told to shave their beards or move out of their West Hills apartments. They decided to move. Standing is Bob Menadier, Kansas City, sophomore while Steve Parker, New York junior, sits astride several packed suitcases.
Students face eviction
'Shave or leave'
BY JUDI DIEBOLT
Kansan Staff Writer
Two KU students living at West Hills apartments must shave their beards or face eviction at the end of this month.
"We don't want any beards around here," said clean-shaven Wilbur Almquist, manager of the apartments.
"We don't have any place to live," said bearded Steve Parker, Rochester, N.Y., junior and Bob Menadier, Kansas City sophomore.
Parker and Menadier refuse to shave. Both students said they would rather move out of their apartments than shave their beards.
Menadier was the first to receive an eviction threat. He said Almquist approached his roommate two weeks ago and asked if "a long-haired floosie" was living there. His roommate replied that Menadier did have long hair but wasn't a floosie. Almquist then said Menadier must leave.
Menadier said that on the same afternoon he went to see Almquist and was given back his apartment deposit.
"Wilbur told me he was afraid for my safety. He said people around West Hills didn't like beards and long hair. He said I wasn't a credit to our apartment complex and might be beaten up."
"Personally," Menadier said, "I'd rather have long-haired bearded tenants than tenants who assault other tenants."
Parker said he was threatened with eviction early Tuesday morning.
"Wilbur asked my roommate if 'The Beard' was still living with him. When he replied that I was, Wilbur told him I had to get out."
Almquist tenants of West Hills do not have leases. "These apartments are
owned by Vickers Oil Company. My contract with them states that I can approve all tenants and rent only to the people I want to. I can also throw out anybody I don't like," Almquist said.
Menadier said he had never met Almquist until Almquist returned his deposit.
Parker said when he first met Almquist he didn't have a beard.
"Although Wilbur and I had never met before that time, Wilbur claimed he had been given reports on me by other tenants."
When asked why he was opposed to long hair and beards Almquist replied, "Those kind of people just aren't clean. They're also dangerous. We've got a lot of girls living over here and they (bearded or long-haired tenants) are a threat to their security."
"The girls' parents and the Vickers Oil people don't like it either."
Almquist then pulled a newspaper clipping from his desk telling of the rape of a 19-year-old girl by a bearded man.
"This," he said angrily, "is why we don't want those long-haired, bearded nuts around here."
Two KU coeds, who wished to remain unidentified and who knew both Parker (see Beards, page 12)
WEATHER
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts fair and cool weather today and tomorrow. Today's high is expected to be in the low to mid 70s while tonight's lows should be in the upper 40s or lower 50s. Precipitation probabilities should be near zero today and tomorrow.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
Tonight is your last chance to avoid the clutches of the Reading Meany
T
lonight, Wednesday, September 25th, at 7:00 P.M. in the Wesley Foundation Building (that's directly across from the Kansas Union) the Reading Dynamics instructors will begin the final class of this series. The next series will not begin until the middle of October. This is your last chance to enroll in this series and escape the clutches of the Reading Meany.
Come to class tonight and see how you can learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now with no loss in comprehension. Learn how to study more effectively. Learn how to recall what you read when you need to.
Hundreds of K. U. students are Dynamic Readers. Don't pass up your opportunity. Enroll tonight!
DON'T LET READING ASSIGNMENTS GET TO YOU!
PLEASE RESERVE SPACE for me in the class beginning on a ( ) definite ( ) tentative basis.
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
CITY___
STATE ___ ZIP CODE ___
I would like to receive additional information. PLEASE SEND BROCHURE. I UNDERSTAND NO SALESMAN WILL CALL.
*
For additional information contact:
WESLEY FOUNDATION BUILDING
1314 Oread Road
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone: 913 VI. 3-6424
书
Evelyn Wood
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
EST. 1959
Evelyn Wood
READING
DYNAMICS
Institute
EST.1959
32
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Fellowship applications are due in mid-October
Deadline for applications for Woodrow Wilson Fellowships, Rhodes Scholarships, Marshall Scholarships and Danforth Graduate Fellowships is mid-October. Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College, said yesterday.
Applications should be turned into the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences office, Bell said. The Woodrow Wilson designate is guaranteed one full year of graduate study, provided he is studying in arts and sciences, Bell said. These fellowships are not applicable to professional schools.
"A basic requirement of this
fellowship is that the candidate must be interested in a full-time career of college teaching," Bell said.
Bell explained that students are nominated by faculty members, and asked to complete applications. These nominations must be sent to the regional secretary before October 20. Interviews are conducted in January and the awards are made in March.
A Rhodes Scholarship entitles the graduate to a possible two or three years of full support at Oxford University in England, he said.
Students,profstmay write for Review
"Priority will still be given to articles turned in by undergraduates, but graduate students and professors are encouraged to make submissions this year," Saricks said.
Graduates and professors, as well as undergraduates, may submit articles to the University Review this year, Chris Saricks, Lawrence senior and editorial board chairman, announced yesterday.
Saricks siad the University Review is a quarterly paper printed as a non-profit organization by interested students. In contains both literary and art pieces submitted by students, and now, faculty also.
He said replies and responses to the published articles are always welcomed and often will be printed.
Saricks tentatively plans the first edition to contain;
- an analysis of the political campaigns.
- a report of the situation in Czechoslovakia by an observer.
- a study of student unrest in France.
- an historical background of the New Left movement both in politics, literature and on the campus.
- a critique of the freshman-soophomore advisory system.
a discussion of enrollment at other campuses as compared with KU.
Presently, Saricks said, the University Review has 16 members, with Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, serving as its sponsor.
They are: Lou Abernathy, Topeka senior; Frances Backus, Lawrence sophomore; Bill Birney, Hill City junior; Joe Goering, Moundridge senior; Joyce Goering, Moundridge junior; Barbara Hughes, Ottawa senior; Robert Hughes, Kansas city junior; Beth Lindquist, Waverly, Iowa junior; Gary McClelland, Topeka senior; Greg Meredith, Kansas City sophomore; John
Interested seniors must file their own applications. Selection is based upon academic ability, character, interests and activities.
A Marshall Scholarship enables a graduate to study at any British university for two to three years.
Michael, Hutchinson senior;
John Neibling, Hiawatha sophomore;
David Norton, Manhattan senior;
Darlre Reed, Kansas City junior;
Walter Stromquist,
Charleston, Ill. junior; and Lance Williams. Lawrence sophomore.
Saricks said all articles should be submitted to Mrs. Gibson's office in room 206 Strong Hall.
Applications must be in Bell's office by October 10, the dean said. They are then forwarded to the British Consulate in Chicago. Criteria for this scholarship are roughly the same as for the Rhodes. Bell said.
The Danforth Foundation of St. Louis offers 400 fellowships for up to four full years of support. Academic abilities, activities and ethical concerns are bases for selection.
Residence halls handle as many as 1,000 calls each day. Because most switchboard operators are new on the job, Wilson said, the influx of new students
and the change in location of old students is bound to create a problem.
J. J. Wilson, director of university housing, has described the difficulties encountered in telephoning a residence hall as only "temporary."
Portraits of Distinction
Also
- Passports
- Applications
- Lettermen
- Seniors
- K Patrols
"We do not believe the problem is any worse than in previous years," Wilson said. "All residence hall switchboards are operated by students and they are doing their best at this time," he said.
Please call for appointment
Artist
Hall calls delayed temporarily
Hixon Studio
Portrait of Distinction
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Novelties
- Lavaliers
- Sportswear
- Paddles
- Cups
- Guards
- Favors
- Rings
- Λ
- Trophies
- Awards
WEAVER'S RECORD DEPT. Barbra Streisand "Happening in Central Park"
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
SUA QUARTERBACK CLUB
of
KU's 47-7 Victory over U. of Illinois
stereo LP—reg. $4.79
presents Game film
7:30 p.m., Wednesday Traditions Room Kansas Union
$2.99
NOTICE
Anniversary Specials
Our thanks to you for a successful first year
Handshake
Dress Shirts Checks...Stripes...Solids
25% off
Levi's Permanent Press Hopsacks 2 for $7.00
Many more specials but only for as long as they last!
MISTER
GUY
MISTER
GUY
920 MASSACHUSETTS
Open Until 8:30 on Thursdays
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
Law, order一1970?
1970
Gather the family around the TV set. We're going to watch the President give his State of the Nation address.
—Don't forget little Charlie. Is he still playing in the sandpile?
And, Daddy, bring out the gun case and set it next to the television. While we watch the President and hear his stirring words on the lowering of the crime rate by throwing any and all trouble-makers into jail, we want to be able to gaze on the symbol of our freedom.
—Go and bring him in quickly or the Good Policeman might mistake him for a dissenter.
—If any of our neighbors ever tries anything ... if anyone ever infringes on our right to discriminate as we choose . . . just wait.
Just look, twenty-five guns: an automatic pistol, a shotgun, a rifle, a Luger, and even a mortar.
The guns are our symbol of freedom, aren't
they, Daddy. The President is making sure we have law and order no matter how many soldiers have to patrol the White House.
—But, the beauty of it is that we can keep our guns to protect ourselves from our neighbors and any—"outside elements."
— Mommy, what are "outside elements"?
-Shh, Charley, someone will hear. Besides, the President has thrown them all in the Potomac.
—Here's the President now. Watch carefully, Charlie. He's talking about the wonderful law and order in America.
—Did I hear our President clearly, Daddy? Did he really say that for our better protection and safety from outside elements and our neighbors, all our guns are going to be confiscated?
—Yes, but the President is assuring us that this is law and order, not a police state, Mommy.
-If our President says so, Daddy, it must be true. He speaks the truth-right to the people, doesn't he, Daddy?
Compromise not dirty
The word compromise has taken on dirty connotations these days.
Don't dare suggest it to local radicals. They're outraged at the mere mention of such an agreement with the "establishment" administration or with even more moderate liberals whose philosophy and concern isn't so violently different from their own.
To compromise, so the argument goes, would be to sell out your ideals. To move one inch from your position would be to taint your character.
We support Voke's views about gaining greater student and minority rights and representation, on the Hill and off. So do many other students, and believe it or not, faculty and administration members.
This support from the silent majority, not the uproar and threatened sit-in by Voice, brought about the proposal for a Student Senate with membership in the University Senate.
If this silent majority, represented by five-sixths of the committee created to recommend ways to implement student representation, had not supported Voice's basic demands, the proposals would not have been made by a group respected enough to win adoption by the necessary procedures.
The recommendations now seem likely to gain approval and for the first time in University history, students will be members of the University Senate.
Voice, even though it instigated the movement, needed non-members and non-radicals to carry through the revolutionary ideas. And in the future, like it or not, Voice will need this same support if its ideas are to be implemented.
Monte Mace Managing Editor
New Paperbacks
TO MOVE A NATION, by Roger Hilsman (Delta, $2.95) —A vast and scholarly treatment of foreign policy in the administration of John F. Kennedy. And such a work seems likely to stand longer than the eulogistic biographical memoirs that hit us a few years ago. Hilsman, a professor at Columbia, treats Vietnam, the Congo, Indonesia, Laos and of course that which seemed most significant, Cuba. Besides providing a historical treatment Hilsman includes considerable philosophizing on the presidency and foreign policy. His contention is that Kennedy was both leader and hero and that the nation lost very much in the President's death.
***
CHILDREN OF CRISIS, by Robert Coles (Delta, $2.45) —An analysis of children involved in America's racial strife. Coles is a psychiatrist, and he penetrates the question of how a small, impressionable child survives conflict and the impact it has upon him. The author also looks into parents, teachers, civil rights workers and segregationists. The work is readable and not at all for the specialist only.
\* \* \*
THE FALL OF JAPAN, by William Craig (Dell, 95 cents) —History of the final weeks of World War II. In the style of "The Last Battle" and "The Longest Day" the writer tries to provide a picture from several sides, including such individuals as Emperor Hirohito, General MacArthur, General Wainwright, Tojo and so on.
OUR CROWD, by Stephen Birmingham (Dell, $1.25) —A book about the great Jewish families of New York, The Loebs, Lehmans, Lewisohns, Strauses, Schiffs, Seligmans, Goldmans, Warburgs and Guggenheims. They are names prominent in the arts, government and high society, and the book represents a depiction of New York philanthropic history. Birmingham interviewed many persons and used family documents for this book, one which has been extremely popular and highly enjoyable to many readers.
\* \* \*
THE PRESIDENT'S PLANE IS MISSING, by Robert J. Serling (Dell, 95 cents) —A political thriller keyed to events of today. Air Force One, the President aboard, leaves Andres Air Force Base on a routine flight to Palm Springs, and over Arizona the plane disappears. And the search begins. This kind of book, well done, is about as good as any popular fiction today, and this one is well done.
KILLING TIME, by Thomas Berger (Dell, 95 cents); NIGHT PILLOW, by Hugh C. Rae (Dell, 75 cents) —The kind of book, in each case, that prompts all those outcries about violence. "Killing Time" is a murder thriller, concerning a Christmas eve when two people find three other people murdered, but not by the psychopath everyone assumes is responsible. Remember "The Collector"? This is a kooky one
* *
in that vein (jugular). "Night Pillow" is pure sensation. Young girls, young boys, motorcycles, sex, violence, and probably headed for American International studies, with Peter Fonda and Nancy Sinatra.
The Hill With It by john hill
I saw this friend of mine sitting in the Gooselight bar reading, of all things, the Daily Kansan.
"Glad to see you're improving your mind," I said. "What's new?"
"There's more on that student rights stuff," he said, adjusting the turned up collar on his yellow windbreaker so it hid his new, slowly-growing sideburns. "That's something I'm really glad to see happening—we should have more rights. Taxation without representation, or something."
"Then you're sympathetic with Peoples Voice, and their goals?" I asked, unsure of his attitude even though he wore the tell-tale penny loafers with no socks. I tried to stand in the shadows so he couldn't see my white ones.
"Beard City? You think I like all those lousy campus activist militant radical protesting non-conforming agitating demonstrating hippie beatnik pinko anarchists? And most of them probably aren't even in a fraternity!" he said, accusingly.
"But you like the emphasis on student involvement now?"
"Of course!" he said. "Look, I'm not one of these apathetic students. I know what's going on! Don't think I don't take an interest!"
"What do you think of Voice's proposal to abolish AWS, the office of the deans of men and women, and the ASC?" I asked.
"Abolish Talk City? Sure—everyone knows that the ASC is ineffective. I know that for a fact; I saw it once in print."
"But you want increased student rights?" I asked, watching him check to see if his sideburns had filled out any more in the last hour. "Whatever's right."
"Well, do you agree with some members of Voice that the proposed student-faculty ratios in the University Senate, the senate council, and SENEX don't fulfill the concept of participatory democracy? What do you think about their views on ROTC on campus? And in their dissenting report, their proposals on aiding Indians, and—"
"Hey! What's all this stuff about Kill City and Scalp City, and all those committees and ratios and stuff? All I know for sure is that, uh, we sure need more rights, or something. Somehow." He went over to join some less inquisitive people. "Later," he said, giving the standard sign-off signal.
"Well, uh, Goodbye City," I said, trying to get with it.
Well, uni, Goodbye City. Please, sorry. As I turned to leave, I stopped and thought about this guy, who was about as Joe Average as they come, and I turned around to get some final impression concerning his interest and understanding in the student rights issue at KU.
I left quickly, not very excited about watching him, with a complacent expression on his blank face, industriously attempting a finger tonilectomy through his nose. . .
Quotable quotes...
(All Gregory quotes taken from Write Me in.)
"My foreign-aid program will mainly consist of sending money and food to needy people in
Percy
Waldo
Smythe
foreign lands--like Mississippi and Alabama."
Dick Gregory
"Just think, Spiro Agnew is coming to KU. My ideological hero for YEARS; that dynamic innovator: Spiro Agnew. Just think! Spiro's the one."
"Some white folks I just can't understand. They're more concerned about busing a kid to school than they are about shipping a kid to Vietnam—That's like worrying about dandruff when you've got cancer of the eyeballs."
Dick Gregory
KANSAN
Newsgroom—UN 4-3648
Newroom—UN 4-2645
Published at the Merrick Kansas daily, during the academic year except holidays and examination periods.
Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester.
$10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansasc. Kindergarten services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily of those of the Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Hainey
Assistant Managing Editors
Pat Crawford
Charla Jenkins
Alan T. Jones
Steve Morgan
Allen Winchester
Editorial Editor Almond Scott
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Kathy Hall
Editorial Assistant
Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Feature and Society Editor
Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor
Sharon Woodson
Coy Chagle
Linda McCreway
Don Westhausen
Sandy Zahradnik
Marilyn Zook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager
Kathy Sanders
Promotion
Pam Flaton
Circulation Mgr.
Jack Hurley
Classified Mgr.
Barry Arthur
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Describes stormy session
KU
KU prof
BY DICK HVALE
Kansan Staff Writer
While many of his counterparts watched the Chicago convention last month on television, a KU professor viewed the proceedings first-hand.
He served as a delegate.
Dr. John Wright, in the Department of Human Development and Family Life, was vicechairman of the Concerned Democrats in Minnesota, which endorsed Sen. Eugene McCarthy even before he announced his candidacy.
Although Wright attended two meetings at the Stockyard Inn in Chicago at which formation of a new political party was discussed, he declined to reveal details.
He moved to Kansas this month.
As for the November elections, Wright said he would not campaign for but might vote for Vice President Hubert Humphrey.
Wright believes that the media accurately reported the events that occurred in Chicago during the week of the convention.
Demo Convention violence
saw
"My impression is that the way you saw it on TV was the way it was," he said. Wright said there were only a few incidents of rock and bottle throwing. Some of the expressions the protestors were shouting did include obscene language, he added.
"If the protestors' strategy was to be both provocative and non-violent, they succeeded," the professor said. "I thought the protestors were extremely well disciplined." he said. Wright stayed at Grant Park with the protestors for three nights.
While at Grant Park, Wright said he observed the efficiency and organization of the group. Certain persons, he explained, were responsible for meeting a speaker at the outer edge of the group and for escorting him through the crowd to the platform. The protestors, who were sitting around the platform in concentric circles, would move to form aisles for anyone walking through the crowd, he said.
Wright credited Mark Dellinger, coordinator of National Mobilization, for controlling the
group at Grant Park. When Dellinger asked the protestors on the periphery of the group to sit down so the leaders could watch the police, Wright said they promptly obeyed.
After Humphrey received enough votes for the nomination, Wright hurried to Grant Park by bus to dissuade he said.
Wright denied the frequentlymade charge that most of the instigators of the protest were Communist-inspired. "They tolerated but did not listen to the revolutionaries," he said.
Wright, who has spent three summers training Minneapolis police in human rights, understands the difficulty of a policeman's job. "They too are a minority group. Just as black people can be made the scapegoat for the hostility of a frustrated white majority, so policemen as a distinct and visible minority can be the scapegoat for protestors.
"Policemen are symbolic of the power of the establishment and will be the natural first target of those who resent and
resist that power. If the police respond to provocation by illegal and unwarranted use of force, they are then fulfilling their previously unearned role as the villain, as they did in Chicago.
"It simply means that they have to be better than ever." Police forces in the United States are improving, he added.
Wright said the Chicago Police Force could have handled the situation more effectively by recognizing the essential nonviolent intentions of the vast majority of protestors and permitting the protest in Lincoln Park as well as the march to the Amphitheater.
Officials at the Democratic Convention, according to Wright, did not equitably enforce some of the rules. One rule stated that delegates could not hold demonstrations on the convention floor.
By remote application of this rule, officials did not let some delegates pass out copies of the New York Times which described the confrontation between protestors and the Chicago police, or copies of a leaflet which explained the minority plank on Vietnam.
Yet signs saying "Humphrey" and "We Love Mayor Daley" passed by the officials and were handed out to the delegates, Wright said. Wright unsuccessfully tried to inform the other delegates of this kind of enforcement of the rules.
When he called John Bailey, the national chairman, to ask if this issue could be brought before the convention, Bailey, according to Wright, said, "We are too busy for that kind of thing now." and hung up.
"It was virtually impossible to get guest seats in the gallery," Wright said. Nevertheless, he saw 300-400 empty seats in the gallery on the first three nights of the convention. People waving "We Love Mayor Daley" signs filled these seats on the final night of the convention. Wright believes that Daley must have reserved these seats for his supporters that night.
Spanish Institute
Bullfights, cat-calls bring reactions from students
BY GRACIE NELSON Kansan Staff Writer
Bullfights, Spanish men and attitudes about the U.S. triggered diverse reactions from the 24 students of the Spanish Summer Language Institute.
During their two-month stay from June to August, the students travelled three weeks throughout Spain and studied five weeks in Barcelona.
One said of the bullfight, "It was horrible. Three matadors were bad and one ball had a twisted horn. It was horrid." An
Now, more than a month and thousands of miles later,their individual recollections vary.
Committees set for Homecoming
Committee chairmen are Nicholas L. Gerren, Wilberforce, Ohio, senior, general chairman; Dixie Underwood, Lawrence junior, arrangements; Janet L. Bare, Wichita junior, decorations; James C. Klaver, Kingman junior, master of ceremonies; William Ebert III, Topeka sophomore, assistant master of ceremonies; Mike Kirk, Kansas City, senior, SUA representative; Kent Hornberger, St. Louis graduate student, public relations; and Barbara Blee, Bonner Springs junior, queens.
University faculty and staff assisting these students are Dick Wintermote, executive director of the Alumni Association, general chairman; Vince Bilotto, also of the Alumni Association, arrangements; Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, decorations; Jay B. Strayer, dean of men's office, decorations; Prof. Kenneth Bloomquist, director of bands, ceremonies.
otherwise enthusiastic student said. "I just refused to go."
Eight students and ten faculty members have been named to head the 1968-69 Homecoming Committee. Activities already scheduled for the annual event November 1-2, are the Kansas-Colorado football game, the Andy Williams Concert sponsored by SUA and the musical "Kismet" in the University Theatre.
Mrs. Katherine Giele, SUA representative; James E. Gunn, director of University Relations, public relations; Mrs. Mary Nash, University Relations office, public relations; Dr. Emily Taylor, dean of women, queens committee; Cheryl Doris, dean of women's office, queens committee.
Darryl Klippsten, Prairie Village junior, said, "It all depends on your point of view. I was excited, but it still strikes me as a barbaric practice. Many Spaniards think of it like that, too."
One girl was more emphatic. "I liked it," Barbaraalee Horesi, Ellsworth senior, said. "I consider it more an art than a sport."
Impressions of the Spanish people also varied. Andy McDonald, Garnett sophomore, said, "They were nice people to meet, but hard to get to know."
This wasn't the problem of two students who became close friends with several Spaniards living at the group's Barcelona dormitory.
"Two of us talked to these three girls about three hours every day," he said. "At first, they thought of Americans in terms of stereotypes, but these gradually faded away."
Varsity
THEATRE TELEPHONE VI 3-1065
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 2-1045
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
WALTER MATTHAU
ANNE JACKSON
PATRICK O'NEAL
in GEORGE AXELROD'S
"The SECRET LIFE
OF AN
AMERICAN WIFE"
color by
DeLuxe
SMA
Matinee 2:30
Evenings—7:19-9:15
---
color by DeLuze SMA
Matinee 2:30
Evenings—7:19-9:15
The notorious Spanish male puzzled Brenda Metzler, Delmar, N.Y., sophomore. She said, "I was surprised by all the compliments you get in the streets, especially in southern Spain, where they are more forward. They'd call out 'guapa'—(pretty) and either hiss or blow a kiss. I didn't know exactly how to react."
Although there was a general impression of friendliness, several students commented on the unfavorable attitude many Spaniards have toward capitalism and the American role in Vietnam. Yet, one said, "They're making too much money off American tourists to really dislike us."1
Granada
THEATRE----telephone VI 3-5784
Granada
THEATRE --- Telephone W3-ST86
IF YOU'RE THIRTY,
YOU'RE THROUGH!
52% of the Nation is under 25 and they've got power. That's how Max Frost at 24, became President of the United States.
This is perhaps the most unusual motion picture you will ever see!
you will ever see!
Shelley Christopher Diane
WINTERS ★ JONES ★ VARSI
STARRING IN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL'S
WILD IN THE STREETS
Evenings—7:15-9:15
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL'S WILD IN THE STREETS Evenings----7:15-9:15
WEAVER'S RECORD DEPT. Glenn Yarborough "Each of Us Alone"
stereo LP—reg. $4.79 $2.99
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
Moved Over!
The hanging was the best show in town. But they made two mistakes. They hung the wrong man and they didn't finish the job.
CLINT EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM HIGH"
THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Presents
SIDNEY POTTIER ROD STEIGER
IN THE NORMAN JEWISON-WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION
"IN THE HEAT OF
THE NIGHT"
COLOR by DeLuxe Presented by UNITED ARTISTS
BEST ACTOR, ROD STEIGER
Box Office Open 6:30 — Show Starts At Dusk!
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesdav. September 25,1968
Hawks rated 6th in poll
KU's Jayhawks were rated No. 6 in the nation in the weekly UPI college football poll on the basis of their 47-7 pounding of Illinois last week.
Notre Dame topped the UPI poll, with Purdue second and Southern California third. AP placed the Boilermakers in the top position, followed by Notre Dame and Southern California.
The Associated Press ranked the Jayhawks 12th.
Indiana, the Jayhawks' next foe, was rated 12th by UPI and placed one spot behind KU in the AP poll in 13th place.
'Gowl'
by Dick Hvale Kansan Sports Writer
When informed that KU was ranked sixth in the UPI poll today, all head coach Pepper Rodgers could say was "Gowl."
After a few seconds, he said, "My reaction is one of shock, one of pleasure, and one of it's a long way from here to Indiana."
Rodgers said that he does not understand how the teams can be accurately evaluated this early in the season. He pointed out that last year this same pcll considered KU's football team as one of the 20 worst teams in the nation.
"By the end of the season, we were one of the better teams in this area," he said.
In discussing yesterday's practice, Rodgers said, "They don't look like the number six team in the nation UPI-wise."
One would think Rodgers was talking about a top pro team when he listed the merits of Indiana's football team. "They are fast. They beat us last year. They have a leading pass catcher, a couple of 9.3 sprinters and are probably leading the country in total offense. They also have John Pont, coach of the year last season."
Yesterday morning Rodgers talked to persons at the Quarterback Club, which was meeting in Indianapolis, Ind. "They asked if it was fair to have a 6-8, 280-pound end chasing a 5-8, 180-pound quarterback," Rodgers said. "I told them I would take out Vanoy (Vernon) if Pont would take out Gonso (Harry)."
Rodgers was playing quarterback for part of yesterday's practice. "We are ranked sixth in the nation and the coach has to be the quarterback." he quipped.
UPI poll
FIRST WEEK
| Team | Points |
| :--- | :--- |
| 1. Notre Dame (17) (1-0) | 323 |
| 2. Clemson (17) (1-0) | 298 |
| 3. Southern Cal (3) (1-0) | 290 |
| 4. Penn State (1) (1-0) | 158 |
| 5. Alabama (1-0) | 136 |
| 6. Kansas (1-0) | 86 |
| 7. Alabama (1-0) | 85 |
| 8. Nebraska (2-0) | 61 |
| 9. Michigan St (1-0) | 57 |
| 10. Miami Fl. (1-0) | 59 |
Second 10—11. Houston State 55, 12. Michigan State 64, 13. Ohio State 26, 14. Ohio State 26, 16. North Carolina State 21, 17. Michigan State 17, 18. Tennessee 19, 20. Florida State 11
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) Southeastern Conference officials had an easy time this year naming the top 10 single game scoring leaders in college basketball.
Real Tops
He was Pete (Pistol Pete) Maravich, all-American sophomore from Louisiana State University. He has all top 10 places with points scored ranging from 49 against Auburn to 59 against Alabama.
NEW YORK (UPI)—Notre Dame today holds an uneasy perch on the pinnacle of college football.
The Fighting Irish, national champions in 1966 and fourth last season with an 8-2 mark, today were named the top college football team in the nation in the first week's ratings by United Press International's 35-member board of coaches.
Notre Dame, which scored an impressive 45-21 victory over a highly-regarded Oklahoma team, received 17 first-place votes and 321 points to outdistance Purdue (13 top votes and 293 points) and Southern California, the defending champion, with 290 points.
Rounding out the top 10 are:
Kansas 86; Alabama 85; Nebraska 81; Louisiana State 67 and Miami (Fla.) 59.
Penn State, a 31-6 conqueror of Navy, was fourth with one first-place vote and 158 points, 22 more than fifth-ranking UCLA, who destroyed Pittsburgh 63-7 and received one first-place vote.
Houston heads the second 10 with 55 points, five more than 12th place Indiana with Texas 42, Florida 36, Ohio State 26, North Carolina State 21, Michigan State 17, Arizona State 14, Tennessee 12 and Florida State 11 rounding out the top 20.
Ara Parseghian's Fighting Irish will be asked to defend their No. 1 ranking almost immediately when they play host to Jack Mollenkopf's powerful Purdue squad in a grudge match Saturday at South Bend, Ind.
Boilermakers Are Tough
The Boilermakers dumped Notre Dame from the No.1 spot early last season when quarterback Mike Phipps burst into national prominence with an impressive passing display against the Irish. But Purdue, boasting one of the best backfields in the country with Phipps, All-American Leroy Keyes and Perry Williams, must buck an awesome South Bend crowd and the fact that no team has ever beaten a Parseghian Notre Dame team twice in succession.
Purdue had an easy time routing Virginia 44-6 while Southern Cal needed two late touchdowns
The record-shattering Irish passing combination of Terry Hanratty-to-Jim Seymour showed that it lost none of its effectiveness as the two combined for two touchdown passes Saturday to give Saymour the all-time Notre Dame record for scoring receptions.
The PGA's attempt to mend the rift with the touring pros by offering a number of concessions ended with the admonition that "in the future the PGA would not permit a contestant any authority in running tournams."
Max Elbin, president of the PGA, said Monday "as trustees for all owners of the Professional Golfers Association circuit, we pledge ourselves to defend our rights by all proper means, including legal procedures."
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (UPI) The warring professional golfing groups may be a courtroom apart today in their efforts to control the multi-million dollar tournament tour.
Golf groups still at war
from All-American O. J. Simpson to edge Minnesota 29-20.
Instead of a voice in tournament management, the PGA said it would give the players more adequate representation in tournament policy.
UCLA got a four-touchdown performance from sub quarterback Jim Nader to romp past Pittsburgh while Kansas bombed Illinois 47-7. Alabama edged a tough Virginia Tech squad 14-7 while Nebraska blanked Utah 31-0.
"The PGA has obligations to the U. S. Golf Association tournament sponsors, club proprietors, equipment manufacturers and, most important, future generations of golfers." Elbin said.
Louisiana State nipped Texas A&M 13-12 and Miami had an easy time beating Northwestern 28-7.
Five coaches from each of the seven geographical areas of the nation comprise the UPI ratings board. Each week they select the top 10 teams in the nation with points awarded on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis on votes from first through 10th.
Cardinal pitcher receives bonus
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-No-hit pitcher Ray Washburn, the season still on but the National League pennant clinched by the St. Louis Cardinals, tore up his old contract Tuesday and signed a new one for the season about to end.
The 30-year-old Washburn, who had been earning between $25,000 and $30,000 was given a $3,000 "bonus" under the new contract, and the indications were that the righthander would get another increase by the time he signs a contract for next season.
Washburn with a 13-7 season record was due to pitch Tuesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies, in the first home game since the Cardinal road trip.
Tickets limited
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-The St. Louis Cardinals say they are doing everything they can to make World Series tickets available to the average baseball fan.
Nevertheless, ticket supervisor Mike Bertani said Tuesday, only 5,000 to 7,500 of the 51,000 seats in Busch Stadium will be filled by the lucky fans whose mail order requests were pulled out of about 90 stuffed mail-bags.
The Cardinals said after clinching the National League pennant that they would sell to one applicant tickets for just two of the four World Series games that conceivably will be played in St. Louis.
LEVI'S FOR GALS
YES!
Levi Strauss & Co.
is now making
girls' LEVI'S
Snug, Slim, Trim
Short, Medium, Tall
Denim, Stretch Denim, Canvas
and Railroad Strip.
Sizes 5-13
Campu
WEST
1424 Crescent Road
the cpo classic outer shirt
Here's outerwear styling that's really "in" with today's fashion look!
In husky, rough-and-ready wool,
it features long-tail comfort
... comes in country checks
and classic plaids.
Woolrich
THE University Shop
Woolwich
C
t
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Speaking of sports
About those Ratings
By Ron Yates, Kansan sports editor
One of the first things which comes to mind when you glance over this week's football "Top Ten" charts, is who deserves what. Is number one really number one? Or is number ten really number one?
Right now, one of the first questions which comes to mind is whether or not any of the top ten teams are really what they are "voted up" to be.
For example, in the UPI poll, KU is rated sixth in the nation. In the AP poll KU is rated 12th in the nation.
KU has achieved this distinction on the basis of winning one game. True, the win (47-7 over Illinois) was impressive, but was it impressive enough that KU (1-0) was voted to a higher spot than Nebraska, who has already won 2 games without a loss?
For that matter, how about Ohio State? In the pre-season polls everyone said Ohio State would have a good team. On the basis of these predictions, Ohio State currently clings to 11th place in the AP poll and it has yet to play a game. Why should a team 0-0 be ranked higher than a team 1-0? Or why should a team 1-0 be ranked higher than a team 2-0?
On such shakev ground is the top ten list founded.
You get the idea that when the voting is going on someone says, "Well, I guess I'll vote for my old Alma Mater."
"Yeah, but your school lost last week," says a fellow voter
"So what?" comes the retort. "My school is better than they looked last week . . . after all it was only the first game of the season." only the first game of the season."
Or how about: "Ho hum, I guess I'll vote the same way I voted last week. Hev, Quigley, who was number one last week?"
"Oread Tech." Quiglev answers.
"Well, who's number one so far in the voting?"
"Schrankkoffer A & M."
"What happened to Oread?"
"They lost 46-3."
"Oh well, I guess I'll vote for Oread again. They probably just had a bad day. Besides, I can't even spell that other school."
Or how about: "What's this, Miss Gladfeet?"
"That's the weekly twoenty voting list from the press service. I think you are supposed to fill it out and send it back."
"I thought Hobart the janitor was handling that."
"I thought Hobart the prince was handling it. Well, actually, the sports editor is supposed to do it. It says so in the letter. Besides that, Hobart is running for city clerk this year and he quit last week because it was making his image look bad being a janitor and all."
"Well, if he isn't doing it anymore, you'll just have to take over, Miss Gladfeet."
"But I don't know anything about football."
"You never know anything about political candidates and you vote all the time, don't you? Well, just act like you were voting in an election."
"Let's see. One potato, two potato, three potato, four . . .."
A. seen in MADEMOISELLE
Ship'n Shore®
shadow weave
stirs up
quite a
ruffle
7.00
Shadow magic, woven into lustrous 80% Dacron polyester, 20% cotton. Exploding in ruffles! Choice of woven patterns in white only. Sizes 28 to 38.
Calkoun's
Calhoun's
Store hours: 9:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
1744 Massachusetts
6th and Michigan
Tickets go to relatives
Chiefs ink Paul Lowe to cure backfield ills
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—A man from Belleville, Ill., was the first to have his request for World Series tickets honored, but he has no intention of using the tickets himself.
Edward Escobedo said he will use the tickets to send his parents, now living in San Antonio, Tex., to one game, and his father and Escobedo's 11-year-old son to another.
"My dad is a real baseball fan," said Escobedo. "It'll be one of the greatest thrills of his life."
KANSAS CITY (UPI)—The Kansas City Chiefs have announced the signing of Paul Lowe, 6-foot, 205-pound, running back released earlier this season from the San Diego Chargers.
Lowe was sidelined by injury in the second game of the 1967 season and played only briefly thereafter.
He ranked second behind Clem Daniels in career rushing with 4,963 yards and has a career running average of 4.9 yards-per-carry, the best in the American Football League.
He gained more than 1,000 yards in 1963 and 1965 and was the AFL's Player-of-the-Year in 1965.
WEEJUNS
with love
Brown Tapered Toe
Amber Tapered Toe
Golden Grain Tapered Toe
Blue Tapered Toe
Brown Tassel Tapered Toe
Brown Full Toe
Green Grain Full Toe
Brown Kiltie Full Toe
Brown Buckle Full Toe
Brown Tassel Full Toe
Bass
OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR
Arensberg's
= Shoes
$15.95
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
Fortas vote near
Senate tactics just like 'hippies'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Conservative senators threatening to filibuster against Abe Fortas' appointment as chief justice were accused Tuesday of using the same political tactics of hippies and yippies seeking to thwart the will of the majority.
Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich.), one of Fortas's staunchest supporters, made the charge in a speech before the Senate, urging his colleagues to abandon any plans to talk the controversial nomination to death and let the majority vote its wishes.
The Senate's leisurely pace led some members, including Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La.), to conclude that a filibuster already had begun.
But Hart's plea showed no signs of cracking the wall of opposition to Fortas. Sen. B. Everett Jordan (D-N.C.) announced that he would vote against halting debate and against confirmation of Fortas if it came to that.
Tax Bill
Debate on a minor tax bill was in its third day, and senators still have to act on a $71.9 billion defense appropriations bill before the Fortas fight begins.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield indicated it would be Thursday or later before the first floor shots are fired in one of the hottest political battles of the year.
Mansfield and Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen denied a report published by the Chicago Tribune that they had agreed to try to head off an anti-Fortas filibuster by introducing a resolution stating that there is no vacancy to fill on the Supreme Court.
Chief justice Earl Warren has conditioned his retirement on confirmation of a successor. Justice Fortas' critics contend this means Warren would remain on the court unless Fortas is confirmed.
He said the Senate would meet on Saturdays to try to dispose of the nomination quickly. He has hinted that if the move to halt a filibuster fails by a substantial margin he would give up the fight.
Hart told the Senate "to encourage the principle of minority veto on presidential nominations" would set a precedent that could eventually benumb governmental operations.
"Any Fortas filibuster in the Senate would have only one purpose: to paralyze the will of
Mansfield said he had not conferred with the White House on antifilibuster strategy. "The final decision is now with the Senate." he said. "It's our responsibility."
Saturdav Meetings
North Korea says US must apologize
The Pueblo was captured Jan. 23 by North Korean gunboats in the Sea of Japan. One crewman was fatally injured in the incident.
TOKYO (UPI)—North Korea said Tuesday the 82-man crew of the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo will be freed only when the United States formally apologizes for the "crime" of spying inside the territorial waters of the Communist state.
The North Korean demand came in an article in the authoritative newspaper Rodong Shinmoon signed by "Commentator" which is usually a pseudonym for a high-ranking government official, broadcast by the Communist Korean Central News Agency KCNA.
It was the first definite statement by the Pyongyang regime since rumors of the imminent release of the American prisoners circulated earlier this month.
The broadcast, monitored in Tokyo, said the article was titled "U.S. Imperialists will never have crew of armed spy ship
Pueblo sent back unless they apologize."
It said the Pueblo crewmen "honestly confessed to their criminal acts and repeatedly entreated the government of the Democratic Communist Peoples Republic of Korea to leniently pardon them..." The Communist radio has broadcast alleged "confessions" by Capt. Lloyd Bucher, the skipper, and members of the crew saying the ship was inside North Korean waters when captured.
"In view of these facts," the article said, "it will be possible to send back the crew only when the United States government bears responsibility as the organizer of the crime, makes due apology to the Pyongyang government and gives assurances that such crimes will never be repeated."
American negotiators have held about a score of secret meetings with Communist officials at the Korean truce village of Pammunjom in the fruitless efforts to secure the release of the 82 American captives.
Harris poll
Nixon continues lead; Wallace still gaining
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Richard M. Nixon leads Hubert H. Humphrey, 39 to 31 per cent, in a recent Harris poll which also showed George C. Wallace gaining on both major candidates.
The former Alabama governor is hurting the Republican nominee more than his Democratic opponent, Harris reported. In a two-way race, he said, Nixon would lead Humphrey by 14 points instead of eight, or 50 to 36 per cent.
The public opinion poll, published by the Washington Post, said 21 per cent of the voters now favor Wallace, an increase of four per cent in just three weeks.
"The discontent of the American electorate with the available choices in 1968 is reflected in the phenomenon of both major party candidates polling less than 40 per cent of the total vote only six weeks before election day." Harris said.
He noted that 43 per cent of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's former supporters are not ready to vote for Nixon, and that 42 per cent of Sen. Eugene J. mcCarthy's backers say they are not inclined to vote for Humphrey.
Harris said Wallace's strength was picking up among independ-
the majority," Hart said. "And isn't that precisely the purpose of far-left youth who howl down speakers and disrupt meetings?"
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
ents, the wealthy, the young and white Protestants, and in small towns and rural areas.
"It certainly strikes me as ironical that Senate conservatives who might join in a filibuster would be in a practical
Andrews Gifts
sense using the same political tactics as, for example, the hippies and the yippies they so often criticize," Hart added.
GIFT
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
At
McConnell Lbr.,
We've Got:
- Lumber and Plywood cut to order
- Do-it-yourself shelving materials
- Homecoming Supplies including standard 1" poultry netting
Visit our newly opened Concord Shop
- Canvas
- Stretcher Frames made to order
- Oil and Acrylic Paints
- Unusual Gift Ideas
- Painting Classes
Mon. thru Thurs.----7-9 p.m.
We're open Mon. thru Fri.
Till 9 p.m. on Thurs.
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 1-3877
?
At least there's no mystery about where she found her
Tami Outfit . . .
at the
Country House
CR
at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St.
Uptown VI 3-5755
THE RED DOG INN
presents
Fri. Night - THE RISING SUNS Sat. Night - THE YOUNG RAIDERS
Tues., Oct. 1 - THE SERFS in action
MARCO ROSCINO
MAKE IT TO SEE MARK WEDNESDAY NIGHT. Friday, Oct. 4 THE REASONS WHY Wednesday, Oct. 9 DOUG CLARK and The HOT NUTS
KU-BEAT INDIANA
Wednesday, September 25,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Presidential campaign roundup
Humphrey and Nixon attack each other
By United Press International Hubert H. Humphrey charged Tuesday his campaign was the target of highly disciplined, well-organized efforts to wreck the Democratic Party and the United States.
The Vice President also said Richard M. Nixon may force a defeat of the nuclear proliferation treaty by his "stalling" on its ratification.
Humphrey told a news conference in Minneapolis that those who had been heckling his appearances were "not just hecklers, but highly disciplined, well-organized agitators . . . some of them anarchists and some of these groups are dedicated to destroying the Democratic Party and destroying this country."
Nixon, meanwhile, sought to
tie Humphrey closely to the Johnson administration when he said the Vice President was the "most uncompromising defender" of administration policies.
The two presidential candidates campaigned in the Midwest Tuesday-Nixon in the Dakotas and Humphrey in Minnesota.
They continued to attack each other by name.
Humphrey told the Minnesota AFL-CIO convention in Minneapolis that Nixon was stalling on the nonproliferation treaty and may force a "crashing" defeat on its ratification. He urged Nixon "to come out of the shadows—to stop stalling—and to
tell us whether he is for this treaty now."
Nixon said he supports the treaty, but does not think the Senate should ratify it at this time because of the Russian-led invasion of Czechoslovakia.
Humphrey also told the AFLCIO convention that both Nixon and third party candidate George Wallace had antilabor records.
Cultural programs started by KUIFC
The Cultural Affairs Committee created last spring by KU's Interfraternity Council has begun its drive to make a varied program of cultural events available to every fraternity man.
"Culture, in its many facets, should play a definite role during a fraternity man's college years," said Ken Wiley, St. Joseph, Mo. junior and chairman of the committee. "This is the reason for the committee's existence."
In addition to musical programs, the committee hopes to organize art displays in houses. "We plan to arrange displays demonstrating the different periods in the history of art, including descriptions of both the painting and the period," Wiley said.
The after-dinner speakers program started by the IFC last fall has been continued by the Cultural Affairs Committee this year. Several faculty members have agreed to speak to fraternities as their schedules allow.
Special projects now planned for later in the year include a photography contest and debates featuring two men from each fraternity discussing fraternity issues. Both will be held in conjunction with Greek Week activities.
The committee has also arranged to make tickets available to KU Greeks for performances of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra and the Kansas City Lyric Opera at reduced rates.
"Our biggest objective might well be exposure," Wiley said. "Cultural affairs have been buried beneath intramurals and social activities for so long that many people fail to realize their benefits."
For that reason, the committee has encouraged every house to establish a cultural affairs chairman and to publish a
ATTENTION Social Chairmen
The log cabin at Oak Lodge is available each night except Sunday for parties, socials, & dancing
Location — 13 miles south of Lawrence on Highway 50
For Information Call 913-594-3349
weekly or monthly cultural events calendar.
Although the IFC committee is aimed at fraternities alone, Wiley hopes the idea will spread to the Panhellenic Council so that sororites can benefit from it also.
"The diffusion of liberal culture, including both the liberal arts and the fine arts, is essential for a well-rounded education. It is time the fraternities and sororities at KU realize this and do something about it," he said.
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
8 E. 9th VI 2-002
18 E. 9th V1 2-0021
EVERYONE SAYS
In everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Social Chairmen... the circumstances call for Pomps.
You're in charge of building the float, decorating the house and dressing up the party. So you need Pomps, the flame-resistant decorative tissue. You can decorate anything beautifully with Pomps, inside and out, and do it faster, easier, better. Pomps don't cost much. They're cut 6" x 6" square, ready to use, come in 17 vivid colors that are virtually run-proof when wet. Buy Pomps at your bookstore, school supply dealer or paper merchant. And ask your librarian for our booklet "How to Decorate With Pomps." If she doesn't have it, just tell her to write for a copy. Or, order your own copy. Send $1.25 and your address today to The Crystal Tissue Company, Middletown, Ohio 45042.
pomps
THE FALL LOOK IN LOW HEELS
featuring the new opener heel
MARY JANE $16
Black, Chestnut, Newport
Blue and Tristan Red Kid
VALLEY $16
Black or Brown Patent
FASHION RIGHT
Bel-Airs
FLUTE $16
Blue Calf, Black Patent and
Burlwood Patent
BONNIE $16
Brown Antique Patent
McCoy's SHOES
813 Mass. St.
Phone VI 3-2091
P
M
Bel-Airs
1
BONNIE $16
M'Coy'S SHOES
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
Plans underway for AURH Fall Festival
Plans are underway for the second annual Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) Fall Festival October 14-18, Janice Wagner, Richmond junior and festival chairman, said.
The festival is the fall counterpart of the AURH sponsored Spring Fling in April. This year's festival theme is "The Great Pumpkin Lives."
Paired floors from men's and women's halls will schedule activities for the first four days. A party is planned on the last night featuring skits and in-between acts by the various living groups.
"The purpose of the festival is to get halls together early in the year," Miss Wagner said.
September 30, upperclass and coed residence halls and scholarship halls elect hall coordinators. Committee heads will compose the AURH Council, Miss Wagner added.
University Extension functions explained
Incorrect conceptions of University Extension were criticised Monday by T. Howard Walker, Extension director, at the semiannual meeting of the Bureau of Extension Classes and Centers in the Kansas Union.
"I have tried to break down the notion that an extension student is a little 81-year-old woman taking a correspondence course." Walker said.
The basic goal of Extension is to provide low cost education of several sorts for students not regularly enrolled on campus.
"A number of students I've seen indicate that the program deals with students whose education has been interrupted," he said.
Walker emphasized that the extension program serves people of all ages, including the very young.
Francis Heller, dean of faculties, presented Walker a silver tray and a set of crystal at the meeting in honor of Walker's service as president of the National University Extension Association last year.
Cavalcade of Comedy opens Friday
The KU 1968 Summer Repetory Company will present command performances of "A Thousand Clowns" and "Once Upon a Mattress," in its Cavalcade of Comedy series beginning this weekend.
The repertory company played to standing-room-only audiences this summer. In addition, two other sell-out comedies, "You Can't Take It With You" and "La Parisienne" were presented.
Herb Gardner's "A Thousand Clowns," directed by Jan Hewitt, Fresno, Calif., graduate student, is the non-conformist play about conformity.
Holmes Osborne, Bates City, Mo., senior, portrays Murray Burns whose nephew Nick is about to be taken from him by the child welfare board. Nick is played by 14-year-old Mark Kappelman, a ninth-grader at South Junior High School.
"Once Upon a Mattress" is Mary Rogers and Jay Thompson's musical love story based
Recruitment of new members will be discussed at the Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR) Meeting tonight at 7:30 in the Kansas Union Kansas Room.
CYR to meet tonight
Jim Powell, publicity vicechairman for CYR, said plans for upcoming Republican events will also be discussed.
German theater group to perform
The University Theatre, in conjunction with the KU German Department, will sponsor two performances of the German touring group, Die Brucke, October 16 and 17.
Die Bruce will perform Lessing's comedy, "Minna von Barnhelm," Wednesday, October 16 and a dramatization of Franz Kafka's "The Castle" by Max Brod Thursday, October 17. Both productions are in German.
Tryouts are next week in Experimental Theatre
upon the fairy tale, "The Princess and the Pea." Pam Roberts, Northridge, Calif., graduate student, directs the leading characters, John Young, Fairway senior, and Irene Ballinger, Mission Hills senior, as Dauntless the Drab and Winnifred the Woebegone in this comedy.
Die Brucke began its tours in South America ten years ago and has since visited 50 countries on six continents.
Dieter Brammer and Joost Siedhoff who direct the company began in 1958 with only themselves as performers. They will bring to KU a company of 15 actors and technicians. The KU performances will be just one stop on a tour that extends from Great Britain to Canada.
Tickets for "Minna von Bärhelm" and "The Castle" go on sale at the University Theatre box office October 2. Prices are $2.40, $1.80, and $1.20. Special rates for groups of 15 or more are set at $1, but must be arranged at least two weeks prior to the production.
Tryouts for "Song of a Goat" by J. P. Clark will be held in the University Experimental Theatre, Murphy Hall at 7 p.m., September 30 and October 1.
J. P. Clark is one of Africa's finest playwrights, according to Fredric M. Litto, director of the International Theatre Experiment. "Song of a Goat," performed widely throughout Africa, Great Britain, and the United States, was entered as Nigeria's representative at the 1965 Commonwealth Festival of Arts in London. The play will appear in the Experimental Theatre Nov. 14-23.
"Song of a Goat," a modern Nigerian tragedy directed by guest professor Joel Adedeji, includes a cast of four men, five women, and a 12-year-old boy.
Folk club to meet
The Folk Dance Club will hold an organizational meeting tonight from 6-7 p.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union.
Members will meet again from 7:9-30 p.m. Friday for a recreational folk dance session in room 173 of Robinson Gymnasium.
WEAVER'S RECORD DEPT.
Sound Track
"Funny Girl"
stereo LP----$4.79
Appearing as the first offerings in the Experimental Theatre Series, "A Thousand Clowns" plays September 27, October 5 and 6. "Once Upon a Mattress" runs September 28, and at a 2:30 p.m. matinee September 29. ___
VENTURA
DARIEN
CIRCLET
$3.99
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
For that "special" occasion
A truly brilliant gift is a Keepsake diamond ring. Beautiful styling is yours along with a written guarantee of flawless quality. Rings relaunted to show detail. Mint wrapping.
CIRCLET $500
ALSO 150 TO 1975
REGISTERED
Keepsake
DIAMOND RINGS
DARIEN $300
WEDDING RING 87.50
VENTURA $300
ALSO $150 TO 1975
WEDDING RING 50
Ray Christian
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432
SUEDE TOTE BAG AND SHOE
NOTE THE IMPORTANCE OF T&C'S SILKY SUEDE
Town & Country Shoes
Town & Country shoes bring forth an important fashion note with the return of silky suede. With Edwardian elegance these are designed for distinctive daytime dress. Select yours with matching bag in
Taupe, Suede, Black Peau de Soie and Silver Kid
Priced from seventeen to twenty dollars
Bunny Blacks Royal
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop 837 MASS. VI 3-4255
Wednesday, September 25,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the newspaper or other media are needed to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
125cc Riverside. Excelent condition.
campus. $25. 10-1
Bob at刘3-5777
$25. 10-1
1950 Cadillac Hearse. Beautiful condition. Ideal for woodsies 300, Lewis Proctor, 6332 Goodman Dr., Merriam, Kansas. HE 2-5243. 9-27
Complete 10 gallon aquarium set-up,
$24.95 value, only $16.98. George's
Hobby House, VI 3-5087, Mall's Shopping
Center.
10-1
String bass, bass guitar with amplifier, drums, trombone. All played professionally. Nothing over $50.00. Also Hi-Fi set, Car radio with speaker. Dr L. S. Bee, 221 Concord Road. Phone 3-4836. 10-1
1967 Suzuki X-6 Hustler, 250cc motorcycles. 6500 miles, includes two helmets, and a jacket. Jim Scott, VI 3-4811. 10-1
Large old family home needs love and decorating. Secluded South location in lovely neighborhood, within walking distance of all schools and shopping center. Twelve rooms, three fireplaces. Will sacrifice at $2,400.00 for immediate sale. VI 3-3536 or VI 3-6640.
10-1
Mobile home 10x57, washer, dryer,
A.C., W-W Carpeting, garbage
disposal, Radio-stereo system, utility
shield, fenced lot. Call Darlene
Ascanio at UN 4-4291 or VI 2-7323 after
5.
9-27
200 mm F/4 Super Takumar lens-
virtually unused, original box, case,
and strap. $150. Call VI 2-6481, evenings.
9-27
50cc bike with helmet. Best offer over $140. Electric starter, automatic battery, no nudge, leg guard, foot mount, engine gaskets. VI- 6901 or U- N 4- 3532.
1964 Alfa Romero 1800 Gulla. Good
condition. $550. Call VI 21-7300
p.m.
1966 BSA 650 for sale, $70 or trade
Call VI 214-869-3000 between 5 and 7 p.m.
9-25
1966 Dodge Coronet 500, 383, 4 barrel, Metallic Silver with black vinyl top, ET Mags, Call Chuck at VI 3-8490. 9-25
*Very* `portable` typewriter, $20.00.
call or see after 5 p. m.
3588
9-25
BSA Starfire 1968, 700 miles, like new Call Larry at VI 2-5345, 9-25
1951 Chevy for sale. '58 eng., radio, very clean, dependable, excellent mechanical shape. One easy low down door! 1341 Mass. 6-5 p.m. V-26 6834.
1988 "SS" Corvette Bronze Camero
396 coupe. Excellent condition with
low, low mileage. Packed with power
and steering rack. Comes with positraction. List $4,148.00. I'll sell it to you for $3,000. Must sell immediately, so call VI 3-5479 today
1963 Impala SS. Bucket seats, 4-speed,
lowest bid. Cal V 3-1578, 9-27
Rust suede coat-full length with
material condition
Call Jann at 843-1619. 9-27
1983 Buick Special V-8. 4-door, auto-
called 821-7456. Call 8:25 p.m. 9-27
Call 821-7456. Call 8:25 p.m. 9-27
4 track car stereo and tapes. Also 15
9:50 p.m. VI 3-1745. Call 9-27
HORSE for sale. American bred 7½-
year-old Chestnut gelding. Perfect for
dogs or horses, please ride.
Horse, saddle, tack; — $225. Phone
V I 3-7596 after 5 p.m.
9-27
Beautiful 1963 Pontiac Bonneville convertible. Arctic white, power, new 1964 Jeep. Must to appreciate Call 723-345-344. Kansas. $10 to call. $850. 9-30
19" G.E. TABLE T.V., New picture tube, $40; B&H 35mm Slide projector and 2 trays, $25; *x*2*343 Mamiga tape, $8; Pentax L240c camera, $125; Pentax f1.4; Leica IIIF, $75. Contact Lyle Shoemaker at UN 4- 98- 3- 430
1957 Triumph TR-3. New tires and
brakes. Ti, 2-6600, Room 1024. 9-30
thi.
HELP WANTED
One or two typists needed immediately. Dittos, lab reports, short papers. Steady work for good typist. Contact VI 2-8155 after 5 p.m. D & L. Blahna.
Part-time from 11 a.m. till 2 p.m.
Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week.
Start $1.25 hr. apply in person to Griff.
Burger Bar, 1618 W. 23rd. 9-28
NOTICE
Rod McKuen "My new book is now in stock at Keeler's Bookstore."
Art Sale, Balik and Tie-Dye matted
prints from $10-$35 each. Sun.
Sept. 27, 28, 29, 1-5 p.m. 9-27
Try something different this weekend.
Have a weiner roast and hay rack ride at Laptad's Barn. Call VI 3-4032 for more information. 9-27
If you think that you have modeling potential, but don't know what the demanded qualities are or how to get started, let a professional model who is acting as a talent scout help plan your project. Then learn in the modeling business. Call Model's Guild for further information VI 2-8634. 9-27
All people interested in folk dancing or leading folk dancing, contact Mil- osberg at Math Dept. E. Strong or 1419 Ohio, No. 8, VI 2- 97 I. 1991.
515 Michigan St. St.-B-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib sbak to go $3.25; Rib order, $1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5%; chicken, $1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most expensive time of the year. Heating and electricity unquestionably available. VI 3-4023 11-1
HORSES BOARDED—New facilities, reasonable rates, close in–south location, indoor and outdoor arenas. CALL VI 2-3353 or VI 3-1628. 9-25
Ace Furniture and Antiques is now open in their new building at 510 N. Wacker Drive, what we have to help you furnish your apartment and home. This week's special is waste baskets for 7 days a week from 10:00 to 6:00. 9-25
Car pool forming from Overland Park area. Will come early and stay late. Call Ray at TU 8-4399 after 7:00 p.m.
9-27
Topsy's can help you lose weight. Jog down here every day. Think of all the weight you lose jogging at home. You will lose turns to putty and you fill up on our good Caramel corn, Cheese corn, Candy apples, fudge and ice cream. Candies and cookies are very sensory bit. Most certainly the jogging and flexing the will power will do you good. But if you give into some of our goodies, you will lose your sense of all those yummy tummy ticklers. Topsy's Old Fashioned pop corn and ice cream shop in the Mall's Shoppe Center. You can jog down later 10 and 11 on Friday and Saturday.
9-26
Portrait Photographs — black and white only. VI 2-4326. 9-30
K. C. Commuters—Would like ride or share drive. Classes from 7:30-11:30 daily, to arrive until 3:00. No car, for automobile or Bonner Springs. AT 7-4018, K.C.K. 9-25
Bookcase Special. Three shell, 24-in-
by 32-in., unfinished white pine, $9.88.
Special sale. Two shelves in the Bridge
and right I block to Brewster wood products. VI 2-8145. 9-27
WANTED
WANTED BY RECORD CLUB OF AMERICA, CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE TO EARN OVER $100 Write for information on the Club Manager, Record Club of America, Club Headquarters, York, Pennsylvania, Club Headquarters, York,
9-26
Male roommate to share furnished apartment. $67.50 pays rent, all utilities, and phone. 524 Fireside Drive, No. 9. Call III 3-1917. 9-27
Female roommate over 21 years old. Damon, Cali VI 2-6159. Daino, Modern Call VI 2-6159.
Girl to cook evening meal five days a week. Pay plus meal included. Apply 2541 Redbud Lane, Apt. No. 4 after 5:00 p.m. 9-27
RIDE TO K.C., MOISOURI to the vicinity of 16th and Main. Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call VI 3-1467. 9-27
ARTIST MODELS wanted, $1.15 to
$2.50 per hour. No experience neces-
sary, male or female. Phone UN 4-
4401. 9-27
Drummer needed immediately. Must have experience in playing hard rock and soul. Call Richard Music Co., IV 2-0021 9-27
Singer wanted for an established band. Must be experienced in singing soul, motown, rhythm and blues. Call Rich, VI 2-4326 p.m. 9-27
Need an upper classman or graduate student to share neat and clean apt. Come see at 1605 Tennessee after 6 p.m. 9-27
Female counter girls: part time help for evenings. Apply in person at Smaks Drive-in at 1409 West 23rd. g.30
Want Senior or Graduate male to share nice apartment with two others. Offer off street parking; quiet place to live, $3.50, 10-11, paid, V 3-4349.
FOR RENT
FURNISHED APARTMENT for graduate student. $100. Utilities paid. No pets. Garage available. Very quiet. V 1-3209. 1633 Vermont. 9-27
Lovely room available in private home for responsible university care and family visit to children (ages 15 and 13) on occasions. Call VI 3-9150 for interview.
TYPING
LOST
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI 2873.
Jason slide rule in brown leather case
Kennedy reward *Kewart* 10-1
bors, VI 2-4119
Reward for finder of AO $ \pi $ sorority pin, lost either in Hoch or between Hoch and AO $ \pi $ house. Phone VI 3-6060. 9-26
Reward: Return of umbrella with carved ivory handle taken in Student Union on Saturday. 23 Great sentimental win. No惩罚. Call VI 2-3531 evenings. 10-11
A gold ladies' wrist watch—possibly
Cail Lewin Hall, room 408. 9-26
Call Lewin Hall, room 408. 9-26
Kansan
Classifieds Work For You!
STRICK'S DINER
STRICK'S DINER
Good Food—Reasonable
Cold Beer—Pool Tobles
Students Welcome
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
Virginia Parker
732 N. 2nd
THE
UnderDog ...A Very Private Club
Nightly Entertainment . . . Now
TRAVEL TIME
LET
---
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
MARRIED STUDENTS Up To $600 Maternity Benefits
For details on this, major medical, and other plans of health and life insurance REPRESENTATION
CONTACT
V. G. Miller
1035 Elm
Eudora, Kans.
KI 2-2793
Mutual
of Omaha
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha
MUTUAL OF OMAHA INSURANCE COMPANY
HOME OFFICE, OMAHA, Nebraska
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857
Weaver Inc
SPECIAL PURCHASE!
A TERRIFIC BUY
STUDENT, BUSINESS & HOME USE!
Royalite Portable Typewriter
$44
incl. Console Case
Compare at $60.
Rugged! Lightweight! Spirited
With many important features of Royal office typewriters!
- Full-size keyboard
- Pleasant, light Royal "touch"
- Two-color ribbon
- Full size carriage-light and silent, too
- Roll 'n Ready Paper Feed
- Quick-Set margins
- Guaranteed for 5 years*
*Royal Typewriter Company Inc. guarantees replacement at no cost, other than labor and shipping, of any defective part (except rubber parts, ribbons or parts damaged by accident or misuse) within five years of purchase. No labor charge within first 90 days. Guarantee covers only the original purchaser.
STOP IN AND SEE IT. YOU'LL LOVE THE SPIRITED NEW ROYALITE!
USE OUR OPTIONAL CREDIT
Jewelry—Main Floor
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 25, 1968
Beards
and Menadier said they did not consider the bearded students a threat to their security.
(Continued from page 1)
"I'm more worried about the wholesome-looking ones Wilbur likes so well," said one coed.
Bob Messman, Wichita senior and Parker's roommate, who has neither a beard nor long hair, was not threatened with eviction but is leaving anyway.
"I'm sick of Wilbur trying to
ASC
run people's lives. You pay a lot for these apartments and don't even get maintenance. There's mildew in the showers and the box springs on my bed have been broken since the day I moved in," said Messman.
"If the nativity had taken place in Lawrence, Wilbur wouldn't have let Mary and Joseph stay at West Hills because Joseph had a beard."
(Continued from page 1
students." The resolution ended by stating: "Let it be known that the students of this University regret his resignation as Chancellor but support him in his decision and wish him great success in all future endeavors."
On the lecture series, the ASC voted to appoint a three-man committee to study the proposal which noted that KU does not have a lecture series such as the Alf M. Landon Series at K-State, even though KU has "adequate
financial, intellectual and cultural support" for such a series.
The committee members are: Bob Howard, Collene Collins and Rick Von Ende.
The proposal postponed until next week would establish a student committee on architectural structures.
ASC normally meets every other Tuesday night, but will convene every Tuesday until further notice because of the campus issues facing it at the present time.
Several graduate students will meet at 4:30 p.m. Friday in Bailey Hall Auditorium to discuss replacement of Kenneth E. Anderson, who recently resigned.
"Someone put forth the idea that each department head in education nominate a student and a representative would be
Even though their role on the selection committee has not yet been established, students plan to choose a representative now anyway, in the event they are asked to assist, Carl Koenig, graduate student in speech education said.
picked from them." Koenig said.
"That wouldn't be representative at all—it would only maintain the status quo."
Koenig says he thinks the student representative should be selected by students.
Koenig said other matters to be discussed at the meeting include:
TODAY
- Should students have a voice in the development of the School of Education's curriculum requirements?
- Should master and doctoral exams be open to other students?
- Should faculty members be evaluated by their students?
Official Bulletin
- Where can a student with an honest gripe, gripe?
Hijackings concern Cubans
Three airliners have been diverted to Cuba by hijackers in the last five days.
ships coming into their airports," Oliver said.
Fee Payment All Day Business
Offer On Sale
Poetry By KU Poets 4:30 p.m. Fo-
poetry
Graduate students of the School of Education may help choose a new dean of the school.
Anderson's replacement might be found by grads
KU Soccer Club Practice
2:30-3:30 5:00-3:30 East of Robinson
Gym
WASHINGTON (UPI)—State Department officials told Congress yesterday there is no evidence Fidel Castro is encouraging the hijackings of commercial airliners to Cuba.
Folk Dance Club Meeting. v parlor A. Kanees Union
Classical Film, 7 & 9 p.m. "Smiles"
Commercial Night, Kansas Union
Ballroom.
KANU Highlights. 7 p.m. Opera.
Wenners "Das Rheingold." KANU,
9:30 p.m.
KU-Y Membership Meeting. 7:30
p.m. Big & Brow. Kansas Union.
KU Peace Corps Committee. 7:30 p.m.
Meeting with speaker, Room 305, Kansai Building.
In fact, the officials reported, the Cubans have "indicated they are willing to sign an international compact dealing with the return of the aircraft and passengers."
TOMORROW
Lecture. 7:30 p.m. Dr. A. J. N. den Hollander "Higher Education, Euro-american; A Study in Cultural Conditioning" Jayhawk Room. Kansas Union
"The Cubans are concerned about this problem," Covey T. Oliver, an assistant secretary of state, told reporters after testifying before a closed hearing of the House foreign affairs subcommittee.
Graduate Study Abroad—69-70.
4:30 p.m. Will discuss Fulbright, Foreign Government and Direct Ex-
griants. Grants. Forum Room, Kansas Union
"We know for a fact that one area of concern is the possibility of accidents with these large
KANU Highlights. 7 p.m. Lecture.
"The Ethics of Controversy, 1968:
Politics and Protest." KANU, 91.5
FM.
Students can register by mail
University of Kansas students who are not permanent residents of Douglas county can now register to vote by mail.
A change in the absentee registration statute, passed in the last session of the Kansas Legislature, allows anyone absent from his home county to register without difficulty. Previously, voters could register by mail only if they were out of the
Poets are playing vegetables today
In addition to reading their own poetry, five KU poets will perform a vegetable concert at 4:30 p.m. today in the Student Union Forum Room.
A vegetable concert?
"Yes, we're going to play vegetables like musical instruments, or maybe we'll just play with the vegetables. We're not sure yet," Lee Chapman, San Francisco, Calif., a former KU student, said.
Wayne Propst, Overland Park senior, said he was definitely going to play a watermelon.
"The reason I'm going to play a watermelon is that I'm a liberal." Propst quipped.
Also performing will be Bill Berkowitz, New York, N.Y., senior, Ken Irving, Rochester, Minn., senior, and Herb Williams, Oradell, N.J., senior.
Berkowitz, Propst and Williams published a book of poetry last April entitled "Uz Poms." The book was published at the Abbington Free Press in Lawrence.
Amsterdam professor speaks at KU tonight
Dr. A. N. J. den Hollander, professor of sociology at the University of Amsterdam, will lecture at a public meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
state, said an assistant to Vera Mercer, Lawrence city clerk.
Visiting iceturer at KU this week, den Hollander is a council member and executive officer of the International Sociological Association.
Den Hollander, who organized the Third World Congress of Sociology, received his degrees from the University of Amsterdam. He has studied in Germany, England and France and has been a visiting professor at numerous American and European universities.
The amended statute also allows for registration in places other than the city clerk's office, election officials said. Lawrence registration centers are: 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., October 7, Kroger Family Center; 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., October 8, East Heights School; 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., October 9, Ballard Community Center.
This application can be filed by another qualified elector if the voter cannot appear in person at the office. A ballot will be mailed from the county clerk to the voter who has filed for an absentee ballot.
After registering to vote a person must apply for an absentee ballot at the office of the county clerk if he will be out of the county at election time, officials said.
Election officials said the voter may cast his absentee ballot in the office of the county clerk rather than mail it on the Friday before election day.
To register for voting a person must:
- Be a U.S. citizen 21 years of
age by the day of the next general election.
- Be a resident within the state for six months, and within the ward for 30 days.
- Register by Oct. 15.
- Re-register upon change of address, change of name, or failure to vote in the last election.
- Short term residents (in the state less than six months) must meet the following requirements to vote in the presidential election:
- Be a U.S. citizen and a qualified elector of another state.
- Reside in the ward 45 days preceding the presidential election.
- Make an application to the county clerk not more than 25 days before Monday noon preceding the election.
SANTOS, Brazil — (UPI)—Veteran superstar Pele, the world famous forward of the Santos soccer team, draws an annual salary of $400,000.
SOCCER PAYS
THE ACTUAL ENGLISH RAINCOAT
THE AUTUAL ENGLISH RAINCOAT
$39.95
EXCHEQUER III
EXCHEQUER II
Well-met by any weather are the
just two versions
KING
Well-met by any weather are these examples of all English style. They're just two versions of the EXCHQUEUR by Driway, largest English manufacturer of weather wear. At left, EXCHQUEUR III, in British Tan, with zip-up liner of exclusive Woolock Slack, rajan sleeve. Bringing up the right, EXCHQUEUR II, in Black Navy with half rajan sleeve. Both up to any weatherchange — because they're up to top British standards!
Exchequer BY DRIWAY.
Genuine British Weathercoat • Made in England
The 821
Regimental Shop
PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
Is Pleased To Present
Professor Nobleza Lande
"PROBLEMS IN INTER-CULTURAL COMMUNICATIONS"
All students and faculty are cordially invited to attend this informative discussion on human communications
Thursday, September 26
7:30 p.m.
Forum Room
Membership in P-T-P will be available and All Members of P-T-P are urged to attend
KANSAN
Thursday, September 26, 1968
79th Year, No.8
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
--by United Press International
UDK News Roundup
N.Y. teachers head back to classrooms
NEW YORK—Mayer John V. Lindsay and the Board of Education acted Wednesday to end a nine-day, city-wide strike by teachers engaged in a power struggle with Negro administrators of a Brooklyn school district.
The board ordered the teachers to return to classrooms Friday under assurances that more than 100 union members ousted from the Brooklyn schools would be given back their jobs and protected from retaliation threatened by some black militants.
Public defender appeals nurse slayer's sentence
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.—The Illinois Supreme Court was asked Wednesday to spare the life of Richard Speck, condemned for the killing of eight nurses, so that scientists may study him and "prevent future crimes of this type."
Speck's attorney, Cook (Chicago) County public defender Gerald Getty, appealed the conviction and sentence of the Texas drifter for the slaughter of the nurses in their Chicago dormitory apartment in July, 1966. Speck, 26, has been condemned to die in the electric chair. The appeal of his conviction and sentence is mandatory under Illinois law.
Negroes set up school
Blacks leave LHS
By MIKE SHEARER Kansan Staff Writer
There were fewer black faces among the more than 1,500 white faces in Lawrence High School today.
Following yesterday's walkout from Lawrence High School, by about 50 of the school's 75 black students, the group met with parents and other members of Lawrence's black community to form a revolutionary new black school.
Merger with Voice topic at SDS meeting
Members of Students for Democratic Society (SDS) last night discussed several methods how they and members of Peoples Voice might coordinate their activities this year but accomplished little except for the formation of a few committees and election of one officer.
Proposals were raised at the SDS general meeting, held in the Kansas Union, for a merger and a joint newspaper with Voice, but the proposals were left undecided as were many organizational details including committee structure, financing and leadership.
Committees dealing with "problem areas within the American system" were formed and some of the 50 persons attending the meeting volunteered to serve on them.
The SDS "problem areas" included black power, Vietnam, neocolonialism, the draft, and communication with the average student—residence hall, fraternity and sorority residents."
(Continued on page 8)
Black students left the high school early yesterday after presenting administrators with a list of eight demands, calling for more black teachers, an "equal chance" at high school royalty nominations, a black history course and a different method of choosing cheerleaders so that a black cheerleader might be elected.
Several Negro parents agreed to support their youngsters' battle against administration "indifference" and policy "discrimination."
Black students decided to meet at the home of a student, Elaine Williams, 878 Elm, at 9 a.m. today and begin operation of a "symbolic black school" with five Negro volunteer teachers, some parents and some teachers.
Students were undecided late last night as to when they would return to school.
Lawrence High School Director Max Stalcup, acting in the absence of Principal Bill Medley who is in Minneapolis, said the administration would not discuss the student demands until students had returned with their parents for readmittance.
Black students and parents meeting last night at Ballard Community Center in North Lawrence decided not to return individually to school but rather to wait until Medley returns to Lawrence and offers to meet the blacks en masse.
"If we start sending them back to school one by one, they're going to make fools of us one by one," said Negro student Rich Dowell, 782 Locust.
Vanessa Collins, 400 Illinois, said Stalcup "took out his handkerchief and blew his nose, then walked away from us," when the students presented the demands to him.
Among the impromptu classes the students were to hold today was Black History, a course promised to the students last April when similar demands were made.
"The books for the course are in his (Medley's) office collecting dust because he says we don't have a teacher to teach the course," Miss Collins said.
Lawrence High's only black teacher, Leonard Clark, said earlier yesterday that he would favor a different system of choosing cheerleaders. He said they should be chosen as athletic teams are chosen for their talent and by qualified persons. Cheerleaders are elected by the student body.
Planned committee may reach ghettos
Plans for KU involvement in nearby urban areas are now being drawn together by a University-wide committee.
Nigga
Kansan Photo by Greg Sorber Rev. Tom Rehorn
Religion school will host course on white racism
By Diane Samms Kansan Staff Writer
"Nigger" splashes across the brochure cover. Almost as if they were an afterthought, the words "white racism" peek out from the corner.
The brochure, distributed by the University Christian Movement (UCM), publicizes a four-week indepth course on white racism which will be in October.
Tom Rehorn, Jr., campus minister of the Wesley Foundation, said the idea for the course came from reading the report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders and from the UCM format of the campus ministry's involvement in social issues.
The course has a threefold aim: to encourage real study of the issue; to provide an atmosphere in which persons can discuss the issue freely; to provide a base from which to deal with the problem of racism in the University.
"The University does not offer a course specifically dealing with the problems of white racism," Rehorn said. A student can emerge from KU well-versed in Aristotle, he said, and still think Negroes are inherently inferior.
Rehorn sees this course as an indication that the Church is "genuinely interested in the University." UCM is a new organization nationally and at KU. Denominations in the KU group are American Baptist, Episcopal, Presbyterian, Disciples of Christ, United Church of Christ, United Methodist, Lutheran, and Roman Catholic.
The course reflects the UCM principle that the campus ministry includes students, faculty and administration. "We think we may have found, at least for this year, a good form to replace the old, institutional structure of the campus ministry." Rehorn said.
Each course registrant will attend two weekly meetings in October—one lecture meeting and one discussion group meeting. The Sunday lectures from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Smith Hall, the School of Religion, are designed to provide stimulus for
(Continued on page 8)
WEATHER
Continued fair and mild today, tonight, and Friday. West to southwest winds, 10 to 20 miles per hour today.
The group, tentatively named the University Committee for Urban Action, has been in existence since last summer with the approval of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, according to Charles D. Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
Kahn, chairman of the committee, said official recognition by the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate is necessary before formal operation can begin.
Already planned by the committee are:
- An "advocacy planning program," which will offer services of the University to ghetto residents.
- A scholarship and remedial education program for disadvantaged potential college students.
- The development of an interdisciplinary curriculum for the study of urban problems.
The committee meets Friday with Clif Conrad, Bismark, N.D., senior and president of the student body, and Joe Goering, Moundridge senior and vice-president of the student body, to discuss student representation in the group.
Kahn said yesterday he was awaiting word on preliminary activities toward the formation of the first advocacy planning center in Kansas City. Kahn said the advocacy center would be a storefront operation staffed by volunteers from KU to provide advice and service to inner city residents.
So far only business and architectural services have been included in the program, he said. The School of
(Continued on page 8 )
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 26, 1968
Republican leaders to attend KU game
Three prominent Republicans will attend the KU-New Mexico football game here Oct. 5, Mark Edwards, chairman of the KU Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR) announced last night.
The three are Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois, Rick Harmon candidate for Governor, U.S. Rep. Robert Dole, candidate for U.S. Senate.
The announcement came at a CYR meeting in the Kansas Union Kansas Room. It was also announced that the candidates will attend a reception after the game. The exact time and place was not known.
Bill McKuen, speaking in behalf of Rick Harmon, disclosed that the candidate's campaign was going outside the Republican party in search of support. He said, "We're not just after Republicans but Democrats and Independents. We are also trying to appeal to people who are not happy with all the Republican candidates. We have several people who were leaders in the McCarthy thing."
McKuen scorned Gov. Robert Docking's vetoes against bills designed to aid education and highways. The Harmon compaigner said, "Kansas rates 37th in aid to schools. This puts tremendous pressure on local school systems."
McKuen charged that the Governor has raised property taxes by forcing local school systems to furnish allegedly large proportions of school funds. He claimed these high taxes had
Deadline set for grant application
Deadline for filing applications for the Fulbright Grants is Oct. 18, the office of the International Programs announced yesterday.
Thomas R. Smith, acting Dean of the International Programs, said he will discuss the Fulbright Grants, foreign government grants, and 1969-70 direct exchange grants at 4:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
The Fulbright program has two types of grants-full grants ans travel grants. The full grants provide tuition, maintenance for one academic year in one country, health and accident insurance, round-trip transportation, and incidental allowance.
Also available are 100 foreign government grants. Applicants must be U.S. citizens, must have a Bachelor's degree or an equivalent by the beginning of the grant, and must generally be proficient in the language of their host country.
Rocky to stump for Nixon-Agnew in Kansas City
TOPEKA (UPI)—Don Coneanon, state Republican party chairman, announced Wednesday that Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York will be stumping for the Nixon-Agnew ticket in Kansas Oct. 4.
The governor will arrive at Fairfax Airport in Kansas City, Kan., at 3:15 p.m. where he will be met by Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan., state GOP gubernatorial nominee Rick Harmon, and party officials.
Rockefeller will then go to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alden Smith in Mission Hills for a reception in honor of Harmon.
At about 5 p.m., he will motor to Kansas City, Mo., for appearances there. He will attend a reception at 6:30 p.m. and address a $100-a-plate dinner at 7:30 p.m. These events will be at the Hotel Muehlbach.
Following the dinner, Rockefeller will return to New York.
"stifled development."
The speaker contended that economic development was a key problem in Kansas. He said, "Kansas" urban problems are not yet to the degree that Chicago's or New York's are." However, he urged that urban problems be worked on now.
McKuen accused Docking of using "personal smears" against Harmon. The speaker referred to a speech made earlier in the week by a Docking associate allegedly noting Harmon's marriage to the daughter of a restaurant chain owner.
IFC to back code debate
The KU Interfraternity Council (IFC) will sponsor an open discussion of the proposed new University Senate Code following the regular IFC meeting tonight in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
Several members of the Student Faculty Committee on University Governance, which drafted the code, will participate in a panel discussion of the documents involved. This includes the new code, the committee report (majority report) and the dissenting report of the committee (minority report).
Panel members include Ambrose Saricks, associate dean of the Graduate School and committee chairman; Charles Oldfather, professor of law; Clif Conrad, Bismarck, N.D. senior and president of the student body; Bill Berkowitz, New York City senior, Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student, and Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, all members of Peoples Voice.
Pete Woodsmall, IFC president, said the meeting, which begins at 8 p.m. is open to all students. The regular IFC meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m.
The main difference between American and European education is that Europe regards its universities as "ivory towers" attended by only a select few, while the American concept is "the more that obtain a higher education the better," according to a visiting sociology lecturer from the University of Amsterdam.
School systems compared
Dr. A. N. J. den Hollander, in a speech last night in the Kansas Union Forum Room, said Europe is feeling the "impact and temptations" of American life. For this reason, many European institutions are trying to "make better preparations for students and change a few rigid boundaries" in their system.
Dr. den Hollander, the founder and major office holder of the European Association of American Study, said all institutions of higher education reflect the culture and ideas of the society in which they operate.
Universities often reflect a cultural lag in some areas but in others provide a "front-guard" of changes. This inconsistency leads to an ambiguity and mistrust among Europeans of the intellectual.
He continued by saying that American universities reflect "middle-class values and local opinions." The reason is that American institutions are sponsored in a large measure by private donations and by incomes derived from taxation. Therefore, the society demands that they account for the money spent and conform to a certain standard of action.
This reason accounts for the growing number of student revolts, he said, as students in American universities feel the imposed standards an attempt to deprive them of their freedom.
In Europe the funds needed for university administration and research come from the government with no standards or demands upon the university. European universities, therefore, are more free to act according to their own policies and traditions.
Because the policies are so rigid, European students revolt. European universities are not the
centers of change, as in America,
says den Hollander, but are centers
for the "unemployed or
shall we say those who delay
employment."
Europe is hampered by the traditions and customs of the past. American universities are fighting "19th century frontier principles and ideas."
?
at least there's no mystery about where she found her DENISE . . . at the
C
Country House
Lawrence police reported yesterday that they had located a suspect in the last case but no charges had been filed.
OMAR AS CHE
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Omar Sharif will play the title role in “Chei”, the film version of revolutionist Ernesto (Che) Guevara.
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
VI 3-5755
Pantless men wander campus
Two coeds were walking by the west side of Marvin Hall Tuesday afternoon and got quite a surprise.
When one of them heard a "Pssst," she looked through the ground floor window and saw a 50 to 60 year old man standing on a chair smiling out at her.
Another coed told police Tuesday of an exhibitionist in a car parked in the Corbin Hall parking lot. She said he was seated in his car with the door open and his feet outside the car. He was wearing only a Tee shirt and fled soon after she saw him.
The man was wearing only an undershirt.
Apparently because of her shock she neglected to mention it to her roommate walking at her side until they were past the building.
Tuesday evening at about 7:30 a college-aged man parked his station wagon in a drive on 13th Street between Tennessee and Ohio Streets and called the attention of another coed.
When she looked at him he said, "Look down here." She fled and he made no attempt to follow, probably because his pants and underwear were pulled down below his knees.
Two similar incidents were reported yesterday by Lawrence and University of Kansas police.
Big Dog Day
THE RED DOG INN
presents
Fri. Night - THE RISING SUNS Sat. Night - THE YOUNG RAIDERS
Duck Duck Goose
Tues., Oct. 1 - THE SERFS in action
JAZZ
SERFin' SAX is Where It's At Make it out to see FREDDY next Tues. night Friday, Oct. 4 — THE REASONS WHY Wednesday, Oct. 9 — DOUG CLARK and The HOT NUTS KU-BEAT INDIANA
Thursday, September 26; 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
HHH has problems Declares HHH must resign
TOPEKA-Hubert H. Humphrey should resign the Vice-Presidency to avoid a Democratic loss in November, Robert Swan, Democratic candidate for Congress from the Kansas second district, declared yesterday.
In prepared remarks released here, Swan said he was convinced "only as a free and unfettered agent can Hubert H. Humphrey speak the true convictions of his mind."
"Nothing could be clearer than that Lyndon B. Johnson is going to force his disastrous policies upon Vice President Humphrey and betray . . . [him]," Swan said.
He also aaid Humphrey had been "arrogantly rebuffed" by Johnson whenever he had tried to deviate from the President's policies.
Swan characterized Johnson as a "President who has led his people to the worst political and military disaster in their history."
Swan said "the only way Mr. Humphrey and the Democratic party can win the election, and regain the confidence of the American people ... is to ... give emphatic evidence to all Americans to his deep commitment to peace in Vietnam."
Humphrey's resignation would give such evidence, he said.
CPA exam review begins Oct. 5
Review sessions, conducted by Sherwood Newton of the Business School, for the national Certified Public Accountant (CPA) examination will be held on Saturdays Oct. 5 to Nov. 2. The sessions will run from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m.
He also said he felt Humphrey is torn between his loyalty to Johnson and "his equal dedication to peace and truth."
Johnson, Swan said, seems to be heat on ruining Humphrey.
Johnson, Swan said, seems to be bent on ruining Humphrey. Swan read the statement at a press conference at the Park Plaza Hotel in St. Louis yesterday. The press conference was held in conjunction with the Democratic National Committee regional task force meeting held there.
Pooh-poohs Humphrey's resignation
ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Rep Thomas Wright, D-Tex., said Wednesday he thinks the proposal that Hubert H. Humphrey resign as Vice President to further his campaign is "silly."
"I don't think Humphrey's ties to the Johnson administration are a drag on his campaign."
Wright appeared at a news conference in connection with a 6-state campaign workshop conducted by the Democratic National Committee.
Wright said Humphrey "has been talking from the head and the heart and not reading his speeches from a piece of paper, as does his opponent, Richard Nixon."
The suggestion that Humphrey resign had been made earlier by several politicians and was renewed at the St. Louis workshop by Robert Swan, Democratic candidate for Congress in Kansas's second district.
BURNTBUK®
swaggers into the sport scene
THE Taylor-Made SHOE
KU young Demos nix active HHH support
Like to be first with trend-setting fashions? Then come on the run for our Burnt Buk® casuals. Textured like suede, toasty light brown in color, they belong in every sporting wardrobe. Gen-Guard® rain and stain repellent treated. Red cushion crepe soles and heels.
The Collegiate Young Democrats (CYD) will not actively support Hubert Humphrey, the Democratic candidate for President.
Sizes to 13 Twenty One Dollars
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
837 MASS.
VI 3-4255
Bob Kolar, Cedar Rapids sophomore, and CYD president said yesterday the organization has made the following resolution "The University of Kansas Collegiate Young Democrats unanimously support Hubert Humphrey and will help the Citizens for Humphrey organization in any way possible, but the club feels that for best interests of the party in 1968 the CYD will work for state candidates thereby focusing their strength on state prospects.
Kolar denied a rift had developed between the CYD and the Citizens for Humphrey organization. "There is no split between the Democrats in Kansas," he said.
Mike Dickeson, Atchison junior and chairman of the Citizens for Humphrey organization, agreed saying, "We're trying to eliminate duplication."
Graduate Council dissolved, replaced
The Graduate Council has been dissolved and replaced with four area committees reporting to a Graduate School Executive Committee.
This resulted from a decision made in May by the Graduate Faculty.
"This change was made so there would be better representation on the Graduate Council," said Louise Byrd, secretary to the Graduate Council. "Previously there weren't enough members to represent each area."
The four committees, now in the process of being formed, are divided as follows: Area I—Hu
manities and Fine Arts, 23 faculty members; Area II—Social and Behavioral Sciences, Business, Education and Journalism, 16 members; Area III—Health Sciences and Nursing, 9 members; Area IV—Biological, Mathematical, Physical Sciences and Engineering, 24 members.
Mrs. Byrd said there will be two representatives from each of the four areas on the Executive Committee, plus the dean of the Graduate School and the four associate deans.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
T.G.E.Y.
5< TO 1% STORES
T.G.E.Y.
5 TO 10 STORES
Discount Record Dept.
Sound Track
"HANG 'EM HIGH"
Stereo LP—Regular $5.79
$3.99
Clothes for the guy who hates to cover them up.
When you go out of your way to choose a great-looking outfit, the last thing you want to do is hide it. So, Cricketeer makes an outfit that'll make it a little easier for you to leave your coat at home. It's a 3-piece coordinate... a bold wool plaid natural shoulder sportcoat, trim-fitting color-coordinated hopsack slacks. And, the little secret that keeps the chill off your chest, is a dyed-to-match lambswool turtleneck. And, the low price for this entire outfit will really warm you up.
CRICKETEER $ ^{\circ} $
Pure Virgin Wool
University Shop
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 26, 1968
Kansan interview: voice of dissent
Kansan: What are the chances of the dissenting report being adopted by the KU student body?
Berkowitz: I think the chances right now are very slim. However, I think if people became familiar with the dissenting report; if they became acquainted and educated to the point where they understood the issues involved, and exactly what the report says; then I think the chances of adoption would be much better. I think the University community can be educated to understand its responsibilities.
Kansan: Was there any inclination on the part of other committee members to support the dissenting report? What complaints were most often voiced against the dissenting report?
Mrs. Atkinson: Members of the committee said they agree with many of the proposals in the dissenting report. They just didn't agree with the wording and the specific nature of some of the resolutions.
Berkowitz: I have been frustrated and amused at the nature of the criticism of the report. It hasn't been that the proposals are not substantive. It's just that somehow we have used the wrong words or that somehow we want to change the whole world or we are idealistic fools.
People think the report is a radical statement. They think you can't achieve these kinds of goals immediately because there is no precedent for them; it hasn't happened before. People are unwilling to go to the point that it's logical to happen.
Professor Saricks (committee chairman) talked about waving a magic wand and Joe Goering (vice president of the student body) talked about irresponsible ideas.
My answer is that I wonder if tutorial programs for black people is an irresponsible idea. I wonder if a department for African students is irresponsible. I wonder if improved relationship with Haskell Institute is irresponsible.
The only magic wand being waved is by those who don't want to see how unjustly these people have been treated.
Mrs Atkinson: I get the impression that some of our critics think we are doing a little too much in saying what we think should be done around here. They think we should have been happy just to get students on committees and as far as social responsibility and non-tenured faculty goes—that's important, but it's just going to have to wait.
Berkowitz: It's a matter of facing reality. One of the main problems that we must face with people opposed to this report is that we are not digging up things that haven't existed.
We are not making them up. We are not talking about hallucinatory forms. We are talking about things that are really happening and need to be changed. They agree that things must be changed but they are not sure when or how.
Kansan: Did the committee attempt to incorporate any of the proposals in the social involvement section of the dissenting report into the majority report?
Mrs. Atkinson: It did not. Some of the people wanted to go through the proposals and pick out the ones they wanted. Others said this wasn't our charge; that the committee shouldn't even talk about social responsibility.
They looked at us as if we had done something wrong to even bring it up. But the committee did talk about it and decided it wasn't important at the time and decided to put it off.
Berkowitz: I think the committee was willing to accept some of the dissenting report's proposals in the area of social responsibility. But the things that we outlined, and they weren't going to accept, go further.
Some of our proposals concern the attitudes that the University has of the problems. The question came up at the press conference "Is there only one black professor on campus?"
It horrifies me to think that this is the attitude. Not one, one would be terrible; but two, thats proper, that's fine.
Professor Saricks immediately jumped in and said, "No that's wrong, there are two."
Mrs. Atkinson: Let me give you an example that came up in the committee. We read proposal number four in the dissenting report advocating "the hiring of additional University personnel from minority backgrounds including instructors, administrators, and coaches."
Members of the committee said this is a fine idea, but shouldn't you say "qualified" University personnel. They were just putting us off one more step each time.
Editors note: The student faculty committee on University governance recently released a report recommending basic changes in the KU governing body. Out of that committee also came a dissenting report. The report was signed by two student members of that committee, Mrs. Elizabeth Atkinson and Bill Berkowitz. The two dissident members of the committee acted as members of Peoples Voice. In an interview with the Kansan, they explain and elaborate on their position.
Berkowitz: Who decides if they are qualified? By putting in the word "qualified," they are not recognizing the problem that exists.
The problem that exists is that black people have been disenfranchised for as long as they have been in this country. And perhaps right now they are not qualified, but put in that position—assuming they can face certain responsibilities—and continuing the educational process, they will become qualified.
So, in their terms it is over-compensation—and I'm willing to admit that it's over-compensation—but I'll also admit that it's damn well time that over-compensation occur.
Their way of solving the problem is to appoint a black cheerleader. We're not talking about a black cheerleader; we're talking about the whole community. If they want coaches and teachers, they always seem to be able to find them, somehow.
Kansan: Up to this point, you have directed most of your comment to the social responsibility section of the dissenting report. But what would appear to be more radical proposals were recommended as amendments to the general report.
One of these was that the position of chancellor should be filled by an individual elected by the University Senate. Could you elaborate on this proposal?
Mrs. Atkinson: I personally think that all administrators should be hired by the University community and should have nothing to do with the Board of Regents.
Berkowitz: Administrators have separate roles and should be treated as such. The faculty and students should take care of the business of the University which is education. The administration should operate as a ball-bearing and not control peoples' lives.
Kansan: You also recommended that the Associated Women Students (AWS) be abolished. Could you explain why?
Mrs. Atkinson: The AWS deals with issues that are not merely a concern of the University's female students, but of the student community at large. Its Standards Board attempts to decide on matters that should be the jurisdiction of the Student Senate Disciplinary Committee.
The role and rights of female students in the University can no longer be dictated by the personal prejudice of certain powerful individuals.
Kansan: You also advocated the abolition of the offices of the Deans of Men and Women, terming them superfluous. Would you elaborate?
Mrs. Atkinson: The responsibilities of the offices of Dean of Men and Dean of Women should be given to the Dean of Students and the Student Disciplinary Committee.
The purely administrative functions should be assumed by the Dean of Student Affairs (whose role is parallel to the Dean of Faculty) and their disciplinary authority should be assumed (as it is already in part) by the Student Senate Disciplinary Committee.
We see these two offices as being purely superfluous and unnecessary in a progressive university as KU presumes to be.
Kansan: Do you think that those proposals just mentioned will attach a radical stigma to the dissenting report?
Berkowitz: People term us radical and call us outrageous, but it isn't the most radical report recommended at any university. You have to remember one thing. This University has been very, very quiet.
University students have tried to deal with the faculty as if they were responsible because the students feel and are responsible. Students have tried to have an exchange of ideas that has many times been difficult and often times shut-off by petty criticism.
Students have attempted to fulfill their community responsibilities. The issuing of this report is one example because the report does try to make a University community rather than a University divided by separate bodies.
Mrs. Atkinson: I think the problem is that most students and faculty don't really feel a community spirit. A lot of students don't feel the responsibilities to create a better university. I think if they were made aware of the educational experience they would get out of this University, they would be much more interested.
The Hill With It by john hill
The bearded man slowly led the donkey which carried his pregnant wife through the dark streets, and finally stopped in front of the Waste Hills Inn.
"You're standing in the shadows," said the landlord from an upstairs window where he was trying to separate his many tenants who were beating each other up, "and I can't tell from here. Is that a beard or don't you wash your face very often?"
"O, sir," said the bearded stranger, "do you have room at the inn for my wife and myself?"
"Why, yes, it's a beard, but I was—"
"Sorry. Means you're a rapist. No room at the inn."
The bearded man was puzzled.
“Look,” said the landlord, impatient, “a beard means you’re a rapist, a mustache means you’re an anarchist, long hair means—”
"But, sir," pleaded the man, "my wife and I need shelter for the night. Could we at least stay in your manger?"
The landlord looked at the snow which had started to fall, and thought about all the Christmas cards he still had to address.
"All right, all right," said the landlord, and the bearded man led the donkey to the manger.
As he was closing the window, the landlord noticed the woman's condition and smiled to himself, smugly . . .
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Kanan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except in 2015, 2016 and 2017. Second class position paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily intended to represent the views of the publisher.
Executive Staff
Executive Stan
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jeak Honey
Assistant Managing Editors, Pat Crawford; Charla Jenkins; Alan T. Jones.
Steve Morgan, Allen Winters
quotes...
Former Atty. General Nicholas Katzenbach, testifying before President Johnson's Commission on National Violence:
"Most murders, rapes and aggravated assaults are committed not by strangers but by friends, relatives, or acquaintances."
Columbia University president, Andrew C. Cordier, appraising the number of students intent on disrupting University life:
"The number, happily, is decreasing by the day."
"No matter how 'liberal' a white person might be, he cannot ultimately escape the overpowering influence—on himself and on black people—of his whiteness in a racist society."
Stokely Carmichael and Charles V. Hamilton —"Black Power"
"When I first saw the report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, I thought I was reading H. Rap Brown's State of the Union address."
"The old Negro used to sit around whittling his stick and telling stories. . . . He was beautiful; he was a philosopher and an orator. . . That old man in the ghetto is bitter now and he is the most dangerous Negro in the world."
"If George Wallace wins the Presidential election, I'm going to take up a new profession. I'm going to become a foreign travel agent for Negroes."
Dick Gregory
Thursday, September 26, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
MELANIE EASTON AND JOHN SCHWARTZ
Kanan Pkoto by Mike Gunther
PLEASE, GEORGE, COME HOME!
Bruce Levitt, left, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, and Doug Wasson, right, Chambersburg, Pa., senior, run through a tense scene from Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman."
Theater company plans Iron Curtain journey
Next spring a KU theatrical company plans to travel behind the Iron Curtain to present the "Kaleidoscope of the American Dream."
Under the direction of Fredric Litto, professor of speech and drama, excerpts from eight American plays will be presented to audiences in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Rumania.
"Kaleidoscope" which is KU's sixth European tour production, is divided into two parts.
The first part is made up of plays written before 1960. Scenes from Eugene O'Neil's "Harry Ape," "Awake and Sing," by Clifford Odets, "Of Mice and Men," by John Steinbeck, "My Heart Is in the Highlands," by William Saroyan, and Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," will be presented in the first half.
The second half of the production consists of plays after 1960. "Chicago," by Sam Shepard, Edward Albee's "The American Dream," and the motel scene from "America, Hurrah!" by Jean Claude van Italie are included.
Satirical songs will be interspersed throughout the excerpts.
0
The name "Kaleidoscope of the American Dream" implies what we are trying to impart to our audiences, Littio said.
"We are trying to show what people have looked for in coming to America ... the ideals they have held and still continue to believe in."
"The idea that America is a
At your newsstand NOW
THE Atlantic
André Malraux
Part Two from Anti-Memors
The War Against
The Young
Richard Poirier
Plus Comments from the Combatants
Cast members selected for "Kaleidoscope" include Cherie Shuck, Atchinson junior; Valda Aviks, Wichita junior; Jerry Koellsted, Massapequa, N. Y. senior; Doug Wasson, Chambersburg, Pa. senior; Bruce Levitt, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, and Judy Howell Levitt, Hinsdale, Ill. graduate student.
Tryouts were held to give all theater students a chance at this opportunity to spend two months behind the Iron Curtain, Litto said.
At your newsstand NOW
THE Atlantic
André Malraux
Part Two from Anti-Memories
The War Against
The Young
Richard Poirier
Plus Comments from the Combatants
A Special Section
It's a real war, says Richard
Poirier, our man at the front,
and it threatens the destruction
of our best natural resource,
the rebelliousness and hopefulness of our young.
"Why we're against the big-
gees," and other voice,
the battlefield.
... and Nicholas von Hot
describes the puzzlem-
the class of '43.
Due to the recent crisis in Czechoslovakia, tours scheduled to be made by other universities have been cancelled. However, according to Litto, the KU theater group has received no word of any such cancellation.
virgin land where a man can make a new life for himself still exists. Some playwrights believe this myth and others are extremely cynical about it. We shall show both sides," he explained.
"Around January or February the State Department will advise us concerning the political situation. If the situation is clear and if the new administration includes funds in its budget for cultural affairs such as this, we will probably be allowed to go," said Litto.
---
"Kaleidoscope" will be presented at KU Oct. 18, 19, and 20. The group will play in Parsons on Oct. 25, Chanute Oct. 27, and Fredonia Oct. 29.
LONDON (UPI)—An authoritative naval publication suggested Tuesday that Soviet Russia and Communist China might clash in a showdown over control of the coast of Southeast Asia if the United States ever leaves Vietnam.
Varsity
THEATRE ... telephone V1 3-1045
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
WALTER MATTHAU
ANNE JACKSON
PATRICK O'NEAL
in GEORGE AXELRODS
"THE SECRET LIFE
OF AN
AMERICAN WIFE"
Sees showdown over Asia
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
WALTER MATTHAU
ANNE JACKSON
PATRICK O'NEAL
in GEORGE AXELROD'S
"THE SECRET LIFE
OF AN
AMERICAN WIFE"
color by
DeLuxe
SMA
Matinee 2:30
Eyenings—7:15-9:15
color by DeLuxe SMA
Matinee 2:30
Eyenings—7:15-9:15
Aesthetics and technology long time enemies, met and embraced yesterday as five KU poets read from their poetry in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Jane's Fighting Ships, which draws its information from unofficial, as well as official sources, said America's allies apparently do not fully realize what a service the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, naval airmen, troops and amphibious forces have been rendering in and off Vietnam.
The poets enveloped their poetry in an array of sounds emitted from televisions, stereos, tape recorders and radios, which surrounded the audience.
As Bill Berkowitz, New York senior read, "Home is where all good things end soon enough," Mike Wallace, moderator of a CBS afternoon talk show, chatted with Chris Connelly on a television screen to the poet's right.
Herb Williams, Oradell, N. J., senior, read poems about a New York bus ride and an "Iowa City blue glass bottom boat."
As the poets read, the audience nibbled on carrots, lettuce and celery which had been passed out earlier.
While radio static and soft folk music blended, Wayne Propst, Overland Park senior, read poems about his summer of working on the railroad, about "cold beer America" and about the death of a child.
One of the most emphatic poems read was "Martin Luther King, Jr., Kansas City Ragtime Rock and Roll Blues," by Berkowitz. It is about poverty and depression as shown in the faces of black children.
"It has been a discouraging, puzzling and enervating war and the U.S.A. has had little material
Poetry reading unites with sound and food
Both Berkowitz and Propst read poems about a friend in the Topeka State Hospital. Berkowitz dedicated his poem to his "friend at Topeka State Hospital who is waiting for all of us."
support from most other nations," the British annual said. "There is a growing feeling among senior U.S. officers that never again ought the United States to venture into any foreign mainland conflict and that once the war is over, U.S. forces will never set foot in Asia.
Ken Irving, Rochester, Minn.
senior, said during the opening
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5782
IF YOU'RE THIRTY,
YOU'RE THROUGH!
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784
IF YOU'RE THIRTY,
YOU'RE THROUGH!
52% of the Nation is under
25 and they've got power.
That's how Max Frost at
24, became President of
the United States.
This is perhaps the most
unusual motion picture
you will ever see!
Shelley Christopher Diane
WINTERS ★ JONES ★ VARSI
STARRING IN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL'S
WILD IN THE
STREETS
Evenings—7:15-9:15
Shelley Christopher Diane
WINTERS * IONES * VARSI
STARRING IN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL'S WILD IN THE STREETS Evenings—7:15-9:15
Also reading was Lee Chapman, San Francisco, Calif., a former KU student.
of the session. "With all due respect to Chancellor Wescoe, I think I'll learn more here today than in all the classes I skipped last week."
The reading was sponsored by the Cottonwood, formerly the Cottonwood Review.
China vs. Russia
"If and when the U.S.A. pulls out the whole Pacific seaboard from Siberia to Sumatra would be wide open to infiltration or to conquest by the largest and most interested environmental power or powers. The final showdown might be between Communist China and the U.S.S.R."
Jane's said the rapid buildup of the Soviet navy into a vast fighting force second only to that of the U.S. has changed the character of the Mediterranean from an international ocean passageway for the Far East into an uneasy lake.
T.G.E.Y.
5< TO 11% STORES
T.G.E.Y.
5% TO 10% STORES
Discount Record Dept.
Jimi Hendrix' first LP
"ARE YOU EXPERIENCED"
Stereo LP—Regular $4.79
$2.99
Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 49
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
Moved Over!
The hanging was the best show in town.
But they made two mistakes. They hung
the wrong man and they didn't finish the job.
CLINT EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM HIGH"
— PLUS —
THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Presents
SIDNEY POITIER ROD STEIGER
in THE NORMAN JEWISON-WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION
"IN THE HEAT OF
THE NIGHT"
COLOR by DeLuza
INTRODUced by UNITED ARTISTS
BEST ACTOR, ROD STEIGER
Box Office Open 6:30 — Show Starts At Dusk!
CLINT EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM HIGH"
THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Presents
SIDNEY POITIER ROD STEIGER
in THE NORMAN JEWISON-WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION
"IN THE HEAT OF
THE NIGHT"
COLOR by DeLuxe Revised by UNITED ARTISTS
BEST ACTOR, ROD STEIGER
Box Office Open 6:30 — Show Starts At Dusk!
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 26, 1968
Speaking of sports
Predictions tough this week
By Ron Yates, Kansan sports editor
Checking last week's college football predictions, I find myself with a record of 15-3-1 for a .787 "guessing" average.
This weekend should help to bring that lofty figure down to about 400.
There are some tough ones this week and here they are: BIG EIGHT
BIG EIGHT California 20, Colorado 10-California bounces back after being upset last week. Brigham Young 30, Iowa State 24-Should be some scoring here, but Cougers are stronger than people think. Penn State 31, Kansas State 17-The bubble pops for the Wildcats as the Lions gobble. Missouri 14, Illinois 10-Tigers squeak it out from a fired-up Illinois team. Minnesota 27, Nebraska 20-Gophers look pretty good and Nebraska will have a tough day. Oklahoma 27, North Carolina State 15-Sooners still smarting
California 20, Colorado 10-California bounces back after being upset last week.
Brigham Young 30, Iowa State 24-Should be some scoring here, but Cougers are stronger than people think.
Penn State 31, Kansas State 17—The bubble pops for the Wildcats as the Lions gobble.
Missouri 14, Illinois 10-Tigers squeak it out from a fired-up Illinois team.
Minnesota 27, Nebraska 20-Gophers look pretty good and Nebraska will have a tough day.
Oklahoma 27, North Carolina State 15-Sooners still smarting from the Irish pounding will take out their anguish on Wolfpack. Oklahoma State-Open date.
Indiana 20, KU 19- Not disloyal, just predicting an upset. The experts have KU figured as a 6 point favorite and I think that will be enough to fire up Hoosiers. By the way, I hope I can add this prediction to my lost column next week.
OTHER GAMES
Alabama 27, Mississippi State 7-Tide flows heavy.
**Abbottas 24, Tulsa 15—Razorbacks.get revenge for last year's loss**
Arkansas 24, Tulsa 15—Razorbacks.get revenge for last year's loss
Arizona State 17, Texas El Paso 14-Close, but State continues to move into high t
to move into big time. Wyoming 30, Air Force 15-Cowboys ground the Air Force Michigan 14, Duke 10-This could be an interesting game. Florida 28, Florida State 20-Always a tough one to pick. UCLA 35, Washington State 14-Not as many points this
UCLA 35, Washington State 14—Not as many points this week as the Bruins, but still enough to win big.
Washington 14, Wisconsin 13-A close one, but Huskies pull it
Michigan State 33, Baylor 21-Baylor will not have the chances here that it had against Indiana last week.
Mississippi 21, Kentucky 17-Ole Miss not the same as Ole Mizzou.
Navy 23, Boston College Mminds have uway Southern California 31, Northwestern 15-USC comes on strong. Ohio State 20, SMU 12-Buckeyes have too much.
LSU 33, Rice 21-LSU could have some trouble, but shouldn't. Notre Dame 25, Purdue 20-A great game, but Irish remember last year and Boilermakers get side tracked.
Gil Hodges suffers attack
ATLANTA (UPI)—New York Mets Manager Gil Hodges suffered a heart attack during a game between the Mets and Atlanta Braves Tuesday night, but his doctor said Wednesday that his condition is now good and he will be able to resume his full duties next spring.
Dr. Linton Bishop, a heart specialist called into the case, told Mets General Manager Johnny Murphy that the 44-year-old Hodges had suffered a "small coronary thrombosis." Doctors at first had said they were unable to determine whether Hodges suffered a heart attack Tuesday night when he complained of chest pains. But Bishop said a second electrocardiogram taken Wednesday afternoon disclosed the attack.
Head football coach Pepper Rodgers said after yesterday's practice that KU and Indiana should not be regarded as similar teams.
Hoosiers not like 'hawks
"They run the option and we don't," he said. "KU has an I-offense but Indiana does not." Rodgers also said that the two teams run different defenses.
Rodgers agreed that certain players of both teams can be compared. Indiana, like Illinois "also gets a lot of big plays," he said.
Hoosier quarterback Harry Gonso, according to Rodgers, should menace KU's defense
more than Illini quarterback Bob Naponic did last Saturday.
"Gonzo is a much better runner and as good a passer as Naponic," Rodgers said. Naponic has had three operations and we couldn't catch him. I don't know what we are going to do about Gonzo," he said.
Rodgers rated yesterday's practice as "only fair" mainly because "they didn't look quick."
At the end of yesterday's practice, Vernon Vanoy displayed his previously unknown kicking prowess when he booted a 35-yard field goal.
Intramural office asks 18 teams to tee
Eighteen teams started play last night in the KU intramural miniature golf tournament according to an announcement by the intramural office.
The tournament, first ever at KU, will continue today and tomorrow with starting times of 7 p.m. both days. Trophies will be awarded.
ROCK CHALK INTERVIEWS
Sunday Sept. 29
Rm. 305 A & B Kansas Union
PRODUCTION:
In-Between Acts Committee
BUSINESS:
Stage Manager
Assistant Business Manager
Advertising Sales Committee
Assistant Stage Manager
Assistant Producer
Ticket Committee
Music Director
Publicity
House Manager
Program Committee
Comptroller
Writers
Secretaries Press Agent
Costumers
Sign for Interview at KU-Y Office—Union
For Further Information Call:
Drew Anderson at VI 3-5539
or
Dave Pitts at V1 3-6400
the Fall Print Sale
MOBV CRUDE
BROOKS
WESTERN
BIG & BROTHERHOUSE
STATE
HOLDING CO.
AK
Gustav Klimt
OCTOBER 2,3 & 4
Be here early for your choice of a limited supply of full color reproductions of your favorite artist's paintings and drawings.
All Prints Only $1.00
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Thursday, September 26, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
weekly bulletin are needed to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
125cc Riverside. Excellent condition.
Bob at McCourt campus. $225.
Bob at S-37570.
1950 Cadillac Hearse, Beautiful condition, Ideal for woodsies 300, Lewis Proctor, 6332 Goodman Dr., Merriam, Kansas. HES 2-5243. 9-27
Complete 10 gallon aquarium set-up,
$24.95 value, only $16.98. George's
Hobby House, VI 3-5087, Mall's Shopping
Center.
10-1
String bass, bass guitar with amplifier, drums, trombone. All played professionally. Nothing over $50.00. Also Hi-Fi set, Car radio with speaker, Dr L. S. Bee, 221 Concord Road. Phone 3-4836. 10-1
1967 Suzuki X-6 Hustler, 250cc motorcycle, 6500 miles, includes two helmets, and a jacket. Jim Scott, VI 3-4811. 10-1
Large old family home needs love and decorating. Secluded South location in lovely neighborhood, within walking distance of all schools and shopping center. Twelve rooms, three bathrooms, four lockers, four lakes. Will sacrifice at $24,000.00 for immediate sale. VI 3-3536 or VI 3-6640.
Mobile home 10x57, washer, dryer,
A.C., W-W Carpeting, garbage
disposal, Radio-stereo system, utility
shed, fenced lot. Call Darlene Ascano
at UN 4-4291 or VI 2-7323 after
5.
9-27
200 mm F/4 Super Takumar lens-
virtually unused, original box, case,
and strap. $150. Call VI 2-6481, evenings.
9-27
50cc Honda with helmet. Best offer
over $140. Electric starter, automatic
balance, big leg, handle foot gaskets, engine gaskets. VI 2-97
6901 or UN 4-3533. 9-27
1951 Chevy for sale. '58 eng., radio, very clean, dependable, excellent mechanical shape. One easy low duty payment! 1341 Mass. 6-8 p.m. VI 3-26834.
1968 "SS" Corvette Bronze Camero
396 coupe. Excellent condition with
low, low mileage. Packed with power
wheel hub adapters. Enjoy with postition. List $4,148.00. I will sell it to you for $3,000. Must sell immediately. so call VI 3-5479 today!
1963 Impala SS. Bucket射. 4-speed,
low bid. Call VI 3-4578. 9-27
4 track car stereo and tapes. Also 15
track car stereo and tapes. Call 9-27
5:00 p.m. VIII 3-1745. 9-27
Rust suede cont–full length with
conditioning tape. 9-21
Call Jann at 843-1619.
9-27
1963 Buck Special V-8. 4-door, auto-
automatic. Built in 1975.
842 - 745-426 after 5.30 p.m. 9-27
Beautiful 1963 Pontiac Bonneville convertible. Arctic white, power, new engine. Call 723-3454 to appreciate. Call 723-3454, Lincoln, Kansas. $10 to call. $850. 9-30
HORSE for sale. American bred 7½-
year-old Chestnut gelding. Perfect for
the backyard pleasure. Please
Horse, saddle, tack. c- $252. Phone
I 3-7596 after 5 p.m.
9-27
G.E, Table T.V., New picture tube, $40; B&H 35mm Slide projector and 2 trays, $25; *2%*x34; Mamiga Press Camera, $160; Omega Cam II; IES; Pentax L.4. Leca TL75; RTS Lyle Chelson at UN 4-3837.
9-30
1957 Trifium TR-3. New tires and
clutch plates.
vi. TI 2-6600, Room 1024. 9-30
4-door 1962 Dodge Dart. 6 cylinder,
automatic, New Tires. Excellent
condition. Call UN-4-4291 or VI 2-7332
after 5 p.m. 10-2
1961 Hawk-Davidson 250cc. Sprint.
or best offer WL 3-066. 10-2
1957 Triumph TR-3. New tires and
contact gear. Contact Airtel
thia. Room 1024. V1 2-6600. 10-2
1965 Sunbeam Alpine convertible, excellent condition. Phone 842-7040. Best offer over $1,000. 10-2
MGA - 50,000 miles, excellent condition.
Call 843-6495. 9-30
1 regular size Kaylon Foam Mattress,
1 Box springs to match 1 Electric
converter, 1 Staunfax 1 Staunfax
exerciser, Sock at 218 Dakota St., Lawrence, Kansas. 10-2
1964 Ford wagon and 1964 Studebaker
wagon with Roll back top. Both cars
in good mechanical condition. Can see
at 625 Mississippi. 10-10
NOTICE
Rod McKuen is: "My new book is now in stock at Keeler's Bookstore 10-1."
Art Sale, Batik and Tie-Dye matted
Crafts, Art Deco, Mid-Century,
Sun; Sept. 27, 28, 29, 3-5 p.m.
9-27
Try something different this weekend.
Have a weiner roast and hay rack ride at Laptad's Barn. Call VI 3-4032 for more information.
9-27
Car pool forming from Overland Park
Car park at JU 8-4399 by 7:00 p.m.
Call JU 8-4399
If you think that you have modeling potential, but don't know what the demanded qualities are or how to get started, let a professional model who is acting as a talent scout work with you and potential in the modeling business. Call Model's Guild for further information VI 2-8634. 9-27
All people interested in folk dance and or leading folk dancing, contact Rosenberg at Mailbox 213 213 E. Strong or 1419 Ohio, No. 8, VI 2-19.
9-27
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Q — outdoor
pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; $\frac{1}{2}$ chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $\frac{1}{2}$ Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Topsys can help you lose weight. Jog down here every day. Think of all the weight you lose by jogging. If you will have to tum it to putty and you fill up on our good Caramel corn, Cheese corn, Candy apples, fudge and ice cream. You won't be able to do that. Most certainly the jogging and flexing the will power will do you good. But if you give into some of our好ties, you will get better. All those yummy tummy ticklers. Topsys's Old Fashioned pop corn and ice cream shop in the Mall's Shopping Center. You can jog down and take 10 and 11 on Friday 9-26 and Saturday.
Portrait Photographs — black and white only, VI 2-4326. 8.90
Bookcase Special. Three shelf, 24-in.
by 32-in., unfinished white pine, 10-
sq ft. Desk for Basketball at Bridge
and right 1 block to Brewster
wood products. VI 2-8145. 9-27
Caramel and Cinnamon apples Thurs., Fri, and Sat, while they last. Along with all our other usual goodies. Topsy's Old-Fashioned Popecrn and Ice Cream Shop. Mall's Shopping Center. Open till 11. 9-30
WANTED
WANTED BY RECORD CLUB OF AMERICA, CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE TO EARN OVER $100 Write Resume to College Bureau Manager, Record Club of America, Club Headquarters, York, Pennsylvania, 17401
9-26
Male roommate to share furnished apartment $67.50 pays rent, all utilities, and phone. 524 Fireside Drive 9. No. 9 Call VI 3-3917. 9-27
Female roommate over 21 years old.
Modern, call VI 2-6159. Dai-
02
RIDE TO K.C., MISSOURI to the vicinity of 16th and Main. Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call VI 3-1467. 9-27
Girl to cook evening meal five days a week. Pay plus meal included. Apply 2541 Redbud Lane, Apt. No. 4 after 5:00 p.m. 9-27
ARTIST MODELS wanted, $1.15 to
$2.50 per hour. No experience neces-
sary, male or female. Phone UN 4-
4401. 9-27
Need an upper classman or graduate student to share neat and clean apt. Come see at 1605 Tennessee after 6 p.m. 9-27
Singer wanted for an established band. Must be experienced in singing soul motown, rhythm and pop. puse call Rich, VI 2-8326 after 6 pase. 9-27
Drummer needed immediately. Must have experience in playing hard rock and soul. Call Richard Music Co., VI-2-0021. 9-27
Need Co-ed roommate to share beautiful 3-bedroom house. $50.00 per month. 1012 Hilltop Drive. Call VI 2-
2048. 10-2
Female counter girls: part time help for evenings. Apply in person at Smaks Drive-in at 1409 West 23rd. 9-30
LOST
Jason slide rule in brown leather case
Therapist Edward Neighbors, VI 2-4119
bors, VI 2-4119
One or two typists needed immediately.
Dittos, lab reports, short papers.
Steady work for good typist. Contact
VI 2-8155 after 5 p.m. D. & L. Blahna.
Reward: Return of umbrella with carved ivory handle taken in Student service room. Must state sentencing value to owner. No questions asked.
Call VI 2-3531 evenings. 10-1
Part-time from 11 a.m. till 2 p.m.
Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week.
Start $12 per hr. Apply in person to Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 W. 32d. 9-28
Reward for finder of AOπ sorority pin, lost either in Hoch or between Hoch and AOπ house. Phone VI 3-6060. 9-26
FOR RENT
Want Senior or Graduate male to share nice apartment with two others -close to KC. Off street parking-a room for you, live $85,00. paid. VI 3-4349. 10-1
One pair of oval, tortoise-shell rimmed glasses. Urgently needed. If found, please return to main desk. Corin Hall. 10-2
A gold ladies' wrist watch—possibly
from the late 1930s. Artifact number
Call Lewin Hall, Mall. 408
9-26
FURNISHED APARTMENT for graduate
student. $100. Utilities paid. No
pets. Garage available. Very quiet.
V 1-3209, 1633 Vermont. 9-27
IBM Computer 360 Model 20 Operator for second shift, 5-12 midnight. Send resume or write for application and appointment for interview. Well established firm, usual benefits. Box 33. Kansan. 10-2
HELP WANTED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most comfortable capitol's barn. Heating and electricity are abundably available. VI 3-4032. 11-12
SERVICES OFFERED
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI tt 2873
TYPING
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Opening-day game crowd may surpass 1964 record
KU's home opener with Indiana at Memorial Stadium Saturday may draw 45,000 fans, Jay Simon, sports information director, said yesterday.
"We are expecting the best opening game crowd in KU's history," Simon said. Saturday's crowds possibly might surpass the attendance record set at the 1964 Nebraska game. A crowd of 44,509 watched the Jayhawks drop that game 14-7.
The ticket office has sold 2,000 more season tickets to the general public and 3,000 more to KU students than they sold last year.
Monday morning, 15,000 tickets were still on sale for the Indiana game. The ticket office, according to Simon, has been "as busy as they can be" since Monday.
THE
Foreign exchange scholarships for grad students
The program, thought to be the largest such program in the United States, is open to graduate students.
The Office of Foreign Study announced yesterday the availability of 13 direct exchange scholarships to the United Kingdom and west European universities for 1969-70.
KU will provide scholarships to a student from each of the foreign schools granting awards to students here.
UnderDog ...A Very Private Club
Nightly Entertainment . . . Now
EVERYONE SAYS
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
1: 1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
05 01t VL1 002
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
Simon said tickets for two other KU home games, Colorado on Nov. 2 and Oklahoma on Nov. 9, have been selling well.
The Jayhawks, he said, are also attracting large crowds for their away games. All tickets on sale at Lincoln, Nebraska, for KU's Oct. 12 encounter with the Cornhuskers have been purchased. Some tickets for KU students are still available at the ticket office.
"The Kansas State and Missouri game are very close to being sold out," Simon said.
Reservists' petition under investigation
FT. CARSON, Colo. (UPI)—A Colorado congressman Tuesday joined the dispute over an alleged petition being circulated at this Army base protesting the "illegal mobilization" of Kansas and Iowa National Guard units.
Rep. Frank Evans, D-Colo., a member of the House Armed Services Committee, said he had his staff at Colorado Springs investigate the report.
"We can't find anybody who can verify the fact there is such a petition." Evans said.
The Denver Post published a story Monday saying that more than 1,000 enlisted men of the 69th Infantry Brigade at Ft. Carson had signed a petition protesting their callup. The article said the petition was to be turned over to American Civil Liberties Union officials in Denver for court action.
"We have been checking everywhere to try to find one," a Fort Carson spokesman said. "We can't definitely tell yet whether this is all a hoax or not, but if there is such a thing, they are certainly being awfully secretive about it."
The 69th, which is commanded by Brig. Gen. John W. Breidenthal of Kansas City, Kan., was ordered to active duty for two years by President Johnson last May.
A portion of a petition to be sent by 80 Kansas reservists reads: "We were told in no uncertain terms that we could not be activated without Congress declaring a national emergency or state of war. This can be verified by every National Guardsman in the United States of America."
FRENCH DIRECTOR #2
JEAN RENOIR
BUTTON
PICNIC ON THE GRASS (1959)
Friday, Sept. 27—7 and 9—303 Bailey—$.75
CRIME OF MONSIEUR LANGE (1935)
Tuesday, Oct. 1—7:30 only—Dyche—$.75
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 26, 1968
Groups unite
(Continued from page 1)
Several fraternity members present were asked to give their views of SDS, but the topic quickly switched to talk of a rumor circulating among fraternity members that SDS or some other radical group would picket a "street party" which is scheduled to be held by several fraternities on Stewart Avenue Saturday.
SDS leaders, including Mike Warner, San Diego graduate student and temporary moderator of SDS, quickly denied any knowledge of such a plan.
Louis Woolf of the Lawrence Peace Center spoke to the group about the center's work and announced that there would be a peace vigil at noon Sunday in South Park, 12th and Massachusetts Streets. Such silent vigils were held there regularly last year.
University to motivate young
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) Law, the School of Education, and other areas of the University may be involved later, said Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Science, and secretary of the group.
The School of Architecture and Urban Design will be able to offer ghetto dwellers large-scale planning and various types of environmental design. Kahn stated.
The School of Business will help poorer citizens set up or improve small businesses, Clifford D. Clark, dean of the School of Business, said.
Funding agencies may be approached this week in an attempt to secure "over a quarter of a million dollars" for an urban scholarship program, Kahn said. The
program would "identify motivated and able young people who may not even have a high school diploma" and attract them to KU, he explained.
Bell said that work was still needed to devise this program "to help graduates from ghetto schools gain basic skills."
Kahn was reluctant to speculate on the size or exact nature the program might take. "We don't want to promise something we can't deliver," he said. "It would be another case of the power structure holding out a carrot and snatching it away at the last moment."
Hasty action in so untried a program "could psychologically damage a lot of kids who are already damaged enough," he said.
Bell could only say that the
program would involve "as many students as we can afford." He explained that the program was aimed not only at blacks but at all disadvantaged students.
Two students currently at KU are in a remedial curriculum designed and funded last summer, Kahn said.
Course offered
(Continued from page 1)
discussion. Discussion groups, composed of approximately 10 persons, will meet for two-hour sessions.
The brochure states that Sunday lectures will cover the historical perspective of white racism, the psychology of racism and the Church as both racist and reconciler. The film, "Nothing But a Man," will be shown Sunday.
Staff members sought for Rock Chalk
Business staff members for Rock Chalk Revue, annual production of satirical skits, are being sought by KU-Y, the sponsoring organization.
Positions including ticket chairman and controller are available, with specific qualifications for each.
Persons interested in staff positions should sign up at the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union this week. Interviews will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. September 29 in the KU-Y office.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
The First Edition's
ANE MY TERROR'S WHEN YOU CHANGE THE TIME WE LAND
DON'T NO
The group that gave us "Just Dropped In to See What Condition My Condition Was In" gives again. This new album is
"THE FIRST EDITION's 2ND"
It will noticeably improve you.
New — on REPRISE
REPRISE ALBUM RS 6302
w r
inprise
BELL'S MUSIC CO.
925 MASSACHUSETTS VI 3-2644
KANSAS
50
ACME Salutes
Player of the Week:
EMERY HICKS . . .
VOTED "LINEMAN OF THE WEEK" Good Job in the KU-lllinois Game! Let's See More!
Acme Offers This:
- 10% discount when you pay cash for your laundry and take it with you!
DOWNTOWN 1111 MASS.
- 5 Shirts for $1.39 Folded or on Hangers!
ACME LAUNDRY
HILLCREST 925 IOWA
MALLS
711 W. 23rd
KANSAN
79th Year, No. 9
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, September 27,1968
* UDK News Roundup
by United Press International Chrysler deceases hike
DETROIT—Chrysler Corp., criticized by the White House and fearful of losing sales to its competitors, cut back price increases for the third year in a row.
The announced hike of an average of $84 per car on its 1969 models was reduced to an average of $52 Thursday by Chrysler, smallest of the "big three" auto companies.
Olympics seen safe
It was the third year in a row that Chrysler had been the first of the auto companies to set a new price structure and, as in the past two years, it adjusted its figures downward after the Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Corp. posted smaller price increases.
MEXICO CITY—President Javier Barros Sierra of the University of Mexico engineered a shaky peace on the campus today between police and rioting students.
Mexico City enjoyed its first overnight period of relative calm after three days' fighting killed at least seven persons and threatened the Olympic Games opening here in two weeks.
Avery Brundage, chairman of the International Olympic Committee, said in Chicago he did not see "one chance in one million that the Olympic Games in Mexico City will be called off."
Ballresigns, to help HHH
UNITED NATIONS—George W. Ball's resignation as U.S. envoy to the United Nations stole attention today from U.N. Secretary General Thant's plea for an East-West summit. But diplomats said Ball's action may have helped arrange such a summit.
The ambassador quit Thursday, saying he wanted to free himself to aid Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey's Democratic presidential campaign against Republican nominee Richard M. Nixon.
1
2
Negroes will meet with LHS officials
BY MIKE SHEARER Kansan Staff Writer
Lawrence High School's 30 dissident Negro students and their parents decided last night to return to school today as a group for a confrontation with school officials.
The decision to return en masse was made after a day of classes at a black student's home and a meeting between Carl Knox, superintendent of schools, and representatives of the Negroes who had walked out of the high school Wednesday morning.
The students hoped to talk today both with Knox and Lawrence High Principal Bill Medley, who returned from Minneapolis, Minn., late last night.
Medley's outer office, the school's main office, sports a framed quotation by William Allen White: "Liberty is the one thing we cannot have unless we give it to others."
The students planned to recommend immediate action on three of their eight demands before returning to classes:
- Election of a Negro cheerleader and a student council decision on changing the system of selecting cheerleaders.
- Creation of a black student union to meet during school time as Lawrence High's Student Council does.
- Inclusion of the Negro history course which was promised last April in the curriculum.
"This does not mean we have forgotten the other five demands," said Beverly Southard, 408 Indiana St., who was among those in the Wednesday walkout.
Miss Southard said the other demands, including those for an African exchange student, more Negro coaches and teachers and a change in the system of electing school royalty, would by pressed later.
Evicted students given sympathy
By JUDI DIEBOLT
Kansan Staff Writer
Floyd Horowitz, KU associate professor of English has offered to
BULLETIN
KU's Council for Progress fund drive has topped 12.3-million-dollars, Stanley Learned, Bartlesville, Okla., announced at a meeting of that group this afternoon. Learned, national campaign chairman, said at the Kansas Union that he is confident that the 18.3-million-dollar goal will be reached by next year.
obtain legal aid for two KU students. The students, Steve Parker, Rochester, N.Y., junior, and Bob Menadier, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, must either shave their beards and cut their hair or face eviction from their West Hills apartments at the end of this month.
Horowitz yesterday told Menadier's roommate, Jim Griffith, Leawood, junior, he was going to contact a lawyer and the Civil Liberates Union to possibly prevent their eviction.
(See support and sympathy page 10.)
About five white persons attended the Thursday night meeting.
Administrators had earlier said they would not discuss the group's grievances until each student had returned to school individually with his parents.
Both Director Max Stalcup, who was acting in the absence of Medley, and Knox said Thursday they would be willing to meet with the students as a group but that they also wanted to meet the students as individuals.
Knox met with local ministers, citizens and adult representatives of the students yesterday afternoon following his meeting with Miss Southard and Chester Lounie, who has served as a part-time counselor at LHS.
Leonard Harrison, director of the Ballard Community Center, in North Lawrence told Knox that black students need a black cheerleader and pictures of black heroes on the walls so they can have someone with whom they can identify.
Knox replied, "Leonard, I am saying this is bigger than color. This is Americanism."
He said he did not want to create "dualism" by supporting any kind of separation of Negro and white students.
"I am not sympathetic to a black union. I would prefer a union that would include both blacks and whites." Knox said.
He said he thought most black students really didn't want "rigged" opportunities.
"We've got a system going for us that is so good, that has so many merits and values about it that we don't want to throw it out without something to replace it," he said.
Schools are "the greatest place in the world for real democracy to grow and thrive," Knox said.
"If the method had worked, we wouldn't be here today," Harrison said.
Disagree on representation for the University Senate
By Jim Gilhousen Kansan Staff Writer
The student body president said Thursday night 50-50 student-faculty representation on the University Senate would create division.
A professor maintained faculty should retain the most power in University affairs.
A member of Peoples Voice said it would mean equality.
Representation became the overriding issue in last night's Interfraternity Council-sponsored forum in the Kansas Union on the newly-proposed University Senate Code.
The topic was discussed by a panel composed of Ambrose Saricks, associate dean of the Graduate School and chairman of the Student-Faculty Committee on University Governance; Clif Conrad, Bismarck, N.D., senior and student body president; Charles Oldfather, professor of law; and Peoples Voice members Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student; and Mrs. Elizabeth Atkinson, Lawrence senior.
"We have been stressing a University community," Conrad said, "but I don't think seating 50 per cent students and 50 per cent faculty on the University Senate will represent a real community. In that case, rather, they will become separate estates."
However, Barrish countered, community means equality.
He stressed that during meetings of the Student-Faculty Committee on University Governance this summer there was absolutely no firm line of separation between the students and the faculty represented. This, he said, is simply a microcosm of what would occur if there were 50-50 representation in the SENate.
"There has been an implicit fear among faculty and administration that students are not able to accept 50 per cent responsibility for running the University," Barrish said.
Then he pointed a finger at apathy among the faculty. On a Faculty Senate of 550 last year the average attendance was only 70 or 80, he said.
Saricks corrected him, claiming the attendance was usually between 100 and 150.
Oldfather, although silent throughout much of the meeting, at one point argued strongly on the ratio of student and faculty representation.
Members of the faculty, he said, are generally here for a longer time than students. They have a long-range commitment to the University and should therefore have a larger voice than students in matters which so directly affect their lives.
A general opinion referendum was proposed by Atkinson, so that the All-Student Council, the Senate Council, and the University Council will know the feelings of the University community before they vote on the adoption of the code.
He proposed a vote for either the majority report, the minority report, or for no change at all in student government. Both students and faculty would vote under his recommendation.
ALEXANDRA M. SMITH
BEVERLY SOUTHARD "We walked out together and we'll go back together."
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. September 27,1968
KU group meets to discuss LHS
By JARYL AMBLER
and STEVE HAYNES Kansas Staff Writers
Black students boycoting Lawrence High School told a KU group last night to "do their own thing."
The group, calling itself the "Concerned Citizens Crisis Coalition," met as an ad hoc committee at 7 p.m. yesterday at the Wesley Foundation to support the boycott. It included members of Peoples Voice, Students for a Democratic Society, campus ministers, faculty members and other "concerned" students.
The group discussed the causes of the boycott and ways of aiding it until 9:30 p.m., when it adjourned to await word from the black students who were meeting at Ballard Community Center in North Lawrence.
When the meeting resumed at 10 p.m., those present were told they should worry about their own problems as white members of the community.
Don Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior and a member of Peoples Voice, said there was no way the group could help the LHS students.
During the first part of the meeting, discussion centered around the reasons for the walkout and ways to support the LHS students.
Several persons, including Michael Maher, associate professor of zoology, and Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo., senior, both active in Voice, were extremely critical of the way Carl Knox, superintendent of schools, had handled the situation.
Knox has declined to meet with the LHS students as a group, maintaining each student is an individual with different problems which must be met with individually.
His action in refusing to immediately grant the students' demands was named at the meeting as the immediate cause for the demonstration.
Those attending the meeting
were divided as to how to aid the students.
Mrs. Morni Leoni, campus minister for the Wesley Foundation, said that the group should do whatever it was asked to.
"If they need a thousand bodies, I'll be down there and I'll do my best to see that they get their thousand bodies. But, if they say to stay the hell out, I think we should stay out," Mrs. Leoni said.
Others agreed, calling for a sit-in at LHS today or the presentation of a petition to the high school administration supporting the boycott.
Someone said the group should not involve itself with the LHS problems, but should concentrate on their own problems. Negroes, they said, have their problems—whites have theirs.
A peaceful demonstration was suggested.
"We ought to be there and we ought to make it clear that if things don't change, we're going to do something a lot more demonstrative on Monday," Barrish said.
When word came from the Ballard center, discussion of tactics was continued.
At 11:30 p.m. the meeting broke up, the group having decided to provide baby sitters for the parents of the black students when they gather at LHS today and to meet at 7 p.m. tonight at the Wesley Foundation.
Columbia opens quietly and with minor protest
NEW YORK (UPI)—Columbia University opened its fall term Thursday in an atmosphere of calm, underscoring Acting President Andrew Cordier's belief that the number of students intent on disrupting campus life is "decreasing by the day."
The campus was quiet through the morning Thursday. The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), which paralyzed the University last spring, was able to muster only 40 persons for a demonstration Wednesday.
The demonstrators, protesting expansion by the University which they said is driving residents from Morningside Heights homes, dispersed after a brief march.
Mark Rudd, leader of the SDS on the Columbia campus last spring, left Thursday for Boston to begin a two-week speaking tour.
Cordier expressed his view of the situation in an address taped last week and telecast by closed circuit Wednesday night to Columbia alumni meetings in 27 places around the country.
"There are those, there have been those, who would disrupt University life. That number, happily, is decreasing by the day."
Cordier, formerly executive assistant to the late U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, has been acting as president of Columbia since Grayson Kirk retired from the post last month.
Reports of the upcoming Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) leadership dinner, Fall Festival and various committee activities were heard Wednesday at the first AURH meeting.
AURH leaders discuss residence hall activities
There are two new programs this year, Butch Lockard, Raytown, Mo., junior and AURH chairman, told the 31 committee chairmen, hall presidents and representatives present. One of these is an academic committee which hopes to establish faculty visitations and an orientation program for new instructors. Also offered for the first time this fall is a special class in human relations open to elected resident hall officers.
DEBUT
spaghetti supper for hall executive officer, floor presidents and members of the AURH Council.
Connie Finch, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and leadership chairman, discussed the leadership dinner at 6 p.m. Saturday in Lewis Hall which is to be a
15c
The housing board consists of research and communications subgroups which "bridge the residence halls and administration," Salvey said.
The purpose of the dinner is to allow hall officers and representatives to become acquainted with officers in other halls and to introduce the leadership program. "Seminars in Campus Concerns."
Possible seminar topics, Miss Finch said, include student rights and the role of the residence hall in academic, cultural and social development of the individual student.
Steve Salvey, Mission junior and housing board chairman, told of future plans of the housing committee and labeled this year "a year of change and planning."
The AURH leadership committee has planned a leadership brochure announcing the seminars which will contain quotations from faculty members on various aspects of university life.
Friday and Saturday, 8:30-12:30
Another Thrill-packed Episode of The Fiery Furnace 1111 Louisiana
"We plan to conduct a survey on coed residence halls this fall to learn what students think about it," said Dave Ballard, Carlsbad, N. M., sophomore and housing board member.
Coffee and Doughnuts Furnished
D.Dugdon
THE RED DOG INN
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI)— Sharyn Winters, former Miss Pennsylvania and runner-up in the Miss U.S.A. contest, will make her movie debut with Jerry Lewis in "Hook, Line & Sinker."
presents
D.C. CITY JETS
Fri. Night - THE RISING SUNS Sat. Night - THE YOUNG RAIDERS
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Tues., Oct. 1 - THE SERFS in action
SERFin' SAX is Where It's At Make it out to see MIKE next Tues. night Friday, Oct. 4 THE REASONS WHY Wednesday, Oct. 9 DOUG CLARK and The HOT NUTS KIH-REAT INDIANA
KU-BEAT INDIANA
As Oldmaine goes so goes the nation
SULKY
LOAKE
OLDMAINE TROTTERS
As Oldmaine goes so goes the nation — and so goes the female gender
of Oldmaine Trotters. Wearing the great classics today that everybody will be wearing. Ask for Oldmaine's Sulky at your campus shoe store. And watch the reaction.
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Green or Cordovan Antiqued
Brown Village Leather
AAAA to B to Size 11
Fifteen Dollars
Friday, September 27, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Model's Guild started here
Approximately 50 KU women will be given a chance to learn and develop professional modeling techniques through an organization being started on campus this semester known as Model's Guild.
Although many girls chosen will have had previous modeling experience, Miss Burk said she was mainly looking for potential and interest in applicants.
Carol Burk, former KU student from Great Bend, is now interviewing and auditioning girls for positions in the group. Miss Burk, a professional model and member of the American Model's Association, is working with several Lawrence merchants as well as the Eileen Ford modeling agency in New York.
The group will not operate as a modeling agency, Miss Burk said, but will be a source of information and contacts for girls interested in becoming professional models.
Several fashion shows are being planned by the guild throughout the year. The first is to be given exclusively for the Alpha Gamma Delta and Pi Beta Phi sororities Oct. 15 at the AGD house.
Building delay affects crowded language labs
The construction postponement of the Humanities building will cause problems for students of foreign languages in the next few semesters, said Ermal Garinger, director of Language Laboratories.
"There are now 117 supervised classes scheduled to meet in the four existing laboratories of Blake Annex each week, and between 1,200 and 1,500 students come in each week for individual study with the tape recorders. I hate to think what we will do next semester," said Garinger.
"Three entire floors of the Humanities building were designed with electronic classrooms for visual and audio instruction, but now that the building is to be redesigned, it will be at least two years before such space and equipment will be available," Garinger explained.
Garinger said the problems of crowding have been getting worse in Blake Annex for some time, but he had thought "stop-
SUA board helps promote KU students' wanderlust
NASA gives KU $100,000 grant to aid engineers
A grant of $100,000 given the University of Kansas by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration will support an additional five students in graduate engineering training.
Students who daydream of winters in Aspen, semester break in New Orleans or summer in Europe, may find such journeys within the limitations set by their pocketbooks because of efforts of the Student Union Activities (SUA) travel board.
Lt. Gen. Lewis W. Walt, assistant commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps and former commanding officer of the U.S. Marines in Vietnam, will speak at a banquet honoring Vietnam veterans Nov. 11.
The travel board, in its fourth year at KU, arranges trips for student groups during school vacations, including transportation, food and lodging, all for one fee.
Gen. Walt will address dinner for Vietnam vets
Members of the Ski Club, recently incorporated into the travel board, may take ski trips this year to Aspen, Vail and Winter Park, all in Colorado.
The travel board also plans to sponsor a New York trip during Christmas, a New Orleans trip at semester break and a trip to Freeport in the Bahamas at spring break, Crago said.
Craig Crago, Merriam senior and travel board member, said the main objective of the travel board is to save people money on the trips by making them as inexpensive as possible.
NASA said it awarded the money for support of interdisciplinary studies in space science and technology. The study throws electrical, mechanical, civil, and other engineering students into contact and cooperation with one another.
The banquet will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union ballroom, Richard Gibson, Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) commander, said Thursday. A parade also is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. on Massachusetts Street. Three parade units from area military bases will appear, John R. Haney, VFW member in charge of parade arrangements, said.
The cost of the ski trips ranges from $108 to $145, depending on the number of days to be spent skiing, and whether or not equipment is rented. Costs also include food, lodging, tows, transportation, lessons and shuttle service.
A two-month trip to Europe next summer also is planned. The round-trip cost is $270. The flight is to originate in New York, but the destination has not been set yet. Paris is a possibility, Crago said. After the students arrive in Europe they are on their own, he added.
"The travel board plans to make information packets for
"We worked so hard to centralize the sound laboratories in one location, and setting up a satellite, laboratory seems a step
backward, but it is one we will make if it becomes necessary," said Garinger.
gap" measures would suffice until the completion of the Humanities building. Now Gäringer says his temporary measures will not fill the gap during the wait for the new building.
Those temporary measures included re-equipping a projection room as a sound lab, building a partition in one room to simulate two rooms and extending the hours to include the lunch hour and Saturday mornings. But Blake Annex offers no more room for expansion.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
students, including information on how to save money in Europe," he said.
There will be no second trip to Europe during August because of lack of interest in previous programs, Crago said, although a Hawaii-California trip may be substituted.
Displays will be in the Union throughout the year, and travel information for most countries and states will be available through SUA.
"We're also developing a bimonthly travel forum with travelogues and speakers who will talk about various countries in the world," he said.
The grant, administered by William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering, supports a pilot program using a new concept in graduate engineering training.
1307 Mass. VI 3-1151
Several locations near Blake Annex are being considered for a temporary lab, but Garinger said a temporary sound lab in a building like Spencer library would probably only "mess up" the existing building. A good sound lab cannot be satisfactorily installed in an existing building, it must be included in the plans by the designer, he said.
The Castle Tea Room "Fine foods in an old world atmosphere"
Nevertheless, Garinger claimed a satellite classroom could be equipped with sound equipment for about 18 students for "under $3,000."
sua
Popular Film Series presents
"Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round"
starring James Coburn Camilla Sparv
7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Dyche Auditorium
Single Admission: 40c
THE BROOKLYN ENGLAND TELEVISION STUDIO
THAT CAME TO AMERICA IN 1960
ALEXANDRA HARDY
MUSIC BY JULIAN LARRY
DIRECTED BY TOM WILSON
STORY BY MARK RAYMOND
ARTIST BY SAMSUNG
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JIM FOLK
PUBLICATION BY THE NEW YORK TIMES
LAMBSWOOL V-NECK
We feature twelve colors in the classical Scottish Lambswool V-neck. This sweater co-ordinated with one of many patterned trousers is perfect for all casual occasions.
MISTER
GUY
920 MASSACHUSETTS
---
24
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday; September 27,1968
Vote on local tax
No one likes to pay taxes and the prospect of the city of Lawrence plucking an extra $10 from the pockets of car owners here does not seem to be viewed with wild enthusiasm on the Hill.
This is because the tax proposal, which will appear on the local Nov. 5 ballot, will apply to anyone having a motor vehicle in this city-not just the Lawrence citizens but KU faculty and us "nine-month transients," the KU students.
And perhaps the city has pulled a sneaky trick by cutting $55,000 from its street maintenance budget and entirely scrapping all allocations for improvements, thus nearly forcing owners of motor vehicles to put up that extra ten in order to have something to drive on.
Still, sneaky tricks or no, the city's rationale makes sense.
In the past, property owners have supported the costs of maintaining and improving Lawrence's streets. Most KU students live in residence halls, Greek houses or apartments and don't pay a dime of property tax.
Have you ever seen a street get potholed by houses driving down them or an intersection bottleneck caused by a long line of shops, banks, motels and hamburger joints waiting to make a left turn?
Motor vehicles wear out the streets, and it seems right that their owners should foot the bill for upkeep.
And yes, fellow students and distinguished faculty, your cars do their share. More than 8,500 of the vehicles which will be cracking Lawrence's pavement this year are student-owned and faculty stickers are stuck to the rear windows of 2,500 more.
Take a drive down West Ninth Street, down the hill from Sunset to Emery. Drive the 30-mile-an-hour speed limit. Unless your car has super-slushy suspension you will find yourself gaily bouncing all over that washboard road. A drive through a Kansas tornado might be a smoother ride.
Or approach Massachusetts Street on West 11th and take the left turn lane. The drubbing you will get bears a marked resemblance to the motion of a weight reducing machine.
Or check out the corner of West Campus and West Eleventh. See the potholes. See the car drive over the potholes. See the car tear a tire or bend its suspension. See the owner pay exorbitant repair costs.
So go and vote on the tax next election day if you can pass the eligibility requirements—and many of you on the Hill can.
It was defeated in the August primary election last year. One of the things that may have defeated it then was the fact, pointed out by opponents of the tax, that KU students and staff weren't here to join the voting and were effectively disenfranchised by the date set for the election.
You're here now. That charge won't work this time. So go down to City Hall, register, and cast your ballot-for or against as your inclination dictates.
Reluctantly, I am for the tax. I don't like the idea of forking over that extra $10 either. But, hopefully, if I do Lawrence will do something about the rotten condition the streets are in today. Robert Entriken Jr.
Robert Entriken Jr.
THE TORTOISE AND THE HARES
POLLS
WALLACE
“... and despite the fact that both hares preached law and order. . . ”
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Executive Staff
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Haney
Assistant Managing Editors, Pat Crawford, Charla Jenkins, Alan T. Jones,
Steve Morgan, Allen Winchester
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor Allison Stelman
Editorial Editor Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Sharon Woodson
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCreney, Don Westerhaus, Sandy
Zahradnik, Zona, Katie, Wool
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Promotion Pam Flatton
Circulation Manager Jerry Bottenfeld
Classified Manager Barry Arthur
"It's a funny thing. The Kerner report said the riots were caused by 'white racism' and the newspapers cried, 'Extraordinary.' I called it the same thing, 'white racism,' and the newspapers cried, 'Extremist.'
quotes...
Dick Gregory
MOST PRONE
ST. LOUIS —(UPI)— A city traffic report says motorists most prone to accidents are 25 to 34 years old, driving on a dry street in daylight, between 3 and 5 p.m.
Juvenile epic dull
by Scott Nunley
"Wild in the Streets" is a monumentally dull motion picture that reaches its dramatic heights when a stoned Diane Varsi floats to her feet to address the U.S. House. In order to mistake the remainder of this juvenile epic for entertainment, a viewer would first have to contract a myopia so severe as to be terminal. The only insight associated with the production must be the flash of bitter irony that consigned "Wild in the Streets" to "mature" audiences.
American International set out to crank out that type of commercialized formula film that has done so much to earn Hollywood its reputation.
Go for the "Now" bag, cash in on the day's headlines: the White House sweepstakes, the drug scene, the revolt of youth. Toss in a million-dollar color production complete with name stars. Never mind slowing down the profits with intelligent screenwriters or a sensitive director.
Of course, there is the off possibility that sneaky Andy Warhol actually contrived "Wild in the Streets" to be the season's greatest put on, a parody of the Bad Film.
Unfortunately, director Barry Shear provides no concrete evidence of this intention Like Jean Luc Godard in "Band of Outsiders," Shear seems to be merely a wild shot, blasting away indiscriminately at comedy, satire, and drama.
"Wild in the Streets" opens on a pretentious Freudian biography of rebel Max Frost, a bit of character study apparently intended to be taken seriously. But Shelley Winters' overacting and the tricky camerawork renders it ludicrous.
Then, like Godard. Shear employs an anonymous narrator to provide the information that the movie itself fails to convey. At each point when action might have become entertaining in its own right, the Voice intrudes and guides the viewer smoothly into apathy.
With now a second's slapstick and now a second's social criticism, "Wild in the Streets" twangs out of tune, not one thing or the other. The slapstick is not original in itself and the polemics against America's current Cult of Youth are merely hysterical.
Even the "acid rock" soundtrack is a failure. The tame lyrics and simple instrumentation are totally unexciting, as outdated as Elvis' chording. With the rock crowd today tuned to serious revolutionaries, Max Frost's threats ring naive. Listen, for example, to Jim Morrison sing "... we got the numbers ... gonna win, yeah we're taking over!"
But that's more than enough discussion of a worthless film.
"Wild in the Streets" is a ghoulish production, attempting to capitalize on the very real dangers of this society. It feeds off the crises but offers neither insight nor laughter as a remedy. It has nothing to recommend it as cinema, as commentary, or as entertainment.
Chosen ones, CYD
To the Editor:
I recently learned the hard way how indiscriminate reporting can color an issue. Therefore I have written this letter so the quote "God's Chosen Ones," in last week's paper may appear in context.
My speech to the Peoples Voice meeting was as follows: I wish to address you tonight as the advance guard of a new society. No longer shall we consider ourselves dissenters and critics of the establishment but rather as the first members of a new establishment of equal representation.
Destructive activities such as the Convocation walkout are wrong. Now is the time for the presentation of positive and constructive alternatives to rhetoric and injustice in this school as well as the world..
God chose us to be different, different from the establishment. We must no longer fear or repress our feeling; we must no longer simply complain. If we see a wrong, we must present a right.
This is why I ask you to gain strength from the fact that you are not a member of the present power structure, that you are different.
Be proud that God chose us not to be able to accept quietly whatever happens but rather to feel and see the injustices in our world and further to try to make things better.
Robert Stowe, ISP Representative of ASC
To the Editor:
Having attended the Democratic convention as the daughter of a New York McCarthy delegate and a McCarthy supporter myself, I returned to Lawrence deeply concerned about the question of political responsibility. I have never considered myself a "political person," but as a result of my concern I have attended in the past week the opening meetings
of three campus political organizations: Peoples Voice, SDS, and Campus Young Democrats.
I have one comment. Whatever may be said of the internal divisions of Peoples Voice or the narrowly radical appeal of SDS, both made, at their opening meetings, a serious (if sometimes disjointed or awkward) attempt to discuss the issues they felt critical-civil rights, Vietnam, student power, whatever.
The meeting of the Campus Young Democrats, on the other hand, struck me as a kind or minor Orwellian nightmare: five-minute election of officers (one nominee or less for each post), promises of beer parties, enthusiasm for "buttons, stickers—everything you need," (everything?) and "vigor" as a key political (whatever happened to thought?) ingredient; no discussion of issues.
Let me be fair: before election of officers, the second item on the agenda, the group was told that CYD would concentrate this year on sticking stickers and posting posters for state candidates.
Humphrey was mentioned about a half-hour into the meeting: "Is that a dirty word? Because I came mainly for a Humphrey button." The appointed head of Young Citizens for Humphrey leaped up to gallantly offer his own button and to explain that Young Citizens was a different organization, and to make his call for "vigor."
It takes a good deal to send a mild apolitical type like me stalking out of a meeting, but after 45 minutes, stalk I did.
What happened then? A sudden burst of impassioned yet rational issue-oriented discussion? I hope so, and I doubt it.
Candy Howard New York senior
Friday, September 27, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Rep theater fills summer in silver town
The 13 KU students who went to Creede, Colo., to work in the Creede Repertory Theater had no problems telling where they weren't. Entering the little town by its one road, they were greeted by a sign: "This is not the road to Lake City."
It was, however, the road to a summer filled with enjoyable labor for the group who not only comprised the resident company of the theater, but also its costume and set designers, property men, directors and stagehands.
This season was the third year students have made pilgrimages to Creede, an old silver-mining town of 500 persons. A minister serving the town worked with local Jaycees promoting the theatre for summer evening entertainment.
Once a boom town, Creede now is listed as a "ghost town." However, this year a new silver vein has turned back time.
Nine members of the company lived at the Silver Palace boarding house which, during the old boom times, was a brothel. Two married couples lived above the theatre.
Shari Roach, Lawrence junior, said about 90 per cent of the audiences were from Texas. They had come to fish at Creede, which is located on the Rio Grande river.
Plays presented during the summer included "Ten Little Indians," "Green Grow the Lilacs," "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Arrow," "Barefoot in the Park," and "A Man for all Seasons."
Steve Reed, Wichita junior, was acting director and B. J. Meyers, Overland Park senior, was technical director.
McCollum sets up exchange program
Food and lodging, football tickets and a "groovy" party including dates, await 57 McCollum Hall residents migrating to the KU-Nebraska game at Lincoln Oct.12.
Frank Zilm, McCollum Hall men's president, says the migration was organized on an exchange basis with the Abel Sandors coed residence hall at Nebraska. "Next year, they'll come down here," said Zilm.
The cost of the weekend for McCollum students is $15,
which Zilm considers inexpensive since the football ticket,
alone, costs $5.25.
The KU group will depart for Lincoln at 7:30 a.m. Oct. 12. Forty-four students will travel by bus, while the remaining 13 will get there "any way they can," said Zilm.
Arriving on the Nebraska campus by noon, the KU fans will attend the game and, afterwards, eat dinner at the residence hall. In the evening, Nebraska students are throwing a party for their Kansas visitors at a cabin on the Missouri River. At the coed Nebraska hall, McCollum students will stay in rooms of NU students who are away for the weekend or will be provided empty rooms, said Zilm.
The exchange idea originated with Zilm last February when he attended the National Residence Hall Conference at Pennsylvania State University. He first met the representatives from Nebraska at a division meeting.
They met again in August at the Midwest Conference at Illinois State University. "We got to talk about football games and I asked them if we (McColum) came up, could they house us," recalled Zilm. "They said 'yes' and we've kept in contact since that time."
KU alum returns as dean of Business School
By Joe Naas
Kansan Staff Writer
Clifford D. Clark, new dean of the School of Business, sees today's businessman in the forefront of social change and the leader in the struggle for world progress.
Clark, an alumnus of KU, sees greater managerial knowhow as the route to world development. "If this can be done with a view to social priorities, then business will have made a great contribution." he said.
"The tools that have been developed within the business community are already being applied to many world problems." Clark said.
Clark said he is aware of the business community's fear that today's idealistic students are ignoring the field. "But evidence for this concern is questionable, I think," he said.
D. W. L.
Still, Clark said he feels there is a need for improving the business image.
"I hope some of the social consciousness of the business community can be brought to the attention of the students," he said.
CLIFFORD D. CLARK
Sees business as social leader
Clark thinks the new joint- major program in the business school will help to serve this purpose. This program allows the business student to declare a second, non-business major.
Scholarship hopefuls learn about programs
Students who hope to obtain Fulbright and Direct Exchange Scholarships met Thursday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Mrs. Sandra Ttaversa, foreign studies advisor, introduced Dean Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College, who spoke on the Fulbright program. Information on the Direct Exchange Scholarships was provided by Dean Arnold Weiss, assistant dean of the Graduate School.
Essentially, both men told students about applications for the programs. Most important are the student's statements about his objectives and himself, and his letters of recommendation by the faculty and others.
Thomas R. Smith, acting associate dean of faculties for international programs, stressed the significance of details in the students' questionnaires.
"Have some idea of your educational development. When did you come awake intellectually? What really matters?" Bell said. "Many students haven't actually thought about this before."
The student should also have some knowledge of the language and background of the country he is interested in. He should expect to answer questions in that language during the interview that accompanies his application.
Hundreds of new and exciting fun things to do on dates.
KU applications are due Oct. 18 in the Office of International Programs, 224 Strong. Qualified seniors and graduate students may apply. Their interviews will be during the first week of November and perhaps sooner for Latin America. All of the applications are forwarded to
Tired of doing the same old thing every weekend? Send a copy of Creative Dating to your boyfriend.
CREATIVE DATING
GUYS
GIRLS
Have more fun on dates; try something new and exciting.
Send $1.00 with your name and address to:
CREATIVE DATING
P.O. BOX 267
WALNUT CREEK, CALIF.
94596
the IIE. Students will be informed by the national screening committee if they are recommended. However, this does not necessarily mean an award follows.
Under the Direct Exchange program, one student from KU is exchanged with a student from the country of his choice. KU pays for the foreign student's expenses, and his country provides the same for the KU student. Expenses cover tuition, fees, and a stipend of approximately $1500. Fulbright travel grants are also possible.
Scholarships available this year are England, 3; Scotland, 1; France, 3; and Switzerland, 1. Six, and possibly seven, are offered from Germany.
A Fulbright applicant for the academic 1969-70 is ineligible for a grant to a country in which he has spent more than three consecutive months during the year prior to May 1, 1969.
"It permits students to become involved in the major issues of our day," he said.
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
WALTER MATTAU
ANNE JACKSON
PATRICK O'NEAL
in GEORGE AXELROD'S
"THE SECRET LIFE
OF AN
AMERICAN WIFE"
color by
DeLuxe
SMA
Matinee 2:30
Evenings—7:15-9:15
---
He considers involvement vital. "It behooves us," Clark stressed, "to educate not only good businessmen, but good citizens as well."
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
WALTER MATTHAU
ANNE JACKSON
PATRICK O'NEAL
in GEORGE AXELROD 5
color by
DeLuxe SMA
According to Clark, one of the big issues in the business world today is finding a set of principles to guide business managers in their community activities.
"If a firm considers locating a branch in Harlem," Clark said, "the decision has to be made by the business manager on the basis of a profit and risk analysis."
But the experience of business in the ghettos is not yet sufficient to predict results, said Clark.
Therefore, he continued, the decision would depend largely on the business manager's sense of social responsibility.
According to Clark, businessmen are becoming more aware of their social responsibilities.
He pointed to John Gardner, former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, a longtime businessman, now head of the Urban Coalition. This group of corporate leaders is hammering away at the complex problems of city living.
Clark also noted the Interracial Council on Business Opportunity, which is made up largely of businessmen volunteering their time and efforts. This organization is making it possible for minority groups to find careers in business, he said.
Clark said some business schools alert their students to social trends and show them how to react.
"This is bad education," he emphasized. "We need to take an active role in these changes and help to lead the way."
Clark, formerly a vice-dean of New York University's business school, said the pragmatic resolutions of the business community can be a strong force for the good.
"I am convinced," said Clark, "that the business arena is the arena of social change."
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784
IF YOU'RE THIRTY,
YOU'RE THROUGH!
52% of the Nation is under 25 and they've got power. That's how Max Frost at 24, became President of the United States.
This is perhaps the most unusual motion picture you will ever see!
Shelley Christopher Diane
WINTERS ★ JONES ★ VARSI
WILD IN THE STREETS
Evenings—7:15-9:15
Council reaches two-thirds of $18.6 million goal
Holgar J. Johnson of New York, president of the Council for Financial Aid to Education, spoke to the KU Council for Progress and guests this afternoon.
Other speakers were C. N. Cushing, Downs, chairman of the Kansas State Board of Regents; Stanley Learned, Bartlesville, Okla., national chairman of the Program for Progress, and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
The Council, composed of about 300 alumni, friends and faculty members is sponsoring a three-year campaign for $18.6 million in capital gifts. About two-thirds of the goal has been achieved as the third year begins.
About 250 persons attended the 2 p.m. meeting in the Kansas Union Ballroom, which was preceded by a luncheon.
Roger Miller here Nov.
Members of the council will be guests for a dinner this evening at Oliver Hall and many will attend a Saturday noon brunch in the Kansas Union before the Kansas-Indiana football game.
Country and western singer, Roger Miller and his 32-piece orchestra, will perform with Andy Williams at the 1968-69 Homecoming Concert, Nov. 2. The concert, sponsored by Student Union Activities (SUA), will follow the Kansas-Colorado football game.
Also scheduled for the weekend is the presentation of the musical "Kismet" in the University Theatre.
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
The hanging was the best show in town!
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40
SHERIFF
CLINT
EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM
HIGH"
SHOWN TWICE
AND
ROD STEIGER
BEST ACTOR
OF YEAR
"IN THE HEAT OF
THE NIGHT"
CLINT EASTWOOD IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
BEST ACTOR OF YEAR
"IN THE HEAT OF
THE NIGHT"
Open 6:30 Show at Dusk
Open 6:30, Show at Dusk
---
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 27, 1968
16
HARRY GONSO
40
JADE BUTCHER
Charter Member
CANTON, Ohio (UPI)—Jim Thorpe, who began to playfor-pay in 1915, is a Charter Member of the National Professional Football Hall of Fame.
'Hawks meet Gonso's gang in Saturday's home debut
Harry Gonso and his gang are going to drop in this Saturday.
The recognized leader of his 44-man Hoosier contingent, Gonso, a 5-11, 190-pound junior quarterback, presents his opponents with impressive credentials.
In 1967, when Indiana compiled a surprising 9-2 record (they lost only to Minnesota and to USC in the Rose Bowl), Gonso rushed for 512 yards and completed 67 of 143 passes for 931 yards and nine touchdowns. KU lost to Indiana in the first meeting of the two schools last year 18-15 in Bloomington, Ind.
Last week, in the 40-36 victory over Baylor, Gonso suffered a broken blood vessel in his right hand. Other than that, he is healthy and should provide problems galore for Jayhawk defenders.
Providing KU's offense with harassment will be linebacker Jim Sniadecki, an All-Big Ten performer last year. Sniadecki is a 6-2, 214-pound senior who was in on 84 tackles last year—59 of those unsassisted.
Other stand-out Indiana defensive men to watch are Cal Snowden, a 6-5, 212-pound senior defensive end who last year made 54 tackles, ten of those resulting in minus 47 yards for the opposition; Nate Cunningham, a 6-1, 178-pound senior defensive back who led the secondary with 58 tackles; Tom Bilunas, a 6-2, 218-pound defensive tackle who puts great pressure on quarterbacks—he broke up five passes last year and made 43 tackles.
Rounding out the list of top Hoosier performers are 6-3, 221-pound tackle Bob Kirk who received a 73% grade for blocking in 1967; Al Gage, a 6-3, 196-pound tight end who caught
21 passes for 343 yards last year while receiving a 79% grade for his consistent blocking; John Isenbarger, a 6-3, 198-pound halfback who rushed 120 times for 579 yards last year and Jade Butcher, a 6-1, 193-pound flanker who was second in the nation last year in TD catches with ten. Butcher grabbed 35 passes for 611 yards last year.
Indiana's offense operates out of an "I" formation with a flanker and split end. The line adjusts itself on most plays so that the longside guard, the longside tackle and the tight end are always on the same side of the center.
The Hoosier defense resembles the pro-set in so much as it employs a front four. However, instead of three linebackers, two cornermen and two safetymen as in pro ball, Indiana uses four
linebackers, and three deep backs.
KU may find weaknesses in an offensive line which lacks starting experience at guard and center. The Indiana defense is also inexperienced at linebacker this year with the exception of Snidecki.
Without Gonso, it has been said, the Hoosier offense does not go too well. This may be true, but with the pride and confidence head coach John Pont has instilled in his team, it is hard to believe that the Hoosiers would fold with Gonso's exit.
Indiana has shown great poise, especially during last year's 14-3 loss to USC in the Rose Bowl. The Hoosiers came to play then and in Memorial Stadium Saturday Gonso's gang should give the Jayhawks 60 minutes of good contact.
KU must prepare mentally
Coach Pepper Rodgers announced his game against Indiana plan after KU's last regular practice session yesterday.
"We're going to run around both ends, we're going to run up the middle, and we're going to pass." he taunted.
Then the discussion took on a more serious tone.
"We've got to stop Gonso (Harry Gonso, Indiana quarterback) and the halfbacks (John Isenbarger and Jade Butcher)," Rodges said.
Rodgers said the Jayhawks would use a 5-4 defense against the Hoosiers tomorrow.
"We're ready to play physically," Rodgers said, "now we get in the right frame of
mind. Most of our preparation was done a long time ago."
Kicker Bill Bell missed the session because of a charley horse. Bell will play tomorrow. Everyone else is healthy.
Offensive guard Dave Aikens took Bell's place kicking field goals in practice.
Rodgers said Karl Salb would play Saturday, but that it would be "at least two weeks before he is up to par in condition."
The Jayhawks will hold a short workout today before Saturday's 1:30 p.m. game with Indiana.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Kansas State is Big Eight stat leader
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Vince Gibson's Kansas State Wildcats lead the Big Eight in four unaccustomed statistical categories following their 21-0 shutout over Colorado State last Saturday.
Missouri is another unfamiliar team leader after registering 210 yards passing at Kentucky.
K-State leads in rushing (233), rushing defense (70), total defense (182) and scoring defense (0). The Wildcats finished last in rushing and rushing defense a year ago and were seventh in both total defense and scoring defense.
K-State last year didn't net 233 yards rushing until its fifth game.
Missouri was also last a year ago in team passing, averaging only 56.8 yards a game. The Tigers' passing game against Kentucky represented more than a third of the air yards they mustered all last season.
Kansas, a big 47-7 winner at Illinois, leads in scoring offense and total offense. The Jayhawks totaled 392 yards against Illinois, 13 more than K-State managed against Colorado State.
Only Iowa State (263.5 in two games) and Oklahoma State (257.0) are totaling less that 300 yards a contest.
Colorado, which permitted Oregon only 87 yards passing, is the team leader in pass defense. Nebraska ranks among the top four teams in all eight categories.
PLAYER'S PROBLEM
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Gary Player, one of pro golf's "Big Three," hasn't won a tournament since the 1965 U.S. Open.
UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT
or
(Who's going to vote "no" for president)
this Sunday September 29,1968
Roger Williams Fellowship 1629 W.19th Speaking: Martin Dickinson Robert Casad Law School
University Lutheran Church
15th and Iowa
Speaking: Jim Logan
Former Dean of Law
School
Previous candidate for
U.S. Senate
Wesley Foundation 1314 Oread (across from union) Speaking: Al Bramble Democratic candidate for U.S. Congress 5th District
All Centers Begin Evening Meal at 5:30 (50c)
Friday, September 27, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Irish risk no. 1 ranking versus keyed Purdue
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)—When the Irish take on the Boilermakers Saturday, look for a real bar-room browl.
Notre Dame, ranked No. 1 in the nation after crushing a strong Oklahoma team in its season opener, plays host to Purdue, rated No. 2 in the country, in the biggest game of the year for both clubs.
A victory for either squad could lead to a national championship and the title of "the best team in college football."
But, besides all the obvious rewards at stake, there is the matter of personal pride. The Notre Dame-Purdue rivalry has been a rugged one for both Indiana schools since the series began back in 1896. The Fighting Irish hold a 23-14-2 advantage over Purdue but are out to avenge a 28-21 defeat suffered at the hands of the Boilermakers last year.
Both Notre Dame and Purdue have awesome offenses. Senior quarterback Terry Hanratty runs the Irish attack. Hanratty's favorite passing target is Jim Seymour, who last week scored two touchdowns to break Leon Hart's school record for most touchdowns caught. Seymour now has 14 career scoring catches.
Notre Dame's running backs are led by senior Bob Gladieut, who opened the season in fine fashion by scoring three times in a 45-21 rout of the Sooners.
Purdue's most potent offensive weapon is Leroy Keyes, a talented runner-passer-kicker who led the nation in scoring in 1967 with 114 points and was
Ron Reimer is medalist in mini golf
Ron Reimer, Newton senior,
took medalist honors and led his
team to victory in the first KU
intramural miniature golf
tournament Wednesday night.
Reimer, who shot an eight-under-par 64, teamed with Sue Regier, Buhler junior, June Whitaker, and Don Jarratt, Jacksonville. Ill. junior, to win with a score of 309.
In second place was a team of Steve Allen, Topeka junior; Sarah Allison, Topeka junior; Jim Dickinson, Coffeyville senior; and Patty Treat, Iola senior; who shot 340.
Trophies were awarded to each couple on the winning team and to the medalist. The meet, originally scheduled for three nights, was completed in four hours. Eighteen teams entered.
terrill's
KNITTING
featuring
BERNAT
YARNS
terriill's
KNITTING
Mike Phipps, Purdue's junior quarterback, was a sensation last season in accumulating 2,020 yards, a school record. Perry Williams complements the Boilermaker backfield. The 6-3, 208-pound senior is a bruising runner and strong blocker.
voted to the All-America team.
Keyes might be slowed by a hip injury sustained last week when Purdue bombed Virginia, 44-6.
terrill's
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
803 Mass. St.
In a grudge game down South, Florida visits Florida State. The Gators, led by All-America Larry Smith, had a tough time with a mediocre Air Force team last week.
National League
G. G. AB R. H. Pet.
Rose, Cin 146 611 91 203 .332
Alou, Atla 143 546 58 181 .332
Alou, Atla 157 551 70 165 .315
Johnson, Cin 146 614 78 187 .315
Flood, S, Cin 146 614 78 183 .298
Doe, Clin 152 632 91 188 .298
Staub, Hou 158 581 74 172 .296
McCvy, S F 155 511 79 150 .294
May, Clin 143 543 75 159 .293
Jones, N 144 495 62 145 .293
Major League Leaders By United Press International
American League
G. AB R. H. Pct.
Ystrschl, Bos 154 259 50
Midgley, H 152 617 142
Oilva, Min 128 470 154
Horton, Det 140 507 136
Blord, Min 128 470 154
Blandin, Min 128 488 152
Cpnrls, Oak 156 630 84
Davillo, Cal 155 804 173
Wks, Wks 155 587 161
Carw, Mil 124 457 175
Carw, Mil 124 457 175
Home Runs
Runs Batted In
National League: McCovey, San Fran 35; Banks, Chi 32; Williams, Chi and Allen, Phil 30; H. Aaron, Atl 28. American League: F. Howard, Wash 43; Horton, Det 36; Harrelson, Bos 43; Jackson, Oak 28; Freehan, Det 25.
STEADY CUSTOMERS
National League. McCovey, San Fran 102; Williams, Chi 98; Santo, Chi 93; Perez, Cin 92; Clendonen, Pitt 85. American League: Harrison, 109; F. Howard, Wash 95; Nothrump, Det 90; Horton, Det 85; Powell, Bal
Georgia, which was tied by Tennessee after the final gun had sounded, returns home to play Clemson. Kentucky and Mississippi tangle at Jackson, and Alabama—only a 14-7 victor over Virginia Tech in its opener—will try to put things together against Southern Mississippi.
American League: McLain, Det 31-9; Culp, Bos 16-5; Tiant, Clevie 21-9; Ellsworth, Bos 15-7; McNally, Bal 21-10.
Pitching
National League: Blass, Pitt 18-5; Marichal, San Fran 26-9; Kline, Pitt 12-5; Gibson, St. L. 21-9; Regan, Chi 11-5.
ST. LOUIS —(UPI)— Adolf Miller and his wife, married 61 years, have attended every performance of the St. Louis Municipal Opera since it started 50 years ago.
Big games in the East find Syracuse playing Maryland; Penn State, a convincing 31-6 winner over Navy in its opener, takes on Kansas State; and Pittsburgh, embarassed on the West Coast by UCLA 63-7 last week, tries to recover against West Virginia.
In Midwest battles, Indiana takes on a tough Kansas team while Minnesota plays Nebraska at Lincoln. Oklahoma goes against North Carolina State; Ohio State opens its campaign at home against SMU; and Southern California, ranked No. 3, plays Northwestern.
In the West, UCLA hosts Washington State, Wyoming travels to play the Air Force, and Oregon State, upset by Iowa last week, takes on Iowa.
Booing to Dawson like paying taxes
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Len Dawson would be justified in saying it. But he won't.
"I'm getting a bum rap" is one thing Dawson will never say.
That's because the Kansas City Chiefs' quarterback is, above all else, a gentleman in the truest sense of the word.
The first to share with his teammates in the savor of a personal success, Dawson is the one who by himself bears the brunt of a team failure.
Reserve Jacky Lee, the man the crowd had demanded throughout the first half, took over in the final two quarters and directed four touchdown drives.
The American Football League's all-time leading passer is taking the blame for the Chiefs' early-season offensive inconsistency. A crowd of 45,821 gave Dawson the worst verbal beating of his life in the first half of last Sunday's 34-2 victory over Denver in which the Chiefs led only 6-2 at intermission.
"I don't like the boos, nobody does, but it's all part of the game," Dawson says. "It's like taxes, you don't like it but you've got to live with it.
"I thought Jacky came in and
took charge," Dawson said. "He did a great job. He gave us a lift when we needed it most."
Dawson has yet to throw a TD pass in three games and hasn't driven the team to a touchdown in the last six quarters he's played. Still, he's hitting better than 60 per cent of his passes and has not thrown the interception.
"The quarterback's performance is the end result." Dawson said. "He's the guy who gets the credit when you win and he's the guy who gets the blame when you lose.
"If I knew what the trouble was I'd correct it," he said. "Everybody is out there doing his best."
But Dawson's pass protection in the first half last Sunday was, at times, very poor. Despite being subjected to a brutal Denver rush, he hit 10 of 15 passes.
Three times he was dropped for losses, and on three other occasions when he had the Chiefs moving, penalties killed the drive.
you can say penalties kill drives but they don't really," he said. "It all depends on how you look at it."
Future Brides
You are Invited to Use Our
Bridal Registry
By listing the pattern and pieces of your choice with us, friends and relatives will know exactly what to select for you. It's the modern, sensible way to choose your sterling silver, ching, and crystal.
China
Royal Doulton Oxford-Bone Flintridge
Castleton
Lenox
Rosenthal
Pasco
Stirling silver
Heirloom
Wallace
International
Lunt
Lenox
Orrefors
Corcoran
Fostoria
Crystal
Rosenthal
Josair
Rasco
Tiffin
809 Mass.
Ray Christian
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
Special College Terms
VI 2-5432
Sandy's...
Speedy Service & Quality Food
Go Jayhawks Beat Indiana
And stop in after the game.
Sandy's
2120 West 9th Phone - VI 2-2930
Sandys Sandy's
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 27, 1968
Mickey Mouse has birthday
Disney hero reaches 40
By' Irma Stephens
Kansan Staff Writer
Mickey Mouse, whose name is heard frequently on campus, turned 40 this week.
The squeaky-voiced cartoon character which revolutionized cinema entertainment has become many things to many people in his 40 years.
A United Press International report said "Mickey became a symbol of joy to millions of children and adults who trooped to movie theaters."
But his name, revered by the younger set and Disneyland stockholders, has a different connotation on campus.
Mickey Mouse, as slang, means "corny" according to Webster's Third International Dictionary.
A term of long standing-by slang standards—its use dates back to World War II. The Sept. 23, 1968 issue of Newsweek says "the Allies" D-Day password in World War II was 'Mickey Mouse.'"
Six-year program planned by Architecture School
Charles Kahn, dean of the new School of Architecture, says he plans to expand the school's curriculum to include a six-year program instead of the present five years.
The change will affect only freshman and sophomore architectural students, Kahn said. Students in or past their third year will continue to follow the five year curriculum. Kahn said further changes will be made in student-faculty meetings.
He said one change would be the use of a new concept in teaching architecture called "progressive advocacy." Under the new method, through on-the-job training, students would
design adequate housing for whole neighborhoods in lower and lower-middle class city ghettos.
Kahn called it a new concept in architecture, dealing with today's social problems, and expressed his excitement about future student designed projects in Kansas City and Topeka in cooperation with Wichita State University.
Progressive advocacy began with ARCH (Architect's Renewal Committee of Harlem) which recently finished designs for the community of East Harlem, Kahn said.
The 1967 edition of the "Dictionary of American Slang" describes Mickey Mouse as an adjective applied to the "sentimental or insincere," and adds that the term was used to describe pop music bands.
The slang usage came from soldier jargon referring to documentary or short movies "vividly showing the means of prevention, the causes, development and care of venereal diseases," as well as movies "vividly showing methods of hand-to-hand combat," the dictionary said.
Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, noted that in 1959 he began hearing KU students using the term to mean "foolish."
The animated rodent was created in 1927 as Mortimer Mouse. Like many Hollywood stars, his name was changed and in 1928 he became the star of "Steamboat Willie," the first sound cartoon in history.
Since then he has appeared in 130 short subject films, starred in two cartoon features and was a television hit on the "Mickey Mouse Club."
He has received tons of fan mail and is notorious as a write-in candidate in all types of elections.
PRESS-SURE
PUT ON THE
Under the pressure of an outdoor autumn, put on the press that's sure, in permanently pressed slacks from our new selection. Beyond their wrinkle-resistance, our newest are nigh stain-proof, too, thanks to a process called soil-release. Press in!
Mixer set by KU Lawrence C of C
Rock Chalk needs satire first scripts due Oct.2
University Shop
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring a KU faculty-Chamber of Commerce mixer at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1 at Broken Arrow Park.
KU faculty members will be guests of the Chamber of Commerce at the informal party to promote understanding between the University and the city of Lawrence.
Rock Chalk Revue has lost its bite and chew, Drew Anderson, Plainville senior and 1969 Rock Chalk director, told 28 living group representatives last night. "Please, please write satirically," he urged. "Don't write skits making profound statements." The judges look for humor and satire—both on and off campus since the audience is mixed, Anderson explained.
Following a bar-be-que, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Chamber president, Frank O'Rally, will speak. The Paul Gray Dixieland Band will provide entertainment.
Shakespeare's "All the World's a Stage" is the '69 Rock Chalk theme. Last year there was no theme. With a theme, we hope to have continuity, Anderson said. "I think it will be the best show ever."
Preliminary scripts must be submitted Oct. 2 in the KU-Y office. At this time, the staff wants to know plot ideas and song titles, said Anderson. If there is repetition among houses in skit ideas or music, the living groups submitting their idea first will have priority, he added.
Dialogue, jokes and gimmicks should be in writing Nov. 6, the second deadline, he said. The complete script is to be finished Dec. 4, and Dec. 20 participants must submit three complete scripts.
Over Christmas vacation, a panel of three judges—two from KU and one out-of-town person will select four skits to appear in the spring production.
Criteria for skit selection are the following: 30 points for humor (satire); 30 points on production possibilities; 20 points on music, lyrics and dance; 10 points on costume and set design, and 10 points for originality.
COURAGE
IN A CRISIS, it takes courage to be a leader . . . courage to speak out . . . to point the way . . . to say, "Follow Me!" In a crisis, it takes action to survive . . . the kind of decisive action that comes from a man of sound instinct, as well as intelligence.
If America is to survive this crisis .if the youth of America are to inherit a sane and even promising world, we must have courageous constructive leadership. The kind of leadership that only George C. Wallace—of all Presidential candidates—has to offer. That's why young Americans who really think support Wallace.
THEY KNOW that it takes courage to stand up for America against the pseudo-intellectual professors, the hippies, the press and the entire liberal Establishment. And they've got that courage.
Thousands and thousands of tomorrow's leaders-the thinking young men and women of America who have courage and who are willing to act一are joining YOUTH FOR WALLACE. You should join, too.
There are no dues. Send in the coupon to receive your membership card, the YFW Newsletter and a copy of "STAND UP FOR AMERICA," the story of George C. Wallace.
Youth for Wallace
1629 K St., N.W.
1629 K St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006
(202) 296-8192
I am ... years old and pledge to support George C. Wallace for President.
Please send me my membership card in YOUTH FOR WALLACE and the Newsletter.
PRINT NAME
MAILING ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP ___
SIGNATURE ___ PHONE ___
8 Friday, September 27, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY TDAILY KANSAN
9
Laptad's proves success at KU
Laptad's barn solves the problem for many KU students.
Tired of picnics at Potter's and gab fests in "O" zone?
Well-known on campus, the barn averages about 50 parties a year, estimated Max Laptad, owner.
"Ten or twelve years ago we started having hayrack rides," recalled Laptad. "Then someone got the idea of having a barn party, so we've been having them now for five or six years."
Where to go
For entertainment this weekend, here what's happening on the KU scene . . .
The Experimental Theatre goes on stage at 8:20 tonight with "A Thousand Clowns."
Ragtime piano, pizza and beer at Shakev's Pizza Parlor.
At the Varsity movie theater, Walter Matthau stars in "The Secret Life of an American Wife."
While the weather is good, play a round of golf at Alamar Hills or Hillview Golf Course. For the less athletic linksman, trv Putt-Putt miniature golf.
At the Granada movie theater, "Wild in the Streets" scares adults over 30.
How about a romantic, moonlight canoe ride? Rent-a-canoe at Bellinger Electric and Marine Service.
"Once Upon a Mattress"
opens at the University Theatre at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. A matinee performance is scheduled at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
Take a giant slide ride for 10 cents. The slide is on Sixth Street across from the Buckaroo Steak House.
Clint Eastwood is appearing in "Hang 'Em High" at the Sunset Drive-In. Also at the Sunset is "In the Heat of the Night," voted best movie of 1967, and starring Rod Steiger.
Take your date on a bicycle built for two. Rent one at A to Z Rental.
On tap at the Red Dog Inn Friday night are the Rising Suns. Post-game party Saturday afternoon. Saturday night the Red Dog brings back the Young Raiders.
More in the mood for coffee, folk-singing, and poetry reading? Try the Fiery Furnace in the basement of the Canterbury House.
James Coburn gets into a "Dead Heat on a Merry-go-Round" at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at Dyche Auditorium.
At
McConnell Lbr. We've Got:
- Lumber and Plywood cut to order
- Do-it-yourself shelving materials
- Homecoming Supplies including standard 1" poultry netting
Visit our newly opened
Concord Shop
For
- Canvas
- Stretcher Frames made to order
- Oil and Acrylic Paints
- Unusual Gift Ideas
Laptad still keeps a few milking cows which account for the barn's popular odor.
● Painting Classes
Mon. thru Thurs.—7-9 p.m.
One of the things that makes the barn so popular, said Laptad, is that "it's one of the few barns that really smells like a barn!"
We're open Mon. thru Fri.
Till 9 p.m. on Thurs.
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th . VI 3-3877
Laptad has lived on the farm for 56 years. He said the barn was built in 1877 on land acquired by his family from the railroad.
Damage to the barn from about 300 parties in it over the years has been slight, according to Laptad.
"We've been very fortunate that nothing serious has happened," he said.
"Although I don't chaperone the parties, I do chaperone the barn," said Laptad. He checks mainly to see that no one starts a fire.
"My wife and I aren't bothered by the parties and we've never had any real trouble," says Laptad.
"The barn is old and hay is in it, so fire is my biggest worry," he said.
"Sure the kids drink, and even though I don't approve, we've never had a problem with it," he said. "When the kids are drinking with a date, they'll take care of each other. It's the ones
CAPTAIN STOCK FARM
WHEN DOES THE PARTY START?
During the day these two cows are the only visitors at Laptad's Barn, north of Lawrence. On weekend nights, however, the cows share the barn with KU students who rent the barn for parties. The cows Lantad said, account for the "popular odor" of the barn.
without dates who try to steal other fellas' girls that cause trouble."
With a grin Laptad recalled the time a big football player came to the door.
"My wife, who is a small woman, answered the door and there stood this big guy holding his foot. The kid had been
dancing on the wooden floors without shoes and had run a splinter in his foot," Laptad said.
"My wife sat him down and took the splinter out. It was funny to see such a big man sitting there looking just like a little kid," chuckled Laptad.
The fall is the busiest time for
barn parties, said Laptad. However, there are still quite a few parties in the winter until it gets too cold.
"Although the barn does have heat and electricity, it's pretty hard to keep a barn warm when it's 10 or 12 degrees and the wind is blowing out of the northwest," Laptad said.
You say the phone company strikes you as a dull place to work?
BENNIE L. MEYER
Don't you believe it.
If you have an idea the telephone business is uninteresting, monotonous and lacking in challenge-do us a favor. Talk to someone who works for Southwestern Bell.
Talk to last year's college graduate who now finds himself responsible for telephone service in an entire community.
Boring? Spend a few minutes with the technician planning vital microwave routes for defense installations.
Ask the young engineer in charge of a million-dollar expansion program how "dull" his days are.
Or question a sales representative who's just completed work on a nationwide data communications network.
The business of our business is the lively art of communications. It's a lookahead, on-your-toes, make it-happen business.
But dull?
Don't you believe it!
BUTTON BELL
Southwestern Bell
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 27, 1968
Support and sympathy—
(Continued from page 1.)
Rev. Tom Rehorn, assistant pastor of the First Methodist Church, has also offered his aid to the two students. Rehorn and several tenants at West Hills, who wish to remain unidentified, are planning to circulate a petition asking that the bearded students be allowed to continue living at West Hills.
Parker said there had been much sympathetic response to their plight.
"A total stranger called last night and told us he had found us a place to live. He said he'd shown the article to his landlord and the landlord was most sympathetic. The landlord said we could move in immediately. We haven't even seen the place yet but we may have to take it," said Parker.
"The tenants out here have been just great. Last night they left a 5-gallon tin can with a note that said, 'Anyone with a beard can't be
all bad. Jesus had one too.' and almost all of them signed it. Everybody's just been unbelievably nice," Parker said.
Karen Mills, Convent Station, N.J., senior who also lives at West Hills said, "We were really upset when we found out about it. We'll sign any petitions for them. We've also written letters to the owners of the apartments asking them to let the guys stay."
Griffith said, "Since the story about Steve and Bob appeared in the UDK, Wilbur (apartment manager Wilbur Alquist) has been extra-nice to us. Wilbur even fixed the box-spring on my bed which has been broken since the day we moved in. He also replaced the four dining room chairs which have been broken for two weeks."
"He asked if the 'Kid,' referring to my bearded roommate, was still living with us. He told us we could
let him sleep on the sofa until he finds a place to live," Griffith said.
"Wilbur looked scared to death when he came to see us. He was probably afraid he might get jumped by some bearded anarchist out here," Griffith said.
Bob Messman, Wichita senior and Parker's roommate said even after they move out of West Hills they plan to continue the fight against what he termed "unfair practices."
"If any of the owners came down here and saw what was going on, they would have to investigate. Anybody with any ethics would," Messman said.
Code not considered
"We don't feel vindictive toward Wilbur. All we'd like to see is better management and more concern from Lawrence apartment owners and managers toward the studenttenant's welfare."
The University Senate Council began its regular fall session yesterday afternoon without considering the proposed new University Code.
The council will meet today at 3:30 p.m. and will continue its session until final action has been taken on the code.
Ambrose Saricks, associate dean of the Graduate School and chairman of the Senate Executive Committee, said members of the Student-Faculty Committee on University Governance will appear before the council tomorrow to present their reports, including the Dissenting Report of the committee and the new code.
Members of the committee will be given an opportunity to make any comment they wish.
Saricks said if the code is passed by the Senate Council and the ASC in different forms, it will have to go to a conference committee and then be passed by both the ASC and the Council again.
This process, he said, could take some time.
Campus Living Takes a Lot of Money - The Best, Cheapest and Safest Way to Pay is By
Our New "D.C."
personal checking account.
- “D.C.” Checks cost less than money orders . . . only 10c!
- No minimum balance is required
- Money is protected against loss
- Cancelled checks prove you paid your bills
- Your name printed free on all "D.C." Checks!
The best way to pay campus bills is with "D.C." Checks!
Open your account today. Jayhawk Special "D.C." Checks designed for students, faculty and friends of the University of Kansas are available only at Douglas County State Bank.
DOUGLAS COUNTY
STATE
BANK
THE BANK OF
DOUGLAS COUNTY
COUNTY JUSTICE
Lawrence's Newest, Most Modern Bank Welcomes You to Lawrence and to K.U.
BANK
PLENTY OF PARKING, PLUS TWO CONVENIENT DRIVE-UP WINDOWS
Douglas County State Bank
"The Bank of Friendly Service"
Member F.D.I.C.
9th and Kentucky
VI 3-7474
Friday, September 27, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
weekly newspaper referred to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
125cc Riverside. Excellent condition.
Perfect for around campus. $225. Call
Bob at VI 3-5770. 10-1
1950 Cadillac Hearse, Beautiful condition. Ideal for woodsies 300, Lewis Proctor, 6332 Goodman Dr., Merriam, Kansas. HES 2-5243. 9-27
Complete 10 gallon aquarium set-up,
$24.95 value, only $16.98. George's
Hobby House. VI 3-5087, Mall's Shopp-
ing Center. 10-1
String bass, bass guitar with amplifier, drums, trombone. All played professionally. Nothing over $50.00. Also Hi-Fi set, Car radio with speaker. Dr L. S. Bee, 221 Concord Road. Phone 3-4836. 10-1
1967 Suzuki X-6 Hustler, 250c motorcycle. 6500 miles, includes two helmets, and a jacket. Jim Scott, VI 3-4811. 10-1
Large old family home needs love and decorating. Secluded South location in lovely neighborhood, within walking distance of all schools and shopping center. Twelve rooms, three fireplaces, covered patio. Will sacrifice at $24,000.00 for immediate sale. VI 3-3536 or VI 3-6640.
Mobile home 10x57, washer, dryer,
A.C., W-W Carpeting, garbage disposal,
Radio-stereo system, utility shed,
fenced lot. Call Darlene Ascanio at UN 4-4291 or VI 2-7332 after
5.
9-27
200 mm F/4 Super Takumar lens-
virtually unused, original box, ease,
and strap $150. Call I 2-6481, evenings.
9-27
50cc Honda with helmet. Best offer over $140. Electric starter, automatic clutch all new aaddle, leg guards, all multimeter gaskets. V-9, 2601 or UN 4-3533. V-27
1968 "SS" Corvette Bronze Camero
396 coupe. Excellent condition with
low, low mileage. Paintless power,
power steering. 35 hp. Fuel type:
with posttraction. List $4,148.00. I'll sell it to you for $3,000. Must sell immediately, so call V 3-5479 today!
1963 Impala SS. Bucket seat 4, speed-
low best bowl CVI Map 3-14578. 9-27
Rust suede coat—full length with
suede collar. Call Jann at 843-1619.
9–27
1963 Buick Special V-8, 4-door, auto,
wagon; 2020 Buick Gran Turismo 4.5-
842; bikers 842-745-8. 15 p. 36 min.
9-27
4 track car stereo and tapes. Also 15
track car stereo and tapes. Call 9-
5:00 p.m. VI 3-1745. 9-27
Beautiful 1963 Pontiac Bonneville convertible, Arctic white, power, new white vinyle vinyl. Vintage Call. 723-3454, Lincoln, Kansas. $1.0 to call. $850. 9-30
1957 Trumbum TR-3. New tires and
suspension. VI 2-6600. Room 1024. 9-30
thi, VI 2-6600. Room 1024.
4-door 1962 Dodge Dart. 6 cylinder,
automatic, New Tires. Excellent condition.
Call UN-4-4291 or VI 2-7332
after 5 p.m. 10-2
19" G.E. Table T.V., New picture tube, $40; B&H 35mm Slide projector and 2 trays, $25; x2*314 Mamiga Press camera, 160 mm², $75 Contact Penta w.f.l.4 Leica IIIF, $75 Contact Lyle Shoemaker at UN 4-3837. 9-30
1961 Harley-Davidson 250cc. Sprint.
New tires, chain, engine work. $185
or best offer. VI 3-0661. 10-2
1957 Triumph TR-3. New tires and battery. Must sell now. Contact Cynthia, Room 1024 VI, 2-6600. 10-2
1965 Sunbeam convertible, ex-
cellent condition. Best offer over $1,000.
42-10-2
MGA- 50,000 miles, excellent condition.
Call 843-6495. 9-30
1964 Ford wagon and 1964 Studebaker wagon with Roll back top. Both cars in good mechanical condition. Can see at 625 Mississippi. 10-10
1 regular size Kaylon Foam Mattress,
1 Box springs to match. 1 Electric Gladiator ironer. 1 Staifer reducing
weight at 216 Dakota St. Kentucky, Kansas. 10-2
1966 Honda Superhawk 305cc, low-hake
holds. VI 3-8191 after 6. $350 cap
includes. VI 3-8191 after 6.
Smith-Corona Galexie portable portable excellent condition. Call 842-8143 10-1
1966 Yamaha Big Bear Scramble,
250cc, 5-speed, dual carburetors. $350.
See Eric Nielsen at 917 Ohio (in
back). 10-1
Remington and Olympia portable typewriters and Friden calculator at wholesale prices. VI 3-8191 after 6. 10-4
1958 BUG EYE SPRITE. Better than new. Asking $900. Will deal. Contact Bill Langsdorf—1000 Mississippi St. 10-4
1963 Sunbeam Alpine. Must sell this week. Best offer. Call Pam Cobb — VI 2-9350 after six or see at 622 North 5th. 10-4
1906 100ce Yamaha Twin. Excellent condition; low mileage; helmet included. $215.00 1201 Oread, Apt. 2. VI 3-4312. 10-1
1964 MGB ROADSTER, one owner,
3-4002 at 12:00 noon. 10-1
1962 Dodge Polara 500, V-8, HT, AC,
New Tires, in Excellent condition.
$860. Call VI 2-7758 after 6 p.m.
daytime or weekends. 10-4
Honda 300 Super Hawk '68 -1600 miles. Like new. For a reasonable price. Information call Roman Mendze at VI 2-9100, room 648. 10-4
NOTICE
Rod McKuen says: 'My new book is now in stock at Keeler's Bookstore.'
Art Sale, Battik and Tie-Dye matted
prints. $125-$300, Sun.
Sept. 27, 28, 29, 1-5 p.m., 9-27
Try something different this weekend.
Have a weiner roast and hay rack ride at Laptad's Barn. Call VI 3-4032 for more information.
9-27
Car pool forming from Overland Park area. Will come early and stay late. Call Ray at TU 8-4399 after 7:00 pm. p. 977
If you think that you have modeling potential, but don't know what the demanded qualities are or how to get started, let a professional model who is acting as a talent scout help you in building the potential in the modeling business. Call Model's Guild for further information VI 2-8634. 9-27
All people interested in folk danceing or leading folk dancing, contact MI-2 Rosenberg at Math DE. VI-E Strong or 1419 Ohio, No. 8. VI-2
1991. 9-27
515 Michigan St. St.B-B-Q — outdoor
pit, rib slab to go to $2.35; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.55; chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Portrait Photographs — black and white only. VI 2-4326. 9-30
Bookcase Special. Three shelf, 24-in.
by 32-in., unfinished white $9.98,
$10.98, and black $12.98 for Bridge
and right 1 block to Brewster
wood products. VI 2-8145.
9-27
Caramel and Cinnamon apples Thurs. Fri, and Sat, while they last. Along with all our other usual goodies. Topsy's Old-Fashioned Popcorn and Ice Cookie Shop. Malls Shopping Center. Open till 11. 9-30
A unique gift shop. Hand made pottery, clothes, book bags, incense, beads, posters and creative portrait photographs. At STRAWBERRY FIELDS, 712 Massachusetts. Open 10-16. 10-4
WANTED
Male roommate to share furnished apartment. $67.50 pays rent, all utilities, and phone. 524 Fireside Drive, No. 9. Call III 3-1917. 9-27
Female roommate over 21 years old.
Modern call 2-6159. Dai 10-2
RIDE TO K.C. MISSOURI to the vicinity of 16th and Main. Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call VI 3-1467. 9-27
Girl to cook evening meal five days a week. Pay plus meal included. Apply 2541 Redbud Lane, Apt. No. 4 after 5:00 p.m. 9-27
Need an upper classman or graduate student to share neat and clean apt. Come see at 1605 Tennessee after 6 p.m. 9-27
ARTIST MODELS wanted. $1.15 to
sary, female. Phone UN 4-4401. 10-3
Singer wanted for an established band. Must be experienced in singing and motown, rhythm & piano. Please call Rich, VI 2-8326 after 6 p.m.
9-27
Drummer needed immediately. Must have experience in playing hard rock and soul. Call Richard Music Co., VI 2-0021. 9-27
Female counter girls: part time help for evenings. Apply in person at Smaks Drive-in at 1409 West 23rd. 9-30
Need Co-ead roommate to share beautiful 3-bedroom house. $50.00 per month. 1012 Hilltop Drive. Call VI 2-2048. 10-2
Reward: Return of umbrella with carved ivory handle taken in Student Center. Please send values to owner. No questions asked.
Call VI 2-3531 evenings. 10-1
Jason slide rule in brown leather case
Boris borson key. Keward. J书
borson. V 2-4119 10-1
Male roommate wanted. 10 minutes
roomtime. Necessary. Worn in.
$50.00 a month. V-3-3316
LOST
One pair of oval, tortoise-shell rimmed glasses. Urgently needed. If found, please return to main desk. Corbin Hall. 10-2
HELP WANTED
IBM Computer 360 Model 20 Operator for second shift, 5-12 midnight. Send resume or write for application and appointment for interview. Well established firm, usual benefits. Box 33, Kansan. 10-2
One or two typists needed immediately. Dittos, lab reports, short papers. Steady work for good typist. Contact VI 2-8155 after 5 p.m. D. & L. Blahna.
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-
time openings available in day or
night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Part-time from 11 a.m. till 2 p.m.
Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week.
Start $12 per hr. apply in person to
Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 W, 23rd. 9-28
FOR RENT
Want Senior or Graduate male to share nice apartment with two others off the Off street parking—nice place to place live; $35,000, 10-11 paid. VI 3-4349
FURNISHED APARTMENT for graduate student. $100. Utilities paid. No pets. Garage available. Very quiet. V 3-1290, 1633 Vermont. 9-27
Two rooms will accommodate four girls, close to campus, furnished. Kitchen, bath, off-street parking, $30 per person. 1216 Louisiana VI 3-101-7958.
Unfurnished two-bedroom apartment.
12th Call VI-12-63 to see.
SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most crowded barn or capitad's barn. Hunting and electricity are available. VI 3-4032. 11-12
TYPING
Themes, These. Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall VI. 2873
Prompt, accurate, typing of manuscripts, theses, dissertations, miscellaneous papers, pica-electric, call Mrs. Troxel at VI-2-1440. 10-4
Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Guards
- Budges
- Gauras
- Novelties
- Favorit
- Novelties
- Novelties
- Favors
- Lovetts Favor
● Lavaliers ● Rings
- Lavaliers
- Rings
- Sportswear
- Rings
- Sportswear - Mugs
- Cups
Sportswear Mags
• Paddles Trophies
- Trophies
Paddles Trophies
Cups Awards
- Awards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Portraits of Distinction
Also
- Passports
- Applications
- Lettermen
- Seniors
- Lettermen
摄影师
Please call for appointment
- K-Portraits
Hixon
Studio
Portraits of Distinction Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. V1 3-03301
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
STRICK'S DINER
Students Welcome
Good Food—Reasomble Cold Beer—Pool Tables
On H-Way 59.40 N. of the bridge
732. N.2nd
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 18 Conn., Law, Pet Ph, VI 3-2921
THE
UnderDog ..A Very Private Club
Nightly Entertainment . . . Now
TRAVEL TIME
ET
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your
SUMMER TRAVEL Reservation Now!
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
MARRIED STUDENTS
Up To $600 Maternity Benefits
CONTACT
V. G. Miller
1035 Elm
Eudora, Kans.,
K12 376
For details on this, major medical, and other plans of health and life insurance REPRESENTING.
K1 2-2793
Mutual of Omaha
The Company that pays
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha
MUTUAL OF OMAHA INSURANCE COMPANY
HOME OFFICE, Omaha, Nebraska
...SORRY ABOUT THAT.
YOU'RE MY KIND OF PEOPLE...
And Micki's is still here to serve KU students and faculty by typing those term papers projects, etc. Micki's also offers Notary Public service and Xeroxing.
Don't wait till the last minute. Save yourself all that time and effort. Inquire today!
MICKI's secretarial service is 4/U! VI 2-0111—901 Ky. St.
sua
PICTURE LENDING LIBRARY
Monday, September 30 9:00-5:00
South Lounge of Union
50c Per Picture
per semester
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 27, 1968
Population explosion subject of new film
The effects of the world-wide population explosion will be the topic of a film soon to be released by the radio-television-film department, it was announced Thursday.
Bruce Linton, chairman of the department, said the film, financed by the Kansas City branch of the Planned Parenthood organization, will cost $7,000 to $10,000.
He said, "This is not a clinic film," emphasizing that the film did not discuss birth control methods but dealt with the hazards of a world becoming overpopulated.
He explained, "They wanted a motion picture which would speak to today's college-aged people, and would make each person who saw it more aware of their own response to the population explosion."
Linton called the film extremely relative saying, "The wide concept of population becomes, in the last analysis, an individual problem."
He denied the film would conflict with the recent Papal decision banning all forms of artificial birth control. He explained the film merely raises the questions, while allowing the audience to make its own analysis.
Linton said the film shows scenes from India, the American ghettos and many other countries. He said, "There is a good amount of footage on hunger and want and the side effects such as violence and the decline of human dignity."
The writer-director of the film, Roger Doudna, a fourth-year graduate student said, "The problem ultimately involves every person in this country. To too many people the term population explosion is a cliche." He expressed hope the film would startle its audience into a better concept of the term.
Official Bulletin
Linton said the motion picture will be shown at KU sometime in November.
TODAY
Foreign Students. Sign up for the Oct. 19 People-to-People tour to the American Royal Parade and Show in Kansas City, P-To-P office, basement,
KU Moslem Society. 12:45 p.m. Friday Pravers. Kansas Union.
Folk Danee. 7 p.m. Robinson Gymnastium
Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Dead
Boy" movie-go-round. Dyche
Auditrum.
KANU Highlights. 8:05 p.m. "Opera Is My Hobby." Excerpts from Mascagni's "L'Amico Fritz." KANU, 91.5 FM.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "A Thousand Clowns."
SATURDAY
ball. Indiana. KANU. 91.5 Fm.
Football. 1:30 PM. Indiana, here.
SATURDAY
KANU Highlights. 12:45 p.m. Foot-
ball. Ice cream. 2:15 FM.
Football. 1:30 p.m. Indiana, here.
Memorial Stadium.
MISSION LEADERSHIP RETreat. 6 p.m.
AURIK Leadership Retreat. 6 p.m.
Lewis Hall.
Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Dead
Merry Merrry- go away." Dyche
Auditorium.
Concert. 8.05 p.m. Shostakovich KANU. 91.5 FM.
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Once Upon a Mattress."
SUNDAY
KANU Highlight 1.1 p.m. Concert,
paladiahia Orchestra KANU, 91.5
fm.
University Theatre. 2:30 p.m. "Once Upon a Mattress."
2:30 p.m. Kansas Union
Culler Hospital 3, 4 p.m. Albert-Ger
z. 30 p.m. Kansai Union
*Railcar Recital* 3 p.m. Albert Gerk-
enk
Faculty Recital. 3:30 p.m. Reinhold Schmidt, bartone. Swarthout Recital
KANU Highlights. 4 p.m. Concert
Boston Symphony. KANU, 91.5 FM
CANU, 91.5 FM
Cleveland Orchestra. KANU, 91.5 FM
**Popular Film.** 7 & 8:30 p.m. "Dead Heat on a Merry-go-round" Dyche Auditorium.
RIGHTS ROUGHT
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Novelist Harold Robbins' company has bought movie rights to "SAS," a spy story.
As advertised in PLAYBOY
Bates Floaters®
Leisure Footwear
the Bates Floater $ Knock-A-Boot $17.95
Traditionally correct for casual wear,
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass.
Recital season opens Sunday with concert
The winner is the rally team who most closely figures the correct mileage of the course and has the most nearly correct count of paint spots, he said.
Kansas University's faculty recital season opens with performances Sunday and Monday at Sawthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
VI 3-3470
Reinhold Schmidt, bass-baritone, will perform at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, and Raymond Stuhl, cellist, will perform at 8 p.m. Monday.
Bailey said the rally would follow a route through the countryside around Lawrence.
spot a quarter of a mile down the correct route." Bailey said, "so a car won't be following the wrong route too long."
LIMA, Peru —(UPI)— When Carlos Boza, 61, was arrested for stealing a wheelchair, he was frank with police. He told them he did not have enough money to buy a place to sit down.
SEAT OF PROBLEM
Jayhawk Sports Car Club to host gimmick car rally
The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will roll into its 1968-69 season at 7:30 p.m. Saturday with a "Hare and Hounds" gimmick car rally.
Duane Bailey, Lawrence resident and rallymaster for the event, said registration would begin at 6:45 p.m. at the Malls Shopping Center.
"The object of the rally is for the drivers (hounds) to follow a path laid out by the rallymaster (hare)," Bailey said.
He said he would go out ahead of the competitors and mark the rally route with paint spots. The gimmick, he explained, is when a rally team finds a paint spot, they will have an option to turn right, left, or continue straight.
Bailey said the only requirement to enter the event is to have seat belts in the car. A working odometer to compute the mileage would also help, he added.
"There will be another paint
Entry fee is $2 for members,
and $3 for non-members, Bailey
said.
Lawrence Ice Company
CASE LOT BEER $3.60-$4.5
3 QUARTS FOR $1.00
KEG BEER
ICE
PICNIC SUPPLIES
616 Vermont Open to 10 p.m. every evening VI 3-0350
We'll give You the shirts off our rack!
INVITRENCES DAY CLEANERS
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners Now at 1029 New Hamp.
featuring:
Drive-up Window
Off Street Parking
Extended Hours to serve you:
7 a.m. - 7 p.m. (Mon. - Fri.)
7 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. (Sat.)
daily pickup & delivery to all KU dorms, fraternities and sororities.
KU
GO BIG BLUE Iron Out Indiana!
KANSAN
Monday, September 30,1968
79th Year, No.10
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
'Progress' to top goal in '69
Stanley Learned of Bartlesville, Okla., and national chairman of the Program for Progress, predicted the successful completion this year of KU's $18.6 million fund drive.
At a meeting Friday, Learned told approximately 200 assembled Council members, "If each of us gives just one day a month to help KU's campaign, I am sure we will exceed our goal well in advance."
Other speakers at the third meeting of the Council were Holgar J. Johnson, president of the Council for Financial Aid to Education; C. Ned Cushing, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents; Dolph Simons, president of the KU Endowment Association, and KU Cancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
Johnson explained that the Council for Financial Aid to Education was formed to stimulate corporations interest in higher education. "Business is the largest user of the end product of higher education: trained manpower," he said.
"By raising the educational level of a community, you raise the economic level, the social level and the political aspects of the community." Johnson said.
He reminded the Council that at the two-thirds level it is easy to become over-confident. He said what is needed is "an atmosphere of wholesome unrest" to keep the Council working hard.
Cushing spoke about a regent's look at KU. He said, "We are at a crossroads in the glorious history of this university. We must find a very qualified man to replace the man who has led this university for eight years."
Cushing continued, "To this task the Board of Regents must dedicate itself this year. This university has even its greatest days ahead of it. We can and we must achieve them."
Simons explained some of the grants and donations given to KU since the chartering of the Endowment Association in 1893. He said the association has only one purpose: "to service KU as it reaches out for excellence."
Chancellor Wescoe concluded the meeting by urging the Council to work hard to reach the goal they set in 1966. He said, "We cannot fail to meet our goal for we put the reputation of KU on the line."
Wescoe said the motto of KU has always been, "We try, and when we try we make it, and we exceed it."
"We have a long road still to travel, to travel together. Perhaps it is the steepest part of the climb." Wescoe told the members.
Wescoe concluded his brief address by speaking of his recent resignation. "For me there will not be any other University or college when I leave KU," he said, "because KU is mine."
Cushing, acting on behalf of the Kansas Board of Regents, then presented Stanley Learned with a special citation for meritorious service to KU and the Council.
M
STUDY, KU STYLE
(Photo by Robert Entriken Jr.)
Berta Miller, Platte City, Mo., sophomore, has found a way to make first-of-the-year assignments less tortuous. Here she catches up on some reading and soaks up the sun at the same time.
Voice pushes for minority adoption
By Steve Haynes Kansan Staff Writer
Peoples Voice organized an all-out campaign to secure adoption of the provisions of the "minority report" on student government last night.
Meeting at the Wesley Foundation, Voice members elected a five-member coordinating committee to lead the campaign.
Voice members were not certain the minority report (the Dissensing Report of the Student-Faculty Committee on University Governance) would ever be considered by the student body, but they pledged every effort to see that it did.
The minority report was signed by two members of the Student-Faculty Committee, Bill Berkowitz, New York senior, and Mrs. Rick Atkinson, Lawrence senior, who are also Voice members.
Provisions of the minority report include:
- 50 per cent student representation on the University Senate.
- Abolition of the Associated Women Students (AWS) and the personal deans.
- Increased social responsibility for the
- Increased social responsibility for the University.
- Election of the Chancellor by the University Senate.
- Vote to be cast.
Voice wants these and other provisions of the report adopted immediately.
of the report adopted immediately. Neither the minority report nor the report of the full committee will be considered by the All Student Council (ASC), the University Senate, or the student body
What these groups will be voting on is the proposed new University Senate Code which was prepared by the Student-Faculty Committee.
Members suggested some sort of referendum, but it was decided instead to conduct an extensive campaign to familiarize students with the report and to gain their support.
Because of this, most provisions of the minority report would have to be considered separately from the code, although some could be presented as amendments to the code.
Voice objects to this, but is not certain how the entire minority report can be brought before the student body.
Committees were assigned to promote the report in Greek houses, residence halls, and scholarship halls.
These committees planned to speak to as many living groups as possible in the next three weeks.
Those elected to the coordinating committee were Berkowitz; Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student; Don Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Michael Maher, associate professor of zoology and John Naramore, Wichita senior, Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student, was appointed press coordinator
--by United Press International
UDK News Roundup
NY schools open again
NEW YORK (UPI)—The city opened its 900 public schools today to more than one million children under an agreement between the striking teachers union and the board of education officially ending
-the three-week, city-wide teacher walkout.
The agreement, announced Sunday by a weary Mayor John V. Lindsay after a series of all-night negotiations, received the approval of the striking United Federation of Teachers (UFT). The vote was 5,825 for ending the strike and 592 against. The membership is about 52,000.
A major question mark remained as to what reaction the governing
Demos warn state against Harman
board and residents of the "decentralized" Ocean Hill-Brownsville district in Brooklyn would take toward the agreement.
TOPEKA (UR)—State Democratic chairman Norbert Dreiling Sunday charged Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Harman with offering the voters "a bill of goods."
"The campaign of Republican gubernatorial hopeful Rick Harman says that an increase in income, sales and gasoline taxes will decrease taxes," Dreiling said. "It is only a bill of goods.
Dreiling spoke to Democratic county chairman in Topeka in a strategy meeting to plan a registration drive for the final weeks of the campaign.
"Kansas taxpayers have the first real opportunity in years to get at the business of tax reform," Dreiling said.
One that we had better not buy."
Dreiling said if voters "fail to remember in November that Gov. Robert Docking is the only one who has held the line on taxes, they can only blame themselves."
---
NIGGER
YOU WILL WANT TO KNOW
- The assumptions of this course are:
-That white people have a problem—their own Racism.
-That White Racism is essentially responsible for the explosive racial situation in this country.
—That these and all other assumptions are open to challenge.
- This course will involve each person in two sessions a week. The Sunday evening session will be attended by the entire enrollment. Each person will then attend a D.E.G. of no more than 15 persons which will meet during the week.
The University Christian Movement offers Depth Education Groups
- The sessions are designed for those who want to question doubt, share fears and convictions concerning White Racism and the prevailing crisis.
WHITE RACISM October Sunday Evenings—School of Religion 7:00-8:30 p.m. (These sessions to be attended by the entire enrollment)
October 6 "Nothing But A Man"
A powerful film dealing with the import of White
Racism on the Negro self image.
October 13 ___ "White Racism: Historical Perspective"
Norman Yetman—American Studies
A session treating the political, economic and social contributions to White Racism.
October 20 "The Psychology of Racism"
David Summers—Social Psychology Why are people Racists? What needs does Racism meet? Why are some people prejudiced against Negroes; if not Negroes, then Jews; if not Jews,
then ... ?
October 27 ___ "The Church: Racist & Reconciler"
Robert Shelton—School of Religion
The church may not have a franchise on bigots, but it has contributed significantly to Racism. Can it contribute to reconciliation?
DEPTH EDUCATION GROUP Session to be attended once a week during month of Oct. (enroll in one)
Monday
6:30-8:30 p.m. Hay Steele, American Studies ___ Grad Student Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread
8:30-10:30 p.m. Donna Shavlik ___ Asst. Dean of Women 842 Avalon Rd. (home)
10:00-12:00 p.m. Warner Morse, Philosophy ___ Asst. Prof. Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread
10:00-12:00 p.m. Judith Kahane, Philosophy ___ Teaching Asst. Home, Hampton Ct. D4, Meadowbrook (W. of Iowa, N. of 15th)
Tuesday
10:30-12:30 p.m. John Stuckey, Pol. Science Grad Student Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread
6:00-8:30 p.m. Ken Ivers Asst. Dean of Men Corbin Hall, Conference Room
9:30-11:30 p.m. Dick Schowen, Chemistry Assoc. Prof. Home. 322 Park Hill Terrace *
Wednesday
6:00-8:00 p.m. James Nabors ___ Asst. Dir., Oliver College McCollum Conference Hall
6:30-8:30 p.m. Charles Williams, Speech Communication Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread
8:00-10:00 p.m. Gene Bonny, Walter Broadnax ___ Grad Students Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread
Thursday
Thursday
6:30-8:30 p.m. Bob Shelton, School of Religion Asst. Prof.
Roger Williams, 1629 W. 19th
9:30-11:30 p.m. Wally May, Human Relations Instructor
U.C.C.F., 1204 Oread
Friday
3:00-5:00 p.m. John Myers, Admissions Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread
6:30-8:30 p.m. Dr. Ralph Christoffersen, Chemistry ___ Asst. Prof. Home, 1809 W. 21st Terrace
8:00-10:00 p.m. Geoffrey & Nancy Steere, American Studies ___ Asst. Prof. Home, 1749 W. 20th St.
YOU WILL WANT TO KNOW
Each session will involve study. Study papers will be used in the context of the course. There will be no outside reading. The study papers are to provide information and to springboard the discussion.
Each person is responsible for the success of his D.E.G. The faculty and administrative participants are facilitators, not lecturers, teachers, baby sitters, etc. etc. Those who need to be entertained will not be interested in these sessions.
The course on White Racism is sponsored by the University Christian movement. Participating in U.C.M. are: Newman Club, U.C.C.F. Roger Williams Fellowship, Lutherans, KU-Y and Wesley Foundation.
- Enrollment fee—$2.00
- The deadline for enrollment is Wednesday, October 3,
at 5:00 p.m.
- Questions???? Call Wesley Foundation. VI 3-7151
- Enroll immediately at Wesley; across from Union
Monday, September 30, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
KU engineers expand technical magazine
The "Kansas Engineer," a magazine published by the KU School of Engineering, will be broadened this year to cover various areas of student life.
Kyle Van, Coffeyville senior and editor, believes this year's magazine will be less technical. He said, "The average student will be able to read and understand this year's magazine."
Van said, "In the past, the 'Kansas Engineer' deviated from its original purpose—a forum for students and faculty to express opinions, problems and changes in the student and faculty."
Although past issues were of good quality, he said, "Perhaps, it was too well written and too articulate. The 'Kansas Engineer' of the past was aimed at the technical person."
Van said, "The engineering student does not have time to take the necessary courses to broaden his understanding of other fields; it is our duty to bring these fields to him."
The first edition of the magazine will be released in early November. Students and teachers, as well as administrators will
Savings and loan execs meet Oct. 5
A movie of the KU-Ilinois football game, a speech contest, a dance, and attendance at the KU-New Mexico football game Oct. 5 will highlight the 20th annual Kansas Savings and Loan Institute Thursday through Saturday at the Kansas Union.
Dr. Clifford D. Clark, new dean of the KU School of Business will welcome the executives in behalf of the sponsors which include the Kansas Savings and Loan League and the University of Kansas Extension.
be included in this new edition. It will contain articles by James B. Tiedemann, head of student faculty relations in engineering; William P. Smith, dean of engineering, who will present the administration viewpoint; Kirk Vann, "An Expose on the Draft;" and Mark Lord, "Linear Programming in Industry."
The staff of the 1968 "Kansas Engineer" includes Kyle Vanz and David Mourning, co-editors; John Hoverson, business manager.
Czechs fear Dubcek loss
PRAGUE (UPI)—Fears persisted among Czechoslovakus Sunday that the embattled reform regime of Alexander Dubcek is soon to be purged despite high-level denials that the housecleaning is one of the prices to be paid for withdrawal of Warsaw Pact occupation forces.
Dubcek himself is said to be on the Moscow purge list but may escape being ousted as Communist party first secretary because of his tremendous popularity among the masses.
Rank-and-file sources in the Czechoslovak Communist party said they and their comrades are unconvinced by a speech by Gustav Husak, the tough Slovak party leader, rejecting what he called "the hysteria" over an alleged Moscow-ordered purge.
A number of party locals sent resolutions to Prague protesting any plans to change the leadership without free elections and urging an early party congress to rid the ruling committees of diehard Stalinists.
DALAT, S. VIETNAM: South Vietnamese soldiers leave their posts to cheer Olympic cyclists as they train in Vietnam's central highlands. Bui Van Huang, left, and Trung Kim Hung, right, are entered in the 200 km. marathon cycling event in the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. (UPI Wirephoto.)
Filipinos demand Sabah
MANILA (UPI)—About 15,000 students demanding return of the Malaysian state of Sabah to Philippine control held a mock trial for U.S. State Department press spokesman Robert McCloskey Sunday and hanged him in effigy.
Similar protests were directed against Malaysian Prime Minister Tengky Abdul Rahman and Sir Michael Carver, commander of British forces in the Far East, during the two-hour rally in Manila's Araneta Coliseum.
Malaysia and the Philippines have been engaged in a bitter dispute over Sabah, a 28,000-square-mile territory on Borneo, for years.
It flared into the open with renewed violence two weeks ago when President Ferdinand E. Marcos signed a law proclaiming Philippine sovereignty over the territory which is part of the Malaysian federation.
DOLDRUMS
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.—(UPI)
—The Albuquerque Boxing Board hasn't been too busy lately. The city has no licensed promoters and there hasn't been a professional fight here in more than two years.
RIP REPLACED
HOLLYWOOD —(UPI)— Rip Torn withdrew from the cast of Warner Brothers' "The Rain People" and was replaced by Robert Duvall.
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
2
CORDUROY SPORT COAT
A campus favorite to fit a variety of needs from class to Friday afternoon activities, this classic will combine with all of your slacks. Available in three colors.
MISTER
GUY
4
THE UNIVERSITY DA'LY KANSAN
Monday, September 30, 1968
White indifference
Disenchanted blacks have again focused attention on the white power structure and its failure to measure up to black expectations. The walkout at Lawrence High School and the demands issued by dissident black students have illustrated the failure of white leaders to recognize the urgency of the situation.
The tendency of school administrators is to view the problem as one to be resolved by them and black students. But the demands by black students and the subsequent reaction by administrators transcends the confines of a school building and its educational curriculum. After several summers of violent black revolts, it should be clear that what is at stake affects the entire community. But unfortunately educational leaders to not hold this view.
The high school administration and black students both feel they have done all that is required of them. Obviously, then, the dilemma stems from what each holds to be his required role in effecting change.
The administration says the necessary channels to effect change are open; all that is required of black students is to use them. But while the black students see these same channels, they view them with a skeptical eye, at best. At worst, they think their suggestions of change encounter a deaf bureaucratic ear.
Black students feel that, because they are a minority, their opinions carry little, if any, weight. This attitude can be blamed partially on the degree to which the administration is receptive to minority opinions. But just as the essential problem transcends Lawrence High School to encompass the entire community, so too does the indifferent attitude. Therein lies the thinly drawn line of racial harmony.
The failure of the administration to go beyond the point of mere compensation could mean the difference between peaceful and violent change. And indeed, Lawrence is not immune to the violence that has infected other parts of the nation.
All indicators show the black students of Lawrence High School to be exceptionally responsible and mature individuals. Their demands were reasonable as was the manner they chose to dramatize their grievances.
But there is another attitude present among the black residents of Lawrence. One that believes this city needs to be shaken up in order to wake up. The failure of the high school administration and indeed the entire community to extend a responsible hand further than it deems necessary could well decide which black attitude predominates.
Richard Lundquist Editorial assistant
By John Marshall
Football reflections
"With 8:44 left to play," the story in the Kansas City Star reads, "Don Autry, the fine rookie tail back from Pasadena, Calif., suffered a broken leg when he was clipped . . . in the final period. . ."
And with 6:20 showing on the clock, a freshman sitting in section 24 finished telling his date about a caesarean operation he observed last summer while working at the KU Medical Center.
And you think about getting sick, or about how his date really feels, or about what happened to Don Autry, or why—as you look through your binoculars—the official grabbed Nate Cunningham (Indiana defensive back) by the collar and ran with him to coach Johnny Pont for a short "conference."
Through the binoculars you can see the man in section 11 using his spyglass in an odd sort of way. He unscrews the lens, and voila!
"Carrot juice and vodka," he says after the game. "You get just as drunk, but you can see a belluva lot better."
And then Don Shanklin, in one of the last Jayhawk plays of the game, took a pitchout from Bobby Douglass and ran 65 yards for the final KU touchdown, boosting the score to 37-20.
You look through the binoculars again. The sweat-soaked No. 23 in the endzone, a jubilant skip, other blue and white numbers around him for a second or two, the hand outstretched . . . skin on skin, a rough slap on the back from coach Rodgers, and finally back near the bench for a rest. Number 23.
"Yeah, I was just getting used to calling them 'ngroes' instead of 'niggers,'" a red nose in section 13 slurred. "But now I have to start all
over and begin calling them 'blacks.'"
"Well, dammit, if they play football like that every Saturday, I'll call them whatever they want," the man with the spyglass said.
The head yelleader shouts through the six or seven big gray speakers and the Frosh Hawks and the students and the youngsters selling pop and popcorn respond.
"SHANKLIN . . .," they scream. And then the applause and the roar, and Don Autry is in the hospital by now.
Through the binoculars again, and you wonder why the Lawrence High cheerleaders are not at the game, or where the policemen with the dogs are. The student managers, you can see, are beginning to gather sweaty towels and footballs and spare equipment around the bench.
Twenty-eight seconds on the clock and Don Shanklin is still catching his breath and you know KU is going to win so you head down the steep cement and into the open outside to beat the crowd.
A blue sportcoat with a pale green dress hanging on hurry past you to a station wagon with the back door open. There are four or five couples standing there. quenching...
"Say, wasn't that one run of his great?"
"Yeah, too bad he had to get hurt. But if I know coloreds, he'll be right back in there next week, sweating with the rest of them."
"Yeah," the plaid coat nodded, "they make the best athletes."
Don Shanklin is tired. And Don Autry has a broken leg.
And you think you'd better clean your binoculars before next week's game.
Police riots
After Chicago
Police in the Chicago riots were a far cry from England's stick-swinging bobby. In keeping with the growing unrest in our country, they carried not only the bobby's traditional night stick, but tear gas guns, grenades, automatic weapons, chemical mace and gas masks.
The rioters, less well equipped, had to make do with bottles, stones, garbage and a continual barrage of degrading insults, which seemed to fit in best with the garbage.
There are courageous and deplorable aspects to both sides of this bitter struggle. All police are not sadists. Neither are all members of the New Left. But when placed at odds these two groups need but little provocation to set against one another in vicious combat. When fighting for what they believe in, most men can become at once irrational and sadistic.
The left encouraged confrontation to make a point. Mayor Daley was running a politically bossed machine oriented to oppress not only blacks but all liberal and new left political actions which might interfere with his chain of command. Daley called his reaction justifiable since it maintained law and order by not allowing a situation of anarchy to develop.
Police did overreact in Chicago. In many cases they were provoked. In more, the constant abuse of words and showers of garbage broke their patience. Newsmen, often highly critical of police actions, learned this only too painfully.
But so did demonstrators overreact. Anarchy and violence are shallow and unsteady bases on which to build a political philosophy. If it is necessary to employ militarism to bring about equitable political change then the situation in our country is more hopeless than has been lately apparent.
It is inconceivable that the new left can tear apart the people of a country so long used to domestic peace and prosperity. They can and hopefully will turn our minds toward the problems of race, poverty, hunger and disease which exist in our nation.
Catching criminals is necessary, but ignoring the problems that make them criminals leads us only to larger jails.
Letters to the editor
'Bearded' exposed
To the Editor:
I, for one, am very glad that the UDK had the wisdom to publish the article concerning the "bearded ones" residing at West Hills apartments. It is about time that they were exposed for what they are.
Also, it seems to me that the expose should be taken much farther. All people with glasses should definitely be suspect and probably should be expelled. (A yellowed newspaper tells me that Charles Whitman wore glasses some of the time and because of it killed seventeen innocent people.)
All males named Richard must also be singled out and brought to justice. (Another article tells me that Richard Speck killed eight student nurses—because of that first name and all that must necessarily go with it.)
Most indisputable in this train of logic is the evidence found in
nearly any daily newspaper, which tells about the murders or rapes committed by members of the Caucasian, Negroid and Mongolian races. Race is obviously the cause.
The non-spectacled, non-Richard, non-Caucasian, non-Negroid people of the world must unit in order to preserve the clean, right and rational tenets on which a society must be based.
Sincerely yours, Richard Moore
Newgroom—UN 4-3646
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Newroom-Un 4-3646
Published at the University of Kansas daily newsletter. You may except holidays and examination periods.
Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester.
$10 a year. Second class postage paid
within Kansas. Special offers, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin.
necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
YES MY FRIENDS HUBERT
HUMPHEY THE LEADER IS
DIFFERENT THAN HUBERT
HUMPHEY THE FOLLOWER.
A. F. W. SMITH
HUBERT HUMPREY THE GUN IS DIFFERENT THAN HUBERT HUMPREY THE MACE.
HUBERT HUMPHREY THE CONDUCTOR IS DIFFERENT THAN HUBERT HUMPHREY THE ORCHESTRA.
TED BURTON
JOHN A. WILLIAMS
ALL HUBERT HUMPIREYS ARE SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHER HUBERT HUMPIREYS.
HUBERT HUMPHREY THE CAPTAIN IS DIFFERENT THAN HUBERT HUMPHREY THE TEAM.
29
100
AND I AM THEY.
EVERYHUMPHREY!
**Davis**
HUBERT HOMPIREY THE SHERIFF IS DIFFERENT THAN HUBERT HOMPIREY THE POSSE.
2
Monday, September 30, 1960
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Happy
HAPPINESS IS ?
From looking through the window of the basement of Haworth Hall, one can tell what happiness isn't. Whatever happens or whoever works in the basement, it's sure that they are reminded to keep smiling.
Radio staff desperate without men's room
Since last March the staff and management of campus radio, KUOK, have been broadcasting under the most unfortunate circumstances.
They have been entirely without access to a men's room in Hoch Auditorium.
This extreme hardship manifests itself about every 30 minutes, especially on weekends when broadcasting operation continues 24 hours daily, said Tom Fredrics, Milwaukee, Wis., senior and KUOK production manager.
After failing to find an answer to the problem, the staff turned to the office of the Chancellor Thursday.
"Whether one views this situation from a legal standpoint, realizing the violation of building and sanitary codes, or from the standpoint of lavatory security which is the utmost concern of the buildings and grounds department, or from the stand-point of the individual's biological necessities, the answer is still the same: KUOK needs a key to the southeast men's room in Hoch Auditorium," said a letter to the Chancellor from the KUOK staff.
Jay Janes start year in new outfits
The Jay Janes, dressed in new blue jumpers and white blouses began the new year at the KU-Indiana game. The group announced recently a selection of 26 new members.
The 80-woman upperclass pep club forms a cheering section at all home football and basketball games, and also sponsor five service projects. They also act as official University hostesses and usher at University events.
One project, the homecoming mum sale, provides scholarship awards to upperclass women.
Dixie Underwood, Lawrence junior and Jay Jane president, announced as new members—Pat Bartee, Topeka sophomore; Helen Byrne; Sharry Bogner; Shirley Chambers; Judy DeGroot, Tacoma sophomore; Mary Dodson, Topeka sophomore; Diane Fleming; Pat Foltz; Carol Gilmore; Bobby Hudson, Muskogee, Okla., sophomore, and Nancy Johnson, Denison sophomore.
Connie Kloefforn, Caldwell junior; Cheryl McCain, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Joyce Monchil; Susan Mowder; Franci Muller, St. Louis, Mo., senior; Gail Skaggs, Pratt junior; Walta Slagle; Diana Smith; Mary Snyder, Elmhurst, Ill., sophomore; Martha Sortor, Kansas City junior; Joan Steel; Susan Wagner, Webster Groves, Mo., junior; Judy White, Prairie Village sophomore; Connie Witt, Wichita sophomore, and Dorothy Witter, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore.
The request has not been answered yet, Fredrics said last night.
Until KUOK gets a key, the staff will continue using its substitute facilities, a big tree growing just east of Hoch Auditorium.
Welcoming party held by Greeks
A rumored SDS demonstration failed to materialize at KU's first all-fraternity block party on Stewart Avenue Saturday night.
Six fraternities, Phi Kappa Theta, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Theta Tau, Alpha Epsilon Pi and Alpha Kappa Lambda sponsored the event. They believe it to be the first party with such a large Greek sponsorship.
Irv Robinson, Prairie Village sophomore and chairman of the event, said the party had two purposes. The first was to welcome Theta Tau, Alpha Epsilon Pi and Phi Kappa Theta to the block. The second was to bring the Greek houses closer together.
terriill's
KNITTING
featuring
BERNAT
YARNS
terriill's
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
803 Mass. St.
A student-run organization offering members a chance for a business traineeship in any of 42 foreign countries holds its first membership meeting Tuesday.
AISEC offers foreign traineeships
terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. St.
AISEC, an international organization for business and economics majors, will be addressed by Clifford Clark, dean of the business school, at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 404, Summerfield Hall. Clark is faculty advisor for the group.
Seven KU students have obtained business traineeships with companies such as Royal Dutch Shell, Norelco and Icelandic Airways through the group.
Bud Zackary, Wichita senior and a trainee in a Norwegian firm during the summer, explained, "The core idea of AISEC is built around job training in foreign countries." Zack-
More than 2,000 high school students will tour KU's science facilities Oct. 12, the 17th Annual Science, Mathematics and Engineering Dav.
Twenty-three KU departments sponsor the day which is designed to show science-oriented students what KU offers them.
Science day here Oct.12
AISEC is entering its fourth year at KU. The parent organization was founded in France in 1948.
The day begins for the high school youngsters at 8 a.m. with registration in Hoch Auditorium H. Glenn Wolfe, associate professor of zoology and chairman of the event, said that some western Kansas students begin their trek to KU as early as 3 a.m.
In morning sessions two KU professors, Richard K. Moore and Edward E. Smissman will deliver short lectures concerning particular scientific projects on which they are currently working.
Students then travel to counseling sessions where a staff member in their department of interest will discuss the types of jobs available in their particular field, current research problems in the field and training necessary for a career in a chosen profession.
Later in the afternoon, each department will sponsor an open house featuring exhibits of the department's work.
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
20TH CENTURY-FOX presents
WALTER MATTHAU
ANNE JACKSON
PATRICK O'NEAL
in GEORGE AXELROD 5
"THE SECRET LIFE
OF AN
AMERICAN WIFE"
color by
DeLuxe
SMA
Mat. 2:30, Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Starts Wednesday
SALT & PEPPER
---
color by
DeLuxe
SMA
ary said that in order for local groups to send members abroad, traineeships for foreign students must be obtained from local firms.
"THE SECRET LIFE OF AN AMERICAN WIFE"
Zackary said that AISEC members would have the opportunity to meet top-level local businessmen in attempting to obtain jobs for foreign students. Working with faculty members was another advantage Zackary listed for AISEC members.
Greeks defy vote edict
ATHENS (UPI)-The Greek military government Sunday won the landslide "yes" vote it demanded for its proposed constitution. But one quarter of registered Greek voters declined to vote for the restrictive document in spite of threatened penalties for non-voting.
With complete returns counted from 3,107 of the nation's 8,050 polling stations, 96.9 per cent voted "yes" and 3.1 per cent voted no to the constitution that makes a figurehead of the self-exiled king, curtails civilian political and civil liberties and butresses the military junta.
Government spokesman Vyron Stamatopoulos said about 26 per cent of registered voters did not go to the polls. He explained the absenteeism as due in large part to the fact that many voters have left Greece since the last registration in 1960. He said it was not unusual.
Under a five-year-old royal decree, persons under 70 years of
age who do not vote can be jailed, fined and lose various rights.
Five and one half million Greeks were eligible to vote.
The government that took power in April 1967 put on an intensive publicity blitz urging voters to say "yes" to their constitution. There was virtually no opposition campaign.
Voter opposition to the document appeared to run highest in the cities. Incomplete returns from Athens showed the "no" vote there was running at 20 per cent, whereas early rural returns showed the "no" vote at less that one per cent in some areas.
The referendum was conducted under martial law decree and was the first vote on any issue since the military takeover 17 months ago.
The constitution, in brief, provides for a strong executive branch, a parliament with limited powers and a figurehead king. It keeps civil liberties and press freedom suspended until the government decides to reinstate them.
KU-Y budget set at 20,000 level
The KU-Y has proposed a budget of almost $20,000 for the coming year.
Ward Coleman, Boise, Idaho, senior and co-president, proposed a budget of $19,320 at a recent meeting of the organization.
He said most of the funds would be raised from the Rock Chalk Revue, an annual program of satire produced in the spring.
Also announced at the meeting was an international gift fair to be held the first week in November. Coleman said the fair is designed to encourage interaction with foreign students and to provide an opportunity for early
Granada
THEATRE 2 - Telephone N13-5784
IF YOU'RE THIRTY,
YOU'RE THROUGH!
52% of the Nation is under 25 and they've got power. That's how Max Frost at 24, became President of the United States.
This is perhaps the most unusual motion picture you will ever see!
Shelley Christopher Diane
WINTERS ★ JONES ★ VARSI
Shelley Christopher Diane
WINTERS ★ JONES ★ VARSI
STARRING IN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL'S
WILD IN THE STREETS
Evenings—7:15-9:15
"PETULIA"
Starts Wednesday
WILD IN THE STREETS
Christmas shopping.
The program followed a "Peanuts" theme, with several representatives of various emphasis committees costumed as the comic strip characters.
Coleman, pleased with the turnout for the meeting, said, "We hope to get the membership up to over 1,000 people—the need is that great."
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
ENDS TUESDAY!
The hanging was the best show in town!
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40
CLINT
EASTWOOD
IN
"HANG'EM
HIGH"
AND "IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT"
Open 6:30—Starts Dusk
— Wednesday —
"RACHEL,
RACHEL"
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 30, 1968
76
45
Jayhawk quarterback Bobby Douglass finds a hole in the Indiana line during Saturday's game at Memorial Stadium. This play went for 71 yards and a KU touchdown in the fourth quarter. (Kansan photo by Greg Sorberg.)
National Football League Western Conference Coastal Division
Pro standings
W. L. T. L. Pct. Pts. O.P.
Baltimore 3 0 0 1.000 96 37
Baltimore Angels 3 0 0 1.000 66 37
San Francisco 2 0 0 .603 73 57
Alanta 3 0 0 1.000 73 57
Atlanta 3 0 0 1.000 73 57
Minnesota 2 1 0 .667 90 47
Detroit 2 1 0 .667 78 47
Green Bay 1 2 0 .333 60 52
Chicago 1 2 0 .333 55 97
Eastern Conference Capitol Division
Dallas 3 0 0 1.000 132 32
New York 3 0 0 1.000 116 16
Washington 1 2 0 3.33 71 153
Philadelphia 1 2 0 0.00 11 109
Oakland 3 0 0 1.000 119 42
San Diego 3 0 0 1.000 107 32
Kansas City 3 0 0 759 102
Chicago 2 2 0 .500 11 93
Denver 3 0 0 1.000 10 78
American Football League Eastern Division
New Orleans 1 2 0 .333 67 62
St. Louis 1 2 0 .333 51 79
Cleveland 1 2 0 .333 37 62
Pittsburgh 1 2 0 .300 37 112
New York 2 1 1 0 .667 102 80
Boston 2 1 0 1 0 .667 71 70
Houston 1 3 0 250 70
Miami 1 3 0 250 73 133
Houston 0 3 0 .000 34 119
American League
Baltimore 41, Pittsburgh 78
Chicago 27, Minnesota 17
Colorado 30, Florida 9
Los Angeles 24, Cleveland 6
San Francisco 28, Atlanta 13
New York 48, Washington 21
Dallas 45, Philadelphia 13
ATLANTA (UPI)—Hank Aaron hit his 510th career home run, a two-run smash 400 feet over the center field fence in the sixth inning Sunday, to power the Atlanta Braves to a 2-1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The homer, his 29th of the season, left the 34-year-old Aaron just one shy of Mel Ott for seventh place on the all-time home run list.
The victory enabled the Braves to wind up their season at the .500 mark 81-81 and finish in fifth place for the fifth time in seven years. The Dodgers wom up seventh with a 76-86 record.
Boston 20, Denver 17
Buffalo 37, New York 35.
Oakland 24, Houston 15.
San Diego 31, Cincinnati 10.
Yesterday's Games National League
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
18 Conn.. Law. Ph. Ph. VI 3-2921
Aaron hits 510th
Pont lauds Hawks
1218 Comm., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
AFL Game Played Saturday Kansas City 48, Miami 3.
Big Eight roundup
Coach John Pont leaned against the locker room wall holding a chocolate drink in his hand. His Indiana Hoosiers had just lost to the Kansas Jayhawks 38-20.
Shanklin said after the game that it was his most exciting game in college.
by Jack Pauley Kansan Sports Writer
While KU outran Indiana 38-20, other active Big 8 teams did well against non-conference foes.
"We've still got eight more games to go," he said, tilting his head back and grasping his neck with his hand to massage it. "They just blew us off the field."
Missouri, springing back after a 12-6 loss to Kentucky last week, routed Illinois 44-0 in Champaign. It was the second week in a row that the Illini have been defeated by Big 8 teams. KU beat them 47-7 two weeks ago.
"They just ran away from us," Pont said and then took a sip from his drink. "They're really a fast team."
Both head coaches were impressed with the other team's speed. Each said the other's team was one of the three fastest teams in the nation. One week earlier Indiana's Pont had not considered KU as one of the top five fastest teams.
Though Pont was not happy about losing, he was not panic-stricken either.
This Saturday was the second in a row for Big 8 teams to post winning records. Going 3-2 this time, they were 4-3 last week. Four of the seven victories were against Big 10 teams.
Helping to provide much of the wind was Kansas tailback Donnie Shanklin. He rushed eight times for 159 yards, including touchdown jaunts of 54 and 65 yards. He also returned a punt for 59 yards and a touchdown.
The Big 8 suffered only one other defeat when K-State lost to Penn State 25-9. The Wildcats held a 9-7 halftime lead, but gave up two TDs in the third quarter.
Quarterback Bob Douglass may have executed one of the longest quarterback sneaks in history with 4:26 to go in the fourth quarter when he jumped across the line of scrimmage to find open field ahead of him, and ran 71 yards for a score.
"I felt good at the beginning of the game," Shanklin said. "I saw daylight and went to it."
Bill Bell kicked a fieldgoal with 0:04 to go in the first half and sophomore fullback John Riggins plunged one yard only 2:36 after the opening kickoff for the other scores.
KU Coach Pepper Rodgers thought Shanklin's running was the most important factor in Kansas' favor in the game.
Rodgers was eating a beef sandwich and drinking a coke when he remembered last year when he put Shanklin at flanker instead of tailback.
"Shanklin put on the best running effort I have ever seen," Rodgers said.
"That won't be the last big mistake I ever make; I hope you newsmen forgive me for that," he quipped.
Tommy Anderson drew praise from Rodgers also.
"Anderson's interception was a great play. I'm not saying it saved the game, but it stopped that drive," he said.
Jayhawk tailback Don Autry suffered a broken leg when he was clipped during the fourth quarter. He is out for the season. Linebacker Mickey Doyle was also injured, but it was not believed to be serious. He will probably see action next weekend.
Anderson's interception came with 6:58 left in the game with KU clinging to a 24-12 lead. Indiana had gone from the Kansas 28 to the 6-yard line on two runs by John Isenbarger when Anderson intercepted.
Earlier, in the second quarter, Anderson had picked off another Harry Gonso pass on the Kansas 25 and returned it to the Indiana 39.
Out in California the Colorado Buffs lost to California in a tough fought game, 10-0.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Kan—Douglass 71 run (Bell kick)
Ettinger Tattler tackled in end zone by Pepi
In two games, Shanklin has now scored five touchdowns. His next chance will come Saturday when the Jayhawks meet New Mexico in Memorial Stadium.
Also bouncing back from an opening season loss was Oklahoma. The Sooners whipped North Carolina State 28-14. The Sooners were defeated by Notre Dame in their opener, 45-21.
RECEIVING
indiana Kansas
First downs 21 13
Rushing yardage 291 388
Passing yardage 151 60
Knee yardage 20 187
Passes 9-25-3 6-15
Punts 8-48 8-41
Fumbles lost 2
Yards penalized 49 119
Ind.-Isenbarger 4 run (pass failed).
Kan.-Shanklin 4 run (Bell kick).
Ind.-Douglas 14 pass from Isen-
barger (pass failed).
INDIANA ... 0 0 6 14—20
KANSAS ... 7 10 17 38
KANSAS--Shanklin 8-159, Douglass
16-99, John Riggins 12-68, Junior Riggins
1-12, Autry 6-23, Jackson 1-8,
Ettinger 4-9, Rucker 1-20, Reeves 3-10
INDIANA--Pogue 6-27, Gonso 1-6
27, Permell 17-112, Thompson 4-
5.
Nebraska won its third in a row by sneaking past Big 10 power Minnesota, 17-14. The Gophers are expected to give Purdue a run for the Big 10 title.
Kan—John Riggins 1 run (Bell kick).
Ind—Pemmel 25 run pass failed.
Manklink 65 run (Bell kick)
=44,000
Kan.—FG Bell 21
PUNTING
Kan — Shanklin 59 punt return (Bell kick).
RUSHING
KANAS-S Mosier 3-20, Junior Riggins 1-25, McGowan 2-15.
INDIANA—Butcher 2-30, Douglas 2-15,
2-23, Gage 1-15, Isenbarger 2-56
INDIANA—Gonso 9-23-137 (3 in-
terceptions), Isenbarger 1-2-14.
KANSAS—Bell 6-42.0, Shanklin 2-
36.5.
INDIANA—Iisenbarger 7-46.3, Pernnell 1-59.0.
College Scores
Big Eight
Area College
California 10, Colorado 0.
Missouri 44, Illinois 0.
Kansas 38, Indiana 20.
Penn State 25, Kansas State 9.
Nebraska 17, Minnesota 14.
Oklahoma 28, North Carolina State
Central Methodist 55, Illinois College, 13.
Lincoln 21, Arkansas A. M. & N. 8
Denison 21, Washington (St. Louis)
Louis 5, Bethel 0,
Ottawa 55, Bedel 20,
Arkansas A, M & N 9
lege. 13.
College of Emporia 20, Bethany 7.
Missouri Valley
North Texas State 17. Colorado
State 12.
Big Ten
Tennessee 24, Memphis State 17.
Missouri 44, Illinois 0.
Kansas 38, Missouri 1.
Massachusetts 17, Michigan 14.
Michigan State 28, Baylor 10.
Southern California 24, Northwest-
Southern California 24, Northwestern 7.
Ohio State 35, Southern Methodist
Washington 21, Wisconsin 17.
Michigan 31. Duke 10.
Southeast Conference
Tennessee 24, Memphis State 17.
Alabama 17. Southern Mississippi.
Auburn 26, Mississippi State 0.
Florida 9, Florida State 3.
Vanderbilt 17, Army 13.
14. Auburn 26. Mississippi State 0.
Southwest Conference
Ohio State 28, Southern Methodist
14.
South Carolina 32. North Carolina 27.
Michigan State 28, Baylor 10.
Oklahoma 28, North Carolina State 14
Michigan 31. Duke 10.
ASK THE GIRL DOWN THE HALL SHE GETS HER HAIR DONE AT Marinello's
1119 Massachusetts
843-3330
Terry Beasley - Michael Fisher Linda & Carol
Special Sale on Falls & Hair Pieces
CALHOUN'S has the Up Beat Button Downs by Arrow and McGregor
by Arrow and McGregor
Long sleeve buttondown shirts in luxurious fabrics of 65% Dacron polyester, 35% cotton. Wide track stripes, plaids, tattersalls and fall's rich darker shades. No iron shirts that tumble dry to a wrinkle-free finish. University fashioned long point collar for the right casual roll. Tapered body for the new lean look in fashion. All popular sizes and colors. Most styles priced from $6.50.
Calkoun's
1744 Massachusetts 6th and Michigan
Monday, September 30, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Timmons indicates optimism for Jayhawk track team
by Luis F. Santos Kansan Sports Writer
Track coach Bob Timmons predicts a bright season for KU this year and the possibility of two NCAA crowns.
"This will be the finest team Kansas has had since 1960," said Timmons, adding that the 1960 team won the outdoor track championship that year. KU also won the 1965 indoor NCAA crown.
KU's team includes two world record holders, Ryun in the mile, the 1,500 meters and in the 880 yards, and senior George Byers in the indoor 60-yard low hurdles. Timmons also pointed out that Salb holds the all-Big 8 shotput record and that Salb broke Randy Matson's (Texas A & M) freshman national shotput record. Salb placed fourth in the Olympic trouts.
Timmons described his team as a strong threat in both meets.
Four KU tracksters tried out for the Olympic team, Timmons said. Seniors Jim Ryun and Stan Whitley, sophomore Karl Salb and freshman Bob Bornkessel all traveled to Lake Tahoe. Only Ryun qualified, in the 1,500 meters.
Bornkessel bettered the national high school 400 meter hurdle mark by almost two seconds, said Timmons. The coach cited other nationally ranked members of KU's track team: spinner Julio Meade, hurdler Ken Gaines and long jumper Ron Jessee.
Other track standouts on KU's team are sprinters Randy Julian, Mickey Mathews, Jim Hatcher,
Baseball season full of surprises
NEW YORK (UPI) -So you looked into the crystal ball last spring and saw the St. Louis Cardinals and Detroit Tigers winning the pennants.
But did you also see:
The Tigers making a runaway of a race that figured to go down the wire as it had the year before?
Denny McLain, coming off a 17-16 season, winning 30 games for the first such achievement since Dizzy Dean in 1934?
Carl Aystrmemski of the Boston Red Sox, batting around .300 but still favored to repeat as American League bat champ?
The New York Yankees, rated near the bottom, scrambling into the first division?
The Chicago White Sox struggling to avoid the cellar and Al Lopez managing them?
Pitchers tossing shutouts in record clusters in both leagues?
Veteran Jim Bunning of Pittsburgh losing roughly three times as often as he won and with all that Pirate batting potential behind him?
Four-time NL bat champ Roberto Clemente of the Pirates hitting under .280 well into September?
Pete Rose of Cincinnati leading both leagues at that point with.341?
Jim Northrup of the Tigers, who had hit only three grand slam homers in the majors, hitting two in one doubleheader, three within five days and leading both leagues with four for the year by mid-September?
Long-time outfielder Rocky Colavito pitching 2 2/3 of middle-inning relief and gaining a victory over the Tigers in the first game of an Aug. 25 doubleheader and then winning the second with a homer while in the lineup as an outfielder?
Jim "Catfish" Hunter of the Oakland Athletics pitching a perfect game against the Minnesota Twins?
If you saw all that, you have the only uncracked crystal ball in existence and probably are sunning yourself on the French Riviera with the future secured by winning long shot bets.
Neil Caterson and John Jackson;
Doug Knop in discus; Steve Wilhelm in shot; Bill Penney in the hammer; Thorn Bigley in the mile; Rich Elliot in the three mile; Rodger Cathol in the half mile; Glenn Cunningham in the three mile; Mike Hayes in the three or six mile and Jay Mason in the three mile, said Timmons.
The indoor season runs from Jan. 31 to March 14, ending with the NCAA championship in Detroit. Outdoor track debuts at UCLA on March 29 and concludes June 12 with the NCAA championship in Knoxville, Tenn.
Cross country is first in the long track season. The Big 8 cross country schedule starts at Oklahoma State on Oct. 5, and extends through Nov. 25 when the National Collegiate Cross Country Championship at Van Cortland Park, New York takes place.
Timmons expects the toughest competition in the Big Eight to come from Missouri, Nebraska and K-State, both outdoors and indoors.
KU basketball team is big
by Dick Dean
Kansan Sports Writer
"Big" is the word which best describes the 1968-69 Jayhawk varsity basketball team. Eight players are listed at 6-4 or taller with two at 6-10, one at 6-9 and two at 6-8.
According to information released by Jay Simon, KU sports information director, head coach Ted Owens has nine returning lettermen, a large number of sophomore prospects from last year's undefeated freshman team, and the addition of a junior college transfer standout.
Up from the freshmen team and shooting for starting berths are:
Name Ht. Wt. Age Ps.
Fred Bosilev 6-4 190 19 F
The returning lettermen are:
Name HR HW HC Age. Pos.
Arndt 8-12 7-10 6-9 21
Bradshaw 6-3 19 Jr. 21-G F
Greg Douglas 6-8 220 Jr. 21 J
Cromorne 6-4 120 Jr. 21 G
C Lawrence 6-4 185 Jr. 20 G
Dave Nash 6-1 120 Sr. 22 G
Bruce Sloan 6-2 120 Sr. 21 G
Joe Sloan 6-2 205 Sr. 21 G
Jo Jo White 6-1 190 Sr. 22 G
Ken Morgaed 6-3 194 19 G
Roger Brown 6-10 226 18 C
Dave Robishc 6-9 233 18 F
Pierre Russell 6-3 198 18 F
Also listed is Jim Hoffman, a 6-7, 220 pounder, who was held out of varsity competition last year. Hoffman, who is from Chicago, will be listed as a sophomore. The juco transfer is Tim Natsues from Fresno, Calif. Natsues is a 6-2 guard who averaged 25.6 points a game last year for Fresno City College.
Owens said White would join
KU returns six out of the seven top scorers from last year's squad, which compiled a 22-8 record including a runner up finish in the National Invitational Tournament.
Heading the list is All-American Jo Jo White who will play basketball for the United States in the Olympics this fall. The slick ball-handler, who led KU last year with a 15.3 per game average, has just 18 games remaining with the Jayhawks because of NCAA eligibility rules. White will run out of NCAA eligibility before the season ends.
the team Oct. 29 after the completion of the Olympic games. Practice will start for the rest of the squad on Oct. 15. He said he would like to have White for the entire season, but feels White's experience will help get KU off to a good conference start noting that four of the first five conference games will be played on the road.
A goal which Owens and his team will be trying to reach this year will be to be the first school ever to win 1,000 basketball games. At the beginning of the 1968-69 season KU will be in second place behind Oregon State (988) and ahead of Kentucky (983). KU has recorded a total of 984 victories.
Commenting about the 1,000 mark Owens said, "It would be a privilege for the team to bring this honor to the state of Kansas, to the University and to all fromer coaches and players connected with the basketball program at one time or another."
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
BULLY SPORTS
HORSE PLAID SUIT
1010101010
TORO DE FILLO
They are that, and a great deal more! Our sports coats in bulliest woollens, fit like none other, thanks to our meticulous care in the try-on. They wear like none other, since we refuse to stock any less than superior. And they flatter, gentlemen, in the richest colours and patterns of '68.
TUXEDO JACKET
THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Uptown 25755
Uptown VI 3-5755
University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr.
On the Hill VI 3-4633
(2)
Van Gogh Buffet
Picasso Klee
Cezanne Feininger
Renoir Dufy
Utrillo Homer
Braque Monet
Degas Modigliani
Vermeer Rembrandt
Matisse Remington
Rouault Lautrec
Vincent van Gogh
ALL PRINTS $1.00
the F Print Sale
Be sure to come early to see size reproductions of world and the great drawings series
Wedne
e Fall int le
M. C. D'URGUE
dnesday, October 2
ne early to see the limited supply of gallery tions of world-famous paintings in full color drawings series.
XV
Le Diable
kansas BOOKSTORE union
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 30,1968
Med Center, KU share classroom
Besides the more conventional means of communication between the Lawrence campus and the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, like the six cent stamp or Alexander Graham Bell's fantastic invention, the campuses are connected by closed circuit television.
Located in Bailey Hall, the TV room is used for fifteen class periods weekly. Some are classes and others are faculty conferences. It is also used to transmit special conferences and short term classes to the Medical Center.
Although classes may be transmitted from either Lawrence or
Chemistry prof gets NSF grant
A $41,500 National Science Foundation grant has been awarded to Richard L. Schowen, professor of chemistry, for research on proton transfer and heavy atom reorganization.
The grant will finance research for two years. The research, concerning the study of how biological systems regulate themselves with catalysts, will be headed by Schowen, assisted by V. P. Vitello and several graduate and undergraduate students.
The graduate students, all in chemistry, are Mrs. Rhonda Bacon, Lawrence; Charles Bazikian, Weehuaken, N.J.; Dennis Drake, Pueblo, Colo; and Charles Hopper, Terre Haute, Ind. The undergraduate students, both seniors in pre-medicine are Gary Ochs, Hoisington, and Marc Jacobson, Leawood.
New campus ministers installed
Rev, Rafael Sanchez Jr. and Rev, Otto Zingel were installed as campus ministers of the United Campus Christian Fellowship during a service at 7:30 p.m.last night at the U.C.C.F., 1204 Oread.
Sanchez, a native of Puerto Rico and graduate of KU, has served as pastor in Kansas and Wisconsin.
While serving as campus minister at Wisconsin U., he was the coordinator for the Latin American Population Problems conference.
Zingg is a graduate of Rutgers University. Recently, he completed work for a Th.M. under a Danforth Campus Ministry Grant.
Robert Evans named as fellow
Robert Evans has been named Pan American Petroleum Foundation faculty doctoral fellow in geology at KU for 1968-69.
The announcement of Evans' selection was released by Dr. William M. Merrill, chairman of the department of geology and by C. F. Bedford, vice president of the foundation.
Evans' tuition and fees for the year plus a stipend of $3,600 and a $1,000 grant to the University are covered by the grant.
New York Cleaners
Kansas City, most classes originate in Lawrence.
One of the teachers who has both Lawrence and Kansas City students, Norman Yetman of the sociology department, admitted to feeling hammy in front of the camera. But he also said that TV classes were effective only for lectures.
He said it was difficult to talk freely with the TV student.
Nancy Winkler, Kansas City, said, "I feel self conscious when I walk in the door. It's easier to watch him on TV."
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Marsha McClain, a nursing student at the Med Center, told her feelings on the TV classroom via camera, "I feel inhibited."
Lee Cramer, also a nursing student, said, "It's not as free a communication as in a real classroom situation."
Everyone seems to concur that while the TV classroom is valuable and interesting it does not substitute for a real classroom or a real teacher.
Steve Parker, Rochester, N.Y., junior, has a place to live until Oct. 20, when he will move out of his West Hills apartment.
Beards can stay 3 weeks, no rent
Parker was previously threatened with eviction from his apartment effective today, if he did not shave his beard.
The eviction notice was issued by Wilbur Almquist, manager of the apartment, who called bearded students a "threat to the security of female tenants at West Hills."
Parker spoke with Alquist last night about moving.
"We told him we were going to move out about Oct. 20, and asked him if we could pay by the day until then. He told us that he already has a new tenant and that we didn't have to pay," Parker said.
"Wilbur was very nice about the whole thing. He apologized for inconveniences and offered to loan us a truck to move with. He also said he would make a settlement on our expenses, like getting the phone - disconnected." Parker said.
Parker said that he and his roommate, Boss Messman, Wichita senior, plan to move into a duplex apartment located on New Jersey street.
"We are really pleased with our new landlord. He's very open-minded, which is quite a far cry from Wilbur," Parker said.
Parker said both he and Messman urged Almquist last night to make it clear to tenants from the beginning that beards aren't allowed, at West Hills.
"If it were in the rules at West Hills," Parker said, "this situation would never have happened. If the management is going to ask people to leave because of beards then it should be in the rules."
Messman said he plans to speak with stockholders from Vickers Oil Co. about having such a rule clearly stated in print.
"If students just stand up for their rights they can accomplish things. I can't understand why there is no agency on campus to protect students from situations like this," Parker said.
"Some people only listen to power or money. We feel if we
hadn't had the power of the UDK press, we couldn't have accomplished as much as we did," said Parker.
Union rents prints Monday
Drab walls and dreary rooms may be brightened Monday by renting framed prints of fine paintings from the Student Union Activities (SUA) Picture Lending Library.
The prints are on display this week in the Kansas Union south lounge for 50 cents per semester.
"Any student, faculty, or staff member is eligible to rent two pictures per semester," said James Congdon, Wilmette, Ill. junior and chairman of the Lending Library. The prints range from Rembrandt to J. Miro. "There are lots of impressionists, surrealists and some Picasso," Congdon said.
The Lending Library was started in 1958 by SUA and most of the prints were donations.
TWA's Group Therapy
Free time and far off places. Going alone or with favorite people. Being open and doing your thing.
Hacking around Central Park...worshipping sun, surf and Big Sur...the total sounds of the Fillmore, East and West...friends, old and new...Hare Krishna from coast to coast...laughing, learning, caring.
Being able to take weekend vacations because you're under twenty-two. Clever enough to stay away from the crowds of old people on their holidays.
Taking advantage of your TWA 50/50 Club Card to roam the US for half the regular fare.
Calling us or your travel agent...then following good vibrations on TWA.
Monday, September 30, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Professionalism is aim of education association
KU'S chapter of the Student Education Association (SEA) will stress professionalism in teaching this year, Cathy Cain, second vice-president in charge of programs, said Friday.
"In the past, teachers weren't supposed to have any opinions, but today, teachers' political involvement is being stressed state and nation-wide." Miss Cain, Sublette senior. said.
The group will hold two student-faculty teas this year, Miss Cain said. These give students and professors opportunities to meet and discuss education on a more casual basis.
At the first SEA meeting, Oct. 10, the group will begin a series of speeches, panel discussions and seminars to help future teachers meet these "radical changes." Lawrence High School music teacher, Chuck Olson, will speak at the first meeting.
Programs on teacher opportunities are scheduled to supplement college class work, Miss Cain said. "In class, we learn very little of the actual problems we'll face as teachers."
Although the local group is part of the National Student Education Association, it works closely with the Kansas State
The staff of the "Cottonwood," formerly the "Cottonwood Review," will issue a onepage issue of "Leaf" within a week.
Cottonwood to print new magazine
"Cottonwood" editor Ken Irving, Rochester, Minn., senior, said "Leaf" is a new subsidiary publication of the "Cottonwood," Kansas University's literary magazine.
Irving said "Leaf" would be issued free this week as part of a sales publicity campaign for the "Cottonwood."
The "Cottonwood Review" was issued only once last year because of a change in editors in mid-year, Irving said.
He said the "Cottonwood" would appear "at least twice" this year, in addition to several issues of "Leaf."
Irving said the "Cottonwood" office, B-118 Kansas Union, is still under repair. However, students wishing to submit poems or fiction may send them to the office or contact Irving.
Irving hopes to "break even" financially this year. The "Cottonwood Review" has lost money for several years, Irving said.
The "Cottonwood" is partially funded through the student organization fund.
Salazar calm following Sat. crisis
LISBON (UPI)—Dr. Antonio Salazar rallied Sunday from a low point in his battle to recover from a massive stroke.
A crisis seemingly was reached Saturday when his pulse leaped to 99 beats a minute and blood pressure dropped sharply.
But at noon Sunday doctors issued a bulletin saying the 79-year-old premier had spent a calm night, that his blood pressure was becoming normal and his general clinical condition changing favorably. The general prognosis was still one of the utmost reserve.
A bulletin Sunday night said there were favorable alterations in the general condition "but the prognosis continues to be grave."
grave.
It was disclosed earlier Sunday that Salazar had left a letter regarding funeral arrangements for himself should the need arise.
Teachers Association in Topeka.
Miss Cain said the SEA Board of Directors at KU will sit in on sessions of the state school board. Each state university has one vote in setting guidelines for local districts in Kansas, she said.
SEA membership is still open. The membership drive will be concluded at the first meeting. "Eliability for membership is not restricted to education majors," she said.
Graduate exam applications due
Applications for the first testing of the graduate record examination must be submitted to Princeton, N.J., by Oct. 8, according to sources in the School of Education guidance bureau.
Any seniors who might begin graduate work are urged to take this exam. It is required by most graduate schools, the sources reported.
The exam will be given at KU in 303 Bailey Hall on Oct. 26. It is a two-part exam: the morning session is an aptitude test and the afternoon portion is an advanced test in any of several specialized areas.
Students may elect to take only one or both parts of the test.
Applications may be picked up in 116 Bailey Hall. The graduate record exam will be given at four other times throughout the year at KU.
Angel Flight seeks to promote a new image
In the past, Angel Flight has been thought of as girls who merely march during half time at home games and act as hostesses at University functions, said Commander Mary Dowell, Haviland senior. She is determined to erase that image.
LUMBER - PLYWOOD Cut to your order
"Drill team practicing, raising money for charity and hostessing are not the main functions of Angel Flight," Miss Dowell said. "Our main duty is to promote the Air Force ROTC and to give the Air Force military a good image on campus."
Angel Flight is a national honorary service organization, sponsors
McConnell Lbr. Co.
844 E.13th VI 3-3877
sored by the Arnold Air Society (AAS). Loyalty to the AAS is the main function of the 60 Flights across the nation, she said.
Miss Dowell continued, "We are proud to wear the Air Forcee 'Blues' and by showing our pride we can also promote the boys."
Working closely with the men of AAS, Angel Flight has earned the respect of many. One of the AFROTC instructors said the Air Force men and Angel Flight women "are part of the present generation that still believe in taking baths and shaving. They are a group of clean cut kids, promoting America."
NY labor may strike
NEW YORK (UPI)—New York City's labor crisis moved inexorably Sunday toward a deadline for potential disaster—a Tuesday morning slowdown by firemen and police which could turn into a full strike by the firemen, and a strike by the city's garbage collectors.
Contracts between the city and the police and garbagemen expire at midnight Monday and with the firemen at 8:45 a.m. Tuesday.
The fire dispute was considered the most serious because not only has the Uniformed Firefighters Association, which represents 10,500 firemen below lieutenant, promised to do nothing but answer emergencies if
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
negotiations fail.
Kustom and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
The Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, which represents 22,000 policemen, was threatening such job actions as refusal to issue parking tickets, but will not strike.
The Uniformed Sanitationmen's Association, which represents 10,000 of the 17,500 garbagemen, has instituted a policy of no contract, no work.
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
Peace vigils to continue
"It's putting one's body out in the public and saying, 'I protest,'" said Louis Wolfe, program coordinator of the Lawrence Peace Center, concerning the weekly peace vigils in South Park.
From noon to 12:30 every Sunday, about 20 persons stand silently in South Park behind a sign that says, "Silent Vigil for Peace in Vietnam - Join Us."
Participants are an "amorphous group of individuals," but maintain the common belief that the war in Southeast Asia should be discontinued," Wolfe said.
Remarking on the effectiveness of the protest, Wolfe said, "As one of a large series of small, individual acts, it is important."
The peace vigil was begun in Lawrence in March 1967, by students and townpeople. The idea came from a pamphlet, "Weekly Vigil for Peace—Conduct of Silent Witness," published by a Santa Barbara, Calif., participant in one of the first peace vigils.
A statement prepared soon after the inauguration of the Lawrence group says, "We shall continue to be here until the Johnson administration is also convinced that peace is the real interest of the U.S.-not war."
SATURDAY, OCT. 5
ARENA 8:30 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
Kansas City, Mo.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
at Auditorium Box Office
$2.50, 3, 3.50, 4, 5
Mail Orders Now. Send self-addressed stamped-envelope with cashiers check or money order to Aud. Box Office.
Exclusively on Warner Brothers Records
IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary
THE FALL LOOK IN LOW HEELS
featuring the new can opener heel
MARY JANE
Black, Chestnut, Newport
Blue and Tristan Red Kid
$16
VALLEY
Black or Brown Patent
$16
FASHION RIGHT
Bel-Airs
FLUTE
Blue Calf, Black Patent and
Burlwood Patent
$16
BONNIE
Brown Antique Patent
$17
Weavers
901 Mass.
VI 3-6360
M
MARY JANE'S HEELS
Bel-Airs
Weavers
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 30,1968
Grad students want voice
A graduate student in the School of Education, selected by fellow students, may be on the search committee for a new dean in the School of Education.
Approximately 40 graduate students in the School of Education, led by Carl Koemig, Dearborn, Mich., graduate student in special education, met and discussed student participation on the search committee to replace Kenneth E. Anderson, whose recent resignation becomes effective in July.
Although dissension ruled the gathering, five students were selected and placed on a ballot to be presented to the graduate student body in the School of Education Monday.
Koenig said that several faculty members, when they heard of Anderson's resignation, put forth the idea that students be placed with faculty members on the committee to look for a new dean.
Dean Anderson, also at the meeting, clarified Koenig's statement. "All the voting members of the faculty were told to send in three names of faculty members and three students, undergraduate or graduate. We then nominated three students, each of us. We didn't have to, but we could."
Koenig said, "If we are going to have representation, then we, the graduate students, should come together and choose the graduate student representative ourselves." He said he felt the group present should select representatives and present them to persons responsible for the selection committee. "I think that out of the representatives we choose, if one would be selected for the committee, that would be sufficient."
Dean Anderson said, "I think it's worthwhile to meet. But the problem is, there are 600 graduate students in the School of Education."
Five students, not all of whom were present, were chosen to be placed on a ballot and presented to the whole graduate student body in the School of Education.
City, Mo.; and Larry Routh,
Chappell, Neb.-all graduate students in the School of Education.
The students are Carl Koenig,
Dearborn, Mich.; Charles Eagle,
Beaumont, Tex.; Sally Slezak,
Topeka; Jay Barrish, Kansas
Voting will be from 8 to 5 Monday and Tuesday on the second floor of Bailey Hall, and at the Children's Rehabilitation Center at the KU Medical Center.
Folk dancing begins students join in fun
By Linda Loyd
Kansan Staff Writer
"One, two, three, bend; back,
two, three, shake-shake. One,
two, three, bend..."
Under white, hot lights of an empty practice room in Robinson Gymnasium, Friday night, 20 folk dance enthusiasts, friendly passers-by and curiosity seekers locked fingers in a circle dance at the first session of the recreational Folk Dance Club.
"Take 16 steps to the left, reverse and go right 16 steps," Steve Resovich, dance instructor, said over the pulsating stereo sounds originating somewhere south of the border, north of the equator and west of the Greenwich line.
In the center of the room, a gray-haired man in white turtle-neck pullover, plaid slacks and green sunglasses joined the dancers. KU students wearing casual cotton dresses, shorts and tee-shirts also formed the circle.
"This is a very informal group," Tony Sorem, teaching assistant in psychology and president of the Folk Dance Club, explained between dances. We will be dancing from 7-10 p.m. every Friday, he said. "Folk dancers are a rabid, fanatical lot,
so we plan to meet twice a week."
"We intend to teach folk dances from East Europe stressing dances from Greece, Rumania, Albania and Israel," Sorem said. "We also plan to do some north European, Spanish and Irish dances."
This first semester we will emphasize the teaching aspect, assuming no one has had any experience, he said.
Steve Resovich, a physical education instructor from Kansas City, will teach the dances. A stocky, dark-haired folk dancer of Serbian descent, Resovich first saw folk dancing on the West Coast.
Although most of his records are Serbian-Macedonian, Resovich claims to know 50 Balkan dances.
"It is ridiculous," said Resovich, "that when you're near a cultural center such as Kansas City or you attend a large school such as KU, all you see is hoe-down."
The first organizational meeting was Wednesday and the group will meet again this Wednesday. "We don't anticipate difficulty getting started," Sorem said. "Any interested persons are welcome."
The photographic laboratories in Flint Hall will be modernized and doubled in size by next spring at a cost of almost $50,000.
Regents approve funds for modern photographic labs
The Board of Regents approved the expansion program at its recent meeting in Kansas City.
The expanded facilities will enable the University Daily Kansan to take full advantages of the color and other fine printing capabilities of the new offset press in the University Printing Service.
The laboratories also will provide for the anticipated growth of the School of Journalism's new sequence in Photojournalism. Five courses now are offered, and Gary Mason, formerly a creative photography instructor at Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia, has joined Bill Seymour, sequence director, on the instructional staff.
In addition to the photojournalism program, the laboratories also serve students from the Department of Design, the School of Education, the School of Architecture and Urban Design, and other areas of the University. About 120 are enrolled in courses this fall.
Seymour said $16,000 will be used for the modification of the existing darkroom in the basement of Flint Hall. This includes the changing and adding of walls, lighting, false hanger ceilings, special resistant tiles, separate air conditioning and a humidity control system.
The remaining $34,000 will be spent on equipment for fixtures, a filtration system and a special water supply system for the new dark room. The new dark room will be in the west end of Flint Hall's basement and is expected to be completed by next February. It will be twice as big as the existing dark room, which will
then be taken over by the Department of Design.
Visiting photography professors during an Association for Education in Journalism national convention in August predicted the new darkroom would be one of the finest in the nation.
"Good equipment for color photography is almost ten times as expensive as black and white. We wish to get into color photography and color printing on a limited basis in the future." Seymour said.
Chinese students celebrate festival
Members of the Chinese Student Association are working in preparation for the annual KU Chinese Banquet, at 6:30 Saturday in the Wesley Foundation.
"The Chinese banquet has two objectives," said Wilson Chang, president of the Chinese Student Association. "It is the time for Chinese students here to get together and celebrate the mid-Autumn Festival, one of the biggest festivals in China. It is also hoped the occasion will introduce some of the Chinese cultures and customs to the people in Lawrence."
Chang said more than ten Chinese dishes will be served. In addition, Chinese classical music, films, pantime and Chinese attacking and defense techniques will be shown after the dinner.
Tickets are available at Kansas Union Information Desk.
Dedication is Nov. 8
The Kansan erroneously reported the Spencer Library dedication and opening for Oct. 8. The dedication will be Nov. 8.
TUESDAY NIGHT AT THE RED DOG
THE MUSICIAN.
Saxophonist
Mike Finnegan And The fabulous "SERFS"
TOMMY HOGAN
THE Bred Dog Box
ROCKS
mike finnigan
ALEXANDRIA MUNGARO
Don't Miss The HEAVY Sounds Of The SERFS Tomorrow Night
Fri., Oct. 4 - THE REASONS WHY
Wed., Oct. 9 THE HOT NUTS
Monday, September 30, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Transplants for young
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Seventy transplant surgeons and government officials agreed Sunday that "young people in the prime of life and surrounded by their families" should by given top preference as organ transplant recipients.
They also urged state legislatures to adopt laws designed to produce a generation of "card-carrying cadavers" persons who carry cards automatically donating their organs for transplant or other medical use as soon as they die.
The agreements were reached during a two-day meeting of specialists called by the 3,500-member American College of Cardiology to draw guidelines for doctors, lawyers and government officials dealing with the social and medical problems raised by transplant surgery.
Delegates to the conference included Dr. Denton A. Dooley, head of the Houston, Tex., team
Goldberg tries to avert NY strike
NEW YORK (UPI)—Former United Nations Ambassador Arthur Goldberg moved into New York City's tangled labor crisis late Sunday at the request of Mayor John V. Lindsay.
Lindsay asked Goldberg to head a special "impasse operation" aimed at averting potential disaster for the city, a Tuesday morning slowdown by firemen and police which could turn into a full strike by the firemen and a strike by the city's garbage collectors.
Goldberg, former secretary of labor and presently a member of a New York law firm, will hold separate sessions Monday with leaders of each of the three unions after a briefing from Lindsay.
which has transplanted 11 human hearts; Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz, Brooklyn, N.Y., transplant surgeon and researcher on artificial organs; Dr. David M. Hums, Richmond, Va., a pioneer in kidney transplants; Dr. Donald C. Harrison, Palo Alto, Calif., a member of the Shumway transplant team at Stanford University; and representatives of the American Bar Association, American Medical Association, government agencies and 15 medical specialty groups.
The meeting was closed to newsmen and most of the results were kept secret pending publication of a guideline paper, probably next December.
But conference leaders disclosed agreement on the sensitive issue of whom to select for transplants if there is an insufficient supply of needed organs.
"All were agreed that transplantation provides an important form of treatment potentially helpful to young people in the prime of life and surrounded by their families," the conference said in a statement.
Mortar Board will discuss party candidates
Student government, political elections, and the presidential candidates are some of the topics for discussion at upcoming Mortar Board meetings.
At a weekend retreat held recently at Gardner Lake, members of the senior women's honorary society met to set their goals and to plan events for the year.
"Mortar Board's purpose this year is to become better informed on the needs of the University," said Elaine Greenock, Quincy, Ill., senior and Mortar Board president.
Chicagoans are grateful to Mayor Daley and police for their action during the Democratic convention, said John Husor, 1963 KU journalism graduate and sports writer for the Chicago Tribune.
KU grad defends Chicago
"Chicago is a proud city and the convention has thrown its reputation into what it was in the thirties."
Husor returned to his alma mater this weekend to report the KU-Indiana football game. While visiting the School of Journalism Friday, he commented freely on the convention scene in August.
Action between police and demonstrators was exaggerated on television, Husor said. "Several persons sent Huntley and Brinkley get-well cards because of their sick coverage."
Although Husor didn't cover the convention, he was in Chicago, read newspapers and talked with reporters. "We knew there was going to be trouble long before the actual convention." Reporters didn't come to Chicago to cover a convention, he explained. They were interested in the mood of the city. "They were there to cover a riot."
Chicago was peaceful, said Husor. In Negro areas, there was no looting, burning or murders. Business went on as usual—the city was virtually untouched by violence at the convention.
The sports writer recalled that "two months before the convention, statements charging police brutality were written and issued to the press." Every step of violence was carefully planned by demonstrators, he said.
"Police and news media infiltrated these various protesting groups to thwart them ahead of the convention."
Husor cited an incident of one investigative reporter, Tom Powers, who was assigned to cover undercurrents of the convention. "Powers caught one female protestor squeezing blood from a calf's liver into a pan to throw on someone's shirt."
"What people saw on TV was the attack by the police, not the provocation of demonstrators," he explained. Television viewers saw police arrest demonstrators, but the cameras didn't capture those same protestors throwing feces at an officer minutes before.
"Not all of the demonstrators involved were McCarthy supporters," said Husor. Some of them were riot organizers. "There is a movement today—an undercurrent of something bigger being carried out by people in the business of organizing protests."
As for innocent newsmen who were beaten, he said, the police are sympathetic. However, none of the reporters arrested were experienced police reporters who knew "when the hell to get out of the way," he added. "Some of those columnists did give police a rough time."
War,hecklers disturb Humphrey
SEATTLE (UPI)—Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey conducted top level strategy discussions Sunday with his key advisers on the problems of Vietnam and hecklers who are harassing his campaign.
With five weeks left to election day, Humphrey's campaign manager, Lawrence F. O'Brien, flew to Seattle to join the Democratic candidate's policy discussions in the wake of an angry 15-minute shouting match with some 20 antiwar protesters.
Over the weekend Humphrey also discussed the Vietnam war with George Ball, former U.N. ambassador who has joined the Vice President's staff as his chief foreign policy adviser.
The men mapped Humphrey's "major" foreign policy address that will be nationally televised Monday night over NBC-TV. Humphrey purchased a half hour of time, the longest program bought by either Humphrey or his Republican rival, Richard M. Nixon, in the campaign so far.
Humphrey considered the strategy talks so vital he cancelled a salmon fishing trip that
was the only item on his Sunday agenda. He was to fly late Sunday to Salt Lake City, where the telecast will originate.
The confrontation with the antiwar protesters Saturday night was the sharpest verbal conflict between the Vice President and hecklers in his campaign.
Before police dragged the demonstrators from an auditorium crowded with some 7,000 Humphrey supporters, a shaggy-haired man with a bullhorn belowed that the 'Vice President should be tried in some sort of United Nations' court for "crimes against humanity."
When Humphrey tried to talk, the man blared through the bullhorn. "We have come to arrest you—not talk to you."
Obviously angered, Humphrey shouted to the balcony protesters: "Now you've had equal time-shut up!"
Although 99 per cent of the audience supported the Vice President, the shouting confrontation appeared to have dampened their spirits during the remainder of the program.
MOBY GRAPE
STOCK
THE MARKET
BIG & BROTHER
STREET
READING CO.
ATK
the Fall Print Sale
[Artwork]
OCTOBER 2,3 & 4
Be here early for your choice of a limited supply of full color reproductions of your favorite artist's paintings and drawings.
All Prints Only $1.00
kansas union BOOKSTORE
14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 30:1968
KU junior heads tutoring program
A University student, working with the Ballard Community Center, is helping spearhead a new tutoring program for north and east Lawrence children.
David Paden, Lawrence junior, organized a group that will tutor at least 39 children from the New York and Woodlawn Elementary Schools. He is expecting about 15 more children in the program.
Twelve KU students, two high school students and one junior college graduate are the tutors
"The idea," he said, "is to tutor in groups of four to five. With a one-to-one situation, there is hardly any transfer to the classroom situation."
Paden said the service, which begins Oct. 7, is a different approach to tutoring.
The children, ages 7 to 11, will receive help in math and reading. Tutoring in social studies might be added later, Paden said.
Development of the children's attitudes is crucial to the program, he said. "We'll be working on their attitudes toward themselves and toward studying and learning. When they have good attitudes in those areas, the school is more successful with them." he said.
The ultimate goal, Paden said, is a comprehensive program for all of Lawrence in all subjects. "But that will take a while," he said.
Since late summer, Paden has been consulting with parents, children and teachers.
Personal contact has been stressed in setting up the program. He said, "I talk to the kids, then the parents. The tutors then contact the parents and teachers. There has hardly been any use of the telephone."
For Paden, an elementary education major, the project cli-
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Foreign Students. Interested in special United Nations Day program on October 19? See the Dean of Foreign Students office for information.
Minority Opinions Forum. 3:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Speaker, speaker. Forum
Kennan. Kamara.
Graduate Physics Colloquium 4:30 p.m. "Nuclear Spaces" 238. Manuscript no. A65.
Faculty Recital. 8 p.m. Raymond Stuhl, cellist. Swarwart Recital Hall.
Special Film, 7 p.m. "Crime of M.
Lange." Dvehe Auditorium.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. weekly testimony meeting. Danbang
Undergraduate Chemistry Seminar will meet Oct. 1, 1968 in 124 Malotti at 8:30 p.m. Dr. C. E. Bricker will speak on "Chemistry of the A-Bomb."
maxes an interest that began after high school graduation when he worked in Head Start. During his freshman year, he was involved with the now extinct KU-Y Children's Hour.
Patromize Kansan Advertisers
As a sophomore, he successfully helped eight Lawrence children in math. "None of them are returning for help this year," he said.
Paden also served as a coordinator of tutoring in the Lawrence Day Camp this summer.
Thirty-eight chosen for choir honors
James S. Ralston, KU music director, announced the selection of 38 advanced students who have won places in the Chamber Choir.
Among those chosen are James Asbury, Overland Park junior; Gene Bauer, Highland junior; David Kirk, Pittsburg senior; Francis Smysor, Lawrence junior; John Trewolla, Shawnee Mission graduate student; Art Skidmore, Lawrence; Steve Robinson, Merriam, and Jack Coleman. Mulvany junior, all tenors.
Burt Allen, Lawrence senior; Robert Benton, Des Moines, Iowa, senior; Duncan Couch, Huntsville, Ark.; Kent Dannen, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student; Roger Sprecher, Fort Scott senior; John Wolfe, Roswell, N.M., junior; Larry States, Logan junior, and Les Combs, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, all basses.
Nancy Crawford, Ogden, Utah, junior; Melinda Grable, Shawnee Mission senior; Beverly Hosking, Lawrence; Janice Johnson, Lawrence senior; Suzanne Juvenat, Columbus, Neb., junior; Terry Knowles, Bloomfield Hills, Mich., junior; Marie Kraus, Lake Forest, Ill.; Judith Mathers, Lawrence; Karla Norton, Lawrence; Judith Strunk, Abilene senior; Celia Ricker, Lawrence; Ginny Sloan, Sioux City, Iowa, and Debbie Pfautsch, Dallas, Tex., all sopranos.
Grace Dexter, Topea junior;
Carolyn Fenough, Osawatomie
senior; Jo Anne Ferrell, Valley
Falls senior; Susan Fredrick,
McPherson senior; Judith
Hughes, Lawrence graduate
student; Margaret McKinney, Great
Bend senior; Diane Allmon,
Wakefield, Neb., senior; Sharon
Zongker, Wichita graduate student,
and Judith Unruh, Wichita
graduate student, all altos.
WAREHOUSE #1
BACK - TO - SCHOOL Special
Lamps ... $12.95 a set
Tables ... $9.95—Now $7.95
3-pc. Naugahyde Living Room Sets ... $289.95—Now $199.95
Day Beds ... $129.95—Now $99.95
Solid Walnut Night Stands ... $49.95—Now $34.95
Swivel Naugahyde Rockers ... $54.95
Velvet 3 Cushion Sofas ... $259.95—Now $209.95
3-pc. Walnut Bedroom Sets ... $159.95—Now $99.95
3-pc. Oak Bedroom Set ... $259.95—Now $189.95
3-pc. Walnut Bedroom Set ... $299.95—Now $239.95
3-pc. Maple Suit with Triple Dresser,
KU pharmacy seniors receive Elko awards
Ten seniors in the School of Pharmacy at KU have been awarded the Elko Charitable Trust and Foundation scholarships of $500 each for the 1968-69 year.
Bookcase, Headboard $249.95—Now $209.95
GOP claims foul against O'Brien
The seniors are Ivan Conover, Satanta; Larry Courney, Ellinwood; James Heim, Hoxie; Gene Hotchickx, Burlingame; Jeanette Huslig, Great Bend; Nancy Littell, Hugoton; Mary Gail Lowery, Mulvane; Bryon Marshall, Fredonia; Darrell Miner, Independence, and Lauren Rigg, Augusta.
700 N.H. VI 2-7409 Free Parking Open All Day Saturday
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Republican officials complained to the Fair Campaign Practices Committee Sunday that Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien violated its code by calling the GOP presidential candidate "Evasive Dick."
In a document he called "complaint No. 1." Richard G. Kleindienst, general counsel for the Republican National Committee, asked that O'Brien be demanded to issue a retraction and that Hubert H. Humphrey repudiate O'Brien's remark about Richard M. Nixon.
The nonprofit, nonpartisan committee has no enforcement powers other than to publicize what it considers unfair political tactics. At the start of every national election campaign, it asks candidates and party officials to pledge to conduct themselves fairly.
Kleindienst objected to O'Brien's statement in a broadcast interview Sept. 15 in which he said the people are "entitled to the views of Mr. Nixon, who has been referred to over the years as 'Tricky Dick' but now has become 'Evasive Dick.'"
WEEJUNS
with love
Brown Tapered Toe Brown Full Toe
Amber Tapered Toe Green Grain Full Toe
Golden Grain Tapered Brown Kiltie Full Toe
Toe Brown Buckle Full Toe
Blue Tapered Brown Tassel Full Toe
Toe Brown Tassel Tapered Toe
Bass OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR
$15.95
Arensberg's
Bass
OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR
Arensberg's = Shoes
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
Monday, September 30,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Page 15
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University manual are offered
To all students who wish to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NEW ANALYSIS OF WATER RESOURCES
WESTERN CIVILIZATION
Up-To-Date 3rd Edition of detailed
furniture plans and drawings.
prints. On sale October 15 at Car-
duff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread,
New York.
125cc Riverides. Excellent condition.
Bebt et VI 357078. campus. $225 Cars.
Bebt et VI 357078. campus. $225 Cars.
Complete 10 gallon aquarium set-up,
$24.95 value, only $16.98. George's
Hobby House, VI 3-5087, Mall's Shopp-
ing Center. 10-1
String bass, bass guitar with amplifier, drums, trombone. All played professionally. Nothing over $50.00. Also Hi-Fi set, Car radio with speaker. Dr L. S. Bee, 221 Concord Road. Phone DR 3-4836. 10-1
1967 Suzuki X-6 Hustler, 250cc motorcycle, 6500 miles, includes two helmets, and a jacket. Jim Scott, VI 3-4811. 10-1
Large old family home needs love and decorating. Secluded South location in lovely neighborhood, within walking distance of all schools and shopping center. Twelve rooms, three fireplaces, five staircases, large fenced. Will sacrifice at $24,000.00 for immediate sale. VI 3-3536 or VI 3-6640.
10-1
Beautiful 1963 Pontiac Bonneville convertible. Arctic white, power, new color. Must to apply to appreciate. Call 723-834-584. Nawed, Kansas. $10 to call. $850. Lined-up. 9-30
19" G.E. Table T.V., New picture
tube," $40; B&H 35m Slide projector
and 2 trays, $25; x2x343 Mamiga
Presence Camera, $125; 160mm
Camera, $125; Pentax w.f1.4 Leica HIF,
$75; Contact Lyle Shoemaker at UN 4-
3837. 9-30
1957 Triumph TR-3. New tires and
brakes. TI 2-6600, Room 1024. 9-30
via. TI 2-6600, Room 1024.
4-door 1962 Dodge Dart. 6 cylinder, automatic. New Tires. Excellent condition. Call UN-4-4291 or VI 2-7332 after 5 p.m. 10-2
1957 Triumph TR-3. New tires and
carbon fiber brakes.
Thia. room 1024. I 2-6600. 10-2
1961 Harley-Davidson 250cc. Sprint.
or best offer. VI 3-0661. 10-2
1965 Sunbeam Alpine convertible, ex-
cellent condition. Bestsell 842-10
Best offer over $1,000.
MGA-50,000 miles, excellent condition.
Call 843-6495. 9-30
1964 Ford wagon and 1964 Studebaker
wagon with Roll back top. Both cars
in good mechanical condition. Can see
at 625 Mississippi. 10-10
1966 Henkel Superhawk. 305cc, low
makes. VI 3-8191. Magnificent. $350 cash
inkes. VI 3-8191
1 regular size Kaylon Foam Mattress,
1 Box springs to match. 1 Electric
Staiffen. 1 Staiffen reducing
exerciser. See at 216 Dakota St.
rence, Kansas. 10-2
Smith-Corona Galexte model portable
excellent condition.
Call 842-8143 10-1
1966 Yamaha Big Bear Scramble,
250ce, 5-speed, dual carburetors; $350.
See Eric Nielsen at 917 Ohio (in
back). 10-1
Remington and Olympia portable typewriters and Friden calculator at wholesale prices. VI 3-8191 after 6. 10-4
1958 BUG EYE SPIRTE. Better than new. Asking $900. Will deal. Contact Bill Langsdorf—1000 Mississippi St. 10-4
1963 Sunbeam Alpine. Must sell this week. Best offer. Call Pam Cobb — VI 2-9350 after six or see at 622 North 5th. 10-4
1966 100cc Yamaha Twin. Excellent condition; low mileage; helmet included. $215.00 1201 Oread, Apt. 2.
VI 3-4312. 10-1
1964 MGB ROADSTER, one owner,
condition 3-4002 at 12:00 noon 10-1
1962 Dodge Polara 500 V-8, HT, AC,
New Tires, in Excellent condition.
$860. Call VI 2-7758 after 6 p.m.
daytime or weekends. 10-4
Honda 300 Super Hawk '68 - 160 miles. Like new. For a reasonable price. Information call Roman Mendez at VI 2-9100, room 648. 10-4
Complete AM-FM radio, stereo console by Arvin. $125. If above doesn't suit, look at our JBL Hartzfeld. Audiostronics. 928 Mass. 10-5
Volkswagen '68 for sale, 16,000 miles.
Euro windows, good tires. Call
3-7589
1967 Triumph TR-6 Motorcycle
Bought new in May. Very low mileage.
Inquire by calling VI 3-5095 or UN 4-3252 and ask for Joyce. 10-1
NOTICE
Caramel and Cinnamon apples Thurs.
Fri, and Sat. while they last. Along with all our other usual goodies.
Topsy's Old-Fashioned - Popcorn and Ice Cream Shop. Malls Shopping Center. Open till 11. 9-30
Portrait Photographs — black and white only. VI 2-4326. 9-30
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order, $1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; chicken, $1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 9-30
Rod McKuen said: "My new book is now in stock at Keeler's Bookstore!"
A unique gift shop. Hand made pottery, clothes, book bags, incense, beads, posters and creative portrait photographs. At STRAWBERRY FIELDS, 712 Massachusetts. Open 10-16. 10-4
Girls! Do you have cheerleading experience in high school? If so, an excellent part-time job during the school year is waiting for you—with prosessionals to mentorship. Model cheerleading uniform fashions and instruct 1-day cheerleading clinics only on SATURDAYS this year. All expenses paid. Good salary. National organization. Call collect day or night. K.C. 816-363-4420.
WANTED
Female roommate over 21 years old
modern. Call VI 2-6158
modern. Call VI 2-6158
ARTIST MODELES wanted. $1.15 to
per hour. Please contact needs
sary. Phone 1-800-4401.
Female counter girls: part time help for evenings. Apply in person at Smaks Drive-in at 1409 West 23rd. 9-70
Need Co-ed roommate to share beautiful 3-bedroom house. $50.00 per month. 1012 Hilltop Drive. Call VI 2-
2048. 10-2
Male roommate wanted. 10 minutes to campus. Welcome and furnishing. $50.00 V-3-33-168
LOST
Jason slide rule in brown leather case
Dillon, K. towardeward. John Neigh-
bories, VF 2-4119.
Reward: Return of umbrella with carved ivory handle taken in Student情境. Send great sentiment value to owner. No conversations asked. Call VI 2-3531 evening. 10-1
One pair of oval, tortoise-shell rimmed glasses. Urgently needed. If found, please return to main desk, Corbin Hall. 10-2
HELP WANTED
IBM Computer 360 Model 20 Operator for second shift, 5-12 midnight. Send resume or write for application and appointment for interview. Well established firm, usual benefits. Box 33, Kansan. 10-2
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-
time openings available in day or
night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
One or two typists needed immediately. Dittos, lab reports, short papers. Steady work for good typist. Contact VI 2-8155 after 5 p.m. D & L. Blahna.
Part-time for 1 a.m. till 2 p.m. Eve-
nings 5 till 12, 5 days a week. Start
$1.25 per hr. Apply in person to
Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 W. 23rd. tf
10-1
3 men for morning work from 7:30 to 11:30. Must have knowledge about the game of golf. Call VI 3-6303. After 7:30. Call VI 3-7988. 10-5
FOR RENT
Want Senior or Graduate male to share nice apartment with two others Off street parking, parking nice, nice place to live; $3,100, 10-11 paid, VI 3-4349.
Two rooms will accommodate four girls, close to campus, furnished. Kitchen, bath, off-street parking, $30 per person. 1216 Louisiana V 1-3601.
Unfurnished two-bedroom apartment.
$75, 811 East
Incall VI-2-6163 to see
phone:
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most expensive capitol's barn Heating and electricity uniquely available. VI 3-40323. 11-12
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elec. located near Oliver Hall. VI 12873.
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
Prompt, accurate, typing of manuscripts, theses, dissertations, miscellaneous papers, pica-electric, call Mrs. Troxel at VI-2-1440. 10-4
TRAVEL TIME
STRICK'S DINER
Good Food—Reasonable Cold Beer—Pool Tobles
Students Welcome
On H-Way 59.40 N. of the bridge
732. N.2nd
THE MISSION INN
Bar - Grill, Windy and Marion
Phone VI 1-9448
1904 Massachusetts
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
LET
Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
Make Your
Up To $600 Maternity Benefits
MARRIED STUDENTS
For details on this, major medical, and other plans of health and life insurance REFERENCES
CONTACT
V. G. Miller
1035 Elm
Eudora, Kans.
KI 2-2793
Mutual of Omaha
The Company that owns
Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha
Life Insurance Affiliate, United of Omaha
METAL BUILDING INSURANCE COMPANY
HOME INSURANCE NORTHWEST
sua
---
PICTURE LENDING LIBRARY
Monday, September 30 9:00-5:00
South Lounge of Union 50c Per Picture
per semester
Portraits of Distinction
Also
- Passports
- Applications
- Lettermen
- Seniors
- K-Portraits
call for appointment
K-ROTTRAILS Please call for appointment
摄影
Hixon Studio
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Portraits of Distinction
Bob Blank, Owner
Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Novelties
- Badges
- Guards
Novelties
Louliers
Rings
- Favors
- Rings
- Sportswear
- Paddles
Mugs
- Trophies
- Cups
- Awards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
INTERNATIONAL DAY OUTBACK
Retorfa
DELUXE
"PETULIA" - Original Sound Track Album
Warner Bros. - 7 Arts Album WS 1755
Bell Music Co.
925 Mass.
V1 3-2644
The Door is Open ...
at Chet Johnson's, to each of you returning to Lawrence this fall. Johnson's Furniture is always ready to help you make life more comfortable, more beautiful, with a large selection of the finest furniture, carpets, lamps, and decorator pieces to be found.
So why not take a stroll through Johnson's Furniture.
CHET
You may find just the solution to your decorating probl You will at least have had a refreshing experience.
CHET
742 Mass.
CHET Johnson FURNITURE CO.
Johnson FURNITURE CO.
VI 3-2448
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 30,1968
Black students return; promised black union
By Mike Shearer Kansan Staff Writer
Lawrence High School was almost back to normal today as the 50 black students who walked out last week returned to classes.
About 30 of those returned Friday for conferences, but few attended classes. The others had returned earlier with their parents.
The decision to return to classes came Friday in a meeting between Principal Bill Medley, Carl Knox, superintendent of schools, and the students and their parents.
Many black students who had returned to school individually or who had not walked out joined those who remained out in the assembly. They were excused from classes to attend the confrontation.
He also agreed to meet with parents and students to discuss the quality and quantity of black history and culture books in the school library.
Medley assured students they could form a black "student union," an organization to press for black students' demands, by establishing themselves as a school club with a constitution.
The students agreed to draw up plans for a new system of selecting school royalty and submit to the Student Council those plans and the plans they have already formulated for selecting cheerleaders.
Medley said demands for inclusion of black history into the curriculum would be met.
Medley explained to the students that he had made exhaustive efforts to hire more black teachers. He said representatives of the school had traveled to other states and made numerous long distance telephone calls in an attempt to find black teachers.
Beverly Southard, one of the black students' leaders, read a letter from the school's only black teacher Leonard Clark, in which Clark said:
"I cannot and will not speak of progress when there has been none."
Breakthrough anticipated in Vietnam negotiations
Clark said administrators had failed to listen to the black students' demands before students took the dramatic action of walking out of school last Wednesday.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—George W. Ball, who resigned last week as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said Sunday the United States was close to a breakthrough in the Paris negotiations on Vietnam.
Ball, who quit his diplomatic post to become foreign policy adviser to Democratic presidential nominee Hubert H. Humphrey, also predicted that Richard M. Nixon would escalate the war if he is elected in November.
"Here's a man," he said of Nixon at another point, "who thinks that military might is the answer to everything."
"He has always been a hardliner," Ball said of the GOP candidate. "My own feeling is that he would escalate."
In a broadcast interview on Face the Nation—CBS, Ball said he had been a pessimist on Vietnam for seven years but in recent weeks "I've begun to feel that we're on a verge of a breakthrough" in the talks at Paris. He did not elaborate.
Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford, in another interview, was more cautious in his assessment of the Paris talks. But he said the "bits and straws" of progress he had previously reported were still evident.
"I believe the fact that the talks are going on indicates that the parties intend to stay with it," he said on Meet the Press—NBC. He added he believed North Vietnam "hopes to find a basis for ending the conflict."
Ball refused to disclose what Humphrey will have to say about Vietnam in his major foreign policy address on nationwide television Monday night, and repeatedly sidestepped questions on whether Humphrey might pledge to end the bombing if he is elected.
His letter repeated what several of the students had vowed: "Our grievences will not be forgotten."
Homer Floyd, director of the Kansas Civil Rights Commission, will meet with parents and students tonight at St. Luke's United Methodist Church.
Soldiers ready to leave Mexico U.
MEXICO CITY (UPI)—A small force of soldiers conducted cleanup operations and maintained roadblocks Sunday, preparing to leave on short notice from the campus of the autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).
They awaited only the word from their commander, Gen. Jose Hernandez Toledo, that the staff of the university had things well in hand and the army could leave.
That word could be given at any time, ending the army occupation of the campus that began Sept. 18. The army took over to force student activists out of the campus and try to control disturbances that had been going on since July in the Mexican capital.
Lady mayors middle-aged,
Never mind reaching for the panic button. They're women.
NEW YORK (UPI)—In 19 cities of over 10,000 population within these United States, "Hizzeron" wears skirts.
The number of female mayors is bound to grow. Women are drawn to kitchens, aren't they? City government is considered "the kitchen of democracy."
Now what kind of woman serves as the mayor in an American city? What rewards and frustrations does she experience? Has her sex created any special problems?
His profile of women mayors goes like this:
William S. Foster knows the answers. He is editor of "American City." management guide to 34,000 city officials nationwide. He's been with the publication 25 years, the last 11 as editor.
Knows the Answers
- Education. All except one
graduated from high school. About half went to college and most of the rest have had special training.
- Martial status. All had taken nuptial vows. Most had spouses living at the time they assumed duties; three were widowed; one was a divorcee.
- Foster reports women entered mayoral races for the following reasons: encouragement or insistence by civic groups; a desire to improve existing conditions in the city; to provide honesty in government and eliminate improper expenditures of tax money, to counter negative attitudes of city councils toward citizens at large.
- Age. All were over 40 and under 65.
- Salary. One reported earning an annual salary in excess of $3,000; three had salaries of less than $50 a year.
Only one of the female mayors admitted without reservation that her sex created special problems on the job. Problems, according to Foster's study, stemmed from male council members who resented having a female mayor.
Two of the nose-powdering mayors serve in cities with more than 100,000 population; six in cities of more than 50,000, and the rest in cities with no more than 25,000.
However, another said her sex had created no problems aside from "the general feeling of jealousy that men have when a woman has superior experience."
Male mayors in California probably have more to worry about than mayors elsewhere. That state has seven of the female mayors in the 10,000 population and over cities.
XEROX COPY
SERVICE
Newsletters
— Theses
Club Bulletins
Quantity Rates
M & M OFFICE SUPPLY
710 Mass.
843-0763
KU B'NAI B'RIT HILLEL UN-LOX
With its 1st Meeting and (FREE!) Dinner
Sunday, Oct. 6th, 4 p.m.
Call for reservations and transportation by October 2
NANCY----#234----Lewis----VI 2-1340
AL----#328----McCollum----VI 2-6600
News Roundup
(Continued from page 1)
Luci Nugent will attend funeral
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Luci Johnson Nugent will attend a funeral service at Arlington National Cemetery Monday for a Navy officer who was her close friend and an usher at her wedding two years ago.
moore Naval Air Station, Calif.
He was to be transferred to Vietnam in February. Mrs. Bates is expecting a baby.
Navy Lt. lg Leroy Bates, 22,
of Houston, Tex., was killed last
week in a plane crash at Le-
Luci and her year-old son Lynn returned to the White House Saturday for the funeral of the man she says had been "everything you say youth was not."
Former Wichita cop faces assault charge
The Sedgwick County sheriff's office said the victim, Douglas H. Selby, 17, of Derby was one
WICHITA, Kan. (UPI)—A former Wichita police rookie faced a felonious assault charge today after a shooting in which a teenage youth was wounded.
of a group of youths driving noisily around a mobile home park early Friday.
They said Miguel C. Cohran, the former officer, had asked them to quiet down. When the noise continued, two shots were fired from a 30-30 rifle.
Chief interest of cool Indian malds is TJ's heapwarm, pile-lined Cochise Jacket, with fabulous fit Hiawatha Pants. Imported cotton suede in fawn... with real leather trim—honest Injun.
Jacket, 5-15, $28.00. Pants, 3-13, $16.00.
THERMO-JAC COCHISE JACKET & HIAWATHA PANTS
LIKE TO BE A TJ MODEL IN SEVENTEEN?
Model application with every Thermo-Jac item
Kirsten's
9th and Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center