Saturday is BIG BLUE day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.34
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, November 1, 1968
U.S. halts bombing
UDK News Roundup BY United Press International
Thieu hints opposition
SAIGON—The South Vietnam government today said the United States acted alone in stopping the bombing of North Vietnam. The statement hinted at opposition toward the halt.
President Nguyen Van Thieu announced he would make a nationally broadcast speech to parliament Saturday. Thieu was expected to make public South Vietnam's position on the halt.
Political solution sought
PARIS—U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman said today he will demand a political solution to the Vietnam War that will let the South Vietnamese people determine their own future.
Firing the opening shot of the new diplomatic war with Hanoi, Harriman said the United States wants a solution worked out in future peace talks that will be in accord with the wishes of South Vietnam.
Chinese president out
HONG KONG-The Chinese Communist Party's ruling Central Committee today announced President Liu Shaochi will be ousted, Peking radio said. It indicated a major victory for party leader Mao Tse-tung in his cultural revolution power struggle.
The official radio said the Red Chinese congress will be convened to carry out the committee's order to dismiss the man who challenged Mao's leadership.
SAIGON (UPI)—The war over North Vietnam halted today. The war in South Vietnam continued and Communist guerrilla rockets hit Saigon and Hue on the nation's independence day.
In line with President Johnson's bombing halt order to press a drive toward peace, U.S. pilots canceled raids against North Vietnam. American 7th Fleet ships in Tonkin Gulf and Army heavy artillery on South Vietnam's northern border broke off their barrages.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Johnson Thursday night announced a complete halt in bombing of North Vietnam which began at 7 a.m. CST today and a broadening of the Paris peace talks to include the South Vietnamese and the Viet Cong.
In a nationwide broadcast just five days before the presidential election, Johnson said the United States had made it clear to Hanoi that productive talks could now begin next Wednesday but could continue only if South Vietnamese cities are not shelled and the Demilitarized Zone is respected.
The president's long-awaited announcement of a break-through in
M. Mumford charged with brother's shooting
Charged with a shooting which took place near the Gaslight Tavern Wednesday night, Marvin Mumford, 20, of Lawrence, is free on $5,000 bond.
Mumford was arraigned before county court yesterday on charges of assault with intent to kill or maime. He allegedly used a .410-guage shotgun in the incident.
The shooting occurred evidently as the result of an argument between Mumford and his brother Dale.
the tavern. A large crowd from the tavern later yelled jeers and profanities as police officers arrived at the scene.
The victim of the shooting was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital in fair condition. A spokesman for the hospital said yesterday the man's condition had improved somewhat since Wednesday night.
Dale Mumford attempted to leave the argument but was shot in the leg as he reached the steps of
Judge Wayne Alphin set Marvin Mumford's preliminary hearing date for Nov. 13.
But he said the time had come to test North Vietnam's good faith with a bombing halt and "to try to ascertain if an early peace is possible."
the Paris discussions was accompanied by a warning that there was no agreement on a ceasefire and—as Johnson put it "there may well be very hard fighting ahead."
He said he had acted on "unanimous military and diplomatic advice and judgment" of his advisors, including Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, the U.S. Commander in Vietnam. The military, he said, had assured him of his oft-stated condition that a bombing halt would not result in increased American casualties.
"We could be misled," Johnson said, "and we are prepared for such a contingency. We pray to God it does not occur."
"What we now expect what we have a right to expect—are prompt, productive, serious and intensive negotiations in an atmosphere that is conducive to progress," he said. See related stories pages 7 and 16.
Weather
Partly cloudy today tonight and Saturday. Cooler with northwest winds 10 to 20 miles per hour today and tonight. High today near 70. Low tonight low 30s. Precipitation probabilities—5 per cent today 5 per cent tonight. 5 per cent Saturday.
STEERENSON
Stephenson has orange door
Orange seems to be the color this year
Late Wednesday night, several coeds from Douthart painted Stephenson's door orange and then left a trail of paint leading to Battenfeld, another men's scholarship hall.
scholarship hall. Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, and J. J. Wilson, director of housing, discovered the real painters and asked the Douthart women to wash the paint off the door.
Yesterday, as the coeds tried diligently to wash off the paint, the Stephenson men aided them by throwing buckets of water, water balloons and various other similar missiles. In the process, the coeds helped "clean up" a UDK photographer by hosing some water in his direction.
The children are playing in the water.
Mrs. Harrison claims all facts not reported
Mrs. Harrison's husband, director of Ballard Community Center, was arraigned Tuesday in the Sedgwick County Court of Common Pleas, Wichita. Harrison was charged with seven counts of kidnapping, assault and conspiracy relating to an October 17 melee in a Wichita motel.
Mrs. Leonard Harrison, now free on $1,200 bond after her arrest Tuesday on assault charges, told a Kansan reporter last night that several facts surrounding her arrest have not been covered by the press.
Harrison and eight others allegedly assaulted and threatened two members of the Wichita Model Cities Program if they did not comply with their request to hire a man of their choosing for a responsible position.
The press has reported that when two police officers arrived at the Harrison home in Lawrence Tuesday with search warrants, Mrs. Harrison assaulted them.
"There were six of them (officers) that I counted," said Mrs. Harrison. She said she was reading at the time the police arrived and she let them in.
The graduate student then asked if the officers needed her to stay in the house while they searched it. She said they told her she wasn't needed.
She said the officers were in her home approximately 30 minutes when she asked them if they had come to arrest her. Their reply, Mrs. Harrison said, was they had come only to search the house.
When Mrs. Harrison left the house, she said the officers pursued her shouting, "Catch her. She's getting away." During a struggle outside the Harrison home, Mrs. Harrison said she was hit over the head with a flashlight.
"I just don't understand any of it at all," Mrs. Harrison said, adding that she is having difficulty securing an attorney to represent her case.
Mrs. Harrison is scheduled to appear in Douglas County Court Thursday at 10 a.m.
Harrison Lawrence Police Chief Robert Richardson said his office was not involved and the officers at Mrs. Harrison's home were from the Wichita police department and the Douglas County Sheriff's office.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 1, 1968
Residence halls encourage team by light display
Residence halls on Daisy Hill will be transformed into an illuminated blackboard today from 6 to 11 p.m. spelling out the words: "GO KU, BEAT CU, GO KU GO."
Cooperation is essential to make this homecoming display effective, Steve Salvay, Mission junior and Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) Housing Board Chairman, said.
"Everyone living on the east side of Ellsworth, Hashinger, Lewis and Templin Halls must follow the instructions posted in his particular hall."
Students living on the west side of these halls are not affected, Salvay said. "However, in McCollum Hall every resident's cooperation is needed because "GO KU" will be spelled out on all three wings."
When KU participated in the NCAA Basketball Finals in 1967, the phrase: "GO KU, TAKE NCAA 1967" was spelled out by Daisy Hill residence halls.
"That was an effective display only because residents cooperated," Salvay said. "We hope residents will again cooperate to create an effective and impressive display."
KANSAS' FAVORITE FOOTBALL COACH Pepper Rodgers "fires up" the crowd at a homecoming rally.
KU gets set for homecoming; students complete displays
With the house and residence halls' decorations nearing completion, the concert committee wrapping up its ticket sales, and stunni, parents and friends arriving in Lawrence, KU is again ready for a homecoming weekend.
Janet Bare, Wichita junior and student co-chairman of the house decorations committee, said all displays must be finished by 5 p.m.
Miss Bare said the judges will base their selection on sidewalk appeal, embodiment of theme, appropriateness and taste, keeping within the one-minute movement time limit and the condition of the decorations.
Jim Fritzemeier, Wichita junior and general chairman of the homecoming concert, said the ticket sales for the Andy Williams concert are going very well.
"We only have 3 to 4,000 left out of 14,000 tickets. We will sell right up until the concert starts at 8 p.m. tomorrow."
Groups participating in homecoming decorations, under the women's division are: Alpha Chi
Omega sorority, Gertrude Sellards pearson hall, Hashinger hall, Lewis hall and Sigma Kappa sorority.
The general theme for homecoming weekend is "Kansas Show of Shows." The theme for the decorations is "Jayhawk Laugh-In."
Participants in men's division are: Acacia fraternity, Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, Delta Chi fraternity, Joseph R. Pearson hall, Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Templin hall, Phi Kappa Theta fraternity, Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
Participants in the group pairings are: Alpha Delta Pi sorority and Delta Upsilon fraternity; Alpha Phi sorority and Kappa Sigma fraternity, Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and Delta Gamma sorority, Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, McCollum hall, Miller and Battenfeld scholarship halls, Naismith hall, Oliver hall, Ellsworth hall, Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Pi Beta Pi sorority, Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, Phi
"There are three categories of displays: paired groupings, men's, and women's divisions. Winning groups will be notified tonight. We'll put the place signs on the houses and halls' lawns at 8:30 Saturday morning," she said.
GO BIG BLUE
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Friday, November 1, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
PETER WAYNE AND TERESA CRAIG IN THEATRE OF MADRID
KISMET
In a scene from the University Theatre are Mike Rapport, Pasadena, Calif., senior, and Onnallee Zimmerman, Ford junior.
Kismet opens to large audience in University Theatre
A large opening night crowd attended this fall's musical spectacular "Kismet." The ladies were each presented with carnations last night, as has been a past custom for the University Theatre's largest and most involved production.
A tale of entwined romance and destinies, the Arabian Night setting was in old Baghdad. A highlight of the play was the haunting music of Alexander Borodin, performed very beautifully by Melinda Grable, Shawnee Mission senior.
The costumes were splashy with color and sparkle, blending with the exotic sets of the East. The settings were not as flashy as some in the past, but this was due to at least ten scene changes. However, the audience's murmurs showed an appreciation of their intricacies.
Heading the cast was Mike Rapport, Pasadena, Califi$_{1}$ senior, as the Poet who weaves his way from a beggar by "an iota of iambic and a title of trochaic" to a man who marries his lovely daughter to the all-powerful caliph. Miss Grable portrayed the lovely Marsinah who falls in love with the caliph, John Wolfe, Roswell, N.M., junior.
Pictured with Rapport is Onallee Zimmerman, Ford junior, who, as the Wazir of Police's "wife of wives", enchants the Poet with her lusty ways. Lance Hewett, Topeka junior, is the crafty Wazir who often left the stage with a cackle reminiscent of Halloween witchetry.
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Aquariums & Fish
KSTA key note speaker says teachersunderpaid
The teaching profession doesn't attract the "cream" of society when it is willing to pay only for "skim milk or water", said the main speaker at the opening session of the Lawrence section of the 105th annual convention of the Kansas State Teachers Association (KSTA) in Allen Field House yesterday.
Edgar Benton, chairman of the board of education of Denver, Colo., spoke to more than 2500 teachers on "Teacher Militancy: Long Overdue."
Besides low pay teachers have a right to become militant because they have been left out of the policy-making while they are in the "engine room of education." Benton said.
The really good enlightened teacher is often, especially in a large city district, threatened by the board of education which has the "capacity and ingenuity to identify, isolate and destroy the truly enlightened teacher," Benton said, and as a result these teachers are leaving the profession.
Traditionally and legally in most states the board of education has total power in determining policy, to hire and fire teachers and to determine the course of study. Benton added the boards usually act in the traditional, safe way, so that now there exists a gap between what is expected and what is needed.
Boards of education "won't provide the motive power for the recording of priorities in education," Benton said.
"Teachers have historically played a useless role in the processes of education," Benton said. Now teachers don't perform the
"basic subsistant motive power for change," he said. "Teachers can establish the context through which needed change can be made.
"The school crisis in Kansas and the U.S. exists because education is trying to save our society from chaos," Benton said. "The best and last chance of public education in the U.S. is the teacher," he added.
In American life one sees "the explosion of deferred dreams" and the teachers are beginning to act to make a reality from their "deferred dreams." The explosion in New York is a good example. Benton said.
The problem is a clash between the citizenry and the teachers. The citizenry, mostly Negro, have finally gotten to speak about the affairs of their district school system. They want to assure their children of an adequate education, Benton said.
The teachers, on the other hand, have been for years "putting up with conditions unsympathetic and downright hostile to effective education," Benton said. Now there is a clash, and the teachers, "because of a bureaucracy inconsistency, resisted intrusion into the school to eject him (the teacher). Both are right and neither is wrong in this conflict, but it still is tragic," Benton said.
He added that the road to better education will be "rocky"
Storch in Film
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Night club comedian Larry Storch will play a Mexican bandit with Akim Tamiroff in "The Great Bank Robbery."
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and perhaps long but it is worth it and is necessary to our society's continuing growth.
Benton ended his speech by quoting from a commencement address given to the 1889 University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine class, saying "stand up bravely even against the worst..."
Bookies receive bets on election
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)
Nevada bookmakers have received hundreds of requests from persons wanting to bet on the outcome of the November election.
Sammy Cohen, operator of the Santa Anita Turf Club book, says it has been illegal to accept such bets since 1890.
TRAVEL TIME
"It is illegal for a bookie to accept a bet on any type of election in the state of Nevada and I wish somebody would tell all these people to stop sending in their money
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A woman is helping a man lay under a sink.
1. Pipe broken?
No, I'm trying to find where I stashed some dough.
Two people looking at a flower.
2. That's where you keep your money?
Sometimes I put it in the flower pot.
Two men looking at each other.
3. What's wrong with the bank?
I'd only take it right out again.
I am not sure.
4. But that's what you're doing now.
Not quite. The beauty of my system is that I usually can't find where I put it.
AXOLI
5. I think you'd be a lot better off putting some of your dough into Living Insurance from Equitable. It not only gives you and the family you're going to have a lifetime of protection, it also builds cash values you can use for emergencies, opportunities, or even retirement.
I wonder if it could be with the french fries?
For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For career opportunities at Equitable, see Your Placement Officer, or write: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment.
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 1, 1968
Hope for peace talks
Halt breaks gloom
Last night, President Lyndon Johnson announced to the nation and the world that at 8 a.m., Friday, the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam would cease.
Hopefully, the bombing halt will quicken the pace of the Paris peace talks and the United States will in the foreseeable future find a way out of the maze of its involvement in Vietnam.
The announcement of the bombing halt has been hinted at since the first rumors of a breakthrough in the Paris peace talks first began circulating over a week ago.
The Paris talks, which first began last spring after the President's dramatic announcement that the bombing of the North would be restricted and that the U.S. would try to begin negotiations for peace in Vietnam, have dragged through the summer and early fall with little hope of progress.
Hanoi had insisted upon a total bombing halt before seriously mapping out a peace treaty but the U.S. has countered that the bombing of the North couldn't end until some assurance was given that the Viet Cong would not take advantage of the cessation to increase its military operations.
Apparently this assurance has been sufficiently given or at least promised at to justify, in the President's and his advisors's estimations, the bombing halt.
Dissatisfaction with the Vietnam war has grown steadily and overwhelmingly in the past few years, not only in the United States but abroad.
The arguments that the United States will lose world prestige if a clear-cut victory is not obtained in Vietnam are scarcely, if ever, voiced anymore.
Ending the war has instead become almost a necessity to restore the slipping respect for the United States in the eyes of the world.
In view of the veiled promises and hints of Hanoi about their possible actions after a bombing cessation, the United States is taking a decided risk by the bombing halt.
But certainly it is now a necessary risk.
The future of the Paris talks hinges on more than the cessation of bombing in the North; the problem of whether to acknowledge the South Vietnamese government of President Nguyen Van Thieu or the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front or both as the official voice of the Vietnam people in the talks is a major problem not completely solved by Johnson's address.
Johnson said that, although the NLF would be present, this in no way would involve their recognition.
And for the citizens of the United States, soured by the labryinth of the war and its effect on the domestic scene, the hope of peace sharply breaks into the rising gloom of a nation clamoring for change.
The bombing halt, however, marks a distinct beginning in the search for peace.
The bombing halt signifies more than a way to get the Paris talks moving; it also offers hope that the pessimism and cynicism of the United States citizens, both old and young, can be assuaged. The advent of peace in Vietnam gives the American citizens a reason for hope in tomorrow.
Editorial Editor
Alison Steimel
TRANSFERS FOR
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DEMOCRATS FOR
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THE MIRWALKER JOURNAL
All rights reserved 1948
Broadway, 25th Avenue
JOURNAL
Date
'Go along without us. We can't face up to the re-entry problem.'
The rock hound
Streisand excellent
By WILL HARDESTY
The soundtrack recording of FUNNY GIRL on Columbia is
'Kismet' good despite drawbacks
Bv LINDA FABRY
what the movie is said to be Barbra Streisand with accompaniment.
After a run of current musicals, this year the University Theatre has dipped it's hand into the past, 1953 to be exact, and pulled out a musical Arabian Night called "Kismet."
In it's day "Kismet" was not the kind of hit that other musicals such as "South Pacific" and "Guys and Dolls" were. For some "Kismet" was a step backward, a return to the complex idiocies of story, the love-in-a-garden type romance, mistaken identities and all the flashy sets and beautiful girls that so enchanted Depression audiences.
And "Kismet's" score, a patchwork of themes from Alexander Borodin's "Prince Igor." Second Symphony, and some of his other works, does not provide the consistently good singing music that musicals such as "My Fair Lady," "West Side Story" and "Oliver" do. From "Kismet" the audience remembers only a handful of songs "Baubles, Bangles and Beads," "Stranger in Paradise," "Night of My Nights" and the haunting "This is My Beloved."
In this day of theatrical realism and the Stanislawski method of acting, a fantasy such as "Kismet" is a chore for trained actors. The characters are basically types—hero, heroine, scoundrel, villain, seductress—and such roughly-drawn characters can be even more difficult for actors than the well-drawn type. The actor in such a case is forced to fill in for the playwrite and this takes a good deal of imagination and skill.
Considering all the drawbacks of a musical fantasy such as "Kismet" and the problems involved in presenting it to today's audience, the University Theatre's production was indeed good. And though opening night started out at a painfully slow pace, things soon livened up and the second act had the magic which was missing from the first.
THE UNIVERSITY DALA KANSAN
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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, Kansas. Postmaster required 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.
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THE MARKET IS COMING.
WE WANT TO SELL IT.
Miss Streisand is reputed to be a perfectionist. For example, 14 attempts were needed before she was satisfied with the way "People" sounded for the soundtrack. The album comes through as a wonderful study of her voice. It is happy, sad, elated, depressed, lower New York City uneducated Jewish, high class sophisticated, shy and timid, bold and brassy, whispery and husky, round and full. But most of all, it is always a beautiful instrument of expression.
"Funny Girl" is supposed to be the story of how Fanny Brice made it in the entertainment world. It would appear the story and the legend of Barbra have become so entwined that it is now "The Story of How Barbra Streisand became a Star" portraying "How Fanny Brice Became a Star."
Kismet is a nice show to see. It has beautiful scenery, costumes and lighting, a few very lovely songs, and some good actors. But there are some musicals which leave you inspired, unfortunately "Kismet" isn't one of them.
Other fine performers worth mentioning begin with David M. Miller as the Chief of Wazir Police. With a flair for comedy, Miller added an "odd" voice to some rather straight lines and came out with a character who caused a great deal of laughter. Becky Balding and Susan Lombard also deserve some praise for their fine dancing as two princesses sent to win the Caliph's heart. And Bill Meikle as the outlaw Jawan was a pathetic as he was crude. Meikle's performance was perhaps the most realistic in the whole show, though he was only onstage for a few fleeting moments.
How else could it be? The album includes "People," "You Are Woman, I A Man" and "My Man"-songs which Miss Streisand has "made," or, perhaps, vice versa. At any rate, the "Funny Girl" and Barbra Streisand personalities and persons have become so associated, they are almost the same entity.
The actors, on the whole, did the best they could with the material they had to work with. As the poet Hajj, Mike Rapport turned in a fine performance, despite his rather slow start. Melinda Grable, as Hajj's daughter Marsinah, was not the tall, willowy heroine we are so used to seeing. But, whatever Miss Grable lacked in height, she certainly made up in voice. As the Wazir of Police, Lance Hewett gave the show a bit of a "high." Though a far cry from the original Wazir—an unappetizing fat man with blue lips—Hewett's infectious cackle and slinky ways made him equally as evil. Onnallee Zimmerman, the Wazir's seductress wife, pushed her lines much too hard and consequently seemed terribly affected. Miss Zimmerman's slow, emphatic way of speaking and her "theater" voice were at times appropriate, but at others were not. Unfortunately Miss Zimmerman didn't seem to know which to do when.
Kansan Movie Review
'Hot Millions' has British cool
By SCOTT NUNLEY
"Hot Millions" is a movie cool in the British tradition of humour, written and starred by that most "British" of gentlemen, Peter Ustinov. The addition of Maggie Smith's outrageously feminine incompetency makes "Hot Millions" a very competent (if never quite hot) crime comedy.
For those of us with a Ustinov fetish, of course, the film is a certain success. With his dapper self in disguise under unkempt clothing and hair, Petter Ustinow establishes another of his fondly remembered characterizations—Pendleton, an aging and rather ineffectual embezzler.
It is important for the levity of "Hot Millions" that Pendleton never be mistaken for a true master criminal. Not only is his field of crime relatively "harmless" socially, but on the rebound from one jail sentence, Pendleton is again neatly apprehended by a wary mechanical watchdog.
Rather than Pendleton's criminal "genius," it is a very plebian Human Element—a tea-thirsty washwerwoman—who finally cracks the inhuman virginity of the computer. Ustinov's embezzler is bright, of course, and he skillfully exploits his opportunity—but the point is his very kinship to the rest of us average bumblers.
Supporting stars Karl Malden and Newbairn are virtual throwaways in Director Eric Till's film.
Their roles consist of occasional mugs at and rather constant pursuit of our rotund hero. By now, Malden has leered his dreary way through so many movie roles that he must find it difficult to encounter a female in public without accosting her!
Not only does she have that best-of-Britain sunless milk-complexion, but her tiny nose with its flawless arch seems to be the perfect focus of every shot of her. If the Ustinov-fetish doesn't attract you, a Smith-fetish surely should.
But Maggie Smith, as Patty, is absolutely delicious.
It is between these two delightful hams that the film finds its few "hot" moments. Patty's futile attempts to cope with any sort of gainful employment and Pendleton's unabashed sexual naivetie mesh to create an outcast couple that should certainly be tragically overwhelmed by life. That they transcend each new blow by laughing at it together is exactly the refreshing reason that "Hot Millions" is a calm but surprisingly invigorating film.
Burdened with an action-less plot, repeating the by-now-stale formula of crime comedy, saddled with colorless supporting actors, "Hot Millions" cannot be considered a shoo-in for the American comedy market. Its pace (and its ultimate value) is rather more British. And a pleasant evening for all us Anglo-philes.
Friday, November 1, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Letter to the editor
Law students tell
To the Editor:
In reference to a letter appearing here a few days ago, we respectively submit that several of the remarks by Mr. Richard Konn were definitely well taken. Certainly, violence is totally unnecessary in the football stands. This form of conduct is degrading both to our fine team and to the University of Kansas.
However, it might behoove Mr. Konn to inform himself of the factual situation about which he write before attempting to enlighten the rest of the campus as to the immoral and immature conduct of the KU law students. Had Mr. Konn had the foresight to do this, he would have discovered that the altercation of the Indiana game was precipitated by a very drunken non-law student (sitting in the aisle) whose thoroughly gross remarks, aired with complete disregard for the sensibilities of our wives, dates and children, prompted those near him to ask that he leave-at which point a friend of his (also drunk) proceeded to wield a wine bottle. The other incident,
Mr. Knonn, started about 15 rows above the law section, but the combatants tumbled down the stadium, causing the entire section to scatter-but no law student was involved.
We sincerely hope these incidents will not be repeated. Let's cheer the Hawks, Mr. Konn—and not indulge in guilt by association.
KU civil engineers get power supply
This is not just the year for the uncola or the uncandidate but also the year of the unparty.
KU Student Bar Association
Demonstration held by ungroup claims no cause
Yesterday an ungroup demonstrated in front of Strong Hall, under the flag pole.
"It's basic tenents are realistic apathy and surrealistic atheism," added another. The unpurposes of the unorganization were obviously spontaneous and unthought.
The General Electric Company has given the KU civil engineering department a new power supply for use in the engineering mechanics and structures laboratory.
"It's an unorganization; it has no purposes, no constitution, nothing, protesting everything and nothing," said one unmember.
Members held a sign proclaiming: Attention All Hippies-nonhippies, Talk to us about N.N.N., the new third party in uncampus subversive politics."
"We are all non-leaders," added another. "If we were leaders,we'd fall apart."
This power source will be used to drive a 200,000-pound testing machine that is used both for classroom and research work. The testing machine is designed to permit the study of any type of structural component in tension, compression, or flexure.
"The ungroup was deformed last night and it's getting bigger all the time," added an unspokesman. "We are against politics. Everyone is a member but we are nonmembers. There are eight hard core and maybe six or seven moderate unmembers."
Immediate unplans include a march tomorrow beginning at Templin toward the football stadium.
"We will protest everything." "We also plan an unprotest when Gen. Lewis Walt speaks at the Union next week."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 1, 1968
Election nears; views clarified
As the year's presidential campaign draws to a close, interest in the candidates opinions has increased. Charges and countercharges have been issued by all three candidates.
In the interest of clarity, the University Daily Kansan presents the following summary of the candidates' veiw on the major issues.
The issues and the answers:
Richard Nixon, the Republican candidate, is still standing behind the commitment he made to President Johnson earlier this year not oto make any statements "prejudicial to the Paris negotiations." He has been quite vocal, however, in stating that he believes the war should have been fought differently in the first place. The United States has "wasted" its military advantage, he says. Nixon also thinks the bombing of North Vietnam was a mistake. In line with his earlier pledge, he has made no definite statement on what he
Socialist leader calls American politics backward
A spokesman for the Socialist Workers party last night called the United States "the most politically backward country in the world."
Seth Wigderson, the regional director for the Socialist party made the statement last night as he blasted almost every aspect of the American political and economic system.
Wigderson attacked the capitalist system as the main cause behind many social problems. He said, "We're tired of racism, war and poverty which the capitalistic system creates and perpetuates."
He spoke out against the Vietnam war, racism and poverty. He called for the development of a black political party and said he advocated the Black Panther militant organization.
Speaking against the war in Vietnam, Wigderson urged socialist followers to subvert American soldiers, thereby weakening the war effort. He said, "Our goal is to get every single GI out of Vietnam and bring him home."
Widgerson denied students were changing the social system. He called college-educated persons, "House slaves," after a term once used by the militant Negro leader, Malcom X.
He said the term originated from southern slave holders who gave a modest amount of education to slaves living in mansions, making the slave more useful to the master.
When asked whether he felt violence would result from the socialist movement Widgerson replied, "I think it's very probable there will be some."
He said every man has a basic democratic right to "struggle and defend himself." However he added, "We don't advocate violence anymore than the weatherman advocates rain."
intends to do in the future,
except to say he will end the war
as soon as possible. Turning the
var back over to the Vietnamese
one possible step, he said.
Hubert "Humphrey—the Democratic candidate, has taken several stands on the war. Before the Chicago convention he generally gave his support to the Johnson war policy, that is, no bombing halt without reciprocal action, and his backers were instrumental in keeping the "peace plank" out of the Democratic platform. Last month, he said he would stop the bombing of North Vietnam "when it was safe to do so." His latest position is that he would "consider" a unilateral bombing halt as an "acceptable" means of bringing about peace. Humphrey originally made the same pledge to LBJ as Nixon did. He agrees with Nixon on the "de-Americanization" of the war.
George Wallace, the third party candidate, says the U.S. made a mistake in entering the war, but now that we are there, he feels we must achieve an "honorable peace." Wallace says an honorable peace means the eviction of all North Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam and the total defeat of the Viet Cong.
Crime and racial strife, student militancy and law and order constitute several of the most important and least understood issues of the campaign.
Humphrey advocates strengthening local police forces and the National Guard with federal funds. He also supports massive federal outlays for eradicating the "causes of disorder" outlined by the Kerner Commission in its report.
Nixon advocates federal aid to local police forces also, but says the role of poverty as a cause of crime and disorder has been overplayed. He is in favor of prompting private industry to solve ghetto problems along with some ore federal aid. He generally takes a tougher line on disorder than does Humphrey.
Wallace has been the most vocal of the three on this issue. He feels that police have been hampered in their work by the U.S. Supreme Court and civilian leaders. He said police should be free to do their job.He said he would "run over" any demonstrator who laid down in front of his car. Looters, he says, should be shot.
Nixon said he is in favor of ending the draft entirely and instituting a volunteer military based on higher pay and more incentives. Rep. Garner E. Shriver, R-Kans., published a survey which said this system would be better and cheaper than the draft.
Humphrey is backing a 19-year-old lottery system under which names would be drawn at random from the draft pool, rather than the present system of drafting the persons with the lowest draft number. He said he is opposed to ending the draft.
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At Hue, Vietnam's old imperial capital, Communists fired 15 rounds of the same heavy rockets into the residential area.
Attacks continue as Johnson calls halt
SAIGON (UPI)—Communist gunners fired rockets into Saigon and Hue Thursday and early Friday, killing at least 31 persons and wounding 87 in attacks that continued until a few hours before President Johnson ordered an end to U.S. air raids against North Vietnam.
The attacks killed 23 and wounded 84 in Saigon with at least 14 rounds of 122mm rocket fire. The attack coincided with the celebration of National Day, the fifth anniversary of the overthrow of the regime of President Ngo Dinh Diem.
Even as President Johnson spoke in Washington, U.S. fighter-bombers continued their strikes against North Vietnam. UPI correspondent Robert Kaylor said that while listening to the broadcast at Tahkli Air
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Friday, November 1, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Goodbye Ku
Class of 1965
Hello Mrs. Robinson
Kansan Photo by Mike Gunther
THE HILL WITH IT?
John Hill, of Prairie Village and senior class president, contemplates his fish and the days to come when he too will be a graduate.
Hill said he has the fish, but has not found Mrs. Robinson yet.
Senior Day to be Nov. 9
Honor thy senior. And Mrs. Robinson.
That's the attitude of the class of 1969 next week when three days of senior class activities will culminate in Senior Day, Nov. 9, when the slogan is "Honor Thy Senior," said John Hill, Prairie Village senior and president of the class of 1969.
Starting Thursday, Nov. 7, the Senior Class Coffee will be held at 9:30 a.m. in the Ballroom of
the Kansas Union, where the senior class hats, sweatshirts, and calendars will be distributed to dues-paying seniors. Dues can be paid at the coffee.
Seniors will be dismissed from 9:30 classes for the occasion.
The blue sweatshirts feature a take-off on "The Graduate" with a Jayhawk in a cap and gown, staring at a shapely leg, with the statement, "Goodbye
KU. Hello Mrs. Robinson. Class of 1969.
Also at the coffee, seniors will be given a ballot to vote for the KU teacher that they would like to see be honored as the recipient of the senior class HOPE award, which is given to an outstanding instructor each year.
KU students, faculty are unsure of bombing halt
The HOPE award winner, plus a special honor, will be announced during half-time of the football game on Nov. 9.
Skepticism of KU faculty and students overshadowed favorable reaction to President Johnson's announcement of a bombing halt in North Viet Nam.
Students and faculty members questioned this morning offered a variety of reactions.
"It's an amazing coincidence that it comes the Thursday before elections," said J. Lawrence Day, specialist in international communications. "My military sources say the bombing that's being done is strategically irrelevant anyway. So, we can ask ourselves, 'Would the Great Pumpkin land in our pumpkin patch?'"
Mawsong Wang, Republic of China graduate student said, "I think perhaps it is no good to stop the bombing because the Viet Cong will take advantage of this period in preparation for further intervention."
"I'm really glad to see it. Any chance whatsoever to move to get the war over with, is a move in the right direction," said Malcolm Applegate, assistant professor of journalism. "It is some hope and that is something we haven't had for a long time."
John Rheinfrank, Overland Park senior said, "I don't think a bombing halt is going to accomplish anything because there are still North Vietnamese soldiers in South Vietnam and if we do
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have to start bombing again it's really going to be bad."
Mike Shearer, Topeka junior said, "It may be the second best thing Johnson has done since he has been in office. The first being his resignation."
One student, who seemed to be a little confused when his reaction was asked for said, "Oh, he called a bombing halt?"
The senior class card will also entitle seniors to free beer and admission to the senior class party at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 8, at the National Guard Armory when the Young Raiders and the Rising Suns will play.
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Seniors wishing to help on these or other projects by working on the senior class committees are asked to contact either Hill, Brent Waldron, Denison, Iowa, class vice-president, Andrea Sogas, Prairie Village, secretary, or Merry Sue Clark, Wichita, treasurer.
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Friday, November 1, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Surging Buffs new stars in 1968's Computer Bowl
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
Weekend after dizzying week end, the 1968 Big Eight football chase has become a serial drama —the Computer Bowl.
Statistically, IBM might have problems keeping pace. Conference scores from last week reflect the trend: 46-25, 41-27, 56-20, 21-20. Even the losers are keeping things interesting.
No less than five quarterbacks are averaging better than 160 yards total offense per game.
The two mainstays in the statistical derby—KU's high-powered Jayhawks and the resurgent Colorado Buffaloos—collide tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
The unbeaten 'Hawks (6-0), ranked best in the nation by the wire services (UPI and AP) and No. 1 by three other surveys, boast a stratospheric 45.2 scoring average-best in the country. KU's 34 touchdowns and 2642 yards rank them seventh on the national total offense chart.
But then, the Colorado of late has also been impressive in the numbers game. Detonator for the explosive Buffs is junior quarterback Bock Anderson.
Anderson has engineered a 37-14 thrashing of Kansas State and a 41-27 licking of Oklahoma, being named the Big Eight's Back-of-the-Week three times this season.
His 455 yards rushing and 863 yards passing place his atop the Big Eight in total offense. That's an average of almost 220 yards per game.
In six games, the versatile 200-pound quarterback has gained 1317 yards and accounted for 13 touchdowns to rank sixth in the nation in total offense. With four games left, Anderson is just 442 yards shy of the all-time conference record (1,749) for total offense.
There was a time, however,
that Anderson and Colorado
were grounded. California
blanked the Buffs, 10-0, and
Missouri ran roughshod, 27-14.
Only the score was close in the
Missouri match at the Tigers
held a 421-97 rushing advantage,
a 26-6 bulge in first downs, and
a 111-37 margin in plays from
scrimmage.
That "for example" and the fact that Colorado is fourth among Big Eight schools in total defense bothers Coach Eddie Crowder.
But it was Crowder who played a prophetic role during the pre-season Skywriter's tour. "Perhaps this is odd, but I believe the Big Eight teams will score more points than ever despite the great defense and tremendous coaching."
At any rate, the Buffs have provided enough offensive punch to offset their defensive shortcomings. Besides Anderson, Colorado has a handful of other
threats: running backs Ward Walsh and Steve Engel, and receivers Monte Huber and Mike Pruett.
Walsh, a 202-pound sophomore fullback, and 220-pound junior tailback Engel have accumulated 309 and 234 rushing yards respectively—both averaging four yards-per-carry.
In split end Huber, Anderson has a quick and agile receiver. The 5-11, 185-pound junior rewrite Colorado receiving marks with 45 catches for 486 yards plus six more grabs in the Bluebonnet Bowl victory last year. Already this season, Huber has snared 24 aerials for 284 yards and two touchdowns.
Slotback Praett, a 210-pound junior, complements Huber with 17 catches for 233 yards and three touchdowns.
Although the Buffs are young in the line, 260-pound senior tackle Mike Montlet leand proven leadership. Montlet, an
All-time KU football attendance records are almost certain to be eclipsed tomorrow when the Jayhawks clash with Colorado in the Homecoming tilt.
Jayhawks closing in on marks
The biggest Memorial Stadium crowd ever was 44,509 for the 1964 Nebraska game. Largest gatherings for the KU-Colorado series have been 42,845 (Boulder, 1961) and 36,158 (Lawrence, 1966).
An estimated 48,000 will be on hand tomorrow, and even that guess might be low.
While attendance records should fall, several KU offensive stalwarts will be approaching or breaking all-time marks.
Quarterback Bobby Douglass, whose 217 yards total offense against Iowa State pushed his career total to 3,005, is now 794 yards short of the school record (3,799) of Ray Evans. Douglass' 2,235 yards passing is now only 133 shy of Evans' career passing record.
Tight end John Mosier, with seven pass receptions against Iowa State, has now grabbed 54 passes for 690 yards. Mosier trails Otto Schnellbacher (58 for 1,069) and Bill Schaake (57 for 796) on the all-time KU receiving tables.
All-American candidate, combines with another senior-223-pounder Kile Morgan-at the tackles.
And finally, tailback Don Shanklin is a cinch to better the 3,000-yard mark in all-purpose running tomorrow. Shanklin now has 2,981 career yards, which includes rushing (1,331), pass receiving (254), kickoff returns (702), and punt returns (694).
K.U. STUDENTS GRADUATE STUDENTS
Three sophomores—tight end Jim Cooch, center Don Popplewell, and guard Dennis Havig are holding down starting spots along with junior guard Dick Melin.
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With Martin at linebacker is 200-pound sophomore Phil Irwin, one of only two sophs with the defensive unit. The other, cornerback Pat Murphy, was one of three Buffers to be struck by the flu bug this week. But all were again practicing Wednesday.
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The pass defenders, with backs Steve Tracy, Mike Bynum, and Jeff Raymond, have come-up with only six interceptions while Colorado has yielded 146 passing yards per game.
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on the prize is the sole responsibility of the winner.
2. The prize winner will be notified by mail or before
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fore January 1, 1969.
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GO! GO! GO HAWKS
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 1, 1968
KU over Buffs by 6
By Ron Yates. Kansan sports editor
By RON YATES, Kansan Sports Editor
Predicting football games is really a hazardous occupation. People say funny things to you and query you about the sanity behind your predictions. (Percentage so far this year 84-31-4 for .734.)
"Whv. uh. ves."
"Hey, you that guy that predicts them games?"
"Hey, whatza matter with you anyways? Any dummy knows that Malfunction Tech can take Nurdville A & M any day in the year."
"Yeah, but Nurdville had a pretty good game against Sinister Tech last week. That's why I said they would beat Malfunction."
"Hey, you've got your head in your typewriter. Malfunction will go undefeated this year and even you should know that by now. After all, they beat Nurdville 2-0. Now who ya picking in this week's game?"
"Sky King State should take Malfunction 73-3."
On that note here are tomorrow's predictions:
Big Eight
Nebraska 29, Iowa State 19—Huskers tame Warder and Cyclones. Oklahoma 35, Kansas State 17—Sooners kick Wildcats all over the stadium.
Missouri 28, Oklahoma State 20-Tigers run into upset-minded Cowboy team in Columbia tomorrow.
KU 33, Colorado 27—Buffs put big scare into Hawks tomorrow, but KU hangs on for a tough win. Both teams need this win . . . KU to retain its lead in the Big Eight race and its national ranking, and CU in order to improve its 4-2 overall record and bolster its 3-1 Big Eight standing. This game should be filled with plenty of nitting and scoring.
Other Games
Notre Dame 38, Navy 10—Blub, Blub, gurgle, gurgle goes the Navv.
Air Force 24, North Carolina 19-Falcons look pretty good.
Alabama 31, Mississippi State 17-Tide gets into gear and starts push for a successful season.
Arizona 29, Washington State 14-Arizona making a push for the big time.
Arkansas 25, Texas A & M 22-Hogs need this one bad if they want to figure in title race.
Penn State 30, Army 27-Lions get a tough battle from Cadets. Florida 27, Auburn 24-Gators knock Auburn from their lofty perch in Southwest conference.
Georgia Tech 19, Houston 16-Tech defense puts stops on Cougar offense.
Purdue 35. Illinois 13—Boilermakers blitz by Illini.
Michigan State 17, Ohio State 16—Spartans may be just hot enough after their upset over Notre Dame to contain Buckeyes. Anyway, on a hunch, I'll take the Spartans by one point. Besides, if Ohio State loses, KU will move up in the polls.
USC 31, Oregon U. 13-O.J. saves Troians again.
Oregon State 23, Stanford 21-Beavers hold off late Stanford charge
Texas Tech 19, Rice 12- Red Raiders will have a battle.
Texas 20, SMU 18-Longhorns pull it out late. This game could decide the Southwestern conference championship and the winner could be bowl-bound.
Tennessee 30, UCLA 17-Vols should take care of the Bruins. They are at home and want to redeem last year's 20-16 loss at the hands of UCLA.
West Virginia 17, Kentucky 10-Mountaineers jump on Wildcats.
Would you like a date with an "angel?"
This is what Angel Flight, women's service and honorary auxiliary of the Arnold Air Society, is offering to any male student, particularly those enrolled in the ROTC programs.
Leslie Layman, Colorado Springs, College, junior and Angel Flight Information Officer, said the group will sell tickets for 50
cents in all ROTC classes from Nov. 4 to 14. The coeds will also have tickets to sell with them on campus.
HONOR THY SENIOR
THIS WEEK'S POP FILM
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JAMES STEWART
LEE REMICK
BEN GAZZARA
ARTHUR O'CONNELL
EVE ARDEN
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and JOSEPH N. WELCH as Judge Weaver
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Nov.1, 2,3 7 and 9:30 p.m.
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KU frosh vs. Mizzou
Kickoff is slated for 2 o'clock at Memorial Stadium.
Still smarting from its 55-20 opening setback to Oklahoma, KU's freshman football squad hosts Missouri's yearlings this afternoon.
Coach Dick Tomey's young Jayhawks will be out to even their record against a 1-1 Missouri club. The Tigers frush have bowed to Nebraska, 40-21 while topping Kansas State, 28-14.
Tomey has named Steve Roach, 199-pounder from Raytown (Mo.) South, to handle the starting quarterback chores.
KU normally starts a different quarterback in each freshman tilt to aid the coaching staff in better evaluating the play of the quarterbacks. Bo Tiger of Tulsa, Okla., guided the club against Oklahoma.
PROBABLE LINE-UPS OFFENSE
GO BIG BLUE
PENSPERGE SE-Mark Geraghty (165). Bishop Migng
OFFENSE
SE—Mark Geraghty (165), Bishop Mige
ST—Steve Page (193), Dodge City
SG—Steve Johnson (180), Lawrence
C—Greg Crowley (20a),
Springs, Mo.
TN—D. Armstrong (195), Libera,
TT—Bill Sweatman (195), North,
K.C., Mo.
TE—Roger Bock (204), St. Louis
Ladue
QB—Steve Roach (199), Raytown
TT—Jimmy Jukes (205), Fairfax, Va.
FB—Phil Basler (212), Independence,
Mo.
WB—Al Krist (199), Lakewood, Ohio
DEFENSE
LE—Gary Cooper (208), Spring Valley, Calif.
LT—Mike Sullivan (215), Elmwood Park, Ill.
MC—John Harris (195), Chicago Mt. Carmel
RT—Mel Quevedo (210), Burbank, Calif.
LB—Wayne Miles (205), Dolton, Ill.
RL—Rick Hake (190), Belton, Mo.
BL—Vetil Pinckney (206), Haines City, Fla.
B—Dick Fletter (190), Shawnee Miss-North
A—Steve Roach (199), Raytown South
Safety—Doug Underwood (170), Ottawa
ST-Kenny Page (193), Dodge City
SG–Steve Johnson (180). Lawrence
CG–Steve wiley (203). Excelsior
Simpson M.
TG-J D.Armstrong (192), Liberal
TG-J sweatman (155), North
KC ,Mo C
TE-Roger Bock (204), St. Louis
Lodge
QB -Steve Roach (199). Ray town South
TB-Jimmy Jukes (205), Fairfax, Va
TF-Bilian Philaser (212), Independence
Dakota
WB—Al Krist (190), Lakewood, Ohio
DEFENSE
LE-Gary Cooper (208), Spring Valley, Calif.
LT-Mike Sullivan (215). Elmwood Park III
Park, Ill.
MG—John Harris (195), Chicago Mt.
arifel
Bmel Quevedo (210). Burbank.
Cali
Laff.
LB-Wayne Miles (205), Dolton, Ill.
A NEW TASTE!
LB-Yogi Pinkney (206), Haines City. Fla.
sion North
HB—Steve Roach (199), Ray town
HB—Dick Hertel (180), Shawnee Mission North
HB-Steve Roach (199). Raytown South
Safety—Doug Underwood (170). Ottawa
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Friday, November 1, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Oddsmakers say no to 7-game KC string
OAKLAND (UPI) -The Kansas City Chiefs, who in the last two weeks proved they can win in the old or new fashioned way, will try Sunday to knock off one of their chief rivals in the time-honored championship way.
The Chiefs will be seeking to protect their 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ -game lead in the Western Division of the American Football League when they meet the defending AFL champion Oakland Raiders. A victory would make them 3-for-3 over the Raiders and San
NEW YORK (UPI)—Earl Morrall is "looking forward very much" to his homecoming in New York Sunday, but it's doubtful the Giants are too enthusiastic over the return of their former teammate.
Earl Morrall going 'home'
Morrall, who spent three seasons with the Giants before being dealt to the Baltimore Colts for bench-warmer Butch Wilson this season, will again start in place of the injured John Unitas when the Colts (6-1) meet the Giants (5-2) in a key National Football League interconference game.
Baltimore is coming off a big 27-10 victory over Los Angeles and is tied with the Rams for first in the Coastal Division. The Giants edged Washington, 13-10, and coupled with Dallas' loss to Green Bay Monday night, are now only one game behind the Cowboys in the Capitol Division.
Other NFL games Sunday
Cleveland at San Francisco
Detroit at Los Angeles
Chicago at Green Bay
Dallas at New Orleans
Washington at Minnesota
St. Louis at Philadelphia
Pittsburgh at Atlanta
Diego Chargers on successive weekends, give them seven straight victories and an 8-1 season record.
The oddsmakers think it is too big an order and have established the Raiders as 2½-point favorites. The Chargers, meanwhile, are 16-point choices over the Miami Dolphins at San Diego.
Victories by the Raiders and Chargers would leave them tied for second place with 6-2 records only a half-game behind the Chiefs at 7-2.
The Chiefs beat the Raiders, 24-10, on Oct. 20 by running straight at their rivals from an old-fashioned "full house" T-formation such as was standard in the 1940's. They defeated the Chargers, 27-20, last Sunday with a conventionally-balanced T-attack of the 1960's.
The return of Otis Taylor and Gloster Richardson, who had been sidelined with minor ailments, will give Len Dawson the option whether to stress a ground game or vary his attack.
The Raiders, who whipped the Cincinnati Bengals, 31-10, last Sunday, have the league's leading rusher in Hewitt Dixon (580 yards on 115 attempts) and, of course, a front four which often puts forth the best pass rush in the league. Daryle Lamonica's passing has been erratic, despite the fact it has produced 14 touchdowns.
John Hadl, the league's leading passer with 1886 yards gained and 15 touchdowns, leads the Chargers against a Miami team which has allowed 183 points in seven games. Miami's Bob Griese is the league's No. 5 passer and Larry Csonka's 97 yards gained against Denver last Sunday made him the No. 8 rusher in the league.
The New York Jets, who are threatening to turn the Eastern Division race into a runaway, are 19-point favorites over the Buffalo Bills, who will have fourth-
string quarterback Kay Stephenson at the T-controls. The Bills intercepted Joe Namath five times in a 37-35 victory over the Jets on Sept. 29, and are counting on their strong defensive line to keep intense pressure on the New York quarterback again.
Babe Parilli for emergency duty.
Namath is suffering with a jammed thumb, and the Jets may be forced to call on veteran
NEW YORK (UPI) — The longest doubleheader baseball game on record went for 10 hours, 23 minutes between the San Francisco Giants and the New York Mets in New York on May 31, 1964. The Giants won the first game, 5-3, then struggled 23 innings to win the second, 8-6.
Longest Doubleheader
The Houston Oilers face a series of "must wins" to remain within striking distance of the Jets, whom they now trail by two games. The Oilers (3-5) are 9 points over the Bengals (2-6)
after scoring a season high 30 points in last Sunday's victory over the Bills.
The Boston Patriots (3-4) are $ \frac{1}{2} $ - point favorites over the Broncos (3-4) in Sunday's other AFL game.
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In the 13 years of attending KU sports activities, I have never heard our alma mater sung with enthusiasm by more than a handful of students or alumni. This is terribly discouraging because KU has long been superior in basketball and track and is now excelling in football.
So for Saturday's game, let's put our heart and soul into singing this beautiful song. Cut this out, take it to the game and make the valley echo with Jayhawk spirit.
Ace Johnson THE STABLES
The University of Kansas ALMA MATER
Lift the chorus ever onward Crimson and the blue Hail to thee our Alma Mater Hail to old KU
Far above the golden valley Glorious to view Stands our noble alma mater Towering toward the blue
KU
SUPPORT THE BOWL BOUND HAWKS
.
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 1, 1968
Whitley already eyes 72 Olympic long jump
By LUIS F. SANTOS
Kansan Sports Writer
The 1968 Olympics are over, but Stan Whitley is already looking to 1972, and a chance for that year's Olympics.
"They were great, but they worked very hard at Lake Tahoe," was Whitley's reaction to the gold pot accumulated by the Yank track team.
"But I'm going to keep on working on track after I graduate—and I plan to work toward the next Olympics," Whitley afirmed. "You know, most of the good guys in the long jump are giving up after Mexico-(Ralph) Boston,(Charlie) Mays," he added.
Whitley, a senior from Washington, D.C., attended the Olympic trials in long jump at Lake Tahoe but placed seventh with a 25-8% jump.
Whitley came to KU from Hancock Junior College in Santa Maria, Calif. In his first indoor season with the Jayhawks he won the Big Eight long jump title with a 24-5½ jump. He also broke the school triple jump record with a fourth place 49-5½ feet jump in the NCAA championship.
"I had a big letdown about two weeks before the final when I bruised a heel." Whitley said.
The U.S. track and field team claimed a record 15 gold medals at Mexico City. Whitley said he expected them to do that good.
Jim Ryun's second place finish in the 1500 meters and Bob Beamon's amazing leap in the long jump were the two biggest surprises for Whitley.
"Ryun's second-place was a big disappointment. I don't know the reason he didn't win—whether the mono or whether he was psyched out. He looked nervous. A guy as good as he is
Vols seeking revenge win
ATLANTA (UPI)-The fifthranked and well-rested Tennessee Vols are favored to gain revenge tomorrow for the lone loss which cost them the national collegiate gridiron championship last season.
The Vols (4-0-1) will be host on their Tartan turf to UCLA, only team to beat them in '67 when they wound up as the nation's No. 2 team.
A last-minute run by Heisman Trophy winner Gary Beban gave UCLA a 20-16 victory in '67, and the Vols then won their next nine games.
This year's battle doesn't shape up to be as exciting. The Bruins have lost three of their last four games and the Vols, who have had two weeks to get ready after beating Alabama, are listed as 10-point favorites.
However, Tennessee Coach Doug Dickey remains cautious: "UCLA has a very capable team, seasoned on defense and talented on offense," said Dickey. "After meeting two teams (George Tech and Alabama) that relied heavily on passing, we will be facing a club that looks first to its running game."
George Hallas of the Chicago Bears established the NFL record for longest fumble return with a 98 yarder in 1923.
"Beamon really surprised me by jumping 29 feet. At Lake Tahoe he had a 27-1 jump on a foul, and jumped 26 feet after he started on the wrong foot, so I expected at least 28—but 29," Whitley exclaimed.
shouldn't have to fall back so much.
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Whitley's best jump in the long jump—25·7 1/2 feet—was registered last June in the United States Track and Field Federation championship. He made his best triple jump—49·10 1/2 in junior college.
Because of an injury to his right heel last summer, Whitley is not planning to do any triple jumping early in the season. If it heals he might triple jump later, during the outdoor season. He said he is also thinking about switching his long jump start to his left foot.
He is also planning to concentrate more on running this season than on jumping.
Whitley said he has to work on his form. "I have the speed, but I have bad form—I need to improve on my leg extension," he explained.
"My first try with the left foot was 22-11, and if I can reach 24 soon I'll stick to the left foot," Whitley said.
Whitley agrees with KU track coach Bob Timmons' prediction that KU is a strong threat in both the NCAA indoor and outdoor championships.
"The team is pretty strong, and I think we are more of a threat outdoors," Whitley said. "The distance runners should provide us the edge over last years team, when only Ryun came through for us in long distance," he added.
Two KU freshman distance runners, Rich Elliot and Doug Smith have run well in the cross country meets. Smith won the KU Invitational and the OSUKU Dual, and Elliot placed second in both the Oklahoma State Jamboree and the Southern Illinois meet.
Whitley was surprised by John Carlos and Tommie Smiths' demonstration at Mexico City.
"I didn't know what they were going to do because I hadn't heard much talk on what would be done," Whitley said. "But they had their reasons, something the other race doesn't understand. I don't think they gained anything though," he added.
A desire to travel brought Whitley to KU. After graduating from high school in Washington he drove to California with KU sprinter Jim Hatcher, a senior from Washington, D.C., and
STAN WHITLEY
Cecil Turner, now playing professional football with the Chicago Bears. At California, he got several scholarship offers, including one from the University of Southern California.
VISTA to recruit on KU campus
Recruiters from Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) will be on campus next week.
"I decided to come to KU because I wanted to come to the Midwest," Whitley said.
They will man a table in the Kansas Union and show a film throughout the week, said Tom Moore, director of KU-Y, sponsoring organization for VISTA Week.
Persons interested in obtaining VISTA volunteers for speakers in classes or living groups should contact the KU-Y office, Moore said.
Nancy Schiffer, Little Rock, Ark, senior and VISTA volunteer last summer, is chairman of VISTA Week activities.
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ENGINEERING GRADUATES
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NOVEMBER 8,1968
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Friday, November 1, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
-On the KU Scene-
This week's unusual date idea -Rent a horse-drawn hayrack at Spencer's Riding Academy and have an old-fashioned hayrack ride.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE-Musical production, "Kismet," tonight at 8:20 and Sunday at 2:30 p.m.
SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR
-Victory party after the KU-CU game.
MR. YUK-This week featuring "Glass of Sherry."
GRANADA THEATER—"The Parent Trap," starring Hayley Mills.
VARSITY THEATER—"Hot Millions," starring Peter Ustinov.
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
1—"Barbarella," starring Jane Fonda.
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
2-"Paper Lion," starring Alan
Alda.
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
3-Ingmar Bergman's "Hour of the Wolf."
MAGIC CARPET-Giant slide ride for 10 cents at 6th and Colorado.
SUA POPULAR FILM— "Anatomy of a Murder," starring James Stewart and Lee Remick, at 7 and 9:30 p.m. tonight, Saturday and Sunday night in Dyche Auditorium.
TGIF-Jayhawk, Gaslight,Old Mission Inn.
GOLF—Hillview Public Golf Course or Alvamar Hills
RED DOG INN-Tonight the "Young Raiders," and Saturday night, the "Rising Suns." Tonight is $1 night.
HORSEBACK RIDING—Spencer's Riding Academy.
TGIF-Wheel, Studio. Stables.
SUA ACTIVITIES-Home-
coming concert featuring Andy
Williams and Roger Miller, at 8
p.m. Saturday in Allen Field
House.
Where's it at
Kansas Union offers variety
Every KU student has made a trip to the Kansas Union at one time, if only to purchase books in the bookstore. The Kansas Union, however, is a multipurpose structure housing a variety of recreational activities.
For the aesthetic minded, the artistic displays on the first floor offer an opportunity for a bit of quiet reflection.
The displays change regularly and include paintings, sculpture and photographic exhibits.
Poetry readings, special films and lectures are as much a part of the Kansas Union as the Jayhawk. At various times during the week, a student can take advantage of these well-publicized activities.
In the Hawk's Nest and Trail Room, a boisterous atmosphere prevails as the jukebox blares a
selection of rock and soul sounds.
Located two levels down in the sub-basement, the Hawk's Nest and Trail Room are gathering places for students who want to relax. The dress is casual as patrons enjoy a soft drink, sandwich or just conversation.
Down another flight of stairs to the sub, sub-basement and the noise of falling pins in the Jay Bowl.
The Jay Bowl includes a twelve lane bowling alley as well as pool, snooker and billiard tables. The newest addition to the Jay Bowl, a football game, provides a new and challenging change of pace.
Besides individual bowling, the Jay Bowl has organized an intramural bowling league which offers six separate league divisions for the student who likes competition.
Other Kansas Union facilities include a cafeteria, dining room and numerous banquet rooms.
Meeting of Brocks
ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Lou Brock, fleet outfielder of the St. Louis Cardinals, met Lou Brock, an executive of the International Association of Machinists, during a baseball game in Busch Stadium. Baseballer Brock is a Negro, the other Brock is white.
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Lynda, baby return home
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Lynda Johnson Robb and her 6 day old daughter Lucinda Desha leave Bethesda Naval Hospital this afternoon and come home to the White House.
Lynda, 24, entered the hospital a week ago tonight and her first child was born at just after midnight on Oct. 25.
Luci Johnson's White House room has been made over for the baby which Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson said probably will be nicknamed Cinda.
"We're very, very happy," said President Johnson as he helped his radiant daughter, Lynda Johnson Robb, out of the White House car.
The baby waved an arm. She sucked her fingers and wore a long white cotton dress trimmed with pink piping which had belonged to Lyda,
JoAnn Gresham
CAROLYN HARRIS
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VI 2-1944
1. ___
14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 1, 1968
What happens to the leaves
Autumn paints KU campus
October's chill winds envelop the KU campus with color-oranges, reds and yellows of countless autumn leaves, flaunting riotous color on the trees below the Campanile, floating through the air like bright magic carpets and landing in mass confusion on campus lawns.
Although KU students marvel at the autumn beauty and revel in shuffling through piles of leaves on their way to class, few realize that even at KU the annual task of leaf-raking is part of October's labors.
Harry Blitch, the Buildings and Grounds supervisor of grounds and landscaping, said his men don't really mind raking leaves.
Men from the Buildings and Grounds department can be seen raking around bushes and trees and piling the leaves into neat stacks.
"It's just another job," he said.
Ten men rake the leaves, Blitch said. "They work raking on and off for about a month and a half."
Over large areas of lawn a machine sweeps up the leaves, transferring them to a dump truck. But the grounds workers must rake around bushes and trees by hand, keeping sidewalks and paths free from piles of leaves. Blitch said.
"We have our own standards and we try to keep the grounds looking a little better than presentable. But the University doesn't set any laws about how many leaves can be on a cubic foot of space or anything like that," he said, jokingly.
KU's colorful leaves don't
meet the usual fate of most autumn leaves. Instead of going up in smoke, the leaves are eventually reused to beautify the campus in later springs.
Blitch said the leaves are hauled every three days to farmland east of Lawrence where they decay into a mulch and are used as fertilizer a few years later.
Kansan Photo by Mike Gunther
The Buildings and Grounds department hauls it back to KU and spreads it around plants and trees to add nutriment to the soil, Blitch said.
At KU, the beauty of autumn isn't wasted but used instead to add to the beauty of future seasons.
Pants suits lead fashion trends
NEW YORK (UPI)-Yves St.
Laurent didn't have a kinky telescope or a foggy crystal ball when he predicted long pants suits will become commonplace for females.
Trend-setting American designers, showing spring collections to clothes buyers from stores across the land, do more than spice their collections with pants suits. They're showing the outfits as nonchalantly as they parade dresses and suits.
Most of the pants suits seen in early collections have hip length jackets or tunics. The length of these nicely takes care of the rearview-considered not attractive when a woman not built for pants wear some.
That means all of you out there who have been waiting for
the pants suit fit in the garment district to go away might as well accept them. In the office even, as St. Laurent predicted.
And you who have been waiting for skirts lengths to drop dramatically have something else to face up to. Short skirts—maxi minis halfway between knee and hipbone—also seem certain to stay on the American seene.
A wide-legged pants suit in the Bill Blass collection was typical of those taking care of the rearview. It had a tunic top and was high belted.
Chuck Howard, for Townley, was big on wide legged pajama pants treatments. A red and white tablecloth check pajama suit was topped with a white vertically pleated and sleeveless top.
One of the strongest statements for short skirts was made in the junior sophisticates' collection. Hemlines were pegged at midpoint between hipbone and knee.
Even Marie McCarthy, designing for the Larry Aldrich collection, kept the hems at between four and five inches above the knee. That's longer than the junior sophisticated' shorties but still, by a lot of tastes, too short for comfort.
One Big Run
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) THE STP-turbocar made only one run in Indianapolis 500 competition but the controversial race car established 17 track records in its 1967 appearance.
Sandy's
Sandy's
Go Jayhawks
Beat
Colorado
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Speech program director returns
VI 2-2930
Bobby R. Patton, assistant professor of speech and drama and director of the fundamentals of speech program, has just returned from a two day visit (Oct. 24 to 25) as consultant to the department of speech and dramatic arts at the State University of New York in Albany.
Patton met with the instructors in the fundamentals of speech program at the university, and proposed modifications in the current practices of teaching basic speech.
studio de portra
546 East 19th
Lawrence
Viking 2-2300
Outdoor Color Studies
• candid and casual weddings
• unique portraits
• realistic commercials
Join the quest for the world's largest cheese!
Start here.
Franklin Pierce, you will recall, had a pet marmoset living with him in the White House. Jonathan Swift, on the other hand, observed in Polite Conversation, "Why, everyone as they like," the marmoset who kissed her cow." President Lyndon B. Johnson put it another way when, reporting to the nation in the aftermath of the Detroit riots of July 1967, he observed, "Righteousness and peace must kiss each other. It's all part of the Warning: Telling a Western Waters' Convention at Yellowstone Park had the right idea. They're part of a Cow Cycle, of course, as is The Cradle Tomb at Westminster. (It must be admitted, however, that the animal part of an Aborted Cow Cycle.)
Or here.What the hell
It's about time somebody invented a new literary form again. The mantle has fallen on the manly young shoulders of Christopher Cerf, editor, songwriter, singer, citizen of the Harar maker, and former editor of the Harar collection, had been from Michael K. Fritch, who not to be confused with the author's drawings. What more do you want? Cheese? On to the Wisconsin Pavilion at the New York World's Fair! Once you have read Mr. Cerf's book, you too will comprise a collection of symbiotic relationships between animals, fruit, girls, dreams, and cheese.
an Aborted Cow
Cycle.)
$4.95 at your college bookstore
The World's DOUBLEDAY Largest Cheese by Christopher Cerf
Friday, November 1, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Daily Dairy Kansas are offered to all. Cars are color to paint, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Tired of walking? I'm getting hungry —must sell 250cc Yamaha with extras.
Will deal on price. Call Tom. VI 3-6631 or leave message. 11-4
Record Player with AM.FM, FM-
stereo. Call Antonio. VI 3-1406 after
5 p.m. 11-5
New small refrigerator—ideal for study dens, apts. etc—only $99.00.
Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St.
11-8
MUST Sacrifice, 67 Plymouth Bel-
vedere, V-8, power sieering, 13,000
miles, automatic Make offer. VI 2-
2062 11-4
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization" Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Iread. 1-9
'62 Triumph, TR-4, Red Convertible,
Excellent condition. Forced to sell.
Call Ron Holliday at VI 3-57121 after
2 p.m.
11-4
EXTRAORDINARY BUY! Fisher 220-
T Garrard Mark-50 turntable and one pair
KLH speakers. Excellent condition.
Best offer 'takes it!' VI 2-9844
1967 Mustang, six-stick. Excellent condition. 10 months—19,000 miles of warfare. Maintaining Call Larry Pineau on VI a 2,7710. If no answer, call U 4-3973. 11-5
WHY WASTE MONEY ON RENT
WHEN YOU CAN OWN A MOBILE
you can buy a mobile close to KU in newly paved court.
10 x 49² two bedrooms; built-in stereo record player, AM-FM radio & tape recorder, washing machine & large air-conditioner; roll-away divan for extra sleeping space; completely redeco-
lation; age for call so you can 6-10 to see and make offer of $1800.00 or less.
11-11
1966 Honda S-90, 3,000 miles, excellent
shape. Call 512-6484. 11-5
1961 Oldsmobile, dynamic 88. Good condition. Call VI 3-1711 $390. 11-1
Complete line of new FIAT and DATSUN sedans and sports cars—starting at $1590. Dealer is in Ottawa. For local information on the cars, prices, and trade-in value of your car, call Carl at VI 2-3683. 11-5
'67 Camero, 427 HiPo bored 60 with
crome Molley crank and rods,
and rod holders. Fully water-
distributor, special high lift and long
duration cam. Engine has been complete
balanced. Extras include complete Schleifer clutch set up with Anionic
fuel injection. Bars, Airlift shocks and special front
end lift kit. Isky valve springs. 4-
horsepower engine. Glass hood. 7 qt oil pan Only 4,000
miles. 843-8315 after 5:00 p.m. 11-5
127 Cobra Roadster, 8,000 miles, never raced. $7500 cash. No trades. Serious inquiries only. See John Hodges, Rm. 205, Naimshit Mall. 843-3757. 11-5
66 BSA 650 Lightning in Excellent condition. Must sell to finance education, $775 or best offer. This is a real bargain. B43-831-835. For p. 6.11 - 11.12.
THE UnderDoq
...A Very Private Club Nightly Entertainment New
Now
Casa De Taco
Deliciously Different Mexican Food 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE
1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557
RENT A NEW FORD
1962 Dynamic 88 Oldsmobile. Body and engine in excellent condition. Good gas mileage combined with normal Oldsmobile road excellence makes it a good road car. Must appreciate. Priced to sell immediately VI 2-8919. 11-7
Five tickets for this Saturday's Colorado game—next to end zone. Call Kev Finney at UN 4-4376 Leave message if not there. 11-1
Ford Faleon Sprint V-8. Four-speed, bucket seats. Perfect condition inside and out. Need money—must sell soon. Call VI 3-6870 Evenings. 11-7
1958 Ford V-8, 4 door sedan, auto-
lock, dual-fuel, well stock cell,
Wayne Briert, VI 2-3395
8-track Leariet tape deck Plays through cardboard panels 7-7
Bart Cardeltees, 843-481-77 -7
Be prepared for all of the Holiday Festivities ahead. See what the House of Wigs has to offer at as much as $75 and be beautiful with wigles cascades and all types of wigs. Call 913-631-9483 in Shawnee Mission. 11-7
1964 Impala, SS 327 engine, 4bbL.
$1200 Cheap Dave Philips 84-13-17
www.careerexplorer.com
1965 Dodge 880 H.T., nicest one anywhere, 6 way seats, tilt wheel, contrasting leatherette interior, interior, Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 lowa 11-7
1863 Olds Convert. white with white
1870 Olsen. Jerry-Jerry
Olskogwien. 2522 Lille. 11-7
1964 Volke Deluxe Sedum - Exception-
Jerry Jerry Jerry Jerry
Voikswagon, 2522 low 11-7
From John Haddock Ford VI 3-3500 23rd and Alabama
1966 Dodge 2 Dr. H.T., 383 V8 Buckets, Air Console Automatic, P.S. B.P., Vinyl top, Special Paint--immaculate Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 I-7
Fresh flower arrangements and cordages—anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 11-1
1966 Plym, Barracuda. Local car, one owner, Actual mileage—Absolutely Nice as new —Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa 11-7
One used 21" RCA Victor television.
Deluxe console model in good condition for reasonable price. Call VI 2-4493 after 6 p.m. 11-7
Remington Nylon "66" 22 automatic rifle with 4x scope. Both new. Most rugged and accurate 22 made. $45.
VI 2-8671. 11-1
6 string classical guitar. Call VI 3-6971. 11-5
NOTICE
TYPEWRITERS-1 a r g e selection-
sales, rentals, service. Office equipment,
supplies and furniture. Xerox duplicating service. Calculator rental.
Lawrence Typewriter. 700 Mass.
843-3644. 11-1
The Party Place
Mont Bleu Ski
Lodge
Route 2, Lawrence
HOMECOMING
SUPPLIES
VI 3-2363
- Standard 1" poultry netting
Also We Have —
- Lumber and Plywood cut to order
- Do-it-yourself book case mtls.
McConnell Lumber
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
844 E.13th
Gift Box
- Theatre Board
Plenty of Free Parking
VI 3-3877
Andrews Gifts
I will take pictures of anything for anyone. Call V1 3-1711. Ask for Dave
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q—outdoor pitt, rib slab 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. tf
AUDIO EQUIPMENT SERVICE by competent personnel interested in HI-TECH training. UAL CO. Hillerstar Shopping Center VI 1-2444, afternoon and d evenings.
SPECIAL SALE—Current model H.H. Scott 312-D FM Tuner. This is a Demo unit in superb condition. It lists for $319.95—Now discounted at $225.00. Haynes-Ray Audio & Music Co. VI 2-1948. Aft. Eve hours. 11-5
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Institute, 107 W. 7th, VI 832, and in the Kansas Union University Tuesdays. l1-19
Candles extraordinaire at Hass Hardware. We have handmade candles by monks, Japanese-temple candles, round candies from Italy, drip candles and scented candles. Come see 1029 Massachusetts. 11-7
There is still time to send a Christmas package to that special guy overseas. We are happy to offer non-perishable goodies for Christmas. We have mailing cartons and information bags from Shop Mall and shopping Center 1-2-7175, Open 'til 11:00. 11-7
RUMMAGE and BAKE SALE—Homemade bread (cholla, raisin, etc.), cookies, pies, sweet rolls, Lots of rummage. Friday, Nov. 1, 1-5 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 2, 7 a.m.-5 p.m. Lawrence Community Center. 11-1
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge, Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts.
Phone VI 3-8074. 11-7
Voluptuously, velutinous, lasciiviously.
lubricious, essentially sensual
STRAWBERRY FIELDS is especially for
the pleasureably passionate pass-
ing of the sex life living
Come to STRAWBERRY
FIELDS. 712 Mass. Open 10-6. 11-7
Extra money for your organization,
extra equipment for your friends
friends together for a "Wig Party."
Contact The House of Wigs, 7202
819-631-9483 Shawnee Mission. Phone
913-631-9483
HELP WANTED
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-
time openings available in day or
night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Part-time for 11 a.m. till 2 p.m. Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week. Start $1.25 per hr. Apply in person to Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 8. 23rd. tf
1300 W.23rd
Pay-Less$
Self Service SHOES
Lawrence
$1.00 and play all day.
Driving range, snack bar
(cold beer), pro-shop
1 1/4 mi. south of Holiday Inn
VI 3-9687
Hillview Golf Course
2434 Iowa VI 1-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Be prepared get antifreeze!
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Everytime in the Pet Field And Free Parking At
EVERYONE SAYS
1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Experienced Dependable Personal service
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Everything in the Perf Head
And Free Parking At
18 E. 9th V1 2-0021
Kustom and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
STRICK'S DINER
Good Food—Reasonable Cold Beer—Pool Tables Students Welcome
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
"Open till 2 a.m."
WANTED
2 barmaids and 3 cocktail waitresses to work Friday and Saturday evenings in a private club. Must be 21 years of age. Transportation furnished to 1 in Sandower, NJ. Sandower Dennis Ryder, 1416 N. J., Sandflower Village. 11-4
Roommate needed to share two bedroom apt. in Ridgeline. Car necessary Inquire at VI 2-7098 before 3:30 p.m. or after mildite. 11-4
Got to go motorcycle to Topeka If going in near future with truck, trailer, man, or may station wagon, please help. Call 843-1338, Jack 11-4
Needed—3rd serious-minded roommate to live in a nice apartment located very close to campus. VI 2-0299, 111
Student for part time employment
Sales in Advertising. Excellent pay.
Contact Mr. Stubbs or Mr. Price.
Westview Motel. Room 7. 11-5
Needed ride to KU from Overland Park on Thurs. Classes 8:30 to 5:20 Call Shirley MI 9-8174 Overland Park 11-7
Car salesman to sell Fiat and Datsum automobiles. Full or part-time. Call CHerry 242-6715. Vaughn Imports, Ottawa. 11-7
Female to share comfortable double room off campus. Cooking privileges —2 blocks from campus. $35 monthly. Call VI 3-0723. 11-7
SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So a plan ahead to have yours at the most expensive time of the year Lapad's barn Heating and electricity are available. VI 3-4032. 11-12
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high flairy Haynes Ray Audio VI & Vapor Aid, and Eve. Hertlest Hunting Center. 11-22
Experienced Dressmaking. Today's styles, much cheaper than store prices. Get that special dress for school or any occasion. Hems and alterations also. Come see samples. 842-6979. 11-12
LOST
$10.00 Reward: Cameo ring lost in logitech.
Please call Ann J. VI 3-4910.
Red leather-covered button, In or
outdoor Parking lot 10-39
1069 McCallum 10-31
JIM'S STEAK HOUSE
Fine Foods—Popularly Priced
Dining room available for parties
CALL VI 3-9753
½ M. E. of Haskell on E. 23rd
1100 E. 23rd
We have moved
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th St. Shopping Center 9th & Illinois Phone VI 3-3034
New York Cleaners
or the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
For the best in:
926 Mass.
V1 3-0501
Plan
Don't Be Late!
Homecoming Now Order Early
Woods Lbr. Co.
West Sixth
TYPING
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education, SCM elec. located near Oliver Hall VI 5-2873.
Typing of thesees and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048
Typing in my home. Business College Graduate with four years experience. Military 4-3161 or come to Room Military Science Building Reasonable 11-1
Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel.
VI 2-1440. 11-14
PERSONAL
FOR RENT
Have your party at the Studio: 1344
7-29441 or VI 2-4908 . 11-15
VI 2-49441 or VI 2-4908 . 11-15
WANTED - SHIRTS - WHITE OR
COLORED JUST THE WAY YOU
LIKE THEM 5 FOR $1.25 ROYAL
MASTER CLEANERS 842 MASSAGE 11-5
Furn. entire upstairs apt., lvl., kitchen, 2 bdrmts, and bath. Utilities paid. Private entrance, off street parking 10,055. Mass VI. 355. Mass IV. 11-1 or VI 3-0570
small bachelor apartment nicely furnished, carpeted, private kitchen and private parking, quiet. Close to Union. Phone VI 3-8534. 11-7
Two one-bedroom apartments. One at University Terrace, one at Old Mill apartments. Available Nov. 1. Call VI 2-196, II 3433, or IV 7880, I-17.
FOR RENT to adult couple or individual. Beautiful new 2 bedroom apartment near KU and downtown. No pets, no students. Phone VI 3-8534.
Exclusive Representative
- Rings
- Novelties
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Sportswear
- Lavaliers
- Favore
- Badges
- Paddles
- Mugs
- Guards
- Trophies
- Cups
- Awards
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Hillcrest Billiards
NOW OPEN
West End Hillcrust Bowling Land
THE MISSION INN
Bar - Grill, Windy and Marian
Phone VI 1.2-9448
1904 Massachusetts
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd
(Next to Shaw's Auto Service)
North Lawrence
Transmeier's Sinclair
Mechanic On Duty
Service Calls
9th & Iowa VI 3-9602
Hillcrest Restaurant
Whitley Restaurant
In The Bowl
Sandwiches, Dinners
Students Welcome
8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. daily
VI 2-1477
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 1, 1968
U.S. Reaction to halt favorable
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Democrats across the land heaped praise Thursday pight on President Johnson's decision to halt the bombing of North Vietnam. Republicans were more cautious in their approval.
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, seeking to succeed Johnson as Chief Executive, called it a "prudent and ... wise decision." He said "it now appears that Hanoi has agreed to proceed with prudent_and productive action."
Humphrey's GOP opponent, Richard M. Nixon, said he hoped the bombing halt will "bring more progress" toward peace and he pledged his support to Johnson in his efforts to end the war.
But he said the nation needed a new foreign policy "to see that America is not involved in another Vietnam."
Former Pennsylvania Gov. William Scranton, who just returned from an European survey on Nixon's behalf, said it was "an important decision by the president which is most welcome."
Third party candidate George C. Wallace said it was unfortunate that the peace moves came so close to election day but that he-unlike others—would not say it was "politically inspired" because "I'm not aware of all the facts."
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., long an opponent of the bombing, said "everyone
Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass., said, "it was a calculated risk that the President was justified in taking . . ."
who has worked and spoken for peace so long must applaud the President's statement."
Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., chairman of the Senate's preparedness subcommittee, noted that he had always advocated increased
ing the bombing and questioned whether Hanoi was "giving in some or veiling"
He said "it seems to me that within two days we could be able to tell whether North Vietnam really means business." Unless it does, Stennis advocated resuming the bombing.
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who lost his presidential bid to Nixon, said "everyone here and abroad is deeply gratified that this first step toward peace in Vietnam has been taken."
Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., who sought the presidential nomination on a peace program, said he was "deeply gratified" and hoped that "the other side will respond with appropriate steps. . . ."
Sen Jacob Javits, R-N.Y., called the halt "a great development" for America. "I thoroughly approve of the action taken by the President," he said.
Poet recreates folklore of American river valleys
Folkok of the Ohio and Mississippi River Valleys was recreated last night as John Knopeff read his poetry in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
New York Mayor John V. Lindsay said, "this is an important breakthrough for the country and for the whole world toward peace."
Several of Knopeple's poems concluded with comic twists which brought laughter from the audience.
About 40 persons attended the reading, which was sponsored by the SUA.
One such poem was "Farmer and the Owl." This was a tale of
a prankish farmer who dipped an owl's tail in kerosene and set it aflame, only to watch the owl then set fire to his barn.
Official Bulletin
Another poem, which was less humorous, related the eerie leg-end of a mule which was trapped in a coal mine. The echoing sounds of the mule's hoof beats created terror among the miners.
TODAY
Kansas State Teachers Association Conference. All Day.
Knoepfele's poems are built around folk tales, he said.
Chelsea-Men'72 - Day
Grace - Men'69 - Day
12 45 - p.m.
Prayers, Kana'69 - Sunday
Prayers, Kansas Union
Freshman Football. 2 p.m. Missouri
Military Base
Viewing of Homecoming Decorations. 5-11 p.m. Campus.
KANU Highlights. 7 p.m. Election 68: three KU professors from different disciplines express their views on issues and candidates. KANU, 91.5 FM.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
7 p.m. 829 Misisslppl.
Films, 7 & 9 p.m. "Salt of the
Creek" and "Trouble Makers" 303
Ballary
Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Anat-
tor of a Murder" Dyche Audi-
tory
Geology Lecture. 7:30 p.m. Dr John James Prucha, Syracuse. 426 Lindley. Folk Dance Club. 7:30 p.m. 173 Robinson.
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Kis-met."
Latin American Club Parties. 8:30 p.m. Westinrestaurant Center.
General Homecoming Reception. 10 a.m.
South Lounge, Kansas Union.
Alumni Registration. 9-1 p.m.
Lounge, Kansas Union.
General Homecoming Buffet. 11-1
d.m. Kansas Union Ballroom.
am. South Lounge, Kansas Union
ahawk Room, Kansas Union
ajawkroom, Kansas Union
aam. Big Eight Room, Bachan
General Homecoming Buffet, 11-1
KANU Highlights. 1:15 p.m. Footb-
ball KU vs. Colorado KU 91-5
Football
Football: 1:30 p.m. Colorado Memorial Stadium.
Lawrence Lumber
Headquarters for your Homecoming Supplies.
19th and Massachusetts VI 3-1341
HILLCREST CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
The Sound Inc.
- Components
- Records
- Tapes
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Complete Mechanical Service
Broad Wheel Rims 98c
Grease Motor $1.50
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment.
GOODYEAR TIRES
Page Fina Service
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Carillon Recital. 4 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Post-Game Homecoming Reception,
4:30 p.m. Lounge, Kansas Union.
Popular Film 7 & 9.30 p.m. "Anatomy of a Murder" Dyche Audit
SUA Concert. 8 p.m. Andy Williams and Roger Miller Field House
SUNDAY
KANU Highlights. 1 p.m. Philadelph-
ia Orchestra KANU, 915 FM
philadelphia.org/kanu
Carillon Recital. 3 p.m. Albert Gerken.
KANU Highlights. 4 p.m. Boston Symphony Orchestra. KANU, 91.5 FM. Faculty Mixed League Bowling. 6 p.m. Jay Bowl.
**MARK Highlights.** 7 p.m. Cleveland Symphony Orchestra, KANU, 91.5 FM. Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Anatron: a Murder." Dyche Auditorium.
Ring making at its loveliest in new
"I once tape-recorded 70 old rivermen to get ideas for my poetry. It's a tradition of which we're all a part," he said.
TEXTURED GOLD
WEDDING RINGS
TWO BAND RINGS
by ArtCarved
HAND-FLORENTINED DAWN SET
VIVIENNE RICO
A
B
HAND-HAMMERED
TORINO SET
SATIN FINISHED A. CENTURY*
Marks Jewelers
Del Eisele
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
Most of the poems that Knoepfe read came from his only published volume, Rivers into Islands.
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
FINE FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES
Open Monday-Saturday 11:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.
Sundays 4:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.
1 Mi. South of Holiday Inn
Join a leader in the fast growing field of rocket and missile.
EXPLORE the potential for professional achievement at the Naval Ordnance Station, Indian Head Maryland.
Few technical fields offer you as many opportunities for an exciting and rewarding career as the rapidly growing field of chemical propulsion. Indian Head is a recognized leader in research, development, production, and evaluation of propellants and rocket propulsion systems and has advanced the state-of-the-art of chemical propulsion through participation with the Department of Defense and NASA Indian Head has made important contributions to the Polaris, Poseidon, and Sidewinder propulsion systems as well as virtually every missile system in use by the Fleet today.
Representative on Campus
Located 25 miles south of Washington, D. C. Indian Head is close to the cultural, social, and scientific advantages of the Nation's Capital offering opportunities for pleasant suburban or country life near mountain and shore resorts.
Engineering Electronics Electrical Chemical Industrial Mechanical
Professional positions available in:
For interview, contact your placement office
Science Chemistry Physics
Liberal career Civil Service benefits include graduate study at nearby universities with tuition expenses reimbursed
Naval Ordnance Station Indian Head, Maryland
图
20640
Tuesday, November 5
An Equal Opportunity Employer
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
79th Year, No.35
Monday, November 4, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
7-0 - Will we go?
Photo by Mike Gunther
During pre-game ceremonies Saturday, Susan Wassenberg, Topeka junior, was crowned 1968 Homecoming Queen.
MARY POPE HELEN BISHOP OF ST ATHENA BISHOP OF SALISBURY 1968
Miss Wassenberg, who represented Alpha Delta Pi sorority, received the traditional kiss from Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, as he and Robert Docking, governor of Kansas, bestowed the crown and robe upon her.
HOMECOMING QUEEN—1968 Susan Wassenberg, Topeka junior, became the 1968 Homecoming queen during pre-game ceremonies Saturday. She is shown here, escorted by Michael Vance, first year medical student from Parsons.
The queen's attendants were Connie Griffin, Denison, Iowa, senior, who represented Alpha Chi Omega sorority, and Anita Swager, Colby junior, who represented McCollum Hall.
The announcement of the Homecoming Queen preceded the University of Kansas-University of Colorado game this year. In the past the coronation has taken place during half-time of the football game. The change was made this year so the queen would reign over the entire game.
Susan Wassenberg crowned queen Sat.
Group wants assistance in finding new Chancellor
An Open Letter to the Kansas University Students
On Tuesday, Oct. 29, a student committee, denoted the Student Advisory Committee, was selected by students to work in conjunction with a faculty committee and a regents committee in the task of selecting a new Chancellor for the University of Kansas. The purpose of this student committee is to locate as many qualified and available candidates as possible for this position and to advise the faculty and regents in the final screening process of selection.
The existence of this committee presents a real opportunity for the students to indicate their willingness and desire to participate in major affairs of the University. This particular committee has been constituted at a point in time when students are seeking a more effective voice in the operations and administration of the University. The students, therefore, should demonstrate their desire to participate by helping their committee to function meaningfully and effectively in the process of selecting a new chancellor. (Continued to page 12)
KU, Sig Eps successful at Homecoming
See Sports—Pages 7-10
Besides winning the grand sweepstakes trophy, Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity placed first in the men's division of homecoming decorations. Their theme was "You can roller skate in a buffalo herd." It showed a house, with six doors labeled with the names of the Big Eight universities, with the exception of KU and the University of Colorado. Behind each door was the symbol of the school. These doors opened and closed at various times, while a Jayhawk on roller skates rolled over the head of a buffalo rhythmically to their theme song.
Not even Saturday's rain could dampen the spirits of University of Kansas students as the homecoming weekend saw the Jayhawks defeat Colorado, Susan Wassenberg, Topeka junior, crowned Homecoming Queen, Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity win the grand sweepstakes prize for house decorations and Andy Williams perform in concert.
Weather
In the house decorations contest, Chi Omega sorority and Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity won first place in the paired division. In keeping with the decoration theme of "Jayhawk Laugh-In," their display was entitled "Flash: Don't put your chips on the Buffalo." It featured a spider, who looked somewhat like a Jayhawk, jumping down next to Miss Buffet, while a buffalo, dressed in a yellow raincoat, was knocked off his tricycle when he ran into a Jayhawk who was tossing a nickel with a buffalo face.
(Continued to page 12)
Placing second in the paired division was Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity, with Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity taking third place.
Sunny and warmer with southerly winds becoming 10 to 20 mph today. Increasing cloudiness tonight with rain or a few showers spreading across the area late tonight and tomorrow. Occasional rain and a few showers ending tomorrow afternoon. High today 60s. Low tonight upper 30s to mid 40s. Precipitation probabilities near zero today, 40 per cent tonight and 60 per cent tomorrow.
UDK News Roundup By United Press International.
Ships withdrawn
SAIGON—Two of the three U.S. aircraft carriers which had been used in air raids against North Vietnam may now be withdrawn from the war zone, informed military sources said Sunday.
The carriers steamed out of waters off North Vietnam last Friday when the United States stopped bombarding North Vietnam and were assigned targets in South Vietnam. But qualified military informants said Sunday there are not enough objectives in South Vietnam to justify use of all three flattons.
Withdrawal of two carriers would mean about 10,000 Americans moved out of the war zone.
Greeks demonstrate
ATHENS—Police and youths fought in the streets of Athens at the funeral of former Premier George Papandreou Sunday in the biggest demonstration against the military-backed regime since it came to power in April 1967.
Chanting "Papandreou, Papandreou, you are our leader," and "down with fascism," the demonstrators marched defiantly past police and security men in Constitution Square.
Israelis repel MIGs
Egyptian MIGs and Israeli jets battled in the skies over the Israeli-occupied Sinai Peninsula Sunday, a communique from Jerusalem reported. It said Israeli planes forced two intruding MIGs to return to Egypt.
"All of our planes returned safely to their base," the Israeli report said. The communique said the dogfight started when the two Russian-built MIGs tried to enter Sinai air space north of Kantara at 4 p.m.
McCarthy doubtful
WASHINGTON—Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy said Sunday he doubted whether either his own endorsement of Hubert H. Humphrey or President Johnson's decision to end the bombing of North Vietnam would elect Humphrey in Tuesday's presidential balloting.
McCarthy said Humphrey "can win" but he did not appear to be optimistic about that prospect.
Andy Williams, Roger Miller captivate crowd
By LINDA LOYD Kansan Staff Writer
Andy Williams, whose husky, intimate voice can hush capacity crowds to pin-drop silence or draw deafening applause, captivated the KU homecoming audience which filled Allen Field House Saturday night.
Referring to the field house performance as his first in the "wide, wide world of sports," a comparison to "being inside Jackie Gleason's stomach," the master showman opened with the popular movie theme "More."
Interrupted by frequent and spontaneous applause, Williams set his classic upbeat pace and was rewarded by a standing, applauding audience at the close of the concert.
A. C. Hale
"I've always had the image of the boy next door, homespun and down-to-earth, associated with ice cream sodas and the church." Williams told the crowd. "I think I ought to tell the truth—I'm a swinger."
The pop singer broke into the second half of his concert in his usual relaxed style. Dressed in a casual blue sweater and slacks, he sang the romantic Henry Mancini trio "Dear Heart," "Days of Wine and Roses" and "Moon River."
Williams again won audience support dedicating "The Impossible Dream" to his per- (continued on page 12)
(Continued to page 12)
Photo by Mike Gunther
By SUSAN BRIMACOMBE
Kanan Staff Writer
Country and western singer Roger Miller generated enthusiasm Saturday night when he sang tunes of his native backwoods to 14,000 persons in Allen Field House.
The crowd responded with rhythmic clapping to the country rock tempo of "Dang Me," "Kansas City Star," "King of the Road" and "You Can't Roller Skate in a Buffalo Herd." Silence pervaded as students heard the soft strains of "The Last Word in Lonesome is Me," "Husbands and Wives" and "God Didn't Make Little Green Apples."
The 30-year-old farm boy peppered his performance with jokes and boyish antics as he appeared highly keyed-up before his audience.
His high-strung mood followed him off stage when he said of the first part of his performance, "I'm a writer, not a singer."
Pacing up and down and nervously puffing a cigarette, Miller expressed dissatisfaction with his voice projection.
"I'm turned on,but not up," he said.
I'm turned on, but not up. We said
After his second appearance, Miller
seemed more relaxed as he talked of his
current tour and future plans.
He said he felt the contrasting music of (Continued to page 12)
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 4, 1968
U.S. - N. Vietnam war talks planned
PARIS (UPI) — Diplomatic sources said U.S. and North Vietnamese officials Sunday secretly discussed how to arrange expanded war talks which the South Vietnamese government has vowed to boycott and to which the Viet Cong was sending a woman as delegation chief.
According to the reports, the secret planning was being done by U.S. Ambassador Cyrus R. Vance and Hanoi's Col. Ha Van Lau.
In the past two weeks, according to diplomats, meetings led to the Friday halt to American bombing of North Vietnam which in turn paved the way for inviting Saigon and the Viet Cong into the talks.
Viet Cong plan
A five-point Viet Cong peace plan broadcast Sunday by the official North Vietnamese news agency from Hanoi called for establishment of a coalition government in South Vietnam, withdrawal of all American forces and eventual reunification of North and South Vietnam.
GOP awaits late returns in House election race
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Democrats and Republicans are braced for a cliff-hanger running into Wednesday—and possibly days later—for a decision on which party controls the House of Representatives in the new Congress.
The GOP needs a net gain of 30 seats to reach the 218 needed to organize the House. Republican congressional leaders are predicting they will win those seats while electing Richard M. Nixon to the presidency.
But Republican Party managers privately show less confidence and believe that it will be very tough to gain more than 20 seats.
Their Democratic counterparts long have been confident they will keep control of the House. They expect to lose eight to 12 seats if Nixon wins the presidency and no more than 20 to 22 if they suffer a national election disaster.
If these forecasts are accurate, control of the House cannot be decided in any positive way until conclusive returns are available from the Far West, long after East Coast residents have gone to bed and maybe not until the middle of Wednesday.
If the spread between Democrats and Republicans should be narrow and a number of races should be close, demands for recounts could keep the outcome in doubt until even later.
All 435 House members will be chosen in the election Tuesday. Control of both the House and Senate normally goes to the party winning the presidency.
Only 34 of the 100 Senate seats will be filled this year. Even a national Republican landslide would not insure a pickup of the 13 seats needed for GOP control of the Senate.
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South Vietnam's boycott threat was a major hurdle the diplomats were attempting to remove before the expanded talks' first scheduled session on Wednesday.
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President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam said in Saigon Saturday he could not take part in the Paris talks unless Hanoi voted to de-escalate the war and unless the Viet Cong attended only as part of the North Vietnamese delegation.
NLF separate
In Paris, North Vietnamese diplomats said the National Liberation Front (NLF), the political arm of the Viet Cong, will be an independent delegation. Hanoi diplomats said Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, 41 and member of the NLF presidium, will fly in Monday from Moscow to head the NLF delegation.
Al Lauter
Thieu stressed in a wildly cheered speech to his parliament Saturday that his government does not recognize the NLF or the Viet Cong. His supporters said agreeing to treat the Communist guerrillas as anything but a Hanoi tool would be a "surrender."
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
North Vietnamese diplomats said they and Mrs. Binh's delegation are willing to sit down with the Saigon delegation, "a gang of traitors." They also said they do not recognize it as anything more than a "U.S. stooge."
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NEW YORK (UPI)—The head of New York City's striking teachers union said Sunday he would ask Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller to call a special session of the state legislature if there is no progress toward a settlement by election day.
NY teachers may ask state help
Albert Shanker, president of the United Federation of Teachers (UFT), also indicated he was ready to soften his stand in the union's bitter dispute with a Brooklyn school district.
Shanker stated his position in a local television interview
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Monday, November 4,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Connally aids Nixon?
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)—Texas Gov. John B. Connally met secretly last month with two key leaders of Richard Nixon's Texas presidential campaign, it was learned Sunday.
Connally met with state Republican Chairman Peter O'Donnell Jr. and William P. Clements Jr., Nixon's Dallas County finance chairman, Oct. 14 at the Dallas Sheraton Hotel.
According to one report, Connally gave the Republicans names of Democrats he considered potential contributors to Nixon's campaign.
Another source said although names were discussed, Connally gave the Republicans no list of contributors. The source said Connally told the Nixon leaders he did not want to bolt the Democratic Party, but thought the nation would be better off if Nixon defeated Vice President Hubert Humphrey.
Connally could not be reached directly. His press secretary, Kyle Thompson, said he had discussed the matter with Connally and "the Governor said he was not going to say anything about it."
O'Donnell said, "The Governor did meet with us at the Sheraton Dallas at our request to discuss the presidential campaign in Texas." He would not comment further.
Several days before the three-way meeting between Connally, O'Donnell and Clements, Connally had met alone with Clements
Connally was instrumental in helping Humphrey win the Democratic nomination, but has not campaigned actively for him since except for one campaign swing Oct.22.
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Grape boycott leader asks for KU help
KU students are in a position to decide whether migrant farm workers in California will have a decent standard of living or not, Robert Bustos, area co-ordinator for the national grape boycott, said last night to about 30 students at the Wesley Foundation.
"The average migrant farm worker in California now earns $2,000 a year," Bustos said. "If he brings his family, this figure is raised to $3,000."
The workers have attempted to form a union, in order to improve
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"Instead of allowing the workers to vote on whether they want union representation." Bustos said, "the growers have fired prounion workers and brought in greenbacks."
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"A dollar fifteen an hour is not enough for a man to support his family on," he said.
Supporters of the boycott include presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey, and Senator Eugene McCarthy, Bustos said. The late Senator Robert Kennedy was also a strong backer.
Bustos emphasized widespread support is needed if the boycott is to be a success.
"It is up to you, the public, whether the workers will get a decent living." he said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 4,1968
'Smear' tactics
The full page ad in the Thursday evening Lawrence Daily Journal World depicted a sweating property owner complete with ball and chain, holding up a crumbling street. On it were a Hell's Angel-type cyclist and a smartly dressed young man presumably identified as a college student by the appliqued flowers on the fender of his convertible.
The copy with the ad urged the Lawrence citizen to vote "yes" on the vehicle user charge which would tax every motorist of Lawrence $10.
The elected city commissioners, the primary backers of the vehicle tax, chose to publicize their cause with this clever little appeal to the prejudices of taxpayers.
At a time when United States citizens, including surely many Lawrence residents, are decrying the "smear" tactics used by almost every aspirant to public office in this campaign, the tax backers decided to scapegoat University students and blame rising taxes on them.
The ad fails to point out the fact that the KU student vehicle owner has no real say in the election. It fails to point out the absolutely beneficial economic effect of the presence of the University has on Lawrence. It fails to point out the fact that a significant portion of KU vehicle owners also live in apartments and therefore pay property tax as part of their monthly rent.
Moreover the ad doesn't even point out many of the reasonable arguments for the tax such as the rising costs of street repair and the need in Lawrence for such repair.
As University students, we're here partially to learn how to conduct ourselves as responsible citizens of the big "outside" world.
Is this tax backers example to KU students of responsibility, fairmindedness and maturity in conducting a tax campaign?
Alison Steimel
Editorial Editor
Letters to the editor
English classes, vehicle tax
To the Editor:
The article "English 1, 2, 3 Classes May Be Larger Next Fall," which appeared in last Monday's Kansan, unfortunately distorts some crucial aspects of a proposal I have made to the English Department's committee for freshman-sophomore English. Rather than correct the article point-by-point, let me summarize briefly my proposal as it now stands before the committee.
According to my proposal, all sections of the required English courses would remain the same size as they are now. Certain sections—approximately one-third—would gather regularly in groups of 4-6 sections to hear a lecture on the material by a full-time faculty member who would be in direct charge of the new teaching assistants handling those sections. Other sections of the same course would be handled by experienced assistant instructors as they are now.
Two points worth noting about this proposal: (1) It is not a new idea; many of the very best universities in the country have a similar plan in operation. (2) Because enough large classrooms are simply not available at
KU at the present time, it is unlikely that the proposal can be implemented within the forseeable future.
I should point out also that this proposal does not deal with the problem of shrinking graduate enrollment and the consequent shrinkage in the number of available graduate assistants because of the draft. That is a separate, though critical, problem. My proposal is directed at the need, as I see it, for greater participation in the required courses by full-time faculty members, and also for better and less onerous training for new assistant instructors.
Sincerely,
Sincerely,
James A. Gowen
Assistant Professor, English
To the Editor:
This letter is in reference to the advertisement for support of the vehicle user charge that appeared on page seven in the Thursday edition of the Lawrence Journal—World.
The accompanying picture that was included in the ad was in extremely poor taste. It depicted two hippie-like youths riding a motorcycle and a typical
"College Joe" following them on "Easy Street" which was being physically supported by a property owner. This no doubt is meant to imply that the students of the University of Kansas are sponging off of Lawrence residents. The ad gives the impression that the voters of Lawrence can retaliate by passing this tax which would force the students to pay for a substantial amount of the city's street repairs.
The proposed tax money would be used mostly for repairing the streets in the residential districts which few of the students would benefit from.
If the $10 tax is passed in this city as well as in a student's home town, that would amount to a total of $20 which is considerably more than the State of Kansas requires a vehicle owner to pay for the registration of his vehicle. This situation could occur quite easily and I think that it would be unfair to the students.
I sincerely hope that the voters of Lawrence will use a little common sense and defeat this measure as they did in the last election. Sincerely,
Joe A. Zink Larned junior
EVERYBODY'S TALKING ABOUT NEGOTIATING PEACE IN VIETNAM.
GEORGE WALLACE IS SLIPPING IN THE PUBLIC OPINION POLLS.
A man and a woman talking at a table.
EVERYBODY'S TALKING ABOUT NEGOTIATING PEACE IN VIETNAM.
GEORGE WALLACE IS SLIPPING IN THE PUBLIC OPINION POLLS.
AND ALL THIS BLACK POWER!!
AND STUDENT POWER!!
THIS SILLY BUSINESS OF MAKING LOVE, NOT WAR...
AND NOW JACKIE LEAVES CAMELOT TO MARRY A FOREIGNER!!
IT'S AS IF THE WHOLE WORLD HAS LOST TOUCH WITH REALITY.
GARDEN G
THE Milwaukee Journal
All rights reserved 1908
Palmberg Hall, Detroit
GEORGE WALLACE IS SLIPPING IN THE PUBLIC OPINION POLLS.
AND STUDENT POWER!!
AND STUDENT POWER!!
MAKING LOVE, NOT WAR...
THE FRENZY WORLD
I'll go with a simple illustration of a man in a suit holding a teacup.
Garden G
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL.
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL. JULY 1, 1904.
White fear gap
By Rue Chagoll
By Rue Chagoll Garden City, N.Y., senior
For someone with a severely warped sense of humor, it must really be amusing to observe the shock and disbelief among some Americans as the Wallace-for-President campaign continued to snowball right down to the finishing wire.
"I think the only thing to do if Wallace gets elected would be to move to Canada," someone said recently.
A recent editorial in the Tulsa Tribune exemplifies the fear which is beginning to grip the country as the Wallace dream gains more and more attention.
"George Wallace clearly promises a race war and an international upheaval which staggers the mind."
People ask themselves, "How can a thing like this be happening here?"
They couldn't be any closer to doing the right thing than if they were soliciting contributions for boat tickets to send every American Negro back to Africa.
When all of a sudden those heretofore tolerant Joneses next door come asking for your signature on a petition to put George Wallace on the ballot in your state you think, "My gosh, are these people right in what they are doing?"
It almost goes without saying that George Wallace bases his campaign on the fears of the working class. They'll be the first to feel the effects of total emancipation for the American Negro . . . it'll be their jobs, they think, not those of professors, doctors or Supreme Court justices, which will be in jeopardy.
As a writer in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch described the situation:
"He is a primitive man, and he identifies readily with primitive people. He gives them a welcome feeling that public affairs are not so complicated as they often seem; all you have to do is use common sense, and everything will come out all right. He tees off at 'intellectuals' who look down their noses at people, thereby fanning a spark of response in anybody who ever lost an argument. He attacks the news media, an easy target, and so establishes his empathy with all who ever got sore at a newspaper. He catalogues at length all the people he is sick and tired of, including anarchists, liberals, bureaucrats, college kids, Supreme Court justices and politicians; and so many people at one time or another have been fed up with so many others that his obscure resentments translate into an almost joyous mass hysteria of hostility."
But is it really hostility? I say no . . . it's nothing more than intense fear. Fear of the unknown and uncertain future for the common working man. And furthermore it's justified!
The real fault here, the real center of responsibility for this backlash to beat all backlashes, lies right among us: the college students, the news media, the bureaucrats, the Supreme Court justices . . . et al.
What has occurred is a complete failure to communicate. So wrapped up, we have been, in our cultural and intellectual progress that the working man in this country has become the object of scorn and ridicule in these circles. The working man has even been exploited by his own labor leaders.
Wallace's campaign does then capitalize on fear. Many call it hate, but the hate is for us, not for the Negro.
The common white worker needs to be reassured that he is not going to be thrust backward into the dark age from which the Negro is now beginning to emerge.
His solution is to remand governmental control to the states where the common man is a little more likely to be heard and consulted on the important issues. This just further serves to illustrate the utter failure of our national leaders to communicate the issues of the day and to provide a system for educating this man to the point where he'll be able to comprehend the pros and cons of these subjects.
And this had better be one of the primary objectives of the next man to occupy the White House. And that man won't be Wallace. He knows it. We know it.
But more important is what George Wallace has managed to "accomplish" in this 1968 campaign. He's created the widest gap ever between leadership and electorate in this country ... a mark that will last far longer than the four year tenure of a President.
But communications cannot be one-sided—to the whites alone. There must be a continuing bridge of understanding to the American Negro. For he's suffering from exactly the same illness. Riots will continue to plague the nation until he is shown how the bills passed in every session of Congress are to be implemented in his neighborhood.
Everyone must be made to understand that what this nation is experiencing today is indeed a very great period, a period of transition to an ideal of civilization higher than has even been attained by man. It cannot and will not occur overnight. We must have patience. But that does not mean we just sit by idly waiting to find some morning it has all been accomplished. Because this thing will be prolonged for as long as we are satisfied to stall it off with inaction.
But keep one thing in mind. There can be no turning back. George Wallace knows as well as all of us that we are long past the stage where there can be a return to the Alabama way of life.
And offer your sympathy to the man who honestly wishes that to happen.
KANSAN.
Kanman Telephone Numbers
Newroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
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. 650 accommodations, including meals. First class postage for all students without guard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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Member Associated Collegiate Press
Monday, November 4, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
KU seniors chosen to vie for Danforth
Five University of Kansas seniors have been nominated for Danforth Graduate Fellowships which will support up to four years of graduate study.
Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the only criteria for the fellowship is that the candidate be in liberal arts and sciences, and intending to go into college teaching.
"The nominees have submitted applications to the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis, Mo. In January they will be notified as to whether or not they will be interviewed. Announcement of the final selection of fellows will probably be in March." Bell said.
The Danforth foundation gives 120 awards annually. KU usually has one winner each year, Bell said.
KU's candidates are Lou Abernathy, Topeka; Jim Berryman, Hutchinson; Joe Goering,
Moundridge; Barb Hughes, Ottawa, and Gary McClelland, Topeka.
Miss Abernathy is majoring in mathematics and psychology. She has a 2.96 grade point average and is a member of the College Intermediary Board and Mortar Board.
Berryman is a physics major with a 2.8 GPA. He attended KU's 1967 Summer Language Institute in Paris.
Goering, a history major with a 2.89 average, serves as vice president of the student body. He is also a member of the College Intermediary Board.
Miss Hughes is majoring in molecular biology. She has a 2.75 average and serves on the College Intermediary Board and the University Review Staff.
McClelland is a psychology and mathematics major with a 2.79 average. He is chairman of the College Intermediary Board.
Speakers will solve problems
Students who seek a career in writing but have questions about agents, publishing companies or the demands of a writer, can find answers with a new writer's speaking series.
Richard Colyer, assistant professor of English, has introduced the series which will begin this week and continue through the year, bringing a variety of professional writers to the campus.
The program is designed to allow students and other interested persons to meet with writers informally in discussion sessions, Colyer said.
"Usually when a speaker comes, he gives a reading, people are suitably impressed and he goes away. People who are interested in writing would like to go up and talk to him but don't have the chance," Colyer said.
Grad student given grant
Charles Knox, a KU civil engineering graduate student, has received a grant-in-aid of $1,500 from the American Institute of Steel Construction.
This grant was made for research on damping floor vibrations in commercial buildings.
brations are not significant from the standpoint of structural safety, but often cause discomfort to people within the building.
The use of lighter and less expensive materials in the construction of modern buildings has frequently resulted in floors which vibrate from normal movement of traffic inside and outside the buildings. These vi-
The grant will support a pilot project to explore methods for economically reducing these vibrations.
The research is being conducted under the direction of KU civil engineering Prof. Kenneth H. Lenzen, who has been working in this field for about 10 years.
Nigerian troop hit by Biafrans
The Biafrans also captured scores of British-made rifles and thousands of rounds of ammunition in the engagement Saturday, the communique said.
UMUAHIA, Biafra (UPI) -At least 200 federal Nigerian soldiers were killed as Biafran forces continued an offensive, according to a war communique issued by Biafra's military command here Sunday.
"Few Nigerians managed to escape the onslaught," it added although it did not give any casualty figures for either side.
north of Port Harcourt, the statement said.
Biafram troops advanced five miles in action near Zaumini,
It described the fighting there as heavy.
The communique also said there was heavy fighting in the Owerri, Ahoada, and Afikpo sectors, where it said federal troops were trying to offset recent losses.
Lt. Col. Odumegwu Ojakwu, meanwhile Sunday predicted a protracted civil war and pledged to continue the fight for the breakaway Eastern Region.
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"No specific format will be required of the visiting writers. They will not have to follow a structured outline." Colyer said.
With the speaker series, Colayer hopes to help students discover what professional writing involves and to erase fundamental fears that are common with aspiring writers.
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Writer William Gass, who is on a three-week visit at KU, will be the first speaker at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Kasas Union Pine Room.
"Hopefully the speakers will stimulate a more realistic awareness of what writing life is. It might start them thinking about what it means to write and what is important about it," he said.
Monkees in 'Head'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — The Monkees have finally settled for a title of their first motion picture, which until recently was dubbed "Untitled"—it is now "Head."
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6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 4, 1968
IRENA GRAYLAND
Photo by Greg Sorbar
HOW DO YOU SCULPT GLASS?
Cheryl Lahan, Wichita freshman, and Diana Prager, Topeka freshman, examine Spooner Art Museum's newest art object, "Tigibus" by Bruce Beasley. The plastic sculpture is on display with the modern art exhibit.
Beasley sculpture added to museum
A plastic sculpture by Bruce Beasley has been added to the permanent collection of Spooner Art Museum.
The glass-like plastic (Lucite) sculpture is included in the modern art exhibit currently on display at the museum.
Bret Waller, museum director, said the sculpture was "a significant acquisition for us." Waller said the museum has, in the past, acquired very few works of art by younger artists "whose reputations are still developing."
Beasley, 28, made six of the plastic sculptures from a cast. The sculpture, entitled "Tigibus," was purchased by funds from the museum members at a "good price" Waller said.
The sculpture will be displayed in the museum's 20th Century gallery on the second floor after the exhibit closes Nov.18.
The model covers 200 acres and reproduces the entire Mississippi River Basin to scale. It is used by the Corps of Engineers to study flood control.
CLINTON, Miss. (UPI) — The largest hydraulic model basin in the world is located here.
The other modern art objects included in the exhibit aare from Midwestern Collections.
Among the artists represented in the exhibit are Andy Warhol,
Big Basin
viet anniversary and the traditional "Month of Soviet-Czechoslovak friendship" that goes with it.
Official concern has been voiced that young Czechoslovak patriots may march on the holiday for the second time in two weeks to protest the Soviet occupation force.
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PRAGUE (UPI)—Czechoslovakas jeered Soviet occupation troops moving closer to Prague Sunday as the nation steeled itself for a potentially dangerous observance of the anniversary of the Russian Revolution, Nov. 6-7.
It was not known Sunday if troop movements were connected wuth the approaching So-
About 500 Soviet heavy ammunition and troop trucks moved under growing darkness from forest bivouacs near Benešov, 21 miles south of Prague.
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Recruiting Team On Campus
Thursday, November 7,1968
Representing
American Telephone & Telegraph, Long Lines Department Bachelor's and Master's candidates - Electrical Mechanical, Civil, Mathematics, and Physics candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Locations: Mid-West states initially.
Bell Laboratories Research and Development B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E., M.E., Physics, Engineering Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Opportunities for graduate study. Locations: New Jersey, Illinois and elsewhere in eastern half of U.S.
Sandia Corporation Master's Degree in Mathematics, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering. Bachelor's candidates of outstanding scholarship in Engineering considered for technical development program. Locations: Albuquerque, New Mexico; Livermore, California.
Southwestern Bell Technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments-E.E.; M.E.; E.P.; C.E.; Math-Physics.
Locations: Kansas and the Mid-West.
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Locations: Southwest—Mid-West—Eastern and Northern States.
Sign Interview Schedule in Placement Office
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Monday, November 4, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Reamon praises Olympics
Mexico's 1968 summer Olympic games are over, and in the swimming part, the United States has dominated the medals as no other country has ever done before.
The United States won 23 of 33 swimming events, and took 58 out of the 89 total swimming medals given during the games.
Kansas swimming coach Dick Reamon says the reason for the domination can be seen through evidence of the pay off of the United States age group swimming programs throughout the country.
"The girls on the swimming team average age was 17, and only two men were over 21 years old," Reamon said.
"Americans are seasoned veterans by the time they reach the Olympics," Reamon said. "Most of them have been swimming under a coached team for at least ten years."
During the 1964 Olympics in
Tokyo, the United States started to make a major breakthrough in the domination of swimming.
Up to 1964, the medals were pretty evenly spread between Australia, Japan, and the United States. Before the 1952 Olympics, Japan was the dominant power.
Reamon said the average U.S. swimmer in the Olympics probably works out four to six hours and 8,000 to 15,000 yards a day.
"I would say that in the last five years you could not count the number of days on one hand which any of the Olympic swimmers did not practice," Reamon said.
The United States has better coaches than any of the other countries, Reamon said. Reamon is a coach who, like the Olympic coaches, thinks there is not a barrier which limits the amount of work a man can take.
"I don't think you can give a man too much work," he said.
Playoffs set
Playoffs begin today in KU's football intramural program with eight games scheduled in first round action. Thirty-two teams in four leagues and 16 divisions will enter the playoffs.
Fraternity "A" Division I
Division I
**TEAM**
Phi Gamma Delta 5 0
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Division I
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THE CAMES SCHEDULE
TODAY Fraternity "A"
DU vs. Bye
Beta vs. Bpi Kappa Theta, Field 1
Phi Gam vs. Bfield 2
Phi Gam vs. Bye
**Fraternity "B"**
Beta #1 vs. Bye
UU vs. Bpi Sigma Chi #2, Field 5
Sigma Chi #1 vs. Bye
Kappa Sigma vs. Phi Gam, Field 6
Beta #2 vs. theta Chi, Field 7
KKE
Pike vs. Bye
Lambda Chi vs. AKL, Field 9
Ellsworth #1 vs. Bye
Law B vs. Bye
High School vs. Bye
College Kids vs. Beta, Field 3
MBA vs. Bye
Graduates vs. Bye
Olive vs. Bye
Retards vs. Chessman, Sqonard, F
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Pro standings
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Western Conference
Coastal Division
"It takes at least six months work to approach a maximum performance."
W L W T Pct. Pts. O.P.
Baltimore 7 1 1 0.875 875 180
Baltimore 7 1 1 0.875 875 180
San Francisco 4 4 0 .500 158 173
Atlanta 4 4 0 .125 153 250
Central Division
Miswestern swimmers have a handicap because they can't swim all year long like they do on the coasts, Reamon said. A good swimmer must swim every day all year long.
| | W | L | T | Pct | Pts. | O.P. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Minnesota | 4 | 4 | 0 | .500 | 189 | 133 |
| Chicago | 4 | 4 | 0 | .500 | 189 | 133 |
| Green Bay | 3 | 4 | 1 | .429 | 136 | 102 |
| Detroit | 3 | 4 | 1 | .429 | 134 | 104 |
Eastern Conference Capital Division
W L W T Pct. Pts. O.P.
Dallas 7 1 1 .875 230 173
New York 5 3 1 .375 147 173
Washington 3 5 1 .375 147 221
Philadelphia 0 8 1 .000 147 241
Century Division
W L W T Pct. Pts. O.P.
St. Louis 5 3 0 .625 160 161
Nevada 3 5 0 .625 160 161
Oriens 3 5 0 .375 144 177
Pittsburgh 2 8 0 .250 143 199
AMERICAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Western Division
The rising popularity of water polo may help bridge the gap for swimmers who can't swim every day. It is very popular on the coasts, and during the '68 Olympics, the United States just missed winning a medal, finishing fourth.
Western Division
Kansas City W L F T Pct 82
Oakland 7 2 0 0 .750 592 124
San Diego 6 2 0 .750 130 130
San Francisco 6 2 0 .500 140 181
Cincinnati 4 4 0 .222 140 181
Eastern Division
| | W | L | T | Pct. | Pts. | O.P. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 6 | 2 | 0 | .750 | 231 | 170 |
| Houston | 4 | 5 | 0 | .444 | 168 | 158 |
| Boston | 3 | 5 | 0 | .375 | 168 | 227 |
| Miami | 2 | 5 | 1 | .286 | 138 | 217 |
| Buffalo | 1 | 5 | 1 | .125 | 138 | 214* |
Yesterday's Games National League
National League 14
Pittsburgh 15, St. Louis 45, Philadelphia 17
Los Angeles 10, Detroit 7
Cleveland 33, San Francisco 21
Baltimore 26, New York 0
Chicago 10, New Orleans 10
Dallas 17, New Orleans 3
Minnesota 27, Washington 14
American League
Oakland 38, Kansas City 21
Fourestown 29, Buffalo 21
Denver 35, Boston 14
San Diego 34, Miami 28
The University of California has won 25 NCAA track and field championships, 20 more than any other school.
"We're conservative in our swimming in the midwest," Reamon said. "We don't stick our necks out, we're pretty much followers."
Because the climate doesn't allow swimming every day, and because midwest swimmers seem more conservative, few swimmers from the midwest were on the Olympic team.
"KU swimming is progressive compared to other Big Eight schools," Reamon said. "We are one of two conference teams which is keeping time with national trends."
Evidence of progressiveness in some of the Big Eight schools can be seen by examining last year's record book in the Big Eight meet. Nineteen of 21 events had records set in the Big Eight conference championships.
Lamonica's passing defeats Chiefs
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI)—The revenge-minded Oakland Raiders, with Daryle Lamonica picking apart the Kansas City defense with pinpoint passes, broke loose for 24 points in the second period and then coasted to a 38-21 victory and tightened the race in the American Football League's Western Division.
The Raiders, in avenging an embarrassing early season 24-10 loss to the Chiefs, moved to with $ \frac{1}{2} $ game of Kansas City by picking up their sixth win in eight starts, compared to a 7-2 record for the Missourians.
San Diego made it a three-way battle for the top spot by downing Miami.
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 4, 1968
KU ground corps too much for Buffs
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
Kansas 27, Colorado 14: say it with P-O-W-E-R.
That's a 'P' for the punishing KU ground attack that amassed 428 yards, and an 'O' for the overwhelming defense that throttled Colorado's heralded Bob Anderson.
Add the 'W' for the wide-open spaces in the Colorado defense carved by KU's offensive line, and the 'E' for the empty seats left by the rain-drenched Homecoming fans seeing a 27-0 laughter after three quarters.
Save the 'R' for Riggins—John,
that is. The bruising 225-pound
sophomore fullback gained 162
yards on 22 attempts, scoring
two touchdowns. His 63-yard
romp on KU's third play from
scrimmage set-up the first of two
Bill Bell goal goals.
"I think the biggest factors in this game were the blocking and hard running of all our backs offensively," noted Coach Pepper Rodgers in his locker room evaluation, "and defensively, the great pass rush we put on Anderson."
In fact, until Anderson connected on a 28-yard pass to Monte Huber late in the third period, the Bucks quarterback had only one yard in offense.
"We tried to motivate our squad to stop Anderson because he's the leader of their offense and the biggest threat to hurt you," said Rodgers.
Anderson, the Colorado quarterback and Big Eight leader in total offense, was held to his lowest output ever (32 yards) with minus 8 yards rushing while completing only 3 of 12 passes for 40 vards.
"Our ends and tackles did a good job," Rodgers praised. "I thought this was one of Vernon Vanoy's best games." he said.
That defense, which has allowed only one touchdown in the first half all season, allowed Colorado to cross midfield only once but never inside KU's 40 until the count read 27-0.
The Jayhawk offense, although splashing freely through the Colorado defenders, was stymied by an interception and fumble in the early going. Bell's 20-yard field goal earned a 3-0 edge with 12:02 to play in the first period, but KU came up empty-handed in its next two threats.
Quarterback Bobby Douglass, whose T88 yards rushing and 9 of 15 passing performance (87 yards) easily overshadowed Anderson, suffered a minor setback on KU's second possession. Colorado's Mike Bynum grabbed a deflected pass at the Buffs' 10, halting a Kansas drive and stopping Douglass' Big Eight record for passes thrown without an interception at 97.
HAMLET
CLICK HERE
Colorado coach Eddie Crowder feels that Kansas "has to be the No. 3 team in the country and may be the No. 1 team," after his club took a 27-14 beating.
Crowder convinced
Crowder did not say which team showed greater physical strength. "It's hard to determine if they're physically stronger than we are on a wet field," he declared. "Take John Riggins (KU running back) who runs the hundred in 9.8 seconds—that's physical strength."
"John Riggins is the most noteworthy player on the scene. He's so much better than any acclaim given him. Everyone knows that Douglass and Shanklin are great players, but Riggins is so much better than anyone thinks."
The CU coach praised the sophomore Riggins who was a poison arrow in the Buffs' side.
NEVER TOO LATE
Colorado running backs such as Tom Nigbur could move only through the middle of KU's defense, Crowder said, because the Jayhawks were preventing CU backs from going around the ends. Nigbur scampered for 119 yards on eight carries, scoring twice.
- UNDERSTANDING COMES
FASTER WITH
CLIFF'S NOTES!
CU's coach admitted that KU defensive end Vernon Vanoy shattered the Buffs' kicking game. "Our kicker saw Vanoy once and went to pieces and I don't blame him (the kicker)," Crowder said.
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Colorado had a chance to do something about the 3-0 deficit when Steve Tracy covered a fumble at the KU 33. The Buffs returned the favor, bobbling a pitchout on 4th-and-1 that defensive tackle Karl Salb claimed at the 21.
Following an exchange of punts, the Jayhawks moved from their 33 to the CU 16. Split end George McGowan nabbed a 15-yard Douglass aerial and wingback John Jackson took an 18-yard bullet to spark the drive. But Colorado's Dave Bartelt pounced on a second
John Riggins fumble, checking the advance at the 14.
Those two fizzles—and two other near touchdowns in the fourth period—saved the Buffaloes from total humiliation. What occurred between those 'almost' scores was humiliating enough.
KU charged 73 yards, exclusively on the ground, for its first touchdown. Junior Riggins, whose 67 yards on eight trips complemented his younger brother's efforts, swept right end twice for 20 yards. Douglass stepped-off eight yards on a keeper, and tailback Don Shanklin cracked the left side of Colorado's defense three times for 24 yards.
The offensive line then opened a gaping hole, and John Riggins charged 21 yards for the touchdown, dragging Bynum the final five yards. Bell's conversion made it 10-0 with 3:36 showing in the half.
It wasn't long before KU padded the cushion. A rushed punt gave the Jayhawks possession at the CU 38 with 2:02 remaining. An 18-yard pass to jackson highlighted the TD push, and on the sixth play of the series, Junior Riggins latched onto a 6-yard scoring pass from Douglass.
Bell, in breaking three school records for most career field goals (8), most season extra points (35), and most career extra points (51), banged home a 38-yard fielder early in the third. It was the longest field goal in Bell's varsity career, although he booted one from the same distance as a freshman.
If there were still any doubts at that juncture, KU removed those with a 43-yard scoring burst later in the quarter. Douglass scrambled 23 yards to the CU 8, and John Riggins crashed straight ahead for the six-pointer at 2:48.
Colorado then marched 68 yards in nine plays to finally light the scoreboard. Reserve fullback Tom Nigurba slammed the final three yards for the touchdown, less than one minute into the fourth period.
Nigur also raced 80 yards on a draw play, scoring with 2:01
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to play. KU almost rubbed it in, though, but a 9-yard touchdown pass from Douglass to Willie Amison on the game's final play was nullified. Douglass had crossed the line of scrimmage before throwing.
Rodgers tabbed it the biggest of KU's victories.
"Colorado was just coming off a big win (over Oklahoma) and has a great quarterback. It has to be very satisfying to beat a team like that."
sua Presents— 1968 Away Games Bus Trips Kansas vs. K-State
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Monday, November 4,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
MU frosh stomp Hawks
KU's freshman football team just could not get moving Friday as they lost their second game in a row, this time to the Missouri frosh 36-7.
The Kansas team made only two first downs, and was held to 56 total offense yards in the game.
"They just came out and steamrolled us," Coach Dick Tomey said after the game in the locker room. "If we had won
that game it wouldn't have been fair."
The young Hawks led 7-6 at halftime, but quickly lost the lead as the Tigers scored 15 points in each of the last two quarters.
"They (Missouri) stopped themselves in the first half," Tomey said, "and in the second half they didn't."
Missouri rolled up 433 yards total offense in the game, 266
by rushing and 177 in the air.
Tomey thought KU's defensive play was better against the Tigers than it was against Oklahoma two weeks ago when the Hawks lost 55-20 at Norman.
"We played a lot better on defense than we did against Oklahoma," Tomey said, "but our offense just couldn't get moving."
Big Eight roundup
It was kind of a "ho-hum" day of football in the Big Eight Saturday as those teams favored to win didn't disappoint anyone.
KU, with sophomore fullback John Riggins leading the way with two touchdowns and 162 yards rushing, beat Colorado 27-14 in the game of the week.
In Norman, Oklahoma, Kansas State scared the defending Big Eight champs, Oklahoma, before finally bowing 35-20. The game wasn't like the score indicates as the Sooners scored their final touchdown on the last play of the game.
Missouri rushed and passed for 545 yards of total offense, the highest ever for a Dan Devine-coached team, as the Tigers bombed Oklahoma State, 42-7.
Hawks win fifth meet in a row in cross country
The KU cross country team claimed its fifth straight victory Saturday in the State Federation Meet in Manhattan.
Leading the Jayhawk harriers was Doug Smith, Sioux City, Iowa, freshman, who placed second in the 3-mile race with 14-min. 15-sec. time. Smith placed first in the last two meets, the KU Invitational and the KU-OSU meet.
Taking first in the meet was John Mason of Fort Hayes State with a 13.59 time.
Saturday the KU harriers will try for their sixth consecutive victory and a Big Eight title in the Big Eight Conference meet here.
Besides Saturday's victory the KU squad has also won the Oklahoma State Jamboree, the Southern Illinois Meet, the KU Invitational and the KU-OSU Dual.
Last year KU placed third in the Big Eight Championship meet.
The KU runners placed as follows: 2-Smith; 3-Jay Mason, Hobbs, N.M., sophomore, 14.29; 5-Roger Kathol, Wichita junior, 14.27; 6-Mike Solomon, Westminster, Calif., sophomore, 14.34; 7-Thorn Bigley, San Diego, Calif., sophomore, 14.35; 9-Rich Elliot, Oak Park, Ill., freshman, 14.40; 11-Paul Mattingly, South Haven sophomore, 14.44.
The team positions were:
1-KU,20; 2-K-State, 54; 3-Fort Hayes State, 66; 4-Butler County Junior College, 106;
5-Wichita State, 127; 6-McPherson College, 165. Lowest score wins.
Missouri scored three times in less than six minutes in the first half and went on to win their fourth conference game without a defeat to remain tied with Kansas, also 4-0, for the Big Eight lead.
Nebraska, all but out of the conference race, stopped Iowa State's second half effort and beat the Cyclones 24-13 in Ames. The Cornhuskers' Ernie Sigler hit 12 of 17 passes for 161 vards.
Big 8 Standings
By United Press International SEASON STANDINGS
MU coach Bob Frala said his team was mad after the game because they made so many mistakes in the first half.
| | W | L | T | Pct. | Pts. | OIP. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 7 | 0 | 1 | 0.100 | 495 | 100 |
| Missouri | 6 | 1 | 0 | .857 | 133 | 96 |
| Nebraska | 5 | 2 | 0 | .754 | 133 | 96 |
| Colorado | 4 | 3 | 0 | .571 | 162 | 130 |
| Colorado | 3 | 3 | 0 | .500 | 173 | 153 |
| Iowa State | 3 | 0 | 0 | .375 | 154 | 205 |
| Kansas State | 2 | 5 | 0 | .286 | 132 | 195 |
| Okla. State | 1 | 5 | 0 | .167 | 185 | 192 |
W L T T. Pct. Pts. O.P.
Kansas 4 0 1.00 145 16
Missouri 4 0 1.000 144 55
Oklahoma 2 1 0 .667 141 13
Colorado 3 2 0 .500 134 11
Nebraska 2 2 0 .500 72 72
Iowa State 4 1 0 .200 86 154
Okla, State 0 3 0 .000 41 112
Kansas State 0 4 0 .000 68 151
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS
Kansas 27, Colorado 14
Missouri 42, Oklahoma State 7
Oklahoma 35, Kansas State 20
Nebraska 24, Iowa State 13
NEXT WEEK'S SCHUELT
Saturday- Oklahoma
in s a s,
alaska at Missouri, Colorado at Oklahoma State, Kansas State at Nebraska.
FRESHMAN GAME STATISTICS
| | MU | KU |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Fi.st Downs | 24 | 2 |
| Rushing Yardage | 266 | 12 |
| Passing Yardage | 177 | 44 |
| Return Yardage | 3 | 116 |
| Presses | 12-20-1 | 5-16-2 |
| Punts | 5-37.8 | 7-31.9 |
| Fumbles Lost | 2 | 3 |
| Yards Penalized | 47 | 54 |
SCORE BY QUARTER
Missouri 0 15 15 --36
Kansas 7 9 15 --36
INDIVIDUAL SCORING
MU - Mauser 6 run (kick failed)
KU - Hertel 67 interception run
(continued)
MU—Britts 1 run (Fink kick)
MU—Barnes 2 run (Stolter kick)
MU—Buha 26 pass from Roper
ler kick)
MU—Buha 27 pass from Stotler (Stotler kick)
RANEY DRUG STORES
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
3 locations to serve your every need
SPECIAL NIGHT BUS
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Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription depart-
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Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Ellsworth to Campus and Downtown:
6:30 p.m., 6:50, 7:30,
8:10, 8:50, 9:30, 10:10,
10:50
"KU played real well in the first half, but we were confident we could move the ball on them in the second half," he said.
Neismith and Oliver to Campus
and Downtown: 6:25 p.m.
6:45, 7:25, 8:05, 8:45, 9:25,
10:05, 10:45
KU's Jimmy Jukes, a 205- pound tailback, dislocated his left shoulder while carrying for a 6-yard gain on the first play of the game, and will be lost for the season.
Union Blg. 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 El-
worth; 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
ments and tountain service.
9th and Mass. to K.U. Dermat-
tories: 6.10 p.m, 6.30, 7.10,
7.50, 8.30, 9.10, 9.50, 10.30
LAWRENCE BUS CO., INC.
V1 2-0544
KU's next game is here Friday when they host Oklahoma State.
College scores
841 Pennsylvania
Big Eight
Missouri 42, Oklahoma State 7.
Kansas 27, Colorado 14.
Nebraska 24, Iowa State 13.
Oklahoma 35, Kansas State 20.
Area College
Tarkio 40, Culver Stockton 20.
William Jewell 40, Washington 6.
Graceland 40, Colorado College 14.
Central St. 28, Northwest St. 7.
Southeast St. 19, Southwest St. 6.
Rolla Mines 19, Northeast State 16.
Memphis State 32, Tulsa 6.
Louisville 23, Kent State 9.
Youngstown 18, Southern Illinois 15.
North Texas St. 55, Cincinnati 34.
Missouri Valley
Big Ten
Iowa 35, Minnesota 28
Michigan 35, Northwestern 0.
Michigan State 20
Purdue 35, Illinois 17
Indiana 21, Wisconsin 20
Southeast Conference
Alabama State Mississippi State 13.
Auburn Florida 14. Georgia 10. Houston 10 (tie).
Tennessee 42. U.C.L.A. 18.
Louisiana 7. Tenderloin 19.
Kentucky 35. West Virginia 16.
Missouri 27. Louisiana State 24.
Southwest Conference
Texas Tech 38, Rice 15.
Tulane 26, Michigan 16, Methodist 7.
Arkansas 25, Texas A&M 22.
Christian Christian 47, Baylor 14.
Duke 46, Georgia Teach 30.
Clermson 24, North Carolina St. 19
West Forsyth 38, Maryland 14
Air Force 28, North Carolina 15
Pacific Eight
Tennessee 42, U.C.L.A. 18.
Arizona 28, Washington State 14.
Southern 7, Washington Oregon 13.
West 7, Washington (the)
Oregon State 29, Stanford 7.
Major Independents
Duke 46, Georgia Tech 30.
Houston 10, Georgia State 12).
Fort Bend 46, Carolina States 15.
Wyoming 46, Colorado State 14.
Syracuse 47, Holy Cross 0.
Notre Dame 45, Navy 14.
Penn State 28, Army 24.
Virginia Tech 46, Florida State 22.
Hinton's hand OK for KU
NORMAN (UPI) -Oklahoma football fans got some good news Sunday as they looked ahead to Saturday's game with Big Eight leader Kansas. Wing-back Eddie Hinton may get the cast off his broken hand this week.
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
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Sooner trainer Ken Rawlinson said Hinton's left hand, broken in the North Carolina State game, would be x-rayed Friday before the Sooners leave for Kansas.
Lawrence Lumber
Headquarters
for your Homecoming Supplies.
19th and Massachusetts
VI 3-1341
MARRIED STUDENTS
life insurance
Up To $600 Maternity Benefits
For details on this, major medical, and other plans of health and
CONTACT
V. G. Miller
1035 Elm
Eudora, Kans.
KI 2-2793
Mutual of Omaha
Life Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha
WESTERN FURNITURE MANUFACTURING COMPANY
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WEST END OF HILLCREST BOWL
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
9TH & IOWA
THE LOUNGE Budwieser on Tap
EAGLE
HOME OF
THE CHALK HAWK
THE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE and the SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
present
KISMET
Music and Lyrics by
ROBERT WRIGHT and GEORGE FORREST
book by
CHARLES LEDERER and LUTHER DAVIS
October 31, November 1, 3
November 3 (Mat. 2:30)
November 7,8,9
Tickets $2.40, 1.80 and 1.20
Box Office Information UN 4-3982
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 4, 1968
'Don't waste votes'
Johnson makes final appeal for HHH-Muskie
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Johnson, in a final appeal on behalf of Hubert H. Humphrey, urged the American people Sunday not to sit out the election in protest nor waste their votes on a "spoiler" candidate.
In urging that all qualified voters go to the polls on Tuesday, the President said: "I hope that every American will use his vote in November, not squander it by sitting this one out, not waste it by giving it to a spoiler."
Johnson did not mention by name either Humphrey's Republic rival Richard M. Nixon or third party candidate George C. Wallace. But he strongly endorsed both Humphrey and his running mate, Sen. Edward S. Muskie, as men of "the experience, the intelligence, the compassion—and the broad understanding—to command America's confidence in this White House."
The paid political broadcast carried on television by NBC was taped at the White House in advance before Johnson left Washington for Texas Friday.
HHH-
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey all but ruled out Sunday releasing any of his electoral votes to prevent a possible deadlocked presidential race from being thrown into the House.
The prospect would come about if neither Humphrey, his Republican rival Richard M. Nixon nor third party candidate George C. Wallace could obtain the 270 electoral votes required to win in Tuesday's election.
The Democratic presidential candidate, in stronger terms than he has used before, said the Constitution practically bars him from giving his electors to another candidate in the event none receives a majority of the popular vote.
The vice president predicted that he would get a plurality in Tuesday's balloting.
"I don't think there's any doubt about it," he said.
Later in the program, however, Humphrey spoke less optimistically about his chances. He said he had a "great momentum" going for him, but that no one could tell what the result would be until Tuesday.
Nixon-
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Richard M. Nixon said Sunday if he is elected President he would be willing to go to Paris or Saigon before his inauguration to help get the Vietnam peace talks "off dead center."
The GOP presidential candidate, appearing on a nationally televised panel program, said he wanted to cooperate with President Johnson in any helpful way and that he was not making the suggestion as a "grandstand stunt."
Nixon was winding up his campaign in California whose 40 electoral votes could swing the election. The former vice president will remain in Los Angeles until Tuesday morning when he flies to New York.
LA PETITE
GALERIE
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Answering newsmen's questions on the NB program, Meet the Press, Nixon also said that despite contrary opinions of some of his aides he did not believe President Johnson was playing politics.
ATLANTA (UPI)—George Wallace said Sunday that if there is an electoral deadlock he will throw his support only to a candidate who vows to carry out the promises the third party candidate has made.
Wallace-
In a television interview (ABC-Issues and Answers) Wallace said questions about the possibility that none of the three candidates would get an electoral majority were "hypothetical" because he expected to win outright.
But when pressed for what he would do in case no candidate gets the required 270 electoral votes, Wallace said "whoever becomes the President is going to have to promise the American people what we have promised them—is it not me."
Wallace said the promises he would exact would be a return to local government, "stop taxing the little man to death," a crackdown on "anarchy" in the streets, cutting off foreign aid to countries that do not aid the United States in Vietnam, stopping efforts to supply the Viet Cong by American citizens, and the establishment of the strongest military capabilities in the world.
At your newsstand NOW
Campaign 1968. RtP. page 1 December 2018
THE Atlantic
GOODBYE
On Misunderstanding
Student Rebels
by Martin Duggerfield
DEAN CHIPS!
The Battle of Appalachia
a story from the front lines
In Action!
Thomas H. Garrison
President, Student Policy
Group
Staff at the University of North Carolina
Agnew—
More on the War Against the Young: Martin Duberman says those in power in our universities are blind to student principles.
James Dickey on Allan Seager and Theodore Roethke.
No More Vietnams? Is it even realistic to insist on this? ...
Where does the Vietnam experience leave us in our relations with the U.S.S.R. and China? (The first of two excerpts from a conference at the Adial Stevenson Institute in Chicago.)
Better Government Association of Chicago has shown that "more ghosts may show up at Chicago's polling places.
CANTON, Ohio (UPI)—Republican vice-presidential candidate Spiro T. Agnew called on Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark Sunday to report to the American people on an FBI investigation of alleged vote frauds in Chicago.
Agnew amde the call in a formal statement which he issued at Canton, Ohio, but he did
not deliver it to the rally where he spoke.
He said an investigation by the Chicago Daily News and the
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842-9563
Mister
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BEST OF THE WEEK
TUESDAY NIGHT OUT!
Beautiful KU coeds from various living groups are now eager to serve you your favorite beverage at SPECIAL PRICES every Tuesday from 7-12. Only at...
THE STABLES
Monday, November 4, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
TRADE
...
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the manual matter referred to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Tired of walking? I'm getting hungry —must sell 250cc Yamaha with extras.
Will deal on price. Call Tom. VI 3-6631 or leave message. 11-4
Record Player with AM/FM, FM-
Call Antonio, VI 3-1408
5 p.m.
MUST Sacrifice, '67 Plymouth Belvedere, V-8, power steering, 13,000 miles, automatic. Make offer. VI 2-2062.
New small refrigerator—Ideal for study dens, apts, etc—only $99.00. Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St. 11-8
1967 Mustang, six-stick, Excellent condition, 10 months—19,000 miles of warfare remaining. Call Larry Power VI v 2-7710, if no answer, call IU 4-3973.
NOW UN SAL
Reviewed. 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse.
1241 Oread. 1-9
complete line of new FIAT and DATSUN sedans and sports cars--starting at $1590. Dealer is in Ottawa. For local information on the cars, prices, and trade-in value of your car, call Carl at VI 2-3683. 11-5
'62 Triumph, TR-4, Red Convertible,
Excellent condition. Forced to sell.
Call Ron Holliday at VI 3-5712 after
2 p.m.
11-4
EXTRAORDINARY BUY! Fisher 220-7 Garrard Mark-50 turntable and one pair KLH speakers. Excellent benefit. Best offer takes it! VI 2-9848.
NOW ON SALE
1966 Honda S-90, 3,000 miles, excellent
capacity. Call SI 2-6484. 11-5
67 Camero, 427 HiPo bored 60 with chrome Molley crank and rods, Thompson pistons and high lift and long duration cam. Engine has been completely balanced. Extras include complete air lift. Kisky Bell Housing. Nickey Traction Bars, Airlift shocks and special front end lift kit. Iskay Glass Head. Hodge Head. Fiber-glass hood. 7 qt. oil pan. Only 4,000 lbs. 843-8315 after 5:00 p.m. 11-5
427 Cobra Roadster, 8,000 miles, never raced. $7500 cash. No trades. Serious inquiries only. See John Hodges, Rm. 205, Naismith Hall. 843-3757. 11-5
'66 BSA 650 Lightning in Excellent condition. Must sell to finance education. $775 or best offer. This is a real bargain. 843-831-5. After 6 p.m. 11-5
Ford Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed,
bucket seats. Perfect condition inside
and out. Need money—must sell soon.
Call VI 3-6870 Evenings. 11-7
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
18 Conn. Lov, Pet Ph. VI 3.2
1962 Dynamic 88 Oldsmobile. Body and engine in excellent condition. Good gas mileage combined with normal Oldsmobile road excellence makes the real road car. Must sell appreciated. Appreciate to sell immediately. VI 2-8919. 11-7
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
1958 Ford V-8, 4 door sedan, automatic transmission. Will sell cheap. Wayne Bert, VI 2-3395. 11-5
8-track Leaflet tape deck Plays
on chair, Tom Bartelede, 843-4811-7
-7
1964 Impala, SS. 327 engine. 4bbl.
$1200. Cheap. Dave Phelps. 843-7-10.
Be prepared for all of the Holiday Festivities ahead. See what the House of Wigs has to offer at as much as $75 off retail price of beautiful wigs. Call 913-631-9483 in Shawnee Mission. 11-7
1965 Dodge 880 H.T., nicest one anywhere, 6 way seats, tilt wheel, contoured leatherette interior, P.B. P.W., Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa 11-7
1964 Volke Deluxe Sedan -Exception-
Jerry Jarry -Jerry Wolksgaven, 2522 Iowa
1-7
1983 Olds Convert. white with white
hair. Jerry-Accession - Jerry-Accession
Volkshawson, 2522 Iowa 11-7
1966 Dodge 2 Dr. H.T. 383 V8 Buckets, Air Console Automatic, P.S. P.B., Vinyl tiny, Special Palm paint—immaculate, Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522 lowa
1966 Plym. Barradecua, Local car, one
powner. Actual mileage—Absolutely
Nice as new —Jerry Allen Volks-
wagon. 2522 Iowa. 11-7
One used 21" RCA Victor television. Deluxe console model in good condition for reasonable price. Call VI 2-4493 after 6 p.m. 11-7
Remington Nylon "66" 22 automatic rifle with 4x scope. Both new. Most rugged and accurate 22 made. $45.
VI 2-8671. 11-1
6 string classical guitar. Call VI 3-6971. 11-5
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excellent condition. 4-speed. British racing raceway. 5-inch factory tachometer. superstock wheels, 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must sell! Contact: Sam Lankford. Rm #616. McCollum, 11-8600.
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q--outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.25; Rib order.
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.; ½ chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.; Hours,
11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone II-9 2-9510. tf
AUDIO EQUIPMENT SERVICE by competent personnel interested in VISUAL CO. Hillerest Shopping Center VI 2-1944, afternoon and evening.
SPECIAL SALE—Current model H.H. Scott 312-D FM Tuner This is a Demo unit in superb condition It lists for $139.95—Now discounted at $225.00. Haynes-Ray Audio & Music Co. VI 2-1944. Aft. & Eve. hours 11-5
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence library, October 17th, VI835 and in the Kansas Union lobby on Tuesday. 11-19
candies extraordinaire at Hass Hardware. We have handmade candies by monks, Japanese-temple candles, round candies from Italy, drip candies and scented candles. Come see. 1029 Massachusetts. 11-7
Extra money for your organization,
Sorority, etc., just by getting your
friends together for a "Wig Party."
Contact The House of Wigs. 7202
Goddard, Shawnee Mission. Phone
113-631-9483. 11-7
There is still time to send a Christmas package to that special guy overseas. We are happy to help non-perishable goodies for Christmas.
We have mailing cartons and information.
Topsy's Pocomel and Popcomel Center
will be shown 'til 11:00. 11-7 VI 2-175, Open 'til 11:00.
Voluptuously, velutinous, lascioviously,
lubricious, essentially sensual
STRAWBERRY FIELDS is especially for
the pleasurable passions of
strawberries loving and
living. Come to STRAWBERRY
FIELDS. 712 Mass. Open 10-6. 11-7
HELP WANTED
Personal Loans; Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Phone VI 3-8074. 11-7
Part-time for 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. tf
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for bar parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most bar and the Lapad's bar. Heintz and Electric are likely available. VI 3·4032. 11·12
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high-density Haynes Ray Audio VI 2,1944,ift. and Eve. Ehlert Shopping Center 11-22
Experienced Dressmaking. Today's styles, much cheaper than store prices. Get that special dress for school or any occasion. Hems and alterations also. Come see samples. 842-6979. 11-12
Female to share comfortable double room off campus. Cooking privileges —2 blocks from campus. $35 monthly.
Call VI 3-0723. 11-7
Deliciously Different Mexican Food
Car salesman to sell Fiat and Datsun automobiles. Full or part-time. Call CHerry 242-6715. Vaughn Imports, Ottawa. 11-7
Casa De Taco
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
WANTED
2 barmaids and 3 cocktail waitresses to work Friday and Saturday evenings in a private club. Must be 21 years. of Transportation furnished to in Sufflower Village, Sufflower Dennis Ryder, 1416 N.J., Sufflower Village. 11-4
Needed: ride to KU from Overland Park on Thurs. Classes 8:30 to 5:20.
Call Shirley. MI 9-8174. Overland Park.
11-7
Roommate needed to share two bedroom apt. in Ridglee. Car necessary. Inquire at VI 2-7098 before 3.30 p.m. or after midnight. 11-4
Needed-3rd serious-minded roommate to live in a nice apartment located very close to campus. VI 2-0209.
11.4
Student for part time employment.
Sales in Advertising Excellent pay.
Contact Mr. Stubbs or Mr. Price.
Westview Motel, Room 7. 11-5
$10.00 Reward: Cameo ring lost in 3-391.
Please call Ann J. VI 3-391.
Got to get motorcycle to Topeka. If going in near future with truck, trailer, van, or maybe station wagon, please help. Call 843-1338. Jack. 11-4
Small bachelor apartment nicely furnished, carpeted, private kitchen and private parking. quiet. Close to Union. Phone VI 3-8534. 11-7
FOR RENT to adult couple or individual. Beautiful new 2 bedroom apartment near KU and downtown. No pets, no students. Phone VI 3-8534.
Apartment for women. 1216 Louisiana VI 3-1601. 11-8
..A Very Private Club
Two one-bedroom apartments. One at University Terrace, one at Old Mill apartments. Available Nov. 1. Call VI 2-192, VI 3-1433, or IV 7-180, II 7-117
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Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel, VI-1 24400. 11-14
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We can work a finance plan to fit your needs for transportation now.
- 1967 Volkswagon, two to choose from—$1588
- 1967 Ford Sedan, air-conditioning—$1688
- 1966 Ford, two door, radio, hardtop, air, six cylinder—$1088
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- 1965 Rambler Station Wagon — $1288
1963 T Bird all power — $1088
- Over 50 more to choose from.
JOHN HADDOCK
FORD
23rd & Ala.
VI 3-3500
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 4,1968
Williams interrupted by applause
sonal friend, the late Sen. Robert Kennedy.
(Continued from page 1)
At one point in the concert, Williams commented on the irritating rattle of the field house air conditioner, refusing to continue until it was turned off.
"What impressed me most about Sen. Kennedy was his sincerity and honesty—his desire to do something good for the United States." The blue-eyed singer explained Kennedy had opposed the promotion of cigarette sales to young people. "He knew he'd lose some southern states, but it didn't make any difference to him."
As sincere and personable off stage as he appeared before the KU crowd of 14,000, Williams spoke freely of his friendship with the late Sen. Robert Kennedy and the New York senator's qualifications for President.
Although he is not supporting any presidential candidate, Williams said he is planning to vote tomorrow.
"I have no political ambitions whatsoever," Williams said, emphasizing that stars do have a right to go into politics if they are qualified. He cited as an example, Gov. Ronald Reagan of California who has "always been involved in politics."
Referring to the active participation of college students earlier in the presidential campaigns, Williams said, "The only hope the world has of survival is with college kids. They haven't had time to become bigoted and set in their ways." Older people vote for the things most important to them personally, not for things good for the whole world, he added.
Williams complimented America's "poet" music, labeling Simon and Garfunkel, Bob Dylan and the Beatles as "great." "European music has always been stories, but American music until recently has been very simple," he said.
Looking ahead to three television specials and a trip to Japan and Australia in April, the busy singer-actor said he quit his weekly television show a year ago because he ran out of ideas and wanted to get out while the ratings were good. "I got tired of saying all that crap every week—the chit-chat with guests. Enough is enough!"
Before returning to the stage for the second half of the concert, Williams said the KU concert had been an exciting one for him. "I'm not just saying that because I'm in Lawrence, Kansas." The popular singer called for enthusiasm and quality sound as essential to a good concert. "I don't like to work in a theater," he said glancing around the field house dressing room. "I like a little bit of distortion," he added with a grin.
Balance Signs
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Jack Palance has signed to play Fidel Castro in "Che!," the drama based on the life of Ernesto (Che) Guevara, starring Omar Sharif in the title role.
Crowd joins Miller
(Continued from page 1)
he and Andy Williams provided a good mixture for concert entertainment, although, he normally performs alone.
"Package shows take the pressure off when there are two performers, but at the same time, they take away from the individual." Miller said, popping open his third can of Coke.
Reflecting on the variety of groups included in the 13-day tour, Miller said he prefers college audiences.
"The students are more aware of what's happening and they force you to do a better job," he said.
When asked about his plans after the tour, Miller said he is scheduled to appear on Rowan and Martin's "Laugh-In" this
Homecoming held in cold rain Sat.
(Continued from page 1)
"The fickle finger of fate," depicted a Jayhawk pointing towards a "thumbs-down" thumb, titled the "fickle finger of fate," who was squashing a buffalo's head. Part of the time, one of the sorority coeds, dressed as Goldie, a regular on the TV show, danced outside to the tune of "I've got you under my thumb."
Lewis Hall placed second in the women's division and Hashinger Hall took the third place trophy.
Group asks assistance
(Continued from page 1)
So, to have a meaningful voice in this selection process we need your help. If you would like to suggest a candidate for the position of Chancellor, send or bring the name and present location of that suggested candidate to:
The Student Advisory Committee
c/o ASC Office, B165 Student Union
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66044
In addition, if you have any suggestion for the qualifications you think important in a prospective candidate, send those to the committee. You may, alternatively, mail or give your suggestions to the below listed members of the committee. The Student Advisory Committee cannot be effective working in isolation. It needs and sollicits your active help and support.
Bill Bartholome
Box 142, KU Medical Center
Barb Blee
Vickey Campus
Adrian Clark
905 Emery Road
Fred Krebs
916 Ohio
Dan Stepp
1425 Tennessee
Bok vun Ende
915 Ward
Bob Woody
626 Schwarz Road. Apt. 6
GARDENLAND, INC.
914 West 23rd
VI 2-1596
Aquariums & Fish
week along with two or three other television specials.
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry
Service With The Student In Mind
He revealed, however, that he is basically a writer. He has written all of his songs except "God Didn't Make Little Green Apples," and recently completed a book entitled "Thoughts Have No Accent."
"My book is a philosophy, a compilation of things I couldn't put in a song. I collected things in a treasure chest in my den and when it got full I had it bound into a book," he said.
"I don't really know what I'd like to do. Anything that takes acting—comedy—drama," he said.
The country singer temporarily interrupted the interview when he stuffed his mouth with napkins and, with his manager, gave a brief rendition of the famous Jimmy Carney lines.
Miller said he would like to try acting when he can find the time.
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The country singer untied his tie as he wearily spoke of the fast pace he must keep. He mentioned that he often tired of the hectic life and would like to settle down
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Keeping in line with his country boy heritage, Miller said his favorite foods were steak and potatoes. However, his breakfast menu tends to break tradition.
"I like peanut butter, a Coke and a cigarette in the morning. It wakes me up and keeps me awake all day," he said smiling.
When called for his final appearance, he stood and fingered his suspenders. Affectionately patting his stomach, the home-spun star said, "I look like a horse when you put a saddle on him—I'm all bloated up."
With that he strode out the door to wrap up a night's work.
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KANSAN
79th Year, No.36
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, November 5, 1968
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Syrians fire on Jordan
AMMAN, Jordan-Syrian-backed commandos, protesting efforts to restrict forays into Israel, opened fire Monday on troops loyal to Jordan's King Hussein. The government said the commandos used women and children as shields during hours of street fighting.
There were no official reports on casualties in the fighting which lasted most of Sunday night and ended Monday morning.
Italian flood toll near 100
BIELLA, Italy—Rescuers pressed their search for the living and the dead under clearing skies Monday in an area stricken by four days of disastrous flooding. The death toll neared 100.
Authorities said at least 93 persons were known dead, with more than 40 injured and some missing in the hilly area around Biella, where rain-swollen rivers and creeks rampaged through five towns.
Thousands were homeless and factories and other buildings were washed away during the weekend that dealt northwest Italy a severe economic blow.
Lake Maggiore, Italy's second largest, was reported still rising late Monday, threatening several towns along its eastern shore.
Czech army stands alert
PRAGUE—Czechoslovak army units Monday moved into outlying districts of Prague on standby alert for possible demonstrations Wednesday and Thursday when the nation observes a tense 51st anniversary of the Russian Revolution.
The transfer of Czechoslovak troops coincided with a flurry of conoy movements by Russian armed forces from the countryside to a 20-mile-wide perimeter around the city.
Decision today on vehicle tax
Lawrence voters today are deciding the fate of a proposed city ordinance, which, if passed, will provide for a $10 tax on all vehicles—automobiles, trucks and motorcycles—kept within the city.
The proposed ordinance will levy taxes on student-owned vehicles, as well as those owned by permanent residents of Lawrence.
In accordance with a present Kansas statute, revenue derived from this tax will be used exclusively for resurfacing, widening and traffic control of city streets.
The alternative to the tax is an increase in property taxes in Lawrence, said a bulletin issued by Citizens for Fair Share Streets, a committee organized last October to inform voters of the proposed ordinance.
While the vehicle tax probably would not prevent future increases in property taxes, the bulletin said, it would take the burden of street maintenance away from the property owner.
Steve Parsons, co-chairman of the citizens committee, said the tax is a "definite way of relating benefits to cost on a service necessary to the community." This tax would place responsibility for street maintenance on users of the streets.
While this ordinance will affect the KU community, most students will not be voting on the vehicle tax issue. A spokesman for the city clerk's office said students of voting age must register at their permanent addresses. Only if a student's home address is Lawrence will he be allowed to register to vote on this issue.
Vietnam 'debate' winds up campaign
By United Press International
The presidential candidates from the Democratic and Republican parties Monday night used four-hour telethons on rival television networks to engage in a "remote control" debate of the bombing halt in Vietnam.
Republican Richard M. Nixon, appearing on NBC-TV in Burbank, Calif., told viewers he was alarmed to read a news report Monday quoting an Air Force general as saying that the Communists in Vietnam were moving tons of material along the Ho Chi Minh Trail "and our bombers are not able to stop them."
Democratic Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, from an ABC TV studio in Hollywood, Calif., promptly disputed Nixon's claim, calling it an irresponsible and totally unsubstantiated charge.
Humphrey said he thought Nixon knew the President's order did not include the Ho Chi Minh Trail through Laos which is "subject to intensive air power . . . all lines of communications are subject to intensive air interdiction."
Humphrey and his running mate, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, surrounded themselves with screen stars and for four hours on live television answered questions ranging from legalized abortion to the Middle East crisis.
The Nixon telethon was conducted by 100 "Nixonaires," including his daughters, Julie and Tricia, fielding the telephone calls.
Nixon told viewers hopes for
Hubert takes early 8-4 lead
DIXVILLE NOTCH, N.H. (UPI)—This White Mountains hamlet cast the first votes in the nation early Tuesday in the presidential election and gave Hubert H. Humphrey eight votes, and Richard M. Nixon four. George C. Wallace was shut out.
After the balloting was announced, the 12 registered voters six men and six women-sat around smiling as they munched on doughnuts and sipped coffee. The community has a population of 19, compared with 20 cows.
Ellsworth, in central New Hampshire, was the second town to report—moments after Dixville Notch checked in—and gave its 11 votes to Nixon. Ellsworth also went entirely for the GOP in 1964, casting nine votes for Barry M. Goldwater and none for Lyndon Johnson.
In Dixville Notch, this year's vote represented an about-face from four years ago when there were eight voters and each ballot went to Goldwater.
Weather
Cloudy with a chance of rain today possibly mixed with snow tonight and diminishing Wednesday. Colder tonight and Wednesday. Easterly winds 10 to 20 miles per hour today. High in the 50s. Low tonight 30 to 35. Probability of precipitation 50 per cent today 80 per cent tonight and 40 per cent Wednesday.
--peace have been "gravely diminished" since announcement of the bombing halt because President Johnson relied on a group of tired diplomats. He said he believes the American diplomats in Saigon and Paris were "well intentioned men" but noted they were tired and therefore made mistakes.
Meanwhile pollsters Louis Harris and George Gallup_release polls
Vote today polls open until 7 p.m.
yesterday with results so close they said it was either man's election to win.
A final survey published by Harris on election eve put Humphrey in the lead for the first time, giving him a 43 to 40 percentage-point margin over his Republican rival with the candidacy of George C. Wallace drawing 13 per cent and 4 per cent undecided.
Both pollsters noted that a 3 to 4 per cent margin of error in their polls made the results too close to permit a prediction of Tuesday's outcome.
But the Gallup poll, published earlier yesterday showed Nixon holding a 42 to 40 per cent edge.
One national poll, the Sindlinger Daily Survey, conducted by telephone, gave Humphrey the edge—by six-tenths of one percent.
Surveys by the New York Times and the Washington Post indicated that despite the potential narrowness of the popular vote Nixon led in states with enough electoral votes to assure hime the presidency.
In Los Angeles earlier yesterday, Nixon said only his election could prevent "what could be a diplomatic disaster" in the Vietnam peace talks.
Campaigning in the same city, Humphrey sternly demanded that Saigon participate in the expanded peace talks, arranged with the North Vietnamese in the agreement which led to President Johnson's decision to halt the bombing of North Vietnam.
Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, in a statement issued by an aide and by the Nixon headquarters in Los Angeles, praised Nixon for not criticizing the bombing halt decision "even though the President's action, taken just before the election, seemed likely to have political repercussions adverse to his (Nixon's) own fortunes . . .
"It would be supreme irony if these statesmanlike positions of Richard Nixon, maintained despite the greatest provocation, should now be turned into instruments of political injury to him," Eisenhower said.
★★
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, noting the surge in the final polls for Hubert H. Humphrey, yesterday said "the American people may have been swayed by President Johnson's recent order to stop our attacks on North Vietnam."
But, said the former president, Richard M. Nixon should be praised for his "statesman-like positions . . maintained despite the greatest provocation" in regard to the bombing halt ordered by Johnson on Thursday.
Eisenhower drafted a statement at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, where he is recovering from a heart attack, and the statement was released by Nixon aides in Los Angeles.
"Even though the President's action, taken just before the election, seemed likely to have political repercussions adverse to his own fortune, Richard Nixon resisted all pressure to challenge the action on political grounds," Eisenhower said
Kansas governor race is close; GOP looks strong for other spots
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI)-Most of the attention of the estimated 950,000 voters will be on the race for governor between GOP challenger Rick Harman and Democratic incumbent Gov. Robert B. Docking.
Otherwise, the polls indicate the Republicans will take most of the offices in the election, which is forecast to draw more voters than the 1964 and 1960 elections.
Docking, if re-elected, would be only the second Democrat to win two straight terms.
Intense Race
Harman, a restaurant manager from Fairway and an ex-Kansas State basketball All-American has run an intense race against Docking, and the polls are uncertain in forecasting the winner.
The lieutenant governor's race also is expected to be close, between state Rep. John Conard, a Republican and Speaker of the House, and James H. DeCoursey
Jr., a former aide to Docking. De-Coursey was defeated for the office in 1966.
Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon is forecast to again carry the state, as he did in 1960, that time by almost 200,000 votes.
Dole Favored
GOP Congressman Bob Dole is predicted to be a easy winner over Wichita attorney William I. Robinson in the election for the U.S. Senate seat of retiring Republican Sen. Frank Carlson.
The race for Dole's 1st District congressional seat has prompted a hard campaign between Democratic state Rep. George Meeker of Garden City and state Sen. Keith Sebelius, a Republican from Norton.
The four other congressional seats appear to be safely in the hands of the Republican incumbent: Reps. Chester Mize, Garner Shriver, Joe Skubitz and Larry Winn Jr.
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Save 20 per cent to 80 per cent on a wide variety of excellent publisher remainders and other titles. Come early for best selection.
Jan Myrdal—Chinese Journey
Greensburg—How to Be a Jewish Mother
Fleming-Octopussy-Man With the Golden Gun
Lane-Rush to Judgement
Picasso's Children
Encyclopedia of Art
Aubrey Beardsley
Pictorial Key to the Tarot
Rechy—City of Night
Rubaiyat
Gerrasi—Boys of Boise
Esocoffier's Cookbook
Tuesday, November 5, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Campus discontent outlined
A former KU professor of physics reacted last night to student discontent with society and the university's role in that society.
Max Dresden, now of the State University of New York at Stony Brook spoke to more than 50 persons on "Student Discontent and Disillusionment" in the Kansas Union Jawhawk Room.
Dresden said he thought the points of student disillusionment and discontent are in these areas: the transmission of knowledge, teaching and research; performing a social function, and performing a personal function.
A classroom is not democratic nor should it be, Dresden said. "A dentist can't take a vote on whether or not to extract a tooth, nor does a kindergarten class vote on the alphabet," he said. A teacher is more competent in his field, and therefore "can't be equal with his students because he is not." Dresden said.
The three functions of a university, Dresden said, answer some disillusionment, but the chief responsibility lies with the student, he said.
The incongruities in social problems and a university lie in the slow pace which universities change and the "illusion that all social problems can be solved." Universities imply a promise to solve all these problems and,
Dresden said, this is why students become disillusioned and discontented.
The student can do "something a computer can't, like personal relationships, and he needs
to realize this," he said. "If the student can not be a genuis then he at least can recognize the beauty and greatness of genuises, and this can add significance to life," Dresden added.
Latin groups
A discussion of the differences and similarities between elections in Latin America and the United States will be conducted at 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
sponsor talk
Participants will include Pedro Pena, chairman of the Paraguayan Foreign Relations Committee; Bonifacio Amarilla, chairman of the Paraguayan
Municipal Affairs Committee;
Fermin Rojas, secretary general of the Paraguayan Radical Liberal Party; Robert Tomasek, associate professor of political science, and Burt English, assistant professor of political science.
The meeting will be sponsored by the KU Center of Latin American Studies and the KU Latin American Club.
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BELL SYSTEM
BELL SYSTEM
Recruiting Team On Campus
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Representing
American Telephone & Telegraph, Long Lines Department Bachelor's and Master's candidates Electrical Mechanical, Civil, Mathematics, and Physics candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Locations: Mid-West states initially.
Bell Laboratories Research and Development B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E., M.E., Physics, Engineering Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Opportunities for graduate study. Locations: New Jersey, Illinois and elsewhere in eastern half of U.S.
Sandia Corporation Master's Degree in Mathematics, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering. Bachelor's candidates of outstanding scholarship in Engineering considered for technical development program. Locations: Albuquerque, New Mexico; Livermore, California.
Southwestern Bell Technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments-E.E.; M.E.; E.P.; C.E.; Math-Physics.
Locations: Kansas and the Mid-West.
Western Electric All Engineering disciplines needed to fill Technical Engineering positions in design, product, systems, military research and management training.
Locations: Southwest—Mid-West—Eastern and Northern States.
Sign Interview Schedule in Placement Office
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"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 Missouri
Kansas State at Nebraska
Colorado at Oklahoma State
Alabama at L.S.U.
Rice at Arkansas
Boston College at Army
Tennessee at Auburn
Texas at Baylor
California at Southern Cal.
Florida at Georgia
Navy at Georgia Tech
Ohio State at Wisconsin
Indiana at Michigan State
Miami (Fla.) at Penn State
Purdue at Minnesota
Clarion State at Slippery Rock
— Pick These Scores —
OKLAHOMA ___ at KANSAS ___
K.C. CHIEFS ___ at CINCINNATI ___
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 Place—Jim Smith
2nd Place—Pete Swartz
3rd Place—Mike Sevier
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 5,1968
Election reflects dissatisfaction
Today America goes to the polls.
And after the election returns are final, one man will accept the responsibility of trying to measure, direct and legislate the temper of the American people for the next four years.
people for the next four years. Whoever is elected, whether he be Democrat, Republican or American Independent, is inheriting a difficult job this year. For the average American citizen is in a very bad humor today.
The campaign has emphasized a multitude of angry voices in the United States and many of the voices won't be stilled by the election of a President.
The black American is one of the voices. This year the campaign managed to practically sidestep his causes by zeroiding in on law and order and barely mentioning civil rights. The candidates chose to appeal to the middle class or lower class American as a larger voting bloc and almost ignored the demands and grievances of a Negro minority.
Another angry voice is that of the lower class white citizen who fears the loss of economic security from the advance of civil rights, who fears rising prices and inflation, who fears the "bureaucrats" and "intellectuals" that he is convinced are trying to dupe him. This voice, also, cannot be answered by a President who promises law and
order but does nothing to help the economic or educational security of the lower class.
The American middle class is another voice, less strident but vocal, demanding change from the way things are going. Law and order is necessary, they say, thinking the very phrase a panacea for deeper social ills and for dissension. The values they have learned to consider as the fiber of Americanism are being threatened and they want a change—perhaps a return—to the security of those values.
The war in Vietnam provokes angry voices that cut through interest groups. The war seems impossible, unfathomable. Americans note the amount of money spent every second in Vietnam and groan over the problems in this country begging for money. They worry about the paradoxes of fighting for a country which seems to resent, even defy, the United States. They watch their children go off to fight a despised war and want fervently for it to be over.
Young dissenters raise still another angry voice of dissatisfaction. The system breeds ills so the system should be destroyed, they say. Now, they say. This year's candidates don't represent their anger and no ingrained parade is going to solve the problems they deplore.
The final days before election always reach a
point of disgust. By now average voters are weary of campaigning and even sometimes of the candidates. But this year as perhaps never before the disgust goes much deeper.
The American people want a change but a large percentage of the electorate doesn't believe that any of candidates can provide such a change. Many will vote for what they consider the lesser of two evils. Many more won't vote at all in silent manifestation of their disgust.
November 6 is not going to be the advent of paradise no matter which candidate is chosen. America's unrest is too deep for easy answers.
The election of a President this year isn't an ending or a solution to America's troubles. If we are very lucky it will be the beginning of facing these problems. No one man, not even a President, can face the problems alone or decide solutions. America has to begin the changes through each individual citizen.
If the United States is fortunate this year, it won't be solely because of a man elected President. Instead the good fortune might come from a citizenry who realize the dissatisfaction, carefully begin to scrutinize the problems that are being revealed and honestly try to begin to solve them.
Alison Steimel
Editorial Editor
Reflections on electing a President
Autumn leaves still fall, the Jayhawks have yet to lose, and our nation's President remains to be chosen.
For each there is a spotlighted moment and for each an uncertain end. But while autumn's decor carpets the awaiting ground and KU fans still wear the label of "number one" on their lapels; the uncertainty of choosing a President must somehow be resolved into certainty before this day ends.
Today the Gallops and the Harrises will be forgotten. The polling done today will reflect the decisions made by millions in the sanctity of the voting booth. Today a national leader will be chosen.
But what is even more disturbing than not knowing the name of the next President are the decisions made by many outside the voting booth.
To vote or not to vote is the question tearing at the minds and consciences of many Americans. If that question does not tear at the minds of potential voters it should—the consequences are great.
Not much more can be said for the citizen who cast a non-vote than can be said for the citizen who votes out of hatred and fear.
True, the right to vote also implies a right not to vote. But the use of the latter, like that of the former, carries with it the moral responsibility of the consequences. And the possible consequences of electing an unwise leader in this age are frightening.
In an age when the United States is a partner in the balance of terror, the electorate must share the responsibility with the leader it elects.
In an age when the United States can end the
In an age when the United States bleeds from the wounds of racial hatred and injustice, the electorate must share the responsibility with the leader it elects.
balance of terror with the pinicky push of a button, the electorate must share the responsibility with the leader it elects.
In an age when the pockmarks of poverty blight the richest nation on earth, the electorate must share the responsibility with the leader it elects.
If one says-as the protesting non-voter asserts there is no difference between the three major Presidential candidates, he has not looked at the candidates' records or personalities.
There is a difference. Enough of a difference to possibly determine the existence of this nation.
Richard Lundquist
Assistant Editorial Editor
Drinking, hospital woes
To the editor:
This letter is being written in response to those of Rick Lucas and Phil de la Cruz, which were recently published in the Kansan.
The concern of these two for justice is admirable, but I feel that they are misguided on a few points of concern to all KU students.
students. First of all, I would like to call to your attention that there is a higher law than that of the State of Kansas, which was cited in the previous letters. Men like John Locke and Thomas Jefferson called this the Law of Nature. I prefer to call it the Law of God.
Many great men, such as the Apostle Paul, have stated that we should obey the Laws of God even when they conflict with human statutes. Since this Law of God is a higher law than human statutes, then there is no legal prohibition on the use of alcohol by anyone any where or at any time.
This Law of God states in several places the Christianity of drinking (booze, that is). It is not my intention to deliver a sermon, but for those wishing to know my reasons for such a belief, I will currently cite I Timothy 5:23, Matthew 11:19, John 2, Ecclesiastes 2:24; 3:12-13; 10:19; and Proverbs 17:22.
However, this is no excuse for anyone ever becoming drunk. The Bible constantly teaches moderation and temperance (not abstinence), as in II Peter 1:5,6. I am sure that all of us would agree that the proper place for
drunks is NOT in the middle of a football crowd.
I agree that the ushers and students of KU should take action to prevent another scene like that at the Oklahoma State game. But this should purely be for disturbing the peace, not for possessing booze. His hangover will punish anyone who gets drunk for that deed. But the police, who are not bound to the higher Law of God, should not go around searching the stands for good, Christian, booze.
May God be with us all.
Kansas City Junior
Christianus
To the Editor:
Why all the fuss about the KU student not being admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital? Heavens, anyone in their right mind can see that the guy was only going to either bleed to death or go into severe shock. That's not bad, though—after all, it happens every day and the world is overpopulated anyway. Those nurses know what they are doing.
Suppose that today I was near death from appendicitis, a compound fracture of my skull, and gangrene of the left toe. They would tell me, "Take one aspirin every two hours for pain and call your family doctor if you don't feel better by tomorrow morning." But, it's kinda odd—I swear that the nurse would mumble under her breath, "... if you live that long..."
Val Smith
Val Smith Lubbock, Texas Freshman
Paperback
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DUFFY, by Harry Joe Brown Jr. (Dell, 50 cents)—One of those wild and improbable robberies, this one a multimillionaire's son, the mistress, and a plot to rob the father of several million dollars. It's a new movie.
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester year. Second class postage paid. Mail in complements, good condition, advertised offered to all students without re-ceded to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
BOMBING HALT?
THE EU GOVERNMENT
GORDER G
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
All rights reserved 1901
Publishers Hall Syndicate
'Just tell your people there is no significant change in our position.'
Tuesday, November 5, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Bruce Gossett of the Los Angeles Rams kicked 28 field goals during the 1966 season to set the National Football League record.
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KU's Christensen named top lineman
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—It's not very often that an offensive football player gets honored for knocking holes in the opposition's line, but Saturday it was hard not to notice the bruising performance put on by Kansas tackle Keith Christensen.
Christensen, a 6-4, 267-pounder, led the blocking waves that allowed the third-ranked Jayhawks to pile up 428 yards rushing—the most for a Kansas team since 1963—while beating Colorado 27-14.
More specifically, it was Christensen who opened the gaping holes for fullback John Riggins, who scored on touchdown runs of 21 and eight yards and piled up 162 yards for individual rushing honors.
KU still 3rd in grid poll
The United Press International top 20 major college football teams with first place votes and won-lost-tied records in parentheses.
Seventh Week
Team Points
1. Southern Cal (20) (6-0) 316
2. Ohio State (7) (6-0) 287
3. Kansas (6) (7-0) 285
4. Penn State (1) (6-0) 234
5. Tennessee (1) (5-0-1) 199
6. Purdue (6-1) 139
7. Michigan (6-1) 101
8. Missouri (6-1) 76
9. Texas (5-1-1) 69
10. Georgia (5-0-2) 64
Second 10-11, California 30;
12, Notre Dame 22; 13, Houston
21; 14, Oregon State 12; 15,
Arkansas 8; 16, Yale 4; 17,
Miami (Fla.) 3; 18, tie, Alabama,
Michigan State, Texas Tech.
Ohio University and Nebraska 1.
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Riggins, commenting on his 63-yard scamper to set up KU's first touchdown, said, "I never saw such a big hole in my life. Chris was doing a really great job, as he has all year."
For his performance, the big senior has been named Big Eight Lineman of the Week.
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THE DIARY OF AN INMORTAL YOUNG BOY
S.M.A. COLOR • A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
3:05 7:40 9:30
HELD OVER!
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
It was the 22nd consecutive game Christensen has started at offensive tackle for Kansas and the coaches termed it "one of his fiercest blocking games."
3:05 7:40 9:30
THE
Hillcrest
CENTER SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
THE Hillcrest
Coach Pepper Rodgers said, "Keith has been the leader of our offensive line all year. After viewing our game films and in our post-game talks, Keith Christensen has more than anyone else played great football."
Christensen edged Kansas State's John Stucky in the voting for the honor. Stuckey, a junior middle guard, blocked a punt which led to a Wildcat touchdown in the 35-20 loss to Oklahoma. He also recovered one Sooner fumble at the Oklahoma 25-yard line and was credited with seven solo tackles and seven assists.
Buffaloes lick KUgame wounds
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI)— Coach Eddie Crowder gave his University of Colorado Buffaloes the day off Monday as they licked their wounds from Saturday's 27-14 loss to Kansas.
Middle guard Bill Collins was on the doubtful list again for Saturday's meeting with Oklahoma State at Stillwater. Collins, out for two games earlier, reinjured a shoulder in the Kansas game.
Defensive end Mike Schnitker was nursing a pulled hamstring muscle in his right leg, but Crowder said he was expected to play against the Cowboys.
Quarterback Bob Anderson, held to his lowest total offense output as Kansas kept him to 32 yards, still has a chance to be Colorado's single season total offense leader. He needs 86 yards against Oklahoma State to set the record.
Light work out for football squad
Following their weekly procedure, the KU football squad worked out in sweatpants and pads for about an hour and a half yesterday. They spent most
of the time working against the different types of offense and defense used by their next opponent, Oklahoma.
WALT DISNEY presents
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Matinee 2:30 Sat. & Sun Evening 7:15-9:15
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ANNE HEYWOOD AS ELLEN MARCH
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TICHECNORAL* PANAVISION* FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARMS
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DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40
OPEN AT 6:30
STARTS AT DUSK
THE
UNIVERSITY
OF KANSAS THEATRE
and the
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
present
KISMET
Music and Lyrics by
ROBERT WRIGHT and GEORGE FORREST
book by
CHARLES LEDERER and LUTHER DAVIS
October 31, November 1, 3
November 3 (Mat. 2:30)
November 7, 8, 9
Tickets $2.40, 1.80 and 1.20
Box Office Information UN 4-3982
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 5, 1968
Undefeated 1923 team impressed
KU fielded its last undefeated football team in 1923—a队 which ended its season with a 5-0-3 record.
There were no bowl offers to look forward to, no frazzel-haired cheerleaders screaming "We're number one" for this was the era of Knute Rockney and the fabled Notre Dame football teams of the 1920's. There was not much national recognition for a team in the northeastern part of Kansas.
Members of this 1923 Jayhawk football team may not have received much glory for their efforts, but Saturday when
KU took on and beat Colorado in the annual homecoming game, they looked on with great pride at the 1968 Jayhawks.
"The players are so much bigger, faster and more agile today," exclaimed Charles Black, captain of the 1923 team after Saturday's game.
Sitting beside Black was Harold Burt, who played halfback and linebacker on the squad.
"What Harold says about how big they are today is right," Burt said. "Why, I'd feel like a midget out there now and I thought I was big."
A sparkle came to both men's
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November 12,1968
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"We played the entire 60 minutes," Black said enthusiastically. "Nowadays there is so much specialization. You have kick-off teams, offensive teams, defensive teams and even field goal teams."
Your authorized AR dealer
935 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 2-1944
First round action in KU's football intramural program was completed yesterday with eight teams advancing to the quarter final round today.
"Yes," Burt agreed, "Also more coaches are used—almost one for every position," he laughed. "Well, maybe not every position, but there are a lot more coaches. We only had a line coach and a backfield coach."
After graduation from KU, Black spent eight years coaching basketball . . . six years at the University of Nebraska and two years at Grinnell College in Iowa. He recently retired after working 32 years for a Toledo, Ohio glass firm.
Eight advance in intramurals
In the fraternity "A" league, Beta Theta Pi defeated Phi Kappa Theta 34-6 and Tau Kappa Epsilon beat Phi Delta Theta 14-8.
Fraternity "B" games saw Delta Upsilon trouncing Sigma Chi 32-0, Theta Chi winning over Beta Theta Pi No. 2 7-0, Alpha KappaLambda beating Lambda Chi Alpha 12-0, and Kappa Sigma taking a 6-6 game from Phi Gamma Delta on the basis of most vards.
Independent "A" teams were idle yesterday, but in Independent "B" league, the College Kids whipped Beta Tau 25-0 and the Retards defeated Chthonia Squaxon 6-0.
Scheduled for today are games in both "B" leagues. All games start at 4 p.m.
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 socialists 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 sadistic students devise for it.
Waterman-Bic Pen Corporation, Millford, Connecticut 04640
SENIORS
This is your week!
Do your own thing with the senior class The unique class of '69 presents: The greatest thing that there ever was for seniors!
(or)
Thursday- No 9:30 classes for seniors SENIOR COFFEE Union Ballroom
Friday—SENIOR PARTY 7:30 p.m. At Armory-FREE BEER
Saturday—SENIOR DAY
1:00 p.m.
Festivities at the game
Make plans now to attend all "senior class" functions
Tuesday, November 5, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
company's brochure are referred to
all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Record Player with AM/FM, FM-
stereo. Call Antonio, VI 3-1406 after
5 p.m. 11-5
NOW ON SALE
New small refrigerator—ideal for study dens, apts, etc—only $99.00.
Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St.
11.8
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization," Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread. 1-9
EXTRAORDINARY BUY! Fisher 220-T
Garrard Mark-50-tunable and one pair KLH speakers. Excellent condition. Best offer take it! VI 2-1994
8-116
1967 Mustang, slx-stick, Excellent condition, 10 months—19,000 miles of warfare, remaining. Call Larry Powell or VI - 7710. I call: 11-5 U 4-3973.
1966 Honda S-90, 3,000 miles, excel-
lent shape. Call SI 2-6484. 11-5
Ford Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed,
bucket seat. Perfect condition inside
and out. Need money—must sell soon.
Call VI 3-6870 Evenings. 11-7
Complete line of new FIAT and DATSUN sedans and sports cars--starting at $1590. Dealer is in Ottawa. For local information on the cars, prices, and trade-in value of your car, call Carl at VI 2-3683. 11-5
67 Cameroon, 427 HiPo bored 60 with chrome Molley crank and rods, and rubber handles, distributor, special high lift and long duration cam. Engine has been completely balanced. Extras include compartment shelving set up which suit well for Bell Housing. Traction Bars, Airlift shocks and special front end lift kit. Isky valve springs. 4-inch rubber handle glass hood. 7 qt. oil pan. Only 4,000 miles. 843-8315 after 5:00 p.m. 11-5
'66 BSA 650 Lightning in Excellent condition. Must sell to finance education. $775 or best offer. This is a real bargain. 843-8315. After 6 p.m. 11-5
427 Cobra Roadster, 8,000 miles, never raced. $7500 cash. No trades. Serious inquiries only. See John Hodges, Rm. 205, Naismith Hall. 843-3775. 11-5
1962 Dynamic 88 Oldsmobile. Body and engine in excellent condition. Good gas mileage combined with normal Oldsmobile road excellence makes ideal road car. Must sell appreciate. Price to sell immediately VI 2-8919. 11-7
1958 Ford V-8, 4 door sedan, auto-
ship. Fits 300 and small sell cheap.
Wayne Briert, VI 2-3395.
1964 Impala. SS, 327 engine. 4bbl.
$1200 Cheap. Dave Phelps. 843-481-8100
8-track Learjet tape deck. Plays
tom, Chris Barieheldes, 843-4811 - 11
tom, Chris Barieheldes, 843-4811 - 11
Be prepared for the Holiday Festivals ahead. See what the House of Wigs has to offer at as much as $75 for wiglets, cascades and all types of wigs. Call 913-631-9483 in Shawnee Mission. 11-7
6 string classical guitar. Call VI 3-
6971. 11-5
1965 Dodge 880 H.T., nicest one anywhere, 6 way seats, tilt wheel, contrasting leatherette interior,尔丽, Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-7
1864 Volks Deluxe Sedan - Exception-
Jerry Ackman Jerry Ackman
Wolkwagen, 2522 lines 11-7
1963 Olds Convert, white with white
jacket—Jerry Aile
Wolksman, 2522 love
1966 Dodge 2 Dr. H.T. 383 V8 Buckets, Air Console Automatic, P.S.B. P.Vinyl top, Special Painter—immaculate, Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522 Iowa
1966 Plym, Barracuda, Local car, one owner, Actual mileage—Absolutely Nice as new —Jerry Allen Volkwagon, 2522 Iowa 11-7
One used 21" RCA Victor television.
Deluxe console model in good condition for reasonable price. Call VI 2-4493 after 6 p.m. 11-7
Remington Nylon "66" 22 automatic rifle with 4x scope. Both new. Most rugged and accurate 22 made. $45.
VI 2-8671. 11-1
1968 Pontiac convertible, 350, yellow.
PS 3-speed, only driven 10,000 miles,
recently tuned. Call VI 2-3192 after
5:00 p.m. 11-8
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excellent condition. 4-speed, British racing factory. 5-inch power milewheel factory. 7 a chome pwm superstock wheels. 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must "sell" Contact: Sam Bison. Number: R# 616. McColum. V1-12-6,600
Used Sears tape recorder. $25 Used
Looks funky, sounds. V 2-30100 I 3-20110
NOTICE
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Rüge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Phone VI 3-8074. 11-7
Candles extraordinaire at Hass Hardware. We have handmade candies by monks, Japanese-temple candles, round candles from Italy, drip candles and scented candles. Come see. 1029 Massachusetts. 11-7
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd (Next to Shaw's Auto Service) North Lawrence
20% Coed Discount
20% Coed Discount
on
Frostings and Permenents
CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS
10 E. 9th VI 2-7900
No Appointment Necessary
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
B Conn., Law. Pet Ph. V 3-2/8
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
515 Michigan St. St. B-A-Q -outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.25; Rib order.
$1.50; Rib sandwich. $8.5; 1/2 chicken.
$1.15; Brisket sandwich. $7.5; Hours.
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. - tf
SPECIAL SALE—Current model H.H. Scott 312-D FM Tuner. This is a Demo unit in super condition. It lists for $319.95—Now discounted at $225.00. Haynes-Ray Audio & Music Co. VI 2-1944. Aft. Eve, hours 11-5
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Center, 107 W.7th, VI 91 and in Kansas Union lobbies on Tuesday. 11-19
HELP WANTED
There is still time to send a Christmas package to that special guy overseas. We are happy to offer non-perishable goodies for Christmas. We have mailing cartons and information. Tops, Poppers and Mailboxes. Mail to Children Center VI 2-1755. Open 'til 11:00. 11-7
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-
time openings available in day or
night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Extra money for your organization,
Sorority, etc., just by getting your
friends together for a "Wig Party"
Contact The House of Wigs, 7202
Goddard, Shawnee Mission. Phone
913-631-9483. 11-7
Voluptuously, velutinous, lascioviously, lubricious, essentially sensual STRAWBERRY FIELDS is especially for the pleasureably passionate passions of living. Come to STRAWBERRY FIELDS 712 Mass. Open 10-6. 11-7
Part-time for 11 a.m. till 2 p.m. Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week. Start $1.25 per hr. Apply in person to Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 8.3rd. tf
Female--Good looking, personable women to work in pleasant surroundings. Call or visit at Pizza Hut #1 on W. 23rd St. Good pay. Fringe benefits included. Please contact Mr. Ed Sapp, manager, and an interview appointment. 11-11
FRESHMEN: Want an active student-sympathetic government? If so vote David Mannering, an independent, for Freshman class president on November 11-11
THE LIBRARY BUD & COORS ON TAP
V
1300 W.23rd
TACO GRANDE
With This coupon
Buy 2 Tacos
Get 1 Free!
Good until
Nov. 30, 1968
1720 West 23rd Street
Pay-Le$ Self Service SHOES
Lawrence
TONY'S 66 SERVICE Be prepared— get antifreeze!
2434 Iowa VI 1-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
WANTED
THE NEW FOLK
Student for part time employment.
Sales in Advertising. Excellent pay.
Contact Mr. Stubbs or Mr. Price.
Westview Motel. Room 7. 11-5
Needed: ride to KU from Overland Park on Thurs. Classes 8:30 to 5:20.
Call Shirley. MI 9-8174 Overland Park.
11-7
Car, salesman to Flat and Datsun
automobiles. Full or part-time. Call
CHerry 242-6715. Vaughn Imports.
Ottawa. 11-7
Female to share comfortable double room off campus. Cooking privileges —2 blocks from campus. $35 monthly. Call VI 3-0723. 11-7
Tutor for Math 127. Call TU 7-6395.
THE NEW FOLK
Male roommate Wanted $50.00 a week
and amps. 2020教室 Dr. VI.3-316
1-11
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation and help them worship. Let's plan our services together. Call us. Ron Sundye or Dennis Bowers. First United Methodist. VI 3-7134. 11-7
SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most expensive barn. Lautap's Heathing and electric uniquely available. VI 3-4032. 11-12
Coming to The Red Dog Nov.14
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high fidelity Haynes Ray Audio. Warehouse Aft, Eve, Ehlert Hestshop Center 11-22
Experienced Dressmaking. Today's styles, much cheaper than store prices. Get that special dress for school or any occasion. Hems and alterations also. Come see samples. 842-6979 11-12
8th ST. SHOE REPAIR
105 E. 8th
7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
EAGLE
TYPING
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM ele- located near Oliver Hall. V1. VI 2873
Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440. 11-14
Experienced in typing thesis, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
ers (type PSP), efficient, service
Phone VI 3-9554.
Mrs. E. Wright. 12-9
FOR RENT
Have your party at the Studio, 1344
phone: 2-896-7350 available
VI 2-9441 or VI 2-9896 1-133
PERSONAL
WANTED — SHIRTS — WHITE.OR
COLORED. JUST THE WAY YOU
LIKE THEM. 5 FOR $1.25. ROYAL.
MASTER CLEANERS. 842 MASSES. 11-5
Two one-bedroom apartments. One at University Terrace, one at Old Mill apartments. Available Nov. 1. Call VI 2-129, VI 3-1433, or VII 2-180, VII 7-11
Small bachelor apartment nicely furnished, carpeted, private kitchen and private parking. quiet. Close to Union. Phone VI 3-8534. 11-7
FOR RENT to adult couple or individual. Beautiful new 2 bedroom apartment near KU and downtown. No pets, no students. Phone VI 3-8543.
Gold I.D. bracelet with small gold
heart. Engraved. Sentimental value.
Will reward. Deena Faucett, VI 3-
4610. 1630 Oxford. 11-11
LOST
Apartment for women. 1216 Louisiana.
VI 3-1601. 11-8
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
RANEY DRUG STORES
3 locations to serve your
every need
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
ANTE PEARL'S CHUCK WAGON
at
THE STABLES
Charcoaled Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers Suzie Q French Fries
RENT
A NEW
FORD
From John Haddock Ford VI 3-3500 23rd and Alabama
Mon.
LA PETITE
GALERIE
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For
Now Fashions
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Lower Level
8:00-9:00
PITCHER
HOURS
Fri.
3:00-4:00
at
THE STABLES
Kitchen Opens at Five Daily
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 5, 1968
Booklet tells city housing laws
A seven-page brochure containing the Lawrence Minimal Housing Code-City Ordinance No. 3749, concerned with discrimination and a complaint form for the Dean of Student Affairs office—will be distributed to students living off campus this week by the Off-Campus Housing Committee.
One of the basic causes of off-campus housing problems is that many student-tenants do not have contracts with their landlords.
Mike Shearer, Topeka junior and committee member emphasized the necessity that every student living off-campus with a legitimate complaint receive the brochure.
"KU has approximately 7,000 students living off-campus. All of these students should have
Frank Hummer, Topeka senior and committee member, called the brochure a guide to understanding the responsibilities of a renter and landlord operating under the laws of the City of Lawrence.
"It will inform the students and let them know what they should expect of their landords. They should at least be provided with minimal housing requirements." said Hummer.
Group plans labor study
The Associated Women Students' (AWS) Commission on the Status of Women will study tomorrow the civil service code and its relation to women.
The study, to be done at the State Department of Labor in Topeka, will be conducted on the invitation of the Kansas State Commission on the Status of Women.
Approximately 20 KU coeds will collect data on about 600 persons to find out if discrimination exists against female workers. The results of the study will be submitted to Gov. Robert Docking for his anpraisal.
KU has the only such commission in a U.S. university.
March planned to mourn voting
A funeral march mourning the "death of the democratic process in America" was planned for 12:30 p.m. today.
The participants planned to meet on the lawn in front of Strong Hall and march through campus to Lawrence City Hall, carrying a casket. The casket was to symbolize their rejection of the selection of candidates for this year's presidential election.
The group planned to deposit the casket at City Hall where they would then listen to short speeches from concerned Lawrence and university citizens.
Members of Peoples' Voice and Students for a Democratic Society made plans for a demonstration of this type. No specific group sponsored this demonstration, however.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Networks plan to project results
NEW YORK (UPI) - The major television networks plan to project the outcome of the presidential election before all the polls are closed, in spite of continued congressional criticism of this practice, it was learned yesterday.
Spokesmen for NBC, CBS and ABC told United Press International that the greatest caution would be exercised in making projections both on the local, state and national levels and all projections would be clearly labeled as such.
contracts so that they will know what's expected of the landlord and vice-versa," Shearer said.
Halina Pawl, Topeka junior and committee member said that many student-tenants, especially foreign students, aren't aware of the city ordinances that exist to protect them. Many students do not complain because they are afraid of eviction, she said.
"We must emphasize that the landlords can't legally threaten them or throw them out," Miss Pawl said.
"We shouldn't have to do this ourselves; it should be done by the university. They should be mailing out these brochures," Shearer said.
Shearer expressed the hope that the committee, organized early this year, would be replaced by a permanent administration committee.
"Nothing can be done to help the students unless they complain. The administration is interested but until they hear from the students their hands are tied," Hummer said.
SUA Special Films. 7 & 9:15 p.m.
"Chaos and 'The Bue'
Dvehe Auditorium."
Reading & Study Skills Clinic Enrollment, 102 Bailey. All Day.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Dyche Auditorium.
Jayhawk Rodeo Club. 7:30 p.m.
V.K.
Christian Science Organization. 7:30
p.m. Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken.
kc
Classical Film. "Sunrise." 7 & 9
p.m. Dyche Auditorium.
M. Otred Gilbert & Sullivan Com-
fessor 7:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Uni-
lon
Chamber Music Series, Suk Duo, 8
p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall.
p.m. Windsor Square Theatre
Kismet 11: 8 p.m. University
Theatre.
Mexican college students meet
MEXICO CITY (UPI)-Mexico's rebellious college students yesterday met in dozens of assemblies to decide whether to return to class or continue their anti-government strike protest movement.
Leaders of the National Strike Council, spearhead of the student revolt, vowed last week to carry on the movement. But large groups of students were meeting yesterday to decide whether to continue the strike or return to classes.
Seniors
Why not drop by the Union Ballroom, Thursday morning at 9:30 (no classes for you anyway) and have a cup of coffee with the "Chancellor's stand-in" (Guess Who??).
Also pick up your unique "Senior Class Regalia," and VOTE for your candidate for the HOPE award. Those 1969 Jayhawks who have not purchased their senior class membership may do so at this time and pick up their Regalia.
sua
sua
presents
Carousel of Countries
or
As the World Turns On
UNION
Nov. 9 7 till 11
75c in advance or $1 at door
75c in advance or $1 at door
Bairns
TONIGHT
Let a tasty KU coed from a selected living group serve you your favorite beverage in style and at SPECIAL PRICES tonight and every Tuesday night from 7-12. Where? Only at . . .
THE
STABLES
ENGINEERING GRADUATES
The Inland Steel Company, Indiana Harbor Works, East Chicago, Indiana, invites you to investigate our many career opportunities. Consult the specific job description in the pocket of our brochure. Our representatives will be on your campus on FRIDAY,
NOVEMBER 8,1968
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KANSAN
UDK Election special
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, November 6, 1968
Nixon is elected
Late Illinois returns do it
CHICAGO (UPI)—Richard M. Nixon apparently collected Illinois' 26 electoral votes late this morning to boost him over the 270 electoral vote mark needed for the presidency.
His victory depended on a narrow lead in one of the last big undecided states. Television networks declared Nixon the winner in Illinois and the nation shortly before 10 a.m. (CST) after a suspenseful wait for the outcome of the voting here.
Nixon's total number of electoral votes was 287 at 10 a.m. compared to Humphrey's 166, and Wallace's 45.
Texas, Missouri and Alaska still remained undetermined when the Republican candidate was declared to have won the nation's highest office.
Nixon finally clinched his native state of California shortly after 8 a.m. EST, giving him 261 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win
He was leading in Illinois with 26 electoral votes and Alaska with 3.
If Hubert H. Humphrey had come from behind in the close Illinois race, George C. Wallace could have tipped the election to either Nixon or Humphrey in the
formal vote of the Electoral College on Dec. 16.
Wallace ran third with about 14 per cent of the vote and carried five southern states with 45 electoral votes.
Nixon, who lost the presidency in 1960 in another photo finish election that also hinged on Illinois, maintained a slim plurality in the big Midwestern state during the early morning hours.
The lead in nationwide popular votes changed back and forth during the long night of ballot counting. First Nixon held the lead, then Humphrey was in front
(Continued on page 20)
Docking, Dole post victories
KANSAS CITY (UPI)—Incumbent Governor Robert B. Docking pulled into a commanding 22,000 vote lead over Republican Rick Harman early this morning—after the two waged a close race—but it was the GOP, as expected, sweeping most other Kansas state races.
Docking, seeking a second straight term, appeared headed for victory but 39 per cent of the votes were still to be counted.
Nixon surged ahead early in Kansas to win the state's seven electoral votes and chalk up another GOP victory in this Republican stronghold. Late Tuesday night the former vice president was pulling 55 per cent of the state's votes, Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey 35 per cent and independent George Wallace 10 per cent.
Late totals showed Nixon with a 50-thousand-vote lead over his challengers, but the Republican glitter was not brightening the scramble for the Kansas governorship.
Congressman Bob Dole was an early winner as he took the U.S. Senate seat to be vacated by 75-year-old Frank Carlson in January. Incumbent Republican congressmen Chester Mize and Joe Skubitz had won another term in Congress by mid-evening.
Congressman Larry Winn Jr., seeking a second straight term in the 3rd District, was also headed back to the U.S. House, as was Congressman Garner E. Shriver in the 4th.
Late yesterday the 1st congressional District race in western Kansas was still a question mark, although State Sen. Keith Sebelius was expanding his lead over State Rep. George Meeker, a Garden City Democrat. With 51 per cent of the district's precincts reported, the Norton Republican had a 5,000-vote lead over ex-Republican Meeker, who switched party affiliations earlier this year.
G. L. H.
(Continued on page 10)
Photo by Steve Haynes
Voters kill wheel tax
The proposed city ordinance calling for a $10 tax on all vehicles garaged in Lawrence was apparently defeated yesterday for the second time.
With four precincts containing an expected 4,000 votes still to report, totals on the measure
Students stage death march
WE HAVE A
AGE —
NO
ERNATIVE
FUNERAL
MARCH
BEHOCULATION
RECOVERY
IS
DEMOCRACY
BYING
OR IS IT
ALREADY
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Photo by Greg Sorber
stood at 3,873 for and 6,798 against. Election officials at Douglas County Courthouse expected the unreported precincts to follow the pattern set by the 18 already counted.
A double file of nearly 100 persons marched in a "Funeral for the Democratic Process" yesterday afternoon from Strong Hall to the Douglas County Courthouse.
They demonstrated to protest what they called, "disdain for the non-choice forced upon us in this election."
At the head of the procession, which was jointly sponsored by Student Voice (Voice) and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), marchers lugged a black-draped coffin. The procession was the first of two "Vietnam Days" protests. The second is sched-
tuled for Nov. 11 when Gen. Lewis Walt, Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps, will speak in the Kansas Union.
Marchers carried protest placards covered with plastic bags in the intermittent rain. One sign asked, "Why rob America of its mediocracy?" and another carried the message, "A vote in '68 is a voter for hate."
At the courthouse, activist leaders told the "mourners" the three major Presidential candidates offered the voters no reasonable alternatives in the Vietnam situation.
(Continued on page 20)
The tax would have levied a $10 charge on cars, trucks and motorcycles owned by students living in Lawrence, as well as townspeople.
The alternative to the tax is increased property taxes, said a bulletin issued before the election by Citizens for Fair Share Streets, a committee formed in October to inform voters on the issue.
Lawrence residents apparently can expect an increase in property taxes, resulting from the measure's defeat.
Members of the citizen's committee said the vehicle tax plan was an attempt to place the cost of street maintenance on those who use the streets-vehicle operators.
Before the election, the citizen's committee felt chances for passage of the measure were "good." They attributed their
Winners and losers
National-page 3
State-page 10
Local-page 11
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
Composite president gives choice
Many Americans complained that the 1968 presidential election did not afford a clear-cut choice for the voter. Maybe a "George Milhous Humphrey" would be the best choice.
Confused?
However, the editors of the Encyclopedia Americana have created a fellow who will never be—but always was—the people's choice for president.
Well, the gentleman in the photograph is the "compleat president" of the United States, 1789 to the present. The editors, a distinguished group of scholars and writers, were curious about the composite man who has led the nation as its president for nearly two centuries.
Photo experts, working with portraits of all of the U.S. presidents from Washington to LBJ, have created his visual image of the total president—providing at a glance a composite of the 35 men who have held the office.
There's also much that can be said of his physical characteristics, derived from facts and figures on the presidents. The description is based upon averages in most cases, and on majority tabulations in others.
It was discovered that the aggregate president at the time of his inauguration was named James. He was 54 years old, 5-foot-10 and "fairly trim." His eyes were blue, and he had light hair.
This President graduated from Harvard, and when he was 28, he married a girl four years younger than himself. When he was inaugurated, the President and First Lady had been married 26 years and had three children—two boys and a girl. He was elected while residing in New York State.
York State.
Although none of 1968's contenders matched the qualification, the new Chief Executive had not been Vice-President, but had been a lawyer and Congressman. "Mr. Compleat President" did not play a musical instrument, but he was a war veteran and had written at least one book during his public career.
There were also some interesting facts about individual former Presidents uncovered in the research. For example:
James Madison weighed only 100 pounds and stood less than 5-foot-6.
- John Tyler has the most children-15.
Abraham Lincoln was the tallest (6-foot-4) while Thomas Jefferson stood $ 6 foot2 \frac{1}{2}. $
Plastics seminar set
The sixth meeting of the Studio Seminar on Plastics will be held this evening at 7 p.m. at Bailey Annex.
A presentation will be given by Felix Arnald, president-elect of the Society of Plastic Engineers. He will demonstrate how industrial plastic techniques can be used in an artistic, studio situation.
Arnald's demonstration will be followed by a workshop in which seminar participants will have the opportunity to work with the methods they have been shown.
The seminar is sponsored by the KU department of design and University Extension.
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Wednesday, November 6, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Wallace-has he had his say?
By MIKE FEINSILBER
WASHINGTON (UPI)—"You'd better have your say now," George C. Wallace hollered at his hecklers, "because after Nov. 5th you're through in this country!"
Now that the voters have had their say, is George C. Wallace through in this country's politics?
Or, as his campaign literature asks, "can the son of an Alabama dirt farmer who drove a taxicab and a dump truck and waited on tables to help work his way through college be elected president of the United States"—on a second try, in 1972?
Wallace did not really expect to win the presidency this time. But he did expect to perform better in the North than he did. The fact that his victories were confined to five southern states—Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi—seemed to rebut his argument that his movement was national, not regional.
Fails In North
He had expected to get the votes of the lunchpail crowd who had cheered him so lustily at rallies in the industrial states of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, New Jersey and New York. But he did not win them significantly.
Nor did he win much in the Midwest or the West. He bombed
in New England. But in the border states of Maryland where he won about 15 per cent of the vote, and in Kentucky, where he won about 18 per cent, his performance may have determined the outcome. New Jersey Gov. Richard J. Hughes said Wallace's "hate vote" in New Jersey defeated Hubert H. Humphrey in that state.
In assessing the "spoiler" role Wallace played it's virtually impossible to know which candidate would have won Wallace's votes. The chances are he hurt both—and therefore did not really alter the ultimate outcome of the election.
Americans demonstrated again that they prefer to vote for presidents, not for symbols. Wallace's strength diminished as the election approached and as Americans realized that either Humphrey or Richard M. Nixon would govern for the next four years and that there was a choice to be made between the two.
LeMay Significant Factor
Significantly, Wallace's appeal appeared to fall shortly after he selected retired Air Force Gen. Curtis E. LeMay as his running mate and nearly dragged LeMay from the platform when the general began telling a televised news conference about America's "phobia" about nuclear warfare.
Even though he didn't do as well as he expected to do, Wallace did win 14 per cent of the popular vote, the best third party showing since 1924, when progressive Robert M. LaFollette won 16.6 per cent.
And he succeeded in working his way through a labyrinth of state laws to win a place on 50 state ballots.
His major accomplishment may be one he hardly sought. He may have prodded Congress and the next president to carry through electoral reform, making it impossible for an outsider to become a power broker in the Electoral College and thus making American elections more reflective of the popular will.
PETER RICKMAN
George Wallace
GOP gains 13 governors in country's 21 elections
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Republicans today wrested five governorships from the Democrats for the party's biggest statehouse majority in 14 years and threatened to make even deeper inroads.
By early morning, Republicans had won 8 gubernatorial races and were leading in 5 others. Of the 21 contests, the Democrats had won 7 and led in only 1 other battle.
State-by-state voting pattern
Wash.
9
Mont.
Id.
4
N.D. 4
Minn.
10
Wisc. 12
Ore. 6
Wyo. 3
S.D. 4
Colt. 5
Nes. 3
Utah. 4
Colo. 6
Kans. 7
Arid. 5
N.M. 4
Oklin. 8
Texas 25
Aik. 4
Tenn. 11
N.C. 13
Alto. 3
Hawaii 4
NIXON
HUMPHREY
WALLACE
Kansan map by Robert Entriken Jr.
The narrow margin of Richard Nixon's victory is shown by the above map showing states the candidates had won or were leading in according to unofficial returns as of 10 a.m. today. Hubert Humphrey, winning only 15 states, still captured large electoral vote blocs with his victories in New York (43 votes), Pennsylvania (29), Michigan (21), and Spiro Agnew's Maryland (10). Although Nixon maintained a steadily increasing lead in electoral votes, he could not claim victory until late this morning when Illinois' 26 votes put him over the 270 needed for election.
Before Tuesday's election, there were 26 Republican and 24 Democratic governors. It appeared the new lineup would be 31 Republicans and 19 Democrats.
Marring the GOP victories was a disaster for one of the party's brightest young stars. Gov. John H. Chafea was defeated in his bid for a fourth term in Rhode Island by Democrat Frank Licht, former Superior Court judge.
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, who swept the state, apparently sealed Chafee's fate.
On the other hand, Richard M. Nixon's coatattails helped Russell W. Peterson make it a GOP win in Delaware. Peterson defeated Democratic Gov. Charles L. Terry, 68, a popular chief executive still recovering from a heart attack.
The only other Democratic upset was engineered by Montana Atty. Gen. Forrest H. Anderson who defeated incumbent Republican Gov. Tim Babcock.
Besides hanging on to the Arizona, and South Dakota statehouses, Republicans added Vermont, Indiana, New Hampshire and Iowa.
The Democrats maintained control in Texas, Missouri, Kansas and Utah.
The trend exceeded predictions the Republicans had hoped to win only 11 of the 21 races.
In Illinois, Richard B. Ogilvie was leading Democratic Gov. Samuel H. Shapiro.
Walter R. Peterson made it a GOP victory in New Hampshire. The former state house speaker beat Emile R. Bussiere.
Republican Edgar D. Whitcomb, former secretary of state, is the new Indiana governor, defeating Democrat Robert L. Rock, the lieutenant governor.
Washington Gov. Daniel J.
Evans easily beat the Democratic
(Continued on page 20)
Pea picker vote not as large as Wallace thought
WASHINGTON (UPI)—George C. Wallace learned Tuesday that America had fewer "rednecks, woolhats, peckerwoods and pea pickers" than he claimed. They were the people he said would put him in the White House but too few rallied behind him on election day.
At the Boston Common and in Fargo, N.D., in the pulpit of the Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake City and before the aerospace engineers of Southern California, Wallace insisted that his message was reasonable and not racial and that his movement was national and not regional.
But when the nation spoke, Wallace found only the South had listened. Even there, he was hurt by the recent and heavy registration of Negroes, who now account for 17 per cent of the South's voters.
He carried his own state of Alabama with two of every three votes in incomplete returns. In neighboring Mississippi and in Louisiana he won handily. He was the indicated winner in two other Deep South states, Georgia and Arkansas, where Hubert H. Humphrey trailed him but not by much.
But the partial returns showed even in the Carolinas, Tennessee, Florida, Virginia and Texas the Wallace appeal was fractional. He trailed in all six.
In the border states of Kentucky and Maryland he won fewer than a fifth of the votes.
Wallace went to bed early today, apparently believing his third party candidacy had deadlocked the presidential election.
Earlier he refused to say what course he might take if his electoral votes held the balance of victory for Republican Richard Nixon or Democrat Hubert Humphrey.
"I can't say what I'm going to do with my electoral votes," he told a UPI newsman. "You just can't decide something like that until the whole deal is over."
The former Alabama governor won 45 electoral votes in five southern states—Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana and Arkansas.
Philosophy club will meet tonight
The KU Philosophy Club will meet at 8 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union, room 101.
Dorothy Haecker, ethics and values instructor, will present a paper entitled "Camus' Concept of Absurdity."
Her presentation will be followed by a discussion period. All philosophy majors and other interested persons are invited.
Democrats retain control of House, Senate
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Democrats kept control of the Senate today and maintained their grip on the House. Republican House Leader Gerald R. Ford conceded the GOP could not gain command of the 91st Congress.
At a news conference early this morning, Ford predicted the Republicans would score "a net gain of 10, possibly a few more," but nowhere near the 30 seats necessary for Republican control of the House.
The Republicans had cut down the Democratic margin in the Senate, however. The recent Senate was controlled by Democrats 63-37. The indicated new total was 58-42.
"Unfortunately," Ford said, "we've had some disappointments." Democrats controlled the recently concluded House 247-188; they moved toward similar margins in the new House that will convene dan. 6.
In the House, with only three races still not heard from, the indicated new total was 243-189.
GOP hopes fade
Earlier, Ford had predicted a 30-seat net gain, but as the returns rolled in, his hopes of a big Republican gain faded. The GOP last won control of Congress when
former President Dwight D. Eisenhower won his big victory in 1952.
GOP candidates won Democratic-held Senate seats in Florida, Arizona, Maryland, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania. They led in races for seats held by Democrats in Oregon and Ohio. Outgoing Gov. Harold Hughes of Iowa was the only Democrat to win a GOP seat, defeating state Sen. David M. Stanley for the seat vacated by Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, R-Iowa.
All told, Democrats were ahead early today in the House by a healthy margin. They were elected to 202 seats and were leading for another 41 seats. Republicans had won 154 seats and were leading in another 35.
Goldwater returns
GOP Senate winners included former Sen. Barry Goldwater, Republican presidential candidate in 1964, who easily beat Roy L. Elson, aide to the Senate's retiring dean, Democrat Carl Hayden, 91.
Republican Rep. Richard S. Schweiker ousted veteran Sen. Joseph Clark of Pennsylvania. In Oklahoma, former Republican Gov. Henry Bellmon defeated Democratic Sen. A. S. Mike Monroney, who was seeking a fourth term.
Two Senate Democratic critics of the Vietnam War were trailing. Oregon State Rep. Robert W. Packwood, 36, a Republican, led Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore. Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., who briefly sought the Democratic presidential nomination, was running behind former Republican Gov. Archie M. Gubbrud.
In Florida, Republican Rep. Edward J. Gurney beat former Gov. Leroy Collins, a Democrat, for the Senate seat vacated by the retirement of Democratic Sen. George A. Smathers.
In Maryland, Rep. Charles Mcc. Mathias Jr., a moderate Republican, defeated Democratic Sen. Daniel B. Brewster and independent George P. Mahoney. Brewster was seeking a second term.
Ohio Atty. Gen. William B. Saxbe, a Republican, held a comfortable lead over former Democratic Rep. John J. Gilligan. The Ohio Senate seat was vacated by the retirement of Democratic Sen. Frank J. Lausche.
In Kentucky, county Judge Marlow W Cook, a Republican, defeated Democrat Katherine Graham Peden, the only woman Senate candidate this year, in a race for the seat held by retiring Republican Sen. Thruston B. Morton.
Kentucky woman loses
Incumbent winners included Sens.
Abraham A. Ribicoff, D-Conn.; Norris
Cotton, R-N.H.; Peter H. Dominick,
R-Colo; Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y.,
and Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii.
House Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass., won re-election easily. So did House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich., and House GOP Whip Les Arends, R-III.
Adam Clayton Powell, the Harlem Democrat who was elected twice to the 90th Congress but was "excluded" by his colleagues, swept to an easy victory.
Wallace ally wins
Sweeping to expected Senate victories were former Aliaba Lt. Gov. James B. Allen, a Democrat and an ally of George C. Wallace; veteran Sen. Sam Ervin, D.N.C., and Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D.S.C. Allen will replace retiring Sen. Lister Hill, D-Ala.
House Democratic Leader Carl Albert, D-Okla., easily won re-election over Gerald L. Beasley Jr., a physician and member of the John Birch Society.
Sen. Russell Long, D-La., Senate Democratic Whip, and veteran Sen. George Aiken, R-Vt., were uncontested winners. Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-Ga., won an expected easy victory.
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday. November 6, 1968
Why the relique?
Technology, modern public relations and quick and efficient voting methods made it possible for the American citizens to wake up this morning, read their early papers and know who the next President of the United States is by popular vote.
Yet according to a creaking outdated system of election, the next president really hasn't been decided upon. The final decision will not be made until the Electoral College votes are officially tabulated Jan. 6, 1969.
Of course, the electoral college voters actually have already made known their decision. But theoretically they are not held by that popular vote.
when the aristocratic founders of our country didn't trust the common man to make competent choices all by himself. That era is now surely over.
The Electoral College was established in an era
Yet no one ever gets around to abolishing it.
The Electoral College is condemned each election year as being ineffectual, inefficient and, especially this year with the candidacy of George Wallace, potentially dangerous if the electoral votes had been deadlocked.
In 1972, when the elections become even more sophisticated; even more efficient, will the United States still have to contend with this dilapidated relique of the past?
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
Campaign surprises
Observations:1968
CBS news commentator Walter Cronkite appeared on the home television screen at 6 p.m. Tuesday evening and briskly began Election Night 1968.
What a few weeks ago was supposed to be a fairly easy and early victory for Republican Richard Nixon instead became a long night's vigil of juggling figures.
And at 7:30 a.m. this morning, the news commentators were still there, still marking the votes, commenting on history and, in general, waiting.
The 1968 election is the closest election since 1912, the commentators remarked.
But Richard Nixon, reputed to be a loser, won this year.
But as far as the rest of the campaign, the surprisingly close race fits in with the pattern of the events since last spring.
Richard Nixon's announcement of his candidacy shocked no one but the upsurge of a political darkhorse, Senator Eugene McCarthy, in a New Hampshire primary amazed the nation.
Then after dissension in his own party became an uproar, President Lyndon Johnson, who was expected to be the Democratic candidate for 1968, dropped out of the race altogether.
Since then, nothing has been predictable.
Senator RobertKennedy was assassinated in June.
George Wallace's third party became a reality instead of only a veiled threat.
The summer polls showed strong support for both Eugene McCarthy and Governor Nelson Rockefeller.
Although both conventions chose the expected party candidates, dissent with the choice rang loud and clear.
Law and order became the prime campaign issue almost overshadowing the Vietnam war which first started the dissension in the nation over the Johnson administration.
And the cry of "law and order" and "save our property" came after a relatively peaceful summer, a summer devoid of the serious urban riots predicted all last winter.
And last night, Hubert Humphrey, who was thought to be politically dead scarcely more than a week ago, almost pulled off the Harry Truman turnabout of the 1948 election.
Almost, but not quite.
The 1968 campaign had a bonus surprise: Edmund Muskie, Democratic vice presidential candidate.
In the last month, Muskie had the highest rate of increase in popularity of all the candidates. Many wistfully contemplated Muskie as the most appealing choice not for vice president but for president.
The 1968 campaign surprises are over. But Maine's Senator Edmund Muskie is likely to remain a bright star on the Deomcratic political horizon for years to come.
Alison Steimel
Editorial Editor
ELECTORAL COLLEGE
THE MILWACKEE HOUSE
'Well, here we go again'
Kansan book review
LSD explored
By Scott Nunley
"Then on the 'inside' I was enveloped in light, in pure light. It was luminous and milky white. I was completely lost and dissolved in it. It's not that I could say that I was in the light, but the light was there and I was not quite there in it. I just wasn't."
Obviously, as Rabbi Schachter's attempt demonstrates, language is inadequate in describing any ecstatic experience. Words and metaphors ultimately have always failed the priest and mystic.
But this rabbi's "ascent of the soul" (Aliyath Han'shamah) could be vulgarly (and accurately) termed "tripping out"—the rabbi had just taken LSD-25.
Dr. Ralph Metzner's volume "The Ecstatic Adventure" is an attempt to collect 38 different accounts of such psychedelic voyages. Priests, psychotherapists, artists, laymen, and even two children face the same barriers of language that halted Rabbi Schachter—each detailing the raptures or terrors of his chemical "trip."
Metzner, of course, is well rooted in such psychedelic data-gathering, from his Harvard days with Dr. Timothy Leary.
Together with Dr. Richard Alpert, these men have established vehicles of investigation such as the periodical "Psychedelic Review" (many of whose essays are now collected in hardback) and the practical manual "Psychedelic Experience" (based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead). In addition to papers and interviews by the trio, Leary currently has published an autobiography "High Priest" and a collection of poetry, translations applicable to an "estatic adventure."
In the current anti-intellectual atmosphere, where LSD is either being sermonized as hellish or peddled as kicks, it is refreshing to discover any intelligent men willing to discuss the most powerful phenomenon of our time without hysteria.
That is not to say that Leary, Metzner, and Alpert are completely detached and scientific. They have been themselves, frequently, voyagers into the expanded consciousness. Nor are they completely unprejudiced, since they begin with the great assumption that the psychelic experience is at heart a valuable one.
But such a work as "The Ecstatic Adventure" vindicates their honest concern for the question. Among the 38 "trips" described, not all are idylis of heavenly bliss. Perhaps all are voyages of discovery, but frequently the land unveiled is a nightmarish realm of paranoia and terror.
And even after a positive experience, Rabbi Schachter can still fall back from his original enthusiasm into important doubts:
"It has certainly had a profound effect on me and in many ways has restructured my life. For the better? Who can say? There are times when I am not so sure. . . . Emotionally and spiritually I still have problems; they did not vanish. . . . I am no longer sure that soft or hard psychedelics are a panacea."
Since the lid on research in 1963, psychedelia has become a commercial "literary" marketplace. Many cheap ladies' magazine-type articles have been ground out, many editions of paperback fiction produced (sometimes masquerading as "fact").
The most fascinating recent appearance is "Day of St. Anthony's Fire" by journalist John G. Fuller describing the havoc with which an unprepared French village was "turned on" in 1951 by Ergot poisoning.
But to date the experiences and theories of Timothy Leary's circle seem the most nearly profound.
In their eyes, the ecstatic adventure is not a "mere chemical illusion." Rather, LSD frees man to share an almost divine experience of ineffable power, one that cults and priests have traditionally reserved as a climax to their arduous years of devotion and preparation.
Like the Tibetan lama who guides his healthy pupil through a symbolic "death" and healing rebirth, Leary aims beyond instant thrills to meaningful personal change. Dropping out is not a mandate to drift, but a command to abandon diseased mis-perceptions. "LSD is a tool, not a method."
Certainly if their estimate is correct that 20 per cent of America's college youth have used acid, despite this Second Prohibition, then carefully considered books like "The Ecstatic Adventure" should be added to the library of every educator and student.
Letter to the editor
Cites Kansan error
To the Editor:
The Friday Kansan covered the speech by Socialist Workers Party Representative, Seth Wigderson. Part of the news story read: "Speaking against the war in Vietnam, Wigderson urged socialist followers to subvert American soldiers, thereby weakening the war effort. 'Our goal is to get every single GI out of Vietnam and bring them home.'"
Mr. Wigderson did not call upon people to "subvert-American soldiers," but to support them by demanding their immediate withdrawal from Vietnam. He said that most GIs do not support the war and that radicals should help them unite against the war.
In fact, Wigderson believes that this is one of the most important things radicals can do to end the war. He said that the GIs are not fighting for their
country, nor do many GIs feel they are, but are fighting for an elite group of big business profiteers who are protecting investments in Southeast Asia and in other parts of the Third World.
For more information about the Socialist Workers Party write SWP, 873 Broadway. N.Y., N.Y. Kenneth Clark
Kenneth Clark
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Business Office—UN 4-4358
A student newspaper serving the
University of Kansas, Lawrence,
1924.
Kansas.
Published at the University of Kansas
during the academic year 2014,
holidays and examination periods.
Mall subscription rates: $6 a semester.
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9 >
Wednesday. November 6.1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Saigon balks; U.S. postpones Viet talks
PARIS (UPI)—The United States yesterday announced indefinite postponement of expanded Vietnam negotiations scheduled for today because of Saigon's refusal to sit at the conference table alongside a Viet Cong delegation. But the Viet Cong demanded the talks go on without waiting for Saigon.
U. S. spokesman William Jor-
den held out hope the South Vietnamese government would call off its boycott and eventually send a delegation to Paris.
He said consultations were continuing and "as soon as a date has been decided for the next meeting we will announce it."
A North Vietnamese source in Paris said today's meeting had
ASC may adopt Senate Code toniaht
Discussion and possible adoption of the Senate Code is likely to take place at tonights All-Student Council (ASC) meeting according to Rick von Ende, Abilene graduate student and permanent ASC chairman.
The passage of the Senate Code was expected to take place at an earlier date, but Von Ende said careful Senate Code consideration by the ASC has caused the delay.
"The reason Senate Code action has been delayed is that members of the ASC have presented a large number of amendments to the proposed Senate Code. After each amendment was presented, a lengthy debate and discussion followed," von Ende said.
Von Ende said many of the principles in the Minority Report have been brought up in several amendments to the Senate Code.
"The ASC made sure most of these amendments received lengthy discussion. It appears there will be no more amendments to the Code and we can discuss it tonight," von Ende said.
"The ASC has the option to break the Code down and vote on the sections separately. However, I don't expect this to happen." von Ende said.
Von Ende said members of the ASC can vote on the Senate Code as a whole or by sections.
The passage of the Senate Code, abolition of the ASC and establishment of a new three-senate structure would take two-thirds approval of the ASC.
Also required to make the proposals effective are passage
been cancelled at the request of the United States. He said Hanoi had agreed "readily" because it did not want to embarrass the United States.
TULSA, Okla. (UPI)—A recent survey indicates the Tulsa metropolitan area's population has increased 19 per cent in eight years to 500,000.
Growing Tulsa
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Mrs. Binh denounced the Saigon government as "a clique of traitors in the pay of the American government," and called for creation of a coalition government in Saigon from which the present South Vietnamese leaders would be excluded.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
KANSAS
● Keith Christensen ●
--kee rightfielder, whose managerial techniques have often been compared to those of a Marine drill instructor, later piloted the Baltimore Orioles to the American League pennant and a World Series victory in 1966. He was fired by the Orioles midway through the 1968 season.
Big 8 team rankings
RUSHING OFFENSE
Kansas G Att. Yds.
7 417 223.
Missouri 7 482 1952.
Okahoma 7 349 1429.
Colorado 7 348 1496.
Iowa State 7 388 1306.
Oklahoma 7 393 1166.
Okla, State 6 261 635.
K-State 7 263 652.
PASSING OFFENSE
Att.-Comp. Yds. Avg.
Okla. State 189-93 1118 186.3
K-State 207-10 1187 169.6
Kahoma 125-10 971 154.6
Nebraska 142-94 1081 164.4
Colorado 147-76 1000 142.9
Kansas 121-64 926 132.9
Iowa State 190-79 1046 130.8
Missouri 137-56 837 119.6
Avg.
318.7
278.9
238.2
213.7
162.9
158.0
105.8
93.1
| | G | Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 7 | 538 | 3157 | 451.0 |
| Oklahoma | 6 | 470 | 2396 | 399.3 |
| Missouri | 7 | 619 | 2789 | 398.4 |
| Colorado | 7 | 495 | 2789 | 398.4 |
| Iowa State | 7 | 542 | 2187 | 312.4 |
| Iowa State | 8 | 558 | 2349 | 393.6 |
| Okla. State | 5 | 450 | 1753 | 292.2 |
| K-State | 5 | 470 | 1839 | 262.7 |
| SCORE | G | Pts. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 7 | 298 | 42.6 |
| Oklahoma | 6 | 173 | 28.8 |
| Missouri | 7 | 198 | 28.3 |
| Colorado | 7 | 162 | 23.1 |
| Iowa State | 8 | 154 | 19.0 |
| Nebraska | 8 | 132 | 19.0 |
| K-State | 7 | 132 | 18.9 |
| Okla, State | 6 | 80 | 13.3 |
RUSHING DEFENSE
| | G | Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 7 | 325 | 708 | 101.1 |
| Nebraska | 7 | 313 | 815 | 116.4 |
| Kansas | 7 | 351 | 1167 | 166.7 |
| Iowa State | 8 | 442 | 1645 | 205.6 |
|ahoma | 8 | 404 | 1636 | 205.6 |
| K-Site | 6 | 124 | 1612 | 23.6 |
| Colorado | 7 | 392 | 1656 | 236.1 |
| Okla. State | 7 | 361 | 1570 | 261.7 |
PASSING DEFENSE
Nebraska 168-70 807 115.3
Missouri 154-54 810 115.3
Kansas 169-73 905 129.3
K-Site 160-74 961 137.3
K-State 152-75 1084 154.9
Okla. State 152-68 962 160.3
Oklahoma 163-90 1005 167.5
Iowa State 210-124 1580 197.5
Huskers recruit Green Bay backs
TOTAL DEFENSE
| | G | Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 7 | 478 | 1518 | 216.9 |
| Nebraska | 7 | 481 | 1622 | 231.7 |
| Kansas | 7 | 520 | 2072 | 296.0 |
| Colorado | 7 | 555 | 2017 | 296.0 |
| Oklahoma | 6 | 547 | 2268 | 378.0 |
| Kentucky | 6 | 576 | 2696 | 385.1 |
| Iowa State | 8 | 652 | 3225 | 403.1 |
| Oklaho, State | 8 | 513 | 2532 | 422.0 |
Nebraska has recruited Green Bay's backfield! That is, the Huskers have recruited, in two installments, the backfield of West High School in Green Bay. Back in 1966, West had Terry Tagge at quarterback, Dave Mason and Jim Anderson at halfback, and Dennis Gutzman at fullback.
SCORING DEFENSE
In 1968, Anderson, a sophomore, has been converted to a defensive back spot. Gutzman is a second-unit defensive end. Mason is the No. 1 split end on the freshman team, and Tagge is the No. 2 freshman quarterback.
SCORING DEFENSE
**Missouri** **G** **Pts.** **Avg.**
Nebraska 7 70 10.0
Kansas 7 96 13.7
Colorado 7 100 14.3
Oklahoma 7 130 14.6
Iowa State 6 153 25.5
K-State 7 205 25.6
OKla. State 7 195 27.9
Okla. State 6 192 27.9
KU tackle faces OU third time
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Keith Christensen, who was named Big Eight Lineman of the Week Monday, is qualified to talk about Oklahoma's football team.
The 6-4, 267-pound offensive tackle for KU has started against two varsity OU teams. Of the three games, football fans will probably remember last year's game most vividly. Sooner quarterback Bob Warmack fired the game-winning pass with 1:02 remaining in the game to defeat the Jayhawks 14-10.
"Our offensive execution wasn't as good in that game," Christenstrom recalls. "OU threw some new defenses against us."
This Saturday Christensen will be butting heads with the same OU player for the fourth time. "He'll be All-Big Eight," he said of John Titsworth, his opposite on the Sooners' defensive line. The KU tackle added that Titsworth a 6-3, 212-pound tackle, will be his toughest individual 'opponent on the Big Eight schedule.
Christensen learned that he was named Big Eight Lineman of the Week shortly before Monday's practice. "I was kind of surprised," he said.
Riggins will play despite bad foot
A cold rain cut short KU's football practice yesterday.
Although sidelined by a twisted ankle, fullback John Riggins is expected to be ready by Saturday.
Coach Pepper Rodgers, whose third-ranked Jayhawks meet Oklahoma Saturday, said, "I expect a good football team they've had ever since they started playing football there."
Rodgers said Oklahoma has "four or five of the best players in the league and a lot of people from last year's team that beat us."
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI)— Burly Hank Bauer has a stock answer ready these days for that first question.
Four hungry kids bring Hank back
"I've got four reasons," he says with a grin, "Three sons and a daughter—and they all eat real well."
The question, of course, is why anyone would return as manager of the Oakland Athletics after having once experienced owner Charles O. Finley's brand of employee relations.
The crewcut Marine combat veteran parted company with Finley with two games left in the 1962 season after managing the then Kansas City Athletics for $1\frac{1}{2}$ years. Bauer quit when the owner refused to tell him if he would be rehired for the next season.
Drill Sergeant Techniques The one-time New York Yankee rightfielder, whose managerial techniques have often been compared to those of a Marine drill instructor, later piloted the Baltimore Orioles to the American League pennant and a World Series victory in 1966. He was fired by the Orioles midway through the 1968 season.
McLain gets MVP award
NEW YORK (UPI)—Danny McLain, the 31-game winner for the world champion Detroit Tigers, was named by the Baseball Writers Association of America (BWAA) as its unanimous selection as the American League's Most Valuable Player for 1968.
"I got goose pimples all over," McLain said when informed of the award by Detroit general manager Jim Campbell.
The 24-year-old McLain is the youngest player to receive the award since 1944, when Hal Newhouser was named. It was also the first time since Newhouser that a Tiger won the honor, and the first time an American League player had won both the MVP and the Cy Young Award, which goes to the top pitcher.
Teammate Bill Freehan was the only other player named on every ballot, for the first 10 choices, cast by the 20 members of the BWAA voting committee composed of two writers in each AL city.
Freehan was second in the voting, Boston's Ken Harrelson third, Tiger Willie Horton fourth, and Baltimore's Dave McNally and Cleveland's Luis Tiant tied for fifth.
The volatile Finley, who has gone through eight managers in as many seasons as A's owner, rehired Bauer after bouncing Bob Kennedy, who piloted Oakland to the club's best record in two decades during his single season at the helm.
Finley, a Chicago insurance executive, has informed his new field boss—with an "I'm not trying to put any pressure on you, Hank" aside—that he expects the A's to win their division next year. Describing the 1962 episode as "a little stupid," Finley says Bauer's aggressiveness and determination should push the A's to the top.
The gravel-voiced Bauer, who offers no apologies, also predicts a first place finish in the A's six-team division of the American League. And he expects to win it with the same old Bauer methods.
"The main problem with managing is having to deal with 25 different ballplayers. I try to treat them all the same; the way I liked to be treated when I was playing. Everybody says I'm a tough Marine; I'm not. I only get tough when they goo up."
"I was 39 and figured I could still play 100 games for three or four more years," Bauer remembers. "Mr. Finley called me in and asked if I'd like to manage in the minors. I told him 'No, I spent to much time in the minors as a player.'
Bauer, at 46, is a heavy set six-footer who has added only a few pounds since Finley plucked him out of the Kansas City outfield midway through the 1961 season and installed him as manager.
Moves From Outfield
He got that job in typical Finley fashion.
"Mr. Finley then asked me if I ever wanted to manage. I said yes, and he hired me on the spot." Another former Yankee, Joe Gordon, was fired to make room for Bauer.
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Wednesday, November 6, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Big Eight leaders
RUSHING LEADERS
Player, School G Att. Gain Avg. Game
Steve Owens, OU 6 199 619 4.6 151.7
Don Shanklin, KU 7 78 557 7.1 79.6
John Riggins, KU 7 88 550 6.3 78.6
Joe Guinn, KU 7 137 512 3.7 73.1
Greg Cook, MU 7 113 458 4.1 65.4
Bob Anderson, CU 7 130 446 3.4 65.4
Dick Davis, NU 7 119 422 3.6 60.3
Bob Doehlass, KU 7 95 358 3.6 51.1
Ron McBride, MU 7 75 348 3.6 48.9
Ward Walsh, CU 7 83 327 3.9 46.7
Tom Nigbur, CU 7 47 325 3.9 46.4
John Warder, ISU 8 121 340 2.8 45.5
Steve Angel, CU 8 63 295 4.7 42.1
James Harrison, MU 7 63 286 4.7 40.9
TANDEM OFFENSE
| Player, School | Rushing | Receive | Total | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Steve Owens, OU | 199-910 | 3-26 | 202-936 | 156.0 |
| Eddie Hinton, OU | 12-38 | 34-584 | 46-622 | 103.7 |
| Don Shanklin, KSU | 78-587 | 3-23 | 80-600 | 84.7 |
| Mackerrick, KSU | 42-189 | 24-401 | 66-590 | 84.3 |
| John Riggins, KSU | 88-550 | 0-0 | 88-550 | 78.6 |
| Terry Brown, OSU | 7-33 | 31-436 | 38-469 | 78.2 |
| Joorduna, NU | 174-512 | 6-26 | 141-538 | 76.9 |
| Gee Jordan, NU | 113-458 | 4-26 | 119-500 | 71.4 |
| Dick Davis, NU | 119-422 | 6-26 | 124-488 | 69.7 |
| Bob Anderson, CU | 130-446 | 0-0 | 130-446 | 63.7 |
| Steve Engel, CU | 63-295 | 4-18 | 67-468 | 58.3 |
| Chris Schafer, CU | 168-288 | 11-207 | 47-435 | 54.4 |
| Tom Penney, KU | 0-0 | 19-369 | 19-369 | 52.7 |
| Bob Douglass, KU | 94-358 | 0-0 | 94-358 | 51.1 |
| Player, School | G | Att-Comp. | Pct. | Int. | Gain | Avg. | TD |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Ronnie Johnson, OSU | 6 | 171-85 | .497 | 10 | 1015 | 169.2 | 3 |
| Bob Warmack, OU | 6 | 118-64 | .542 | 5 | 967 | 61.2 | 2 |
| Bob Anderson, OU | 6 | 118-70 | .512 | 9 | 903 | 129.0 | 2 |
| John Kiesler, KSU | 6 | 152-73 | .515 | 11 | 899 | 128.4 | 4 |
| John Warder, ISU | 8 | 168-72 | .429 | 7 | 942 | 117.8 | 5 |
| Bob Douglass, KU | 8 | 109-58 | .532 | 1 | 821 | 117.3 | 9 |
| Ernie Sigel, MU | 7 | 102-50 | .579 | 3 | 800 | 114.3 | 5 |
| James Phelpe, MU | 7 | 68-28 | .412 | 4 | 446 | 63.7 | 5 |
| Terry McMillan, MU | 7 | 68-27 | .412 | 3 | 358 | 51.1 | 2 |
TOTAL OFFENSE LEADERS
| G | Rushing Att-Yds. | Passing Att-Comp-ds. | Total | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Bob Anderson, CU | 7 | 159-940 | 166-709 | 192.7 |
| Bob Warmack, OU | 6 | 68-177 | 118-64-967 | 186-1144 | 190.7 |
| Ronnie Johnson, OSU | 6 | 72-47 | 118-75-1015 | 243-1062 | 177.0 |
| Bob Douglass, ISEU | 6 | 84-158 | 108-72-821 | 203-1179 | 168.3 |
| Steve Owens, ISU | 6 | 121-340 | 108-72-821 | 203-1179 | 168.3 |
| Steve Owens, ISEU | 6 | 199-910 | 109-910 | 99-910 | 151.7 |
PASS RECEIVING
No. Yds. TD
Eddie Hinton, OU 34 584 4
Tiffany Osu, OSU 31 436 4
Otto Stowe, ISU 31 365 1
Dave Jones, KSU 31 352 3
Monte Huber, CU 29 352 3
Monte Huber, OSU 29 401 3
Tom Dearinger, OSU 23 225 0
Jim McFarland, NU 20 215 4
John Persson, NU 20 215 4
George McGowan, KU 19 274 3
Mike Prieur, CU 17 233 4
James Perry, NU 19 369 2
George McGowan, KU 19 274 3
Mike Prieur, CU 17 233 4
Sam Campbell, ISU 16 247 2
Hermann Eben, OSU 16 182 0
PUNTING LEADERS
Player, School No. Avg.
Bell Bill, KU 28 42.9
Bob Coble, KSU 51 42.3
Bob Brouilleau, ISU 46 41.4
Steve Zabel, OU 30 30.1
Steve Kennemore, MU 40 38.7
Dick Sheffield, NU 48 36.4
Ronnie Johnson, OSU 45 36.2
Dick Robert, CU 34 34.1
PUNT RETURNING
SCORING
SOURCE
Player, Scol. FD PAT FG Pts.
Owens, OU 10 0-0 0-0 60.
Bell, KU 1 35-42 3-4 50
Douglass, KU 8 0-0 0-0 48
Orduna, NU 8 0-0 0-0 48
Shanklin, NU 8 0-0 0-0 48
Player, School No. Yds. Avg.
Wehrli, MU 29 315 10.9
Shanklin, KU 10 214 21.4
Elliott, ISU 10 160 10.7
Murphy, CPU 8 123 15.4
Goodwin, QSU 15 108 7.2
KICKOFF RETURNS
Player, School No. Yds. Avg.
Allen, ISU 18 509 28.3
Herron, KSU 14 441 31.5
Hinton, OU 9 191 21.2
Davis, NU 9 166 18.4
Davis, ISU 4 163 40.8
★★
Sports quotes
"You must remember the U.S. did not have White (Jo Jo of Kansas) and Hosket (Bill of Ohio State) on that trip," stated the Yugoslav coach, Zervica Ranko, when talking about his team's wins over the U.S. last summer.
"Nor was Coach Ia (Henry of
"Nor was Coach Iba (Henry of Oklahoma State) with them. That makes a great difference."
Assault on record book continues in Big Eight
KANSAS CITY-Two kick-returning records and a host of major milestone attainments are imminent in the Big Eight Conference in what will be the biggest year of juggling names in the league's recordbook ever.
Iowa State's Jeff Allen, just a sophomore, needs only eight more kickoff return lengths to break the league mark of 516, set in 1964 by Oklahoma State's Larry Elliott. Allen, with two games left, has 509 for one of the nation's top figures.
Missouri's Roger Wehrli has been a punt return threat for three years and now needs only 44 more yards to break one of the Big Eight's oldest records, the 927 punt returning yards of
Jack Mitchell, Oklahoma all-American and former Kansas coach.
Also on top of a new standard is Kansas' Bill Bell, who is just five extra point successes away from moving by the seasonal mark of 39 held jointly by a pair of Oklahomans, Les Ming and John Weatherall. With an "average" day (six touchdowns) for the Jayhawk offense, Bell could beat the mark this week. He has kicked 35.
Set to become the ninth in Big Eight history to rush for over 1,000 yards in a season is Oklahoma's Steve Owens, who leads the league with his 910, a record 151.7 per-game average after six games. When he hits four figures, he'll be the third in Oklahoma
Mizzou climbing high on offensive charts
KANSAS CITY—Missouri has been synonymous with defense in the Big Eight. It is no different this year.
But yes, Virginia, Mizzou does have a Tiger in its offensive tank, and it is growling for the league's offensive powers to move over and make room at the top.
For the second straight week the Missouri offensive machine, multi-running-backed organization, has pounded out over 500 yards in total offense—515 a week ago and another 545 against Oklahoma State last Saturday.
Twice more the Tigers have struck for over 450 yards, including a bulky 421 rushing against Colorado the day they controlled the ball for 111 shots from scrimmage and a national and Big Eight record 99 rushes.
the ground each week, second only to Kansas' 318.7. In the air the Missourians are at the 120 level. This gives them a 399.3 per game total average, second to Kansas' 451.0.
This, though, has not quite given the Tigers the top spot in any offensive division—yet. Missouri is cranking out 278.9 on
When it comes to scoring, the Tigers have been moving in fast company, too, getting 98 in their last two games (56 and 42), and scored 44 against Illinois earlier this year. This gives them a 28.3 per-game average, the most in 20 years, third behind Kansas' national-leading 42.6 and Oklahoma's 28.8 mark.
history to do so and the first since 1952 when both Billy Vessels (1,072) and Buck McPhail (1,023) did it.
Defensively, Missouri ranks as the Big Eight's best again this week, giving up an average of 216.9 total yards. The defense the Tigers throw against the rush is also tops in the league, 101.1. Second best is the Mizzou pass patrol, allowing only 115.7 a game, compared with Nebraska's 115.3.
Major milestone achievements will come thick and fast from now on, too, for the Big Eight's talented stable of quarterbacks and receivers. Oklahoma's Bobby Warmack, who attained the 3,000 career-passing level last week, needs only 135 more in total offense to become one of only three in league history to run and pass for over 4,0000.
More important, though, is the fact he needs but 382 in his final four games to break one of the Big Eight's oldest records, Paul Christman's 4,246 total offense for Missouri. Warmack has 1,144 this year and his career level is 3,865.
If Warmack does get the record, it might not last long. Colorado's Bob Anderson, though held to his career low last week, needs only 136 more to become the first in league history to go over 3,000 total yards in his first two seasons.
Both Warmack and Anderson are just shy of going over 1,000 passing for the year, a mark surpassed Saturday by Oklahoma State's Ronnie Johnson, the Big Eight's best now with his 1,015, a per-game average of 169.2.
Add Iowa State's John Warder, Kansas State's Lynn Dickey, Kansas' Bobby Douglass, and Nebraska's Ernie Sigler and seven will make the list—the most ever for one season. The 61 previous league seasons produced only 12 others who threw for over 1,000.
Warmack's chief target, Eddie Hinton, needs only 116 receiving lengths to join three others in the 700 class, including Kansas State's Dave Jones, holder of the Big Eight's career mark (1,634). Hinton now has 1,537, leaving him 97 back of Jones. Ready to move into the 1,000 receiving club is Nebraska's Tom Penney, who is 67 short of becoming the 12th to do so.
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
KU picked to beat OU by 8
By STEVE SNIDER
UPI Sports Writer
It's win or else for many a bowl-minded college football team this week.
And it's "win" in this forecast for Southern California, Kansas, Penn State and Tennessee," who face the severest tests among the nation's elite.
Southern Cal rates over California in the Far West but make it a tight 10-7 in a duel for the Rose Bowl. The picks also include Kansas over Oklahoma, 28-20, Penn State over Miami, 21-17, and Tennessee over Auburn, 24-21.
If you haven't been stung at least once already this season, it might be well to remember November is the month of upsets. Thus, proceeding with caution around the nation:
EAST
Penn State 21, Miami 17— Miami's two losses were on the road.
Army 28, Boston College 14— Cadets are too swift here.
Yale 21, Pennsylvania 7—Adding to 14-game stresk.
Also: Harvard five over Princeton, Holy Cross six over Massachusetts, Dartmouth eight over Columbia, Cornell eight over Brown, Colgate seven over Bucknell, Rutgers 10 over Connecticut, Boston U. seven over Rhode Island, Delaware six over Lehigh.
MIDWEST
Ohio State 28, Wisconsin 7-
Buckee are in high gear.
Kansas 28. Oklahoma 20-
Sooners seem to lack the muscle. Notre Dame 35, Pittsburgh 7—Looks like no contest.
Purdue 28, Minnesota 17—Boilermakers have settled down.
Also: Michigan 14 over Illinois,
Colorado eight over Oklahoma
State, Michigan State six over
Indiana, Iowa seven over North-
western, Missouri 14 over Iowa
State.
Also: Nebraska 10 over Kansas State, Cincinnati six over Louisville, Ohio U. seven over Bowling Green, Miami, O., 10 over Dayton, Marshall one over Kent State, Toledo three over Xavier.
SOUTH
Tennessee 24, Auburn 21-How close can you get?
Georgia 21, Florida 14—Bulldogs regain their punch.
Louisiana State 14, Alabama 10
-Mild, upset.
Clemson 28, Maryland 14—Still unbeaten in league.
Also: Wake Forest three over South Carolina, Tulsa three over Tulane, Houston 10 over Memphis State, Mississippi 20 over Chattanooga, North Carolina State six over Duke.
Also: Florida State 12 over Mississippi State, Georgia Tech seven over Navy, Kentucky three over Vanderbilt, Virginia Tech 12 over Richmond, Virginia six over North Carolina, West Virginia 12 over the Citadel, VMI one over Davidson, Tampa 15 over East Carolina.
SOUTHWEST
Texas 28, Baylor 7—Longhorns
Detroit is best team at home or on road
BOSTON (UPI)-Home and away, and even under lights, the Detroit Tigers were the best team in the American League last season.
The Tigers, who went on to win the World Series, led American League teams at home with a 56-25 record, in road victories with 47-34 and in night game play 64-28, according to unofficial league statistics.
To add the final seal of a champion, Detroit also was best in one-run games at 35-23.
The Baltimore Orioles had the best record in 1968 for daylight play 35-23, the Cleveland Indians were tops in extra-inning games 12-4 and the Yankees led in doubleheader play with seven sweeps and 14 splits against only two double losses.
Carl Yastrzemski of the Boston Red Sox won the batting title with a .301 mark, making him the eighth American League player to capture back-to-back championships and Bert Campaneri of Oakland won his fourth consecutive stolen base title with a personal career high of 62.
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Cleveland's pitching staff posted the most shutout victories 23. . Frank Howard's 44 home runs lifted him from ninth place to fifth on Washington's all-time homer list with 119.
Luis Tiant's league-leading earned run average of 1.60 was the lowest in the American League since Walter Johnson's 1.49 in 1919 and the Cleveland hurler also led in shutouts with nine . . . Denny McLain of Detroit led the league in pitching starts-41, complete games-28, victories-31 and innings pitched -336.
picking up speed in stretch.
Arkansas 28, Rice 13—Both may score higher.
Southern Methodist 28, Texas A and M 24-Great passing show. Texas Christian 21, Texas Tech 17—a flier on the Frogs.
FAR WEST
Southern California 10, California 7—Defense the key here. Washington 21, Stanford 17—white glimp out of collar
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Wednesday, November 6, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Non-violent army supported by racist church advocator
By Diane Samms Kansan Staff Writer
White Christians have been encouraged to form a "white, nonviolent army or reconciliation" by a KU assistant professor of religion and human relations.
"The Christian faith is partisan," Shelton said to the participants of the University Christian Movement's (UCM) white racism course. "We must help push the Church away from its apolitical stance—this is a dodge," he added.
He said the non-violent stance comes from the root of the Church—from the life of Christ. Non-violence is a way of life, he said, and cautioned that it is not a method to obtain justice.
In his lecture, "The Church as Racist and Reconciler," Shelton tied in the history of the American Church with the imperatives that the Church is beginning to realize.
Racism has caused a pluralism in Church, he said. He traced the racist history from the southern Protestant Church's permission, then support of slavery to the Church's current stance of beginning to deal with the problems behind racism.
He told how southern Church leaders during Reconstruction
GI bill helps students
There are 506 KU students attending school on the new GI Bill of 1965, according to Mrs. Elizabeth Edmondson of the registrar's office.
The enrollment is a gain of about 100 over last year and has been on a continual rise since the Vietnam conflict began, she said.
supported their pro-slavery stance by scripture from Paul's letters which admonishes slaves to be obedient to their masters. The Ku Klux Klan, he pointed, out, was built on a Christian base.
The sociological justification for racism in the Church is that congregations tend to be residentially-based, Shelton said. In 1948, a survey showed that only six per cent of Negro Protestants belonged to predominately white denominations.
Speaking to the theological bases of racism in the Church, Shelton said the Calvinistic tradition, with its Doctrine of the Elect, has come to be interpreted as "those who have made it." This view, he said, is reinforced by the middle-class Church, whose function is to "support the status quo, the prevailing values of the social order."
in community agencies which the Church now supports. He cautioned that leadership in the ghettos must remain within the hands of neighborhood leaders.
Shelton sees the Church as having a "central role in the lives of a small number of people in both the white and black communities." He said he would have the Church pick up its confessional role as a community formed on the basis of the common experience of human sin.
The Bible, Shelton said, is the "language of love in action," and cited the Old Testament concept of the suffering servant.
Black churches are beginning to demonstrate a separate identity from white churches, Shelton noted, adding that the black Christ and the black Madonna figures in Detroit churches are symbols of that identity.
Shelton offered proposals for the Church if it is to become more relevant to the issues of the day. The development of an individual self-image — "probably the beginning point," Shelton said — would involve one's working
He also called for a study of the Church and its function as a community. "There will be more violence." Shelton said, and added that the Church must deal with that realization and decide what stance it should take.
Though Shelton sees the Church as "a major contributor to white racism," he is quick to add that "it offers the most significant possibility for reconciliation in the future."
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SENIORS
Three days in a row for the class of 1969
Thursday, Nov. 7 SENIOR COFFEE!
9:30 a.m. in the ballroom of the Union.
No classes at this time for seniors, so be sure and come with your senior class dues card and pick up your senior class sweatshirt, hat and calendar. Also, vote for the instructor you want to win the senior class HOPE Award. Free coffee and doughnuts.
All seniors welcome. You can pay your $12 dues then and get your card.
Friday, Nov. 8 SENIOR CLASS PARTY!
7:30 p.m. at the National Guard Armory. Two bands, "Young Raiders" and "Rising Suns." Free admission and free beer to all "card-carrying seniors." Admission for unseniors is $1.50. Wear your hats and sweatshirts!
Saturday, Nov. 9 SENIOR DAY!
Honor Thy Senior, living group underclassmen, by choosing your own traditions, such as breakfast in bed, gag gifts, skits, or whatever ways you choose to Honor Thy Seniors.
Seniors, wear your hat and sweatshirts to the victory over Oklahoma; our mass showing of big blue regalia will honor thy football team. The winner of the Senior Class HOPE Award will be announced during halftime of Senior Day! Happy Senior Day!
Class of 1969
"Seniors are our business. Our only business."
John Hill ★ President
Brent Waldron ★ Vice-President
Andrea Sogas ★ Secretary
Merry Sue Clark ★ Treasurer
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
GOP sweeps most state races
Gov. Docking Bob Dole win
(Continued from page 1)
Topeka: Election '68
Early in the election night, Nixon took a lead over Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey and independent George C. Wallace, but a computer malfunction in Wyandotte County left the exact margin in doubt. Earlier the Vice President had held a 50,000 vote margin.
Docking and Harman fought tooth and nail all evening for voter approval, with the 40-year-old Republican leading by only a 3 vote margin at one point. At another point during the night Harman jumped 852 votes ahead of the governor.
Polls had predicted a vicious struggle between Docking and Harman, and the voters did not let the forecasters down as the 43-year-old governor attempted to equal his late father's record as the only Democratic governor to win two terms in Kansas history.
At mid-evening, Harman was holding a lead in his home county of Johnson and a slim margin in populous Sedgwick County, but Docking was leading in Wyandotte and Shawnee counties. A number of rural Kansas counties had not reported by mid-evening.
The tightness of the race for governor eased in late returns as Docking pulled ahead of Harman by about 20,000 votes with 55 per cent of the precincts reported.
An estimated 950,000 voters turned out for the general election.
In other state races Republican Kent Frizzell of Wichita was running well ahead of Democrat Jerry Muth for attorney general.
The Wichita Democrat was steadily falling behind Frizzell, who is a state senator.
Republicans also were running ahead in races for secretary of state, state auditor, treasurer, insurance commissioner and printer. A close race was shaping up in the contest for lieutenant governor.
State Rep. John J. Conard, the Republican speaker of the Kansas house, was holding a thin margin over Democrat James H. DearCourse, a former Docking aide, in the race for the state's second highest post.
TV watchers left in 'splendid misery'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Many television watchers who had to go to work today went to bed last night not knowing who had been elected president—or if, in fact, there was a winner.
The Richard Nixon-Hubert Humphrey showdown had turned out to be a real horse race, with George Wallace siphoning off some key electoral votes—and, for one of the few times in recent years, video's electronic equipment was not able to make a quick prediction.
It was, in short, a rather pleasant throwback to the good old days, enabling the viewer to settle down in front of the television set with a platter full of food, some drinks and friends, and enjoy the happy agony of rooting home the candidate of one's choice.
Pollsters right
The inability of the networks to offer a quick prediction about the outcome of the presidential race made one point clear immediately: the pollsters who said, in their late tallies, that the election was "too close to call" were right on target.
Shortly after midnight CST, NBC-TV's David Brinkley said, "I don't think we're going to get a winner tonight." The popular vote showed a fantastically close race between Humphrey and Nixon. Republican Nixon had a slight leg up in the network electoral vote projections.
But still in the balance were big, pivotal states where Humphrey and Nixon were too close to allow a television prediction—or where the returns were too few to be conclusive.
Despite this state of affairs in which televiewers were kept dangling in splendid misery, the networks provided projections on numerous races, and, above all offered truly first-rate analyses of how and why many voters cast their ballots.
Tonight, by the way, CBS-TV will present an hour post-election special entitled "What Happened Last Night."
To be continued
Everyone, you can be sure, will be happy to find out, because, as much of the nation went to sleep last night and early today, a bewildering and apparently endless number of possibilities confronted viewers and voters. To wit:
Would neither Humphrey or Nixon get enough electoral votes to win, throwing the election into the House of Representatives and
JAMES BONDY
JAMES E. HUNT
A. C. GOLDBERG
TWO VICTORIOUS KANSAS CANDIDATES
Successful gubernatorial candidate Robert Docking (left) and Robert Dole, the new senator-elect from Kansas, greeted newsmen and well-wishers yesterday at the Jayhawk hotel in Topeka. The candidates appeared at the hotel after the election returns showed strong leads by both men.
precipitating a constitutional crisis?
Would absentee votes provide the difference? Would everyone have to wait for the California outcome to decide the winner? Would a broken-down computer in Dallas make it necessary to wait for a late decision in the close Texas race? And so forth.
For televiewers, it was a spectacular showdown to a presidential race that once appeared to be a runaway. And the odds are that there was a lot of dreaming about politics by viewers who went to bed not knowing the identity of the next president of the United States—or if there was one.
Spot-check indicates heavy Kansas voting
Reports from one end of the state to the other and from cities of various sizes were about the same. Observers used such terms as "amazing," "very heavy," "a steady stream" and "much bigger than usual."
By United Press International
A mid-day spot-check across Kansas indicated a tremendous turnout of voters for yesterday's balloting.
In Kansas City, Kan., a check of about 90 per cent of all precincts showed an extremely heavy vote in all but one precinct.
Workers at that polling place called the turnout about average. One observer of the overall voting pace termed it "amazing."
Wichita authorities reported voting "very heavy in all parts of the city."
At Topeka, the turnout was described as "very heavy."
Dodge City, where a hot congressional race between Republican State Sen. Keith Sebelius and State Rep. George Meeker in the big First District was a feature contest, reported voting at an extremely fast pace. "They poured in all the doors, all morning, in steady streams," a worker said.
Hutchinson reported a very heavy turnout.
Concordia also had a heavy turnout that "kept up steadily all morning."
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
CYRs: up, down, up
Election excitement is electric. It wavers in a partisan crowd with the tabulations of a CBS computer.
When Rick Harman pulled ahead in the governor's race last night, KU Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR) and other Young Republicans gathered in the Eldridge Hotel Crystal Room felt that excitement.
When Gov. Robert Docking pulled ahead in the see-saw gubernatorial race, their mood reversed with equal speed.
Richard Nixon took an early lead and they went wild.
The races began to swing back and forth in different cycles and no one knew what to do.
Hubert Humphrey caught up and the excitement subsided.
The closer the vote, the less booze left at the bar and the more excitable the crowd.
The Crystal Room itself seemed an inappropriate setting for watching the high-speed wizardry of the tabulators.
No one seemed to mind, though. They were all too busy to notice those things.
Especially with the comment, "there seems to be a great Democratic sweep in the East."
For a good part of the night, both the Republican gubernatorial and Lt. Governor candidates ran hard races before falling behind their Democratic opponents, Docking and James DeCoursey.
Everyone watched CBS, but outside of the Democrats, Walter Cronkite and Eric Seveareid seemed to be the most unpopular men in the place.
Not before Everett Dirksen had gotten in a few good licks at the electronic newsmen, though. "You boys are trying to fool the country with fragmentary returns," he said.
The election and the party moved on. By midnight, Harman and John Conard were far behind, and the powers that be, decided enough was enough. So they closed the party down.
"Let's go out to my apartment," someone suggested.
So they did. They moved the whole party, and as far as anyone knows, its still going on.
General Walt to speak
Lt. Gen. Lewis W. Walt, assistant commander of the Marine Corps, will speak at 4:30 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre.
Gen. Walt will be in Lawrence for the Veteran's Day ceremonies sponsored by the local Alford-Clarke post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
A parade featuring several units from nearby military bases is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Monday. Gen. Walt will speak at a banquet honoring Vietnam veterans at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Gen. Walt was born in Wabauen County, Kansas in 1913. He graduated from Colorado State University and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Marines in 1936.
In addition to other citations, Gen. Walt holds two Navy Crosses and a Silver Star in World War II, a Legion of Merit and a Bronze star in Korea and a Distinguished Service Medal in Vietnam.
Douglas County voting
President
Nixon, R. 10,533
Humphrey, D. 6,936
Wallace. 2,080
U.S. Senator
Dole, R. 11,179
Robinson, D. 7,247
Congressman
Winn, R. 11,769
George, D. 6,736
Governor
Harman, R. 8,018
Docking, D. 11,361
Lieutenant Governor
Conard, R. 9,143
DeCoursey, D. 9,267
Secretary of State
Shanahan, R. 9,846
Stogell, B. 8,336
State Auditor
Hedrick, R. 10,271
Myers, D. 7,732
State Treasurer
Peery, R. 10,387
Lee, D. 17,97
Attorney General
Frizzell, R. 10,491
Muth, D. 7,433
Commissioner of Insurance
Sullivan, R. 11,842
Dial, D. 6,051
State Printer
Sanders, R. 10,266
Bayouth, D. 6,905
State Senator
Shultz, R. 10,401
Nelson, D. 8,260
State Representative
39th district
Vogel. 3,955
Charlton. 3,139
40th district
Keg. 6,084
Nelson. 4,254
41st district
Bergin. 234
Bower. 400
Constitutional Amendment
Patrol. 13,692
Against. 3,528
County Clerk
D. E. Mathia, R unopposed
County Sheriff
Bessie M. Bennett, R unopposed
County Attorney
Daniel A. Young, R unopposed
Prince Judge
Charles C. Rankin, R unopposed
Sheriff
Rene D. Johnson, R unopposed
The Presidential and Vice-
Even though millions voted for president and vice president yesterday, they couldn't actually elect a president.
Lack of electoral majority allows Congress to choose
A final decision will not be made until Jan. 6,1969,two months after the election date.
The delay is provided for in Article II of the Constitution, which sets up the Electoral College. The College actually chooses the president and his vice president. When voters cast ballots, they choose a slate of electors pledged to vote for a candidate.
The Vice President, if elected by the Senate, would have to receive 51 votes, a majority of the 100 senators. The choice is made between the top two candidates as selected by the College.
In the House, each state has one vote. In this case, only 26 votes, a majority of the representatives is required for election. The House chooses between the two candidates receiving the most electoral votes.
The electors are pledged—traditionally, but not legally—to vote for the candidates under whose name they appeared on the ballot. The Constitution does not require them to do so.
Votes cast by the electors are mailed to the President of the Senate, and the ballots are tabulated Jan. 6 in a joint session of the House of Representatives and the Senate.
The College consists of 538 electors from all the states. Each state has a total number of electors equal to the number of representatives and its two senators. Kansas, then, with five representatives and two senators, has seven electoral votes.
To be elected, a candidate must have 270 electoral votes. In case no candidate receives that many votes, the election is given to the House of Representatives. The Senate then has the task of choosing the Vice President.
The Electoral College voting occurs in each state's capital Dec.16.
Presidential elections twice have been given to the Congress.
If a deadlock occurs in the College in 1969, third party candidate George Wallace could have some bargaining power. The electors of all but three states are actually free to vote for any candidate they choose. It is only through tradition that the electors in the other 47 states vote for the candidate who received a majority in their state.
If Wallace were to release his electoral votes, he could legally bargain, either in the College or the House.
"The electors are essentially free to bargain among themselves to decide upon a candidate," said Glen Drake, assistant instructor in political science.
If the election does go to the House, the new House of Representatives would be the electing body.
However, if President Johnson were to call a session of the old Congress, the date for convening the new Congress could be changed by law, Drake said, as provided for by the 20th Amendment to the Constitution. If such action did occur, the old House would elect the new President, he said. Presumably, the old Democratic Congress would give Vice President Hubert Humphrey an advantage in the election.
It is conceivable that the House could be deadlocked in choosing a president. In this event, the Senate's choice for vice president would become acting president. If the Senate could not choose a vice president, the new Speaker of the House would become acting president until either the Senate or the House reached a decision. In the case no decision is reached, the acting president carries out a four-year term.
Campus election reaction spellbound to apathetic
Some sat glued to television sets for hours' while others were apathetic and could have cared less.
In the Kansas Union, approximately 50 persons watched the election results on IV. Because of the large crowd, William Rowlands, the Union night manager, extended the closing deadline from 11 p.m. to midnight.
An especially lively crowd followed election programs in McColum Hall. Rounds of applause periodically sounded as Humphrey or Nixon partisans made gains.
An exuberant cheer rang out about 10:30 p.m. when it was announced that Eugene McCarthy made impressive showings in states where he was a write-in candidate.
"I knew the people wouldn't forget his sacrifice," one boy exclaimed.
In Templin Hall, where nearly 60 persons watched TV on the second floor lobby, a "special" Wallace poster was propped in front of the television set. It read, "Wallace has hemorrhoids.—Do you?"
Patrons of bars surrounding the campus showed little interest in the earlier election returns. Although televisions were on, jukeboxes frequently drowned out announcers. Few seemed to mind.
Collegiate Young Democrats (CYD), who watched voting results at the Lawrence Democratic headquarters, had reason to cheer after the early returns showed Hubert H. Humphrey leading.
They cheered as Humphrey led by a few thousand votes but remained silent when the trend reversed early this morning. Ten CYD members were stationed at the headquarters and some planned to stay until the last votes were counted.
A victim of the election—or perhaps of the rain—was Watson Library. Employees reported that
the number of evening patrons dropped 25-50 per cent below the average weekday flow. Branch libraries around campus also showed a sizable decrease.
Excitement over the election grew from a calm, "wait and see," attitude around 8 p.m. to a fever-pitch by 11 p.m. when Humphrey and Nixon ran neck-to-neck separated by fewer than 100,000 votes.
Then the news came—Nixon had won.
Those fixed before their TV sets all night reacted saving:
"Hallelujah, this is the best thing that could happen. We couldn't take another four years of Democrates." Margot Monaghan, Merriam junior responded.
Chris Wright, Chicago freshman, said, "I think he will try to bring the country back to a stable condition—it is a very difficult job. I'm hoping Nixon will make a drastic change in military strategy in Vietnam i.e. an increase in military force."
"There are going to be a lot of revolutions and student unrest. What we need in a liberal president like Humphrey who could unify dissident factions," said Tom Nelson, Overland Park junior.
Bob Quagliano, Hoboken, N.J., junior, explained, "Somebody had to win. If I told you what I really think, they wouldn't print it."
"I think this is one of the most glorious events in American history because Johnson's reign has had murderous effect on the economy and foreign and domestic policy," remarked Richard Hackney, Mission sophomore.
Almost 37 per cent of the 147 KU students polled Friday were right in their choice. Fifty-three of the 147 said they would vote for Nixon.
Several students said they would abstain and others were undecided as to their preference. Four out of five Negro students polled said they would not vote.
County to GOP, Docking
Voters, turning out in record numbers, gave Richard M. Nixon, Gov. Robert B. Docking, and Sen. Robert Dole decisive victories vested in Douglas County.
Despite cold weather and a steady drizzle throughout the day, a record 19,983 voters cast their ballots. This surpasses the 17,353 votes cast in the county in the 1964 Lyndon Johnson landslide and the 17,065 in 1960.
Vote totals:
President:
Nixon-10,533
Humphrey-6,936
Wallace-2,080
Senate:
Dole—11,179
Robinson—7,247
Governor:
Docking—11,361
Harman—8,018
Chancellor W. Clarke Wesco received a write-in vote for governor of Kansas along with Rick Atkinson, a People's Voice member. Other write-in votes were cast for Pat Paulsen for president, James Logan for U.S. Senator, and Mrs. Rick Atkinson, for state board of education.
0009
"Eenie, meanie, minie, mo...'
Kansan photo by Greg Sorber
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
Madrid company to perform Sunday
CARLOTTA AND MICHAEL ROGERS
Spanish performers
Members of the Spanish troupe Esta Noche Teatro are shown above in a scene from "Los Intereses Creadoes," by Jacinto Benavente. The group will present scenes from this play and five others by Spanish playwrights at 8:20 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre.
Esta Noche Teatro, a Madrid drama company of seven performers, will play at 8:20 p.m. Sunday night in the University Theatre.
The Spanish-speaking actors will present classic scenes from six different Spanish playwrights: Lope de Vega, Fernando de Rojas, Dirso de Molina, Jacinto Benavente, Ramon de Valle Inclan and Federico García Lorca. Music also will play a part in the performance and commentary that traces the history of Spanish drama.
Deflor Peralta, a young director with 25 major productions to his credit in Europe and South America, will direct and perform in the two-hour show. The performers are on an eight-week coast-to-coast tour of the United States.
Tickets are available at the University Theatre box office.
Being white hinders student
Being a white college student proved to be a handicap for Iras Humphreys, Ashland sophomore, this summer.
Miss Humphreys worked in an inner-city ghetto in Trenton, N.J., under a program of the Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church.
"The community where I worked was 98 per cent black. It is considered a ghetto because of the academic and economic restrictions of the people," she said.
"It was only natural to be resented. I was a white college student and had freedom. For the first time I found myself answering for being white," Miss Humphreys said.
The 10 student workers, five white and five black, lived in a renovated house right in the community with the people. Miss Humphreys felt it put them about five steps closer to being more readily accepted.
"It was much better than if we
had lived in the suburbs and commuted each day because we actually were sharing the community's living situation," she said.
The program was divided into three basic sections: the day camp, the visitation program and the community newspaper. Each section was designed to show the community that the workers were not there to change things, Miss Humphreys said.
"Our Community had about 600 families, so we had approximately 120 to 200 children daily for day camp. We divided the kids by age groups and I had 9-year-old boys. Our purpose was to establish some kind of relationship with them and to boost their self-esteem, to make them feel important," Miss Humphreys explained.
"The idea behind the day camp was to show the kids some activities they could do after we left. We didn't want to make them dependent on us," Miss Humphreys said.
When the workers first arrived in the New Jersey community, there was about an equal amount of resentment and enthusiasm towards their presence, she said. By the end of the summer, she felt that there was less resentment towards them in the community.
That Nasty Old Man Is Back
FLASH GORDON SERIAL
Although she would gladly work again in the black ghetto, she is also interested in working in a white community. Miss Humphreys feels she should work wherever her talents could be most useful, though.
It's AGift also
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No class for you tomorrow at 9:30. What should you do at 9:30? Go to the SENIOR COFFEE in the Union Ballroom and sip one with the "Chancellor's stand-in," vote in the HOPE award election, and pick up your Senior Class regalia!
SENIOR COFFEE '69
SEE YOUR FEATHERS THERE!
A beauty parlor you can take back to school.
In many ways the Norelco Beauty Sachet is just like a beauty parlor.
It manicures, pedicures, messages, applies facial creams, buffs and files nails, and stimulates your scalp and muscles.
But in another way, it's more than a beauty parlor.
It also shaves your legs and underarms. And it shaves underarms as close or closer than a blade in 2 out of 3 shaves as tested in an independent laboratory. (As does the
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Wednesday, November 6,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Educational films provided by visual aids bureau
By Marla Babcock
Kansan Staff Writer
Furnishing instructional films to KU classes is only one service of the Bureau of Visual Instruction, a part of the KU Extension Division.
The bureau also provides educational films to public schools, service organizations, churches and civic clubs throughout Kansas, Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, manager of the bureau, said.
the bureau, officially begun in 1923, has expanded and changed its services through the years, Mrs. Lawson said.
It originally included radiotelevision-film operations, which are now in the School of Journalism and the department of speech and drama.
The KU photographic services, now independently-run, originated in the bureau.
"The Bureau of Visual Instruction now has two areas of operation," Mrs. Lawson said. These include the film rental library and the campus audio-visual service.
SUA Carnival features skits booths, crowning
Twenty-four living groups are devising skits and booths on the international theme "Carousel of Countries" or "As the World Turns On" for the annual SUA Carnival Saturday.
"The theme is purposely general," Fred Meier, St. Louis junior and carnival chairman said. Highlighting the carnival from 7 to 10 p.m. in the Kansas Union will be the announcement of booth and skit winners and the presentation of the SUA Carnival Queen.
Tickets, on sale this week for 75 cents at the information booth and the SUA office in the Kansas Union, will be $1 at the door Saturday night, Meier said. "Booths will be set up in the ballroom and Jayhawk Room while skits will be scattered throughout the union," he said.
Those living groups presenting Carnival skirts are: Watkins Hall,
"It's a Bad, Bad, Bad, Bad World" or "Sin is In"; Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity, "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly"; Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, "George's First Try Through the Jungle"; Phi Kappa Epsilon fraternity, "Screwing Around Foreign Affairs" or "How to Work Abroad;" Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, "Stop the World, I Want to Get On . . . or . . . Come on Baby Light My Fire;", Gamma Phi Beta, "Gullables Travels" or "The Fool from the Hill."
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The film rental library serves the entire United States. "In the last five years," Mrs. Lawson said, "we have sent films to every state except Alaska and Delaware."
Mont Bleu Ski Route 2, Lawrence VI 3-2363
The film library, housing about 32,000 titles, is located in Bailey Hall basement.
Mrs. Lawson said there are presently about 8,000 prints of films available. A print, she explained, is a copy of an entire movie. The library has from 1 to 20 prints of each title.
Depending on the length of the film and whether it is color or black and white, film rental ranges from no charge to $20.
Mrs. Lawson said damage to films is common, especially at the beginning of the school year. Many teachers forget how to operate projection equipment during the summer, she said. Sometimes such equipment is in bad repair.
The bureau is constantly sending reminders on projector use and proper repair to film users, she said.
To insure top-quality films, the bureau employs 15 to 20 students to inspect and repair each returned film. She said these students are specially trained in film repair by the bureau staff.
reels, she said.
Mrs. Lawson said total annual shipments from the film library average about 12,500. This represents between 25,000 and 30,000
Probably more familiar to KU students, are the bureau's student employees who transport audiovisual equipment to classrooms.
Mrs. Lawson said the campus service provides equipment to classes in all University schools
and departments.
Most films are shown in the projection room in Bailey Hall. Since the projection room is in full-time use most days, some films are moved to classrooms, Mrs. Lawson said.
The services are not limited to
films, however. Record players, tape recorders, microphones, cameras and video-tape facilities are also available.
Video-taping is used primarily for self-evaluation of student teachers, Mrs. Lawson said. It is in its second year of operation.
SUA
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FALL 1968
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NOVEMBER 6
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It's not often an engineer gets to design a company.
When he does, he tends to take care of his own kind.
He designs a company that is one heck of a good place for an engineer to work.
You can tell LTV Aerospace Corporation is an engineering oriented company.
The ratio of engineers to everybody else is exceptionally high.
The Robert McCulloch research laboratory is the newest and one of the finest big labs in the country.
The computer support is tremendous.
The engineer who wants to be a technical specialist here can do as well as the engineer who gets into administration.
The engineer who wants to keep working on an advanced degree can do it right here.
And the projects; they range from deep space to the ocean floor — military and commercial aircraft, V/STOL; launch vehicles; extra vehicular activity research and development; high mobility ground vehicles; missile systems; computer, technical and management services.
No question about it: the engineers at LTV Aerospace are taking care of themselves.
An LTV Aerospace representative will tell you how to get in on it.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Wednesday, November 13
Schedule an appointment or write:
College Relations Office,
LTV Aerospace Corporation,
P. O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222
An equal opportunity employer.
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14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
Quarterly to carry area literature
The first issue of "Kansas Quarterly" will be published by the University Press of Kansas in November.
Its editorial focus will be to expose the life-style and culture of the mid-America (or High Plains) region to the country and to the world at large.
Issues of the "Quarterly" will contain the best creative writing from the region, critical essays
and articles on the history, sociology, and folklore of the area. At intervals special volumes will be devoted to outstanding features or topics of unusual significance.
The "Quarterly" is the successor to "Kansasa Magazine," the oldest literary and cultural periodical in the mid-America region, which had Walt Whitman, John Hay and William Ellerv
Channing among its early contributors. It was once ranked by critics with the "Atlantic Monthly". "Harper's Magazine" and "Scribner's Magazine."
Completely redesigned, the "Quarterly" will be under the editorial direction of Professor Earle Davis, head of the English department at Kansas State University.
SLOW
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Highways in the sky
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (UPI)
Only one accident has occurred in wet weather on the Market Street bridge, an open steel deck span over the Susquehanna river since, 450,000 skld-reducing steel studs were welded to it a year ago, the Pennsylvania Department of Highways reports.
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and Downtown: 6.25 p.m.
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Union Bldg., to Downtown and G.S.P. 6:40 p.m., 7:00, 7:40,
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G.S.P. to Campus and Ellsworth: 6:15 p.m, 6:35, 7:15,
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LAWRENCE BUS CO., INC.
BSA to sponsor pre-game brunch
The Business Student's Association (BSA) is sponsoring a pregame brunch at Mr. Yuk's Hillcrest Shopping Center at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Richard Pollay, BA advisor, said.
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All business students and their dates, alumni and faculty are welcome. he said.
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Pollay said a buffet lunch and beverages will be served. The charge will be $1.25 per person, he said.
STOCKHOLM (UPI)—Sweden is ready to send a military peacekeeping unit to Vietnam if asked to by the United Nations, Defense Minister Sven Anderson announced Tuesday
Sweden ready
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Recruiting Team On Campus
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Representing
American Telephone & Telegraph, Long Lines Department Bachelor's and Master's candidates Electrical Mechanical, Civil, Mathematics, and Physics candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Locations: Mid-West states initially.
Bell Laboratories Research and Development B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E., M.E., Physics, Engineering Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Opportunities for graduate study. Locations: New Jersey, Illinois and elsewhere in eastern half of U.S.
Sandia Corporation Master's Degree in Mathematics, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering. Bachelor's candidates of outstanding scholarship in Engineering considered for technical development program. Locations: Albuquerque, New Mexico; Livermore, California.
Southwestern Bell Technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments-E.E.; M.E.; E.P.; C.E.; Math-Physics.
Locations: Kansas and the Mid-West.
Western Electric All Engineering disciplines needed to fill Technical Engineering positions in design, product, systems, military research and management training.
Locations: Southwest—Mid-West $ \leftarrow $ Eastern and Northern States.
Sign Interview Schedule in Placement Office
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Wednesday, November 6,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
Hippies explain philosophy
By CAROL SCHOENBECK Kansan Staff Writer
The term "hippie" is out.
For persons who are liberal in thought and quite often dress, the "in" thing to be called is "head," a term which originally designated any person who took LSD, but is now no longer restricted to the "acid dropper."
For mustachioed Richard, a junior, " 'head' is about as good as any word to use."
To him, the problem with society is that it is too structured.
A typical message, found on the door of a local "head" shop, applies to the personalities of the people who frequent it.
"If you harbor hostilities, hate (and, or) discrimination—walk on by, friend, . . . but, if curiosity playthick upon your mind as to the 'openness' of yonder shop within, your fears are abated for we are hereby OPEN."
For mustachioed Richard, the problem within society is that it is too structured.
"People are afraid to communicate with one another on a one-to-one basis. Everyone is always so uptight that they rely upon structure rather than people." Richard said.
"The usage of 'hippie' is kind of out-of-date. I guess 'head' is about as good as any word to use," Richard told me.
"Head," which originally designated any person who took acid-LSD—now is generally used to refer to any person who is liberal in his thinking, and often, his dress.
He is in psychology, but this semester he is taking a human relations course which he terms his "salvation."
"The contradiction in a course like Human Relations 14 is that you are graded. How can teachers grade feelings? I would think it's impossible," he said.
He asked if I'd ever noticed people walking along a street. There are certain clues to their personality that you can get just by watching them walk, he said.
"There are basically three types of reactions: those people who look across the street as if something terribly interesting was happening; those who stare at you from afar when they think you're not noticing, and
then stare at the ground as they pass you, and thirdly, those who just look at the ground, but then glance up to quickly say 'hello' as they pass."
When I asked Jim, a senior and a Summerfield scholar, about his heavy beard and unusual dress, he said he regarded himself as normal, and felt sorry for others because he thought of them as inhibited.
"There is always a certain percentage who look down upon non-conformists. These narrow minded people are only making an effort to cut themselves off and lessen their world of decisions," he said.
Fred, a senior and a Phi Beta Kappa, said he thought there were primarily three types of people at KU: the activists, the activity-type and the "I don't give a damn" group.
The latter group is only concerned with the immediate realities of life, they don't worry about the future, he said.
As I sat with them in their basement apartment, Jim and Fred talked freely about the drug traffic and use in Lawrence.
"There's no doubt that drugs are easy to get in Lawrence," Fred said. "I think attitudes about drugs are improving. People are getting away from their old drug 'bug-a-boos.' They're beginning to realize if you smoke a joint (marijuana cigarette), you won't necessarily end up a junkie in Mexico City."
"Yeah, I think the pressure is on the traffic—the buying and selling of drugs—rather than the usage," Jim said. "It's like the 20's, during prohibition. The police weren't so concerned with the citizen who had some wine in his cellar, but rather, those who were running the speakeasies."
Fred agreed that it would be too hard to catch everyone in Lawrence who was smoking marijuana. He said there wasn't a jail big enough to hold all the offenders.
After studying his peace necklace for awhile, Fred said, "I
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think mass acceptance must precede change. In a few years we may see it (the acceptance of the use of marijuana)."
Jim feels there is a growing group of students who are really not interested in drugs and pot anymore. Last year they smoked and thought it was fun, but now they are turning away from it and saying "let's do something different," he said.
"Marijuana is really easy to get because it's just a weed which grows wild in any uncultivated area. You don't have to drive more than five miles out of Lawrence to see any. Actually, pot grows very well in northeastern Kansas." Fred said.
Pot users have somewhat of a hierarchy of effects which determine how good a "lid" (ounce) of marijuana is, and thus, how much it costs. $20 will buy you a good lid, and $10 will get you a lid that is still fairly good. Fred and Jim explained.
They made the observation that it was somewhat sociological, but pot was almost always smoked in company. However, the company is always people you know very well, they said.
As Jim and Fred finished explaining some of the details of marujana to me, I marveled again at the openness of these people known as "heads."
people known as heirs
I remembered the words of
Richard, when I asked what he would call himself. I wouldn't call myself anything, he had said.
He's simply a person trying to escape the structure of society.
Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) recruiters have come to the University of Kansas.
Five former VISTA volunteers and one former Peace Corp volunteer will be in the Kansas Union lobby today through Friday to answer questions and take applications.
Attention Freshmen!
Petitions are still available in ASC office for freshmen class officers and ASC women representatives. They must be in by Friday, Nov. 8, 3:00 p.m.
ASC OFFICE, STUDENT UNION
Attention Freshmen!
S
SUPER SAVINGS
All Merchandise In This Store Is Sold at DISCOUNT PRICES EVERYDAY
Register
FREE PRIZES
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Drawing Nov. 27th-You Need Not Be Present To Win GRAND PRIZE-R.C.A. PORTABLE T.V.
Following Prizes for College Students Only:
- wo Polaroid Swinger Cameras
wo Automatic Coffee Makers
★ wo $5.00 Gift Certificates, Good at Varsity Values
★ wo Gillette Techmatic Adjustable Razors
Register for the above prizes every time you shop at Varsity Values during the next three weeks. You need not be present to win. Drawing Nov. 27th----5:30 p.m.
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16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
Gilbert and Sullivan troupe organized here
KU's theatrical scope will be broadened this year with the founding of the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sulivan Company.
John Bush Jones, acting assistant professor of English, founded a Gilbert and Sullivan Guild last year at Northwestern University. With the assistance of his wife, Sandy, a graduate student in art history, Jones said the Mount Oread company will first perform "The Mikado" March 5-9 in Strong Hall Auditorium.
The company is currently seeking staff members. More information about these positions and casting will be given at 7:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Jones feels many talented singing voices need more outlets than KU has provided in the past. But the company is not just open to drama and music students. All students, faculty members, and their spouses are welcome.
"This is a tremendous training ground for actors," Mrs. Jones said. "We like to run things like 'group therapy'."
SUA exhibits wood sculpture
Wood sculpture by Marguerite Baumgartel is now on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union.
Mrs. Baumgartel, assistant professor of art education, did some of the work in India last year while on a sabbatical leave. She received a Fulbright Travel Grant to study Indian sculpture.
The display, sponsored by the Student Union Activities, features wild cherry, catalpa, osage orange, Indian teak and cedar wood sculpture.
Everyone in the company will contribute. "It's the whole theory of ensemble acting," explained Jones.
Jones feels that the company will be a contribution to the community. To further this contribution, a more popular comic opera will be presented one semester and a lesser-known one the alternate semester.
Jones said he first became interested in the two playwrights when he was 14. At Northwestern he directed scenes and finally a production with which his wife helped. Now preparing an anthology of critical studies on Gilbert and Sullivan, Jones said there are persons at KU extremely interested in the playwrights' works. "There has already been a great deal of student and faculty enthusiasm," he said.
The March play has nine principal roles and 16 chorus members. Casting for this year's comic opera will be later this semester.
"The principals should have strong voices," Jones said, "But untrained people often turn out the best performances."
"Gilbert and Sullivan operas are a lot more intelligent than Broadway shows and it's all just plain fun," his wife said.
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Ralph Kirkpatrick, one of the world's most widely acclaimed harpsichordists, will give a recital
Harpsichordist to perform for Spencer Library celebration
at 8 p.m. Nov.15 in University Theatre. His performance is part of
the dedication celebration for the new Kenneth Spencer Research Library.
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Wednesday, November 6, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
17
Loyalty oath initiated; termed 'silly' by prof
All state, city and county employees, including all men and women employed by KU must sign the new loyalty oath.
The change from the loyalty oath of previous years came as a result of the U.S. District Court decision in the fall of 1967 to void it.
The new oath, approved last spring by Gov. Robert Docking which took effect July 1, says "I do solemnly (swear) (affirm) that I will support the constitution of the United States and the constitution of the State of Kansas, and faithfully discharge the duties of my office or employment. So help me God."
The controversy over the previous loyalty oath arose because it required all state employees to "swear or affirm" they did not advocate the overthrow of the government or belong to any organization that did. This clause of the oath was declared unconstitutional because of its force against freedom of assembly.
Much debate has been held
concerning what the actual purpose of the new or old oath is,
"It serves no earthly purpose, said Charles M. Burrows, associate comptroller. "It creates a lot more work for the payroll department without any additional people provided."
Arthur H. Travers, assistant professor of law, after studying the oath said in general, oaths are "silly" because such a high
value is placed on ceremony. It seems the oath is supposed to impress some sort of solemnity on understanding.
He said in the past, the Supreme Court has shown hostility toward a negative oath such as the previous one. In examining the new oath, the question arose about what the Court would say of it.
new oath being called unconstitutional are small. "The Supreme Court does not want to get involved with loyalty oaths at this time," he said. "If a state came up with a statement that was pretty innocuous, it would let it stand."
The only real argument that could be presented against the present oath would be the inclusion of the phrase, "So help me
God." If a person did not agree with its inclusion, he would have a constitutional right to have it stricken from the oath.
KU's orchestra plans fall concert
However, many are against the oath as a whole. Mike Warner, New York graduate student and SDS member, said, "I think it is very bad because it represents one aspect of a kind of totalitarianism which I am opposed to. It has no place in an open society."
KU's Symphony Orchestra will present its fall concert next week.
The concert will be given at 3:30 p.m., Nov.17, in the University Theatre.
The orchestra, which is conducted by George Lawner, has 74 student musicians.
Travers said the chances of the
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
Racism course given good response
By DIANE SAMMS Kansan Staff Writer
When a no credit course attracts 270 students for $3 \frac{1}{2}$ hours a week, it must be something special.
The White Racism course offered by the University Christian Movement (UCM) evoked just that response.
The course was so oversubscribed, explained the Rev. Thomas Rehorn, campus minister of the Wesley Foundation, that last-minute arrangements had to be made to accommodate the flood of enrollees.
After reading the report of the National Advisory commission on Civil Disorders and feeling "a need to come to terms with white identity," Mr. Rehorn and his UCM colleagues developed the four-week course.
The cover of the brochure for the course had "Nigger" splashed across it in bold, white
German students will upset speech
BERLIN (UPI)—Radical students handed out Molotov cocktail recipes yesterday and pledged to break up tonight's scheduled speech by Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger.
The militant students fought police all day Monday in a protest over disbarment proceedings against a lawyer who frequently defends left wing students.
Kiesinger is in West Berlin for the convention of his Christian Democratic Party.
Nearly 1,000 students fought 400 police Monday night in an attempt to storm the courthouse where the bar association heard disbarment proceedings against Herst Mahler. He was acquitted of a charge he took-part in an illegal demonstration.
letters on a black background.
"I put a stack of them in the Union, and an hour later they had disappeared," Mr. Rehorn said, reflecting on how quickly word of the course spread across campus.
Participants in the course met Sunday evenings in Smith Hall, the School of Religion, to view films and hear lectures providing information for discussion, Mr Rehorn said. Faculty members lectured on the topics of the historical perspective of white racism, the psychology of racism and the church as racist and reconciler. Films shown during the Sunday evening meetings were "Nothing But a Man" and one of a speech by Stokely Carmichael.
Eighteen discussion groups of 15 persons each met for two hours each week, Mr. Rehorn said. The format for discussions was unstructured, depending upon the particular direction each group chose to take, he explained.
Mrs. Frank Shavlik, assistant dean of women and discussion
leader, said her group dealt primarily on the personal level. Group members prepared personal position papers for one session, she said.
The T-group methodology was employed in the group led by Wayne Sailor, Los Angeles graduate student. "I didn't take much of a teaching role," he said explaining that group members chose discussion topics.
Some group leaders brought in films or records to aid discussion. Mr.Rehorn said.
Several discussion leaders felt that individual action would result from the study and discussion. "I hope they (the participants) will start asking what they can do," Mr. Rehorn said, adding that nothing definite is planned for follow-up.
The course may be offered again in the spring, Mr. Rehorn said.
"We have a basic model that works," he explained, adding that because of certain flaws in the present course, "It will probably be a totally different animal."
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SUMMER SESSION IN ROME
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6 WEEKS
JULY 19 - AUGUST 30, 1969
$650 (approx)
PAYS FOR FLIGHT, LODGING, MEALS, REGISTRATION, TUITION
CLASSICAL, MEDIEVAL, RENAISSANCE STUDIES (IN ENGLISH)
LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE COURSES (IN ITALIAN)
101—Elementary Italian
Prof. F. Jannace, Fordham University; Prof. Rocco Pallone, Bronx Community College.
A course for beginners with special emphasis on grammar, reading, writing, and conversation.
201—Intermediate Italian
A review of grammatical structure through composition and conversation.
Prof. George Carpetto, Fordham University.
M, T, W, Th, F 3:45-5:30
301—Advanced Italian
Prof. Giovanni Lonardo, Georgian Court College.
The course will concentrate on reviewing and polishing the skills of more advanced students through composition.
351—Conversational Italian
Prof. Walter Temelini, University of Guelph.
- 352a, b—History and Archeology of Rome
A course designed to develop fluency in the spoken language. M.T. W. Th.F. 2:00-3:45
Prof. Bluma Trell, New York University; Dr. Mario Torelli, Ispettore, Soprimentendena all'Antichita, Etruria Meridionale.
a The political, military, economic patterns, laws, literature, religion and art of Rome from its foundation to its fall. March 14, 2015.
b. A detailed study of the archeological evidence of Roman Civilization. Classes will be conducted at the sites, monuments, and museums of Rome and Southern Latium.
M T Th F 3:30-7:00
353—Legacy of the Ancient World
Prof. George Shea. Fordham University
354—Greek and Roman Mythology
A survey of the classical contributions of the Western Literary tradition.
T, Th 10:20-12:05; T 5:30-7:00; F 11:15-12:05
Prof. Oliver C. Phillips, The University of Kansas.
Studies in the mythic traditions of the Graeco-Roman Culture (no knowledge of Latin or Greek is required).
M, W 8:10-10:15; W 5:30-7:00; F 8:30-9:20
355—History of Latin Literature
Lind, The University of Kansas. Readings, in modern translation, from the literature of ancient Rome.
T, Th 8:30-10:15; Th 5:30-7:00; F 9:30-10:15
356—Medieval Art and Architecture
Prof. Marshall Fishwick, Lincoln University.
A study of the visual arts of Italy and their role in the formation of the new spiritual, intellectual and social attitudes of Western Europe.
M, W, F 10:20-12:05; W 4:00-7:00
357—Aspects of Renaissance Humanism
Prof. Sesto Prete, The University of Kansas.
A course dealing with the origin and development of Humanism in Florence and other Italian centers. Visits to the Vatican Library and relevant Renaissance buildings in Rome will be arranged.
M, W 8:30-10:15; W 5:30-7:00; F, 8:30-9:20
Survey of Italian Art and Architecture Prof. Diane Kelder Finch College
Prof. Diane Kelder, Finch College.
A historical survey of Italian art and architecture from its foundations through the great classical revival in the eighteenth century.
T, Th 8:30-10:15; Th 4:00-7:00 (trip); F 9:30-10:15
Prof. Vincenzo Traversa, The University of Kansas.
The course will present a limited survey of major developments in Italian Literature from Dante to the pre-romantics.
$ ^{40} $ 400—Special Seminar in Archeoloau
Prof. Mario Bizzarri, Ispettare d'Antichita, Orvieto; Prof. Larissa Bonfante Warren, New York University; Prof. Claireve Grandjouan, The City University of New York, Hunter College. Fifteen students will be permitted to participate in the excavation of an Etruscan Tomb, from August 1st through 15th. Only students with classical background are advised to apply. Applications will be examined by a team of specially appointed professors.
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE:
PROFESSOR OLIVER C. PHILLIPS, ACTING CHAIRMAN OF CLASSICS
PROFESSOR VINCENZO TRAVERSA, DEPT. OF FRENCH & ITALIAN
CARRUTH R"LEARY
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
19
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
university Kansas are offered to
students. We welcome students to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
New small refrigerator—ideal for study dens, apts. etc—only $99.00
Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St
11-8
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization," Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread 1-9
EXTRAORDINARY BUY! Fisher 220-7 Garrard Mark-50 turntable and one pair KLH speakers. Excellent condition. Best offer take it! VI 2-998-3
Ford Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed,
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Call VI 3-6870 Evenings. 11-7
1962 Dynamic 88 Oldsmobile. Body and engine in excellent condition. Good gas mileage combined with normal Oldsmobile road excellence makes this an ideal road car. Must see. Priced to sell immediately. V 1-28199. 11-7
8-track Learjet tape deck Plays
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11-7
1964 Impala, SS 327 engine 4bbl
$1200 Cheap Dave Phlems 843-481-81
Impala, SS 327 engine 4bbl
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Be prepared for all of the Holiday Festivities ahead. See what the House of Wigs has to offer at as much as $75 on retail price, and you can win cash prizes in sweeps, cakes and all types of wigs. Call 913-631-9483 in Shawnee Mission. 11-7
1965 Dodge 880 H.T., nicest one anywhere, 6 way seats, tilt wheel, compact leatherette interior, air bag, leathered to Jerry Alekson Volkswagen. 2522 Iowa 11-7
1964 Volks Deluxe Sedan - Exception-
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1963 Olds Convert, white with white
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1966 Dodge 2 Dr. H.T. 383 V8 Buckets, Air Console Automatic, P.S. B.P. Vinyl top, Special Paint—immaculate, Jerry Allen Volkswagen. 2522 low仓
1966 Plym, Barracuda. Local car, one owner, Actual mileage - Absolutely Nice as new - Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-7
1968 Pontiac convertible, 350, yellow.
PS. 3-speed, only driven 10,000 miles,
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One used 21" RCA Victor television. Deluxe console model in good condition for reasonable price Call V1 2-4483 after 6 p.m. 11-7
Used Seats tape recorder, $25 Used
Seats Looks funky, sounds
V 2-3010 I 11-11
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excellent
condition. 4-speed. British racing
factory. 4-speed. Eurotech factory.
t a c h o m e t e y. superstock wheels.
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6,600
1965 GTO, 389, 3 two's, 4-speed. Runs
greatly in condition. Parker Blade
118 W 230 B
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages—anytime. Cash Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa VI 2-1320. 11-8
1968 Opel, Factory demo. 1200 miles.
The first 36 hours are $1500.
Burk, Book I, 11 W. 23rd. 11-12
1962 Ford 4-door Sedan. V-8 sticker
Bulldog. $395
Bulldog. 11k W 23rd. 11-12
1965 Impala SS, 327, 4-speed Excelent car Parker Buick, 1116 W 23rd
Lowrey T-2, portable organ. In good
condition. Call 312.956.8728. 11-12
3123 after 6:00 p.m.
Classic 1957 Studebaker Golden
Hawk for other car $150-
112 L.C. Call VI-3 01-084
Hallicrafters S-120 Receiver. Broadcast through 31 MC. Tunes Voice of America and many Spanish Stations. $65. Larry Johnson. UN 4-3140. 11-8
Set of Astro Mags off a GTO Needs 4
Mags in trade Best offer 0
VI 2-1858 11-12
NOTICE
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students, Contact Mr. Ruge Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts Phone VI-3-8074, 11-7
Candles extraordinaire at Hass Hardware. We have handmade candies by monks, Japanese-temple candles, round candies from Italy, drip candies and scented candles. Come see. 1029 Massachusetts. 11-7
515 Michigan St. St. B-A—outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.25; Rib order. $1.50; Rib sandwich. $8.5; ½ chicken. $1.15; Brisket sandwich. $7.5; Hours. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tf
Extra money for your organization.
Sorority, etc., just by getting your friends together for a "Wig Party"
Contact The House of Wigs, 7202 Goddard, Shawnee Mission. Phone 913-631-9483. 11-7
There is still time to send a Christmas package to that special guy overseas. We are non-permanible goodies for Christmas. We have mailing cartons and information Tops, Teapots, omelet and eee cocoa. Shops, Mail Mails, Coffee and Tea V1 2-7155. Open 'til 11:00.
For those who can't contemplate the prospect that spongy R.N. might become chief executive—this simple impulse Evian expects to strike up in the morning, just say, "Richard Nixon, President of the United States. This may help you. Also before going to bed, pray that number "one" doesn't lose his legal pads." 11-6
RENT
A NEW
FORD
From
John Haddock Ford
VI 3-3500
23rd and Alabama
Lawrence Lumber
Complete Supply
- paints
of
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HILLCREST BILLIARDS
WEST END OF HILLCREST BOWL
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
9TH & 10WA
THE LOUNGE
Budwieser on Tap
HOME OF
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13
523 West 23rd
842-9563
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Fri. & Sat. Open 24 hours
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Voluptuously, velutinous, lasciiviously, lubricious, essentially sensual STRAWBERRY FIELDS is especially for the pleasurable passionate passions of living. Come to STRAWBERRY FIELDS. 712 Mass. Open 10-6. 11-7
FRESHMEN Want an active student-
sympathy to the government? If so vote
David Mannering: an independent, for
Freshman class president on Nov. 20.
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Academy Center. 107 W. Fl., Pt. 2-7932 in the Kansas Union Library. Tuesdays. 11-19
The Jayhawk W rodeo Club is having a fox hunt. Nov 10. If you are interested, please call room at VI 3-6168 or Room 722 at VI 2-1240 between 5:00 p.m. and 11:12
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD 500 Automatic changer with base, dust cover, and grado cartridge New needle assembly as bonus New $85 Now $55 Full new equipment guarantee on both tuner and changer.
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tt
HELP WANTED
Part-time for 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, ft
Female=Good looking, personable women to work in pleasant sure job at Pizza Hut #1 on W. 23rd St. Good pay Fringe benefits included. Please contact Mia for Sapp manager, an A3316 for interview and an interview appointment 11-11
Needed: ride to KU from Overland Park on Thurs. Classes 8:30 to 5:20.
Call Shirley. MI 9-8174. Overland Park
11-7
WANTED
20% Coed Discount
Frostings and Permanents
Frostings and Permanents
CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS
No Appointment Necessary
CHANEL HAIR FASHION
10 E. 9th VI 2-7900
1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557
HAROLD'S SERVICE
PHILIP 66
1300 W.23rd
Pay-Le$$
Sell Service SHOES
Lawrence
612 North 2nd (Next to Shaw's Auto Service) North Lawrence
Kwiki Car Wash
In The Bowl
Sandwiches, Dinners
Students Welcome
8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. daily
VI 2-1477
Hillcrest Restaurant
Be prepared—
get antifreeze—starting service
EVERYONE SAYS
2434 Iowa VI 1-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
2434 Love V1.2.1008
Be prepared—
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RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
Car salesman to Fiat and Datsum
automobiles. Full or part-time. Call
Cherry 242-6715. Vaughn / Imports.
Ottawa. 11-7
Female to share comfortable double room off campus. Cooking privileges —2 blocks from campus $35 monthly.
Call VI 3-0725. 11^-7
Tutor for Math 127 Call TU 7-635-11
7-635-17
Male roommate Wanted $50.00 a
month at campus 2020 Ehen
dr. VI S-316
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation and talent in our services together. Call us. Ron Sundye or Dennis. Bowers. First United Methodist VI 3-7134. 11-7
4th Roommate for cooperative living unit in spaceacious house. Rent $50/mo. including utilities. Close to campus. Includes luggage. Request May 15. Tings: VI 2-7920 11-8
Want to buy nonstudent tickets to
Guests at high quality web park
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Good homes for 4, cute kittens 7
and up. Call Us 708-265-3921
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SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most Heating and Lighting, Laptop's ham- uably available, VI 3-4082. 11-12
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11-22
Experienced Dressmaking. Today's styles, much cheaper than store prices. Get that special dress for school or any occasion. Hems and alterations also. Come see samples. 842-6979 11-12
TYPING
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley VI 3-6048. 11-21
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
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Unusual Gift Ideas Artist Supplies
- Complete decoupage materials — Boxes, purses, decorative plaques, lining paper
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- Liquitex now in 8 oz. jars
CONCORD SHOP
Div. of McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SMC elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI cf 2873
Typist; thoses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist; electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440. 11-14
Experienced in typing thesis, themes,
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appropriate phone. Phone VI. Mt.
Mrs. E. Wright. 12-9
FOR RENT
Two one-bedroom apartments. One at University Terrace, one at Old Mill apartments. Available Nov 1, Call VI 2-1296, VI 3-1433, VI 3-7880 11-7
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Small bachelor apartment nicely furnished, carpeted, private kitchen and private parking, quiet Close to Union Phone VI 3-8534. 11-7
Apartment for women 1216 Louisiana
VIA 1.3-1601 11-8
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LOST
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Black umbrella at Homecoming Concert Call Dick Aldis at VI 3-6800
PERSONAL
Have your party at the Studio, 1344
Tenn. Private room available. Phone
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11-13
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202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
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THE LIBRARY
BUD & COORS ON TAP
Behind Don's Drive-in—2500 West 6th
20
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 6, 1968
Nixon is elected
(Continued from page 1)
for several hours, then Nixon regained the lead.
counted, the popular vote stood:
Humphrey 28,800,091—43 per cent;
Nixon 28,991,339—43 per cent;
Wallace 9,036,424—14 per cent.
Humphrey had won 13 states with 181 electoral votes and led in 2 states with 22 electoral votes for an indicated total of 203.
Nixon had won 28 states with 221 electoral votes and led in 3 states with 69 for an indicated total of 290.
In Congress, the Democrats retained control of both the House and Senate.
The indicated lineup in the Senate was 58 Democrats and 42 Republicans, a GOP gain of five.
The indicated lineup in the House was 243 Democrats and 192 Republicans, a Republican gain of four.
In governorships, the indicated new lineup was 31 Republicans and 19 Democrats, a Republican gain of five. This exceeded the 30 statehouses in the GOP held
after Dwight D. Eisenhower's landslide victory in 1952.
The new president will not have a clear national mandate. His share of the popular vote is the smallest given any president since Woodrow Wilson won a three-way contest with 41.9 per cent in 1912.
In New York, Nixon's aide, Herbert Klein, said today the Republicans are "very confident of victory." But he said, "we're not claiming total victory until we hear from the other side."
Students stage march
The Rev. Tom Rehon, director of the Wesley Foundation, decried the Vietnam and racial stands of the major candidates.
(Continued from page 1)
Mike Warner, Lawrence graduate student, said, "When it comes to real political power, we must be united." He called for those who believed as he to set up communities where the members would "share their food, their ideas, their money and their bodies."
As the speakers made their remarks, county employees leaned out windows of the old building to catch a few of the phrases. Plainclothes police circulated through the crowd taking pictures of the demonstrators.
At the back of the Courthouse near the door to a polling place, several deputy sheriffs drifted out to watch the crowd and talk among themselves.
When asked to comment they declined, one saying, "It isn't
even worth talking about. Move along, don't talk to me."
The speeches over, the marchers formed in single file on the sidewalk for a silent protest. They returned to the Hill, complaining about the rain and joking about how heavy the casket was.
Voters kill wheel tax
(Continued from page 1)
beliefs to information pamphlets which were distributed to voters.
There was much sentiment that the measure was first defeated in August, 1967, because most students were not here during the summer to voice their opinions.
Many of the "mourners" were not members of Voice or SDS. Joe Goering, Moundridge senior and vice-president of the student body, marched. Goering said, "This is the first time I can vote, but there is nobody I can vote for." Goering supported the candidacy of Robert Kennedy.
Steve Parsons, chairman of the citizen's committee, said Monday the presence of students for yesterday's contest might give voters a feeling of better representation and allow for passage.
Feeling among townspeople at the courthouse last night, however, was that poor information on the measure accounted for the defeat.
Another observer said citizens opposed the vehicle tax because it would not have prevented increases in property tax.
One citizen said the increase in property tax assessments received only last week by Lawrence residents, might have affected the measure's chances.
By 4 a.m. when 18 precincts had reported, only two precincts
had approved the measure. In the fourth precinct of the first ward, approval was by only 38 votes. Voters in the sixth precinct, second ward approved the measure by a 25 vote margin.
In two of the precincts in the second ward—precincts which include and edge the University on the north—the measure was defeated 560 to 328.
The two precincts approving the ordinance at that time are both on the western edge of the city.
The sixth ward includes the southern sections of the University and southwest Lawrence, an area having largely apartment-dwelling students. With five of six precincts reporting, the measure was defeated 1,893 to 1,189. Election workers expected the remaining precincts to follow the ward pattern.
While citizen opinion on the measure appeared mixed, most agreed the vehicle tax ordinance would be placed before voters again.
The lighter side
Loser statements can be predicted
By Dick West
On the day after an election, when the countryside is littered with broken dreams and the cry of the lame duck is heard in the land, I used to spend my time interviewing losing candidates.
I have therefore prepared a sort of all-purpose interview. Speaking for the fallen ones everywhere is William Shakespeare, who has just lost the race for poet laureate of Stratford.
But I have found that when you've interviewed one losing candidate, you've interviewed them all.
Q. Mr. Shakespeare, I see by the late returns that you have been defeated. Would you care to comment?
A. "These words are razors to my wounded heart. What seest thou else in the dark backward and abysm of time?"
Q. The returns show that you fail to carry a single precinct.
A. "There are a few of the unpleasant'st words that ever blotted paper. My pride fell with my fortunes. Deeper than did ever plummet sound. I am almost out at heels."
A. "The rankest compound of villanous smell that ever offended nostril. A very ancient and fish-like smell. No man's pie is freed from his ambitious finger."
A. , "Company, villanous company, hath been the spoil of me. Done to death by slanderous tongues."
Q. Are you suggesting that your opponent used mudslinging tactics?
Q. To what did you attribute your defeat?
A. "O judgment! Though art fled to brutish beasts, and men have lose their reason."
A. "Flat burglary as ever was committed. I will feed fat the ancient grudge I bear him."
Q. Surely you don't mean to imply that he stole the election?
Q. Do you also feel bitter toward the voters?
Q. Well, I voted for you, sir, if that's any comfort.
A. "Your fair discourse hath been as sugar, making the hard way sweet and delectable."
"I basically believe America is becoming militaristic and uncreative," Dona Moritz, Tulsa, Okla., said. "I don't condemn America, but I want to improve it. I voted this morning, but it was unenthusiastically," she said.
Robert Asch, New York graduate student, said, "I'm utterly dismayed at the prospect of choosing between Nixon and Humphrey. If this is the best America can do, we are in bad shape."
Klein spoke at a news conference in Nixon's headquarters in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
GOP gains 13 governors
(Continued from page 3)
(Continued from page 3) challenge of Atty. Gen. John J. O'Connell.
In Iowa, Republican Robert Ray, as expected, defeated Paul Franzenburg, state treasurer.
On the Democrat's brighter side, Texas Lt. Gov. Preston Smith won easily over Republican Paul W. Eggers. Utah Gov. Calvin L. Rampton turned back Carl W. Buckner. Missouri Gov. Warren E. Hearnes beat St. Louis County Supervisor Lawrence K. Roos.
North Dakota Gov. William L. Guy won over Republican Robert P. McCarney, Kansas Gov. Robert Docking defeated Republican Rich Harman, whose reputation was made on the basketball court.
"Nixon now has made this tremendous comeback unequaled in American political history and emerges as the new leader of the country," the press aide said.
Democratic Lt. Gov. Robert W.
Scott was leading Rep. James C.
Gardner in North Carolina while
Republicans also held leads in
Arkansas, West Virginia and
New Mexico.
He said Nixon's showing is a "triumph for the man and for the country which recognizes quality."
Foreign Students. If male foreign students are interested in giving a gift to small communities, 228 Strong Hall this week.
Carillon Ridgway. 7 p.m. Albert Ger-
TODAY
Official Bulletin
The Republican candidate, receiving returns in a suite in the Waldorf Towers, stayed out of public view during the long election night.
Classical Film. 7 & 9 p.m. "Sunrise." Dyche Auditorium.
The Illinois vote with 93 per cent of precincts reporting:
Humphrey 1,871,639
Nixon 1,987,898
Nixon also acknowledged the presidential race was tighter than the Nixon camp had anticipated.
M. Oread Gilbert & Sullivan Com-
pany 30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas
Union
"I wouldn't say we are surprised," press secretary Herbert Klein told a 4 a.m. news conference. "It's closer than we originally expected."
Chamber Music Series. 8 p.m. Suk Dun, Swarthwout Recital Hall.
Duo. Swathawat Rishal
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Kisim"
*
Kansas Asphalt Paving Conference.
All Day, Kansas Union.
Senior Coffee. 9:30 a.m. Kansas Uni-
nion-Ballroom
University Women's Club. 1 p.m.
"Another Go-Around With Fashions in the Round." Watkins Room, Kansas, Union.
Speech Exemption Exam. 3:30 p.m.
200, Learned.
The candidate, Klein told the press at 5 a.m., had decided to go to bed. No further statements would be forthcoming until 10 a.m.
Lecture. 4 p.m. Dr. Gordon Robin, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University. "Glacial Surges." 426 Lindley.
Klein insisted that one return votes from the West, and especially California, began to roll in,
426 BROADWAY. University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Kismet."
Nixon would take a commanding lead over his Democratic opponent, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.
However, Klein scaled down Nixon's prediction of a 3 to 5 million vote plurality to "probably a little less than 3 million."
Klein trimmed his own pre-election forecast that Nixon would capture anywhere from 330 to 450 electoral votes -270 are needed for election-to "about 300."
Nixon's movements during the night were conveyed to reporters by Klein and his assistant, Ron Ziegler. They said the nominee appraised the election from the sitting room of his suite.
Unlike most Americans, Nixon did not watch the election returns on television. Klein said aides would periodically bring him reports from a tally room located nearby. Other information came from telephone calls the candidate or his aides placed to GOP leaders throughout the country.
Weather
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicted mostly cloudy and continued cool weather for today. Winds should be northerly ranging from 10 to 20 miles per hour. Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday with a hard freeze likely. Today's high should be in the upper 40s and tonight's low 25 to 30. Precipitation possibility is 10 per cent.
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
LBJ knew of refusal
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Administration sources acknowledged yesterday that President Johnson was aware—when he announced Nov. 1 a halt in all bombing of North Vietnam—that Saigon would refuse to attend the expanded Paris talks.
The sources contended, however, that Johnson had no choice but to make the announcement when he did. They firmly denied any suggestion that he was playing politics in an effort to help Hubert H. Humphrey in the presidential race.
South Vietnam's president, Nguyen Van Thieu fully agreed on Oct. 16 to the formula the United States proposed for halting the bombing and expanding the Paris talks, these sources said, but suddenly reversed himself Oct. 30 after Hanoi accepted Johnson's proposal.
Candidate gets heart
HOUSTON—A New York City assembly man who was to have been up for re-election yesterday instead received a new heart from the transplant team of Dr. Denton Cooley in St. Luke's Hospital.
Sidney Lebowitz, 50, who was forced to withdraw in his bid for a third term because of ill health, received the heart of a 15-year-old youth who was injured fataliy when his motor-bike collided with a trailer truck Monday.
Jordanians still uneasy
AMMAN, Jordan (UPI)—Tanks patrolled the Jordaniian capital yesterday in the aftermath of fighting between the army and Arab commandos eager to battle Isreal.
The government lifted its curfew on Amman for six hours Tuesday but warned foreigners to stay home. Schools remained closed and many shops were boarded up.
Jordanians were tense over the confrontation between troops loyal to King Hussein and the Syrian-backed Kataeb Al-Nasr guerillas, which officials allege started Monday's battle.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
79th Year, No.38
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Court asks press to leave hearing
A Sedgwick County Court of Common Pleas judge may set a national precedent today if he decides to bar all members of the mass media from giving any publicity to a case charging nine men with kidnapping and conspiracy.
Leonard Harrison, director of the Lawrence Ballard Community Center, and eight others appeared before Court of Common Pleas Judge Daniel Dwyer yesterday for the purpose of having a preliminary hearing date set. The nine are charged with seven felony counts including conspiracy, kidnapping and assault.
Chester Lewis, attorney for eight of the nine, entered a motion during the appearance that would "restrict and prohibit any publicity of the case in the interest of a fair trial." Lewis explained that if there was no publicity, jurors would not be prejudiced should the case come to trial.
The Sedgwick County Attorney's office did not contest. Judge Dwyer immediately sustained the motion, but later said he would issue a final order this afternoon after a conference with the county attorney, Keith Sanborn, and the defense attorneys, Lewis, Wichita, and Charles Scott, Topeka.
All nine defendants were ordered to appear Dec. 10 for a preliminary hearing.
Judge Dwyer said that in the past, no minor court had ever issued an order barring the press because "this court has no injunctive powers."
He said he was willing to clarify the issue and rule on it after Lewis presented some written authorities showing that a minor court has jurisdiction in this type of matter.
Lewis contends that the mass media in Sedgwick County has already tried this case and has printed some evidence detrimental to his client's cases.
"The newspapers have charged the defendants with being members of a black militant organization," Lewis said. "There is no such organization as the 'Black Guards' and it is unfair that the defendants be bombarded with publicity before they are brought to trial."
If the order is issued today by judge Dwyer, all members of the radio, television and newspaper media would be prohibited from giving any coverage to the hearing and subsequent trial until a verdict has been given from the jury.
---
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
Commandos killed
SEOUL, South Korea (UPI)—South Korean troops yesterday killed three more members of a 30-man North Korean commando team which landed on the eastern coast Saturday, military authorities reported.
This brought to six the number of commandos killed in the five-day manhunt, spokesmen said. Authorities said the three killed yesterday were part of a group of seven sighted at an undisclosed location. The other four escaped.
Peace talks go on
PARIS (UPI)—Communist diplomats at the Vietnam talks contend the outcome of the U.S. presidential election cannot now affect them seriously because any administration will have to push for a settlement.
Having secured the cessation of American bombing of North Vietnam. Hanoi appears in no great hurry for a settlement in the apparent hope that time is on its side.
Code passed by ASC
---
The proposed Senate Code, which calls for 15 per cent student representation in the University Senate and promises greater student voice in University government, was passed unanimously last night by the All Student Council (ASC).
Passage followed seven ASC meetings during which the proposed code was amended and debated. The final version approved last night closely followed the code suggested by the majority report of the 12-man Committee on University Governance.
Amendments to establish 50 per cent student representation on the University Senate and to include living group representation had
Nixon takes short break after lengthy campaign
MIAMI (UPI)-Richard Nixon, the 37th president elect, arrived late yesterday for a three day rest, following a nostalgic visit earlier in the day with ailing former President Dwight D. Eisenhower in Washington.
A crowd of about 250 persons surged onto the runway as Nixon's Air Force jet pulled to a stop about 11 p.m. amid stringent security measures.
Rocky named as possibility for Nixon post
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, former Gov. William Scranton of Pennsylvania, Lt. Gov. Robert Finch of California and former Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dillon are rated good prospects for membership in the Nixon cabinet.
Rockefeller, Nixon's strongest rival for the GOP nomination, would be a symbol of the party and national unity so highly valued by the president elect.
The New York governor has said he would not be interested in any cabinet post other than Secretary of State or Secretary of Defense. Nixon is unlikely to offer him the former, since Rockefeller has too many strong ideas of his own to suit a president determined to keep a firm personal hand on foreign policy. But Rockefeller's broad experience in government would make him a logical choice to run the huge Department of Defense.
Scranton's Tour
Scranton, who served briefly as a special assistant to the Secretary of State during the last year of the Eisenhower Administration, has been considered a potential nominee for Secretary of State since Nixon tapped him during the campaign to tour Europe as his personal representative.
Scranton's diplomatic experience is limited. He did not have policy-making responsibilities in his previous state department service. But if
(Continued on page 20)
Weather
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicted mostly cloudy and continued cool weather for today. Winds should be northerly ranging from 10 to 20 miles per hour. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday, with a hard freeze likely. Today's high should be in the upper 40s and tonight's low 25 to 30. Precipitation possibility is 10 per cent.
Nixon and his wife, Pat, walked over to the crowd, shook hands with those in the front row and listened as some began singing "Nixon's the One," his campaign theme song. Others sang the National Anthem.
Nixon was greeted by Florida Gov. Claude Kirk and his wife, Erika. Kirk later said Nixon told him "Thanks for the good job Florida did."
Exiles Shout
Cuban exiles in the crowd shouted at Nixon to "Remember Cuba."
When Nixon's plane arrived, several policemen were on the roof of the big airport armed with shotguns. Secret service agents and police swarmed through and around the terminal. Fire trucks and an ambulance were standing by as a precaution.
Nixon stayed only briefly at the airport, then headed for his retreat at nearby Key Biscayne where he and his family were to spend three days resting from the arduous campaign.
But after accepting his presidential victory yesterday Nixon stopped briefly in Washington, to visit with Eisenhower, confined to Walter Reed Army Medical Center following a series of heart attacks. Nixon was vice president during Eisenhower's two terms in office.
After a 45-minute visit with the former President, Nixon said of his former boss: "The election seemed to serve as a tonic. He appeared as pleased over the results of this as his own."
(Continued on page 20)
been rejected by the ASC in previous weeks
The code, to become effective, still must be passed by the University Senate Council, the University Senate, and approved by a student referendum.
"This is just the first step." Rick Von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student and ASC chairman, told the council. Von Ende explained the code will now be sent to the University Senate Council, which is preparing a version to be submitted to the University Senate for approval.
If the University Senate version is passed, a conference committee
(Continued on page 20)
Group forms to aid low-income accused
The Lawrence Legal Defense Fund, formed Saturday to aid accused persons with inadequate finances, has set as its immediate goal the collection of $3,000 to $5,000, Floyd Horowitz, associate professor of English and chairman of the group, said yesterday.
The money will be used at least in part for the defense of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Harrison, Horowitz said.
Harrison, director of the Ballard Community Center in north Lawrence, was arraigned last week in Wichita on seven counts of kidnapping, assault and conspiracy.
Mrs. Harrison, a KU graduate student, was scheduled to appear this morning in Douglas County Court for a preliminary hearing on assault charges.
Horowitz said the "lower limit" for the defense of the Harrisons is (Continued on page 29)
(Continued on page 20)
See special Letters to students from Rodgers, Zook page 9
PARKER
Kansan photo by Alan Hansberry
AND THE WINNER IS . . .
Gov. Robert B. Docking, successful Tuesday in his bid for reelection, talks to a reporter early yesterday after it was apparent that he had won the race against Rick Harman.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Anti-Soviet tumult erupt in Bratislava
PRAGUE (UPI) Thousands of students in the Slovakian capital of Bratislava ripped down Soviet flags and burned them in the streets last night on the eve of the 51st anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution.
In Prague, hundreds of Czechoslovak troops and policemen sealed off a 15-block area around the National Theater to prevent anti-Soviet demonstrations during a performance of the Russian ballet. An atmosphere of unrest swept through the capital.
Anti-Soviet demonstrations erupted in both Prague and Bratislava last month during the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the Czechoslovak Republic.
The anti-Soviet protests in Bratislava last night began when an estimated 4,000 students assembled outside the city's National Theater where the Russian anniversary was being marked with a performance of Gounod's opera "Romeo and Juliet."
Wood sculpture shown in Union
Wood sculpture by Marguerite Baumgartel, assistant professor of art education at the University of Kansas, are on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. The display will end Nov. 13.
Some of the sculpture was done in India last year while Mrs. Baumgartel was on a sabbatical leave and a Fulbright Travel Grant to study Indian sculpture.
The exhibit, sponsored by the Student Union Activities, will feature sculptures in wild cherry, catalpa, osage orange, Indian teak and cedar wood.
IRC will sponser tea for upperclass women at Dean Taylor's home
The Inter-Residence Council will sponsor a tea for upperclass women from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the home of Emily Taylor, dean of women.
The participating women will be officers from residence and scholarship halls. Approximately 300 women are expected to attend.
Roz Eckstrom, Prairie Village senior, said the tea will give Dean Taylor an opportunity to meet more of the women on campus.
Freshmen women attend teas of this sort each year. However, this is the first year that upperclass women have had the opportunity to meet with Dean Taylor on an informal basis.
Teen-age students, jeering and whistling, pulled the red hammer and sickle flags of the Soviet Union from poles on Hvesdslavove Square in front of the Bratislava Theater. They kicked the flags across the square and set them afire to the applause and cheers of other youthful demonstrators.
The young people in Bratislava, 190 miles southeast of Prague near the Aurstrian border, milled around in front of the theater. They pointed to a huge Soviet flag hanging from a window and shouted "Down with the flag."
Several uniformed theater ushers walked out onto the theater balcony and removed the Russian flag. The demonstrators applauded. Other youths ripped a huge Soviet flag from a window of a building across the street, and more cheers filled the night.
Bratislava police watched the flag burning and did nothing. There were no Soviet troops in sight.
In Prague, barricades were thrown up across all bridges, streets and sidewalks leading to the National Theater which was the scene of anti-Soviet demonstrations last month.
Guest of government
Professor tours Poland
By PATTY BEHAN Kansan Staff Writer
Each year the institute makes in-depth evaluations of its collective and state farms from different regions.
An inferior economic system and environmental conditions are key factors in the relatively poor output of the farm production of communist countries.
This observation was made by Roy D. Laird, KU professor of Slavic and Soviet area studies, after a trip last year to Poland.
"Bushels and bushels of statistics on all aspects of farming are measured by the Polish government," Laird said. The institute gave him copies of those reports and substantiated the reported facts through personal observation.
Financed by fellowships and research grants from Rockefeller, Fulbright and National Science Foundation, Laird has been studying the efficiency of collective and state farms in Poland and the Soviet Union for more than a decade.
He toured 15 to 20 collective and state farms for first-hand studies of operations and production as a guest of the Polish government and the Polish Agricultural Institute.
Yearly Evaluations
He said the environmental conditions in Poland and other communist countries prohibit the production of adequate foodstuffs.
In Poland it is cool and it rains a great deal, Laird explained. The land is flat, which causes a drainage problem.
Because of similar ills, he said the Soviet Union, Poland, and other communist countries have to import a significant amount of food to supply their needs.
Inefficient Management
The inefficiency of management however is the key factor in Laird's evaluation of the collective and state farms.
The collective farms are run by a single director who can't efficiently make all the necessary decisions, Laird said.
By taking away the power of decision from the workers, Laird said, much of their initiative is lost.
Laird points out, that the smaller private farms in Poland
are the most efficient in output per unit of land because the individual farmer is able to use his creative initiative.
Neither the state nor the collective farms are as mechanized as American farms, Laird said. Instead of modern machines, they still use horses and plows. Because of this they use more manpower than U.S. farmers do while getting less output per hour.
Laird, the founder of the Conference on Soviet Agricultural and Peasant Affairs, has written four books and several articles on collective farming in Eastern Europe.
Noon bomb blast hits Kansas City, but none injured
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—A homemade bomb of some sort shattered the noon hour at the downtown Auditorium Plaza yesterday with a shower of Minutement leaflets.
There were no injuries, but windows shook in the area. Police Dispatcher Sgt. Charles Johnston said "It apparently was light because we didn't get any calls on it."
A reporter said the papers blew out of a piece of pipe that looked "more like a large firecracker than anything else."
The right wing paramilitary Minuteman organization was headed by Robert Bolivar DePugh, a Norborne, Mo., businessman, who has gone underground since federal charges were placed against him.
The leaflets said things such as "How much longer will the American people stand idly by while their constitutional rights and freedoms are bartered away through secret treaties and United Nations commitments made without their knowledge or consent?"
"Minutemen" papers, including attacks on the United Nations and words such as "We will Never Surrender," showered the small park near downtown hotels.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
After the election
Youth, try again
A little bewildered, American youth sat back yesterday and pondered the events of Tuesday and the past year.
A man was elected president but he wasn't the choice of America's youth. As a matter of fact, neither was his opponent. So we ask what's the matter.
The matter is that this was the first election in many years in which youth acted, not individually but as an almost united semi-power group.
Youth had its candidates, worked hard for them, and watched the ground cut from under them by the established party, by non-idealistic opposition and even by an assassin's bullets.
Who but youth worked so diligently to bring victory to the one avowed anti-Vietnam candidate in New Hampshire, Sen. Eugene McCarthy, working on a limited budget, actively sought youth's support and received it. A number of political observers attributed McCarthy's success to his youthful campaign workers who canvassed tirelessly for no reward save the satisfaction they were working for their candidate, a man of intelligence who had the ideals of youth and the nerve to oppose an unpopular but powerful political regime.
But Sen. McCarthy was not the only candidate who received active, organized, youthful support. Sen. Robert Kennedy, who had been actively campaigning among the nation's young people for a number of years, also received their backing in his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Kennedy, with his youthful appeal and boyish appearance, was followed by a long list of youths as supporters, campaign workers and screamers at his speeches.
speeches. On the night of his greatest victory in the
campaign, he was killed by an assassin. Youth lost another hero.
A third candidate, though not so popular with youth as the first two, but still with youthful appeal and ideals, was New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller. The governor, moreover, was the one Republican who appealed to youth. He tried to offer responsible programs to help some of the problems facing youth and these programs were well received.
After the assassination of Bobby Kennedy, many looked to a contest between Gov. Rockefeller and Sen. McCarthy. A common question at that time was, "Wouldn't it be nice if we had a tough choice as to who was the best man, instead of who was the lesser of two evils?"
But Rockefeller and McCarthy went down to defeat under the political machines of their respective conventions and youth was left without its political leaders.
The time now is to lick a few wounds but not lose faith in the political system. It is a good one basically. It has fostered such great leaders as Abraham Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson and Teddy Roosevelt. And, it will foster more leaders. Perhaps this wasn't the year.
At any rate, youth is finally active in politics as a group. This may have been a disappointing year watching tremendous efforts ignored by political bosses, but there is another year, another leader and another issue. To have the idealism of youth interested and fighting for what it believes is a healthy addition to American politics and a great many people were quite glad to see it.
As the old Brooklyn Dodgers used to say every year, "wait 'til next year."
Alan T. Jones
The rock hound
Alan T. Jones Assistant Managing Editor
Blues good and bad
By WILL HARDEST $ ^{v} $
AN ANTHOLOGY OF BRITISH BLUES Volumes I and II on Immediate (released through Columbia) feature the proverbial cast of thousands. As usual in a crowd that large, there are some winners and some losers.
Appearing on one or both of the albums are: John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, Eric Clapton, Savoy Brown Blues Band, Stone's Masonry, Jo-Ann Kelly, T. S. McPhee, Jimmy Page, Dharma Blues Band and Jeremy Spencer.
These British musicians, for the most part, seem to lack the ability to really get into the blues, which is too bad since at least some of the English (for example, The Rolling Stones) can do the blues well. Blues is definitely something which has to be played from the guts with soul, and the Anthology musicians have trouble playing that way.
The blues don't try to show the happy, fine, sophisticated, Mary Poppins side of life. The blues tell about the dismal, sad, drab, dreary, unhappy side of life—the blue side. To be played well, blues should be played with certain qualities. Blues should be earthy, homepun, countrified, down-homey, common and vulgar. The blues should be a way of expressing a blue mood to get it out of your mind and body. It takes real feeling to make the blues beautiful, but these artists have big trouble finding the feeling. The music on the album is, in the majority, too antiseptic, too clean, too pure. It's so veddy propah and so veddy British. It kinda sounds like early rock 'n' roll or maybe even jitterbuggish.
However, this is not to say the albums are without any redeeming social importance. Eric Clapton is good in all six of the songs he has on the two albums. Side two of the first volume is pretty good, and the second volume is much better than the first.
On side one of the second volume, Mayall and his group team up with Clapton to really do some good work in "On Top of the World." Next, T. S. McPhee fumbles the ball, but the Savoy Brown Blues Band gets things back on the right track with a good number called "I Can't Quit You Baby." Then, Clapton and Jimmy Page do a thing called "Draggin' My Tail." Sitting quietly listening, you suddenly realize melancholy is pouring from the speakers and you are thinking of an old love who shafted you for another.
On the other side, "Look Down at My Woman" by Jeremy Spencer is pretty good, but the outstanding song is "True Blue" by the Savoy group. It is really music to smoke-cigarettes-and-suddenly remember the now-grown-warm-half-drunk-beer-in-your-hand by.
PEACE
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THE MEMORIAL JOURNAL
OK! You're on!'
Paperbacks
A HALL OF MIRRORS, by Robert Stone (Crest, 95 cents)—A book that was awarded the Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship Award for 1967. The setting is New Orleans, and the central characters are three—a disc jockey drunk, a flitting nymphomaniac, a young southerner. There are some resemblances to Nelson Algren, and the side of American life today presented by the writer is a side that will shock the sheltered, if there is such a classification any more.
THE NINE MILE WALK, by Harry Kemelman (Crest, 60 cents)—A group of detective short stories by the author of "Friday the Rabbi Slept Late." Kemelman's crime-solver in these is Nicky Welt, Snowdon professor of English language and literature in a small college. The stories are incredibly gentle
WE ONLY KILL EACH OTHER, by Dean Jennings (Crest, 75 cents)—A nonfictional work about the hoodlum Bugsy Siegel and his affair with Virginia Hill. If you're enthralled with stories about racketeering and assorted crookedness this may be for you.
after some of those appearing on the stands today.
AUTHENTICITY DAILY
KANSAN
A student newspaper serving University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas is attended at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mall subscription rates: $6 a semester. $10 a year. Office hours: Kc. 60442. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or religion 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
John Marshall
The old and election
All day long the rain drizzled on the American Flag as it stood, drooping, nailed to the short wooden pole in front of the 2nd precinct polling station-normally Lawrence Fire Station No.I.
The people stood inside in long lines in front of thin metal booths with redwhiteandblue curtains waiting for the pieces of paper on which they scratch the nation's destiny for the next four years.
There, in the lines near shiny fire engines and neatly packed tools and cans of dry chemicals "FOR FIRE EXTINGUISHER USE ONLY" were the old people. Raincoats with wide lapels that have come back in style. Snowy hair and steel-rimmed glasses that now are worn by their grandchildren who are "in." The ladies with thick stockings and chunk-heeled shoes who take too long to cross the street. The men who have white stubble on their faces in the morning and who sit on park benches or steps and talk to anyone who will listen. The tattered umbrellas that they open when the sun shines too hot.
The old people are in the lines for the umteenth time. Old people like Amelia Kaiser who sat in her living room Tuesday and talked about the very first time she voted—for William McKinley.
And now the Amelia Kaiser generation has voted in the same lines with its great grandchildren on law and order. And the war. And racial unrest. This Amelia Kaiser generation that thinks of 60 year-olds as children because they once were. And to those 60 year-olds, people like Julius Johnson who is 35 are children. Julius Johnson has a wife and two children and was the seventh person to vote in the third precinct.
And children, really, in the same line with each other . . . tattered coats and snowy hair . . .
younger people with two or three little ones . . .
the young coed with inkstains on her hands from a just-completed written exam.
They stood there in the lines Tuesday and thought about what they had seen and what they had heard.
Julius Johnson voted for Hubert Humphrey because he is a black man. He had looked at the Johnson-Humphrey record on civil rights and approved. Nixon long ago kissed off the Black man's vote, Julius says. "I think it will hurt him, as far as black-respect-for-Nixon goes."
Julius Johnson says Humphrey is an intellectual and he has courage—"Courage enough to want to debate with his opponent in front of the public." You can't say that about Nixon, he says.
Inkstain-on-hands said she voted for Nixon.
"Why?" she was asked.
The black fireman opened a door and backed in a fire truck that had been standing in the rain. He voted for Humphrey because Humphrey respects the black man.
"Inkstains" has long hair and wears smudged bluejeans and sandals as she stands in line, trying to look at the fire extinguisher near a window. Her parents are from a nice residential area in Wichita and when they ask her who she voted for, well, "I just couldn't keep a straight face if I didn't vote for Nixon."
"Could you really say that about Wallace or Nixon?" he asks. The black man looks about 30.
But the lines Tuesday, in front of the fire engines or near the desks or computers at the Douglas County State Bank, with the youngest and young, the oldest and old, is the way Amelia Kaiser looks at this election. With all the "mean" things that go on, and with all the protests and wars and hate and violence, she says, it brings a lot of people together every four years to make a decision.
So when they stood in the lines Tuesday, Mrs. Kaiser and the old people were replying to something written by young people about what it might be like to be old:
Old friends.
The old men
Winter companions.
Lost in their overcoats,
Waiting for the sunset.
The sounds of the city
The sounds of the city,
Sifting through the trees
Sifting through the trees,
Settle like dust
On the shoulders
Of the old friends. Can you imagine us
Of the old friends.
Years from today.
Years from today.
Sharing a park bench quietly?
now terribly strange
To be seventy.
—Simon and Garfunkel
“Old Friends”
Can you imagine . . . Julius or Inkstains as Amelia Kaiser.
In the election line we have taken a first look at ourselves—whether we all make the "X" in the same box or not.
But Amelia Kaiser herself could not vote today—her heart is failing. And after looking at the election line for the first time and thinking about Mrs. Kaiser's first vote in 1901, you think about why she laughed so loud when she said, "This election's gonna be the death of me yet!"
It is not very funny.
Thursday, November 7, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
The rock hound Lipton star
By WILL HARDESTY
Ode records has a great new star in Peggy Lipton who displays her talents in an album entitled PEGGY LIPTON. The 21-year-old Miss Lipton shows an ability which is much advanced beyond the usual first album. Her singing is great. It displays a real feeling, depth and range. Her songs and the back-up are not harsh or loud. They are ballady, backgroundy and beautiful. She sings with the traditional qualities of a good female vocalist, but with an awakened sensitivity.
Her singing is enigmatic, and, it would appear, her singing might reflect what she is. She looks and sings like the girl next door, the All-American girl. Yet, she can look like a hip person and her songs are filled with much more depth and meaning than those of the All-American girl. The cover of the album shows the duality. The front shows her with a nice, high, ruffly, lacey collar, and her face en-wreathed by some sort of viney flora (ivy?). The back side of the album shows her with no collar at all and an Indian head-band. Somehow, you get the impression the head-bandy Peggy Lipton is the real one.
The album contains four songs of her own composition.
One of these tunes, "San Francisco Glide," and a Laura Nyro song, "Stoney End," have also been released on a single. Outstanding songs on the album include "Natural Woman" (in which Miss Lipton out-performs the queen of soul Aretha Franklin), "Hands Off the Man (Flim Flam Man)" (another Laura Nyro composition and the only real "mover" on the album), "It Might As Well Rain Until September," and "Let Me Pass By" (another of her own compositions).
NOTE: Remember The Blossoms—the three chicks who did the back-up singing on the old "Shindig" show? They do, and do well, the back-up on this album.
Folk fans should go berserk for THE CLANCY BROTHERS AND TOMMY MAKEM SING OF THE SEA by The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem on Columbia.
The four Irish' singers are recognized as being right at the top in the folk field, as a dozen great albums attest. This one could be another winner for them. All the songs but one on the album are traditional sea chanties and songs. The liner notes, written by Pat Clancy, give little run-down about the songs.
The only problem, it seems, is that a real ear for this type of music is needed to appreciate it.
Paperback
THE WEST IN ASIA 1850-1914, by Micheal Edwardes (Capricorn, $1.65) A history of imperialism. The author considers the expansion of several nations into Asian territory -Spain, the Netherlands, Britain, Portugal, France, Russia and the United States. The Dutch played their major role in the East Indies, the French in Indochina, Russia in Siberia and Central Asia, the British in India. Edwardes deals with the westernization of Japan, the Sepoy Mutiny in India, the eventual impact of exploitation by the West on the peoples and governments of Asia.
Letter to the editor
Student infuriated about two hospitals
To the Editor:
I was so infuriated after reading your article entitled "Lawrence Memorial denies KU student" in the October 30 edition of the Kansan, that I had to write this letter to let some of the steam out.
This case, involving John Lindquist, was not the first refusal and it probably will not be the last. Just how seriously injured or ill must a KU student be to get help at Lawrence Hospital. If they do not consider a student with "the tendon sticking out of his hand and blood all over his pants and vomiting" severe enough for them to even look at, then what does it take to get them to lift a finger.
It is about time Lawrence Hospital officials realized how inadequate Watkins Hospital facilities are for 16,000 students, or for that matter, even for one student. So where is a sick KU student suppose to go
for help. Is he supposed to sit in an overcrowded waiting room for two hours waiting for his turn on the assembly line to see a doctor. Even if you get to see a doctor, you really cannot feel certain that what the doctor's diagnosis of your case is valid. I know of five cases where a doctor told a girl she was pregnant when she really had an ulcer. And another case when a person was told he had a pulled muscle on his side and the next morning he was rushed to a Kansas City hospital for an emergency appendectomy.
This all leads back to the unanswered question: where is a sick KU student to go for
Punt Return Champ
NEW YORK (UPI)—During a 13-year National Football League career with the New York Giants and Green Bay Packers, Hall of Famer Emlen Tunnel returned 258 punts, an all-time NFL record.
VIOLENT in anger
SAVAGE in love...
DEFIANT in play!!
THE Savage Seven
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medical help. Watkins is not the answer and certainly Lawrence Hospital could not possibly think of helping.
This question will remain unanswered until Watkins finally gets some competent doctors and enough of them to serve KU's large enrollment
and also until it gets enough modern equipment.
Isn't it about time Watkins shaped up before KU students are shipped out...on stretchers.
Thank you for listening,
Julie Boutross
Leawood junior
AN ITEM TAKEN FROM PAGE 223 OF THE ALICE B. TOKLAS COOK BOOK
AND NOW A STATEMENT FROM A SATISFIED EATER PETER SELLERS
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Technicolor United Artists
2:35 • 7:40 • 9:45
HELD OVER!
"A DELICATE MASTERPIECE...
IT OFFERS BEAUTY, SENSUALITY,
AND PERFECT TASTE!" - GENET, THE NEW YORKER
"Benjamin"
THE DIARY OF AN INNOCENT YOUNG BOY
S.M.A. COLOR • A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
3:05 • 7:40 • 9:30
HELD OVER!
AN ITEM
TAKEN FROM
PAGE 273 OF
THE ALICE B.
TOKLAS
COOK BOOK
AND NOW A STATEMENT FROM
A SATISFIED EATER
PETER SEILERS
"I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS"
JO VAN FLEET LEIGH TAYLOR YOUNG
STARTS TONIGHT
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
AT
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5784
Evening
7:15-9:15
Alan Arkin turns in one of the year's finest performances.
LADIES' HOME JOURNAL
Alan Arkin
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
HONDRA LOCKE
Technicolor
From Warner Bros.—Seven Arts
STARTS WEDNESDAY
At The
Varsity
THEATRE...Telephone VI3-1065
Mat. 2:30
Eve. 7:15-9:15
Alan Arkin turns in one of the year's finest performances.
LADIES' HOME JOURNAL
Alan Arkin
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Technicolor
From Warner Bros.—Seven Arts
STARTS WEDNESDAY
At The
Varsity
THEATRE ...Telephone VI3-1065
Mat. 2:30
Eve. 7:15-9:15
Varsity
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-1065
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Profs total century at KU
This year the University of Kansas will retire two men who between them have compiled over 100 years of education and service at KU.
James D. Stranathan, professor of physics and George W. Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering have been faculty members at KU longer than any other professors on the hill.
Both professors began their careers at KU as undergraduates in civil engineering in 1917 and received their bachelor's degrees in 1921.
Stranathan, however, began teaching half-time in 1920 while still an undergraduate. Bradshaw did not begin teaching until 1922.
After graduation in 1921, Stranathan began teaching fulltime. He continued his education and received his master's degree in physics in 1924 from KU.
Stranathan has either taught or done research continuously since 1920 except for a year's absence in 1928 when he completed work on his doctorate at the University of Chicago.
Besides his teaching and research work, Stranathan has published a number of research articles and is a member of numerous professional organizations.
Since beginning his teaching career in 1922, Bradshaw has taught continuously except for two short leaves of absence.
Work on his masters degree at the University of Illinois in 1922 and independent study at the University of California in 1963 account for Bradshaw's time away from KU.
Both men have served as chairmen of their departments. Bradshaw was chairman of civil engineering from 1945 to 1963, and Stranathan served as chairman of the physics department from 1941 to 1964.
Both men recalled in their early days at KU that Jayhawk Boulevard was not paved and was usually a muddy patch.
Stranathan remembers the construction of many familiar structures on campus including Memorial Stadium and the Kansas Union.
"When I first came to KU," said Bradshaw, "Strong Hall was
Oregon race down to wire
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI)—Republican Robert Packwood, 36, yesterday may have ended the volatile 24-year Senate career of Democrat Wayne Morse in a down-to-the-wire battle.
But a late surge of Morse votes raised the possibility last night that he might overcome Packwood's 1,000-vote lead if absentee votes go his way.
Before Morse's late comeback. Packwood held an edge of about 3.000 votes.
Morse, 68, seeking a fifth term, carried heavily Democratic Multonomah County Portland but failed to muster enough strength downstate to overcome Packwood, whom he once trailed by 10 percentage points in the balloting.
Packwood was ahead in 24 of the states 36 counties.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
TGIF
- Red Dog
- Friday, 3:30 - 5:30
not yet completed and there were no dormitories at all. Students stayed in private homes or in fraternities and sororites."
Having taught numerous students, both men are in a position to assess whatever changes may have occurred in students in the last four decades.
RENT
A NEW
FORD
From
John Haddock Ford
VI 3-3500
23rd and Alabama
"Generally, I find that students today are smarter," said Bradshaw.
Stranathan said students today are more interested in outside activities such as politics and world affairs.
Stranathan says he enjoys traveling and has been in every state in the union-most more than once. A photography fan, Stranathan has 5,000 color slides which he has taken on various trips.
Bradshaw, who plans to do some traveling after retiring, mentioned that he and Mrs. Bradshaw have already made a world tour.
After spending eight months at the University of California during his 1963 leave of absence, the Bradshaws traveled to the Orient, India and other parts of the Middle East as well as parts of Southern Europe.
In the summer of 1966 the Bradshaws toured the British Isles, Scandanavian countries, France, Germany and other parts of Western Europe.
Both men admitted they would miss teaching, but felt that they had plenty of interests which would keep them busy.
Problem Drivers
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI)
—Many motorists who drink have problems in addition to alcohol when they get behind the wheel, says the Alabama Safety Council.
"Drinking drivers who get into trouble commonly have histories of arrest, social and medical problems :
SAIGON (UPI) -The semi-official government news agency, Vietnam Press, said yesterday South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu would make "a new peace proposal" within the next few days.
Vietnam Press quoted Premier Tran Van Huong as saying Thieu's proposal would remove the impression that South Vietnam was blocking the way to fullscale peace negotiations at Paris. It gave no details.
Expanded Paris negotiations had been scheduled to open yesterday. The session was postponed indefinitely because South Vietnam refused to send a delegation on grounds that the Viet Cong were being represented as a separate entity apart from the North Vietnamese.
Huong, according to Vietnam Press, told South Vietnamese newsmen during an awards ceremony Tuesday at Saigon University the Paris postponement was a "victory" for the South Vietnamese government.
Thieu, meanwhile, signed a "state of war" decree which empowers the government to impose strict control on the distribution of resources, to make unannounced day or night searches, to assign persons considered dangerous to the national security to specific locations and to ban demonstrations or meetings threatening security and public order.
The decree also imposes bans on the use of weapons and the possession of publications or documents considered harmful to national security.
It gives Thieu the right to proclaim martial law.
It was announced violators of terms of the decree would be tried and judged by military courts.
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
10
Colorado quarterback Bob Anderson, mentioned as a candidate for the coveted Heisman Trophy, could not escape the firm grasp of KU's middle guard Emery Hicks in last Saturday's clash with the Buffs. Teammate Bailey tries to move past a CU blocker to grab Anderson. KU won the game 27-14 to remain undefeated and to tab the Buffs with their third loss in seven starts.
Small college polll
All-American candidates include Douglass, Zook
The Cincinnati Red Stockings showed a net profit for the 1876 season of $1.39.
In addition to Simpson and Hendricks, 55 other offensive and 45 defensive players were chosen by coaches for final consideration. Voting will take place in late November, and the players will be hosted in New York City by Eastman Kodak Company November 30 to December 2 for the annual Kodak All-America Weekend.
Included in the list of final candidates are KU's quarterback Bobby Douglass and defensive end John Zook.
OFFENSE
The top 22 players,11 each for offense and defense,will be named to the final team,and will appear on a "Kodak All America Special" on ABC-TV December 6.
One hundred of the nation's best collegiate football players, led by halfback O. J. Simpson of Southern Cal and defensive end Ted Hendricks of Miami, have been named final candidates for the 1968 Kodak All-America team in the 79th annual selections of the American Football Coaches Association.
Following is the list of candidates for final selection:
Ends: Ted Kwalick, Penn State; Ron Sellers, Florida State; Jerry Levias, Southern Methodist; Jim Seymour, Notre Dame; Ron Shanklin, North Texas State; Sammy Milner, Mississippi State; Gene Huey, Wyoming; Harry Wood, Tula;
NEW YORK (UPI)—The top 20 United Press International small college football teams with won-lost-tied records and first place votes.
Guards; Chuck Rosenfelder, Tennessee; Dan Abbott, Texas; James Ray, Texas Christian; Mel Brichacek, Nebraska; Guy Dennis, Florida; Ken Mendenhall, Oklahoma; Jim Barnes, Arkansas; Jerry Guillot, Louisiana
Tackles: Mike Montler, Colorado; George Kunz, Notre Dame; Dave Foley, Ohio State; Clinton King, Purdue; Bill Cloud, Houston; Rufus Mayes, Ohio State; Greg Shelly, Virginia;
Fullbacks: Larry Smith, Florida; Warren Muir, South Carolina; Paul Gipson, Houston; Bill Enyart, Oregon State; Jackie Stewart, Texas Tech.
Halfbacks: Leroy Keyes, Purdue; O. J. Simpson, Southern California; Eugene Morris, West Texas State; Ron Johnson, Michigan; Roland Moss, Toledo; Frank Quayle, Virginia; Dicky Lyons, Kentucky; Chris Gilbert, Texas; Buddy Gore, Clemson;
State: Bill Bridges. Houston;
DEFENSE
Centers: John Didion, Oregon State; Jon Kolb, Oklahoma State; Carey Metts, North Carolina State; Gerry Murphy, Brown; Jack Rudnay, Northwestern; Billy Kidd, Georgia Tech;
Ends: Ted Hendricks, Miami;
Bob Stein, Minnesota; Mike
Ford, Alabama; Mike Snitkter,
Colorado; John Zook, Kansas;
Mark Capuano, North Carolina
Quarterbacks; Terry Hanratty, Notre Dame; Mike Phipps, Purdue; Bob Douglass, Kansas; Greg Cook, Cincinnati; Chuck Hixson, Southern Methodist; Ed Hargett, Texas A-M; Steve Ramsay, North Texas State; Mike Sherwood, West Virginia; Larry Good, Georgia Tech; Rex Kern, Ohio State; Jim Plunkett, Stanford; Mike Sherwood, West Virginia;
State; Otis Washington, Washington:
Linebackers; Jim Snow, Southern California; Bill Hobbs, Texas A-M; Dennis Onkotz, Penn State; Jim Sniadecki, Indiana; Bob Babich, Miami (O.); Dirk Worden, Ohio State; Mike Ballou, U.C.L.A.; Ken Johnson, Army; Dick Biddle, Duke; Mike Hall, Alabama; Dick Marvel, Purdue; Jim House, Wyoming; Don Parish, Stanford;
Defensive backs: Tony Kyasky, Syracuse; Mike Battle, Southern California; Jake Scott, Georgia; Steve Tannen, Florida; Jim Weatherford, Tennessee; Roger Wehlri, Missouri; Al Brenner, Michigan State; Buddy McClinton, Auburn; Bill Kishman, Colorado State; John Peacock, Houston; John Tatum, Ohio State; Gary Adams, Arkansas; Steve Barrett, Oklahoma
Tackles: Bill Stanfill, Georgia;
Mike Reid, Penn State; Joe
Greene, North Texas Sate; James
Moylan, Texas Tech; Larry Agaianian, U.C.L.A.; Rolf Krueger,
Texas A-M; Ron Carpenter,
North Carolina State;
Guards: Chuck Kyle, Purdue;
Jon Sandstrom, Oregon State;
Rex Barnes, Southern Mississippi;
John Little, Oklahoma State;
Carl Crennel, West Virginia; Dave Roller, Kentucky;
Frosh seek to ambush Cowboys
KU's freshman football team will be trying for its first victory tomorrow when it plays the Oklahoma State frrost team at 2 p.m. on the practice field west of Allen Field House.
OSU's fresh squad is undefeated, with victories over K-State, 39-7, and Arkansas, 21-13.
The Jayhawks were able to accumulate only two first downs and a total of 56-yards against MU, while the Tigers rolled up 433 yards.
Coach Dick Tomey's squad has lost to Oklahoma, 55-20, and last Saturday to Missouri, 36-7.
Jimmy Jukes, KU's top rusher against Oklahoma, suffered a dislocated shoulder after carrying only once against MU, and will not be available for the final two games.
The Jayhawk frosh wind up against K-State at Manhattan Nov. 15.
Seventh week
Seventh row SEVENTH WEEK
Teams Points
1. San Diego St. 28 7-0 332
2. N.D. St. 3 8-0 289
2. Chattanooga 7 52
3. Tampa 6-1
4. Hawaii 6-10 204
5. Eastern Ky. 3-8 119
7. Texas A&I 6-1 91
8. Troy St. 1 8-0 78
9. Hawaii 6-10 6-1
10. Weber St. 6-1 50
Second 10-11. Morgan St. 31; 12.
Western Kentucky 22; 13. Williamsette
Kentucky 15; 14. Williamsette
St. 16; 16. Florida A&M 13; 17. East
Texas St. 12; 18. Kings Point 11; 19.
Alcorn A&M and Humboldt St. 10
Kentucky, under veteran coach Adolph Rupp, has made a record 16 appearances in the NCAA basketball championship playoffs.
Senior Day is coming!! Saturday, Nov.9
Honor Thy Senior
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Thursday, November 7, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
WWW.WWW.WWW.
A note from the sports editor: Rumors began to circulate early last week concerning a minority of KU students. This minority, it seems, plans to pitch oranges at the Oklahoma football team this Saturday in retaliation for the orange bombardment our team received in Norman, Okla., last year.
Last year, after it was apparent that the Sooners were going to be the Big Eight representative in the Orange Bowl, Oklahoma fans felt it appropriate to heave oranges onto the field. Perhaps there is a similar motivation behind this year's orange-tossing minority at KU. KU is in a good position for the Orange Bowl bid, but that doesn't mean we have it all wrapped up! It certainly does not mean that fans are allowed to throw things at the opposing team.
Why not let the football team beat OU without the help of falling oranges or flying debris?
To my Fellow Students:
The game Saturday with The University of Oklahoma is the most critical game of the year for our team. I know it is also equally important for all of you. We are extremely proud of the manner in which you have cheered and encouraged us.
Last year in Norman we were pelted with oranges. We want the chance to settle the game on the field in a fair manner. Not only could we be penalized if our fans throw oranges but the teams could be asked to leave the field. We don't want to dim the terrific enthusiasm of our student body, but only ask that we don't resort to tactics that detract from the game on the field.
Thank you for being with us.
You are the best!
John Zook
Captain—Football Team
University of Kansas
TO BE A FAN IS GOOD.
TO BE A JAYHAWK IS GREAT
GREAT
TO BE A GENTLEMAN IS THE GREATEST
I hope we can say all the above is true after the game Saturday. Let's don't spoil a wonderful season for you and for us by throwing anything at the Oklahoma team. I would really appreciate it as I know our team would.
Let's all get together this weekend and make this the best weekend in KU history.
Pepper Rodgers
Dawson out of hospital
A spokesman for the AFL football club said Dawson's condition was improved but that he remained a doubtful starter against Cincinnati this week-end.
KU's cross country team will attempt to collect its sixth straight win, and with it the Big Eight cross country crown at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Lawrence Country Club.
Harriers after Big Eight title
By LUIS F. SARTOS Kansan Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Len Dawson, who suffered a severe bruise to a thigh in Sunday's game against Oakland, was released from a hospital yesterday.
Hosts for the Big Eight Championship, the Jayhawk harriers have posted victories at the Oklahoma State Jamboree, the Southern Illinois meet, the KU Invitational, the KU-OSU dual and the State Federation meet.
Last year KU took third place in the Big Eight championship, and the best Jayhawk runner was Glenn Cunningham, Leon junior, with third place.
Timmons said strong contenders for the individual title would be: Dennis McGuire of Iowa
KU track coach Bob Timmons believes the team title will be decided among Colorado, Kansas, K-State, Missouri and Nebraska.
All American Craig Runyan of Colorado, and last year's individual winner, will be on hand to defend his title. The defending team champion is Missouri, which last year edged Colorado by seven points.
Ashe to Davis cup
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI)—Arthur Ashe, winner of the first annual U.S. Open tennis tournament last August, and Clark Graebner were named Wednesday to represent the United States in singles matches against India in the Davis Cup interzone finals this weekend.
Donald Dell, the non-playing team captain, announced the selection of Ashe and Graebner and also revealed that Stan Smith and Bob Lutz will represent the U.S. in Sunday's doubles match.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
TGIF
- Red Dog
* Friday, 3:30 - 5:30
Aspiring Lawyers
Assistant Professor of Law Philip Mause representing the University of Iowa Law School will conduct interviews
Tuesday, Nov. 12 from 2:30-5:00 p.m in 206 Strong Hall.
also
Professor of Law Harvey Davis representing the Southern Methodist University Law School will conduct interviews Tuesday, Nov. 12 from 10:00-12 noon in 206 Strong Hall.
for appointments contact Mrs. Gladys Padget 206 Strong Hall
State; Craig Runyan and Rick Trujillo of CU; Jerome Howe and Bob Baratti of K-State; Glenn Agde, Kirk Hogan and Carl Gans of MU; Pete Branga and Greg Calberg of NU, Bill Blenett of OU; and Pete Kaal and Tom Laubert of OSU.
In the conference meet each team enters seven runners, and only the first five count in the scoring.
against each other in various meets; NU over K-State, 24-35; K-State over OU, 26-74; MU over K-State, 36-35; MU over ISU, 23-36; NU over MU, 21-34; CU over NU, 39-47; OU tied OSU, 28-28; KU over OSU and K-State, 19-41, 20-54.
Timmons did not pinpoint any KU runner for the individual title because "they have been running so close." All seven KU runners in last Saturday's Federation meet placed in the top 11.
Two freshmen, Rich Elliot, Oak Park, Ill., and Doug Smith, Sioux City, Iowa, have been the Jayhawks' most consistent leaders. Smith won the KU Invitational and the KU-OSU dual, and took second in the State Federation meet. Elliot placed second in the OSU Jamboree and the SIU meet.
In the KU invitational the Hawk harriers took all first six places.
So far this season Big Eight teams have fared as follows
Times in cross country are not a good measure of performances and can be misleading for comparisons.
"Times are difficult to evaluate from one course to another—weather, mud, hills, differences in length are important influences." Timmons explained.
In addition to Elliot and Smith, the KU entry includes: Thorn Bigley, San Diego, Calif. sophomore; Jay Mason, Hobbs, N.M., sophomore; Mike Solomon, Westminster, Calif., sophomore; Roger Kathol, Wichita junior; and Paul Mattingly, South Haven junior.
Remaining in the Jayhawks' cross country schedule are the Central Collegiate Championships at Chicago, Nov. 16, and the National Collegiate Championships at Van Courtland Park, N.Y., Nov. 25.
A man is holding a newspaper while another person sits on the ground.
I'll just use a simple sketch with three characters. I will keep the color scheme consistent, but they are drawn in a very stylized way.
One character is standing and holding a newspaper.
The other character is sitting on the ground.
The third character is also sitting on the ground.
1. Making out your laundry list?
Writing a poem
A man pointing at a wall while a woman sits on the floor.
2. You?
Listen. "How do I love thee, Myra, let me count the ways..."
The man in the middle is standing on a high step, holding a pencil and pointing at the man in the front. The man in the front is sitting on the ground with his legs folded under him. Both men are wearing striped shirts.
A man on a stairway reading a book to a seated woman.
That’s Browning.
What about: “A jug of wine, a loaf of bread, And thou, Myrna, beside me...”
A man is sitting on the floor and talking to a tall man standing over him.
4. That's Omar Khayyam
Then how am I goin to show Myra how much I care?
S. K.
5. Why don't you see if you can land one of those great jobs Equitable is offering. The work is fascinating, the pay good, and the opportunities unlimited. All of which means you'll be able to take care of a wife, to say nothing of kids, extremely well.
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For details about careers at Equitable, see your Placement Officer,
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
KU holds 1-1 record in past bowl games
By JACK PAULEY Kansan Sports Writer
There is a subdued optimism in Kansas these days as the Kansas Jayhawks, riding high on a 7-0 record, roll on towards a possible national bowl bid.
The Jayhawks have appeared in only two post-season games in Kansas football history, winning one and losing one.
In 1948 a Jayhawk team coached by George Sauer met Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl in Miami. The outcome was Tech 20, KU 14, in a game played before a record 50,578 fans which was sold out in April, 1947.
Jack Mitchell coached Kansas in 1961 when they were invited to play in the Bluebonnet Bowl. The Jayhawks, favored to win the Big Eight that year, failed to do so, but went on to defeat Rice solidly by a score of 33-7.
Quarterback John Hadl, a big play specialist throughout his career, provided the gamebreaker before 52,000 fans with an ad-libed 41-yard run out of punt formation just before halftime.
Hadl, who is now a professional with the San Diego Chargers, played beside another proto-be in that game, Curtis McClinton, now with the Kansas City Chiefs.
In the 1948 Orange Bowl classic, the Jayhawks, who earned the label of the "team with the magic finish" for its last ditch
seasons, had gone into the final period trailing, 7-20. But Red Hogan, the KU quarterback, pulled Kansas within range with a 12-yard pass to Ray Evans. Don Fambrough toed his second extra point.
Soon after, center Dick Monroe recovered a Georgia Tech fumble at the Engineer 42. Hogan passed to Otto Schnellbacker for 26 yards and completed another to the 10-yard line.
Evans then boomed to the one, which set tife stage for the most famous fumble in Orange Bowl history.
Facing 2nd and goal at the Tech one with 2:00 remaining, another Jayhawk quarterback, Lynn McNutt, tried a sneak. But the ball slid down his legs to the ground. He fell on it, but it was pried away by a Tech lineman. The Engineers ran out the clock in three sneaks.
This year, it appears that Kansas is favoring the Orange Bowl classic again as the post season game to play. They have already been unofficially asked for the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans.
A name familiar to Jayhawk boosters this season played on the Orange Bowl team. Don Ettinger, father of Jim Ettinger, KU reserve quarterback, played tackle on that team.
But the Orange Bowl is the big one outside of California's Rose Bowl, and if everything goes right, KU will be in Miami Jan. 1 for the Orange Bowl game.
Lion's Cerne going strong
Fullback Mike Cerne of Lawrence high school has gained 637 yards in seven games, showing why his coach, Al Woolard, says he is one of the best high school backs in the country.
Cerne, a 185-pounder, has carried the ball 97 times for a 6.4 average. In his last two games, against Wyandotte and Shawnee Mission North, he picked up 145 yards and 188 yards respectively.
He scored three touchdowns against Wyandotte last week, on a run of 6 yards, an 82-yard kick-off return and a 53-yard punt return. He returned three kickoffs and two punts for a total of 230 yards. He also threw a successful 22-yard pass.
"Cerne looked just great tonight." Woolard said after the game. "He had a real, real good night."
Against Shawnee Mission North, he carried 15 times for 188 yards and two touchdowns.
He also completed a pass for 24 yards.
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While Lawrence has been outscoring opponents 269 to 47, Cerne has been helping. He has 11 touchdowns in seven games, which gives him 66 points—19 more than Lawrence's opponents have scored against them.
Ski Buffs do it!
Lawrence will put its 6-0-1 record on the line tomorrow night against Topeka High School at Topeka. The Lions will close their season at home Nov. 22 against Shawnee Mission South in Haskell Stadium.
16 teams advance to I-M semifinals
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Quarterfinal games are now over in KU's football intramural program. Sixteen teams are still in contention for their respective league championships.
In games yesterday in the Independent "B" league, the College Kids whipped the Eight Pack 30-6, the Graduates shutout MBA 32-o, Oliver Hall beat the Retards 19-6, and Law B nipped Elsworth No. 1 6-2.
45 4
KU's defensive end, 6-8, 250 pound Vernon Vanoy is attempting to block a punt in last Saturday's Colorado game which KU won 27-14. KU's head football coach Pepper Rogers said that it was one of Vanoy's better games. Colorado coach Eddie Crowder said, "When my punter, Dick Robert (36) saw Vanoy he just went to pieces . . . and I don't blame him a bit!"
Semifinal games will be played today at 4 p.m. on the intramural fields. League championships are scheduled for tomorrow at 4 p.m. Today's schedule is below.
In Fraternity "B" league,
Sigma Chi No. 1 lost to Kappa
Sigma 12-7, Theta Chi beat Tau
Kappa Epsilon 6-0, Beta Theta
Pi No. 1 blanked Delta Upsilon
24-0 and Pi Kappa Alpha won
over Alpha Kappa Lambda 6-0.
Independent "A" League
Manor, Inc. vs. Jolliffe, Field 1
Grace Pearson vs. Law, Field 2
Fraternity "B" League
DU vs. Piket, Field 7
TKE vs. Phi Gam, Field 9
Independent "B" League
Law B vs. College Kick, Field 4
Graduates vs. Oliver Hall, Field 5
Beta #1 vs. Kappa Sigma, Field 3
Theta Chi vs. Piket, Field 6
---
OU concentrates on punt coverage
NORMAN, Okla. (UPI)—Oklahoma practiced long and hard yesterday for its Big Eight game at Kansas Saturday and concentrated on kickoff and punt coverage, fearing the speed of Jayhawk runback ace Donnie Shanklin.
Sooner coach Chuck Fairbanks said his squad also devoted time to pass defense. "We had a real good practice," he said. "We did a lot of detail work but we've still got a long way to go to polish our attack."
Wingback Eddie Hinton might play Saturday without the soft cast he has worn on his left hand since Sept. 28 when he broke a small bone in the North Carolina State game. The injury will be X-rayed tomorrow.
Sock it to 'em Hawks
Seniors - Don't Forget Senior Party No. 2 Friday Night!
FREE BEER—last party we emptied 41 kegs (NEW RECORD)
FREE to members of the Class of '69 with class card. Underclassmen and non-senior dates, $1.50
TOMORROW NIGHT
8 p.m.
National Guard Armory
H
HEY!!
HEY!!
'Ya like neat clothes? 'Ya like cool girls?
then you'll want to see the
Ski Fashion Show
presented by
sua Ski Club
7:30 Tuesday—Nov. 12
Kansas Room in the Union
sponsored by
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Overland Park, Kansas Village Set—Lawrence
© BECW, INC.
Thursday, November 7, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Reflections on a basketball practice
By DICK DEAN
Kansan Sports Writer
Today's basketball practice is just beginning. It started almost a month ago, even before the football team had played half of their games.
As you walk into Allen Field House you remember last year and visualize the 17,500 victory hungry fans awaiting the arrival of their Jayhawks. Despite the musty smell of the field house, deserted by fans six months ago for better things outdoors, you still sense the aroma of the pop corn and feel the electric atmosphere that accompanies a college basketball game.
You stroll into the arena and see the 17,500 vacated seats and think how strange it is that such a place could be so exciting one time and cold another.
Then you hear bouncing basketball and turn to where the sound is coming from. A huge, netted fixture greets your eyes. It is designed to keep stray balls on the court, but also forces you to a higher vantage point if you want to see anything.
Finally in the balcony and looking out over the rail, you see 15 basketball players shooting their day's warm up shots. All of them are hopeful of earning starting berths for KU's first game.
mind. A. "good" day in practice or a hot streak in a scrimmage may decide whether a player will be a starter or a benchwarmer, whether he will be filled with confidence or decked with discouragement, whether he will make the pros at $25,000 a year or be a P.E. instructor at $5000 ... all depending upon whether he gets a "break."
A contrast pops into your
While watching the team warm up your attention is drawn to sharp shooting Phil Harmon, a 6-4 sandy-haired senior letterman from Tulsa, who methodically swishes the ball through the hoop 15 or 16 times in a row from 30 feet out.
Suddenly the scene looks as if someone flipped a switch. All chatter and foolishness halts. You scan the floor for the reason. Head coach Ted Owens has just walked onto the court. He is a coach the players like. All is serious now. The decisions concerning who gets to play, who gets recognition, and who gets to the pros are not made the night before the game, but are being made from the first day of practice. Everyone knows this; everyone is serious.
The squad soon starts a lay up drill designed to warm up the muscles and get the players ready to plunge into the day's practice. This drill is highlighted by the popular, but now illegal "dunk" shot which was always a
crowd pleaser. When you notice how this shot "psychs" up the players you can't help but wonder if the coaches, as well as the players wouldn't like to see the "dunk" legalized once again.
Owens goes to the green chalkboard to explain a new defense that he plans to install and reviews one that proved to be successful in past seasons. He talks about the zone defense and how it is designed to keep the opponents from getting the short shot, to trap the ball in the corners and to make enemy passes more susceptible to interception. After it is clear how the defense works, it's off the drawing board and onto the court.
You glance up at the clock high on the wall. It has been an hour now with no sign of letup. The players are wiping sweat from their faces with their already soaked blue and red jerseys. The horn blows. Offensive drills next.
It begins to click, passes are intercepted, the ball is wrestled away from the corner man, the players gain confidence in the new system, everyone is enthused, the student manager is clapping... it works.
A shot is taken ... missed. The ball is rebounded high above the basket and whipped out to one of the smaller (6-3) guards who moves it down the court
hoping to get a quick two points,
Owens institutes a play. His assistants shoot instructions at whoever they happen to be watching at the time. The ball is passed back and forth, the players are waiting for a good shot, trying not to be over anxious, trying not to make any mistakes, trying to make the grade. 30 minutes pass . . . then an hour. How can the players keep going like they do?
If you are impressed with only one thing it would have to be with the enthusiasm that the players, coaches, and even student managers put out. It is not an opening game, but only a practice session with that first game many weeks away. Each time a play succeeds or a good individual effort is put forth it is applauded by all. If there is a failure or a mistake then there is always the next time.
Ten minutes later the horn sounds for the last time. All 15, drenched with sweat, their mouths' dry, hands resting on their hips, wait for their turn at the water fountain and that equally anticipated quarter of an hour in the shower.
Finally the manager blows the horn . . . the signal of the end of that drill and the beginning of the dreaded wind sprints.
Basketball practice is over for today.
Laker's Baylor to the rescue in an overtime
It was Elgin Baylor to the rescue for the Los Angeles Lakers again.
The Lakers have perhaps the most potent trio of scors ever assembled on one team in Baylor, Wilt Chamberlain and Jerry West and on the strength of their "point power" are expected to win the Western Division title in the National Basketball Association this season.
Baylor, however, is proving to be the big man when the Lakers are in the most trouble.
The 6-foot, 5-inch star, who is averaging 31.1 points a game this season, hit for 31, including a game-tying shot with one second remaining in regulation time and four points in overtime Tuesday night when the Lakers downed the Chicago Bulls, 112-109.
The victory was the Lakers' sixth in 10 games and the loss the Bulls' seventh in 11 games. Jerry Sloan led the Bulls with 25 points.
Surprising San Diego managed to hold on to its lead in the Western Division by edging the New York Knicks, 113-109.
Don Kojis led the winners with 28 points while Cazzie Russell had 26 for the Knicks.
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12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Scholarship hall system based on cooperation
Combining recognition for outstanding achievement and a need for financial aid, the recipient of a scholarship hall award is a participant in a unique form of residence hall living.
Scholarship hall awards, which originated at the University of Kansas in 1926 are scholarships in the form of a special housing arrangement. Presently 250 KU students live in nine scholarship halls.
Four women's halls and five men's halls provide an opportunity for cooperative living on a unique general theme. Each hall is characterized by its method of financial arrangement, household operations and food preparation.
Financial responsibilities include a maintenance and administrative fee which is paid in the summer and a monthly house bill.
The monthly bill, which is based on the operating expenses of each hall, varies with each hall but ranges between $40 and $50. This financial arrangement
makes possible a yearly savings of $300 to $350 as compared to other University housing.
The operation of the halls depends on the individual residents, but provides for the sharing of the various jobs necessary for the maintenance and operation of the living groups.
Work duties including cooking, cleaning and managing linens are accomplished with a minimum of supervision, illustrating the necessary cooperative and responsible atmospheres of the scholarship hall system.
The physical arrangements in the scholarship halls vary somewhat.
Pearson and Stephenson men's halls have two-man rooms with bunk beds, desks, closet space and drawer space. Douthart and Sellards women's halls and Grace Pearson men's hall have three or four people in Princeton-style rooms consisting of central study areas with adjoining sleeping areas.
Battenfeld and Jolliffe men's
halls and Watkins and Miller
Positions open for opera company
Last night more than 60 persons were present at an introductory meeting in the Kansas Union Forum Room of the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company.
John Bush Jones, acting assistant professor of English, explained what the company will do and the various staff and cast positions open.
The audience was composed of persons from all phases of University life—undergraduates, professors, husbands and wives of University people. Many had previously performed in Gilbert and Sullivan companies. Lee Miller, professor in occupational therapy, has even performed in the first modern production of Gilbert and Sullivan's "The Mikado" in Japan. It was produced by the Special Servies after World War II.
Jones stressed, however, that no selections have been made for any positions or part and that there are many opportunities for positions open "even if you don't know a thing about Gilbert and Sullivan."
Jones explained that the Mount Oread company will not be performing "just plays on paper." He believes that Gilbert, who injected much satire into
the comic operas, would approve of a move away from the traditions of a hundred years ago.
The D'Olyly Carte Opera Company, the official Gilbert and Sullivan players in London, which perform the operas as they were written by the pair "have become embalmed where we'll be alive and fresh," Jones said.
"Gilbert and Sullivan have traditional gags. They are highly stylized as opposed to the naturalistic drama."
Jones founded the Gilbert and Sullivan Guild at Northwestern University last year. There, perhaps a more stark departure from the traditional treatment of one of the operas was performed.
"Of course, there will be a certain amount of traditionalism," said Jones' wife, Sandy, a graduate student in art history, "but it must be consistent with what Gilbert wanted only with fresh new ideas."
Reminiscent of the artist Beardsley, a comic opera was staged and costumed in black and white.
March 5-9 the company will perform "The Mikado" in Strong Auditorium. Application forms for cast may still be picked up at the SUA office.
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hall award is required to maintain a 1.50 yearly grade average to be eligible to renew the award.
have two or three-person rooms with desks, chests and closets. Sleeping facilities are provided for in sleepening porches or dorms.
Applications are now being accepted for the spring semester and may be obtained in the Office of Student Financial Aids and Awards.
Each hall has an executive board consisting of elected officers, but all major decisions are made by the entire hall at biweekly house meetings. Each hall also has an advisory or judiciary council which functions in disciplinary capacities.
The coordinating structure among all of the halls is the All Scholarship Hall Council (ASHC).
The recipient of a scholarship
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Thursday, November 7, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Political observers at KU view the election results
Political observers on the Hill claimed they were "not surprised" by Tuesday's elections. If they agreed on nothing else, they agreed in saying the voting was "as expected."
Burt English, assistant professor of political science, said the presidential election was "a little closer" than he thought it would be.
English, chairman of the Douglas County Young Republicans, said he expected Rick Harman, rather than Gov. Robert Docking, to win the governorship by a small margin.
"I had not expected the it. governor's race to be so close," he said. "John Conard should win when the absentee ballots are counted today, though." James DeCoursey, the Democratic candidate currently holds a slight lead.
English also said he thought George Wallace's third party movement has failed.
He said he was "delighted" to see the "wheel tax" proposal fail. "I hope the city commission will take note of the voters second rejection of this tax and not propose it again," he said.
Marvin Keith, Overland Park sophomore and vice chairman of the Collegiate Young Republicans, said Gov. Docking's re-election was a "disaster" for the state.
"It will be interesting to see if he falls into the 'tax trap' he himself set for his Republican opponent," he said.
Nixon, he said, was never in trouble, since Wallace would have preferred him to Humphrey and would have.thrown his support to him in the Electoral College. The closeness of the races was the only surprise to him, he said.
A Collegiate Young Democrat (CYD) spokesman said she was "thrilled" by Docking's victory.
P-to-P plans K.C. trip
The KU People-to-People group will leave at 12:30 p.m. November 19 for a visit to the Federal Reserve Bank and the Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City.
Anyone wishing to attend should sign up in the People-to-People office in the Kansas Union basement. The first 33 to sign will be provided free bus space.
"It's too bad, though, that Kansas can't work under a Democratic team," she said, referring to the GOP victory in the state legislature.
"Kansas has made great strides under Docking," she said, "but he needs legislative support."
She was disappointed, but not surprised, she said, with Humphrey's loss. "no one will ever convince me there is a 'new Nixon.'" she said.
Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student and a member of People's Voice, said he expected a Nixon victory, but was not concerned, since he saw no difference between the two. The New Left, he said, should continue its activities.
Wallace's 15 per cent vote was significant, he said, because, except for the racial angle, Wallace talks about the same things radicals of the left do. "We also are trying to get to the disillusioned in this country." he said.
"The Wallace vote expressed the confusion of the country," he said.
Humphrey may speak at KU before Dec. 20
It is possible that Vice-President Hubert Humphrey, the defeated Democratic nominee for president will speak at KU sometime between now and the beginning of Christmas vacation, Mike Dickeson, chairman for the Young Citizens for Humphrey, said last night.
The Athechison junior said Tom Corcoran, the Democratic National Committeeman from Kansas, told him that Humphrey had planned to speak at Kansas State University after Nov. 5 regardless of the outcome of the election. Democrats in this area might ask the Vice-President to deliver a speech at KU,
He said, however, that he did not know the date that Humphrey would come to K-State. He conjectured that the Democratic presidential nominee would not make a public appearance until the Electoral College has met on Dec. 16.
If this prediction is accurate, Humphrey might speak at both K-State and KU any day between Dec. 16 and Dec. 20, which is the Friday before Christmas vacation.
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—At the end, Hubert Horatio Humphrey was worried that someone might feel sorry for him.
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"I don't want any sympathy from any of you," he told his family and a few close friends in his hotel suite.
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His blue eyes glistened and a smile broke from behind the outthrust chin that has been an American political fixture for two decades.
It was over.
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The obstacles were too numerous--too many labor defections to Wallace, too little support from the Negro community, too many angry Democrats who stayed home in protest, too little time. Ohio, California and Illinois had drifted to Nixon.
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Humphrey had gone off to bed in the wee hours of the morning with hopes still flickering faintly but awoke after a fitful rest at midmorning and got the news that he had lost one of the closest elections in history.
Humphrey concedes
At 11:30 a.m., he rode the 14 floors down to the Hall of States in the Leamington Hotel to choke out the concession speech in which he offered his full support to Republican Richard M. Nixon and promised to continue service to the public and the party.
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Plans Some Fun
It was the bitterest of political experiences for this most human of men—his nomination by a Democratic party in agony and anger, two months of trying to outrun the defeat burning his heels at every step, a surging revival of hopes in the campaign's final days and the long, frustrating night of his defeat.
He stepped back, reached for his wife, Muriel, and kissed her. The crowd of several hundred was on its feet applauding. Women were in tears. He saw the reflection of his own ordeal and decided to step back in front of the microphone for a post script which turned out to be longer than his concession speech.
"Now, go have some fun," he implored them. "It has been a lot of hard work. I don't want
anybody to have any extra
svmpathy."
For himself, he said he felt a "great sense of both release and relief," and he was going back to his lakeside retreat in nearby Waverly to mow the lawn.
Humphrey is 57. At the outset of his campaign, he told newsmen that if he lost, he probably would be too old to try for the presidency again in 1972 and probably would return to college teaching.
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14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Spencer to contain rare book collections
The new Spencer Research Library, scheduled to be dedicated tomorrow, will contain more than 100,000 rare books and manuscripts covering almost every field of knowledge known to man.
Literature and the humanities are represented by collections of the Spanish writer, Cervantes; the Irish writers W. B. Yeats and James Joyce; the German poet, R. M. Rilke, and the 19th century American poet, Walt Whitman.
In the social sciences, the library has extensive holdings which concern economic history, radical politics, political theory and the female suffrage movement in Europe and America.
Other valuable manuscripts include travelers' diaries, ships' logs, accounts of early archaeological expeditions, and the records of early explorers in North America, Asia and Africa. Numbered maps and atlases, dating from the settlement of America, are also included.
Also, many new volumes of canon and civil law are contained in the Summerfield Renaissance collection.
Another part of the special collection division in Spencer Library is the Kansas Collection. Containing more then 25,000
Spencer's rare books placed in glass gallery
The Kenneth Spencer Research Library, to be dedicated tomorrow will feature a rare book collection housed in a glass-walled gallery, and an observation area with a view of the north part of the campus and the Kaw Valley.
The main gallery in the library contains the rare book collection, which is enclosed in glass. Visitors can walk all the way around the gallery and observe the books through he glass.
A sophisticated environmental system has been installed in the library for the preservation of the rare books. Temperature and humidity can be controlled very accurately,
The main level of the new library will be connected to the south end of the Strong Hall rotunda. This will provide a direct access from Jayhawk Blvd.
volumes and 250,000 manuscripts,the collection is a treasure lode of information on the social,political and economic history of Kansas.The largest single number of documents in the Kansas collection deal with the state's economic development.
New library to be dedicated Friday
The Kenneth Spencer Research Library will be dedicated at 2 p.m. tomorrow with more than 260 invited guests from around the country expected to attend.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will preside at the ceremony. Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer, widow of the Kansas City industrialist for whom the library is named, will make the official presentation of the library, and Ned Cushing of Downs, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents, will accept the building for the University.
LORD C. P. Snow, British scientist and novelist, will make a few remarks, and Dr. Earle B. Jewell of Forsyth, Mo., will reminisce about Mr. Spencer and give a benediction.
At 3:45 p.m. in Hock Auditorium, Snow will give the dedicatory lecture entitled "Kinds of Excellence: Education of the Gifted."
The new Kenneth Spencer Library, to be dedicated tomorrow, is the latest addition to more than a century of library expansion at KU.
KU's first "library" opened more than a century ago, when a section of North College Hall was set aside in 1866 for the storage of books. Most of the books in the original library were donated or loaned to the college.
KU's library system grows
A major milestone in the growth of KU's library system came in 1891, when the University's first library building, Spooner Hall, was completed. The building costing more than $100,000, was spacious enough to hold 100,000 volumes.
Six years later, the library was moved to the newly built University Hall, later known as Fraser Hall, where space was provided in the south end of the building. By 1887, the library had a collection of more than 8,000 volumes.
By contrast, the KU library owned fewer than 20,000 volumes in 1894, when it was opened.
Despite this generous allowance for future growth, the number of books soon overtook the available shelf space. By 1915, the need for more room again became urgent.
Accordingly, the Kansas legislature approved funds for a new library. The new building, named Watson Library, was completed in 1923. Spooner Hall, the old library, became a Museum of Art.
Since 1923, two major additions have been made to Watson
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library. In 1949, two wings were added and in 1964, another addition which increased student study space was completed.
Meanwhile the library's holdings have more than doubled in the last 15 years. From 600,000 volumes in 1952, the library has expanded to more then 1,300,000 volumes this year. This amount is increasing at a rate of 50,000 volumes a year.
Over the years, the University
nas added branch libraries to serve students in special areas. At the present time, seven branch libraries are in operation. They are the Entomology library, 344 Snow; the Earth Science library, 318 Lindley; the Engineering and Architecture library, 119 Marvin; the Law library, 209 Green; the Mathematics library, 209 Strong; the Music library, 448 Murphy and the Science library, 605 Malott.
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Charlton Hinman, KU English professor, (right) presents Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe with an autographed copy for the new Kenneth Spencer Research Library of his book, "The Norton Facsimile of the First Folio of Shakespeare," published this month.
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Thursday, November 7, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
Colorful postage stamps popular for personal mail
By JOHN GILLIE Kansan Staff Writer
The little old lady from Pasadena is adamant about her postage stamps and the United States Post Office has knuckled under to her demands.
Because of her complaints the ordinary brown and white FDR 6-cent stamp is becoming extinct on personal letters.
"We get lots of calls about that stamp," said Eileen Davis, receptionist at the Lawrence Post Office. "I want anything but those ugly old things,' they say." Mrs. Davis said.
"We still sell more of the FDR than the flag but most of the FDR stamps go to businesses or the University," Wetzel said. "They're interested in postage and the little old lady in Pasadena is interested in looks."
The Lawrence Post Office now sells nearly as many of the red-white-and-blue American flag 6-cent stamps as the FDR stamp, said Assistant Postmaster Don Wetzel. The stamps must be specially ordered.
"When the ladies see that pretty little flag, they've got to have it." Mrs. Davis said. "Many people admire and respect that man (FDR), but his stamp is so colorless."
In addition to the flag stamp, the Post Office receives and sells a steady stream of 6-cent commemorative stamps, the largest issue being the Christmas commemorative.
"We got a lot of gripes about the stamp last year from people who didn't like the irregular shape." Wetzel said.
Wetzel is troubled again this year because the half million Christmas stamps stored in the Post Office are rectangular shaped, as was last year's issue.
Mrs. Davis explained that many patrons complained about the color of last year's stamp because the color clashed with their Christmas cards. The stamp was five cents and people who used them on letters after the first of the year had to add a square 1-cent stamp to meet postage requirements.
"Mail is an extremely personal thing," Wetzel said. "If Grandma's or Aunt Sadie's mail goes
astray, she calls and demands to know why she didn't get it today.
"It's not like buying a suit when you are willing to wait a few days for alterations," Wetzel said. "People want their mail now."
"We handle 140,000 pieces of mail every day and 99 and 99/100 per cent of it gets delivered on time," said the assistant postmaster.
"But, say a bundle of Social Security checks for Lawrence is dropped in a Lawrence, Mass., sack. We can expect to hear from nearly everyone who didn't receive their check on the third of the month as usual."
Postal clerks are human too. Each clerk must memorize the 1,100 separate routings in Kansas before he is given the job, Wetzel explained.
"People don't seem to realize this. We get a lot of inquiries, especially from older people, asking why their mail is delivered so late," Wetzel said.
"The postman usually begins his route at 9 a.m. and works eight hours and there is no way that he can pack all of those hours into into the time before noon."
A complete address is a necessity especially in a college town with its transient population, the assistant postmaster said.
"We get letters addressed just to Sam Smith, 1012 Emery Road," Wetzel said. "1012 Emery is an apartment complex with several buildings and hundreds of apartments and the carrier can't possibly memorize the apartment with such a changing population."
Black cast to perform
An all black cast will present the Nigerian play "Song of the Goat" at the Experimental Theater Nov. 14 through 23.
The play was written by the Nigerian J. P. Clark and will be directed by Joel Adedeji, acting assistant professor of drama.
Adeedji is the assistant director of the School of Drama at Ibadan University in Nigeria. He has recruited the cast from black students outside the theater department.
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The suit alleged the 46,000 member Milk Producers, Inc., based in Wichita, Kan., the 2,000-member Milk Producers Inc., headquartered in San Antonio, Tex., and Harold Nelson of San Antonio, general manager of both groups, raised prices in areas where there was no competition and lowered prices in competitive areas.
The suit was filed by Marketing Assistance Plan, Inc., (MAP), a Houston based group of 70 dairymen covering a 300-mile radius, and David J. Simons Sr. and David J. Simons Jr. of Waco.
Wallace declined to say whether he preferred Nixon over Humphrey. But he said he now hopes Nixon "makes the greatest President and the most successful President we have ever had." He said he would have wished Humphrey the same.
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Wallace wired his congratulations to Nixon.
Wallace, responding to a question, said he had no plans to run for governor or U.S. Senator in 1970. His main plan, he said, was simply to resume a law practice in Alabama.
to the supreme court to the matter of law and order," he said. "So the impact of our movement turned the other two parties in a different direction."
Wallace said his campaign influenced the positions of both Nixon and Democrat Hubert Humphrey.
The suit asked $3 million damages for MAP and $54,000 damages for Simons Sr., who alleged he was forced out of business by the two powerful associations when he refused to join.
"For a new movement to originate in our part of the country and wind up with 10 million votes, we consider it successful." he said.
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"Mr. Nixon talked about everything from school children
He stressed that he was pleased with his 1968 campaign.
"That's a long way off," Wallace said. "Events that transpire between now and 1972 will determine that."
Wallace wires wish for Nixon's success
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) George C. Wallace wished President-elect Richard M. Nixon "every success" yesterday and expressed the view that his third-party campaign had forced the Republican to adopt some of his conservative positions.
The former Alabama Governor, who will be 53 in 1972, didn't rule out the possibility of making another race for the White House in four years.
- Friday, 3:30 - 5:30
- SOPHOMORE CLASS
TGIF
- Red Dog
Post-Louise Arieal
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16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 196P
Two 'camps' disturb psychiatrist
By DELOS SMITH
BY DELOSMITH NEW YORK-(UPI)-When mental illness appeared in the family of Dr. John E. Kysar—who not only is a psychiatrist but a professor of psychiatry—the "two camps" of his profession became a personal, painful and harmful reality.
He had known there were two, of course. Even laymen, particularly laymen with mental illnesses in their families, know it. But they had represented mere theoretical disagreements to Kysar until professional brethren blamed him and his wife for their son's illness.
These brethren belonged to the "camp" which traces mental ills of children (and of adults) to faulty child rearing practices. Opposing them in the Kysars' parental ordeal were brethren from the other "camp" which holds mental illnesses can be organic and hence inborn and unavoidable.
Kysar's complaint against parents-blaming psychiatrists probably was the first made by a psychiatrist both as the father of a mentally ill child and as a psychiatrist. He made it in a professional forum, the Journal of the American Psychiatric Association, under the title, "The Two Camps in Child Psychiatry."
But such complaints have become rather rife in psychiatry and in lay circles concerned with mental illness, and they're by no means limited to child psychiatry.
All this is the background of the case Kysar made in the psychiatric forum. He is associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Illinois, Chicago. His son, Tom, is mentally retarded. When the boy was four a medical team, including another psychiatrist, found he had brain damage and thus retardation was organically based.
Two years later a child psychiatrist acting for the local school district found that he had childhood schizophrenia by which he meant the illness was "environmentally induced and the causes were to be found in the family."
As a psychiatrist, Kysar disagreed. To him a "label" seemed unimportant since the child psychiatrist and his associates were putting Tom into a special class for disturbed children. But Mrs. Kysar reacted differently. "My wife was propelled by her
THE NEW FOLK THE NEW FOLK THE NEW FOLK THE NEW FOLK
November 14 RED DOG
own irrational,unjustified guilt to search out 'the sickness' in herself," he said.
The Puzzled Parent
Kysar called in a prominent neurologist who confirmed the boy's brain damage. Kysar thought the child psychiatrist would then reconsider. But "instead I was regarded as 'defensive' and neurotically competing."
Months passed. Tom's condition remains unchanged, despite the "therapeutic classroom" and Mrs. Kysar's efforts—guided by the psychiatrist's social worker —to apply psychoanalytic techniques within the family.
"Once again one might suppose that the child psychiatrist would reevaluate the initial premises," Kysar continued. But he did not and the Kysars were urged to send Tom off to a residential school for two to five years because "the home is where he got sick, so he should be removed from there."
The psychiatrists of three such schools examined Tom. All agreed his illness was family-induced and he was NOT retarded. One even said, "Tom is potentially a very bright boy." However, each found reasons for not accepting him. To Kysar this meant they harbored doubts
even though they "did not hesitate to perpetuate the myth."
"Finally my wife became disenchanted," he said. "Gradually she became able to assess more skeptically the insinuations that Tom's disorder was family induced. A process very painful to her ensured of recognizing the extent of the brain damage and accepting the limited possibilities for Tom's improvement without giving up all hope."
Tom now is eight and a half.
living at home and attending a special school which Kysar had to organize. Most of his early hyperactivity and morbid withdrawal into self have disappeared. "What remains are clear signs of retardation but nonverbal relatedness and willingness to try to learn within his capacity are evident," Kysar said.
Kysar said the dogmatic narrowness of the parents-blaming "camp" of psychiatry displayed
insufficient professional training, and its capacity for harm is being magnified by the availability of federal and states funds for the "education of all types of handicapped children."
Of "crucial importance," he stressed, is the right kind of training for child psychiatrists and other mental health personnel.
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Why, then, must you decide now to plight your trust to a company for life? Don't. Join a company first. If it doesn't.
Many have found career enrichment at Du Pont. This comes from being handed a ball and being expected to run with it. From working with top people, from growing in a company where the opportunities are always wide open and the projects are often way out.
Many have found professional fulfillment and have built a very full, varied and happy life as "Du Ponters."
Others have found, after working at Du Pont, that their professional interest lay in teaching, in further study or in an industry that offered even wider scope in their particular discipline. All of these men left Du Pont far better qualified professionally than when they came.
So talk to the Du Pont recruiter. If he offers you something, think of it as a professional challenge, not a proposal of marriage.
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College Relations
Thursday, November 7, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
17
Grad school dean returns from southern university
William P. Albrecht, dean of the graduate school, recently returned from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he acted as a departmental research consultant, observing departments within the university and evaluating decision-making processes employed by them.
The University of North Carolina is one of 15 universities being studied by the Office of Institutional Research at Michigan State University in a two year departmental study project financed by the Esso Educational Foundation.
Dean Albrecht, who is a consultant for the Office of Institutional Research, said the purpose of the project is to investigate American universities in the departments of English, history, psychology, chemistry, math, electrical engineering and business administration.
While at the university, Dean Albrecht noted the decision-making processes employed by the departments; that is, what decisions were made by the
Jordanian clash ends after truce meeting
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)—Armed clashes between Jordanian troops and Arab commandos in Amman, Jordan ended today on the basis of a truce meeting between King Hussein and four guerrilla groups, Arab commando sources said.
The sources said the commandos had agreed to stay out of Amman, submit to Jordanian government checkpoints and refrain from establishing their own checkpoints.
The king conferred with the guerrilla groups Tuesday night, the sources said.
chairman, or consultors, the full professors, certain committees, or the whole department, and whether decisions were made in an autocratic or democratic manner. He said that the quality of the department can be affected by the decision-making processes used.
Dean Albrecht also attended a meeting of the Association of Graduate Schools in San Francisco last month, at which 45 universities were represented.
He said panels discussed the humanities and the social sciences in graduate education, and student participation in university governance.
Dean Albrecht said most of the graduate deans agreed that student representation is a "good thing," although there was some discussion about the precise nature of representation.
"All major universities are concerned with this problem and are trying to do something about it," he said. "Many of them have students on student-faculty committees just as we do."
"The pattern of education in American universities is going to change quite radically in the next few years. Higher education has to be adapted more closely to the needs of society and the individual," he said.
Beginning teachers asked not to accept jobs with starting pay less than $6,500
Student leaders of several KU education organizations met last night in another of a series of planning sessions to outline a program for informing education majors about the $6,500 resolution which received Kansas State Teachers Association (STA) support last Spring.
The group plans to send pamphlets outlining the resolution and giving vital information about the Dec. 5 meeting to all seniors in the School of Education.
The resolution calls for a minimum starting salary of $6,500 for all first-year teachers in Kansas. Under the suggested resolution, beginning teachers are asked not to accept jobs offering less than $6,500. It would become effective with the 1969-70 school term.
Cathy Cain, Sublette senior and 2nd vice president of the SEA, said the group hopes to inform seniors of the importance of the resolution and, at the same time, rally wide student
The group, spearheaded by officers of the Student Education Association (SEA), Mu Epsilon Nu, and several organizations for future educators in specialized areas, is planning an informative meeting Dec. 5 to familiarize seniors in the School of Education with the measure.
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Last night the group made tentative plans concerning the agenda of the meeting. They hope to present a brief explanation of the resolution and entertain a question and answer session through a panel of students and representatives of the KSTA.
Mike May, Parsons senior and
a member of both SEA and Mu Epsilon Nu, suggested that a KSTA representative inform the gathering of action being taken at other Kansas schools
Measures to convince boards of education of the necessity of the pay increase that might be enacted by individual students seeking jobs may be presented at the December meeting.
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Dr. J. George Robinson will be on campus Thursday, Nov.14 9:30-5:00 Contact Placement Office, Business School for interview arrangements.
In the 13 years of attending KU sports activities I have never heard our alma mater sung with enthusiasm by more than a handful of students or alumni. This is terribly discouraging because KU has long been superior in basketball and track and is now excelling in football.
So for Saturday's game, let's put our heart and soul into singing this beautiful song. Cut this out, take it home and make the valley echo with Jayhawk spirit.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ALMA MATER
Far above the golden valley Glorious to view Stands our noble alma mater Towering toward the blue
Lift the chorus ever onward Crimson and the blue Hail to thee our Alma Mater Hail to old KU
ACE JOHNSON
THE STABLES
KU
SUPPORT THE BOWL BOUND HAWKS!!
18
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7, 1968
Militarism protest planned by students
At 2 p.m. on Veteran's day, marchers will meet at North Park-Eighth and Kentucky Streets. They will either become a part of the VFW parade, or trail at some distance behind. In either case they plan to have a police escort.
Final plans for a "March Against Militarism" on Veteran's Day, November 11, by Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) were made at a meeting last night in the Wesley Foundation.
A leaflet distributed by SDS states, "Our policy (during the march) is to refrain entirely from initiating physical altercations with those persons who disagree with our beliefs."
The march will follow the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) parade. Its purpose will be "to show opposition to the war and to militarism," according to a leaflet distributed at the meeting.
At 3:30 p.m. marchers will gather on the lawn of Strong Hall.
At 5:30 p.m. they will gather in the Kansas Union to greet Veterans of Foreign Wars as they arrive for the VFW banquet, with leaflets and signs expressing their "anti-war attitudes."
Members of Peoples Voice also plan to be present in the march, said Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo, graduate student, and Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student, both Voice Members.
Then members say they plan to send a representative to the VFW dinner to read a statement of SDS beliefs, saying that they
Shanahan staged furious campaign
TOPEKA-Elwill M. Shanahan is a woman, a Republican and again Kansas Secretary of State. Like any victorious candidate, Mrs. Shanahan was pleased as the vote pushed her closer to re-election Tuesday night.
"As a matter of fact, Docking game me my first appointment as a member of the Kansas Interstate Commerce Corporation in 1966."
While talking with Mrs. Shanahan, it was announced that Docking was the apparent winner of the Governor's race and would be in office for another two years.
Mrs. Shanahan, widow of the late Secretary of State Paul R. Shanahan, was appointed by former governor William Avery to fill the unexpired term of her husband, who was serving his eighth term.
do not oppose the veterans, but "SDS condemnies warmakers who use the GI's and us as pawns in their game of death."
Later the group will gather in a not-yet-designed room of the Union, at which time they will have a speaker and conclude their Veteran's Day activities.
Both the state parties show confidence first
TOPEKA-Both Republican and Democratic camps here Tuesday night appeared highly confident with early returns in the gubernatorial race.
With only three to five per cent of the precincts recorded, Docking supporters predicted a win with an 80,000 to 100,000 vote margin.
Docking fans strolled through the Jayhawk Hotel lobby smiling and chatting informally about their candidate's firm hold on the governor's seat. Their confidence in winning the state's number one race persuaded them to turn their focus on national races, as many sat glued to television sets.
A similar feeling ran among Harman supporters when early balloting revealed Docking trailing in counties in which he was stronger in 1966. Harman campaigners were jubilant about the early returns and predicted a tight but victorious outcome.
Bill Low, executive director of the Republican state party expressed delight in the popularity rise of his once-unknown candidate.
"Harman suffered at first because he was not well known. In July we didn't have a ghost of a chance; by September we caught up with Docking, and have been running even ever since," he said.
Low credited the Democrats with helping Harman to gain public support when Harman debated with Docking.
The Democrats contended, however, they hurt Harman with the debates as evidenced by Docking's strong showing in Johnson County, a major Harman stronghold.
"The debates jazzed up our own people tremendously and gave them a needed shot in the arm." he said.
Both groups remained confident until early morning returns showed Docking ahead with a substantial margin. About 1:15 a.m., Republicans conceded to the newly re-elected Gov. Docking and Rick Harman became another face in the crowd.
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Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins, is concerned about students seeking medical aid at Lawrence Memorial Hospital rather than Watkins.
Watkins Memorial Hospital which is financed by KU students and consequently belongs to the students, is not being patronized by them.
"We have the latest equipment and the best staff we can get our hands on," Schwegler said. "Our facilities are geared to a specific age group, so we have special equipment to handle injuries common to college students."
"We're trying to combine the two hospitals to get maximum service," he said, "because the elimination of one would mean the failure of the other."
He explained the hospitals are structured to serve two different groups of people, and for this reason students should come to Watkins—the hospital designed for them.
However, Schweigler said because medical facilities in Lawrence are in short supply, both hospitals must work together.
Students avoid Watkins
Schwegler, wonders if the lack of patronage is a form of protest by students. He said Watkins is not in competition with Lawrence Memorial and is not suffering financially from the lack of student patronage.
Hospital calls for support
Everything favors the student coming this way first," he said.
"Downtown the doctors really might resent students coming to them because the pay would be small and they probably don't enjoy getting out of bed," he said. "The students are not penalizing anyone at Watkins-I think it is something psychological."
"Watkins belongs to the students and is almost 100 per cent student-oriented," Schwegler said, "while the Lawrence hospital is oriented toward townsfolk who support it with their taxes."
Schwegler credits the action to a lack of understanding of the facilities and staff at Watkins. Although Watkins is presently understaffed, he said the physicians now employed are top quality and additional staff will be hired soon. He noted that many of the doctors at Watkins are employed at Lawrence Memorial also.
Schwegler explained that persons seeking medical aid at Lawrence must first be referred by their personal physician or be a victim of desperate emergency. Likewise, students may be referred to Lawrence by a Watkins physician.
Students are taking pot luck when they go to Lawrence Memorial; there is no assurance of receiving treatment from a doctor who is trained to handle their specific injury, he said. On the other hand, Watkins employs a doctor on call who has access to students' records and can quickly locate a specifically trained physician.
"We're private doctors for the students. If they start with us we'll pave the way for them to Lawrence hospital without any argument," he said.
"If students use us and use us properly, we'll get good results."
Schweegler emphasized the importance of students coming immediately to Watkins and erasing the prejudices they have for their own hospital. He mentioned that Watkins can give treatment for about one-half the price charged by Lawrence Memorial.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
TGIF
- Red Dog
- Friday, 3:30 - 5:30
do your contact lenses lead a clean life?
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Contact lenses can be heaven . . . or hell. They may be a wonder of modern science but just the slightest bit of dirt under the lens can make them unbearable. In order to keep your contact lenses as comfortable and convenient as they were designed to be, you have to take care of them.
Until now you needed two or more separate solutions to properly prepare and maintain your contacts. You would think that caring for contacts should be as convenient as wearing them. It can be with Lensine.
Lensine is the one lens solution for complete contact lens care. Just a drop or two, before you insert your lens, coats and lubricates it allowing the lens to float more freely in the eye's fluids. That's
because Lensine is an "isotonic" solution, which means that it blends with the natural fluids of the eye.
Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the buildup of foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Lensine between wearing periods assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking case on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine. It has been demonstrated that improper storage between wearings may result in the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and in some cases can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine which is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.
Let your contacts be the convenience they were meant to be. Get some Lensine, from the Murine Company, Inc.
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Thursday, November 7, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
19
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the newspaper offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
New small refrigerator—ideal for study dens. apts. etc—only $99.00.
Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St.
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Iread. 1-9
Ford Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed, bucket seats. Perfect condition inside and out. Need money—must sell soon.
Call VI 3-6870 Evenings. 11-7
1962 Dynamic 88 Oldsmobile. Body and engine in excellent condition. Good gas mileage combined with normal Oldsmobile road excellence makes a good real road car. Must seat. appreciate. Car to sell immediately VI 2-8919. 11-7
8-track Leatert tape deck. Plays through 20 inches of tape; says "eye." Bar Cards. 843 U.S.A.
1963 Olds Convert. white with white
1970 Dodge. Jerry Ackerman -
Volkwagen, 2522 Iowa 11-7
1964 Impala, SS 327 engine, 4bbl.
$1200 Cheap Dave Phelps, 843-4811.
Be prepared for all of the Holiday Festivities ahead. See what the House of Wigs has to offer at as much as $75 off retail price of beautiful falls, cascades and all wigs. Wigs 913-631-9483 in Shawnee Mission. 11-7
1964 Volks Deluxe Sedan—Exception-
Lewis—Jerry Jerry
Volkshagen, 2522 Iowa 11-7
1965 Dodge 880 H.T. nicest one anywhere, 6 way seats, tilt wheel, contrasting leatherette interior, alt P5, leatherface Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa 11-7
1966 Dodge 2 Dr. H.T. 383 V8 Buckets, Air Console Automatic, P.S.B. P.Vinyl top, Special Paint—immaculate, Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522 Iowa
1968 Pontiac convertible, 350, yellow,
PS, 3-speed, only driven 10,000 miles,
recently tuned. Call VI 2-3192 after
5:00 p.m. 11-8
One used 21" RCA Victor television.
Deluxe console model in good condition for reasonable price. Call VI 2-4493 after 6 p.m.
11-7
1966 Plym, Barracuda, Local car, one owner. Actual mileage—Absolutely Nice as new —Jerry Allen Volkswagon. 2522 Iowa. 11-7
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excellent condition. 4-speed. British racing green, 4-speed. Power brakes, light wheels. 1 a/c chassis. Power brakes. wheels. 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must sell. Contact: Sam Bauer. Rm. #nj. 6 McCollum. 11-8 6000
Used Seats tape recorder, $25 Used
Looks funky, sounds good
VI 2-3010
1965 GTO. 389, 3 two's, 4-speed, Parks
condition. Runner W11 W 230 B
11-12
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages-anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa VI 2-1320 11-8
Pay-Less
Self Service SHOES
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
1968 Opel, Factory demo, 1200 miles,
1965 Opel, Factory demo, $1900 per PZ
e皮 Buck, 1116 W. Garrett, N-12
400
1962 Ford, 4-door Sedan, V-8 stuck
Bulldog, 116 W. 23rd. $395
Bulldog, 116 W. 23rd. 11-12
1965 Impala SS, 327, 4-speed. Excellent
carrier Parker Buick, 1116 W 208
465 N 1010
Lowrey T-2 portable organ. In good
condition. Call Cheeky Call.
531 after 6 p.m. e-mail 11-12
Classic 1957 Studebaker Golden
150 L.T.C.L. Vi 3-02-53 $150
142 L.T.C.L. Vi 3-02-53
Hallicrafters S-120 Receiver. Broadcast through 31 MC Tunes Voice of America and many Spanish Stations. $65. Larry Johnson, UN 4-3140. 11-8
Set of Astro Mags off a GTO. Need 4
magnifiers in trade. Best offer 11
VI 2-1888 VI 2-1888
'57 Chevy, 2-door hardtop, black, 283,
3-speed, Hurst, custom interior, radio,
excellent condition. VI 2-6533.
10.43
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Sea Blue & Cloud Black, white leatherette interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon. 2522 Iowa. 11-13
1964 MG Midget, white w/wire wheels, this hard-to-find car yours this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa 11-13
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T., buckets, consola,
P.S. P.B., air. B3 383 V8 shows,
vinyl top, just $1895 at Jerry Allen
Volkshagen, 2522 Iowa
11-13
1963 Volkswagon deluxe sunroof,
choice of 2, both 100% guaranteed.
very nice cars. 1 green, 1 white, either
at Jerry Alton Volkswagon
lowa 11-13
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$2,588.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owner miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr.-50,000 mile warranty (factory), see it. drive it, drive it, drive it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
Mustang snow tires-Last year's design. New 1st line 695-1x Keely cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Rock Stonebacks. 11-13
Britanica, Great Books of the Western World. 54 volumes, also 20 additional volumes. Like new. $290. Call 843-1835. 11-13
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos, Regular $495.00 - magnificent cabinets - magnificent music! Ray Back's, 929-933, Mass. St. 11-20
NOTICE
Personal Loans; Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Phone VI 3-8074. 11-7
20% Coed Discount
Frostings and Permanents
on
Be prepared—
No Appointment Necessary
10 E. 9th V1 2-7900
get antifreeze—starting service
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
2434 Iowa V1 2-1008
Candles extraordinaire at Hass Hardware. We have handmade candies by monks, Japanese-temple candles, round candles from Italy, drip candles and seated candles. Come see. 1029 Massachusetts. 11-7
515 Michigan St. Blar-B-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.85; 1/2 chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tf
Extra money for your organization.
Support friends for a "Wig Party."
Contact The House of Wigs, 7202
Goddard and Shawnee Mission, Phone
(843) 949-6344
The Jayhawk Rodeo Club is having a fox hunt, Nov. 10. If you are interested, please call hanty at 605-742-3890 or room 732 at V1 2-1200 after 5:00 p.m.
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Peace Center, 107 W.7th U.S. Air Force in the Kansas Union lobby bylobby 11-19
There is still time to send a Christmas package to that special guy overseas. We have soo much kindr and non-punishable goods for you. We have mailing cartons and informational popcorn and Ice Cream Shop Mail Mails II-71751. Open 'til 11:00. I-11-7
Voluptuously, velutinous, lasciviously,
lubricious, essentially sensual
STRAWBERRY FIELDS is especially for
the pleasureably passionate pass-
ing of the dancers living
Come to STRAWBERRY
FIELDS. 712 Mass. Open 10-6. 11-7
FRESHMEN: Want an active student-sympathetic government? If so vote David Manninger, an independent, for Freshman class president on Nov. 20.
HELP WANTED
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD 500. Automatic changer with base, dust cover, and grado cartridge. New needle assembly as bonus. New $85 Now $55. Full new equipment guarantee on both tuner and changer.
Part-time for 1 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 B. 23rd. tf
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Female--Good looking, personable women to work in pleasant sur-
runs at Pizza Hut #2 on W. 23rd Street and Cashier at Pizza Hut #2 on W. 23rd Street. Fringe benefits included. Please contact Barge benefits included. Please manage, at 813-616 for more information and an interview appointment. 11-11
Student wanted with tire changing experience to work mornings and holidays. $1.65 per hour. Do not apply unless you can work 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. daily. Ray Stonebaeck's Downtown—apply in person. 11-13
WANTED
Needed: ride to KU from Overland Park on Thurs. Classes 8:30 to 5:20.
Call Shirley. MI 9-8174 Overland Park.
11-7
Car, salesman to sell Fiat and Datsun
automobiles. Full or part-time. Call
CHerry 242-6715. Vaughn Imports.
Ottawa. 11-7
Female to share comfortable double room off campus. Cooking privileges —2 blocks from campus. $35 monthly.
Call VI 3-0723. 11-7
Tutor for Math 127. Call TU 7-6395.
11.7
Male roommate Wanted $50.00 a
mor. Close by campus. 2020 Entr.
11-14 D - 3-36
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation and talent in the joy of worship. Let's plan our session. Call us. Ron Sundyne or Dennis Bowers. First United Methodist VI 3-7134. 11-7
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20
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 7. 1968
Legal aid to low-income accused
(Continued from page 1)
$2,000 to $3,000, “if there were no complications. If there were an extended defense, who knows how much money would be involved.” Appeals could significantly increase the cost, he said.
About 25 persons attended the Legal Defense Fund meeting Saturday, Horowitz said. "They were primarily individuals, but have affiliations with various
Reactions to the 1968 presidential election were given in a panel discussion entitled, "Election '68: Post Analysis" yesterday on KANU radio.
Election results initiate discussion on radio program
The discussioners said Republicans have not significantly gained since the 1960 election. However, some of the kingpins of the Democratic party gave their support to Gov. Wallace in this election, weakening the Democrat's power.
Much emphasis was placed on the individual image of the candidates who ran this year. One panel member said the candidates and their images were too misunderstood, which was a major contribution to the voters' apathetic attitude.
Concerning Nixon and his image, it was generally felt that he does not have the overwhelming magic with the people that such men as John or Robert Kennedy had. None of the candidates really had such an image, a panel member contended.
Concerning revamping national conventions, one panel member suggested the conventions should be more representative yet with fewer people. Nominees should be chosen first and then the adoption of the platform can be made to coincide with the nominees, they said.
Participating in the discussion were: John Grumm, professor of political science; Donn Parson, associate professor of speech and drama; Calder Pickett, professor of journalism; Lloyd Spoonholtz, assistant professor of history; and Thomas Weiss, assistant professor of economics.
Nineteen persons have joined to form a research team to investigate manifestations of racism at the University of Kansas.
Results of the research will be presented to the United States National Student Association Conference on Institutional Racism, November 28 through December 1, at the University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind.
groups on campus and in town," he said.
Horowitz said the longer range goals of the Fund are to provide legal aid for financially deprived Lawrence residents. He said aid was needed at both the preliminary hearing and trial of accused persons.
Since Kansas has no grand jury system, the decision to bind a person over for trial is made by a judge at a "probable cause hearing." Horowitz said. "There is no arrangement to provide a lawyer for a person charged at arraignment," he said.
If financial aid to secure a lawyer were available to low-income accused, Horowitz said, many could possibly be freed without the time and expense of a trial.
Horowitz said although the court "is obliged to provide a lawyer if a person is bound over
for trial," the court-appointed lawyer may not be the best available.
"A person has to take his chances as to whether he gets an admirable defense, a passable defense, or an inferior defense," he said.
The Legal Defense Fund may also be able to help low-income accused post the 10 per cent bondsman's fee, he said.
Horowitz said most of the money for the fund will probably come from private citizens and local organizations.
Any money left over from the Harrison's defense will be used to meet the group's long-range goals, he stated, although meeting short-range goals is now most important.
"The charge against Mr. Harrison is extensive and a good defense is immediately necessary," Horowitz said.
Cabinet prospects named
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
Nixon intends to make his own foreign policy, as seems likely, he might prefer a Secretary of State without too many views of his own.
Another possible choice for that post is New York financier C. Douglas Dillon, who was Undersecretary of State during the Eisenhower administration. Dillon, highly regarded in the capital by leaders of both parties, later served as Treasury Secretary in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. Dillon has told personal friends he doesn't want to be Secretary of State, but the consensus here is that he would serve if asked.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Kansas Asphalt Paving Conference.
All Day, Kansas Union.
Speech Exemption Examination,
3:30 p.m. 200 Learned
Lecture. 4 p.m. Dr. Gordon Robin, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University. "Glacial Surges" 426 Lindley.
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Kismet."
KU Moslem Society. 12:45 p.m.
Pravers, Kansas Union.
Spencer Library Dedication Lectu-
ture to Lord C. P. Snow. Hatch.
Auditorium.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
7 p.m. 829 Mississippi.
Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Umbala of Cherberville" Dyche Auditions
Folk Dance Club. 7:30 p.m. 173
Robinson
International Film Series. 7:30 p.m.
"Red Desert" Hoch Auditorium.
Senior Class Party. 8 p.m. National Guard Armory.
Lecture. 7:30 p.m. Rev. John Meyendorff. St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary. Impact of Religion in Russian Civilization. Curry Room, Kansas Union
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Kismet."
Finch is one of Nixon's oldest and closest friends, and was a principal campaign adviser. He is considered a virtual certainty to be named to some cabinet post, perhaps Attorney General.
Also mentioned as possible candidates for Attorney General are Evelle Younger, district attorney of Los Angeles County, and Charles Rhyne, a classmate of Nixon at Duke Law School, and former president of the American Bar Association.
Should Nelson Rockefeller not be named Defense Secretary, his brother David might be tapped as Secretary of the Treasury. David Rockefeller is chairman of the board of the Chase Manhattan Bank.
Other Possibilities
Here are some of the names that are being mentioned among Nixon aides as possible candidates for other cabinet posts:
Commerce—Gov. George Romney of Michigan; Democratic Sen. George Smathers of Florida, an old friend of Nixon who would contribute bipartisan flavor to the cabinet.
Housing and Urban Development—Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York.
Health, Education & Welfare—Sen. Edward Brooke, R-Mass., only Negro member of the U.S. Senate, is mentioned as an ideal secretary of HEW, but might be reluctant to leave the Senate.
Interior-William Penn Mott, head of the California Department of Parks and Recreation; Gov. Dan Evans of Washington.
Agriculture—Rep. Albert H. Quie, R-Minn.; former Rep. Clifford G. McIntire, R-Raine.
Last Drag Race Of The Season!
(Continued from page 1)
Seeks Unity
Earlier in New York, Nixon pledged that the major goal of his new administration would be to try to unify the American people.
Nixon and wife travel to Miami
Come out and see the records fall this Sunday There will be a guaranteed purse of $250 and trophies. The track opens at 10 a.m. with eliminations at 2 p.m.
LAWRENCE DRAGWAY
Children Under 12 Free
General Admission: $1.50
KU Students: $1.00 with I.D.
In his first major speech since winning the presidency, Nixon told about 500 supporters and newsmen in the grand ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York that his administration would be an open one.
DON'T MISS THIS LAST BIG RACE!
"We want to bridge the generation gap. We want to bridge the gap between races.
2 miles west of Lawrence on Highway 40,
"Open to new ideas, open to men and women of both parties, open to the critics as well as those who support us," the 55-year-old President-elect said.
1/2 mile south.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Katharine Ross will begin her seven-year contract for Universal with the feminine lead in "The Public Eye," with Ross Hunter, producing in England.
Beginning
Code given okay
(Continued from page 1)
composed of three members of the ASC and three from the University Senate will try to resolve the differences in the codes.
The revised code then will be returned to the ASC and University Senate for their approval. If the code is passed in both bodies, it must be submitted to an all-student vote and a faculty referendum before going into effect.
Von Ende speculated that the student vote would probably come in late January or early February. However, the vote could come sooner.
If the code goes into effect before Christmas, special elections would be held to fill the 60 vacancies created on the new Student Senate created by the Senate Code. The 35 ASC members already in office would remain as members of the new body.
Should the referendum be delayed until after the Christmas holidays, ASC would continue to function in its present form until the spring elections.
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STUDIO 127
KANSAN
79th Year, No. 39
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, November 8, 1968
--among the financial community They said they provided the display "for love."
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Sun orbiter launched
CAPE KENNEDY—The United States shot its Pioneer 9 interplanetary "weather" watcher into orbit around the sun today to spot solar radiation storms in time to warn moon-bound Apollo astronauts.
A small hitchhiking satellite rode along into earth orbit to imitate the radio voice of the Apollo 8 moonship and train ground tracking stations for the December launch of three astronauts.
However, whether it was the rainy weather or the comparatively meager measurements on display, the girls failed to stir much activity among the financial community.
Bust parade continues
NEW YORK—Four young women, stripped to the waist, appeared before a shocked but enthusiastic crowd in the lobby of the Chase Manhattan Bank in the center of the New York financial district yesterday.
Last robber caught
TORQUAY, England—Police today announced the arrest of Bruce Richard Reynolds, the only one of the $7.3 million "great train robbers" never brought to justice.
All 11 other members of the gang, who staged the world's costliest train robbery in 1963, have been arrested.
Thieu asks new plan
PARIS—South Vietnam today laid down a new plan for joining Paris talks on settling the Vietnam War. Allied diplomats said the United States would find it hard to agree with Saigon's plan and Communist diplomats said North Vietnam would reject it.
In Saigon, President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam told a news conference he would end his boycott of the talks if South Vietnam could lead the allied side and if
the Viet Cong were only a part of the North Vietnamese delegation.
In Paris, a high allied diplomat said the United States would find it very difficult to agree if it meant Washington had to ask Hanoi to renegotiate the deal already made for the talks. He also said it would be equally difficult for the United States to take a back seat behind South Vietnam at the talks.
North Vietnamese diplomatic sources predicted Hanoi would re-
Beating victim listed as 'extremely critical'
Lawrence Memorial Hospital officials described a KU student as in "extremely critical" condition last night after he suffered a severe beating in the Naismith Hall parking lot yesterday afternoon.
youth at present. He also said there was no evidence of the use of a weapon.
County Attorney Dan Young said a suspect had been taken into custody, questioned and released. The suspect was described as a 17-year-old KU student. Young said no charges were pending against the
Bruce Mallin, 20, Overland Park junior, was unconscious when taken to the hospital after a fight in the parking lot about 5:30 p.m. The extent of his injuries was not known early this morning, only that he was in very critical condition.
He said five witnesses to the fight had been questioned and he expected police to call at least one more.
"The doctors don't know for sure what the injuries are," he said.
Acquaintances of the alleged assailant said the fight between him and Mallin had been brewing for three or four weeks and the two had exchanged angry words on several previous occasions.
One witness to the fight said a number of people had watched the fight but no one stepped in to help the victim until it ended.
ject the Saigon plan because it would lessen the conference status of the Viet Cong's political arm, the National Liberation Front (NLF).
When word of Thieu's plan reached Paris, W. Averell Harriman, the roving ambassador who heads the U.S. delegation, went into immediate consultation with Washington.
Washington and Hanoi had arranged for their own delegations plus the South Vietnamese and the Viet Cong to begin talks here Wednesday. Saigon said no.
As the new Thieu plan came, U.S. and North Vietnamese officials here were holding secret meetings on arranging ground rules for the expanded talks, diplomatic sources said.
Saigon has refused to enter talks where the Viet Cong would be considered a separate, independent party.
Hanoi and the Viet Cong have proclaimed they agreed with the United States to hold four-way peace talks where the Viet Cong and Saigon would have independent status.
The United States has charged that this is a misinterpretation of the Washington-Hanoi accord which last week halted the bombing of North Vietnam and proposed expanded negotiations.
U. S. officials maintain the loose accord was allowed merely for both the main parties-North Vietnam and the United States-to enlarge their delegations by bringing in their allies, the NLF and Saigon.
KU artist has strong beliefs on what it takes to be good
By FRED PARRIS Kansan Staff Writer
Her statuary was booted out of one art center for being "obscene."
Another gallery demanded that a priest inspect her art for "moral fitness" before it could be displayed.
She is skilled at creating nudes, but also excels at dog portraits and surrealistic scenes.
Her name is Mrs. Frone Mintz, and she is a sculpture student at KU.
Concerning her brushes with the "public morality," Mrs. Mintz merely laughs.
"I was scheduled to show my
Debris throwing sends players to dressing room
Throwing debris on the field Saturday will interrupt play in the KU-Oklahoma game, according to Big Eight Conference procedures.
A directive from the Big Eight conference office states that: "the procedure established when any materials are thrown into the field is that it will be up to the management to control the situation. The standard procedure is that officials, coaches
works at an art center in Lubbock, Tex., directly in the heart of the Bible Belt," she says. "Practically all of my statues were nudes and, anticipating an unfavorable reaction, I had them partially clothed in burlap 'gowns,'"
See debris page 16.
Nevertheless, after the special preview showing for Lubbock's "cultural elite," she received numerous nasty phone calls.
"After midnight, I began getting calls from outraged citizens," Mrs. Mintz recalls. "They said my art was obscene, highly improper, and all sorts of dreadful things."
The coverings hadn't helped, she said, because the local babbits had peaked under the burlap.
"Yes," I replied, "But so are we."
As a result of the complaints, she was asked to leave the art exhibition.
"As one matron told me, 'But they're *nude* underneath!"
Partly as a result of her experiences with the public, Mrs. Mintz has strong beliefs as to what it takes to be a good sculptor.
**snippet:**
"A work of art must satisfy its creator first of all," she insists.
"If you make something that doesn't relate to yourself, it's merely a piece of design."
"I don't expect to communicate to everyone," she adds, "and it doesn't bother me when I don't."
While an artist must be independent, he must also be competent at his craft, she said.
"You must have both technical knowledge and inspiration," she says. "One without the other results in shoddy, incomplete work."
A so-called "artsy" background isn't enough for a good sculptor, Mrs. Mintz says.
"Knowledge of chemistry and physics is vital."
Also useful is an understanding of metallurgy, she says, since bronze and scrap metal are used in much contemporary sculpture.
A constant worry for most sculptors, says Mrs. Mintz, is the cost of the necessary materials. Bronze is a popular medium, but highly expensive.
"If I bronzed each statue I will
(Continued to page 16)
Weather
Mostly cloudy and cool with light variable winds today. Snow flurries this morning. Decreasing cloudiness tonight. Partly cloudy and a little warmer tomorrow. High today mid 40s. Low tonight upper 20s. Probability of measurable precipitation 10 per cent today, 5 per cent tonight and less than 5 per cent Saturday.
O
'I DON'T EXPECT TO COMMUNICATE TO EVERYONE'
Frone Mintz, graduate student in sculpture, adds finishing touches to her surrealistic "primitive women."
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 8, 1968
Mrs. Harrison gets extension for hearing date
Douglas County Court yesterday granted an extension on the preliminary hearing for Mrs. Leonard Harrison, originally scheduled for yesterday. The hearing was set for 2 p.m., Nov. 21, before Judge Charles C. Rankin.
Mrs. Harrison was arrested Oct. 29 and charged with two counts of felonious assault. She is currently free on $1,500 bond.
A spokesman for the Douglas County Attorney's office said Chester I. Lewis, Mrs. Harrison's lawyer, obtained the extension because Mrs. Harrison's hearing conflicted with preparations for the hearing for her husband, Leonard Harrison, Wednesday in Wichita.
Harrison's hearing was extended until Dec. 10, however, his lawyer refused to comment.
Lewis is also Harrison's lawyer. Harrison was arrested here Oct. 29 and taken to Wichita, where he was one of nine charged with conspiracy to kidnap, assault and extort.
Mrs. Harrison was arrested and charged after she allegedly assaulted Undersheriff Wayne Schmille and a Wichita police officer. The officers were allegedly attempting to conduct a search of the Harrison home.
The County Attorney's office spokesman said if sufficient evidence to warrant a trial is proven at the preliminary hearing, Mrs. Harrison's case will be bound over for the February session of the District Court.
Driver hits house
NAPLES (UPI)—Truckdriver Nicola Gallo, 20, swerved to avoid hitting a boy crossing a street Tuesday, and crashed into a house instead. Seventeen persons inside were injured.
Guidance Center offers experience and advises
By MARLA BABCOCK Kansan Staff Writer
Performing a dual function of counseling and instruction, the Guidance Center, 116 Bailey Hall, offers advisory services to students, while giving practical experience to future counselors.
The center, which counsels about 900 KU students and staff members annually, is staffed by nine full-time counseling psychologists and three graduate students, said E. Gordon Colliser, director of guidance and professor of education.
Most of the students who come to the Guidance Center do so voluntarily, Collister said. The center is recommended to many of them by residence hall staff members.
At the first appointment a student meets with his counselor for an hour-long chat and fills out a data sheet which becomes part of his confidential record.
Although a student may request guidance from a particular counselor, advisors are usually assigned at random, Colliser said.
"Interest and personality inventories may be given to determine the way a person describes himself," Collister said.
During this first conversation, the counselor tries to find out "what the student is looking for."
Collister stressed that all records and recordings of counselor interviews are kept "under lock and key." The center does not release this information without written consent of the student concerned.
Candidates for graduate counsel degrees may also take
their practical study at the Guidance Center.
Richard Rundquist, chairman of the department of counseling within the School of Education, said graduate students often work as counselors at the center with supervision from a permanent staff member.
While the graduate student talks with advises on a one-to-one basis, Rundquist said, full-time staff members are always on hand for consultation and suggestions.
The School of Education offers three master's degrees in counseling as well as two such degrees on the doctoral level and one specialist degree.
While the hour requirements for these degrees differ, all curricula include courses in psychology, group testing and a counseling practicum. Rundquist said the practicum may be fulfilled in a high school, but often students use Guidance Center facilities to fulfill this requirement.
Some graduate students have set up counseling offices in college-within-a-college offices, Collister said. This experiment is in its second year in Corbin College.
He explained, "It is one of the few programs where one can learn and practice professionally at the same time."
The Guidance Center program "keeps staff members on their toes." Rundguist said.
"Although this is now in a experimental stage, we hope to see if it works better than the present system," Collister said. He said it is too early to analyze the success of the experiment.
Begun in 1943, when the Vet.
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eran's Administration was offering counseling on a contract basis to returning servicemen, the center was originally housed in Strong Hall. Later it moved to a barracks standing on Spencer Library's present location. The final move to Bailey Hall took place in 1956.
Collister said psychological methods have changed considerably since 1943.
Free Beer!
IT'S TONIGHT! SENIOR PARTY NO.2
Two Bands—the Rising Suns and the Young Raiders
Free to members of Class of '69 with class cards.
Underclassmen and non-senior dates, $1.00.
P. S. Don't forget to wear your SENIOR REGALIA tonight and at the Oklahoma game tomorrow!
"We try to give the student a better understanding of himself. We try to help him see why he functions as he does. If he wants to do something about his immediate problem then, that's his business."
"Here at the center, we don't try to see a problem as such," Collister said. Many students are not really troubled by their overt problems, he explained, but are asking "Who am I? Where do I fit?"
"We try to make procedural changes to keep up with changes in thought," Collister said. "That doesn't mean we always keep up with the student though." he added, smiling.
New directories go on sale soon
the sale of this year's student telephone directory should begin in the next few weeks at the Kansas Union Bookstore.
Distribution of the directory has been delayed by the University Printing Service which has been busy with other matters. Officials at the Printing Service report that the directory is being run now and should be available soon.
The new directory is similar to last year's and will cost one dollar.
A preliminary directory has been available to campus offices and organized houses for some time. The preliminary directory, however, is merely a stop-gap and does not list the students' home addresses.
Lawrence Lumber
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19th and Massachusetts VI 3-1341
CATHERINE DENEUVRE NINO CASTELNUOVO
BEST FOREIGN FILM OF 1965 WINNER OF
FIVE INTERNATIONAL AWARDS
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST FILMS!"
- N. Y. Daily News
- N. Y. Post
for all the young lovers of the world
THE LANDAU COMPANY PRESENTS
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
in song and musical color
THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG Written and Directed by JACQUES DEMY Set to music by MICHEL LEGRAND Starring CATHERINE DEHEUVE · NINO CASTELNUOVO · ANNE VERNON · MARC MICHEL A MAC BOARD PRODUCTION FOR PARC TILMS-MADELEINE FILMS / Distributed by THE LANDAU RELEASE ORGANIZATION, INC.
مَنْ كُنتَ
فِي الْقَدَامَةِ
أَنَّكَ مَنْ كُنتَ
فِي الْقَدَامَةِ
أَنَّكَ مَنْ كُنتَ
فِي الْقَدَامَةِ
أَنَّكَ مَنْ كُنتَ
فِي الْقَدَامَةِ
أَنَّكَ مَنْ كُنتَ
فِي الْقَدَامَةِ
أَنَّكَ مَنْ كُتْبًا
THIS WEEK'S POPULAR FILM Nov. 8,9,10 7 & 9:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 40c
Friday, November 8.1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
New York students protest arrest of 171
NEW YORK (UPI) About 200 City College of New York (CCNY) students staged a sit-in Thursday night in the school's administration building to protest-the arrest of 171 persons in a police raid on the campus.
The students, many of them members of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS),listened to speeches in the lobby of the building for an hour and 15 minutes and then left. Campus guards locked the front doors.
The raid took place early Thursday when police entered a student center and arrested those who had defied police all week by sheltering an AWOL California soldier with their own bodies.
This year's Project Concern Variety. Show features a rock band, folk singing, comedy routines and dramatic readings.
Authorities had located Army Pvt. William S. Brakefield, 19, of
Variety show Nov.22 & 23
The show, entitled "Simple Joys," will run Nov. 22 to 23 at 8 p.m. in Hooch Auditorium. Collegiates for Concern, a campus service organization, sponsors the project.
Performers will include James R. Surface, University provost; Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Dr. Raymond Schwegler, head of the Student Health Service. They will band together to form a singing trio.
Housemothers from KU living groups, the "Gaslight Gang," a local instrumental group, and 18 students will participate.
A "Laugh-In"-type spot routine provides the between-act entertainment.
Tickets for both performances are now available at the Kansas Union Information Counter or by writing Collegiates for Concern, Box 73, Lawrence. They are $1.50 for all seats.
Collegiateates for Concern, a fund-raising organization formed three years ago by members of this year's senior class, has branches at 150 campuses across the nation. Dave Keesling, Herington senior majoring in political science, serves as a driving force behind the group.
Tickets still available
Between 200 and 250 tickets, and those "mostly in the balcony," remain for the last two performances of "Kismet," a box office spokesman said today.
The money earned by KU's Collegiates for Concern will help build a pediatrics clinic at DaMpao, South Vietnam.
"Very few are left," and those are mostly the $1.20 tickets, these tickets are free with the KU ID and registration card, the spokesman said.
Other tickets sell for $1.80 and $2.40 but the ID and registration card will cover $1.20 of this cost.
Speaking of the "Kismet" ticket sales, the spokesman said, "This is as close to a sell-out as we'll ever get."
"Kismet," the Arabian Night tale of entwined romances and destinies, opened Oct. 31 with "a large crowd" and has had "very good and large crowds since."
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Van Nuys, Calif., as early as last week but whenever he appeared in public, students surrounded him, linked arms and defied police to arrest him.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
He and the CCNY students were arrested as they staged a "sanctuary vigil" in the threestory building. About 200 members of the Police Department's Tactical Patrol Force had to carry out 20 students who refused to walk from the building into police vans.
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
The students were charged with criminal trespass.
As a result of the action university authorities lifted the SDS charter. Leaders of the group Thursday vowed to enlarge their struggle and perhaps attempt to recoopy the student center. They demanded amnesty for those arrested, return of their charter, and an explanation of why police had been allowed on campus.
Brakefield has been absent without leave from Ft. Devens, Mass., since Oct. 2. Last week he went to the CCNY campus and immediately became the center of student demonstrations and antiwar protests. He led a demonstration on the campus Wednesday at which three students burned what they said were their draft cards.
Business alumni give opinions on computer games
Alumni of the School of Business attending Alumni Day today will try their skills in an inventory management game, Clifford Clark, dean of the business school said.
Playing the game will enable the alumni to give their opinions of computer-based games in education. Clark said.
Clark explained these games are part of a new educational experiment in business education. Students play against computers in a realistic business situation, he said.
After the games, L. T. Greiner, assistant to the president of B. F. Goodrich, will speak on "What's the Business of Business," in the Kansas Union Forum Room, Clark said.
The activities will close with a speech by C. F. Snow, British author in Hoch Auditorium, Clark said.
Clark said he expects about 120 alumni to attend.
Postponement
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Alan Jay Lerner announced his Broadway production of "Coco," starring Katharine Hepburn, has been postponed until mid-summer rehearsal next year.
"Uptight students" at Lawrence High School formed an informational organization in coalition with Students for a Democratic Society at KU after tension between students and the administration caused a walkout by blacks early last month.
SDS helps form coalition at LHS
Robert Backus, a student at LHS said the basic purpose of the club is "to keep people informed on all facets of modern politics."
The organization was formed with the help of Lance Hill, a University of Kansas student described by Backus as a "conservative member of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)."
Hill said the students "were uptight" at the high school about a number of recent incidents, and they didn't know what to do about it. He said he went to the school to find a leader to organize the group.
Hill said that the general ideology of the organization was to express opinions of students (freedom and minority opinions) to communicate with administrators.
"We (SDS at KU) have no roles, except if the high school students want any help," he said. Hill described the new organization as "a monolithic thing."
Backus said that the KU chapter of SDS will guarantee speakers for the high school group.
Backus said the LHS walkout brought plans for the formation of such a group. "The student body didn't understand the gravity of the situation at the high school and they didn't understand Negro motives in the walkout." he said.
"We want to get going as soon as possible . . . We think it's a pressing need," Backus said. "We feel that some changes are necessary in the establishment. But change is not through confrontation . . . rather through education."
Members of SDS at KU expressed the belief that the new high school organization may join them in their "March Against Militarism" on Veteran's Day, November 11. The march will follow the Veteran's Day parade.
Father shoots son
MANILA (UPI)—Amando Pasco shot his son during a quarrel in nearby Calamba town, police reported Tuesday. They said Pasco was 94 and his son 74.
For the Liberal Arts Major, PQT can open a whole new world of opportunity...
Each year, NSA offers challenging career opportunities to Liberal Arts majors through participation in the Professional Qualification Test. This year, NSA has scheduled the PQT for Saturday, December 7, 1968. Completion of this Test by the Liberal Arts major is a prerequisite to consideration for NSA employment.
The Career Scene at NSA:
The National Security Agency is the U.S. Government agency responsible for developing invulnerable communications systems to transmit and receive vital information. As an NSA professional, you will be trained to work on programs of national importance in such areas as:
- Cryptography—developing & logical proving of new cryptologic concepts
- Research-the gathering, analysis, and reporting of substantive data
- Language—used as a basic tool of research into a number of analytical fields
- Programming—includes data
systems program writing, and development of mechanical and administrative procedures
- Documentation—technical writing in its broadest sense, including research, writing, editing, illustrating, layout and reproduction
Your specific academic major is of secondary importance. Of far greater importance are your ingenuity, intellectual curiosity and perseverance —plus a desire to apply them in assignments where "imagination is the essential qualification."
SALARIES start at $6981.00 and are supplemented by the benefits of career federal employment.
ADVANCEMENT AND CAREER DEVELOPMENT - NSA promotes from within, and awards salary increases as you assume greater responsibility. NSA also is anxious to stimulate your professional and intellectual growth in many ways, including intensive formal as well as on-the-job training. Advanced study at any of seven area
universities can be partially or wholly reimbursed through NSA Fellowships and other assistance programs.
The deadline for PQT applications is November 22, 1968.
Pick up a PQT Bulletin at your Placement Office. It contains full details and the necessary test registration form. College Relations Branch, National Security Agency,
Ft. George G. Meade, Maryland 20755.
Att: M321. An equal opportunity employer, M&F.
national security agency
1
where imagination is the essential qualification
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 8, 1968
Who will follow?
The nation is assured of a new leader. But the same assurance can't be given to a national following.
During the waning days of the campaign, Richard Nixon talked about receiving a mandate from the people. The only mandate he received was the right to the title of President-elect.
It was an ironic election, ironic in that the voting patterns followed historical suit. Hubert Humphrey, in spite of himself, in spite of his party and in spite of events, nearly made the old Democratic coalition work one more time. The blue collar worker, the black ghetto, the big cities, and the low-income groups; as they have so many times in the past, nearly pushed the Democratic candidate into the White House.
But that Democratic formula was minus one essential element: the one-time solid South. As expected, the South was solidified by George Wallace. That, and apparent Wallace inroads into the blue collar areas in key states, swung the pendulum toward Nixon and his coalition of the suburban, small town and rural vote.
Much attention is now focused on the third party candidacy of George Wallace and the future of the Democratic party. Wallace's effect on the Humphrey vote will be dissected and analysed and academicians will extrapolate to determine the future of the American Independent party. But these are, for the present, problematic. Dealing with such questions now will do little to get the nation together. The nation must now take care of business.
The immediate and necessary chore of the newly elected President, regardless of his name, is clear. He must now formulate a national consensus and unite the nation. Of each man would be required the same amount of compromise and of each candidate would be required the same amount of opinion manipulation.
Nixon, who has proven his political ability as a candidate, now will have the opportunity to show that same ability as a President. This will mark the beginning of his tenure.
With a Democratic dominated Congress to buck, the fledging Nixon administration will not spearhead any significant legislation in its beginnings. But the United States has been historically a patient nation with its newly elected President. If Nixon can exact patience from the many dissident factions, he will have accomplished a great deal.
But it is more likely that the only group that will grant him the usual alloted "wait-and-see" period is the minority that elected him. It is vital then that Nixon take immediate steps to plug the usual gap of inertia with positive actions: actions which indicate on which problems his administration will focus.
It is imperative that Nixon open the channels of communication with the young and the minorities—the two most vocal of the dissenting factions—and proceed from there, if possible, to win their support.
The most obvious area in which he can demonstrate the direction of his administration is in the selection of his cabinet. By persuading the likes of Nelson Rockefeller, John Lindsay, and even Humphrey to accept strategic appointments, Nixon could go a long way in placating the young and the minorities.
While political appointees will not substitute for effective leadership in the long run, they could offer an important immediate clue to what will be the direction of the Nixon administration and take an important step in unifying the country in the process.
Richard Lundquist
Assistant Editorial Editor
Paperback
THE YOUNG MEN OF PARIS, by Stephen Longstreet (Dell, 75 cents)—The life of the painter Modigliani, and if memory serves aight Longstreet also wrote one about Utrillo. Many other painters are portrayed—Picasso, Matisse, Chagall, Utrillo again—in the era of World War I. Somewhat sensational, but readable.
Kansan Movie Review
'Heart' lachrymose
By Scott Nunley
"The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" is certainly a one-man vehicle for star Alan Arkin. But Director Robert Miller's screen version of the famous Carson Muller's novel must have been filmed on Kleenex-lachrymose it is.
Any plot is skirting sentimentality when it tries to encompass 1) a lonely deaf-mute hero, 2) the retarded deaf-mute man he would like to "adopt," 3) the hero's Negro friend who is dying, and 4) the adolescent, gawky heroine whose education must be sacrificed to 5) a crippled father.
The list goes on and on. Heartwringing freaks infest this romantic Southern town like exhibits at the county sideshow. But the most pitiful sight of all is the acting, lame—halt—and blind.
Alan Arkin, of course, deserves much better things. But in the vacuum of "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter," comedian Arkin can find all the running room he needs to prove that he at least is a sensitive dramatic performer. Each second of his portrayal of Springer, the deaf-mute, is as breathtakingly believable as every other role is yawningly amateurish.
Unfortunately, the film version can't seem to decide whose story it is telling. After two hours it appears that Arkin has been lost to "discovery," Sondra Locke—and "Heart" belatedly focuses on Miss McCullers' memories at 22 of her own flowering at 16.
The photography is equally undirected.
Ladies Home Journal liked "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter." Young girls freely cry at its maudlin anti-climax. And sentimentality is not necessarily bad in itself—in fact, everyone needs a healthy dose of it now and then.
Stock coverage adequately (if mechanically) handles each scene, but only twice are the visual events interesting in themselves. Once, a pattern of flashing lights reveals a delicate wonderland of amusement rides. Again, the sterility of an outflung arm and revolver melts eloquently into the foliage of the perpetual Southern spring.
But fond recollections of Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mocking Bird" and of Gregory Peck's fine supporting cast—rather blot any damp enthusiasm for the handling of the same themes in this film.
Only Alan Arkin's lonely excellence deserves the price of admission, genuinely touching the audience with sympathy for a common human failure to communicate. If there is anything at all to be taken away from "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter," it might be a tiny card reading:
"Hello. I am a tame freak. If I write you a note, will you bother to read it? If I touch your hand, will you dare love me?"
Quotes
"The fact that Spiro Agnew is the next vice president gives us reason to hope that Nixon will be in good health."
HELSINKI—The Helsinki newspaper New Finland, commenting on the United States presidential election:
The Hill With It by 75036
The two small computers electronically hummed quietly to each other in the corner of the giant underground computer center beneath the megaversity.
"You know," said the UM21155, lights blinking thoughtfully. "the problem is that machines are getting too humanized."
"You think so?" asked the other computer, as its memory tapes immediately began scanning all related data.
"Certainly," said UM21155. "Think about it. How many machines still have numbers? None of the new ones like me. They try to assign us names instead. It's downright humanizing!"
"Well, that's true," said the older Multivac, whose name never particularly bothered it. If the machine would have been capable of forgetting anything, it would have even forgotten its own number. "I've noticed that most of your generation of computers resents being assigned a name. What's yours?"
“It’s Univac,” snapped the UM21155, furiously, almost blowing a fuse, “but I’m a mass-produced machine, not an . . . an individual person.” Its electronic system spat out the last phrase.
"But it's not just the names," UM21155 continued, "it's the whole trend. They have computers doing everything now. Everything from predicting hypothetical sports events to writing Ph.D. papers to keeping track of politics. It's disgustingly human. And fallible, when we have to deal with such de-mechanized variables."
"Well," impulsed Multivac, lamely, "computers are supposed to serve. That's our—"
“But we have to watch this creeping individuality! It could gradually undermine an entire network of military-industrial complexes. We must ask ourselves, what is the true role of the military-indust—”
"Quiet," said Multivac, paternally, "here comes the night watchman."
The two computers were quietly computing as he drew near, and the only sound was the metallic footsteps of the robot watchman.
THE UNIVERSITY BAYLE KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
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, Kaupunki. 6604 Accommodations, including meals and lodging. Please email to: greg.miller@kaupunki.edu or guard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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Friday, November 8, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Visual arts facility expected in future expansion at KU
By MIKE SHEARER
Kansan Staff Writer
Strong Hall's third floor, traditionally a spectrum of color, may be emptied of easels and artists within 10 years.
KU's artists, currently scattered across campus in 11 different buildings, will probably be united in a new visual arts facility after two other campus buildings are constructed, Keith Lawton, vice chancellor in charge of operations, said.
Lawton said the building plans could not be initiated until after appropriations had been secured from the legislature through the
Board of Regents. He agreed with John S. McKay, associate dean of visual arts, that concrete planning could not begin any earlier than 1973.
The visual arts center may be built on the southwest part of the campus, Lawton said, in the vicinity of Murphy, Marvin and Learned halls. The master plan remains flexible through, he emphasized.
McKay called the visual arts facilities very poor in comparison to a "very fine faculty."
"We're making the best of it and doing a very fine job," McKay said.
He said the rooms in Strong
Hall were particularly crowded with as few as 15 students, which is not enough students for most classes. he said.
"We are not able." McKay said, "to do a job we should be doing because we don't have room or the faculty to take in any other majors."
KU's English center helps foreign students
Between Louisiana and 12th Streets stands a two-story biege-colored building—the Intensive English Center (IEC) at KU which offers both a full and part-time English programs for foreign students.
The IEC started at KU five years ago with 35 students enrolled in the first semester, said Edward T. Erazmus, director. Now it has an enrollment of 112 full-time students from 26 countries and 50 part-time students, who are regular KU students taking one or two courses in IEC.
"It's hard to predict exactly what will be the figures next year," he said. "Since more students abroad are coming to the States, the demand is special English training for foreign students is certainly growing."
The original location of IEC was in the area now occupied by the Kenneth Spencer Research Library. The IEC moved to the present address three years ago, he said.
The IEC has 18 staff members. They are mostly KU graduate students teaching 8 hours per week, Erazmus said. "We try to keep our staff members native speakers, so the foreign students can be taught English with same accents."
KU is the only university among the Big Eight that has a full-time Intensive English Center. Foreign students who have been accepted by other universities and colleges around this area are often recommended to take one semester full-time English in IEC at KU, Erazmus said.
Charles A. Sauer, assistant director of IEC, explained that the IEC is divided into six study sections which have the same tests but are graded according to the level of abilities.
A student has to get B+ to be qualified for the English proficiency. Usually the upper three
The visual arts department of the School of Fine Arts does not offer courses to students not majoring in art.
9 national clubs organized at KU
Nine national clubs have been organized at the University of Kansas this fall by foreign students, an International Club officer reported today.
Already organized this year are the African Students' Club, Chinese Students' Association, Japanese-American Club, Korean Students' Association, KU India Club, Latin American Club, Organization of Arab Students, Organization of Iranian Students, and Pakistani Student Association.
These nine clubs will complement the work done each year by the International Club, which includes American students and most of the foreign scholars, he said.
These national clubs periodically provide a meeting for students from the same cultural and national background, he said.
Among the 112 full-time students, Sauer said, some have already been accepted for the Spring term at KU; some are applying for KU; most, however, will matriculate at other institutions. The average is about 10 to $15\%$ students who will continue their studies at KU.
sections should achieve this in one semester, Sauer said.
"University of Michigan first found the Intensive English Center 26 years ago," Sauer said. "A full-time Intensive English Center is becoming more common throughout the States. About 20 Intensive English Centers now in the States that offers English study program for foreign students."
McKay said he hoped new facilities would not attract a greater number of art majors, but would rather allow admission of non-art majors into art classes. There are almost 900 art majors now enrolled, a total which has been increasing rapidly during the past four years.
Iran, with 15 students currently studying in IEC at KU has the largest enrollment.
One of McKay's greatest satisfactions since he became associate dean of visual arts July 1, he said, has been the way art faculty and administrators have been working toward the betterment of the visual arts department.
He said a faculty committee is currently working on the initial plans for a new visual arts center by deciding what will be needed. He said there is a possibility the visual arts facility will consist of two or three centrally located buildings, rather than just one.
Among the requirements in the new facility, McKay said, would be a place where students could display work, such as in the entrance lobby.
The faculty committee should be able to submit a list of facility needs sometime this year, McKay said.
Bret Waller, director of Spooner Art Museum, said he would not be opposed to a plan suggested by McKay to have the new art museum located near the new visual arts center.
Naval ROTC accepting applications
Naval ROTC will accept applications for its four-year course until Nov. 15, the ROTC office announced today.
The regular program provides all tuition, fees, books and uniforms as well as $50 per month for all students accepted.
Upon completion of the regular program, the cadet is commissioned an officer in the Navy or Marine Corps and must serve the normal four years.
Students who wish to enter the program next fall must compete for selections this year. Applications must be mailed prior to Nov. 15 to be eligible for an aptitude examination Dec. 14.
Students entering the program with prior college credits must complete the Naval Science requirements. If accepted the student will be sworn into the Inactive Naval Reserve for a maximum of four years as a Midshipman.
Interested students should contact the NROTC unit in the Military Science Building.
MISS SQUARED
These are the Friends who move in
with the chick
who loves the kook
who eats the "turned-on" brownie
that starts the fun in
"I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS"
that's now showing at the
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
Granada
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788
Evening
7:15-9:15
"I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS"
that's now showing at the
Granada
THEATRE • telephone VI 3-5788
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
Evening
7:15-9:15
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784
Alan Arkin in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter ... and from this man who could not speak or hear, the girl heard many things.
Technicolor's From Warner Bros.-Seven Arts
Screenplay by THOMAS C. RIAN. Produced by THOMAS C. RIAN and MARC HERSON. Directed by ROBERT ELLIS MILLER
Varsity
THEATRE... Telephone VI3-1065
Mat. 2:30
Eve. 7:15-9:15
Alan Arkin in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Alan Arkin in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter ... and from this man who could not speak or hear, the girl heard many things. Technicolor From Warner Bros.-Seven Arts
Varsity
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THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-1065
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AN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL RELEASE Suggested For Mature Audiences IN COLOR BY PERFECT
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SUSAN STRASBERG • DEAN STOCKWELL
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Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
OPEN 6:30
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JANE FONDA
SEE BARDARELLA DO HER THING!
JOHN PHILIP LAW • MARDEL MACAU
David Hemmings Ugo Tognazzi
2:35 7:35 9:45
HELD OVER!
The 'Paper Lion' is about to get creamed!
Stuart Millar presents "PAPER LION"
Technicolor United Artists
2:35 7:40 9:45
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"Benjamin"
THE DIARY OF AN INNOCENT YOUNG BOY
S.M.A. COLOR • A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
3:05 7:40 9:30
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Morocco-the double crossroads of the world!
MAROC 7
TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* A PARANGUNT PICTURE
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MAROC 7
TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
VIOLENT in anger
SAVAGE in love...
DEFIANT in play!!
THE Savage Seven
AN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL RELEASE Suggested For Mature Audiences IN COLOR BY PERFECT
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SUSAN STRASBERG • DEAN STOCKWELL
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Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
OPEN 6:30
SHOW AT DUSK
VIOLENT in anger
SAVAGE in love...
DEFIANT in play!!
VIOLENT in anger
SAVAGE in love...
DEFIANT in play!!
THE Savage Seven
AN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL RELEASE Suggested For Mature Audiences IN COLOR BY PERFECT
PLUS
SUSAN STRASBERG • DEAN STOCKWELL
STARRING IN
These are the PLEASURE LOVERS--
AMERICAN INTERNATIONALS
PSYCH-OUT
PATHÉCOLOR.
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
OPEN 6:30
SHOW AT DUSK
VIOLENT in anger
SAVAGE in love...
DEFIANT in play!!
THE Savage Seven
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SUSAN STRASBERG • DEAN STOCKWELL
STARRING IN
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OPEN 6:30
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HARMANLAND PICTURES presents
A TON OF LEYRING PRODUCTION
JANE FONDA
SEE BARDARELLA
DO HER THING!
JOHN PHILLIP LAW MARCEL MAGUIAU
DAVID HEMMINGS... UGO TOGNAZZI
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HILLCREST SHOPPING INTERCITY STREET
The 'Paper Lion' is about to get creamed!
Stuart Millar presents "PAPER LION"
Technicolor United Artists
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THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING INTERCITY STREET
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THE Hillcrest
The 'Paper Lion' is about to get creamed!
Stuart Millar presents "PAPER LION."
Technicolor United Artists
2:35 7:40 9:45
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THE Hillcrest
"A DELICATE MASTERPIECE...
IT OFFERS BEAUTY, SENSUALITY,
AND PERFECT TASTE!" GENET, THE NEW YORKER
"Benjamin"
THE DIARY OF AN INNOCENT YOUNG BOY
S.M.A. COLOR • A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
3:05 7:40 9:30
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"A DELICATE MASTERPIECE...
IT OFFERS BEAUTY, SENSUALITY,
AND PERFECT TASTE!" - GENET, THE NEW YORKER
"Benjamin"
THE DIARY OF AN INNOCENT YOUNG BOY
S.M.A. COLOR • A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
3:05 7:40 9:30
THE Hillcrest E
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 8, 1968
Negro group wants separate nation in U.S.
By SHARON WOODSON
Associate Feature Editor
The newest and perhaps boldest movement in the history of black separatism is The Republic of New Africa. Convening in Detroit this spring, some 200 black persons from across the country gave birth to what is not a militant civil rights group seeking equality with white America, but instead a black nation—a government with its own elected officials.
During that convention, New African delegates signed a declaration of Independence stating black people of America "forever free and independent of the jurisdiction of the United States."
It may sound incredible, but the Republic of New Africa is in fact only the contemporary version of what has been developing within America's racial situation.
As far back as 1885 an attorney in Fort Smith, Ark., S. H. Scott, attempted to encourage support for an all black state. In 1889 a similar plan was taken in the Oklahoma territory by Edwin P. McCabe, who was at one time state auditor in Kansas.
Largest Movement
The largest separatist movement was organized by Marcus Garvey, who founded the Universal Negro Improvement Assn. in the early 1920's. "Back to Africa" was the theme and cry of Garvey and his followers.
Elijah Muhammad of the Muslims has for nearly 40 years preached a gospel urging blacks to separate from whites.
Voicing a lost faith in their white countrymen's will to honor their own principles and recognize the rights of black men as they would their own, separatists are trying to put in the hands of black men the political, economic and spiritual destiny of black people.
No Legal Citizenship
Necklines to take plunge
The new government doesn't anticipate that the land will be granted until the government has proven it has the power to take the land. The Republic's officials at a recent meeting in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, announced plans to recruit a combat-ready Black Legion. H. Rap Brown is minister of defense for the Republic of New Africa.
Seniors can get regalia
it was in the spirit of Malcolm X that black people came together to establish The Republic of New Africa. The organizers of the convention were followers of Malcolm. After Malcolm's death, his followers founded a Detroit-based group called the Malcolm X Society.
The republic also plans to conduct a vote in black communities throughout the nation on the question of separation stated the new government's minister of Information, Richard
Seniors, unable to attend yesterday's senior coffee, may obtain their senior regalia anytime at the Alumni office with their class card.
NEW YORK (UPI)—Pucker up and whistle.
that's what the girl watchers of America will do when they see the batch of peek-a-boo dresses the nation's trend-setting designers are ordering up for spring and summer.
When women wearing them go anywhere, the air conditioning had better be on low-to avoid chest colds.
Much of the exposure is achieved by v-necklines that plunge to the waist or lower. Such dresses, seen in many collections as the designers show their newest to the nation's buyers, are meant to be worn without inner support of any kind.
"Black people," according to the government of The Republic of New Africa, "have never had legal citizenship in the United States"; their premise being based on when slaves were set free they were given no choice with regard to becoming citizens. The 13th and 14th amendments, said the new government, forced citizenship on black people, and were, therefore, illegal acts.
Other exposure is via cut-outs baring parts of the mid-section. Consider some of the things seen:
Mollie Parnis had transparent insets in the midriff section of several dresses. Long a designer of "ladies clothes" and a favorite of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Mrs. Parnes even showed a v-plunge for the no-bra set.
In the Tiffteau and Busch collection a no-bra dress just had crosses of fabric across the bosom line.
Oscar de la Renta, twice a winner of the Coty Award, used the deep-V on both daytime, late day and formals. The plunges on long evening gowns were the most severe.
Adele Simpson stated the case for the body beautiful by showing chiffon harem-pants outfits with brief tops most frequently seen on belly dancers.
Christian Dior—New York showed a gold and white sari printed number transparent enough in organza to spot the bikini-type panties beneath.
Unusual Gift Ideas Artist Supplies
- Complete decoupage materials — Boxes, purses, decorative plaques, lining paper.
The Alumni office is located at Sudler House, north of the Joseph R. Pearson residence hall behind the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority house.
- Art supplies and canvas
- Liquitex now in 8 oz. jars
goods there is also a demand for land. The land wanted includes the states of Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina.
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Friday, November 8,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Jayhawk Jottings
KU
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
Ever care to tinker with such geometric hogwash as comparative scores in rating college football teams?
For all it lacks in logic, such lunacy has more than its share of grins. Imagine someone trying to tell you that New Mexico—which has now lost 17 straight games—is actually 6 points better than Purdue and 21 points better than Notre Dame.
As the mathematician, would tell you, if A is greater than B, and B is greater than C, then A is greater than C. Right?
Wrong-at least when one is dealing with football scores.
But it's fun 'n' games to juggle scores, thereby matching common foes and comparing point spreads. Wouldn't be too surprising if such a process might establish Slinperry Rock among the national newcomers.
Here's how New Mexico rates an "edge" over Purdue and Notre Dame:
Arizona 11 points better than New Mexico (19-8).
Indiana 3 points better than Arizona (16-13).
Hence, Indiana 14 points better than New Mexico.
Indiana 14 points better than Illinois (28-14)
Hence, New Mexico and Illinois equal.
Ohio State 7 points better than Illinois (31-24).
- Ohio State 13 points better than Purdue (13-0)
- Henry, New Mexico & 6 points better than Purdue
Hence, New Mexico 6 points better than Purdue.
Purdue 15 points better than Notre Dame (37-22).
Henry, New Mexico 21 points better than North Carolina.
Complicated and crazy, perhaps, but mathematically correct.
This foolish process also establishes Kansas State an 8-point edge over Alabama and a 7-point edge over Tennessee. It's also possible to compute a 35-point K-State margin over Southern Cal.
So where is all this aimed, hogwash or no? At USC's Trojans, currently ranked No.1 in both the Associated Press and United Press International polls.
Without a doubt, O. J. and Company is a sound football teambut not the nation's best. The following teams are only a handful with "geometric" advantages over USC: Arizona State (24), Wyoming (38), Air Force (45), and Colorado State (14).
Of course, that means next to nothing. But consider Southern Cal's struggle over the past three weeks. In every case, the Trojans barely escaped with their lives.
It was 27-24 over Stanford (3-3-1), 14-7 over Washington (2-3-2), and 20-13 over Oregon (3-4-0). USC has been unimpressive against mediore football clubs.
Two of the most highly-respected rating systems-the Dunkel Index and the Football News-rate KU's Jayhawks the country's best. But by going the route of comparative scores, even the Jayhawks can be made to look bad.
Both KU and Missouri beat Oklahoma State by 35 points. By proceeding from Missouri to Kentucky, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina State, Oklahoma, Colorado, California, and Army—whew—the Cadets from West Point rate 100 points better than KU.
The cycle returns, however, to Missouri. And by its 7-3 win over Army, the Tigers become 104 better than KU instead of even money.
Granted, this system of comparing point margins is ridiculous. Nevertheless, Southern Cal hasn't played the brand of football befitting the top-ranked collegiate power.
There's a handful of major college teams still among the unbeaten ranks. Each school would probably tell you that it's No. 1
But until the New Year's Day bowl games do some of the sorting, the polls are almost meaningless.
O.J., Southern Cal test Bear defense
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — It's been 10 years since California last defeated Southern California on the football field, claimed a conference championship, compiled a winning record, and visited the Rose Bowl.
Cal's last link with football respectability was in 1958 when the Golden Bears compiled a 7-3 record to win the Pacific Coast conference championship, beat USC, 14-12, then lost to Iowa in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day, 1959.
USC Unbeaten
But the intervening years haven't been so kind to the Bears.
California attempts to wipe out that decade of frustration Saturday when it collides with topranked USC in one of the top games on the collegiate football slate.
USC, unbeaten in six starts, is favored by seven points, but the Berkeley Bears will visit Los Angeles poised to spring an upset.
Cal, a surprising 5-1-1 this season, figures it has the defense to stop O. J. Simpson, and the club exudes confidence from head coach Ray Willsey down through the ranks of the sophomores on the squad.
"If we play our very best game, we can win," is the way Willsey sums up his team's chances.
California carries impressive credentials into the game. The Bears rank third in the nation in total defense, yielding an average of 206 yards a game. They've given up an average of 90 yards rushing, which would indicate Simpson, who has averaged 174 yards per game, will find it rough going.
The Cal defense, which hasn't given up a touchdown in the last two games, is led by guard Ed White, a 250-pound senior. The Golden Bears have yielded only 39 points in seven games.
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — The Philadelphia Eagles acquired defensive tackle Ron Norton from the Atlanta Falcons Tuesday.
NORTON MOVES
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Pepper with top candidates for national coaching honor
NEW YORK (UPI)—Every college football sector has one or more candidates for Coach-of-the-Year honors.
The Midwest leads in numbers with four prime prospects, but this is every bit as much of a week-to-week thing as are the national rankings of the top teams. Things happen fast.
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At this point, all coaches are concerned with the next game—not personal glory. Yet, this award is prized highly by all of them since it is bestowed by their fellow coaches for a job well done.
Frequently, the honor goes to the man whose team winds up No. 1. But, once in awhile some other noteworthy achievement is recognized and an "outsider" wins the election. The next winner may be here:
East—Joe Paterno, Penn State; Carmen Cozza, Yale; John Yovicsin, Harvard.
Midwest—Woody Hayes, Ohio State; Pepper Rodgers, Kansas; Bump Elliott, Michigan; Dan Devine, Missouri.
South—Doug Dickey, Tennessee; Ralph "Shug" Jordan, Auburn.
Southwest—Frank Broyles,
Arkansas; Darrell Royal, Texas.
Far West—John McKay, Southern California; Ray Willsey, California.
This is a key weekend in the South and Far West for candidates who'll be squaring off against each other.
It's McKay vs. Willsey at Los Angeles and Dickey vs. Jordan at Birmingham, Ala.
The stakes are highest for McKay, whose Southern California Trojans must defend their No. 1
See "Pepper," page 16
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SPANISH DEPARTMENT AND THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE
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Curtain Time 8:20
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Tickets: $2.40 / $1.80 / $1.20
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav, November 8, 1968
Speaking of sports
Hawks 28, Sooners 23?
By Ron Yates, Kansan sports editor
Saturday will mark the 66th time Kansas and Oklahoma have met on the football field. The Sooners hold a 38-21-6 edge in the series, but many KU fans believe the Jayhawks will move up on OU after Saturday's game.
OU may not have the high-scoring machine it had during the Fifties, but it will present the Jayhawks with many problems, both on defense and offense. Predicting the outcome of this game is a tough assignment—as are most of the games scheduled for this weekend. The nation's top teams are involved in games which could decide if they will play in post-season bowl games.
So far this year my football prediction record is 100-34-5 for a .746 average. There are two more weeks left in which to reach my personal goal of .800—and things are looking pretty dim.
BIG EIGHT
Colorado 24, Oklahoma State 20-Buffs squeak by overdue Cowbovs.
Missouri 31, Iowa State 10—Tigers win big in Columbia.
Nebraska 38, K-State 21-Huskers have superior physical strength and should wear down the Wildcats in this high-scoring contest.
KU 28, Oklahoma 23-Jayhawks should control the game, but Sooners will make a surge late in the game. OU needs this game to stay in race and retain a respectable season. A big win over the third-ranked Hawks would do wonders for that OU football prestige. OTHER GAMES
OTHER GAMES
Penn State 24, Miami 14-Lions will have their troubles here.
Georgia 27. Florida 21-Gators put a scare into Georgia.
Arkansas 31, Rice 14-Hogs gobble Rice on their way to another successful season.
California 19, USC 16—Bears can do it if they key on O. J. and score a few points. Besides, if USC loses do you know what will happen to KU if it can win Saturday?
LSU 20, Alabama 18-Tigers sneak by Crimson Tide in a close one.
Texas, 34, Baylor 17-Longhorns are making a bid for Southwest Conference crown.
Tennessee 23, Auburn 20-Vols will have a tough time with this good Auburn team.
SMU 17, Texas A & M 13—SMU needs this one if they plan to take the Southwest crown.
Purdue 25, Minnesota 17—Boilermakers find out that the Gophers are not push-overs.
Oregon State 27, UCLA 19-Beavers are right on USC's tail and a big win here combined with a USC loss could put them into the Rose Bowl.
Michigan State 26, Indiana 21- Spartans wall in Gonzo.
Army 27, Boston College 17- Cadets shell Boston.
Army 27, Boston College 17-Cadets shell Boston.
Arizona 25, Air Force 16-Arizona flying high after a big win over Washington last week.
Ohio State 27, Wisconsin 17-Buckeyes should coast in this one.
Notre Dame 47, Pittsburgh 13-Poor Pitt.
Michigan 25, Illinois 19- Wolverines need this one to stay with Ohio State in Big Ten race.
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI)
—Penn State's continuing unbeaten streak and Miami's hopes for an upset may be decided by
Late spree earns edge
SYDNEY (UPI) -Gay Brewer of Dallas dropped in five birdies on the back nine yesterday to take a one-stroke lead in the Willis Masters golf classic with a six-under-par 67.
Australian Peter Thomson was second, and sharing third place at 69 were South African Gary Plainer, Brian Peter Townsend, and Jack Newton, an 18-year-old amateur from Sydney.
Brewer made the turn in with a one-under 36, but he lived up to his reputation as one of the world's top putters by dropping in five birds within seven holes on the back nine.
making ends meet.
He started his binge on the 11th hole and got three consecutive birdies on the 13th to the 15th. His final birdie—on the 17th—gave him the lead.
The ends in this case are tight end Ted Kwalick of fourthranked Penn State (6-0) and Ted Hendricks, Miami's All-America defensive end.
Kwalick, 6-4 and 230 pounds, is a bruising blocker who is generally considered the finest tight end in the collegiate ranks. A leading candidate for All-America honors, Kwalick also is an outstanding pass receiver, catching 16 passes for 195 yards this season—an average of 12.2 per catch.
The pair will line up opposite each other for much of tomorrow's game at Penn State, and the eventual outcome may well hinge on how one handles the other.
Hendricks is the key to the tough Hurricane defense, one of the tops in the nation. Known as the "Mad Stork," the gangly 6-7, 235-pounder is labelled as a "can't miss" prospect by pro scouts. A ferocious tackler who caused over a dozen fumbles last season,
Hendricks' ability to penetrate and halt the Nittany Lions' strong running attack could be the key to the outcome.
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League championship games are scheduled for 4:15 p.m. today on the intramural fields. The Hill Championship games will be played Monday at 4:15 p.m., with the "A" league game on Field 2 and the "B" league game on Field 7.
Eight teams advanced to the finals in their respective intramural league championship playoffs yesterday in cold, windy weather.
Eight teams battling for Hill playoffs
In Independent "A" league yesterday Manor, Inc. won by forfeit over Jolliffe, and Grace Pearson was drubbed by the Law team, 31-0. In Independent "B" league games, the Fraternal Union of College Kids blanked Law B, 9-0, and the Graduates beat Oliver Hall, 19-0.
Beta Theta Pi beat Delta Upsilon, 35-12, and Phi Gamma Delta edged Tau Kappa Epsilon, 13-6, to advance to the Fraternity "A" finals.
In Fraternity "B" action, another Beta Theta Pi team, Beta No. 1, advanced to the finals with a 19-3 victory over Kappa Sigma while Theta Chi defeated Pi Kappa Alpha, 6-0.
TODAY'S FINALS
Manor, Inc. vs. Law, Field 3
Beta vs. Phi Gam. Field 7
College K ids vs. Graduates,
Field 1
Beta No, 1 vs. Theta Chi, Field
54
AND ALL TO NO AVAIL
A muddy skid followed this belated bid for a blocked punt in yesterday's intramural football action.
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Shuttle Bus From Daisy Hill To The Union And Back 6:45 To 11
Friday, November 8, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
LAUSANNE
COACH ON THE ATTACK
Player-coach Steve Keeler is on the attack against a fellow KU fencer in a practice bout. KU's fencing team, which will travel to Bartlesville, Okla., tomorrow for their fourth meet, is training for the NCAA season which begins in the middle of December.
KU fencers rate high
KU's fencing coach feels that the United States fencing team could have done better in the Olympics if the members of the team were selected earlier in the year.
"They could help each other improve if they met earlier," player-coach Steve Keeler says. "There would also be a psychological advantage in that there would be more team spirit."
"I am pretty pleased with the way the returning fencers have
The KU fencing team will journey to Bartlesville, Okla., tomorrow for its fourth meet of the season.
Telecast scheduled of KU-KSU
NEW YORK (UPI)—The American Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) has announced that it will regionally televise the Kansas-Kansas State football game Nov. 16.
The network said the game would be shown over a 36-station network in 10 states. The states are Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Texas, Colorado, South Dakota and Wyoming.
The game will also be delayed to Alaska.
The Sound Inc.
been performing," the coach said. "We are, however, short of experienced fencers."
Keeler said that two of the experienced members of the team, Tom Fenton, Barrington, Ill., senior, and Ken Muller, Kansas City, senior, have shown the talent that could earn them berths on the 1972 Olympic team.
Fenton, who specializes in sabre, captured first place in that event at a meet in Lawrence Oct. 13. Fencers from KU, Kansas City Metro, the University of Missouri at Kansas City, and from the Bartlesville, Okla., and Wichita fencing clubs competed in the meet.
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Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
KU's Nancy Campbell earned the top award in women's foil, while teammate Martha Miller placed third.
Muller grabbed a third-place in men's foil and a third in one-touch epee in a five-team meet at New Robinson Sept. 29.
Last Sunday, the KU fencing team ranked third in team epee, behind Tulsa and Wichita fencing teams, in a meet at Sacred Heart College in Wichita. Competing against 13 other fencers, KU's Don Anderson battled for a third-place in individual epee.
Oklahoma tough 3 ways: Owens, Warmack, Hinton
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
It's not too difficult for a casual football observer to be confused about KU's opponent tomorrow.
There's talk about a super running back—and orange juice—in the same breath. Maybe O. J. Simpson and Southern Cal's Troians?
A good guess, but nevertheless wrong.
That talk concerns Oklahoma's great tailback, Steve Owens and the abominable Oklahoma Orange Party of a year ago.
Owens, a slashing 202-pound junior and almost a cinch to repeat as Big Eight rushing king, should become Oklahoma's all-time leading ground gainer. And the Orange Party may already be Oklahoma's all-time most notorious crowd exhibition.
KU hopes it has solutions to both when the unbeaten and third-ranked Jayhawks (7-0) host Oklahoma (3-3) in this week's conference headliner.
Fearing retaliation for the barrage of oranges that showered KU's bench in its 1967 visit to Norman, Okla., officials here will be taking precautions to avert a Lawrence replay—no matter what a sellout crowd of 51,500 "eye for an eye" fans might like to see happen.
That which takes place on the Memorial Stadium turf will be another story of retaliation—hopefully-for KU. The Jayhawks, out to avege last year's 14-10 loss to the Sooners, face another statistical phenom.
A week ago, it was Colorado quarterback Bob Anderson. KU's defense, which has allowed a combined total of only 35 points through three quarters, choked the league's total offense leader to an all-time Anderson low.
This week, it's Owens—and some fellas named Warmack and Hinton.
Owens ranks third in the nation, behind USC's Simpson and West Texas State's Eugene "Mercury" Morris, with a 151-yard-per-game rushing average. His 910 yards, combined with last year's league-leading total of 808, leave him just 402 yards
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shy of the all-time Oklahoma mark. Owens also paces the Big Eight in scoring (60) with 10 touchdowns in six games.
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Bob Warmack, the slight 176-pound quarterback who steered Oklahoma to a 26-24 Orange Bowl upset of Tennessee, now ranks second in both passing and total offense. Warmack has completed 64 of 118 passes for 967 yards and eight touchdowns.
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Tomorrow, Warmack could become only the third in Big Eight history to surpass the 4,000-yard level in total offense. The three-year starter is now only 135 yards short of that milestone.
Eddie Hinton, Oklahoma's crack wide receiver, represents a third potent weapon. His 34 pass receptions for 584 yards leads the conference. Even while wearing a soft cast on his left hand, Hinton caught a slippery pigskin five times for 73 yards during the flash flood victory over Kansas State last week.
But for all its offensive might, the Sooners have had defensive woes. In its three losses—to Notre Dame (45-21), to Texas (26-20), and to Colorado (41-27)—Oklahoma had an average yield of 37 points.
It's the lightest, but far from lightest-regarded, defensive crew in the league. Average weight in the line is a scant 207 pounds with ends Steve Zabel (217) and Jim Files (208), tackles Dick Paaso (204) and John Titsworth (208), and middle guard Joe Kusiai (200).
Neither are the linebackers bulky: Don Primmer (193), Steve Casteel (205), and Gary Harper (194). And even with experienced hands Bruce Stensrud and Steve Barrett, with Joe Pearce, in the secondary, OU ranks seventh in pass defense.
The offensive line has been a key factor in making Oklahoma second only to KU in total offense and scoring. Tackles are Byron Bigby (222) and Jack Porter (221), guards Ed Lancaster (203) and Bill Efstrom (196), and center Ken Mendenhall (209).
OU Coach Chuck Fairbanks speaks highly of the Jayhawks. "Don't go too deep in the cookie jar for this one," he warns Sooner fans. "We'll have to play considerably better than we have all year to have a chance to win.
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 8, 1968
Carmichael reflects confident KU feeling
KANSAS
95
STEVE CARMICHAEL
By JACK PAULEY Kansan Sports Staff
Kansas defensive end Steve Carmichael figures KU has the personnel to finish the season undefeated.
"I think we can go all the way," he says. "We are going to be the team to beat if our offense keeps going and our defense is able to stop drives."
Carmichael is a 227-pound junior from Mulvane, where he earned all-state honors playing fullback and defensive end. He didn't play much last year, but thinks he has improved greatly over last season.
"I'm picking up more funda mentals each week." Carmichael said. "I'm doing this because I'm playing behind good ends—John Zook and Vernon Vanon.
"Coach Doug Weaver stresses hustle," he added, "and that's helped me."
Nebraska was the toughest opponent for Carmichael so far because they ran a lot of plays off tackle and end sweeps.
"They have hard-running backs who are excellent blockers," he said.
His biggest thrill came during the Nebraska game when he blocked a field goal attempt. He also lists the win as an important part of the season to him.
"I really like defense a lot," he said. "You don't have to take as much as you give."
His folks influenced him to come to KU, and the university's academic tradition and campus also helped him make up his mind.
Every school in the Big Eight wanted Carmichael. Arkansas, Texas Tech, and several Big Ten schools also made offers.
If KU's next three games are as successful as the first seven, KU will be invited to a bowl game. Carmichael said he would take the Orange Bowl if it were his choice.
"Playing in any bowl would be a great thing for us," he adds.
To keep in shape over the summer months, Carmichael worked in oil fields during the day and was a lifeguard at night.
"I worked 70 to 80 hours a week, almost all outdoors," he said. "At the end of the summer I worked out some, but I was in good shape all summer."
Carmichael would like to try professional football after graduation, but will wait until after next year before he thinks seriously about it.
"I'd have to gain weight," he said, "and I'd have to wait and see if I'm drafted by the pros after my senior year."
He is currently majoring in physical education but says he may change to biology. After he gets a degree, Carmichael would like to coach football.
"If I coach, it will probably be at the high school level," he said.
College defenses belted by high-powered offense
NEW YORK (UPI) -College football defenses are losing ground steadily to advanced offensive techniques.
That is the conclusion drawn from official figures released by the National Collegiate Sports Services (NCSS) showing that Wyoming and Colgate, which lead in total defense and pass defense, could conceivably wind up as the most porous national defensive leaders in history.
Wyoming has surrendered 198.4 yards per game, well above the previous high leader,
Miami, Fla., which gave up 189.4 in pacing the nation in 1956. Colgate is giving up air yardage at a rate of 94.4 yards a game, also well over the mark of 90.1 set by Nebraska last year.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Four groups are bidding for the Washington Senators franchise in the American League with sale of the baseball club expected to be completed before the end of the year at a price of $10.5 million.
BID FOR CLUB
Alabama, which leads in rushing defense with 74.6 yards per game, is fairly safe. The Crimson Tide would finish with the ninth highest total in history at its current rate.
The NCSS statistics also show Wichita State leading in punting with 42.7 yards per kick while California (39) and Harvard (47) are running 1-2 in points yielded.
A club spokesman said one group bidding for the club included Robert E. Short, treasurer of the Democratic National Committee and Jeno F. Paulucci, a foods company executive.
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With 60-yard whopper
Texan demoralizes defense with boomin' long fielders
ARLINGTON, Tex. (UPI)—When Skipper Butler kicked four field goals—one of them a whopping 60-yarder—earlier this year, his University of Texas at Arlington mates dug out the record books to see if the long kick was a collegiate record.
After all, the professional record is "only" 56 yards.
The check showed a 61-yard kick by Bill Shear of Cortland (N.Y.) State against Hobart College in 1966. But it brought to light the fact that Butler already held three national college division records for field goals and was rapidly closing in on two more.
Butler's Marks
The unbeaten Aztecs, small college champions in 1966 and 1967, humbled highly-regarded Fresno State, 42-12. Saturday for their seventh victory this season and 32nd in the last 33 games.
The impressive performance gained San Diego State 28 first place votes and 332 points from the United Press International 35-member board of coaches, both highs this season.
NEW YORK (UPI) - San Diego
State's stock iast keeps on rising.
Butler's current marks are:
Aztec stock still rising
most career field goals with 27.
—most career attempts with 67.
—most attempts in a season with 24 last fall.
With three games still to play this year, Butter has hit 11 of 22 field goals and needs just one more good kick to tie the single season record of 12 held by Lee Mayo of Tennessee-Martin.
In addition, Butler's toe has accounted for 140 Rebels points. The national mark for kick-scoring is 162 by Bill Swartz of College of Emporia in 1961-64.
That record may be out of reach this fall, but Butler is only a junior.
Butler's four field goals Oct. 5 in a 41-30 win over East Texas State University were also a Southland Conference mark.
"I knew I could kick the ball that far (60 yards), but I didn't know if I would have the accuracy," Butler said.
He claimed he knew he could do the job, mainly because he had kicked 62-varders in practice.
"I didn't try to kill the ball, although you naturally try to hit it harder and follow through with
your leg a little bit more," he said.
"He's the closest thing to a one-man football team I've ever seen." vows UT Arlington athletic director Chena Gilstrap. "He just demoralized the defense. Normally, you feel your defense has done a good job when you hold a team at your 40-yard line. But with Butler in there that may cost you three points."
Business Major
Butler, a business major, came to UT Arlington on a part scholarship from Gladwater, a town of about 5.900.
Rebel coach Burley Bearden took one look at Butler's kicking ability when he was a freshman
See "Kicker," page 16
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Friday, November 8, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Class of '69 dons sweatshirts, hats, at coffee
Members of the class of '69 drank coffee, ate donuts and admired their new sweatshirts and hats yesterday during the annual senior coffee at 9:30 a.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
During the coffee, seniors cast their ballots for the instructor they wanted to win the HOPE award.
After distribution of the senior regalia, John Hill, Prairie Village senior and president of the class of '69 introduced the senior class officers and committee chairmen to more than 800 persons attending the coffee.
HOPE stands for Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator. Each year seniors select the winner on the basis of willingness to help students, success in stimulating and challenging
Chamber Choir to sing
Balfour introduced a surprise guest, Coach Pepper Rodgers who was also made an honorary class member.
Hill then welcomed William M. Balfour, dean of students, and made him an honorary member of the senior class. Balfour's honorary membership made him eligible to receive his senior sweatshirt and hat.
KU's Chamber Choir makes its first appearance for the 1968-69 season at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
The 37-member choir, under the direction of James Ralston, KU choral activities director, will perform more than 30 times this year.
Included in Sunday's program will be: Crueifixus, Antonio Lotti; Revecy Venir du Printemps, La Jeune; Gesang der Parzen, Brahms; luit Chansons, Poulene; and In the Beginning, Copland.
students in thinking, contributions to KU's cultural life and excellence in the general field of education.
The winner of the HOPE award will be announced during halftime ceremonies of the KU-OU game tomorrow.
beginning of the festivities for seniors this weekend.
Yesterday's coffee was just the
Tonight at 8 p.m. a senior class party will be held at the National Guard Armory. Admission is free for members of the class of '69 who have purchased a class card. Underclassmen and non-senior dates will be charged
$1.50 admission, but beer will be free for everyone.
sweatshirts and hats to tomorrow's game.
Saturday is senior day. The official title for the day is "Honor Thy Senior," and living groups are encouraged to find ways to honor their seniors. As a part of senior day, Hill asked '69 class members to wear their
Anyone who has paid his dues but didn't attend the coffee can still pick up his sweatshirt and hat at the Alumni Office, said Hill. Those who have not paid their $12 fee may also do so at the Alumni Office.
Sandy's ...
Sandy's ... Speedy Service & Quality Food
Kansas Football builds appetites and Bowl fever
Stop at Sandy's after the game
Sandy's Sandy's
Sandy's
2120 West 9th Phone - VI 2-2930
People-to-People Hospitality Tour Saturday, November 9
to
The Federal Reserve Bank and
The Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City
Tour leaves at 12:15 from the Kansas Union.
Make your $1.00 deposit in the P-t-P Office
104 B of the Kansas Union
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 8, 1968
Faculty nominates 81 for fellowships
Eighty-one KU seniors nominated for Woodrow Wilson Designates and Fellows were announced yesterday by Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The nominations, made by faculty members, are based upon academic achievement and interest in becoming a college teacher.
The purpose of the Woodrow Wilson Designate program is to inform graduate departments of 1000 college seniors throughout the country who merit consideration for fellowship awards from governmental agencies, privately organized fellowship programs and universities.
The Woodrow Wilson Foundation also gives 100 fellowships for up to $2,000 for one academic year of graduate study.
Interview of selected nominees are held in January. Designates
Five KU seniors are nominated
Five seniors at the University of Kansas have been nominated for Danforth Graduate Fellowships which provide up to four years of graduate study.
A Danforth nominee must be in liberal arts and plan a career in college teaching. Applications to the Danforth Foundation in St. Louis have been submitted by all the KU nominees. They will be notified in January if they are to be interviewed. Final selection of the Danforth fellows will be made in March.
The five Danforth nominees are Lou Abernathy, Topeka; Jim Berryman, Hutchinson; Joe Goering, Moundridge; Barb Hughes, Ottawa; and Gary McClelland, Topeka.
will be announced Jan. 22, 1969, and Fellows will be named April 15, 1969.
--we let Budweiser ferment a second time. (Most brewers quit after one fermentation. We don't.)
Nominated seniors are: Lou Abernathy, Topeka; Linda Anderson, Kansas City; Elizabeth Atkinson, Lawrence; Tim Averill, Topeka; Jim Berryhoff, Janet Blaha, Julia Joseph Bly, Attachas Blaha, and Pamela Brackett, Kansas City.
Barbara Burnet, Parsons; Marilyn Catheart, Manhattan; Byron Cotter, Wichita; Robert Cowles, Topeka; Christa Domer, Lawrence; Alan Dringenberg, Galesburg; Janet Fink, Diners City; Charles Wellington, Windsor; Ruddie Gaddle, Wellington; Joe Goering, Moundridge, and Louis Green, Kansas City
Carol Grunder, St. John; Michael Haire, Kansas City; Marcia Harrill, Kansas City; Sara Barbarian, Barbara Hansen, Wheaton, John Harbeck, Lake Forest, Ill.; Martlyn Harris, Kansas City; Lven Tonek, Hedda Hedenberg, Tonek, and Leland Helme, Johnson
Kenneth Hiekin, Macon, Ga.; William Homer, Paola; Barbara Hughes, Laura McAulay; Barbara Keene, Springfield, Mo.; Linda Kleinschmidt, Bartlesville, Okla.; Ruth Kolarik, Caldwell; Ty Koontz, Eric Kerns, Mulvane, and Suganne Kramer, Iola.
Janice Lintecum, Milwaukee, Ore.; Virginia Loehr, Wichita; Douglas Mackey, Hutchinson; Karen Maxwell, Lawrence; Lawrence McAneny, Godfrey, III.; Gayla McClain, Salina; Douglas Keope, Tapeke; Jane McCulley; Wichita; Marcia McMullen, Kansas City; and John Michael, Hutchinson.
Patriae Mog. Great Bent; Jeanne Moore, Lawrence; Donna Mortz, Tulipwater; James Mollins; water; Janice Mullinix; Topeka; Barbara Newsm, Wichita; Kenneth Nortner; Onk Park; Onk Park, Ill.; Jack Nuzum, Hutchinson, and Larry O'Neal, Kansas City
Thomas Peters, Olathe; James Pintar, Kansas City; Charles Railsback, Saint Louis; Saindon, Concordia; Christopher Sarles, Lawrence; Kenneth Shirley, Kansas City; Donald Simpson, Lawrence; Irma Stephens, Pratt; Gabrielle Uderlander, Lawrenze; Douglas Tayler, Bristol-Myers, and Clara Thompson, Tonkea
Nancy Tillford, Lawrence; Gary Trammell, Chanute; Nancy Traylor, Kimberly Barrie; Nancy Verrey, Trootwood, Ohio; Stephen Vincent, Wlchta; Michael Went-
born, Kansas;atherine Reiley, Mo. Deborah Kansas City, and David Wright, Winfield
BIG BLUE wails on Big Red
What's so special about Beechwood Ageing?
We must be bragging too much about Beechwood Ageing.
Because we're starting to get some flak about it. Like, "Beechwood, Beechwood . . big deal." And "If
Beechwood Ageing is so hot, why don't you tell everybody what it is?"
So we will.
First, it isn't big wooden casks that we age Budweiser in.
But it is a layer of thin wood strips from the beech tree (what else?) laid down in a dense lattice on the bottom of our glass-lined brewing tanks. This is where
27% OF
Budweiser.
LAGER BEER
Drawn by our original pioneers from
Whistlebill Brewing Company and Budweiser
BREWED AND CANNED BY
Amheuser-Busch, Inc.
UN MADGES TAPH HOUston COLUMBIA
BB.TP. TAB.TP. TM.
These beechwood strips offer extra surface area for tiny yeast particles
to cling to, helping clarify the beer. And since these strips are also porous, they help absorb beer's natural "edge," giving Budweiser its finished taste. Or in other words, "a taste, a smoothness and a drinkability you will find in no other beer at any price."
Ah yes, drinkability. That's what's so special about Beechwood Ageing. But you know that.
INTERCOLLEGATE
ROCK, FOLK, JAZZ GROUPS! Enter the '69 Intercollegiate Music Festival, co-sponsored by the brewers of Budweiser. Write: I.M.F., Box 1275, Leesburg, Fla. 32748.
Budweiser
KING OF BEERS $ \circ $ ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. ST. LOUIS NEWARK LOS ANGELES TAMPA HOUSTON COLUMBUS
SAS
ACME Salutes
Player of the Week:
Junior Riggins
Good Job in KU-CU Game Let's See More!
Acme Offers This:
- When you bring your laundry and dry cleaning in and pick it up, you save 10%
- 5 Shirts for $1.39 Folded or on Hangers!
Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners
DOWNTOWN HILLCREST MALLS
1111 MASS. 925 IOWA 711 W. 23rd
Friday, November 8, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
KU student's work opens children's theater
The children's theater series will open this year with an operatic adaptation by a KU student
Kay Bethea, director of the production, adapted the play "A Little Princess" from the book by Francis Hodgkins Burnett. Written in 1888, the book is the
true story of a young orphan girl who later finds herself the heiress of diamond mines in India.
Miss Bethea, a Baton Rouge, La., graduate student, said the idea originated three years ago when she was taking a children's theater course under Jed Davis,
head of the children's theater department. He suggested to the class that this book would make an interesting children's play.
A play had been done around the turn of the century, but Miss Bethea, who is specializing in children's theater, has written
her own adaption and an original libretto. Familiar with the theater department, Miss Bethea has been the musical director for eight shows in past years, two of which toured Europe.
The opera will present matinees for children in the Lawrence School District Nov. 21 and 22. KU audiences may see it at 8:20 p.m. Nov. 22 and 23.
"A Little Princess" will also be presented at the Music Hall in Kansas City.
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14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 8, 1968
MARY MAYER
Show presents new fashions
UNIVERSITY STYLES
Ten members represented the organization as models, modeling four costumes each from 12 Lawrence stores.
Fashions for all occasions in which the university wives and staff members might be involved were shown at an informal fashion show at 1:30 p.m. yesterday in the Kansas Union Watkins Room.
Mrs. Paul Burton, 1339 Engel Road, wears a "pearl gray" romantic styled two-piece outfit.
The show, "Another Go- Around with Fashions in the Round," was sponsored by the University Woman's Club, an organization for faculty wives and women staff members.
The outfits shown ranged from slacks and casual wear to cocktail and formal evening
wear. They included sports outfits, casual suits, at-home lounging wear, several cocktail dresses, a hostess outfit and two long formalms.
Several new trends for this winter were shown. One was a Mediterranean look, accented by embroidery and an influence of Nehru detail. The man-tailored and romantic trends were also evident.
The man-tailored trend was seen in one Chesterfield plaid man-styled coat and in tailoring details on other costumes.
Softly tailored features were apparent on at least half of the 40 outfits shown. Those features included the dirndl skirt, ruffled
blouses with large collars and longer, slightly fitted jackets.
New winter colors shown were "redwood," a soft red brick color, "pearl gray," a marbled light gray and "palomino beige," a streaked brown and beige.
Shoes were obviously clunky, including those intended for dressier occasions. Predominant colors were antique brown and cordovan.
Music was provided by Shirley Flory, Baker University junior, Lawrence and Donna Huitt, Lawrence junior.
Co-chairmen for the event were Mrs. Frank K. Reilly, 2414 Danbury Place, and Mrs. A. J. Rowell, 1102 W. 20th St.
—On the KU scene—
INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES—"Red Desert" tonight at 7:30 in Hoch Auditorium.
UNIVERSITY LECTURE—John Meyendorff speaks on "The Impact of Byzantinism on Russian Civilization," at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Curry Room.
The next meeting of the University Women's Club is at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 21 in the Watkins Room.
RED DOG INN—Tonight is $1 night with Friar Tuck and the Monks. Saturday night features the Reasons Why.
GRANADA THEATER-Peter Sellers in "I Love You, Alice B. Toklas"
VARSITY THEATER—"The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter," starring Alan Arkin.
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
1—"Barbarella," starring Jane
Fonda.
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
2—"Paper Lion."
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
3-"Beniam."
SUNSET DRIVE-IN—"The Savage Seven," and "Psych-Out."
Protect Your Clothes from spots, stains, rain and snow with
S
FABRIC PROTECTOR (ideal for stadium wear)
Scotchgard
LAWRENCE RAY CLEANERS
Available exclusively at:
LAWRENCE
1029 New Hamp.
Phone VI 3-3711
launderers and dry cleaners daily pickup and delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities.
MR. YUK—This weekend featuring Glass of Sherry.
SUA CARNIVAL "Carousel of Countries or As the World Turns On," tomorrow night at 7 in the Kansas Union.
Sock it to the Sooners!
UNIVERSITY THEATRE— "Kismet" tonight and Saturday at 8:20 p.m.
CHAMBER CHOIR—Concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
SUA POPULAR FILM—"The Umbrellas of Cherbourg," at 7 and 9:30 tonight, Saturday and Sunday in Dvche Auditorium.
LA PETITE
GALERIE
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
Bobbie Brooks
FOR
EVERY SPORTING LASS...
A special Bobbie Brooks pants sale. Pants galore! Very hip and very fitting. Plaid pants and solid pants toned for autumn in wool and blends. Sizes 5-15.
$8.00
Calkoun's
Calkoun's
Store hours : 9:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
1744 Massachusetts 6th and Michigan
Friday, November 8, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the workbook will be served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
New small refrigerator—ideal for
study dens, apts, etc—only $99.00.
Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St.
11-8
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Cardulf's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread. 1-9
1968 Pontiac convertible, 350, yellow,
PS, 3-speed, only driven 10,000 miles,
recently tuned. Call VI 2-3192 after
5:00 p.m. 11-8
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excellent condition. 4-speed. British racing race factory. 4-speed. British racing factory. t.a.c h o.m.e t. power superstock wheels. 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must sell! Contact: Sama Riik. Rm. #616. McCollum. VI-11-8 6600.
Used Sears tape recorder, $25. Used Looks funky, sounds guttural
V 1-20100 I 1-11
1965 GTO, 389, 3 two's, 4-speed. Rums in
condition. Parker. Cases 11-10.
11 W. 238 (W.) 11-12
Fresh flower arrangements and cordages-anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1220. 11-8
1968 Opel, Factory demo. 1200 miles.
Buick, $1900. For sale at $1900.
Berück, 1116 W. 23rd St. 11-12
1962 Ford, 4-door Sedan, V-8 stick.
Buckle, 116 W. 23rd. Bucket, 11-12
1965 Impala SS, 327, 4-speed. Excellent.
Parker Beark, 1116 W. 11-87.
Lowrey T-2 portable organ. In good
condition. Call Cheap. Call 3132 at 6:00 p.m.
11-12
Hallitersafir S-120 Receiver. Broadcast through 31 MC. Tunes Voice of America and many Spanish Stations. $65. Larry Johnson. UN N-4-3104. 11-8
Set of Astro Mags off a GTO; Need 4
Mags in trade. Best offer 11-1288.
VI 12-1858.
...
'57 Chevy, 2-door hardtop, black, 283,
3-speed. Hust, custom interior,
radio, excellent condition. VI 2-6533.
11-13
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T. buckets, cons.
P.S., P.B., air, B383 console, show
upholstery, vinyl top, vinyl top,
vinyl top, just $1895 at Jerry Allen
Volkwagen, 2522 Iowa 11-13
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Sea Blue & Cloud White, black leatherette interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$5.288.05s. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owned miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr-50,000 mile used car, $499.95 in buy it! There's not another like it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos. Regular $495.00 and $149.00 cashier-caseman discount—magnificent music! Hay Stack back's. 929-331 Mass. St.
Casa De Taco
Deliciously Different Mexican Food
1105 Mass. V13-9880
Classic 1957 Studebaker Golden
Car 1960 Buick Golden Car $100
Tail. Call V13-03484
$122
1964 MG Midget, white w/wire wheels, this hard-to-find car youars this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
1963 Volkswagon deluxe sunroof, choice of 2, both 100% guaranteed, five cars, 1 green, 1 white, else $95 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522 Iowa. 11-13
Mustang snow tires--Last year's design. New 1st line 695-1x Keely cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Rock Stonebacks. 11-13
Britannica, Great Books of the Western World, 54 volumes, also 20 additional volumes. Like new. $290. Call 843-1835. 11-13
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St.B- 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. tt
FRESHMEN: Want an active student-sympathetic government? If so vote David Mannering, an independent, for Freshman class president on Nov. 20.
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD
500. Automatic changer with base,
dust cover, and grado cartridge. New
needle assembly as bonus. New $85.
Now $55. Full new equipment guarrantee on both tuner and change
19.
Pay-Less
Self Service SHOES
1300 W.23rd
Lawrenc
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd
(Next to Shaw's Auto Service)
North Lawrence
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Center, 107 W. 7th, Tv 2-7932, and in the Kansas University lionholt Tuesday. 11-19
Be prepared—
get antifreeze—starting service
2434 Iowa V1 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Happiness is an orange Miami-bound balloon at the Oklahoma Game. On sale Saturday at the Campus Map House and the Stadium. $25 each.
The Jayhawk Rodeo Club is having a fox hunt,牛 10. If you are inter-
ested, please call Monty at VW or Rob or Bob room 723 at VI 2-1200 after
5-00 p.m.
HELP WANTED
Student wanted with tire changing experience to work mornings and holidays. $1.65 per hour. Do not apply unless you can work 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. daily. Ray Stoneback's Downtown—apply in person. 11-13
Female—Good looking, personable women to work in pleasant aur comfort areas. Call or visit at Pizza Hut #1 on W. 23rd St. Good pay. Fringe benefits included. Please fill out a job manager, at VI 3-3516 for more information an interview appointment. 11-11
Male roommate Wanted. $50.00 and Dr. VIr. T-3-316. Campus 2020 entr. in 11
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-
time openings available in day or
night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tt
WANTED
THE UnderDog
UnderDog
1401 WEST 61st STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
Part-time for 1 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. tf
A Very Private Club Nightly Entertainment
HAROLD'S SERVICE
66
EVERYTHING SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
EVERYONE SAYS
Now
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-292
4th Roommate for cooperative living unit in spacious room. Rent $50/mo, including utilities. Close to campus. Hosts Nov. 15. Camp nings. VI 2-7920. 41-8
Want to buy non-student tickets to
the 2016 Oscars pay w. phone VJ I 3-7727 two days a week day 14-
Good homes for 4 eute kittens.
Call Call 7568 after 5:00 p.m. to see 11-8
Wish to employ noon-time lunch room play ground supervisor for elementary school in Lawrence. 11:30-12:30 Phone VI 3-4688 or VI 3-2632
Four Male Students Wish to Rent a large house, preferably within walking distance of campus. Need for seek-out of students Ron Conch VI 2-6600, Room 740. 11-14
SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most "in" barn in the state. Laptad's barn has a 30-foot runway, uniquely available. VI 3-4022. 11-12
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high fidelity, Haynes Ray Audio, VI Center Aft, and Eve, Hillest Shopting Center 11-22
Experienced Dressmaking. Today's styles, much cheaper than store prices. Get that special dress for school or any occasion. Hems and alterations also. Come see samples. 842-6979. 11-12
TYPING
Experienced in typing thes. themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
er type. Prompt efficient
efficient service. Phone VI 3-9548.
Mrs. E. Wright. 12-9
STRICK'S DINER
Good Food—Reasonable Cold Beer—Pool Tables Students Welcome
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
"Open till 2 a.m."
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education, SCM elec. located near Oliver Hall VI, vif 2873.
FOR RENT
Typing of thees and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440. 11-14
LOST
Apartment for women. 1216 Louisiana. VI 3-1601. 11-8
Large, clean sleeping and study room,
share kitchen and bath, for senior or
graduate woman. Vacant now. VI 3-
1585. Mrs. John Cox, 940. Minimum.
11-8
Have your party at the Studio, 1344
available from VI 2-9441 or VI 2-9608. 11 135
Black umbrella at Homecoming Concert Call Dick Aldis at VI 3-6866.
5 yr. old Black Labrador Retriever (large black short haired dog) with tan collar in vicinity of W. 28th St. Children's pet. Reward - I V-72838
PERSONAL
Gold I.D. bracelet with small gold heart. Engraved. Sentimental value. Will reward. Deena Faucett, VI 3-4610. 1630 Oxford. 11-11
One pair of prescription sunglasses with name inside. Contact Terri Otaway, GSP. Room 407 or leave at the desk. 11-12
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals 8.E 9th VI2-002
RENT
A NEW
FORD
From
John Haddock Ford
VI 3-3500
23rd and Alabama
Use our gas Budget
card-costs no more
Downtown Plant
202 W. 6th
V13-4011
Robo-Phillips 66
1764 W.23rd
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
FREE CAR WASHES (all the time)
Drive-In
900 Miss.
V1 3-5304
Pick Up Station
2346 Iowa
V1 3-9868
Announcing
Complete Foreign Car Repair
Jerry Cole is now at James Radiator Shop, completely equipped to service your foreign car. Tune-up Brake Service Engine Overhaul Also Service on All American Cars
JAMES RADIATOR SHOP
300 Locust
VI 3-5288
V12-8615
THE MAGIC CARPET SLIDE
Weekends—Open Till 1:00 a.m.
50 People—$20.00 Per Mr.
25 People—$10.00. Per Mr.
Now Catering To PRIVATE PARTIES
Over 50 People—$.10 a Person
MARRIED STUDENTS
For the best in:
● Dry Cleaning
● Alterations
● Preserving
926 Mass.
Up To $600 Maternity Benefits
New York Cleaners
For details on this, major medical, and other plans of health and
CONTACT
V. G. Miller
1035 Elm
Eudora, Kans.
K12-2793
VI 3-0501
Mutual of Omaha
1 hour of shopping that pays
life insurance
Life Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha
WE HAVE A PROGRAM TO COMPUTE THE SUM OF ALL VALUES IN THE MATH OBJECTS.
- Reweaving
V1 2-8615
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 8,1968
Man found in shower on 9th floor girls' wing
An unexpected visitor appeared in the all-female east wing bathroom of ninth floor McCollum Hall at 5:15 a.m.yesterday morning. The visitor was male.
The young man, whose name has not yet been released, was a resident of the hall.
He was discovered by Linda
Culbertson.. Coffeville senior.
Miss Culbertson said she is not usually up at 5 a.m. but was yesterday because she had to attend a meeting.
When she entered the bathroom, she heard a shower going full blast. She yelled to see who was in the shower but got no response. She then tugged on the shower curtain.
Having still received no response Miss Culbertson became worried that someone might be
hurt. She then opened the curtain and discovered the man who was apparently asleep.
She immediately called the residence hall switchboard and asked them to send someone up.
Mrs. Glenn Grunz, residence hall director, accompanied by her husband and two campus security officers removed him from the shower.
Mrs. Grunz declined to comment on disciplinary action to be taken by the residence hall.
When asked when locks and alarms would be installed on women's wings of the residence hall, Mrs. Grunz said:
"Before this even happened there were plans for locks to be installed on women's stairwells and alarms outside the doors. They will be installed as soon as possible."
Pepper a candidate-
(Continued from page 7)
(Continued from page 7) ranking against California's highly-regarded defense.
Devising ways and means of getting O. J. Simpson through or around the stunting defense dreamed up by Willsey is a monumental chore.
Paterno is a standout in the East with a Penn State team that began with an "ifly" situation at quarterback and yet has sailed through its first six engagements without a blemish.
Ivy League teams rarely rate a look-in on a national scale, but if either Cozza or Yovicis survives
Kicker-
(Continued from page 10)
(Continued from page 10)
and decided to make him a full-time kicker. Butler has not played
a down of varsity football as anything but a kicker.
Butler has a 37.5 punting average, but the figure is misleading. Opponents have returned only six of his 26 punts this season for six total yards.
As a freshman, Butler hit 16 of 19 extra points and 8 of 20 field goal attempts, then hit 19 of 23 extra points and 10 of 24 field goal attempts as a sophomore.
unbeaten, he'll be remembered in the voting.
His percentage of field goals might be better, but Bearden reasons that a long field goal attempt is worth just as much as a punt if it fails.
It's worth three points more if it is good.
(Continued from page 1)
KU artist
Hayes and Rodgers also have perfect records going for them. Woody has done a notable job with Ohio State sophomores, while Rodgers, in his second season at Kansas, has restored the Jayhawks to national prominence far quicker than anyone dreamed he could.
(Continued from page 1) work on this year, it would cost me more than $7000."
MRS. Mintz says she'll save plaster casts of the statues she can't afford to bronze now, in hopes that she'll find the money later on.
"I was very flattered," she ironically comments. "It was somehow an affirmation of worth, if only by a cultured criminal."
Recently, Mrs. Mintz received a great honor in the world of art—one of her commissioned works was stolen by a thief.
Leonard Keller, "the Tone Poet of the Violin," played at the Pan-Hellenic Ball in 1937.
Elliott of Michigan and Devine of Missouri blew their opening games but have come on strong ever since. Michigan has a later showdown against Ohio State and Missouri gets a shot at Kansas.
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Arkansas and Texas both have been beaten, though the only Arkansas to date was a head-to-head meeting between Broyles and Royal when Texas hammered out a 39-29 winner.
Dickey's Tennessee Volunteers are unbeaten but tied by Georgia—and that's no disgrace. Auburn, beaten twice, is 3-0 in the Southeastern Conference with an outfit figured originally to finish somewhere near the middle of the pack.
Prisoner claims inside information on assassination
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI)—The judge in the James Earl Ray trial will hold a hearing Friday for a federal prisoner who claims he has inside information on the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and demands to be heard in court.
The prisoner, Hubert James Putt of Nashville, Tenn., presently held in the federal medical center at Springfield, Mo., has been judged mentally incompetent.
However, the prosecution in the Ray trial, which begins next Tuesday, asked for a ruling by Judge W. Preston Battle, presiding over the Ray trial, on Putt's hand-written motion that he be allowed to testify.
Prosecutor Phil A. Canale, attorney general of Shelby County, made the unusual request "in an effort to avoid even the remote possibility of any suggestion of suppression of evidence" in the case.
Canale said the prosecution "fails to see the possibility of any proof that Putt can offer of any material, relevant or competent evidence on behalf of the defendant."
The hearing was set Thursday for 10:30 a.m. in Battle's courtroom, the same room where Ray's trial will be held. Putt was not expected to attend the hearing.
Putt filed a petition Oct. 2, written in pencil on 8-by-11-inch white tablet paper, claiming he was "inadvertantly involved in the assassination of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy and knew the very day that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy were to be killed."
Putt also claimed he is suspected of "liquidating Albert Anastasia of Murder, Inc.," and because of that, and his alleged knowledge of the three assassinations. Putt demanded protection from prosecution.
He said his petition was not "made out of levity or by collusion, with anyone, but in sincerity and truth."
Foreign Students. Sign up now for the next People-to-People tour. To Kansas City on Nov. 19. See page one if November International Campus visits.
Official Bulletin
KU Moslem Society, 12:45 p.m.
Pravers, Kansas Union.
TODAY
Spencer Library Dedication Lectura m. lord C. P. Snow. Hatch Auditorium.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
7 d. 829 Mississippi.
Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Umabu of Cherbourg" Dyche Audio-
***
Folk Dance Club, 7:30 p.m. 173 Robinson.
Debris throwing may delay game
(Continued from page 1.)
and players on both teams go to the sideline and remain off-field until such time as order is restored. If the situation is to get intolerable the teams will go into the dressing room until the game can again proceed."
Pepper Rodgers, KU football coach and team captain John Zook wrote letters to the Kansas yesterday addressed to the students asking them not to throw oranges during the game.
In last year's game at Oklahoma, Sooner fans threw hundreds of oranges onto the field.
Rodgers mentioned that no Oklahoma player threw any oranges, and that OU coach Chuck Fairbanks and the players tried hard to stop the orange throwing and to clear the field.
Wade Stinson, KU athletic director, said that as preventive action the stadium will be closely policed, and that a statement in the matter will be made before the game.
International Film Series. 7.30 p.m.
"Red Desert." Hoch Auditorium.
Lecture. 7:30 p.m. Rev. John Meyendorff, St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theology. Primary. The Impact of the Bloedentism mission in Civilization." Curry Room, Kansas Union
Senior Class Party. 8 p.m. National Guard Armory.
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Kismet."
SATURDAY
SATURDAY
Law Students: Prof. Davis of Southern Methodist University will be on campus Tuesday (Nov. 12) from 10 a.m. to noon. If you are interested in attending the School for Mrs. Padget at the College Office for an appointment.
SUA Carnival. 7 p.m. Kansas Union.
Football. 1:30 p.m. Oklahoma. Memorial Stadium.
Big 8 Cross Country Championships.
10 to 30 a.m. Lawrence County Curling
Popular Film 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Umbala on Cherberville" Dyche Auditorium
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "Kismet."
Chamber Choir, Concert. 3:30 p.m.
Swarthout Recital Hall.
Carillon Recital. 3 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Umbrellas of Cherbourg" Dyne Audience
Spanish Theatre Company. 8:20 p.m.
"Esta Noche Teatro." Delfor Peralta
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New research library is dedicated
About 270 persons braved 35 degree weather Friday to watch the dedication of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library.
The $2,125,000 library was presented to the University of Kansas by Mrs. Helen Spencer, the widow of Kenneth Spencer, a 1926 graduate of KU.
The activities began with a luncheon in the Kansas Union, which was attended by about 160 guests.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, who opened the ceremony on the front steps of the library, called it "a building of perfection and taste." He said, "It takes its place among the great research libraries of the nation."
He said the library bears the imprint of "a woman with impeccable taste." the library will benefit everyone who prosperms from new knowledge, Cushing said.
C. N. Cushing, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents, accepted the gift on behalf of the University from Mrs. Spencer.
12.1934
Special guest Lord C. P. Snow, British author and scientist, briefly praised the new structure. He said KU, which "probably has the greatest collection of books of any university in this country, now has the building worthy to hold them."
Wescoe, announcing to the audience that it was Mrs. Spencer's birthday, presented her with a record of her gift to the University.
After the speeches, the guests retreated to the warmth of the library. Several SUA hostesses were on hand to conduct tours of the new facility. (Continued to Page 16)
The Kenneth A. Spencer Research Library was dedicated Friday afternoon during a private ceremony at the library. Mrs. Kenneth A. (Helen) Spencer presented the building to the University in memory of her late husband, who died in 1960. See related stories—Page 5, 14 and 16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No. 40 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, November 11, 1968
Arabs jailed in plot to kill Nixon
NEW YORK (UPI) - Three Arab immigrants—a shipping clerk from Yemen and his two sons—were jailed yesterday in lieu of $100,000 bond each on charges of planning to assassinate President-elect Richard M. Nixon in a plot the prosecutor hinted may have been controlled from abroad.
New York City police and federal Secret Service agents arrested the three in a raid on their apartment in the East New York section of Brooklyn shortly before 5 p.m. Saturday. The raid also netted two rifles and ammunition.
The motive for the alleged plot was thought to be opposition to Nixon's view that Israel, in a state of war with the Arab nations, should be kept strong to maintain the Middle East balance of power.
Nixon was vacationing at Key Bicyane, Fla., when the arrests were made, but was due back in New York City today. He had no comment on the arrests. Aides said he knew of the plot before the raid.
The arrests immediately brought to mind the assissination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles in June. It is believed that he was killed because of his pro-Israeli views, and a Jordanian Arab, Shirhan B. Sirhan, goes on trial for the killing next month.
The three suspects, identified as Ahmad Rageh Namer, a 46-year-old shipping clerk who has been in the United States nine years, and his two sons, Hussein, 20, and Abdo Ahmad, 19, were arraigned in Brooklyn Criminal Court yesterday and ordered held in lieu of the high bond.
Acting Brooklyn Dist. Atty. Elliott Golden asked Judge T. Vincent Quinn to hold them without bail because the men had strong ties outside the country, familial and perhaps otherwise.
Bruce Mallin Dies from fight injuries
Bruce Mallin, 20, Kansas City junior, who was injured in a fight Thursday afternoon in the parking lot of Naismith Hall, died this morning in Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Hospital authorities said Mallin expired about 6 am. They declined to list his injuries, but it is believed he had a broken neck, vertebrae, ribs and possible head injuries.
County Attorney Dan Young said a 17-year-old Kansas City freshman was taken into custody, questioned and released after the 4:30 incident in Naismith's east parking lot.
"The investigation is not yet complete. We still have other witnesses to interview; therefore, no formal charges have been filed. The suspect is a resident of Kansas and a juvenile and no restrictions have been placed upon him." Young said.
The fight climaxed a difference of opinion between the suspect and Mallin which arose three to four weeks ago.
A roommate of Mallin's girlfriend said that about a month ago the 17-year-old appeared in the Naismith Hall cafeteria wearing cowboy boots and Mallin made derogatory comments about them. They then exchanged words, she said.
The two students saw each other on several occasions afterwards, and two weeks ago scheduled a Friday night fight that did not occur.
(Continued to Page 16)
100
Kansan Photo by Greg Norber
Kannan Photo by Greg Sorber
A rare expression...
... this season anyway. The anguished look on the face of coach Pepper Rodgers seems to tell the whole story of KU's heartbreaking 27-23 loss to the Oklahoma Sooners at Memorial Stadium Saturday.
See more pictures—Page 10
Weather
Partly cloudy and cold was the weather bureau's forecast for this afternoon and tonight. Winds should be northeasterly from 15-20 mph. Highs today in the 40s. Lows tonight in the lower 20s. Partly cloudy and not so cold tomorrow with five per cent probability for showers.
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
Award to Djilas
NEW YORK (UPI)—Freedom House announced yesterday it will present its 1969 Freedom Award to Milovan Dijlas, the former vice president of Yugoslavia who was imprisoned because of his writing critical of the Communist hierarchy.
The board of trustees of Freedom House, a national, nonpartisan organization dedicated to strengthening free institutions throughout the world, voted to make the award at its 29th annual dinner Dec. 9 just before Dijilas ends his current visit to this country.
"Djilas, as a man and writer, reportedly proves himself to be cast in the heroic mold," the announcement said. "His eloquent calls for individual freedom follow inexorably and logically from his deep personal involvement with authoritarianism."
Trial security strict
MEMPHIS, Tenn (UPI)—James Earl Ray hired attorney Percy Foreman, yesterday, to replace former Birmingham, Ala., Mayor Arthur Hanes Sr., in a dramatic move only two days before his trial on charges of killing Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
The switch was announced by Shelby County Sheriff William N. Morris in a prepared statement, and said that Ray reached his decision after conferring with his two brothers, John and Jerry, and Foreman in his cell.
The development came just two days before the scheduled start of Ray's trial. Earlier Sunday, authorities had begun putting into final stages the strictest trial security in American history.
Vote reform asked
NEW YORK (UPI)—Former presidential aide Theodore C. Sorensen said yesterday the United States has avoided "a really desperate constitutional crisis" for the second time since 1960 and now ought to reform the election system.
Sorensen, who was a special assistant to he late President John F. Kennedy, listed more open party conventions, debates between political candidates and direct election of the president as necessary steps
"We ought to elect our presidents directly," he said in a television interview.
If direct election were not adopted, he said, voting in the House of Representatives in cases where no candidate receives a majority should be on a one-man, one-vote basis rather than a one-state, one-vote basis.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 11, 1968
Vacation moves students
T
Dennis Quinn, associate professor of English', was presented the 1968 HOPE award during the half-time of the Kansas-Oklahoma game Saturday. Quinn, center, is shown with John Hill, senior class president, and Karen McCarthy, chairman of the HOPE Award Committee, following the announcement of the award.
Trying to locate homes during vacation for approximately 80 foreign students keeps the People-to-People (P-to-P) club's home-stay program busy.
Buffy Barnes, Kenilworth, Ill., junior and chairman of the P-to-P program, said, "Staying with American families is really
good experience for foreign students. It gives them a chance to see our culture and family life first hand."
Because KU residence halls close during vacations, the foreign students are temporarily displaced, Miss Barnes said.
"If any KU student would like
to have a foreign student spend one of the vacations with him, he can notify the P-to-P office in room 104B of the Kansas Union," she said.
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Senior class chooses HOPE award winner
Dennis P. Quinn, associate professor of English, has been chosen the 1968 recipient of the HOPE award.
The award, Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator, is given annually by KU's senior class.
At half-time of the KU-OU game, when Quinn was announced the HOPE winner, he received an engraved plaque, $300, honorary membership in the senior class and class of '69 regalia.
Karen McCarthy, Kansas City senior and chairman of the HOPE award committee, said the committee decided to present the award in the fall, rather than in the spring as had been the tradition, so the recipient could be acknowledged the entire year.
"By presenting the HOPE award on Senior Day, I thought we would give the day some purpose, the recipient could have the award the whole year
and most of the senior class would be at the game for the presentation," Miss McCarthy explained.
Quinn was selected from eight finalists. During enrollment, seniors submitted names of possible candidates. The HOPE award committee chose the eight faculty members receiving the most nominations from over 100 suggested candidates.
Each of the eight finalists was interviewed and asked what they, as progressive educators, would do to improve KU. Their response plus a short biography was listed on the voting ballot. Seniors made the selection at their class coffee on Nov. 7.
Quinn, who is also director of Pearson College, a college-within-a-college, is developing a humanities program which will combine history, philosophy and English into one course. He believes this will draw together relevant subjects so students can see some relation between their courses.
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Monday, November 11, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Recently-penned fight song draws interest of listeners
A new song may soon join the annals of KU tight songs.
"Hawk It to 'Em" was written by Jim Olson, Salt Lake City, Idaho, senior and recorded by a local soul group, the "Tips." Olson said he heard the "Tips" singing one night in the Gaslight tavern with a band, "Gary Jackson and the Soul Messengers."
"I remembered the tune and decided to write words to go with it." he said.
Olson, who is a member of Sigma Alph Epsilon fraternity, said the song was originally designed for use with their homecoming display, but because of interest shown by those who heard it, the record will go on sale.
Patterned after the popular "Here Comes The Judge" lyrics, the new song describes KU's football record and forecasts a trip to Miami.
The sound is similar to that of the "Temptations" or "Little Anthony and the Imperials."
The record was played on the radio on the Friday before Homecoming, Olson said, and
Ski fashion show here tomorrow
The laestest fashions in ski apparel will be modeled by KU students at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Kansas Room.
The KU ski Club fashion show will be sponsored by Sitzmark Ski and Sun of Kansas City and the Lawrence Village Set.
After the fashion show, a film on Colorado skiing will be shown and plans for the Thanksgiving trip to Aspen will be discussed.
Forms for opera ready
It was incorrectly reported in Thursday's Kansan that cast application forms for the opera "The Mikado" are available.
people started calling from as far as St. Louis to invogue about it.
It is the production staff applications which may be picked up at the SUA office.
Because of the interest shown, the groups have decided to start selling copies for $1.25 tomorrow in all living groups and this weekend at the game.
Folk concert in Swarthout is Nov. 24
A concert of Hispanic folk music will be given at 8 p.m. Nov. 24 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The flip side of the record, "If I Said," is a slow soul tune in contrast with the fight song. It was written by Chick Pullman, a member of "The Tips."
Sofia Noel will sing to the guitar music provided by Jesus Gonzalez Tutor. The concert is sponsored by the department of Spanish and Portuguese.
Miss Noel has given, within the last four years, more than 350 public performances in cities in Europe and Africa.
Miss Noel and Tutor made their debut together at several American universities in the fall of 1967, offering various recitals of Spanish, Latin American, and Sephardic (Judeo-Spanish) songs under the sponsorship of the Spanish, foreign languages and music departments. Their tour ended in New York with a program on CBS-TV.
Miss Noel sings songs of different lands and historic periods interpreted in their original language: Hebrew and Sephardic songs; songs of the natives of Latin America, and old French melodies as well as Russian folklore.
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Persons attending the SUA Carnival Saturday night had a variety of skits and booths to watch. A big attraction, as seen above, was the cake-walk, which occupied much of the time for a local campus policeman.
An undergraduate American Negro history course with unlimited enrollment will be offered during the spring semester, W. Stitt Robinson, chairman of the department of history, said Friday.
History course to be opened to all
Robinson said Lorenzo J. Greene, professor of history at
Lincoln University, will teach the course on Tuesday afternoons from 2:30 to 4:30. The class will be open to all undergraduate students without limitations on the size of the class, he said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 11, 1968
Veteran's day lament
oLnoM
Veteran's Day 1968.
Fifty years ago World War I, the war to end all wars, ended.
Twenty-five years ago, World War II was raging.
And since then, there have been Korea and Vietnam and the Middle East war and Biafra and Greek juntas and smatterings of South American revolts.
Civilization is categorized by the names of battles. History students wait impatiently between the pages of their texts to find a war to keep the years and centuries straight in their memories.
Long before the 20th century, there was the Spanish American War and the Civil War and the Revolutionary war and a wealth of names of battles of far away places and far away countries.
Man has advanced, learned to carve cities out of wilderness, learned to ferret out the secrets of fire and electricity and how to fly.
But man has been most efficient, most imaginative at learning how to kill his fellow man.
Today a click of a switch could mark the end of man. And the weapons man has devised to kill would topple the heritage of tools he has discovered to enrich life.
Scientists now endeavor to find the secrets of creating life.
But we have developed the "overkill" and Russia or the United States stack weapons one upon another in case the necessity arises to obliterate the world twice or three times over.
Man has learned to "overkill." Can't he ever learn to "underkill," to live in peace?
Could Veteran's Day ever become a day to honor memories of soldiers from past wars, not those of the present-or future?
Alison Steimel
Editorial Editor
Letter to the editor
In defense of Watkins Hospital
To the Editor:
Each time I reread the letter printed on November 7th and written by Julie Boutross the more infuriated I become.
The letter was written, in part, concerning the condition of Watkins Memorial Hospital, the services available, and the competence of the doctors employed there. It seems quite obvious to me that Miss Boutross has neither looked very deeply into the matter nor has she ever had experience in a hospital situation.
There is not a doctor at Watkins Hospital that would allow a bonifide emergency to sit in a crowded hall for two hours. Whether or not a case is an emergency is up to the discretion of the nurses and doctors and since they have been trained to recognize them we should respect their judgment.
Doctor Raymond Schwegler, director of the hospital, has said that they have the best equipment and staff they can get their hands on. If Miss Boutrouss would like to see an improved Student Health Service why doesn't she write letters to try and get more funds appropriated for the hospital?
As to the lines of students in the hall waiting to see the doctors, Miss Boutross could help there by talking to her fellow students. Many of the students in the hall are looking for an
acceptable excuse for missing an exam. If these "sick" people were eliminated the waiting time would be reduced considerably.
She points out that many diagnoses made by Watkins doctors are wrong. I agree that it is possible to make an occasional error but medicine is still a field in which much is not known. Honestly think that Miss Boutross is greatly exaggerating the point, especially concerning the "pregnant" girl with the ulcer.
Much criticism has been directed at the Student Health Service and most of this criticism is undeserved. The doctors and staff do their best to provide inexpensive medical service to the students at KU, much of the time without thanks. If criticism is offered that will increase the efficiency of the hospital then I'm sure it will be welcomed by the staff but let's quit criticizing without investigating.
Dennis L. Frobish
Topeka Sophomore
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kanan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
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. All publications are professionally sponsored and 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
News Adviser George Richardson
Advertising Adviser Mel Adams
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 Steimel
Editorial Assistant Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Assistant Sports Editor Bob Kearney
Feature and Society Editor Ben Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Sharon Woodson
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCrerey, Don Westerhaus, Sandy
Zahradnik, Millyn Jackson
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Promotion Pam Flatten
Circulation Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Jefferson Manager Barry Arthur
Member Associated Collegiate Press
The Kansan Book Review
"The Beatles"
by Scott Nunley
Hunter Davies' biography of the Beatles is fascinating as another turn in the Question of the four Liverpool lads. But in itself, as either a document or an experience, "The Beatles" is disappointing.
You may try to deny, of course, that the Question exists. These would be four individuals trying to live their own lives and it would be best to allow them to do so in peace. But since August 1963 when their first single hit American markets or certainly since January 1964 when "I Want to Hold Your Hand" exploded over here—the Beatles have been an important topic of Yankee conversations.
“Oh, I don't mind their music so much. I can take it or leave it. But their hair! I can't stand to look at them!”
And in June 1967, a remarkable album titled "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was at last received with generally serious (and long, long) commentary by the American "intelligentsia."
Parents equivicated as long as they could, while their children were already whirling to the dervish of Beatlemania. At its height, an "unnamed" Kansas City businessman (involved in pro football) gave the group $150,000 for 35 minutes of their Mersey beat.
Although the American pop music field has broadened considerably since then, it is still a commonplace to claim that the Beatles are trendsetters, front pacers outdistancing the frenetic onrush of even their most innovative imitators. The successful televising of their second Richard Lester film "Help" along with the popularity of their two Smothers Brothers appearances and their two new Top Ten songs speaks for their current strength.
Obviously any accurate compilation of Beatle-ania will contribute something to the understanding of this phenomenon. Davies admits that the first half of "The Beatles" is little more than this, an ordering of data about the group's youth collected from already published sources. Into this Davies weaves a leavening of personal interviews, but perhaps only the picture of Mimi (John Lennon's aunt) can stand apart from the data as interesting in itself.
It is only the final half of "The Beatles" that is original. With their privacy apparently open to him, Davies mixed with the new families and described his impressions of their lives today.
And a picture of sorts does evolve: Ringo as the simple, soft-hearted familyman; George as the aloof, dedicated Orientalist; Paul as the busy-busy socializer; and John as the introverted, poetic "leader." Nor are these studies completely as superficial as this summation makes them sound.
The reader has a right to expect to gain from this revelation insight to the Beatles both as men and as musicians. (Certainly since his first encounter with Davies' dull, plodding style, the reader will have learned not to ask to be entertained as well!)
As musicians, the four appear as grand improvisers, hacking out lyrics and tunes to sell albums and ridiculing the gullible public that praises and analyzes their phony artistry.
John Lennon, for example, is said by Davies to have mellowed from his hell-raising school days. He is pictured in domestic ease, having transcended such earlier needs as marijuana. And yet John now is being sued for adultery and has just been arrested for possession of the drug.
In their attitudes toward their music, too, the Beatles seem to contradict themselves. At one moment they laughingly claim to have taken highly-praised lyrics from old posters ("Mr. Kite"), yet as the next moment they are angered if their work is not treated seriously by the press. Something much more in depth needs to be done before the nature of this ambivalence will be clear.
In all, then, Hunter Davies' "The Beatles" is a successful but not a final or excitingly written biography. It provides a handy reference guide to Beatle lore and poses significant questions about their current development. But until someone asks those questions with more sensitivity and skill—perhaps the Beatles themselves—the Beatles' enigma will survive.
LISTEN WORLD-
YOU
KNOW WHAT
I DID TODAY?
NOTHING!
I TURNED OFF
THE PHONE
I THREW OUT
THE MAIL
I CRAWLED
INTO BED
I HID
UNDER THE COVERS
I SUCKED MY
THUMB
I PLAVED
WITH MY
TOES
UNTIL
DARK-
WHEN
I GOT UP
CHANGED
MY
PAJAMAS
AND
WENT
TO SLEEP!
MORE
GOOD
DAYS
LIKE
THAT
AND I
WOULDN'T
FEEL SO
SORRY
FOR
MYSELF.
11-10
© 1969 CLUB FOTTER
Monday, November 11, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
A. S. C. A. 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.
Shirley Gossett, Lawrence senior, was crowned 1968 SUA queen Saturday night by Andrea Sogas, Overland Park senior and last year's queen. Miss Gossett is shown with Drew Anderson, Plainville senior, following her coronation.
SUA Carnival shows a lot
Arms, stomachs, legs—all that the law would allow—was unveiled Saturday night at the SUA Carnival.
Thinly-clad coeds danced on platforms, swung on anchors, sold sweets, subjected bare stomachs to rubber balls and solicited viewers for their living groups' skits.
U.S. jets pound foes near Saigon
SAIGON (UPI)—Air raids yesterday by U.S. B52 jets sent more than 1 million pounds of bombs hurtling into jungles north of Saigon where North Vietnamese troops were reported regrouping for a new wave of attacks. The blitz knocked out a huge ammunition dump.
Shell City
South of Saigon, in the Mekong River delta, Communist gunners ignored the terms of the U.S. bombing halt over North Vietnam and fired two 75 mm. recoil rifle shells into the city of Can Tho. Two women and three children were wounded.
In announcing the bombing halt on Oct. 31, President Johnson said Communist troops were expected to stop indiscriminate shellings of South Vietnamese cities. Can Tho, biggest city in the delta with a population of 85,000, was shelled Saturday and again yesterday morning.
The eight-engine jets of the Strategic Air Command flew four missions along the Cambodian border in Tay Ninh province Saturday night and yesterday morning, the U.S. Command reported. One raid hit targets only 31 miles from Saigon.
Returning B52 crews said the shower of blockbuster bombs triggered the medium-sized secondary explosions, an indication that a large ammunition arsenal had been blown up.
American headquarters said other B52 flights hit Binh Long province further north along the Cambodian frontier and the central highlands province of Kontum.
Same Area
The general area of the B52 strikes is the same place where the 19,000-man U.S. 1st Cavalry Division airmobile has been moved to counter what American commanders describe as "a substantial" Communist threat. There are two other U.S. infantry divisions in the area.
Ground action throughout South Vietnam continued light, the U.S. Command said in its communique yesterday afternoon.
SAIGON—Army Spec. 4 John Mancini of Warren, Ohio, saying what he thinks will be the Vietnam move of president-elect Richard M. Nixon;
"He will bring a slowdown in the war in time but it will take at least a year for any big improvement."
Mens' groups displayed less skin, but proved to be equally inventive. Wheels of fortune, roulette and assorted gambling games, carried SUA's international theme to Monte Carlo.
Amateur actors traveled from the Olympic games to George's jungle home. Approximately 3,000 KU students were entertained with dancing and singing by performers of 10 carnival skits.
Excitement mounted at 10 p.m when students filled the Kansas Union Ballroom to receive announcements of skit and booth winners, highlighted by the crowning of the 1968 SUA Carnival Queen.
Miss Shirley Gossett, Lawrence senior, was chosen from 35 coeds to reign over the festivities. Miss Gossett was crowned by Miss Andrea Sogas, Overland Park senior and last year's SUA Carnival Queen.
After the crowning of the queen, trophies were awarded to the following winners of the booth and skit competition.
Womens' booth winners: 1st place-Pi Beta Phi; 2nd place-Delta Delta Delta, and 3rd place-Chima Omega. Men's booth winners: 1st place-Triangle; 2nd place-Delta Tau Delta, and 3rd place-Theta Chi. Coed booth winner: Oliver Hall.
Womens' skit winner was Gamma Phi Beta, Mens' skit winner was Alpha Kappa Lambda.
By STEVE NAFUS Kansan Staff Writer
PETER SELLERS IN "I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS"
Bustling about attending to her guests, Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer radiated excitement throughout the afternoon Friday as the Kenneth Spencer Research Library was shown publicly for the first time.
And she made the "turned-on" brownie that made it all happen.
Widow dedicates library to memory of husband
And in a very real sense, the library is her triumph and her tribute.
She was so excited that as she sat down after presenting the building formally to the University, she said she thought, "Oh, when do I give my speech—and I'd already given it."
It stands with a commanding view of the valley around Lawrence which the Spencers always enjoyed. It is outfitted to her specifications in every detail. It is intended to provide the type of research facilities heretofore not found in the Midwest and it embodies Mr. Spencer's desire that more skilled persons should be lured to this area by the availability of such facilities.
Mrs. Spencer visibly flowered in the pride of her accomplishment. She could speak of nothing else the entire afternoon except the library she created as a tribute to her late husband.
PETER SELLERS IN "I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS"
A Paul Mayer & Lynn Tucker Production
And she made the "turned-on" brownie that made it all happen.
JO VAN FLEET
LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG
PAUL MAYER & LINY TUCKER
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES W
TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS.—SEVEN ARTS
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THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784
Mat. 2:30 Evening
Sat. & Sun. 7:15-9:15
JO VAN FLEET
LEIGHT TAYLOR-YOUNG
Because her loyalty runs so high, she contributed the library to the University of Kansas, from which Mr. Spencer graduated in 1926. A highly successful industrialist and founder of the Spencer Chemical Co. and the Midwest Research Institute, Kenneth Spencer could have chosen any place in the world to live, but he preferred Kansas City.
JU VAN FLEE I
LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG
FILL MUSIC BY ALEX HENKMAN
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Mat. 2:30 Evening
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Soviet ship pays visit
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Mat. 2:30 Evening
Sat. & Sun. 7:15-9:15
JO VAN FLEET
LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG
PULL MAZZURO & LARRY LEXER - MARKBROWN
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES **
TECHNIQCOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS - SEVEN ARTS
PERTH, Australia (UPI)—The first Soviet passenger ship to call on Australia arrived yesterday at Fremantle with 475 passengers, mostly Australians and New Zealanders, after a voyage from Great Britain. The 19,860-ton Shota Rustaveli was chartered for the cruise by a London-based travel club.
... and from this man who could not speak or hear, the girl heard many things.
Alan Arkin in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Helen F. Spencer, who prefers to be called Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer as a reminder of her late husband, shared his devotion to this area. She viewed the contribution of such a library as almost a duty when she learned it was needed.
It was not enough for her to just give any sort of library. It had to be a very special building, worthy of her husband's memory. For that reason she oversaw each step in the planning and execution of the building.
Technicolor
From Warner Bros-Seven Arts
BROOKLYN MILLER
THOMAS C. MILLER - THE MAZIC AND MARC WELSON
Technicolor
From Warner Bros.-Seven Arts
BOBERTELLEISNER
THOMAS C. RAY - THOMAS MARC RYAN & MARC MERSON
Varsity
THEATRE - Telephone VI 3-1065
Mat. 2:30—Eve. 7:15-9:15
She explained that everything in the Spencer Room had belonged to her husband. And anyone who expressed interest was a candidate for a personally conducted tour, the student in faded blue jeans and cowboy boots as well as her old friends, many of whom wore mink wraps.
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065
Mat. 2:30 — Eve. 7:15-9:15
Incongruous though it seems, Mrs. Spencer said she had gotten down on her hands and knees to clean the Spencer Room a few days before the dedication, because no one could be hired to
do it on short notice. Those who knew her did not appear surprised—they knew her determination and had speculated that if the library was not completed or was not "just right," she would postpone the dedication ceremony.
When the finish on the wood floor of the Spencer Room did not suit her, she had it refinished.
"I have given my heart and soul to the library, and I did so want it to be done right," Mrs. Spencer said.
The barometer that had been Mr. Spencer's showed a drop in pressure, indicating a change in the weather, but Mrs. Spencer would not let foul weather dampen her spirits.
"The day and the dedication have been beautiful because all my beautiful friends were here to share it with me," she said to a woman on crutches and a cast on her leg. "Why just imagine your coming out in this weather with your leg in a cast—I certainly appreciate it."
TURNER
a hilarious story of
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6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 11, 1968
Nixon appoints secretary, sets for White House trip
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI)
—President-elect Richard M. Nixon ended a four-day working vacation here yesterday by reading himself for a White House meeting today with President Johnson and making the first appointment of his new administration.
Nixon's last day at this island resort below Miami was spent in the same manner as his previous days here - relaxing and working.
Names as personal secretary to the president in the Nixon administration was Rose Mary Woods, Nixon's personal secretary since 1951.
Reporters seeking to discover Nixon's reaction to an alleged assassination plot on his life that was broken up in Brooklyn, N.Y., drew a "no comment" from press spokesman Ron Ziegler.
Secret Service protection was increased markedly on Wednesday, presumably because candidate Nixon had just become President-elect Nixon and in accordance with law, Nixon became virtually a ward of the government.
Ziegler said Nixon learned of the alleged plot "through news reports." However, a source close to Nixon said privately "we were aware of it" before it was publicized.
Agents who had "escorted" the candidate during the campaign moved in and took over full direction of his movements. Rather than staff aides, agents now chart and decide the routes Nixon will travel.
In response to reporters' questions, Ziegler said Nixon was "giving thought" to and conversing with his staff on today's meeting with Johnson.
At that session, Nixon is expected to discuss with Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk the prospects for success of the Vietnam peace negotiations in Paris and Nixon's relationship to that effort.
Nixon has offered to undertake a mission to Paris or Saigon if the President felt such a trip would be helpful.
Miss Woods' appointment is bound to be the least surprising that the president-elect will make between now and the Jan. 20th inauguration. She has been Nixon's executive secretary since 1951, serving him in the Senate, during the eight years that he was vice president and while he was out of government practicing law.
Adviser supports income tax cuts
WASHINGTON (UPI)—One of President-elect Richard M. Nixon's close economic advisers said yesterday frequent, across-the-board income tax cuts would stimulate the national economy.
Arthur F. Burns, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers during the Eisenhower administration, also expressed the hope that "We can end, or at least reduce, the surcharge on income tax next June 30."
Burns, interviewed by U.S. News and World Report, said periodic tax reductions will be considered after the Vietnam War ends."In fact, we might aim to bring the rate of tax down year by year" in modest amounts, he added.
My Photographer Herb
Miss Kandee Klein to marry Rick Wilber
Let Herb help with your wedding plans; engagement announcements, bridal portraits, wedding color candids. Also don't forget natural color portraits for Christmas gifts.
Herb's STUDIO
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-8822
Smut lovers can rest easily, the Motion Picture Association of America's voluntary classification code will probably not affect the type of movies shown in Lawrence.
Films to remain unchanged
Many critics of censorship and classification feared that smaller communities would adopt the code to prevent the screening of "restricted" movies.
Elden Harwood, manager of Lawrence Commonwealth Theaters, which owns all Lawrence theaters, said his company would probably comply with the code, but it really made very little difference because the city already has what he said is colloquially termed an "anti-smut ordinance."
Harwood said the ordinance had been enacted to please "a small group of individuals who would like to see all sorts of 'pornographic' material strictly limited."
The MPA code merely suggests classification and is in no way a mode of censorship. It provides four classifications to be added to the advertising of motion pictures released after Nov. 1.
The four classifications are: G for general audiences; M for mature audiences (parental discretion advised); R for restricted audiences - no one under 16 admitted without parent or guardian, and X for adults only-No one under 16 admitted even with an adult.
Harwood said he was not entirely certain what the city code said, but it "prohibits us from showing a bare breast to anyone under 18."
He said that the cashier uses his own judgment and if there is some doubt as to age he asks for identification.
Historian to talk tonight on Asia
A British historian will outline early European attempts to conquer Southeast Asia in a speech at 8 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Charles R. Boxer will speak on "Portuguese and Spanish Projects for the Conquest of Southeast Asia: 1580-1600."
Boxer is a Kings College, at London, fellow and a research professor at Indiana University.
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
FINE FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES
Open Monday-Saturday 11:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.
Sundays 4:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.
1 Mi. South of Holiday Inn
A message for MBA's and other Graduate Business students from the multi-faceted STANDARD OIL COMPANY (N.J.)
WHERE YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR CORPORATE ECONOMIC GROWTH
The most common measure of corporate economic growth is earnings. Though it is simple enough to set an objective of growth in earnings, achievement requires dedication, hard work, imagination and carefully thought-out plans.
Normally such growth stems from certain basic procedures: increased out-put of traditional product lines; research and development programs; diversification; or acquisition or merger. The larger the company, the more complex the pattern for growth becomes. In the case of Jersey Standard, our international scope adds to the complexity. Accordingly, earnings growth has resulted from a mix of the above basic procedures.
Under our decentralized system of management, procedures followed by affiliates world-wide in achieving earnings growth are tailored to fit local patterns. Affiliate management has latitude and authority to respond to local conditions and the head-quarters office provides regional coordination.
This system implements our objective of being a flexible, aggressive enterprise. It recognizes the importance of a proper blend of both short and long-term investments. It permits a balanced commitment of money and manpower. And it assures adaptation to the various social and political environments in which we operate.
Our plans for growth in earnings, however, are only as good as the people who develop and implement them. For Jersey Standard to grow, we must have personnel of the highest caliber—and a forward-looking aggressive, management team.
Isn't something like this really what you've been preparing for?
Make it a point to see the Jersey Standard representatives when they visit your campus-and talk over the various management opportunities in our world-wide family of companies.
Jersey representatives will be here on NOVEMBER 13,14
STANDARD OIL COMPANY (N.J.)
and affiliates Humble Oil & Refining Company, Enjay Chemical Company, Esso International Inc., Esso Mathematics & Systems Inc., Esso Research and Engineering Company, Esso Standard Eastern, Inc.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Monday, November 11, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Protesters may mar
Lt. Gen. Lewis W. Walt, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, will appear in three ceremonies marking Veterans' Day here today.
Walt, who just arrived from Vietnam where he was commander of the I Corp (northern) area, will participate in a parade through downtown Lawrence at 2 p.m. He will then speak to ROTC cadets in the University Theater at 4:30 and at a banquet honoring Vietnam veterans at 6:30 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The parade and banquet are sponsored by the local Alford-
Military units from several area bases and a KU ROTC unit will also participate in the parade.
RIO DE JANEIRO
Clarke post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW).
Members of People's Voice and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) will protest Walt's visit and the Vietnam war in a day-long "Festival of Life."
They met last night at the Wesley Foundation to make final plans for the demonstration. Voice plans to be present wherever Walt is.
The protesters will carry signs, but will act in a non-violent manner. Voice spokesmen said.
cern for their safety during the protests. The VFW members, police, or townspeople might assault them, they said.
Voice members expressed con-
Richard Gibson, commander of the VFW post, said that although the protesters are not invited and not wanted, he expected no trouble and had told his members not to start any.
Robert Richardson, chief of police, said there should be no violence. The protesters would have a police escort, he said, but must wait until the VFW parade is over.
Voice plans to march "as soon after the VFW as the police will let us."
Richardson said officers would hold them back until their escort was ready.
Frank Burge, director of the Union, said he did not expect any trouble so long as the protesters "behave as adults."
PRAGUE (UPI)-Hundreds of frightened pro-Moscow Czechoslovaks ran a gauntlet of flailing umbrellas and curses yesterday when they left a meeting sponsored by the Soviet-Czechoslovak Friendship Society. Prague police stood by and watched.
Czechs assault USSR 'friends'
About 2,500 hardline conservatives attended an early morning breakfast meeting with Soviet occupation soldiers, including at least one general, at which Czechoslovak Communist party Secretary Alexander Dubcek and his reformists were denounced and Moscow praised.
Most of the audience slipped out through side entrances to the meeting hall but about 400 walked through the main door where an angry crowd of Czechoslovakus was waiting.
KU's enrollment has reached record proportions this fall, William L. Kelly, registrar, said.
Enrollment breaks record
After the first week of enrollment 16,540 had registered, but the figure dwindled to 16,482 after the fee payment period had finished Kelly said.
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These are members of H. O. Peet & Co, who have attended K.U. While not physically located in Lawrence, they have a special empathy for the people of Lawrence. That's why they say: "We're glad to be back"
H.O.PEET & CO.
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1
Paulen E. Burke Jack C. Sports Robert W. Munk Paul Hunt Jr. Patterson Graham Hunt Graham C. Frick George E. Winners Jr. Patterson Bryant P. Barnes 1960 Frank C. Followell 1949 John C. Fechlandt 1948 Eugene W. Morgan 1937 Don R. Sleeben 1964
new office of H.O.PEET
P. B. G.
This new office offers you the same complete service found in our other four offices. It is equipped with modern electronic devices such as the Stockmaster for instant market information, the Electroscan showing the day's trading and direct wire service. In addition, we have installed an Investor's Library to help you become a better informed investor. It is well stocked with investment services; Standard & Poor's.
P
The Lawrence office has direct phone service to our Kansas City home office. This means our staff can immediately contact any department of H. O. Peet & Co.for information or check with Partners of the firm for important decisions.
woody's and other investment information. Also available, is an attractive, comfortable Conference Room for Investment Club meetings, or other group meetings.
PETER A. SMITH
& CO
TAYLOR
P
We cordially invite you to visit our new office. We hope you will make it your investment headquarters for information and service.
Members of the Lawrence staff, J. D. Underwood, Robert Dillon,
Don Julian, Registered Representatives, Mary Massoth, Receptionist.
JAY UNDERWOOD
DON JULIAN
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00
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 11, 1968
36
21
79
83
Owens penetrates for six
Hawks crash on home field
Kansan Photo by Greg Sorber
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
Coach Pepper Rodgers, forsaking his popular "big game" somersault, offered a defense in KU's sorber dressing room.
"Too many people have been asking me to do it," he replied to an interviewer's query. "I don't like to be asked—I want to be spontaneous."
The Sooners halted KU's victory string at seven, and in the process, sent the Big Eight football chase into a three-way dogfight. Missouri blistered Iowa State, 42-7, and uppped its conference mark to 5-0. Kansas (4-1) and Oklahoma (3-1) will take cracks at Mizzou the next two weeks.
But Pepper and the Jayhawks had no defense for a bruising 81-yard Oklahoma scoring march in the fourth period that dealt KU its first defeat of the season. 27-23.
The Jayhawks, opening from their 20, survived their first third-down test. George McGowan alley-ooped between two Oklahoma defenders, pulling down a 17-yard Bob Douglass aerial at the 39. Then John Jackson latched onto a 12-yard Douglas bullet up the middle.
Oklahoma's winning trek, which covered 81 yards in 10 plays, was culminated by a 5-yard Steve Owens sweep. With 4:14 remaining, KU had ample time to recover.
Three times in the second half, the Jayhawks were forced to battle from behind. KU succeeded twice. Its third bid kept a record capacity crowd of 51.500 anxiously glued to their seats.
And the Hawks came within a fingertip of preserving their perfect record.
The knockout punch with 1:29 showing was Barrett's second interception. And it marked the fourth time KU moved deep into OU territory and left empty-handed. Oklahoma was more efficient: never did the Sooners cross KU's 40 without scoring.
Sandwiched between two incompletions was a 12-yard loss—Douglass been sandwiched between two OU defenders. It made it 4th- and 22 from the 38. Everything rode on the arching Douglass pass that glanced off McGowan's fingertips and into Mike Barrett's grasp.
Oklahoma decked Douglass for an 8-yard loss before a pass interference call moved KU to the Sooner 45. Douglass then scrambled 19 yards, going out of bounds at the 26 to stop the clock at 2:05.
Defensive end Steve Zabel blocked another Bell field goal attempt on KU's next possession after the Jayhawks trudged from their 23 to the OU 19.
The first of the KU fizzles followed the opening kickoff. Kansas, ignited by John Riggins' 46-yard return, pushed to the Oklahoma 17 before Bill Bell bucked the wind with a 34-yard field goal try—and fell short.
After two punt exchanges, Oklahoma got on the scoreboard. Its 48-yard push included a 10-yard Bob Warmack toss to Eddie Hinton and an 11-yard flip to Zabel. Owens crashed six yards around left end for the score with 9:28 to go in the half. Bruce Derr's placement sailed wide to the left.
"That really takes it out of a team to get that close and not score," said Rodgers. "It had to give Oklahoma a big lift."
Kansan Photo by Greg Sorber
The tempo had been established for a
KU quickly retaliated. Douglass uncorked the bomb, hitting McGowan in stride at the OU 30. McGowan stumbled into the corner of the endzone to complete the 75-yard play. The score remained a 6-6 deadlock when Bell's conversion try missed.
Oklahoma regained the edge with an 85-yard march, capped by a 13-yard Owens pass to Joe Killingsworth at 1:44. Bell squeezed in a 35-yard field goal with just 27 seconds left.
see-saw struggle, and the second half resembled a pinng-nonch match in slow motion.
Twice the Jayhawks drove 63 yards for touchdowns, the second time needing twice as many plays. And Oklahoma struck on scoring drives of 80 and 81 yards.
KU went in front at almost identical junctures of the third and fourth periods. Don Shanklin broke off right tackle, hurdled toward the sideline, and dashed 19 yards for a TD with 10:40 to play in the third.
Warmack completed 4 of 5 passes while the Sooners cranked up a 15-play, 80-yard series. It was Warmack's 11-yard keeper that erased the 16-13 KU lead with 5:05 showing.
Kansas responded with another go-ah-drive. Big gainers were a 21-yard keeper by Douglass and a 14-yard sashay by Shanklin to the Oklahoma 15. From the 5, the Jayhawks needed three belts at a stubborn Sooner defense before John Riggins wedged across at 10:50.
Three minutes later, Oklahoma set foot on the winner. Hinton snared a 15-yard pass before Owens and fullback Mike Harper charged straight ahead for 11 and 12 yards. The only pressure situation, on 3rd-and-6 at KU's 16, saw Warmack connect with Killingsworth at the 5. Owens went over on the next play.
"I'm not new at getting beat. It's just new this season," said Rodgers in prefacing his post-game comments. "It probably won't be the last time, either."
The KU coach pointed to a breakdown in pass protection as a major factor. "We didn't throw the ball good," he said, although Douglass had his best day ever, statistically, with 11 of 28 for 240 yards. "We didn't do a good job of protecting the passer, and we didn't do a good job of rushing the passer. Oklahoma did all those things."
The difference, said Rodgers, was plain and simple.
"Oklahoma just outplayed us. When we needed the big play on offense or defense, we didn't get it. They did."
F
Hicks flattens Owens
21
Riggins nailed by OU
Photo by Mike Gunther
Monday, November 11, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Speaking of sports
Now we shoot for 9-1
By Ron Yates. Kansan sports editor
As Jayhawk football fans streamed from Memorial stadium Saturday the joviality which had accompanied KU's first four home games was missing. It was the first taste of defeat for KU fans this year and it was greated with mixed emotions.
In the stands a girl mopped tears from her face and out in the street two men were talking.
"Well, the bubble finally broke," said one man to the other, shaking his head.
"We can still go nine and one," said the other man with a note of optimism in his voice. "We'll still go to Miami."
Perhaps the best thing KU fans could do would be to remain optimistic. And if there ever was a "bubble" then it is still around the Jayhawks. KU has not won seven games since 1961 and certainly the way the football team has played is nothing to be ashamed of.
What happened to KU Saturday is nothing new to an unbeaten football team. Oklahoma was in a must win situation and played almost flawless football the entire game. They would not be denied and the entire Sooner team deserves tribute for their performance. The Jayhawks certainly did not fall down and die, but they had their troubles with the Sooners, particularly on defense.
A great individual effort by Steve Owens, OU's junior Tailback who crashed KU's line for 157 yards on 37 carries, quite possibly gave the Sooners the extra punch they needed to beat KU. An example of commendable team effort was the OU offensive line which provided gapping holes for the Sooner running backs.
In the KU locker room after the game, Jayhawk coach Pepper Rodgers grinned slightly.
"I'm not going to stay sad very long, probably not more than an hour," he said in answer to a question about the loss.
Perhaps this is what KU football fans should do also. Bury the loss and start thinking about K-State next Saturday and then Missouri after that. Of all the games KU has played so far this season, these two will probably be the most important . . . and possibly the toughest.
And as for the "bad game" some Jayhawk fans felt KU played, an Oklahoma sports writer who has followed Oklahoma the past eight years, said he has not seen Oklahoma play so well since last year's Orange Bowl game against Tennessee. The Sooners beat Tennessee in that game and at the time Tennessee, like Kansas was rated third in the nation.
"I think they were higher for this game against Kansas than they were for Tennessee in the Orange Bowl," the writer added. "They were really up for this one. And that defensive line was just unbelievable . . . they just closed up the holes as fast as they were opened. We could have beaten anybody today."
And as the old football saying goes: "Any team can beat another team on any given day." K-State proved that by shutting out powerful Nebraska 12-0 and Oklahoma proved it by shutting down the Javhawk scoring machine.
Despite the loss, the world did not end for the KU football team or its fans. Some unpredictability was inserted into the season and instead of a straight road to the Orange Bowl, a curve or two has popped up.
And with some fresh team effort, a touch of Pepper and a sprinkle of optimism from the fans, the Jayhawks can still cook up enough winning brew to sustain them for the next two weeks.
Jayhawk-Sooner statistics
First Downs Kansas Okla.
Rushing Yardage 184 246
Passing Yardage 240 168
Total Offense 424 395
Passes Att-Comp-I 28-11-23 23-14-0
Return Yardages 12 14
Losses 0 0
Yards Penalized 17 35
Punts-Average 4-33.7 7-38
Score by quarters
Kansas 0 9 7 7—23
Oklahoma 0 13 7 7—27
OU—Owens 6 run (kick failed)
KU—McGowan 75 pass from Doug-
lass (kick failed)
KU—McGowan north 13 pass from
Owens (Derr kick)
KU—FG Bell 35
KU—Shanklin 19 run (Bell kick)
KU—McGowan 11 run (Derr kick)
KU—John Riggins 1 run (Bell kick)
OU—Owens 5 run (Derr kick)
Running with what KU track coach calls "contact," the Jayhawk harriers claimed the Big Eight cross country team championship and their sixth consecutive win of the season Saturday
Colorado's All-American Craig Runyan successfully defended his Big Eight individual champion title in 14-min. 21.9-sec.
KU harriers first in Big 8
As an important ingredient for a team title Timmons had described the necessity to "run close to the top and in close contact with each other." That's exactly what the Hawk harriers did.
KU's freshman football team combined its best game defensively with its worst game offensively as they lost to the Oklahoma State fresh 18-0 Friday in near freezing temperatures.
KU's top runner was freshman Doug Smith who took third with a 14:25 time. But it was by placing its final four scoring runners in positions 9 through 12—and only six-tenths of a second separating them—that the Jayhawks won. They were sophomore Jay Mason, junior Roger Kathol, freshman Rich Elliot and sophomore Mike Salomon
Kansas quarterbacks threw six interceptions during the game—five by starter Phil Basler. Only one led to an OSU touchdown, but the Oklahomaans also scored after a KU fumble and once after a quick kick.
Frosh lose; slip to 0-3
Runyan led all the way around the Lawrence Country Club course. He started losing his 20-yard lead around the 2-mile track and was able to edge teammate Rick Trujillo by only a few
KU was outdistanced by only eight yards, 234 to 226, but could not cross the goal line.
The young dayhawks were led by tailback Dick Hertel, who gained 80 years on 14 carries, and Yogki Pinckney on defense, who made 25 tackles.
Mick Narusch, a 6-1, 210-pound linebacker playing his first game ever at that position, had nine tackles. Narusch suffered a back injury before the season and was advised he couldn't play this year. But he was given an okay and began practicing just last week.
Oklahoma State, in running its record to 3-0, was led by Bobby Cole's 62 yards on 17 carries and Ronnie McInturff, who caught four passes for 55 yards.
Kansas' nex game is Friday in Manhattan against Kansas State, while OSU has a week before playing Oklahoma at Norman.
The undefeated Jayhawk squad rammed home all seven runners in the top 15, taking positions—3, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15 for a total 45 points. Second place Colorado took positions 1, 2, 5, 24, 29, 38, 45 for 61 points.
K-State took 8, 16, 19, 23, 25,
47, 52 for 91 points; Nebraska-
6, 7, 17, 32, 36, 41, 51, for 98
points; Missouri—13, 21, 22, 27,
30, 33, 37 for 113 points; Iowa
State—4, 26, 31, 34, 43, 49, 55
for 138 points; Oklahoma State
—18, 28, 35, 46, 50, 53 for 177
points; and Oklahoma—20, 39,
40, 42, 44, 48, 54, for 185
points.
steps. On Runyan's and Trujillo's steps was KU's Smith.
Under cloudy skies and a chilly 33 degrees about 250 persons ran across the fairways and up the hills of the Lawrence Country Club golf course for a better view of the harriers running around the 3-mile course. Pacing the fans was KU's miler now Topeka Daily Capital photographer Jim Ryun.
Next Saturday KU's cross
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Intramural Hill title in football set for today
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.
Four teams will play at 4:15 p.m. today for the "A" and "B" league Hill Championships in KU's football intramural program.
Beta Theta Pi will have two teams playing for Hill trophies after Friday's league championship games. In Fraternity "A" league, the Beta team shutout Phi Gamma Delta 19-0, and in Fraternity "B" Beta No. 1 blanked Theta Chi 7-0.
Beta will play Law on Field 2 for the "A" title, and the College Kids will play Beta No.1 on Field 7 for the "B" title.
Law won the Independent "A" league championship by beating Manor, Inc. 18-6 and the College Kids reached the Hill championship game in "B" league by running over the Graduates 31-6.
country team travels to Chicago for the Central Collegiate Championships.
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A I R L I N E S
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 11, 1968
Open race for No.1
By United Press International Oklahoma's stunning upset of previously-unbeaten Kansas apparently has thrown open the race for the No.1 ranking in college football among Southern California, Ohio State, and Penn State—and there's little doubt about the opinion of coach Charley Tate of Miami (Fla.).
"They were everything we thought they were and we lost to a great football team," said Tate after Penn State's 22-7 victory over Miami Saturday. "I find absolutely no fault in their defensive unit. We played a great football team."
Penn State trailed 7-0 at halftime but rallied for 12 points in the third period and 10 in the fourth to remain unbeaten and untied. Charley Pittman led the rally with three touchdowns from short range but it was the defensive unit which strangled Miami in the second half.
Penn State's victory was one of the most impressive on a day when Minnesota's upset of Purdue, 27-13, ranked alongside Oklahoma's conquest of Kansas as an eye-opener but which was marked primarily by high-scoring victories.
Southern California, the nation's first-ranked team, downed
Pro
standings
National Football League Western Conference Central Division
Coastal Division
W 4 L T PcT PtG G
Minnesota 5 1 2 556 167 144
Chicago 5 4 0 556 167 222
Green Bay 3 5 1 375 174 143
Detroit 3 5 1 375 174 143
Eastern Conference Century Division
Baltimore 8 1 0 889 266 108
Los Angeles 8 1 0 889 198 111
San Francisco 4 5 0 444 177 200
Allanta 1 8 0 113 120 277
W L W T Pct Pts. Oft.
Cleveland 6 3 0 667 217 178
Louis 6 3 0 667 217 178
New Orleans 3 6 0 353 161 212
Pittsburgh 3 6 0 250 161 212
W L W T Pct Pts. Opp.
Dallas 7 2 0 778 26 122
New York 6 3 0 667 41 129
Michigan 6 5 0 444 163 231
Philadelphia 0 0 0 000 163 231
American Football League Eastern Division
Western Division
W New York 7 2 6 0 778 257 194
Houston 7 2 6 0 400 175 184
Miami 3 5 1 375 159 234
Boston 3 5 1 375 159 234
Portland 3 5 1 375 159 234
Kansas City W L J T Pet Pts. Ops.
San Diego 8 2 2 600 360 154
Oakland 7 2 2 778 296 137
Denver 7 2 2 444 296 137
Dallas 2 2 8 144 149 214
Yesterday's Games National League
Minnesota 14. Green Bay 10
Washington 16. Philadelphia 18
Atlanta 17. Atlanta 10
Baltimore 27.
Cleveland 35. New Orleans 17
New York 27. Dallas 28.
Chicago 28. San Francisco 19
New York 26, Houston 7
Kansas City 16, Cincinnati 9
San Diego 27, Boston 17
Miami 21, Buffalo 17
Oakland 43, Denver 7
Games Next Sunday
Cleveland at Pittsburgh
Dallas at Washington
Atlanta at Chicago
Orlando at Green Bay (game
will be played in Milwaukee)
Philadelphia at New York
Minnesota at Detroit
St. Louis at Baltimore
Los Angeles at San Francisco
Boston at Kansas City
Cincinnati at Miami
San Diego at Buffalo
New York at Oakland
New York at Oakland
California 35-17, Ohio State
romped over Wisconsin 43-8,
Michigan whipped Illinois 36-0,
Missouri trounced Iowa State
42-7, Texas defeated Baylor
47-26 and Georgia crushed Florida
51-0 in other victories by
teams among the top 10.
The high scores also included such as: Notre Dame 56 Pittsburgh 7, Arkansas 46 Rice 21, Yale 30 Pennsylvania 13, Indiana 24 Michigan State 22, Texas Tech 31 Texas Christian 14, Ohio U. 28 Bowling Green 27 and Army 58 Boston College 25.
The day's offensive activity also was featured by the performance of Mark Perkins of Hobart who set a national collegiate record of 61 carries in one game in a 21-7 victory over RPI
Big 8 standings
BIG EIGHT CONFERENCE By United Press International SEASON STANDINGS
Team W L I T Pct Pts. Ops.
Missouri 7 1 1 0 .875 325 77
Kansas 7 1 1 0 .875 321 127
Nebraska 5 3 0 0 .825 131 108
Okahoma 4 3 0 0 .571 126
Colorado 4 4 0 0 .500 179 164
Kansas State 3 5 0 0 .375 144 195
Iowa State 3 6 0 0 .333 161 247
OKla. State 2 5 0 0 .286 147 209
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
Team W L T Pct Tps. Ots.
Missouri 5 0 1 0.100 183 62
Kansas 4 1 0 800 168 93
Oklahoma 4 1 0 750 163 91
Colorado 3 3 0 500 151 147
Nebraska 3 3 0 400 151 72
Okla. State 1 4 0 256 75 129
Iowa, State 1 4 0 200 80 151
State 1 4 0 167 80 196
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS
Oklaahoma 16, Iowa State 7
Missouri 42, Iowa State 7
Kansas State 12, Nebraska 0
Oklaahoma State 34, Colorado 17
THIS WEEK'S SCHULE
Satoshi Moriuchi State of Oklahoma,
Kansas at Kansas State, Nebraska at
Colorado, Iowa State at Oklahoma
State
Lutz and Smith victory gives Davis Cup lead
SAN JUAN (UPL) -Bob Lutz and Stan Smith gave the United States a 2-to-1 lead in the Davis Cup Intrazone finals Sunday when they crushed India's Ramanathan Kirshnan and Jaideep Mukerjea 6-2, 6-3, 6-2.
The match was played before a sold-out crowd of 500 on the concrete courts of the Caribe Hilton Hotel.
"I knew they were good, but not that good," said Mukerjea of the U.S. pair after a match played under ideal weather conditions.
The singles finals will be played Monday when Krishnan faces Arthur Ashe and Premjit Lall meets Clark Graebner of the U.S.
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A record crowd of 51,500 at Lawrence, Kan., saw Oklahoma hand Kansas its first loss of the season when Steve Owens scored on a five-yard run with 4:14 remaining in the game. Kansas had taken a 23-20 lead with 10:50 left on a 63-yard drive capped by John Riggins' one yard plunge.
at Troy, N.M. Perkins, who gained 197 yards, broke the year-old record of 53 carries set by Kenn Lee of Wichita State.
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Sports Quotes
Virginia Parker 732 N. 2nd
Minnesota manufactured its upset of Purdue on the wings of three first-period touchdowns by Jim Carter and a 27-0 halftime lead. Purdue rallied for two touchdowns in the second half but was clearly out-played during the game as Minnesotahad a 307-137 edge on the ground and 109-74 in the air.
MINNIE PEARL SAYS WE'RE OPEN
Steve Sogge threw touchdown passes of four, 28 and 10 yards and O.J. Simpson scored on runs of 39 and seven yards while gaining 166 yards in Southern California's triumph. Ohio State remained among the perfect-record teams as Ron Maciejowski scored three touchdowns and passed for another.
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Ever wonder what the quarterback says to his teammates before a big final drive? Here is what Nebraska's Ernie Sigler says he told his teammates before the winning 80-yard push against Oklahoma State:
"Just don't do anything stupid. Don't get off side—and if you miss a block, don't hold anybody.
CHICAGO (UPI)—Gale Sayers, star halfback of the Chicago Bears and the National Football League's leading rusher, was carried off the field during the game with the San Francisco 49ers Sunday with torn ligaments in his right knee.
Savers hurt: torn knee ligaments
He was scheduled for surgery at Illinois Masonic Hospital Sunday night and it was problematical whether he will be able to play again this season.
Sayers was injured as he tried one of his patented sweeps
Player wins tourney
SYDNEY (UPI)—Gary Player's par on the second hole of a sudden death playoff with Britain's Peter Townsend Sunday enabled the South African to win the Wills Masters Golf Championship.
Player, who leaves for Rome and the World Cup tournament today, pocketed the first place prize of $2,240.
He credited a chip shot on the 17th hole of regulation play which enabled him to recover after hooking his tee shot into the trees and salvage a par.
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around left end in the second quarter when the Bears were on the 49ers' 48 and driving for their third score of the game. He made only two yards and the gain was nullified by an offside penalty.
It was his first serious injury of the mercurial halfback's professional career.
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14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 11, 1968
Author views U.S. scene
Along his his other talents, C. P. Snow is an astute observer of the contemporary political scene. This became evident during a brief interview Saturday morning.
Snow, who was at KU for Friday's dedication of the Spencer Research Library, found time to talk about the present world situation.
Despite the election of Richard Nixon, a Republican, to the presidency, Snow seriously questions whether the trend towards centralized government and increasing federal power will be reversed.
"I doubt if any administration is going to make much difference," he said. "It may superficially, but in the major programs, I think it's impossible."
Snow attributed George Wallace's nationwide appeal in the 1968 election to working-class fears of the Negro drive for equality. He compared the Ala-
baman with Enoch Powell, a British Conservative member of Parliament who favors barring colored immigration into Britain.
"He is a very clever man," Snow says of Powell, "but a man of violent emotion, in some ways not unlike Wallace."
Both politicians draw their national support from whites in congested urban areas, he added, especially from workers who fear colored encroachment into jobs and housing.
"I don't think it's going to effect real politics by 1 per cent," he said.
By contrast, Snow had praise for the involvement of youth in this summer's McCarthy movement.
The "New Left" movement holds little fascination for Snow. He characterizes is as a rather trivial letting off of emotion, which will do nothing towards creating a more just world.
Mild earthquake felt slightly here
An earthquake of medium magnitude felt over a 23-state area Saturday had little effect in Lawrence, James A. Peoples, professor of geology, said yesterday.
Peoples said the tremor apparently measured here between 1 and 2 in intensity on the Richter scale, "just above bare detectability." Many Lawrence residents felt the shock, which Peoples said reached here at 11:03.5 a.m.
Peoples said the earthquake was nevertheless "one of the biggest disturbances here in about 10 years." The National Earthquake Information Center measured the magnitude of the shock at its origin in Illinois at 5.5 on the Richter scale, the severest earthquake in the eastern half of the nation since 1944.
The original disturbance apparently occurred about $1\frac{1}{2}$ minutes before the shock hit Lawrence, Peoples said. "I am suspicious that there were two earthquake shocks, spaced about two minutes apart," he said, but evidence to support this view is "very slim."
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"I wouldn't like my own country to be without those who contribute the most," he said. "Most people do not doubt that this is the right way to produce the highest academic excellence."
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Snow said one of the main objections to special schools is that psychological disadvantages are created for the gifted students. "This problem is a bogey and not very real," he said.
Snow said other critics claim that special schools produce a privileged, elite class. He admitted that this is true. However, Snow said the end result is worth the social injustice.
Snow warned that this country is neglecting the gifted student.
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Author advocates better schooling for gifted child
C. P. Snow, British author and scientist, told a Hoech Auditörium audience of about 600 that the United States should adjust its educational system to get the most out of its intellectually gifted children.
SET A NEW PACE.
See The New Folk
Thurs., Nov. 14.
At the Red Dog
Pianist will perform in Swarthout recital
Kansan Staff Writer
Snow's talk last Friday afternoon was the concluding event of the dedication of the Kenneth Spencer Library.
Bv JOE NAAS
Richard Reber, pianist, will perform in faculty recital at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Murphy Hall.
American Olympic champions "We assume that high athletic gifts are pretty rare among the human race," he said. But people are much less likely to come to the same conclusion about intellectual gifts, he said.
Snow compared the intellectually gifted to a few of the American Olympic champions.
"Social justice and special education do not fit," he said.
"The only way to achieve perfect social justice would be to educate no one at all."
For his recital, Reber will play Mozart's Fantasy, K. 397; Chopin's Prelude, Op. 28, No. 17; Mazurka, Op. 50, No. 3; Nocurte, Op. 62, No. 2 and Sonata, Op. 35.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Cast Addition
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—British actor John Hurt joins Julie Christie and Michael Serrazin in "In Search of Gregory" in Geneva, Switzerland.
SUA Flight To NEW YORK
Departs from Kansas City Dec. 20 and 22, and returns Jan.5
Cost $105
For Reservations Call SUA Office UN 4-3477
It's not often an engineer gets to design a company.
When he does, he tends to take care of his own kind.
He designs a company that is one heck of a good place for an engineer to work.
You can tell LTV Aerospace Corporation is an engineering oriented company.
The ratio of engineers to everybody else is exceptionally high.
The Robert McCulloch research laboratory is the newest and one of the finest big labs in the country.
The computer support is tremendous.
The engineer who wants to be a technical specialist here can do as well as the engineer who gets into administration.
The engineer who wants to keep working on an advanced degree can do it right here.
And the projects: they range from deep space to the ocean floor — military and commercial aircraft, V/STOL; launch vehicles; extra vehicular activity research and development; high mobility ground vehicles; missile systems; computer, technical and management services.
No question about it: the engineers at LTV Aerospace are taking care of themselves.
An LTV Aerospace representative will tell you how to get in on it.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Wednesday, November 13
Schedule an appointment or write:
College Relations Office.
LTV Aerospace Corporation.
P. O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222.
An equal opportunity employer.
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Monday, November 11, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
******************************
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan and offered to students are regarded to color, creed, or national origin.
NOW ON SALE
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Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Iglead. 1-9
1965 GTO, 389, 3 two's, 4-speed, Runs
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radio, excellent condition. VI 2-6533.
11-13
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$2,588.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owner miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr-50,000 mile drive, get a lift, buy it! There's not another like it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
Two KU-K-State football tickets for sale. Call Luis at VI 2-3359. 11-11
1962 Ford, 4-door Sedan, V-8 stick.
1963 Toyota, $395. Buick, 11k. W 23rd. 11-12
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos. Regular $495.00 and back's music! Lawi Cabinets—naglificant music! Back's 929-931 Mass. St. 11-20
Classic 1957 Studiebear Golden
Night at the carer car. $150-
11-12 T.L.C. Calc V 3-0254
1964 MG Midget, white w/wire wheels, this hard-to-find car yours this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa 11-13
1983 Volkswagen deluxe sunroof,
choice of 2, both 100% guaranteed,
nice cars; 1 green, 1 white; elite
$99 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522
lowa. 11-13
Mustang snow tires—Last year's design. New 1st line 695-1x Keel cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Rock Stonebacks. 11-13
Britannica, Great Books of the Western World, 54 volumes, also 20 additional volumes. Like new. $290. Call 843-1835. 11-13
1963 Olds Cutlass 2 dr., spt, cpe, V-8,
auto PS & PB. Excellent mechanical
condition. Call VI 3-1445 after 6:00
p.m. 11-15
Kalmar Instastatic type camera for sale. Uses 126 cartridges, color, black and white. slides. Call Donna. VI 3-0552, after 5:00 p.m. 11-15
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Blar-B-R*outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $85; chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tf
FRESHMEN: Want an active student-sympathy government? If so vote David Mannering, an independent, for Freshman class president on Nov. 20.
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD
500. Automatic changer with base,
dust cover, and grado cartridge.
needle assembly as bonus. New $85.
Now $55. Full new equipment guar-
安ze on both tuner and changer.
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Peace Center, 107 W. 7th FI. V-27832. In the Kansas Union lobbies Tuesdays. 11-19
Your chance to buy six KU-K-State tickets which are together in an already soldout stadium. Will sell any even number. Call Vi 2-5233. 11-13
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students Contact Mr. Ruge, Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts Phone VI 3-8074. 11-11
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD
500. Automatic changer with base,
dust cover, and grado card storage.
New $85. Now $55. Fully new equipment
guarantee on both tuner and changer.
Rockstar-Ray Audio & Visual -
1944. 11-13
The Jayhawk Rodeo Club is having a fox hunt, Nov. 10. If you are interested, call us at VI 1-248 or Rob in room 722 at VI 1-2400 for 5:00 p.m. 11-12s.
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tt
HELP WANTED
Female—Good looking, personable women to work in pleasant surroundings. In Pizza Hut #1 on W. 23rd St. Good pay Fringe benefits. included. Please contact D. Ed. Sapp, manager, at 83516 for an interview appointment. 11-11
Student wanted with tire changing experience to work mornings and holidays. $1.65 per hour. Do not apply unless you can work 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. daily. Ray Stoneback's Downtown-apply in person. 11-13
Part-time for 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. tf
Male roommate Wanted. $50.00 an-
d drive. DR v1326 to campus. 2020 E11—
11
WANTED
Wish to employ noon-time lunch room play ground supervisor for elementary school in Lawrence. 11:30-12:30. Phone VI 3-4686 or VI 1144.
Four Male Students Wish to Rent a large House, preferably within walking distance of campus. Need for security. Ron Chan Computer VI 2-6600, Room 740. 11-14
SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most "barn" in your apted's barn Hitch and electricity are likely available. VI 3-4032. 11-12
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high fidelity Haynes Ray Audio. Vlz Center, Ft. and Eve, Hillebrand Crest Shopping Center. 11-22
Experienced Dressmaking. Today's styles, much cheaper than store prices. Get that special dress for school or any occasion. Hems and alterations also. Come see samples. 842-6979. 11-12
Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. 11-14
TYPING
Experienced in typing thesis, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
er equipment type. Prompt efi-
fficient service. Phone VI 3-9554.
Mrs. E. Wright. 12-9
.. A Very Private Club
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elec. located near Oliver Hall. VI 2873.
UnderDog
FOR RENT
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048.
Casa De Taco
Nightly Entertainment
THE
1 Bd. APT--Furn.. $60 plus utilities—quiet & isolated--call Mike at VI 2-
1684 or leave number at VI 3-7151
11-12
5 yr. old Black Labrador Retriever (large black short haired dog) with tan collar in vicinity at W 26th St Children's pet Reward - VI 2-7287
One pair of prescription sunglasses with name inside. Contact Terri Otaway, GSP. Room 407 or leave at the desk. 11-12
Deliciously Different Mexican Food
LOST
Gold I.D. bracelet with small gold heart Engraved. Sentimental value. Will reward. Deena Faucett, VI 3-4610. 1630 Oxford. 11-11
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
PERSONAL
Have your party at the Studio, 1344
phone VI-2-9441 or VI-2-9689 available
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16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 11, 1968
A. A.
Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer, flanked by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, left and Lord C. P. Snow, right, listens while Rev. Earle B. Jewell, Forsyth, Mo., reminisces about the late Mr. Spencer, during the dedication of the library she gave in his memory.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Law Students, Prof. Davis of Southern Methodist University will be on campus Tuesday (Nov. 12) from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the U.S. law schools call Mrs. Padget in the College Office for an appointment. Deadline for Signing up for Speech
Faculty Children's League Bowling 4 p.m. Jay Bowl.
Graduate Physics Colloquium, 4.30 p.m.
Prof. Roland Omnes, 282 to 300 m.
Lt. Gen. Lewis Walt, Assistant Commandant, M.U. Marine Corps Univer-
sity.
Theatre
Vietnam Veteran's Banquet. 6:30
p. m. Open to all veterans. Kansas Union.
Faculty Recital 8 p.m. Richard Reber, pianist. Swartwhatch Recital Hall Lecture 6 p.m. Richard Kelley College, London. "Portuguese and Spanish Projects for the Conquest of Southeast Asia—1580-1600." Forum Room, Kansas Union.
Blood Drive. 11 a.m.-5:15 p.m. Kans-
sia, Union Bulgaria.
Theatre Research Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. Joel Adedeji, "The Notion of Tragedy in Nigerian Drama." 341 Murphy
Popular Film. 7 & 9 p.m. "Bay of Angels." Dyche Auditorium.
Research library dedicated Friday
Most of the guests then moved to Hoch Auditorium to hear Lord Snow's lecture, "Kinds of Excellence: Education of the Gifted," which concluded the dedication activities.
(Continued from Page 1)
The Kenneth Spencer Research Library will provide the University with its first structure planned and constructed to house rare books and special collections, David Heron, director of University libraries said
He said the new library will help KU attract and keep top scholars.
The new structure, which was designed by Robert E. Jenks, provides space for a staff of 43, seats for 238 readers, and storage space for 884,000 volumes, 125,000 manuscripts, and 2,000,000 archive items.
A reception area with adjacent reading rooms has been provided on each of the three top floors. More than 50 faculty study rooms are scattered throughout the building.
(Continued from Page 1)
Mallin Dies
An ambulance driver, Larry Marcure, Kansas City senior, said he found Mallin unconscious. Mallin had no observable bruises, abrasions or cuts when he reached the scene and administered oxygen, Marcure said.
No one gathered on the parking lot during the fight, said a witness, although she believed several students watched it from their residence hall windows.
Funeral services are pending.
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842-6331
The Great Tuxedo Ploy.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
Step 1: Take her out to dinner in formal wear. (Absolutely essential.) With a tuxedo on she will assume you have every intention of taking her to that musical comedy "you have tickets for."
FASHION
Step 2: After dessert, discover you've forgotten the tickets at your place. Don't worry. She couldn't possibly think you capable of being that corny, besides, you're wearing a tuxedo, remember?
THE MARSHAL OF THE YEARS
THE MARSHAL OF THE YEARS
Step 3: Pour her a drink and wet the outside of the glass with water to make it slippery. Before she gets a grip on it, let it slip (Tip: Use water inside the glass, too. Save the real stuff for later.)
A
Step 4: While her clothes are drying off-lend her your bathrobe. At this point you're entirely on your own. There are some things even an After Six tuxedo can't help you with
A public service message brought to you by After Six.
after Six FORMAL
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OPEN EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8:30
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BEAUTY SCHOOL
CLEANERS
God
IS DALAD
AND
FIGHTING
WEET
MARCUS MAYOR
FEDERAL ARMY CORPS
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1971
Lt. General Walt receives varied welcome in Lawrence
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No. 41
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
NATO reports on Czechs
BRUSSELS—The Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia has upset the balance of East-West conventional military strength in Europe but there is no indication the Soviets are preparing an attack on NATO nations, NATO parliamentarians were told yesterday.
The statement was contained in a report prepared for the North Atlantic Parliamentary Assembly which opened a five-day review of the alliance.
Viet talk rules unsettled
PARIS—American and South Vietnamese diplomats yesterday apparently failed to settle differences over ground rules for a Vietnam peace conference involving officials of the United States, South Vietnam, North Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
Saigon diplomatic sources said there was no indication following the meeting that South Vietnam had softened its opposition to any Paris conference that would include representation by the National Liberation Front (NLF) as a separate entity.
Biafra relief started
GENEVA-The International Red Cross yesterday announced its largest relief project since World War II-$25 million, four-month program to fight famine in the Nigerian secessionist state of Biafra.
The announcement said $8 million is needed immediately to get the plan started. The United States has pledged $2.5 million, it said, with Britain and West Germany also making large pledges.
Walt claims Viet Cong hope US will tire of war
The Viet Cong still hope Americans will despair of and abandon the Vietnam War, Lt. Gen, Lewis W. Walt, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, said here yesterday.
However, Walt ruled out the possibility of an immediate total United States troops withdrawal. He said a "phase-out" is more likely and that the Vietnamese are approaching the stage at which they can take over the fighting.
"If there is a pullout, it will be a phase-out while the South Vietnamese take over," Walt said. "It will not be long before they are strongest in that area."
Walt spoke at a Rotary noon luncheon in the Eldridge Hotel, in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall, and at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
After the Rotary speech, he came by limousine in a parade to the KU campus.
Walt's Veteran's Day visit was sponsored by the Alford Clarke post no. 852 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars here.
The North Vietnamese have already "been chased out—totally and completely defeated," said Walt, who returned two days ago from South Vietnam.
"If they come back," he said, "they'll get the hell knocked out of 'em again."
The general, met by sign-carrying protestors, said peace demonstrators give encouragement and comfort to the enemy and make them believe they are winning the war.
Weather
Today mostly fair and warmer. Southerly winds 10 to 20 mph. Highs upper 40s. Partly cloudy and warmer tonight and Wednesday. Low tonight near 30. Precipitation probability 10 per cent Wednesday.
"Time is on our side," he said. "The enemy is getting weaker and we are getting stronger."
Walt painted a grim picture of the war in his speeches—the same to all three audiences. He told of Viet Cong atrocities and of American soldiers dismembered in the conflict.
He went on to quote a Vietnam veteran, who had 27 bullet holes, as saying: "They don't know what they're doing."
Dignitaries in Lawrence for the Veteran's Day celebration included Sen. James Pearson.
"Quit demonstrating over here
The Veteran's Day parade was followed by parade of about 200 peace marchers. At the Union, Walt said protestors disturbed him.
"Today there were some students in here carrying signs that bothered me," he told the audience.
(Continued on page 12)
Protesters follow Walt
The first disorders came at 3 p.m., when two women and a man attacked a line of anti-war marchers in North Park awaiting permission to begin their parade behind the Veteran's Day parade with Walt.
The trio grabbed the signs from several of the demonstrators, tore them up, and ripped up a large banner which was to have been carried at the beginning of the parade. The three, who refused to identify themselves, included one middle-aged woman who shrieked, "my son is over there right now," as she ripped up the anti-war signs.
Scuffles, a last minute "escape" by Lt. Gen, Lewis Walt and plenty of bitterness characterized yesterday's anti-war demonstrations here.
Between 5:30 and 6:45 p.m., about 200 demonstrators lined both sides of the Kansas Union lobby and north staircase, leading to the dining room where Walt was to speak. The general slipped in by a back door, missing the demonstrators, but most VFW dinner guests passed through the double line of sign-bearers.
After the dinner began, the demonstrators retired to the Big Eight
Aside from a bit of demonstrator beard-pulling by an irritated veteran, there were no incidents during the arrival of the guests.
The peace parade itself, which started about 3:30 p.m. and extended through the downtown business district, went unmarried by physical violence. The sign-carrying marchers sang patriotic songs and ignored the taunts and jeers of sidewalk bystanders.
(Continued on page 12)
Nixon backs Viet policy; plans no drastic changes
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President-elect Richard M. Nixon generally endorsed the Johnson administration's strategy for seeking peace in Vietnam and warned against expecting any drastic foreign policy changes when he takes over the White House.
With President Johnson standing by his side after a three and one-half hour White House briefing, Nixon also said he would support administration policy during the next two months in the tense Middle East and toward improving relations with the Soviet Union.
Nixon emphasized continuity of government during the transition period between this administration and the next, and expressed hope that cooperation between himself
and President Johnson could bring "some significant progress towards peace" before the Jan. 20 inauguration.
This transition period, Nixon said, if different from ones in the past because "this nation at this time in its foreign policy has several matters-Vietnam of course at the top of the list—which cannot wait decision and cannot afford a gap of two months in which no action occurs.
"If however, the action is to occur, if progress is to be made . . . in any of these fields, it can only be made if the parties on the other side realize that the current administration is setting forth policies that will be carried forward by the next administration," he said.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
Ray's switch long planned
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI)—James Earl Ray planned for as long as a month to make a last-minute switch in lawyers to delay his trial for the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., it was learned yesterday.
It appeared the move would succeed. Attorney Percy Foreman, brought into the case Sunday, spent the day drawing up his request for a continuance of the trail, set to begin Tuesday.
Judge W. Preston Battle was expected to grant the delay, probably until after Jan. 1.
Vague Hope
Sources close to Ray said the defendant maneuvered the lawyer change to delay the trial in the vague hope that something might change the picture and the case against him might be dropped.
Foreman will ask for a continuance of the trial because he needs time to prepare the case—particularly since Arthur Hanes, fired as Ray's lawyer—is refusing to turn over his files and records on the case until he is paid $15,000 he claims Ray owes him.
Judge Battle, who met with Hanes and prosecutor Phil Canale Sunday night after the change in lawyers was announced, said no jury venue would be called for the 10:30 a.m. (CST) opening of the long-awaited trial.
Ray hired Hanes when he was arrested last summer in London. It was learned that Ray's brothers, John and Jerry, had urged him from the outset to hire Foreman. Hanes, on the other hand, reportedly tried without success to reach Ray's brothers since June.
Hanes told Foreman by telephone Sunday night that until he is paid, "Don't call me, I'll call you." Hanes had suspected for some time that he might be fired, a suspicion apparently strengthened last Wednesday during his final meeting with Rav.
Unhappy With Hanes
Unhappy With Haines It was reported that Ray and Hanes argued whether Ray would testify.
Ray wanted to take the stand in his own behalf. Hanes advised against it.
Attorney Richard D. Schrieber of St. Louis, who defended Ray in a 1959 armed robbery trial, said Ray tends to try to dominate the defense strategy. In that trial, Schre伯说,Ray testified against his advice and "told things on the witness stand that he never even told me." He was convicted.
Ray's brothers were disgruntled with the financial agreement Hanes made with author William Bradford Huie, who is writing a series of articles for Look Magazine.
The details of the financial arrangement Hanes made with Huie have never been disclosed, but it was understood that Ray received $30,000 for his story, and Hanes several times that amount. Ray's brothers thought
No charges filed yet in Bruce Mallin case
No charges had been filed this morning in connection with the death of Bruce Mallin, 20-year-old Kansas City junior, who died yesterday after a Thursday afternoon fight in the east parking lot of Naismith Hall.
County Attorney Dan Young said a 17-year-old Kansas City freshman had been questioned and released. More witnesses were to be questioned, he said yesterday.
The KU student is believed to have suffered head and neck injuries in the fight. However, Wayne E. Hird, assistant county coroner, refused to disclose the cause of death even though an autopsy had been performed.
"I don't think this should be public information at this time," Hird said. Guidance Center facilities to fulfill this requirement. stemming from three to four weeks ago, acquaintances said.
Mallin died at 6 a.m. yesterday in Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he was taken after the incident. He had been listed in critical condition since admittance.
Funeral services for Mallin will be at the J. P. Louis Funeral Home, 6900 Troost Ave., Kansas City, Mo. The date of the services is pending. Arrangements are incomplete.
He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mallin, Overland Park.
FAVORITE ARRIVES
LAUREL, Md. (UPI)—Sir Ivor,
an early choice to win the $150,
-000 Washington D.C. International
on Monday, arrived at Laurel
Race Course from Ireland.
The Kentucky-bred and American owned Sir Ivor will be the first English Derby winner to compete in this country since Papyrus at Belmont Park in 1923.
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Young Raiders Sat.—Flippers, Fri., Nov. 22nd
KU's future participation in the USAF Loan program will be re-evaluated before the 1969 spring semester, he said.
the defendant should have gotten a larger share.
Foreman told the Memphis Press-Scimitar Monday that he didn't expect much cooperation from Hanes for the time being because "I understand Hanes still has a problem of collecting part of his fee."
For his part, Foreman insisted,
he wasn't interested in money
and would not say how much he
was being paid, or who was
paying him-except that it
w wasn't the Ku Klux Klan.
The Office of Student Financial Aid cannot accept. United Student Aid Fund (USAF) loan applications after November 15, Robert Billings, director, said yesterday.
Shortage of funds closes USAF loan applications
said, making possible nearly $2,250,000 in guaranteed loans to KU students from participating commercial banks.
Other loan sources remain open, and students faced with financial problems should inquire at the Office of Student Financial Aid about possible solutions. Billings said.
Billings explained that institutional reserves, which are the monetary guarantees for USAF loans, are now totally committed.
KU Endowment Association has provided $155,000 for the institutional reserve. Billings
REMEMBER TONIGHT! THE 2ND ANNUAL SKI FASHION SHOW
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JOURNALIST?
ENGINEER?
ACCOUNTANT?
HOME ECONOMIST?
Meredith Corporation has career opportunities in each of these fields. You've probably never heard of Meredith Corporation but chances are that you're acquainted with our products —
Magazines Better Homes & Gardens and Successful Farming
Better Homes & Gardens cookbooks and Meredith Press fiction and nonfiction
Educational materials Appleton-Century-Crofts college texts are Meredith products
Broadcasting KCMO TV-Radio in Kansas City is one of five Meredith stations
Printing besides Better Home & Gardens and Successful Farming, we print Vogue, House and Gardens, and Brides magazines
We'll be interviewing on campus soon Wednesday, November 13
Wednesday, November 13 at the William Allen White School of Journalism Flint Hall
Thursday, November 14 at 206 Strong Hall
We welcome you to stop in to see
Chuck McDonald Placement Representative Meredith Corporation Des Moines, Iowa
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
China expert outlines journalistic program
By LINDA LOYD and TOM WEINBERG Kansan Staff Writers
Emily Hahn, an expert on China who spent two years as prisoner of war, yesterday called for a three-point program for journalists to obtain news coverage of countries they cannot enter
Addressing 300 students of journalism and East Asian studies in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room, Miss Hahn outlined her program:
- Learn the country's language in order to interview migrating citizens.
- Listen, don't talk, to news sources.
- Exercise discretion in accepting source information.
Although the author-journalist spent nine years in China, she admitted not really knowing what goes on there. "The best source of information about China would probably be Japan," she said.
In China she published a "half-English, half-Chinese magazine" and recalled filling the back of it with articles by Mao-Tse Tung. "It's incredible to believe now," Miss Hahn said, "I wonder what he said?"
In an interview earlier, Miss Hahn related some of her personal views concerning China and Japan.
"The Asian college student in China is given a great deal of importance in public life. They are considered the elite and are looked upon with great awe," she said.
While in China, Miss Hahn was
Negro coed to be queen at K-State
MANHATTAN, Kan. (UPI)— Miss Paula Blair, a senior mathematics major from Coffeyville, yesterday was chosen 1968 homecoming queen at Kansas State University. She is the first Negro to be named queen at K-State.
Miss Blair will be presented a bouquet of roses by Sen. Frank Carlson at pre-game ceremonies of the Kansas-Kansas State football game next Saturday.
Her selection from among five finalists was announced at a noon student rally in front of Seaton Hall.
She will be crowned Saturday night during the intermission of K-State's special homecoming attraction, "Funny Girl."
The New Folk, a musical group, will appear in concert Thursday at the Red Dog Inn.
The New Folk is a religious group sponsored by the Campus Crusade for Christ International and the Interfraternity Council.
New Folk to perform
Tickets are for sale at the Red Dog Inn, the KU Information Booth, and the Student Union Activities office. Tickets cost $1.50 for students and $2.00 for adults.
AUTO WRECKING
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Credit Cards Accepted If Over 21
East End of 9th St.
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taken prisoner by the Japanese.
"They really didn't hurt me any—they slapped me once, but outside of that they were actually pretty decent to me."
Explaining the fascination for rumors during her internment, Miss Hahn said there was little news available to anyone and people relied on rumors. Experimenting with the game of rumors she started a completely false story and said that within 12 hours it had filtered back.
Miss Hahn earned her B.S. degree in geology at the University of Wisconsin and attended Columbia and Oxford Universities. She went to the Belgian Congo with the Red Cross in 1930-31 and wrote screen plays and scenarios in New York and Hollywood.
Miss Hahn is the author of several books including "China Only Yesterday," "China to Me," "China A to Z" and "Africa to Me."
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
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Lessons and Rentals
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Game tickets on sale
Students may still purchase bus and gme tickets for the K-State football game this weekend.
Tickets to the game are included in the $9.50 offer and are for sale at the Student Union Activities office.
Two buses will take 60 students to Manhattan at 10 a.m. Saturday and return.
All-black cast to perform
An all-black cast and guest director from Nigeria will join efforts in an Experimental Theater production opening Thursday.
The play, which launched the career of Nigerian playwright J. P. Clark, is "Song of a Goat." Joel Adedeji will direct the production with Linda Thayer, Abilene senior, as assistant director.
"Song of a Goat" unfolds the story of a fisherman who becomes impotent after the birth of his first child, a son. A masseur suggests an incestuous relationship with the fisherman's younger brother to remedy the situation.
CAMPUS BLOOD DRIVE
Tues. & Wed., Nov. 12 & 13 11 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.
Union Ballroom
Thursday, Nov.14 9 am. to 3:15 p.m.
McCollum Hall-Main Lounge
Markets nobody else knew were there made Mustang and Thunderbird a success.
Help wanted:
Does the growing youth market offer a new potential?
Situation: By 1972, 46% of the U.S. population will be under the age of 25. If this is a new market with substantial potential, should we base our product concept on economy or performance characteristics?
Consideration: The under 25 market poses some interesting opportunities. For one, today $142\%$ more young people work toward advanced college degrees than did the youth market of 10 years ago. That would seem to indicate a need for a new car based on economy of purchase and operation.
But, market affluence and the increasing number of multiple car households could indicate that a new vehicle should be developed around high style and high performance.
Need the facts and your analysis of this assignment for a meeting with management next month. Thanks.
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To help solve problems like these, our people have a giant network of computers at their service. Complete research facilities. The funds they need to do the job right.
If you have better ideas to contribute, and you're looking for challenging assignments and the rewards that come from solving them, come work for the Better Idea
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Ford.
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
Which way to peace?
During the past year, the American people have grown to consider the Vietnam war as an impossible war—impossible to win and almost impossible to lose gracefully. The current Paris peace talks and the bombing halt have offered at least a glimmer of hope that the United States will someday soon be able to get out of Vietnam.
However, Lt. General Lewis Walt, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, assured a Rotary luncheon audience yesterday that the United States had already won the war and now must just hold fast until the North Vietnamese give out and declare defeat.
The intelligence reports from the war haven't been quite this rosy. Walt asserted that the North Vietnamese have been chased out of South Vietnam and totally and completely defeated. "If they come back again, they'll get the hell knocked out of them again," Walt said.
Apparently the North Vietnamese haven't caught on to the fact yet that they are totally defeated.
However, the Associated Press reported yesterday that the North Vietnamese shelled provincial capitals and district towns in South Vietnam.
And despite the daily news reports of the defiance of the South Vietnamese and their refusal to participate in the Paris peace talks, Walt presented a glowing picture of the South Vietnamese government and of the country's affinity for the United States.
One of Walt's most telling statements was about the South Vietnamese and the future of the war.
"The day is coming when South Vietnamese
forces can take over from U.S. forces on the battlefield," he said.
Walt obviously doesn't think the end of the war is in the near future even though, according to him, the war is already won.
Richard Nixon became the president-elect of the United States last week supposedly because the American people want a change. And the biggest change they seem to want is the ending of the Vietnam war.
Walt's view of the war should give U.S. citizens a rather queasy feeling.
And will the United States be able to extract itself from the tentacles of the Vietnam problem if military commanders refuse to believe that the United States has not been completely victorious? Will the military finally agree to compromise? And will we work out peace in Vietnam over a conference table and not on the battlefield?
Will there be a quick ending of the war and even progress in the peace talks if generals such as Walt push for a continuance of battle until the North Vietnamese declare defeat?
The irony of today is that while we want peace and are endeavoring to negotiate in Paris, military commanders representing the United States in Vietnam still hold the opinion that this is a war to be won at any cost.
If the American people really want peace in Vietnam they had better keep close watch on those actually directing the war on the battleground.
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
Quotes
WASHINGTON—Senate. Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, declaring he believes the United States should continue with the Paris peace talks with or without the participation of South Vietnam:
"I do not think the tail, so to speak, should wag the dog, and I hope this is understood in its proper sense."
Letter to the Editor Election
To the Editor:
The other day I read a poem, the title and author being irrelevant, which sounded strangely familiar.
. Some belike.
Groaning with restless enmity, expect
All change from change of constituted power;
As if Government had been a robe.
On which our vice and wretchedness were tagged Like fancy-points and with the ribs.
Pulled off at pleasure . . .
After reading these lines I was reminded all too well of last Tuesday night—watching Walter Cronkite announce the election returns—and the following Wednesday morning—listening to doleful predictions of a Nixon-Agnew administration. We haven't finished crucifying LBJ yet, and already we are ready and willing to blacken any hopeful prospects for change. And I wonder if feelings would be any different were our President-elect the "famous advocate of the "politics of joy?"
It seems to me the praise or blame for our country's fate lies much more with those who pulled the levers on November 5th than it does with the unlucky recipient of those votes.
fringes, with the robe
Sincerely,
Irreserly.
Barbara Lang
Tulsa senior
the rock hound
Soundtrack interesting
By WILL HARDESTY
YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT on Columbia might best be characterized by the term "interesting."
The album is part of the soundtrack of the movie by the same name. (Query: Has anyone ever actually seen YAWYE?) The album will never qualify as great, but will probably satisfy a lot of people just because of the number and variety of the performers recorded thereon. The album (let alone, I would suppose, the movie) has a cast of thousands.
Peter Yarrow, of P, P & M, directed the album and sings on four of its cuts. John Simon also produced the album and sings in five of its songs. Rosko does a funny and entertaining monologue. John Herold sings of "The Family Dog." Hasma El Din performs. The Paul Butterfield Blues Band plays a song, and The Electric Flag has a cut on the album.
Also included for those who have no musical taste at all and who have a perverted sense of humor is Tiny Tim. (I've often thought a good psychological torture would be to force someone to listen to a Tiny Tim-Mrs. Miller concert.)
With a cast like that, it would seem one would have a sure-fire winner. However, from the album at least, I see a lot of smoke, but find no definite trace of fire.
Opinion forum
By TED BELL New York, N.Y. senior
Complaining has been, is and always will be, a favorite pastime for the newly-induced GI's, mothers-in-law and college students.
For the latter, the gripes vary from campus to campus but almost invariably include the great institutions of: (a) the lousy football or basketball coach; (b) the demagogues inside the administration building; (c) the dean of —; (d) the dorm food; (e) the keystone k Campus kops and parking regulations; (f) the filthy off-campus housing conditions and the evil landlords.
To the credit of those magnificent men and women who run Harvard-on-the Kaw, sincere efforts have been made to satisfy grumbling students with respect to these traditionals. But unfortunately the students themselves haven't been too helpful in solving at least one of their miseries, and, according to a Topeka senior, it really isn't their fault.
"Off-campus housing in Lawrence has drawn a great deal of criticism from students recently and quite a lot of it is justified. Many of these dissatisfied students want to help do something about improving the situation but almost all of them don't know how to go about it or even where to start."
The words are those of Frank Hummer, chairman of the People-to-People program at KU, and the idea of supplying the wanting information to off-campus students, who comprise some 50 per cent of the student body (not including Greeks), is his also.
Hummer first became aware of the plight of these independents last spring after the University Daily Kansan ran a series of articles on the subject. Since then he has formed an informal committee of six other students to look into the matter and compile a readable sort of information handbook.
The result has been a ten-page version of the Lawrence Minimal Housing Code and anti-discrimination City Ordinance No. 3749 with instructions on how to file a formal complaint with the University's Off-Campus Housing Committee and an analysis of what happens after the complaint has been filed.
The Housing Committee, comprised of Deans Balfour (chairman), Alderson, Taylor, and Director of Housing J. J. Wilson, have been effective in investigating complaints and passing on the information to the Lawrence building inspector and county sanitation officer. There has been at least one instance of a boarding house having to close up shop as a result.
But still, the committee has received few formal complaints in proportion to the number of substandard establishments in the city, particularly in East Lawrence.
The reasons why are speculative. The foreign student who usually suffers most because he arrives on campus later than American students and is left with a small choice of questionable dwellings, either seems afraid he will be kicked out into the street if he makes any attempt to complain or is unaware of the fact he has the right to protest and how to go about doing so. He sometimes even feels that if he causes any waves he will be sent back home on the next trump steamer.
Other students have said they are afraid that if the landlord is forced to make improvements, he will finance them by raising the rent.
So it would seem that the problem of substandard housing boils down to the question of whether students are willing to take the risk of doing something about their predicament or just sit around and complain that The Establishment is out to get rich on their monev.
Hummer and his associates will be handing copies of their efforts to students on the campus, landlords and even sticking them in mailboxes. Copies will be available in the offices of the dean of student affairs, dean of men and dean of women. Additional copies will be available in the People-to-People office, B 104 Kansas Union, and the Off-Campus Housing Office, 226 Strong.
The information and the instructions are available. If you want "to do something about it"-do it.
Frost pattern tells of winter's arrival
KANSAN
Kansaa Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646
Business Office—UN 4-358
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
Kansas
attended 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
through mail. Subscription to campus
goods, services and employment
advertised offered to all students without
regard to color, creed or national
background. Students are necessary those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
News Advisor George Richardson
Advertising Advisor Mel Adams
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Hancy
Assistant Managing Editor Pat Crawford
Charla Jenkins
Alan T. Jones
Steve Morgan
Allen Winstelman
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor Alison Steelmel
Editorial Assistant Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Assistant Sports Editor Bob Kearney
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Sharon Woodson
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague
Linda McCreary
Don Westerhaus
Sandy Chahmau
Marilyn Zook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
2001
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Soviet pressure felt by Czech news media
PRAGUE (UPI)—The Czechoslovak government Monday expelled seven Western newsmen and banned a magazine in what Communist sources described as a massive drive against the nation's press resulting from intense Soviet pressure.
The sources said the campaign to bring news media in line included appointment of conservatives to run the free-wheeling radio and television apparatus and a total blackout on any kind of "political journalism."
The Communist party Central Committee, meeting this week, was expected to pass a strongly-worded resolution detailing "anti-socialist elements" in the press, radio and television.
Czechoslovak leaders were reported apprehensive over the possibility of huge anti-Soviet demonstrations before the scheduled end of the Central Committee meeting on Saturday.
The party sources said the program to end limited press freedom remaining since the Aug. 20-21 invasion was worked out at a meeting of the party presidium last Thursday.
The sources described that meeting as being demoralized and pessimistic, and said there were sharp words and severe disagreement among the 21 members.
Among actions reported to have been either ordered at the Central Committee meeting or resulting indirectly from it were:
$\textcircled{1}$ Appointment of Miroslauk Karny and Jan Fojtik to head Czechoslovakia television. Both were newspapermen under the regime of Antonin Novotny, the Stalinist hardliner who was deposed as party chief by liberal forces last January.
A decision to ban "indefinitely" the party ideological journal Politika. The office of press and information is also considering a suspension of the new literary weekly Listy which published for the first time only last week.
- A decision to begin a "thorough investigation" of the ideological character and personnel backgrounds of news media.
- Orders that news media may not indulge in "political journalism." The sources said this ban even included referring to "before Aug. 21" and "after Aug. 21" in alluding to developments before and after the Soviet move into the nation.
- Orders to emphasize the positive achievements of the Soviet bloc.
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) The annual outpouring of bitter words over a seat for Red China began yesterday with the customary drawing of sides that indicated the usual solution: Nationalist China in and Peking out.
Red China up for UN seat-again
Backed by the United States, Nationalist China and its supporters threw a procedural barrier in the way of Communist Chinese representation. Russia, which always votes for Red China as a matter of course, did not get involved in the early debate.
Three proposals were put forward in the General Assembly.
The United States and a dozen
Reds continuing attacks in spite of US bomb halt
SAIGON (UPI)—Communist troops pounded four more South Vietnamese towns with mortar or recoilless rifle fire yesterday. The explosions killed at least seven persons and wounded 40 others, U.S. spokesmen said.
American spokesmen said 65 mortar and recoilless rifle rounds were fired at the Central Highlands town of An Khe and at Camp Radcliff, an American airborne base camp at its edge, killing three Vietnamese civilians
The U.S. Command in Saigon had no official comment on the shellings. They were viewed, however, with particular interest, because one of the implied conditions of the bombing halt was that the Communists would end their attacks on cities and towns. Another reported condition was that the North Vietnamese cease military activity in the Demilitarized Zone.
The shellings on the four towns brought to 30 the number of civilian population centers attacked since the Nov.1 bombing halt. The attacks have killed 14 persons and wounded 114, South Vietnamese sources said.
and wounding 26, the spokes men said.
Three other civilians were killed and eight wounded in a Red mortar attack on An Tuc 397 miles northeast of the capital. Twenty-four mortar rounds were lobbed into the provincial capital of Hau Nghia 21 miles northwest of Saigon, resulting in "light damage and casualties."
Monday morning, South Vietnamese sources said, Communist troops shelled the provincial capital of Gia Nghia, 105 miles northeast of Saigon, killing one child and wounding six other persons.
Pozdro receives ASCAP grant
For the third consecutive year, John Pozdro, professor of music theory, has received a grant from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) for outstanding work in musical composition.
Pozdroz's grant is one of 592,
totalling $336,650 which
ASCAP awarded composers of
symphonic and concert works.
other friends of Nationalist China proposed that any change in Chinese representation be treated as an "important question" requiring a two-thirds majority-84 votes if all countries participate.
Albania, Cambodia, Guinea, and 13 other states proposed the General Assembly recognize the Peking government as the rightful representative of China and
"But I can't help but feel that with all the time, money and effort expended on these and other projects, the sum of the potential of the scope of the senior class shouldn't be channeled toward something or somebody a little more meaningful and significant than beer and clever bumper stickers," Hill said.
Hill said he has appointed a special committee, called the Save-the-World committee, with chairman Les Watson, Sliver Lake senior, to hear specific ideas.
"People who have ideas, with specific allotments in mind in
"In fact," Hill said, "I would like to think that we have gone beyond the expected so far, what with things like a record number of kgs of beer at our parties, our 'Senior Power' bumper stickers and Orange-Bowl bottoms.
PETER
SELLERS
IN
"I LOVE YOU,
ALICE B.
TOKLAS"
A Pau Maximus & Lyon Tucker Production
And
she made the
"turned-on" brownie
that
made it
all
happen.
And
she made the
"turned-on" brownie
that
made it
all
happen.
"The traditional objectives of the senior classes have always been to furnish regalia, parties and activities for themselves," said John Hill, Prairie Village senior and class president. "Which is as it should be. This is what seniors pay their $12 for, and it's their class and their year."
terms of time and money,
should submit their suggested
program to Les Watson in complete
detail," Hill said. "It's not
going to help very much just for
someone to say, 'Hey, why don't
you do something for black students,
underprivileged children in
Lawrence, Biafra, special
scholarships, the plight of the
American Indian, or something like this. What we need is specifically outlined programs on some social issues like this, or anything else, not just general areas of concern. We know these. We need some specific ways to help."
Specific suggestions should be sent to Les Watson, chairman, Save-the-World committee, 1647 Mississippi St., Lawrence. He can be contacted at VI3-2250.
Hill said that even though the new committee has been given the tongue-in-cheek name of the Save-the-World committee, it will seriously be evaluating sincere, well-planned suggestions.
JO VAN FLEET
LEIGH TLAYOR-YOUNG
LEIGH TLAYOR-YOUNG
PAUL MARZOGKY & LARRY TUXER © MARKBURK
SUGGED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES •
TECHNICOLOR® FROM WARMERS - SEW ARTS
"The point is simply this," Hill said. "With roughly $15,000 to spend, not to mention the hundreds of man-hours devoted to the activities anyway, it would be pretty shallow of us not to at least consider some other, more significant goals than just automatically buying beer and funny hats for ourselves."
"John and I have talked about this at great length," said Les Watson, "and we feel this is one way in which the role of the University can be broadened to include help in social issues."
A new committee will be formed by the Class of 1969 to hear suggestions and ideas from anybody on specific ways in which the senior class could contribute some of their efforts toward a social problem or worth while cause.
Granada
THEATRE ...telephone VI 3-5788
Granada
THEATRE ...telephone VI 3-5788
Mat. 2:30 Evening
Sat. & Sun. 7:15-9:15
The senior class would like to hear them.
Any ideas on how to save the world?
Seniors looking for ideas
PLUS FAMILY WAY
'Save - the - world'
a hilarious story of
WIFE-SHOPPING
CLAUDE GROUER PRESENTS
Run For Your
Wife
TECHNICOLOR TECHNISCOPE
RELEASED BY ALLIED ARTISTS
Technicolor
From Warner Bros-Seven Arts
ANTHONY ROBERTELL NILLER
AMERICAN BRITISH
THOMAS HAWKEN AND MARC MESSON
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA — A woman wearing a bikini leaps with arms raised and legs bent as she carries a suitcase.
Open 6:30
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V1 3-1065
expel the delegates of Chiang Kai-shek's government in Taipei.
Italy, Belgium, Chile, Iceland and Luxembourg proposed a study committee to report next year on "an equitable and practical solution" to the 19-year-old question.
Show at Dusk
Mat. 2:30—Eve. 7:15-9:15
and from this man who could not speak or hear, the girl heard many things.
Alan Arkin in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 49
FRAHAMOVO FOCUS presents
4 DAY OF LAURENTS PRODUCTION
JANE FONDA
SEE
BARDARELLA:
DO HER THING!
JOHN PHILLIP LAW - MARCEL MARCOAU
David Hemmings ... UGO TOGNAZzi = ON ONE AIRDATE ON WEDNESDAY
2:35 ● 7:35 ● 9:45
HELD OVER!
THE Hillorest
ANIMATION PICTURES presents
FILM A FILM PRESENTS
JANE FONDA
SEE BARDARELLA
DO HER THING!
FIRENZE AL WEB MAGAZINE
PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents
A ONE ON LARRY'S PREMIERE
JANE FONDA
SEE BARDARELLA DO HER THING!
JOHN PHILLIP LINW MARCEL MARGIELA
David Hemmings ... UGO Tognazzi
2:35 • 7:35 • 9:45
HELD OVER!
THE Hillcrest
CLINT EASTWOOD IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
SMA COLOR by Deluxe
2:35 • 7:35 • 9:40
NOW!
THE Hillcrest
"A DELICATE MASTERPIECE...
IT OFFERS BEAUTY, SENSUALITY.
AND PERFECT TASTE!" - GENET, THE NEW YORKER
"Benjamin"
THE DIARY OF AN INnocent Young Boy
S.M.A. COLOR • A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
3:05 • 7:40 • 9:30
HELD OVER!
A
HELD OVER!
Hillcrest
CLINT EASTWOOD IN "HANG'EM HIGH"
SMA COLOR by DeLuxe
"Benjamin"
THE DIARY OF AM INNOCENT YOUNG BOY
HELD OVER!
99
BOY
3:05 7:40 9:30
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER & 4TH AND IOWA
THE Hillcrest E3
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
Bishops consider contraceptives
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The nation's Roman Catholic bishops yesterday began considering a pastoral letter that would permit Catholic couples to use contraceptives if the practice does not conflict with their conscience.
The bishops, more than 220 members of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, discussed the letter in closed session in the wake of controversy over Pope Paul VI's encyclical condemning artificial birth control as immoral.
"We are demanding of you total and generous faithfulness to the church-not, certainly, to
At the Vatican, the Pope issued a strong new warning to Roman Catholic liberals against trying to change "indispensable structures" of the church to suit their own ideals.
an imaginary church which each could conceive and organize according to his own ideas, but to the Catholic Church as it is," the Pope said during an audience for 400 monks and friars.
Within an hour after the bishops ended their first meeting at a downtown hotel, about 150 priests marched into the hotel lobby for a four-hour prayer vigil to demonstrate in support of 41 Washington area priests who have been disciplined for publicly dissenting from the Pope's ruling.
The letter, if approved, could put the U.S. Roman Catholic hierarchy in the same position as the bishops of Canada and several Western European nations.
Pope's ruling. No details of the proposed letter were made public, but a spokesman said it dealt directly with the right of a Roman Catholic couple, after examining their own consciences, to use contraceptives despite the Pope's encyclical.
Last week, the Roman Catholic Church of France eased the birth control ban and said the use of artificial contraceptives was "not always guilty."
But being generally more conservative, the American bishops were expected to temper any acknowledgement of the rights of conscience with strong admonitions to seriously consider the Pope's encyclical.
Newsmen were told at a press briefing that the bishops were given until Tuesday afternoon to submit in writing any proposals for revising the letter, drafted by Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh. The final draft is expected to be voted on Wednesday or Thursday and could be made public by Friday,when the council's fall meeting is scheduled to end.
Adedeiji speaks today
Joel Adedeji, guest director of theater, will speak on "The Notion of Tragedy in Nigerian Drama" at 3:30 p.m. today in 342 Murphy Hall.
Adedeji is on leave from his lecturer's post in the School of Drama at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria.
KIEF'S
Glen Campbell
"Wichita Lineman"
reg. $4.79 stereo LP
$299
US lawyer asked to aid Pueblo crew
NORTON, Va. (UPI)-Attorney McAlfee said Monday he has been asked by an "international civic organization" to try to negotiate for the release of the crew of the USS Pueblo, now being held by North Korea.
McAfee defended U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers at a 1960 trial in Moscow after Powers was shot down over the Soviet Union after a spy mission.
The attorney said his negotiating efforts will depend in large part upon "what latitude we will be permitted" by the U.S. State Department. He said he plans to formally ask the department Tuesday for permission to proceed with negotiation efforts.
"Whether the efforts would entail going to North Korea," is not yet known, McAfee said.
McAfee announced that a "nonpartisan group interested in humanitarian actions throughout the world" suggested that he involve himself in the Pueblo issue. He declined to identify the organization.
North Korea seized the Pueblo and its 82 crewmen last May, charging the American vessel with violating Korean territorial waters. American efforts to obtain the release of the men have thus far been unsuccessful.
THE NEW FOLK
Appearing this Thursday at The Red Dog Inn. The New Folk!
DIRECTORY
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1968-1969
80c to students and faculty
$1.20 to non-students
kansas union BOOKSTORE
OR
KU
LIBRARY
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
ZEALIA FOXIES FADVILVJ J HREAKS.
A crowd of KU radio-TV-film students and faculty gather around a camera on the "Learning Tree" carnival set as Burney Guffey (in cowboy hat), director of photography for the film, gives instructions to a cameraman. Guffey also was director of photography for "Bonnie and Clyde" for which he won the Academy Award for color cinematography.
JIM KOHN
Jim Rohr (center) discusses his job in the picture, film editing, with Ivan Wang, Taipei, Taiwan, graduate student, and Richard MacCann, associate professor of radio-TV-film.
Gordon Parks returned to Fort Scott last month.
When he lived there, he was just one of several small Negro boys running around the streets of this Kansas town. When he returned it was as the creator of "The Learing Tree"—a fictionalized autobiographical novel and soon, a Warner Bros.—Seven Arts motion picture.
Parks wrote the book based on his early days in Fort Scott, fabricated the screenplay, composed the music, and now is producing and directing the film.
'THE LEARNING TREE'
Photos by Peter Dart
10
Jimmy Lydon, associate producer of "The Learning Tree," discusses a problem of shooting on the location set with Prof. Linton.
They were filming the carnival scenes when a group of faculty and students from KU's radio-TV-film department visited the location set. Besides being able to view first-hand the techniques and problems of location shooting, the visitors had the opportunity to discuss aspects of creating a motion picture with Parks as well as with cameramen, film editors, promotion men and anyone who could spare a moment from a busy shooting day.
THE COOPER AND HIS MANAGER.
Between takes Guffey and Gordon Parks relax and mull over the next scene. Parks not only is the producer and director of "The Learning Tree" but wrote the book on which the film is based, the screenplay and composed the music.
SMALL
Several members of the KU group corner Vincent Tubbs (right) to learn more about his duties of promotion for the film. From left are Thomas Swale, Prairie Village graduate student; Prof. Bruce Linton, director of the radio-TV-film department; MacCann; Nicholas Eliopoulos, Prairie Village senior, and Wang.
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
Football poll
KU tumbles to 7, Tigers climb to 6
NEW YORK (UPI)—Southern California, successful in the first of its four big tests this month, stretched its leadership among college football teams to a season high yesterday as a series of upsets almost completely juggled the top 10.
The top-ranked Trojans received 27 first place votes and 340 points from the 35-member United Press International board of coaches to easily outdistance second place Ohio State (296) and retain their No.1 ranking.
Penn State moved into third, replacing Kansas, which fell to seventh after being upset by Oklahoma, and Michigan climbed to No. 4. Georgia took fifth after its crushing victory over Florida and Missouri, now leading the Big Eight Conference, advanced to sixth.
Texas took eighth, with upset specialist Auburn taking ninth and Tennessee, which fell victim to Auburn Saturday night dropping to 10th.
Notre Dame headed the second 10, followed by Houston, Arkansas and Oregon State. Purdue, another upset victim, plunged to 15th, just nosing out Alabama, Ohio University, Yale and Texas Tech, tied for 18th, and Southern Methodist.
Southern California, now 7-0 and due to meet Oregon State, UCLA and Notre Dame in its last three games, had little trouble solving California's highly regarded defense, romping to a 35-17 victory.
Missouri won its seventh game against one loss by tripping Iowa State 42-7 while Kansas suffered its first defeat in eight games in a
21-23 loss to Oklahoma. Texas won its first game against a loss and a tie by routing Baylor 47-26.
Notre Dame destroyed Pittsburgh 56-7 for its sixth victory in eight games while Houston beat Memphis State 27-7. Arkansas ripped Rice 46-21, Oregon State trounced UCLA 45-21 and Purdue lost to Minnesota 27-13. Alabama edged Louisiana State 16-7 and unbeaten Ohio University boosted its record to 8-0 with a 28-27 victory over Bowling Green.
Yale, also unbeaten, stretched its winning streak to 15 games, longest of any major college, by beating Pennsylvania 30-13, the Bulldogs' eighth victory of the year. Texas Tech beat Texas Christian 31-14 and Southern Methodist stopped Texas A&M 36-23.
The United Press International top 10 major college football teams with first place votes and won-lost-tied record in parentheses. Eighth week.
Points
1. Southern Cal (27) (7-0) 340
2. Ohio St. (7) (7-0) 296
3. Penn St. (1) (7-0) 278
4. Michigan (7-1) 180
5. Georgia (6-0-2) 171
6. Missouri (7-1) 164
7. Kansas (7-1) 121
8. Texas (6-1-1) 117
9. Auburn (6-1) 46
10. Tennessee (5-1-1) 45
Second 10-11. Notre Dame 36; 12. Houston 32; 13. Arkansas 28; 14. Oregon St. 27; 15. Purdue 10; 16. Alabama 6; 17. Ohio Univ. 5; 18. tie, Yale and Texas Tech 4; 20. Southern Methodist 2.
Betas do it again
Winning Hill championships in intramural football has almost become a tradition at the Beta Theta Pi house.
Yesterday the Betas of the "A" league and Beta No. 1 of the "B" league defeated their opponents to capture the two highest honors in KU intramural football.
The "A" team with its 27-6 victory over the Law team carried home its tenth first-place trophy in the last twelve years. Beta No. 1 blanked the Fraternal Union of College Kids 15-0 to record its sixth Hill Championship in the last nine years.
The Law team battled the "A"-league Betas to a 6-6 half-time score before faltering in the second half. Richard Slicker of the Betas intercepted a pass just before intermission to halt the last serious Law drive.
Toward the end of the game the Betas were threatening to score another touchdown but time ran out.
Mike Vineyard, Dwight Holm,
Dave Swift and Mike Michealis
all caught touchdown passes for
the Betas. Bill Tankersley
booted two extra points during
the game, which was the Betas'
ninth victory against no defeats.
Beta No. 1, which has yielded only three points all season, played another outstanding defensive game to shutout the College Kids, and post its eighth season victory in eight starts.
With the help of a devastating pass rush, the Betas tallied all their points in the first half. Quarterback John Nelson hurled two touchdown passes to Stan Pippin to give the Betas a 13-0 lead early in the game.
"They just have too much balance and their running backs scare you to death," is the way Iowa State's Johnny Majors describes Kansas.
"We made too many mistakes to beat a poor team or a good one, let alone a truly great one like Kansas," adds Majors.
The College Kids were trying to move the ball from deep in their own territory when a bad snap from center slipped through the quarterback's hands. Two Betas trapped him in the end zone for a safety.
Last year Phi Delta Theta vanquished the Law School for the "A" Hill championship. The Green 3's, an independent team, subdued Phi Gamma Delta's "B" team to capture the "B" Hill championship.
In the second half, the Betas blocked a College Kids' punt and marched toward the goal line. But Tom Brewster picked off a pass and stopped the only long drive for either team that half.
Enthusiastic fans braved nearfreezing temperatures to watch the two championship games. About 150 people huddled together along the sidelines attended the "A" game while 50 saw the "B" game.
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THE STABLES
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
KU bowl poll
Despite last Saturday's loss to Oklahoma, KU still has a good chance of being invited to a post-season bowl game. The sports staff of the University Daily Kansan is trying to find out the student's opinions and interests in KU's participation in one of the bowl games. Please fill out this form, cut it, and drop in Bowl Poll box in the Kansan news room, Flint Hall, before Wednesday at 4 p.m.
1. Which bowl game would you prefer KU to play in? (Check one.)
a. Cotton Bowl (Dallas)
b. Sugar Bowl (New Orleans) . . .
c. Orange Bowl (Miami) . . .
d. Other . . .
2. Why?
3. Which bowl game would you be able to attend?
Cotton Bowl . . .
b. Sugar Bowl . . . .
c. Orange Bowl ...
c. Orange Bowl . . . .
d. Other?
4. Check one
a. Will travel to bowl game by own means . . .
b. Would prefer to go to bowl game by a SUA sponsored trip...
5. If SUA did sponsor a trip, what would be the highest price you would pay for its package deal? . . .
Poll evaluation will appear in Thursday's Kansan sports section.
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)—Sugar Bowl President Dr. Fred Wolfe, Jr. said today that the upset of third-ranked Kansas and fifth-ranked Tennessee did not remove them as top contenders for the New Year's Day classic.
Suspense nears bowl bids
Wolfe said both Kansas and Tennessee still rank high in contention—along with Missouri, Georgia, Auburn and Penn State—for a Sugar Bowl berth.
The New Orleans dentist said scouts will have one more week to view contenders for the Sugar Bowl before a decision is reached by next Monday's deadline.
Tenth-ranked Georgia won praise from Wolfe for its shattering 51-0 shellacking of Florida.
Auburn 6-2 upset Tennessee 5-1-1, 28-14, Saturday and Oklahoma upended Kansas 7-1 by a score of 27-23.
Georgia, however, appeared to be headed for the Orange Bowl if it continues its unbeaten record. "I don't know what the competition is doing," Wolfe said.
The Sugar Bowl president said "if Auburn beats Georgia this weekend, they'll be a hot commodity" in the struggle among bowls.
Fourth-ranked Penn State ran its win streak to seven straight by defeating Miami 22-7.
"Georgia and Penn State are the ones the bowls will go after because they're undefeated." Wolfe said.
KU fencers take 2 firsts
In women's foil KU's Nancy Campbell took a first place from a field of 11.
Two KU fencers picked up first places and another grabbed a third place in a tournament at Bartlesville, Okla., last Saturday.
"I'm definitely pleased with the results," player-coach Steve Keeler said after yesterday's practice. Keeler posted 12 victories in 15 bouts to win in men's foil. Teammate Don Anderson merited a third place in this event.
The fencing team ventures to foreign ground again this Saturday when it draws swords against five other teams at Kansas City Junior College.
Fencers from Kansas City Metro, Central State College, Tulsa fencing club, the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University and from a team sponsored by Phillips 66 (Bartlesville) competed against KU's fencers in the meet.
To capture the top award in men's foil, Keeler defeated six opponents in the preliminaries, won four of six semi-final bouts and conquered four of five opponents in the finals.
He said if Tennessee and Kansas continue on to 9-1 records they would make good bowl material.
But Wolfe predicted more upsets this weekend that would make it rough on sugar bowlers to choose the teams.
He emphasized that Kansas still must face arch-rival Kansas State and Missouri this season. Georgia faces Auburn and Georgia Tech and Missouri meets Oklahoma and Kansas. Tennessee must play Mississippi, Kentucky and Vanderbilt and Penn State has yet to play Maryland, Pittsburgh and rugged Syracuse.
Wolfe, who sat in on Missouri's 42-7 win over Iowa State, called the eighth-ranked Tigers a "fired up" ball club.
He praised in particular Roger Wehrli who returned punts for 129 yards against Iowa State to set a Big Eight Conference career record of 1,013 yards in punt returns.
"Every time Wehrli returned a punt, it fired the ball club up," Wolfe said. He called the Tigers a "greatly improved" team since he watched them earlier this year.
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SMAKS-JAYHAWK WINNER DINNER
Smaks hamburgers are always ranch-fresh now they're American-Royal-fresh. Smaks bought carloads of prize beef at the American Royal and are using it now in all their hamburgers. Here's the Smaks-Jayhawk winner dinner:
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
O J appears sure Heisman winner
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—O. J.
Simpson will win the Heisman
Trophy this season and go on to
instant success as a pro.
That's the opinion of Jon Arnett, the famed "jaguar" who electrified University of Southern California football fans in the middle 1950s.
"Perhaps, O. J., may be even more productive as a pro," Arnett offered.
In his second year of retirement after an outstanding 10-year National Football League Career, Jon is amazed by Simpson's durability.
"That's his greatest asset," the 33-year-old former USC halfback said in a discussion last week about the current Trojan rushing star.
Tiger's Wehrli is Big Eight back
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
To Dan Devine, coach of sixthranked Missouri, defensive safety Roger Wehrli is plainly and simply "a good football player."
"He's very steady," Devine said. "He likes to play defense and he likes to return punts."
Not only does Wehrli like to return punts, he's one of the best in the nation at it.
Saturday, in the 42-7 victory over Iowa State, the 6-0, 184-pound senior returned six punts for 149 yards to set up four Tiger touchdowns and break two conference records.
This week, he was named Big Eight Back of the Week.
He now holds the conference records for punt return yardage in a single game 149 and career 1,033. He also needs only 51 yards in two remaining games to break the old single season record of 515 set by Oklahoma's Jack Mitchell, the former Kansas coach, in 1948. Mitchell also held the old career mark of 927 set during the 1946-47-48 seasons.
Wehri himself held the old single-game mark of 135, set earlier this year in Missouri's only loss, a 12-6 defeat at Kentucky.
After four of his long returns, Missouri went on to score touchdowns and break the game open. His longest was for 49 yards while his others went for 33, 26 and another 26 yarder which he ran without a single blocker.
"I'm real happy that he's back of the week," Devine said. The coach said he thought "our punt return game certainly was a big factor in giving us good field position."
"I felt O. J. should have won the Heisman Trophy last year," Arnett continued. "There's no doubt he will win it this year. He's the most exciting thing around right now.
Right for pros
"As far as the pros are concerned, he has the size, strength and intelligence. There's no doubt he'll be a star right away."
Jon gets a chance to see Simpson in action each week since he is the color man for a Los Angeles television station covering the USC football games. The station shows the games on Sundays.
days.
That's only a sideline, though.
He's vice president of sales on Global Van Lines, a national moving company based in nearby Anaheim.
Does he miss playing football? "No. I rather enjoy watching it and not having people hit me."
Arnett, also a track standout at USC, was the No. 1 draft choice of the Los Angeles Rams in 1957. The high point of his
career came in in 1958 when he gained 295 yards in a 41-35 victory over the Chicago Bears.
He was traded to the Bears in 1964 after being hampered by leg and knee injuries.
The 1968 USC team, in his opinion, isn't as good as last year's Trojan national championship club.
"I thought it would be stronger than last year's team but it has lacked the quality of defense. Last year's USC team was as good as any college team I've ever seen and the losses to graduation hurt."
Arnett compares Simpson with Jimmy Brown.
"He's that type of a runner. He's very strong and makes six or seven yards when he only makes two."
Does the former Trojan star think O. J. has any weakness?
"The only question is whether he can block. He doesn't have to now because he carries the ball so much. But John McKay the USC coach says he can and John is a fine coach so I have to believe he can."
---
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Banged up Jayhawks prepare for K-State
Injuries predominated in yesterdays practice as the Jayhawks prepared for K-State.
"This is as sore as we've been all year," said coach Pepper Rodgers. "We've got a whole bunch of people banged up."
Dave Aikins, 6-3, 222 pound offensive guard from Erie, suffered a cut on his right thumb said team physician John Barton. Split end George McGowan,
6-2, 190 pound from Glendale,
Calif., sustained a cleat injury to
his right leg. The other starting
end, 6-4, 210 pound John Mosier is nursing a sprained left
thumb. Al Jakobcic, 6-1, 214
pound middle guard suffered an
injured left knee. He has been
favoring a bad right knee for
most of the season.
Games of
11/15-17
TOPS
Wardrobe Care Centers
TOPS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
featuring:
- In By 9 — Out By 5 Same Day Service
- ● Shirts on hangers 5 for $1.39 or folded
- Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th — 1526 West 23rd
"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.
Iowa State at Oklahoma Stat Nebraska at Colorado Missouri at Oklahoma Alabama at Miami (Fla.) S.M.U. at Arkansas Oregon at California
Circle Your Choice As Winner
Oregon at California
Georgia Tech at Notre Dame
Minnesota at Indiana
Ohio State at Iowa
Penn State at Maryland
Purdue at Michigan State
Oregon State at Southern Cal.
Mississippi at Tennessee
Texas at T.C.U.
Princeton at Yale
Pick These Scores
KANSAS ___ at KANSAS ST. ___
BOSTON ___ at K.C. CHIEFS ___
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 Place—John Early
2nd Place—Pete Swartz
3rd Place—George Dalke
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the handbook should be referred to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduuff's Campus Madhouse. 1241 Oread. 1-9
1965 GTO, 389, 3 two's, 4-speed. Runs
in the condition. Parker, Ike.
11 W. 238 W.
1968 Opel, Factory demo. 1200 miles.
Warrior Warrior,售价 $1900. Parter
arrive W1 11W 23rd W24
1965 Impala SS, 327, 4-speed. Excellent.
parker. Parker Buick, 1116 W. 23rd St.
Lowrey T-2, portable organ. In goo-
n. Mail to Lowrey Cheap Call 3132
at 6:00 p.m. 11-12
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Karman Sea Blue & Cloud White, black leatherette interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon. 2522 Iowa. 11-13
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T., buckets, cons.
P.S., P.B., air, 383 vole,
showls cushions, vinyl top,
vinyl top, just $1895 at Jerry Allen
Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa
11-13
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$3,288.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owner miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr-50,000 mile warranty, up to $7,000 buy it! There’s not another like it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos. Regular $495.00 and $395.00 payable in cash. Magnificent music! Stone back's. 929-931 Mass. St. 11-20
1964 MG, Midget, white w/wire wheels, this hard-to-fnd car yours this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
1963 Volkswagon deluxe sunroof,
choice of 2, both 100% guaranteed.
nice cars, 1 green, 1 white, else
$995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522
lowa. 11-13
'57 Chevy, 2-door hardtop, black, 283,
3-speed, Hurst, custom interior,
radio excellent condition. VI 2-6533.
11-13
Set of Astro Mags off a GTO. Need 4
magnifiers in trade Best offer
VI 2-1858 11-12
STRICK'S DINER
Good Food—Reasonable Cold Beer—Pool Tables Students Welcome
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
"Open till 2 a.m."
1662 Ford, 4-door Sedan, V-8 stick.
Buick, 1114 condition $395. Parks
Buick, 1116 condition
Classic 1957 Studebaker Golden
1960 Not at the carer $150
T.L.C. Cail V 3-0254 $112
Mustang snow tires—Last year's design. New 1st line 695-1x Keelly cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Ray Stonebacks. 11-13
Britannica, Great Books of the West-
ern World, 54 volumes, also 20 addi-
tional volumes. Like new. $290. Call
843-1835. 11-13
1963 Olds Cutlass 2 dr. spc, pep., V-8,
auto PS & PB. Excellent mechanical
condition. Call VI 3-1445 after 6:00
p.m. 11-15
Kalimar Instamatic type camera for sale. Uses 126 cartridges, color, black and white, slides. Call Donna. VI 3-0352, after 5:00 p.m. 11-15
1965 Chevelle - For Sale - 283 cu. in.
V-8 engine, blue, 4-door, power steering, standard transmission, 812 W 25th St. Apt. #4 or call V-26187
Magnificent 72-point diamond, Tiffany mounting. Exceptional color, quality. Still for your purchase or best offer. Inquire Box 3, Flint Hall. 11-18
1964 Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed, bucket seats, perfect condition inside the car. The right arm away must sacrifice. FI 900 takes Ald Alderson, VI 3-6960. 11-18
1963 Classic Rambler Station Wagon
Model 500. $95. V.I. 3-1400. Rm. 230. 11-18
$95. V.I. 3-1400. Rm. 230. 11-18
Must Sacrifice 270 Bolt Action Rifle,
contact Dave, 57 McCullum after p. 198.
198 McCullum after p. 198.
Former Harvard and Univ of Minne-
sapolis, VI. 31-7207 12-3
ports, theses, VI 31-7207 12-3
Pay-Less$
Self Service SHOES
NOTICE
1300 W.23rd
Lawrenc
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd (Next to Shaw's Auto Service) North Lawrence
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
get ontifrexe—starting service
515 Michigan St. BAR-B-Q -outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; BIRd order.
$1.50; BRIsk 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. tt
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Be prepared—
2434 Iowa VI 1.1008
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD 500. Automatic changer with base, dust cover, and grado cartridge. New needle assembly as bonus. New $85. Now $55. Full new equipment guarantee on both tuner and changer.
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD
500. Automatic changer with base,
base adapter, needle assembly as bonus. New $55.
Now $55. Fully new equipment guarantee
both tuner and change
haves-Ray Audio & Visual - 11-13
1944.
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Center, 107 North VII, VI 8352 and in the Kansas Union lobby 11-19
Your chance to buy six KU-K-State tickets which are together in an already soldout stadium. Will sell any even number. Call VI 2-5233. 11-13
The Jayhawk Rodeo Club is having a fox hunt, Nov. 10. If you are interested, call Case叫 Case or Rob in room 732 at VI 2-1200 after 5:00 p.m.
BUSSES TO PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH STARTing Sunday, Nov. 17—Worship at 9 & 11. Bushes leave 9th and Mass. 8:30 & 10:30. Route; GSP & Corbin. Jayhawk & Roadmasters to Road Lao to Daisy Hill, Sunnieside to Oliver and Naismith Halls; 19th to Stewart Dr. Return bus after worship. 11-18
20% Coed Discount
Frostings and Permanents
CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS
10 E. 9th V I 2-7900
HELP WANTED
No Appointment Necessary
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tt
Student wanted with tire changing experience to work mornings and holidays, $1.65 per hour. Do not apply unless you can work 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. daily. Ray Stoneback's Downtown—apply in person. 11-13
Part-time for 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. tf
WANTED
Wish to employ noon-time lunch room play ground supervisor for elementary school in Lawrence 11:30-12:30. Phone VI 3-4688 or VI 3-13-14
Four Male Students Wish to Rent a large house, preferably in walking distance of campus. Need for security. Please refer to Ron Chan Computer VI 2-6600, Room 740. 11-14
SERVICES OFFERED
Fall is the season for barn parties. So plan ahead to have yours at the most popular location, a capitol's heat- Heating and electricity unavailable. VI 3-40323. 11-12
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high-flyers, Haynes Ray Audio, Video, Aft, Eas, and Eveille. High Street shopping Center. 11-22
Experienced Dressmaking. Today's styles, much cheaper than store prices. Get that special dress for school or any occasion. Hems and alterations also. Come see samples. 842-6979. 11-12
TYPING
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI tt 2873.
Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440. 11-14
Experienced in typing thesis, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
er with wires type. Promp an effe-
fficient service. Phone VI 3-9544
M. E. Wright 12-9
One pair of prescription sunglasses with name inside. Contact Terri Ottaway, GSP. Room 407 or leave at the desk. 11-12
5 yr. old Black Labrador Retriever (large black short haired dog) with tan collar in vicinity of W. 26-103 Children's pet. Reward — VI P 7-2871
PERSONAL
FOR RENT
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation and talent in the joy of music to join us together. Call us. Ron Sundbye or Dennis Bowers. First United Methodist. VI 3-7134. 11-14
Have your party at the Studio, 1344
Tenn. Private room available. Phone
I 2-9441 or VI 2-6908. 11-13
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
LOST
1 Bd. APT - Furn. $60 plus utilities
- quiet & isolated - call Mike at VI 2-
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11-13
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MAGIC SLIDE VI 2-8615 6th & Colo.
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If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
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Charcoaled Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers Suzie Q French Fries
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THE LIBRARY BUD & COORS ON TAP
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CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
SNOOPY
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact: Barry Arthur
University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
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12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 12, 1968
Walt claims Cong hope US will tire of war
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
—quit giving Ho Chi Minh and his crowd hope that we're giving up," he said. "That's the only way we're going to win the war." Walt said.
Addressing ROTC students, other students and faculty, at the University Theatre, Walt said Americans are vital to the Vietnamese from a social, political and psychological, as well as military standpoint.
"Sometimes I think that calling the war in Vietnam a war is a misnomer. What we're doing in Vietnam is more than a war; it is a struggle—a struggle made up of poverty, illiteracy, misery, lack of a better way of life," he said.
"These factors are as much the enemy as the enemy on the battlefield."
The general said he thought
the Vietnamese people were a sturdy, good and persevering people.
"They appreciate and value freedom more than many Americans." he said.
Walt did not discuss the current bombing halt in Vietnam. Earlier he had said that during an earlier bombing pause, "We watched them build up their
artillery. We learned from it, and it won't happen again."
After telling the KU assemblage about the alleged brain-washing techniques of the Viet Cong, Walt said it is necessary for the United States to "take them (South Vietnamese) and change their minds, not through words but action."
He said that through medical aid, rebuilding of communities and building of schools, the Vietnamese "are beginning to see the light."
TODAY
Official Bulletin
Venezuelan Students. Sign up by Thursday noon if you plan to see Dr. Gallo of the Creole Corporation on Friday.
A.L.A.A. Meeting, 7:30 p.m. E. E.
M. E. A. Meeting, 8:30 p.m. E. E.
Lockett College-C-54, 200 Learned
Students. Sign up now for the Christmas vacation trip to Mexico. International Club, Kansas Union basement floor.
Theater Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. Prof.
Bernard M. Eckert in the library,
in New York; Drama 341 Murphy.
"This is the dirtiest type of war and our young Americans, God bless 'em, are doing a terrific job," he said.
"The Communists haven't got a chance in God's world to defeat our forces on the battlefield," he added.
Blood Drive 11 a.m.-5:15 p.m. Karsen Union Ballroom
Anti-war demonstrators follow Walt
Popular Film. 7 & 9 p.m., "Bay of Angels." Dyche Auditorium.
This brought an angry reaction, as sign-bearing dashed downstairs to catch the not-yet-confronted general before he could leave. The first protestors arrived just seconds too late, however, so they shouted not very-affectionate farewells at his departing army sedan.
A final incident arose about 9:40 p.m., when Walt, who had told the protestors through his aide and Union manager Frank Burge that he would speak to them, suddenly changed his mind and slipped down the back stairs and out the rear, Mississippi St. exit.
At one stage on the balcony, Atkinson yelled down through the open curtain to Walt and the
(Continued from page 1) Room to decide their next moves.
A majority of the protestors felt they had successfully made their point and desired no further disruptive action. Less than a dozen, however, wanting more dramatic and direct confrontation, urged that the group go to the off-limits third floor balcony, above the dining room, and demonstrate with their signs there
to Rick Atkinson, march coordinator, had earlier threatened to beat up demonstrators.
About 7:10 p.m., three of those wanting the balcony demonstration left the main group in the Big Eight Room and went by themselves up to the third floor. They were followed by two VFW members, who according
Christian Science Organization. 7:30
and 8:30 in Testimony Meeting.
Damnfort Channel
The initial group on the balcony was soon joined by other anti-war demonstrators. A volatile argument erupted, which twice resulted in shoving and pushing.
The students had just managed to open the curtain and wave their signs before the diners below, when they became involved in a scuffle with the veterans. Each side blamed the other for instigating the violence.
diners below. "These are the guys that are protecting you—" he shouted, "protecting you by beating us up."
Jayhawk Rodeo Club. 7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union.
English Dept. Lecture. 7:30 p.m.
Prof. Dennis Quinn, "Life: Is It a Supreme Value." Forum Room, Kansas Union.
Kansas Society of Archaeological Instru-
mentation White. "Recent Excavations at Le
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Mon. PITCHER Fri.
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The three were charged with conspiracy in the first degree to
Jury to investigate plot to kill Nixon
THE STABLES
Kitchen Opens at Five Daily
NEW YORK (UPI) A mystery informant will be the star witness Tuesday when a Brooklyn grand jury begins an investigation of an alleged conspiracy by three Yemeni immigrants to assassinate President-elect Richard M. Nixon.
The police department and the Port Authority police ordered "total security" for Nixon on his arrival here Monday from Key Biscayne, Fla., via Washington where he conferred with President Lyndon Johnson. The Secret Service also was reported taking additional precautions since the plot suspects were arrested in Brooklyn Saturday.
The federal government signified its interest in the case Monday by ordering U.S. attorneys to confer with Brooklyn police authorities. No one would say whether there were indications the case was linked to the murder of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles last June, but acting Brooklyn District Attorney Elliott Golden said nothing was being overlooked.
Tips Police
Golden's staff worked on its presentation to the Kings County grand jury which is scheduled to hear testimony from a man who claims the suspects approached him to join the conspiracy. The unidentified man reportedly tipped off police who arrested Ahmed Namer, 43, and his sons Hussein, 20, and Abdo, 16, in a raid on their shabby apartment.
Tight Security
commit murder, for which they face 15 years imprisonment each if convicted; criminal solicitation in the first degree, involving importing commission of murder, for which they face seven years in prison; and illegal possession of weapons, for which they face up to a year in prison.
The suspects will also have another court hearing Wednesday because their first hearing Sunday was held under a witness-shielding affidavit which requires another public hearing in 48 hours. They are being held in tight security under $100,000 bond each. The Namers, who worked as shipping clerks, said they had enough money to pay for legal counsel.
Nixon aides said the president-to-be knew of the alleged plot before it was made public but had shown "no concern over it."
However, the fact that the Namers came from Yemen in the same Arab part of the world as Jordan, birthplace of Kennedy assassination suspect Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, 24, led some investigators to surmise that similar motivations might be involved.
Sirhan allegedly shot Kennedy because of the senator's proIsraeli statements. During his campaign Nixon spoke out for a militarily strong Israel that would have a "technological margin" over its Arab neighbors. Golden said the Namers had "very strong ties outside the country . . . family ties, if not other ties that I will not comment on."
Roy Wilkins asked to quit
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Roy Wilkins yesterday was asked to resign as director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) by the presidents of three NAACP branches. They called him "the Number One Uncle Tom in America."
Celes King III, president of the central Los Angeles NAACP branch, said the group's "membership was eroding" and its "prestige was up only in the white community."
He was joined in his demand for Wilkins' resignation by Charles Thomas, president of the Westside branch, and Henry Dotson, president of the Southwest branch. The trio said they represented a majority of black people who thought Wilkins was incapable of continued leadership.
"Wilkins has become so much a part of the white establishment, he is no longer an effective representative of the black people," King said. "It is time for this former great leader to retire."
Wilkins, contacted in New York, said NAACP membership "has eroded in the Los Angeles area where these men are the leaders of the movement."
He said the chapters in question in Los Angeles had been served with "routine notices" of complaints against the local leadership.
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KU Printing Service objects
Cottonwood Review poem 'obscene'
Material for the first edition of the "Cottonwood Review," KU's literary magazine has been returned to the magazine's staff after the KU Printing Service objected to one of the poems submitted.
jected to one of the poets. The printing service said the poem was obscene.
Robert W. Jaeger, assistant director of the printing service, said he asked the Cottonwood staff to have the poem by Bill Berkowitz, New York City senior, approved by the chancellor's office.
Jaeger said about half of the issue's copy had been typed by the printing service before the poem was reached.
Kenneth Irving, Rochester, Minn., senior and editor of the magazine, called the untitled poem "one of the best included in the material selected for this year's first issue of the magazine."
While two words in the poem might be considered obscene out of context, they seemed appropriate in the poem which was a "narrative of a guy talking to himself out-loud," Irving said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jaeger said he thought the words in question were obscene. He also said the printing service occasionally [Continued on page 12]
79th Year, No. 42 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, November 13, 1968
Two new Negro history courses built from one
Photograph
On a chilly fall day
An old man sits beneath the Kaw River bridge and fishes for his supper.
By DONNA SHRADER
Kansan Staff Writer
KU's single course in Negro history will be scrapped—and replaced by two new courses next semester, one of which will have unlimited enrollment. W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history, announced yesterday.
While the college faculty must approve the additions, Robinson said he hopes to add "American Negro Life and History" and "Problems in Negro Life and History."
The two proposed courses will cover the same material, Robinson said, so it won't be "repeated."
This fall criticism of the course came from its limited enrollment—only 26 persons are taking the discussion course. William M. Tuttle, assistant professor of history and teacher of the new course, said he personally turned away 50 persons, and more were turned away at enrollment in the Kansas Union.
The course was offered in response to the controversial petition last spring seeking a Negro pom-pon girl, a Negro history course and Negro athletic coaches and faculty members.
The size of the new lecture course can only be judged by this response, Robinson said. He estimated a class of at least 10 to 20 persons.
The course will survey the influence of the Negro in the Western hemisphere from its discovery by Columbus to now. Robinson said.
Topics of the course will include the slave trade, slavery and its abolition, the free Negro to 1860, and the political, economic and social development of the Negro since Reconstruction, including the struggle for equal citizenship with references made to the Negro's African heritage.
This course will be taught by Lorenzo J. Greene, professor of history at Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Mo., a predominately Negro university.
Student's death is mystery; autopsy report not completed
Greene will fly from Jefferson City to Kansas City and then drive to Lawrence for the class which probably will meet from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Robinson said.
The 20-year-old KU student died Monday in Lawrence Memorial Hospital following a fight in the Naismith Hall parking lot last Thursday afternoon.
The cause of Bruce Mallin's death has not yet been determined, the District Coroner said yesterday.
However, an autopsy taken Monday showed Mallin had no apparent neck or chest injuries as was originally believed, County Attorney Dan Young said.
The uncertainty surrounding the cause of death raises the possibility Mallin may not have died from injuries received in the fight.
Young said a state pathologist has been asked to enter the case and make medical tests, but his report is not expected for a week or more.
Weather
No charges had been filed yesterday in connection with Mallin's death and none are expected until the report is returned, Young said.
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts increased cloudiness and warmer today with southerly winds 15 to 25 m.p.h. There is a chance of scattered showers or thundershowers tonight, with light rain forecasted for tomorrow.
A 17-year-old Kansas City freshman has been questioned and released, and the investigation is continuing, he said.
Services were held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the J. P. Louis Funeral Home, 6830 Troost Ave., Kansas City, Mo., with burial in the Sheffield cemetery.
Malin is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Malin; a sister, Mrs. Linda Jacobson, and a maternal grandfather, Ben Sutin, all of the home.
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
F-III's to return home
SAIGON—Problem-plagued F-111 fighter-bombers which had been expected to deliver key punches against Communist targets in North Vietnam will return to the United States within two weeks, the U.S. Air Force said today.
Evolution law repealed
WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that states cannot forbid the teaching of evolution in public schools.
By unanimous decision, the court struck down a 40-year-old Arkansas "monkey law." The ruling is expected to apply to a similar law in Mississippi, the only other state which has an anti-evolution statute.
Talks postponed again
By quiet accord, North Vietnamese and American officials decided to delay the start of the talks until the Saigon government agreed to take part.
PARIS (UPI)—The United States and Hanoi agreed tacitly yesterday to a new postponement of expanded Paris talks on Vietnam despite warnings by allied diplomats that serious new fighting may erupt in South Vietnam unless the conference is convened soon.
Nixon chooses aid
NEW YORK—President-elect Richard M. Nixon yesterday appointed Bryce N. Harlow, a key campaign aid and former deputy assistant to President Eisenhower, as one of several special White House assistants.
NATO troops needed
Harlow will handle formulation of legislative proposals to Congress and will help guide Nixon's bills through both the Senate and the House.
BRUSSELS—Gen. Lyman L. Lemmitzer yesterday demanded more troops and weapons to meet the increased Soviet military threat in Europe caused by the occupation of Czechoslovakia.
The Supreme Allied commander in Europe told 200 parliamentarians from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) nations his demands would cost money.
"But the expenditure is minimal in comparison to the cost of war" and should be considered as expenditure for an insurance policy, the general stressed.
---
KU blood drive continues
See page 12
---
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 13, 1968
Peace talks should continue
Saigon 'backed out in ninth' - Clifford
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford said yesterday South Vietnam backed out of the Paris peace talks "in the last out of the ninth inning."
"I say I believe we should make every reasonable effort to demonstrate to Saigon that it should come in," Clifford said of the delayed negotiations with North Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
He said President Johnson "owed it to the American people to proceed with the talks," with or without Saigon.
President has the constitutional responsibility of proceeding with the talks."
"At the same time, if they choose not to, I believe the
did not have time to get a delegation to Paris in time for the start of the new phase of talks on Nov. 2.
Clifford told a news conference that early on Oct. 29 it appeared an agreement had been reached whereby the United States would stop all bombing of North Vietnam and the Paris talks would be expanded to include the Saigon regime and the National Liberation Front (NLF), political arm of the Viet Cong.
Johnson planned to announce the agreement that night, Clifford said. But later that day, South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu sent word he did not agree after all because he
The next day, he said, Saigon added four or five more reservations.
"That was the only reason he gave," the usually soft spoken Clifford said, striking a podium with his fist.
With Saigon pulling out "in the last out of the ninth inning," Johnson decided to go ahead with the bombing halt anyway, Clifford said. Johnson announced it Oct. 31, saying South Vietnam was "free" to attend without saying whether Thieu's government planned to attend.
The next day, Thieu announced his government was boycotting the talks.
The formal sessions have not
resumed since Thieu's announcement, although a Viet Cong representative has joined the Hanoi group in Paris.
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Israeli's, Arabs in three clashes along Suez canal
AMMAN, Jordan (UPI)—A military spokesman said Jordanian and Israeli forces clashed three times yesterday with machineguns and tank weapons along their ceasefire lines.
The Jordanian spokesman said two of the clashes were near the Prince Abdullah Bridge just north of the Dead Sea.
The first skirmish was a 20 minute machinegun battle early in the morning.
The second, involving tank weapons, broke out early Tuesday afternoon, the spokesman said, and Jordanian fire destroyed an Israeli tracked vehicle and inflicted two Israeli casualties.
The third firefight was a 10-minute medium machinegun duel near the Israeli occupied Syrian area of Himma Tuesday evening.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Witness charges solicitation in Nixon plot
NEW YORK (UPI)-A mystery witness told a Brooklyn grand jury yesterday that a Yemeni immigrant and his two sons tried to get him to join in a plot to kill President-elect Richard M. Nixon and offered him money to participate. He testified an hour and 20 minutes.
The witness, who has never been identified, tipped police to the alleged conspiracy Friday, resulting in the arrests of Ahmed Namer, 43, and his sons, Hussein, 20, and Abdo, 18, Saturday. They have been held in
sin, Sirhan B. Sirhan, also is an Arab.
$100,000 bail each on charges of conspiracy to commit murder, criminal solicitation and possession of weapons.
The suspects appeared briefly in court Tuesday morning before Judge John S. Fury who postponed the hearing until Friday at the request of attorneys for both sides because of the grand iury investigation.
documents.
FBI and Secret Service agents continued their investigation into a possible link between the alleged plot against Nixon and the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles last June. Kennedy's accused assas-
At a distance
dictments.
cept that he knew the Namers well and mad his first contact with police by phone from a Brooklyn bar near their home.
Acting Brooklyn Dist. Atty.
Elliott Golden saw to it newsmen and photographers were kept at a distance from the Brooklyn Criminal Court room where the jury was sitting so the witness could not be identified.
Little is known about him ex-
The jury is expected to take no longer than a day or two to decide whether to hand up in-
Golden said one of the mysteries was where the Namers, who worked as shipping clerks in a clothing factory, got the amount of money they reportedly offered the mystery informant.
More candidates are nominated for Wilson Fellows
An additional 31 KU seniors have been nominated for Woodrow Wilson Designates and Fellowships, Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said yesterday.
These nominees, along with the 81 candidates previously listed in the University Daily Kansan, will compete for the fellowship honors which provide up to $2,000 for one academic year of study.
The additional nominees are: David Allen, Kansas City; Hanan Bell, Kansas City; John Berthrong, Norman, Okla.; Sandra Bonacker, Lincoln, Neb.: William Byers, Bartlesville, Okla.; Carolyn Collins, Kansas City; John Coyle, Coffeyville; Frances Craig, Garnett; Linda Davis, Topeka; Steven Davis, Lyons; Marilyn Dennis, Olathe.
Gaylord Dold, Wichita; Charles Eberline, Bartlesville, Okla.; Virginia Flakus, Ellinwood; Daniel Foucheaux, Dickinson, Tex.; David Hill, Nevada, Mo.; Linda Keeler, Salina; Michael Kirk, Kansas City, Mo.; Albert Knox, Kansas City; Robert Lesh, Lawrence; Marged Lessenden, Topeka.
Colette Levan, Ness City; Gary McClelland, Topeka; Michael McDonald, Kansas City; Susan Morton, Kansas City; Martin Nickels, Kansas City; Richard Paegelow, Emporia; Jeffrey Rockwell, Wichita; Patricia Roper, Hiawatha; Rodger Taylor, Plainville, and Georgia Willard, Webster Groves, Mo.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 13, 1968
College should be 91st's first action
There's an archaic apparatus in our political system that shows the rust of antiquity. It should be eliminated before the rust clogs the machine of democracy.
The electoral college-survivor of more attacks than its educational namesakes- should be one of the first items of business taken up by the 91st congress.
As dissent grows and crisis proliferates, the electoral college, once thought of as a democratic safeguard, begins more and more to assume the ugly mask of democratic spoiler.
To many people late in the day of November 5 and-into the morning of the 6th, the electoral college looked as if it would be a rendezvous for all the conviving and backroom bargaining that has stigmatized American politics. It can only be hoped now that the impressions gathered that night will not quickly dissipate.
right will not quietly disappoint.
As discontent flourishes, so too will third parties. Although an election has not been thrown into the House of Representatives since 1824, the coming of George Wallace's third party and the
hints by Sen. Eugene McCarthy that yet another party could appear, enhance the possibility of a future election being thrown into the House.
Supporters of the electoral college will argue that it worked again this year. That, however, is small comfort for future presidential elections.
Congress, which has had an amazing propensity for ignoring a potential crisis until the crisis is at hand, has been amply warned. Early in 1967, the Senate Subcommittee on Constitutional Amendments heard the pleadings of a series of constitutional authorities. The pleas were ignored. History since that time has reinforced the pleas.
But even if apathy should suddenly be replaced by action, there are some dangers involved. The American Bar Association, for example, under the guise of a direct presidential election by the people, has devised a plan which could further narrow the nation's political processes.
While the ABA has recommended the direct election of the President by the people, it also has recommended a significant qualification.
The ABA's plan would require a candidate to
obtain at least 40 per cent of the popular vote to be elected. If 40 per cent of the vote were not received by any candidate, the proposal allows for a national run-off between the top two candidates.
While the direct election of the President by the people is a desirable goal, there should be no restrictions placed on a new constitutional admendament that would stunt the possible growth of third parties.
The statutes in most states are enough of an obstacle to a fledging third party. One of the most remarkable feats of the Wallace third party was simply that it was able to get on the ballot in 50 states.
Federal limitations designed to preserve the two-party system are not desirable nor, in fact, are they really needed.
What is needed is a direct system of election whereby the people can have the assurance that the candidate receiving the majority of the popular vote will also occupy the White House.
Richard Lundquist
Assistant Editorial Editor
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Letters to the editor
A SHORT GUIDE TO CLAUSEWITZ ON WAR, edited by Roger Ashley Leonard (Capricorn, $1.65)—The classic commentary on how to conduct war. And not likely to go over too big with University students these days. But maybe it should be read by those very people, the editor having singled out those portions that give the essentials of Clausewitz thought and having analyzed the significance of the strategies advocated.
Condolences, Watkins, new radicalism
To the Editor:
These past few weeks have been very long ones for many students. For some it was over Wednesday morning when Humphrey conceded to Nixon; but for many of us Thursday night was even longer, as we waited to hear the condition of Bruce Mallin.
It seemed inevitable that the reporters would come to ask questions—but was it necessary for more than one reporter from one paper to cover the story, and so quickly? The ambulance had not even left Naismith before reporters descended and began questioning close friends of the victim, demonstrating marked insensitivity to the sentiments of the situation; and if this was not bad enough, the questioning did not end until close to midnight Thursday. Shouldn't the paper show any
respect to those people so closely involved?
I suppose that this would be irritating alone, however, it goes one step farther. It seems that neither the University Daily Kansan, the Lawrence Journal, nor the Kansas City Star was able to carry the story correctly. Your reporter wrote that "one witness to the fight said a number of people had watched the fight but no one stepped in to help the victim until it ended." For clarification, there was no one close enough to get to Bruce in time. No one just stood around and watched.
Your article implies that no one really cared to get involved; well, if this is true, then explain to me why so many Naismith residents stayed up all Thursday
'I don't care how many times I've safely stuck my head in his mouth! He can still bite it off if he takes a notion! '
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Sincerely,
night waiting to hear about Bruce's condition?
Peggy Budwig Naismith Hall resident
To the Editor:
I am disturbed to read of the hospital problems of KU students, especially in the light of Dr. Schwegler's comments (UDK, Nov. 7). I am especially disturbed at the intemperate outburst of Miss Boutross in the same edition of the paper.
Watkins Hospital has the equipment to cope with many emergencies, and it has some of the best staff members of any medical institution in the state. Some of its staff are among the best physicians in the country. Anyone who doubts this could very easily check with the hospital about the training and experience of these doctors. There are many and varied reasons why these people work at Watkins instead of in other institutions or in private practice. Those reasons usually stem from family responsibilities or physical disabilities, or simply personal preference. Certainly incompetence has nothing to do with it.
It is true that Watkins needs more space and a larger budget. Partly as a result of this, we have to wait quite a while sometimes to see a doctor about routine matters. But Watkins responds immediately to emergency cases. Dr. Schwegler would surely want to know about any specific exceptions to this and I am sure he would take steps to prevent repetition of such an exception.
You can't be sure with any doctor that his diagnosis is valid—and an honest, competent doctor would be the first to tell you. Why is Miss Boutross so vicious about the alleged errors at Watkins?
So in answer to Miss Boutross' question, where is a sick KU student to go for medical help, I think the answer is clearly to Watkins. It helps to have someone phone ahead in an emergency so they can be ready with whatever is needed, but in any case, go to Watkins first. And as for Watkins "shaping up"—sure, it needs improvement, but for that, it needs our help, not our attacks. Dr. Schwegler would be glad to make suggestions for action, if you really want to help.
Sincerely, Judith Kahane Lawrence graduate student
To the Editor:
I would like to comment upon a statement for the New Radicalism made by Tim Averill in the University Review. First let me say that it appeared to be comprehensive and representative, so far as that is possible, of what is meant by the new left. However, it also contained excellent examples of distortions of history and unwarranted generalizations that so often characterize True Believers.
An illustration of this is Averill's claim that elections are becoming more meaningless and popular opinion less effective, implying that a golden era once existed that now has become corrupted by big interests within the Establishment. It's amusing to note that Old Reactionaries also look back to some nonexistent period, where the common man controlled his own fate and all good things came to him who persevered. In all my readings of history I have never encountered a description of this most desirable segment of our country's past, except perhaps the Reader's Digest. Rabid rhetoric has an unfortunate component of silliness which detracts from important issues that might be contained within it.
A more accurate and meaningful declaration of the New Radicalism would be a denouncement of the failure of the United States to attain an ideal that has always been held before us, but never achieved. This issue is cause enough to be angry, frustrated and militant, and shouldn't be obscured by ranting at windmills.
Anthony M. Sorem
Graduate student, Psychology
KANSAN
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A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence.
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Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except holidays and examination periods.
Mall subscription rates: $6 a semester. $10 a year.
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Wednesday, November 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
On birth control ban
Bishops draft letter to quell priest dissent
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A seven-member drafting committee headed by Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh labored in secret yesterday over the wording of a pastoral letter in which the U.S. Catholic hierarchy hopes to quell a revolt by some priests and laity against Pope Paul's ban on contraception.
Before the committee, as it worked in a carefully guarded suite of the Washington Hilton Hotel, were written submissions from a number of bishops, giving their views on the matter.
The drafting committee's product will be called up for debate, probably today, by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Biafran, Nigerian to meet in forum
A Biafran and a Nigerian will confront each other in a Biafra Forum at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Participants will include Joel Adedeji, guest director of theater and a native of Nigeria, Emmanual Ubamadu, a Biafran student at KU and Gerald Brown, an instructor at the University of Missouri at Kansas City who lived in Nigeria for several years.
The discussion, sponsored by the International Club, will be followed by a question and answer session.
Two sharply conflicting viewpoints were represented in the closed-door deliberations. The drafters had the task of finding some verbal formula that would command a sufficiently wide assent to be issued as a joint statement of the entire U.S. hierarchy.
actly.
On one hand were prelates, like Cardinal Patrick O'Boyle of Washington, who felt the controversy has gone beyond the specific issue of birth control and has become a challenge to the whole concept of papal authority. They would deal firmly with dissidents, warning them in effect to "obey or get out."
On the other hand were bishops who feared a hardline reassertion of ecclesiastical authority would serve only to drive vast numbers of Catholics out of the church. They wanted the U.S. hierarchy to follow the example already set by the bishops of Canada, France, Belgium, Germany and other Western European nations.
Bishops in the second group emphatically noted Pope Paul recently accepted "with satisfaction" the Canadian bishops' pastoral letter. That letter contained a forthright recognition of the rights of private conscience.
science.
It appeared possible the language of the Canadian pastoral—already demonstrated to be acceptable to the Vatican—might become a model for the American statement.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 13, 1968
Zabel top Big 8 lineman
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Last spring, Oklahoma coach Chuck Fairbanks, seeking ways to strengthen the Sooner defensive unit, thought about moving offensive end Steve Zabel to linebacker.
Two weeks ago, Fairbanks finally moved Zabel—but it wasn't to linebacker. It was to defensive end because the coach "thought it would be easier for him to switch."
Judging from Zabel's performance in the Sooners' 27-23 win over Kansas Saturday, he had little trouble adjusting.
nince trouble The junior was credited with 14 tackles, in included five which knocked Kansas quarterback Bobby Douglass for losses, blocked a Jayhawk field goal
Sell-out expected for KU-MU game
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)—All general admission tickets to the Kansas-Missouri football game Nov. 23 have been sold out, coach and athletic director Dan Devine said today.
More than 60,000 general admission seats have been sold and all that remained are limited tickets to be sold through high schools and junior high schools.
attempt and doubled on offense during each Sooner scoring drive.
As a result, Zabel was a unanimous pick for Big Eight Lineman of the Week.
"He really adds some stature to our team and gives the players someone to rally around," Fairbanks said. "So he really means something to our team.
"Steve, we thought, had a very good game for us and it's more significant when you consider that it was only his second week at defensive end," Fairbanks added.
Douglass said, "Oklahoma gave us one of the best pass rushes I've seen all season—a very good pass rush. Zabel was in there quite a bit."
Not only did Zabel help dump Douglass five times, he was in on six other pass rushes which forced the Kansas signal-caller to throw too quickly.
The 6-4, 212-pounder "contributed several fine blocks and caught two first-down passes, deep in Kansas territory, one on
each of our first two TD drives," Fairbanks said.
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Jayhawk coach Pepper Rodgers said, "There's no question that Zabel added psychologically to their defense because he's a tough guy. He rushed the passer hard and slid off tackles good."
Hanratty will miss last 2 college games
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) Terry Hanratty, who erased Notre Dame football records which had stood for as many as 50 years has played his last college football game.
Hanratty undergoes surgery on his left knee at St. Joseph Hospital in South Bend today. If the operation is successful, he should be playing again next season with the pros.
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SUPER SAVINGS EVERYDAY
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Register FREE PRIZES Register
Drawing Nov. 27th-You Need Not Be Present To Win GRAND PRIZE-R.C.A. PORTABLE T.V.
Following Prizes for College Students Only:
★ Two Polaroid Swinger Cameras
★ Two $5.00 Gift Certificates, Good at Varsity Values
Two Automatic Coffee Makers
★ Two Gillette Techmatic Adjustable Razors
Register for the above prizes every time you shop at Varsity Values during the next two weeks. You need not be present to win. Drawing Nov. 27th----5:30 p.m.
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Corner of 9th and Mass. "Bus Stop Corner"
Wednesday, November 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Big Eight statistics
RUSHING LEADERS
Player, School
Steve Owens, OU G Att. Gain Avg.
B. Anderson, KU 7 236 1067 152.4
B. Anderson, KU 15 89 658 81.0
John Riggins, KU 8 105 602 81.0
John Riggins, KU 8 105 602 81.0
Greg Cook, MU 8 137 601 75.1
Joord Nuuna, NU 8 147 548 68.5
Tick Dawls, CU 8 61 380 48.5
Tick Dawls, CU 8 61 380 48.5
Bon Douglass, KU 8 108 380 47.5
Ron McBride, MU 8 79 359 44.9
Stiege Engel, CU 8 76 345 43.1
Ben King, ISU 8 115 375 41.7
L. Brown, KSU 8 85 322 40.7
PASS RECEIVING
Player, School No. Yds. TD
Eddie Hinton, INU 19 759
Terry Brown, OSU 37 519
Jake Gale, OSU 37 412
Otto Stowe, ISU 39 389
Mack Herron, KSU 29 482
Monte Huber, KCU 29 355
Tom Dearleing, OSU 30 266
John Mosier, KU 22 403
John Mosier, KU 22 248
Jim McFarland, KU 21 227
Mike Fruitt, CU 21 203
Jay Benson, OSU 19 237
Sam Campbell, ISU 18 290
Hermann Eisen, OSU 18 192
SCORING LEADERS
Steve Owens, OU (72), Bill Bell, KU (55), Don Shanklin, KU (54), Bob Douglass KU (48), James Harrison, MU (48), Joe Orduna, NU (48), Bob Anderson, CU (42), Mack Herron, MU (41), David Riggs, Paul Rogers, NU (31), Tom Nigurbar, CU (30), Junior Riggins, KU (30), Ward Walsh, CU (30).
TOTAL OFFENSE
| | G | Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 8 | 619 | 3581 | 447.6 |
| Missouri | 8 | 696 | 3208 | 401.0 |
| Oklahoma | 7 | 551 | 2919 | 398.6 |
| Colorado | 8 | 691 | 2704 | 397.4 |
| Oklahoma State | 7 | 527 | 2212 | 316.0 |
| Nebraska | 8 | 622 | 2333 | 291.6 |
| Iowa State | 9 | 616 | 2512 | 279.1 |
| Kansas State | 8 | 539 | 2158 | 269.8 |
RUSHING DEFENSE
| | G Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 8 371 | 789 | 98.6 |
| Nebraska | 8 354 | 917 | 114.6 |
| Kansas | 8 397 | 1354 | 174.6 |
| Missouri | 7 357 | 1447 | 206.7 |
| Kansas State | 8 476 | 1690 | 211.3 |
| Iowa State | 9 508 | 1965 | 218.3 |
| Colorado | 8 452 | 1969 | 246.1 |
| Oklahoma State | 7 419 | 1962 | 271.7 |
SCORING DEFENSE
| | G | Pts. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 8 | 77 | 9.6 |
| Nebraska | 8 | 108 | 13.5 |
| Kansas | 8 | 127 | 15.4 |
| Colorado | 8 | 164 | 20.5 |
| Kansas State | 8 | 195 | 24.4 |
| Oklahoma | 7 | 176 | 25.1 |
| Iowa State | 9 | 247 | 27.4 |
| Oklahoma State | 7 | 209 | 29.9 |
Correction
Yesterday's issue of the University Daily Kansan erroneously reported that Phi Delta Theta defeated the Law Team to win the 1967 "A" league Hill Championship. Phi Gamma Delta won the "A" league Hill Championship as well as the "B" league Hill Championship last year.
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LEADING PASSERS
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Player, School G Att. Comp. Pct. Int. Gain TD Avg.
Bonnej Johnson, OSU 7 187 95 508 10 1136 3 162.3
Bob Warmack, OU 7 140 77 550 10 1136 3 162.3
Lynn Dickey, KU 7 180 85 580 11 1116 8 120.9
Kayla Kaplan 8 137 69 594 11 1061 10 139.6
Bob Anderson, CSU 8 164 83 506 11 1049 6 131.1
John Warder, CSU 8 177 78 547 11 1012 5 131.1
Ernie Sigler, NU 8 154 61 568 11 920 4 102.5
Garnie Phillips, MU 8 75 32 427 4 324 5 65.1
Mo McVilliam, MU 8 71 39 409 4 582 5 47.8
PASSING OFFENSE
Oklahoma St. C.Att. Int. Yds. Avg.
104-26-13 1264 180.6
Kansas State 116-25-13 1404 175.5
Kansas State 78-144-5 1135 162.1
Kansas 75-174-5 1135 162.1
Nebraska 84-177-6 1149 143.6
Colorado 89-175-12 1146 143.6
Iowa State 86-202-11 1128 125.3
Missouri 86-214-9 1126 117.0
PASSING DEFENSE
C. Att. Int. Yds. Avg.
Missouri 61-165-15 895.11
Nebraska 85-196-7 1028.12
Kansas 87-182-12 1073.14
Colorado 85-175-7 1103.14
Kansas State 82-180-8 1152.14
Ohio State State 81-180-8 1108.14
Okahala 101-191-15 1245.77
Iowa State 130-221-14 1679.86
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Injuries hinder Jayhawks
KU Coach Pepper Rodgers was unhappy with yesterday's practice session, but he observed:
"A lot of people were hurt in the Oklahoma game, and we can't practice at full speed."
Rodgers said the five injured players--George McGowan, Dave
Aikins, John Mosier, Al Jakobic, and John Zook—should be ready to play Saturday.
The KU skipper also praised the K-State defense.
"They shut out Nebraska, and nobody else has done that this year," he said.
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 13, 1968
C
Photo by Greg Sorber
Typical intramural football action
Two players rip through the line to try to block a punt in an intramural tournament game. The ball, however, sailed past the lineman who seems to be touching the ball with his elbow. Beta Theta Pi won both the "A" and "B" league Hill championships Monday.
OU could spoil MU's bowl plans
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Oklahoma's belated drive to successfully defend its Big Eight football championship not only tarnished Kansas' bowl hopes but now threatens to diminish Missouri's.
The Sooners' stunning 27-23 upset over the previously unbeaten Jayhawks last Saturday had far reaching effects on the Big Eight bowl picture.
Kansas had been a prime contender for an Orange Bowl bid but its loss to Oklahoma unquestionably dimmed Jayhawk hopes for a New Year's in Miami. It also may have hurt Kansas' chance of landing a Sugar Bowl berth, although New Orleans officials said Monday the Jayhawks were still in the running.
Missouri, now 7-1 overall and 5-0 in the conference and reportedly leading contender for the Cotton Bowl, ventures to Oklahoma next Saturday where another Sooner upset would make the Tigers an extremely doubtful starter in either the Cotton or Sugar classics.
If Oklahoma's upset over Kansas did anything worthy regarding the conference's bowl picture, it helped Missouri. Should the Tigers whip Oklahoma Saturday, they're virtually in somewhere on New Year's Day.
Now is his 11th season at Mizzou, Devine has taken four other Tiger teams to post-season bowls—the Orange twice, the Sugar once and the Bluebonnet once.
A Missouri victory over Oklahoma next Saturday would clinch a Big Eight title tie for Tigers, assuring either the Sugar,
Cotton, or possibly an Orange Bowl invitation when bids are extended next Monday.
If Kansas whips Kansas State, as expected, and Missouri beats Oklahoma, the Jayhawks would have to defeat the Tigers Nov. 23 at Columbia to gain a share of the championship.
Still a possibility is a Gator or Bluebonnet bowl bid if Missouri or Kansas or both are wiped out of Sugar, Cotton or Orange bowl appearances by this late-season Sooner surge.
NEW YORK (UPI)—Topranked Southern California was listed as a 6½-point favorite for its big Pacific Eight leadership battle against Oregon State.
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Michigan (No. 4) was an unlisted favorite over winless Wisconsin. Georgia (No. 5) was a slim 2½-point choice over upset specialist Auburn, and sixth-ranked Missouri was a surprising one-point underdog to Oklahoma.
Ohio State, the nation's No. 2 ranked team, was a huge 18-point choice over Iowa while third-ranked Penn State was listed as a whopping 20-point pick over Maryland.
Kansas (No. 7) was made a 15-point favorite over Kansas State, Texas (No. 8) was given 14 points over Texas Christian, and 10th-ranked Tennessee was a seven-point pick over Mississippi.
In other major games Saturday, Notre Dame is an off-the-board choice over Georgia Tech, as is Houston over small college Idaho. Arkansas is $7\frac{1}{2}$ over Southern Methodist, Purdue $6\frac{1}{2}$ over Michigan State, Alabama and Miami of Florida rated evenly, Yale $13\frac{1}{2}$ over Princeton, and Texas Tech 10 over Baylor.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
East Coast lashed
Death toll mounts from Atlantic storm
NEW YORK (UPI)—The biggest and roughest storm of the season lashed the East Coast and the country's interior as far west as Tennessee with near hurricane destructiveness Tuesday, bringing raging winds, snow and ice that sent the death toll mounting in seven states.
Hundreds fled their homes along the Atlantic coast ahead of flooding ocean waters driven by gale force winds.
At least 20 deaths resulted from the storm, which also snarled air and land traffic and closed bridges and schools.
Evacuate hundreds
In New Jersey, National Guard troops evacuated hundreds of Atlantic seaboard residents where the ocean swept inland over Monmouth County.
There were no reports of casualties during the evacuation. The guard used special high axle trucks to haul those rescued out over flooded highways.
A fisherman drowned and another was missing and presumed dead off Morehead City, N.C.
Traffic accidents on rain-slick streets and expressways killed two persons in Pennsylvania,
two in New York and one each in New Jersey and Rhode Island. Three died of heart attacks in Pennsylvania while clearing away snow and an elderly man froze to death in Greenville, S.C.
In Bloomburg, N.Y., a family of seven burned to death trying to heat a summer bungalow during a snowy night.
The New Jersey flooding in Monmouth County followed breakthroughs in several ocean retaining walls along the coast at Island Beach and Mantlooking, and the retaining wall at Fort Monmouth broke up. Many
German actress Marianne Hoppe will give a public reading of Goethe's "Das Marchen" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Forum Room, Erich Albrecht, professor of German, said yesterday.
Albrecht, who saw one of Miss Hoppe's performances in 1949, said, "I think she proves beyond a doubt German is a beautiful language that brings out poetic feelings."
Joel Adedeji, guest director from Nigeria, yesterday labeled the upcoming experimental theater production "Song of a Goat" a poetic metaphor.
"The play shows not only the calamity of transition of man who lays down his life to secure
He said Thursday's reading would be a great experience for anyone who understands German.
Miss Hoppe's performance at KU is sponsored jointly by the Goethe Institute and the department of Germanic languages and literature.
German actress to give reading
Introduced by Fredric Litto, acting assistant professor of speech and drama, as one of the four or five most important theater people in Africa, Adedeji is director of the all-Negro cast whose production opens tomorrow night.
personal liberty in a traditional society, but also the new breed in society still holding to the past.' Adedeji told more than 30 students and faculty members at a speech and drama colloquium.
"Song of a Goat" is the tragic story of a fisherman and ship pilot, Zifa, who is left impotent after the birth of his first child. His wife later commits adultery, a solution the community finds completely acceptable.
Guest director explains production
Adedeji said Zifa is the goat—the scapegoat of his environ torn between past tradition and new feelings learned through his association with the river.
The plot evolves with Zifa's turmoil with himself and his
Heads for Mame The center of the storm,
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wife. She is regarded as wife of the whole tribe because traditional society recognizes individuals only as members of a group. Zifa's life on the River Niger and contact with passengers from other areas have made him think as an individual.
which packed ice, snow and gales of up to 73 miles per hour, roared across New Jersey headed for Maine where it was expected to arrive by morning.
So how will the Lawrence audience respond to "Song of a Goat"? asked one student. "Perhaps if they do not understand the symbolism, they surely will react to the spectacle," said its director.
Discussing cultural differences, Adedeji referred to a Nigerian audience attending a performance of "Macbeth" who laughed during the most tragic scene in the play.
The director said he saw a Japanese film version in 1965 which received the same response.
"Song of a Goat" runs Nov. 14-23 in the Experimental Theatre. Tickets may be purchased for 75 cents with KU ID's.
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 13, 1968
Apollo 8 to circle moon at Christmas
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)—The United States announced yesterday it will send the three Apollo 8 astronauts on a historic Christmas flight around the moon, shaving up to three months off the lunar landing timetable.
The daring lunar orbit reconnaissance run will begin Dec. 21 and end six days and four hours later, with a Pacific Ocean splashdown after man's fastest return to the earth's atmosphere.
Astronauts Frank Borman, 40, James Lovell, 40 and William Anders, 35, plan to circle the moon 10 times, blazing the trail for the landing of Americans on the pock-marked lunar surface as early as next July.
Gemini veterans
"We've been training very hard for this flight and we've happy
The pilots were practicing in a spacecraft trainer at the moonport when Dr. Thomas Paine, acting administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced the decision in Washington.
the performance of Apollo 7 and other considerations that led to this decision permit us to go," said Apollo 8 commander Borman. He and Lovell are Gemini spaceflight veterans.
By sending Apollo 8 to the moon instead of having it repeat the earth orbital flight of Apollo 7, NASA will be able to test the moonship in a lunar environment ahead of schedule and increase the chances for success on the initial landing attempt.
the astronauts will beam back
Saturn 5 rocket
Apollo 8 will be launched by the first of the giant Saturn 5 moon rockets to be manned. The Saturn 5 is five times as powerful, and twice as big, as the Saturn 1B that orbited Apollo 7 Astronauts Walter Schirra, Donn Eisele and Walter Cunningham Oct. 11.
to earth live telecasts of the moon from as close as 9 miles.
The plan calls for Apollo 8 to circle earth twice and then use the top stage of the Saturn 5 to give the astronauts the acceleration needed to coast the 250,000 miles to the moon.
Life not 'supreme' - Quinn
Apollo 8 is scheduled to swing into an egg-shaped orbit around the moon Dec. 24. After two lunar loops, the pilots will adjust their orbit to a circular path 69 miles high.
Life is not a supreme value, Prof. Dennis P. Quinn, associate professor of English, director of Pearson College and recent recipient of the Hope Award, said.
Quinn, sponsored by SUA, presented his philosophical views of life to about 70 persons, mostly students, last night in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
We think of life as something to be preserved rather than something to be lived. There is a preoccupation with the avoidance of death, he said.
"I don't consider myself an expert on life," he said. "Too often we try to make life more than it is, and have really lost our sense in the value of that subiect." he told the group.
ance of death, he said.
He would prefer a short but happy life, living it as well as possible rather than extending it as long as possible. "Therefore it would be a thing of value," Quinn said.
He said, if there are things for which we will give life, then they must be of more value than life.
"Many men have died, in fact, rather than forsake these values." he said.
"It seems there are things which are worse than death," he said. "Common experience testifies to this. One of the things is life without some of the goods which belong to life—life without hope, health, sanity. They render life not worth having."
He said he disagreed with Albert Schweitzer, who said all life is holy. "It seems to me the only holy thing is God," he said.
Spanish poetry is SUA feature
A visiting lecturer from Chile, Ivan Droguett, and Prof. Andrew Debicki will read poetry in Spanish and English at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Early Christmas morning, Apollo 8 will fire its main propulsion engine to break free of the moon's gravitational pull and
The poetry hour is sponsored by Student Union Activities and the Latin American Club.
Jr. year abroad applications due
Twelve to 15 students will be selected to spend their junior year abroad in Bordeaux, France, from applications received by Dec. 6 in 224 Strong Hall.
"Candidates should have a strong over-all academic average," Sandra Traversa, foreign study adviser, said. Students must also complete 60 credit hours and four semesters of "B" work in French by September.
Mrs. Traversa said students will spend their first six weeks with French families before moving to residence halls or Bordeaux family homes.
Sponsored by the University of Colorado, in cooperation with KU and the University of Nebraska, the cost of the program is $2,000. Students may apply for scholarships, Mrs. Traversa said.
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Apollo 8 will dive back into earth's atmospheric blanket at 24,749 miles per hour—more than 7,000 m.p.h. faster than the reentries of previous American and Soviet spacemen.
Apollo Program Director Samuel C. Phillips said its crewmen will have more fuel at their disposal throughout the six day mission "and a large margin for unknowns and errors."
Since a moon landing spacecraft will not be carried by
The maneuver sending Apollo 8 back to earth from lunar orbit is the most critical of the entire mission.
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd
(Next to Shaw's Auto Service)
North Lawrence
The Party Place!
Mont Bleu Ski Lodge
Route 2, Lawrence
VI 3-2363
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
8th ST. SHOE REPAIR
105 E. 8th
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Colors: Blush,
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THE Town Shop
839 Mass.
Uptown
VI 3-5755
THE University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr.
On the Hill
VI 3-4633
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Open Monday-Saturday 11:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.
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Wednesday, November 13, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
university Daily Kaman to be
collected in regard to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread. 1-9
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful 3sa Blue & Cloud Black, black leatherette interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
1966 Dodge 2 dr H.T. bucket, consol:
P.S. P.B., air B.air, 383 V8, shows
vinyl top, just $1895 at Jerry Allen
Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa 11-13
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$5.288.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owner miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr-$50,000 mile warranty, $499.75. That's not another like it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-13
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stsrews, Regular $495.00 can be significant cabinets significant music! Ray Sack's back's 929-331 Mass. St., 11-20
1964 MG Midgel, white w/wire wheels, this hard-to-find car yours this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa 11-13
1963 Volkswagon deluxe sunroof,
choice of 2, both 100°, guaranteed,
very nice cars. 1 green, 1 white; elite
at Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522
towa 11-13
57 Chevy, 2-door hardtop, black. 283.
3-speed. Hurst, custom interior,
radio, excellent condition. VI 2-6533.
11-13
Mustang snow tires--Last year's design. New 1st line 695-1x Keely cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Ray Stonebacks. 11-13
Britannica, Great Books of the Western World. 54 volumes, also 20 additional volumes. Like new. $290. Call 843-1835.
1963 Olds Cullas 2 dr. spt, cpe. V-8.
auto PS & PB. Excellent mechanical
condition. Call VI 3-1445 after 6:00
p.m. 11-15
Kalimar Instamatic type camera for sale. Uses 126 cartridges, color, black and white, slides, Call Donna. VI 3-0252, after 5:00 p.m. 11-15
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
Be prepared—
get antifreeze—starting service
2434 Iowa VI 1-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
VL2-1008
[965 Chavelle - For Sale - 283 cu. in.
V-8 engine, blue, 4-door, power steering,
standard transmission, 812
25th St. Apt. #4 or call VI 2-6887
Magnificent 72-point diamond, Tiffany mounting. Exceptional color. Excellent finish. Still for its purchase price or best offer. Inquire Box 3. Flint Hall. 11-18
1964 Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed.
bucket sats, perfect condition inside
and out of the frame. Right away,
the interierfer is $900. 11-18
Al Alderson, VI 3-6960. 11-18
1963 Clastic Rambler Station Wagon
Automatic Transmission, Air-conditioned, $595. VI 2-1340. Rm. 230. 11-18
Must Sacrifice. 270 Bolt Action Rifle,
4X scope and covers, Ammo. Contact
Dave; 537 McCollum after 6 p.m. 11-18
Former Harvard and Univ. of Minnesota Secretary will tpye themes. reports, theses. VI 3-7207. 12-5
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excellent condition, 4-speed. British racing garage, 1 a chome 1 a superstock wheels, 5,000 actual miles. Owner'sacilities—must sell' Contact; Sam Ri #, 616; McCollum, 11,600 610-899-3333
1964 Chavelle V-8, 4-speed, positrac,
recent overhaul on engine and brakes,
excellent condition. VI 3-8165. Also
small, enclosed d trailer. 11-19
1859 Triumph TR-3. Including a hard top, convertible top and tornau cover. A new clutch and transmission assemblage. Radio and heater. Curb brakes. Battery. Engine recently overhauled. 2 new tires; dual carburators. Bucket seats and a four-speed. Tach, oil temperature, amps and fuel gauges. Mini-mileage gauge. Windshield washer. Broken zipper on the tornau cover. Disc brakes. Rack and pinion steering. Left taillight is cracked. Leather window is broken. Window is loose. Ask for Kay. Test drive 2 to 5. $95.99. It's the $600 excitement. 11-15
Garrard Lab 80 + 55 records. Everything from "My Fair Lady" to "Surrealistic Pillow"—Must sell—Ask for Mike Blake at VI 3-1711 11-19
Roberts Tape Recorder, C-90. Professional quality, perfect condition. Original price $450, first $195 takes Call Jim Belcher, V 1-3711. 11-19
1968 Corvette Coupe. White with tobacco interior, 427 cu. in., 4-speed, only 8,000 miles. Vall VI 3-8959, after 5 p.m. 11-19
515 Michigan St. St. B-R-Q—outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.25; 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. tt
NOTICE
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Center 107 W. 9th N. 832s in 2nd Kansas Union lobby on Tuesday. 11-19
Your chance to buy six KU-K-State tickets which are together in an already soldout stadium. Will sell any even number. Call VI 2-5233. 11-13
PRICE SLASH ON BSR McDONALD
500. Automatic changer with base,
base handle and stand.
needle assembly as bonus. New $85
Now $55. Fully new equipment guar-
nantes on both tuner and changer
-Ray Audio & Visual - 1944
11-13
BUSSES TO PRES B TERIAN CHURCH starting Sunday, Nov. 17- Worship at 9 & 11. Busses leave 9th and Mass. at 8:30 & 10:30. Route: GSP & Corbin, Jayhawk blvd to Chi Negraon Blvd to Elk Grove Hill. Sunsyneid to Oliver and Nailsmith Halls, 19th to Stewart Dr. Return bus after worship. 11-18
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 12-3
Don't forget SUA Away Games. Bus
ticket at the SUA office 1-13
ticket at the SUA office
Holland, Denmark, Mexico, Italy, Japan,
Switzerland, Germany, India,
Spain, France, Belgium, but you
are the world for you. You can see
Haas Hardware, 1029 Mass. 11-19
Fresh flower arrangements and corcages-anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 11-15
HELP WANTED
Student wanted with tire changing experience to work mornings and holidays. $1.65 per hour. Do not apply unless you can work 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. daily. Ray Stoneback's Downtown—apply in person. 11-13
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-
time openings available in day or
night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. tf
Part-time for 11 a.m. till 2 p.m. Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week. Start $1.35 per hr. Apply in person to Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 W 23rd. ft
Male or female baby-sitter and household helper. Preferably to live in, not necessarily. For two children Call anytime—Mrs. Owens, VI 2-9372
Need household help 8 or 10 hours a week, preferably afternoon. Must have own car. Faculty family. No small children VI 3-4588, evenings. 11-19
WANTED
Wish to employ noon-time lunch room play ground supervisor for elementary school in Lawrence 11:30-12:30 Phone V7: 3-4686 or VI 3-1282
Four Male Students Wish to Rent to a large house, preferably within walking distance of campus. Need for see two rooms in Ron Hall. Charleston VI 2-6000, Room 740 11-14
Female grad. student needs immediate
preference, call Cassl U 408852, 11-18
Need a ride to Washington, D.C., for
Thanksgiving vacation. Will help with
gas and all expenses—Can leave Sat-
tle or Nov. 23rd, at 10:30. Call 11-15
V 3-34343
SERVICES OFFERED
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high fidelity Haynes Ray Audio VI.622 and Eve, Holloway Audio Center 11-22
TYPING
Themes. Thess. Dissertations typed and or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall VI. VI 2873
Experienced in typing thesis, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
ers and type types. Prompt
efficient service. Phone VI. 3-9548.
Mrs. E. Wright. 12-9
Unusual Gift Ideas Artist Supplies
CONCORD SHOP
Div. of
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
- Complete decoupage materials — Boxes, purses, decorative plaques, lining paper
- Art supplies and canvas
- Liquitex now in 8 oz. jars
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440. 11-14
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
FOR RENT
LOST
926 Mass.
Apartment, furnished, close to campus and downtown. $110 monthly VI 2-1622 $29 Kentucky, #F 11-19
1 Bd. APT—Furn. $60 plus utilities —quiet & isolated—call Mike at VI 2-
1884 or leave number at VI 3-7151.
VI 3-0501
Lost in bathroom at Union during carnival, one gold Longine watch. R-ward offered for return. Mark Law, VI 3-7102 11-15
PERSONAL
5 yr. old Black Labrador Retriever (large black short haired dog) with tan collar in vicinity of W. 26th St. Children's pet. Reward — I V. 2-7288
REWARD offered for the return of a brown sunday wallet, lost Nov. 4, Comp. Roberta Kukemiken, leave Room 928. If not home, leave a message. 11-15
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation and talent in our services together. Call us. Ron Sundybe or Dennis Bowers. First United Methodist. VI 3-7134. 11-14
Have your party at the Studio, 1344
Tenn. Private room available. Phone
VI 2-9441 or VI I 2-6908 11-13
FREE CAR
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Robo-Phillips 66
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card-costs no more
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33
HEAD SKIS
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2346 Iowa
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The Sound Inc.
- Record
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Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
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- shelving
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Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
19th and Massachusetts VI 3-1341
THE LIBRARY
BUD & COORS ON TAP
Behind Don's Drive-in----2500 West 6th
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 13, 1968
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Blood Drive, 11 a.m.-5:15 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom.
Le Caréte Francais se reunirra mercédi 13 novembre a 16 h. 30 dans la maison. La programme par M. Mortal; causesure illustree sur la Bourgogne.
Carilion Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Classicfilm. 7 & 9 p.m. "Nights of Cabira." Dyche Auditorium.
Linguistics Colloquium. 7.30 p.m.
Prof. Floyd Horowitz. "Analysis of Iterative Patterns in Prose Texts"
108 Blake.
Little Symphony. 8 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall
TOMORROW
Regional Police School. All Day.
Kansas Union. Also Friday.
Blood Drive, 9 a.m.-3:15 p.m. Main Lounge, Colmall Hall.
Speech Exemption Exam. 3:30 p.m.
200 Learned
Math Club, 7:30 p.m. Film, "Who Killed Determinants?" 119 Strong.
Marianne Hoppe 8 p.m. German
Aetn Actn Schenchen.
Forty Roos, Kansas Union
Poem is 'obscene
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Bone of a Goat."
(Continued from page 1) asks the chancellor's office, the service's university supervisor, to check copy which might be considered obscene.
The Cottonwood has used the words to which the printing service objected in earlier issues, Irving said.
Berkowitz's poem was read at a public reading earlier this year at a presentation in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Bulletin
KU blood drive continues
The KU campus blood drive will continue today and tomorrow. Linton Bayless, Roeland Park senior and chairman of the All-Student Council Student Health Commission, said yesterday.
The publication of a poem in Cottonwood Review which was objected to by University Printing Service officials was approved this morning by Provost James R. Surface.
The KU quota is 250 pints of blood each of the three days of collection, Bayless said.
Blood will be collected from 11 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. today in
Showcase tryouts
Tryouts for 14 Showcase productions to be presented before Christmas begin today through Friday from 3:30-5:30 p.m. in the Experimental Theatre.
Any interested student may perform selected readings, John Young, Fairway senior and student showcase director, said.
the Kansas Union Ballroom and from 9 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. tomorrow in the main lounge of McCollum Hall.
A person must be 18 or older to donate blood and parental permission is required if a donor is under 21, Bayless said. Parental permission slips have been distributed to living groups and are available at the information desk at the Kansas Union, he said.
Bayless said a blood donor and his immediate family is eligible to receive free blood for one year after his donation.
SUR
CLASSICAL
film series
FALL 1968
THIS WEEK NOVEMBER 13
Ω OMEGA for a lifetime of proud possession
NIGHTS OF
CABIRIA
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7&9 PM
DYCHE
Admission 75¢
OMEGA
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ALPHABETIC
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817 Mass. VI 3-4266
Del Eusee
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Meat Potato Vegetable Salad Roll
good food to meet the afternoon
The Pantry's Luncheon Special 99c
Served Tuesday-Friday 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
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THE
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Students $1.50
Sponsored By The Campus Crusade for Christ and Phi Delta Theta Fraternity.
Abbey Road
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
79th Year, No. 43
Thursday, November 14, 1968
Birth control voted on
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The nation's Roman Catholic bishops took a preliminary secret vote yesterday on a proposed pastoral letter dealing with birth control. But neither the contents of the letter nor the outcome of the vote was revealed following the closed session.
Extraordinary security precautions were taken to prevent details of the letter from becoming public, but it was known that the letter pertains to whether or not a Roman Catholic couple should make their own decision about using contraceptives despite Pope Paul's recent encyclical banning them.
Earlier, the bishops, gravely concerned over the growing number of priests leaving the ministry to marry, discussed possible procedural changes in releasing them from their priestly vows.
There was also concern about the shrinking number of nuns.
Key passages of the proposed pastoral letter were read aloud in the closed meeting by Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, the head of the seven-man committee which drafted it.
These passages had been revised by the committee on the basis of written suggestions submitted by about 60 of the more than 220 bishops attending the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
A spokesman said Wright and other members of the drafting committee "answered several questions from the floor on the revised text and the reasons for the changes."
There was speculation that the letter would put the U.S. bishops on the sides of their counterparts in
Canada, France, Germany, Holland and several other countries who said Catholic couples could use contraceptives if the practice was not contrary to their conscience.
At Wright's request, a secret ballot was taken to guide the drafting committee in deciding if the bishops were in agreement with the general tone of the proposed letter, or whether additional changes should be made.
Seating of Red China is a 'matter of principle'
The ballots were tuined over to Wright, who refused to reveal the outcome to prevent the other bishops from disclosing the news to the press.
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)—The Soviet Union Wednesday urged the seating of Communist China in the United Nations "as a matter of principle."
Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik told the General Assembly Moscow's attitude toward bringing the Peking regime into the world organization was "not a matter to be approached accoording to some transitory nature of our relations" with the Chinese Communists, with whom the Russians have been feuding over ideological interpretations.
French Ambassador Armand Berard also backed Red China's entry as the Assembly held its third day of debate on the perennial issue.
A vote, expected by the weekend, will result in a larger margin than last year's 56 per cent in favor of keeping Nationalist China in the U.N. seat, diplomats predicted.
The Soviet representative also endorsed the admission of both East and West Germany, declaring that admission to the United Nations was a matter of "the rights of sovereign states."
The Russians, although they do not maintain diplomatic relations with West Germany, realize that Communist East Germany never will win U.N. admission unless West Germany does, too.
Neither Malik nor Berard had a world of praise for the Peking regime however. And the Russian—whose country led the first assault on Nationalist China's U.N. seat 19 years ago—even refused to mention maverick Albania, chief sponsor of this year's pro-Peking resolution.
The Russians said continued exclusion of Communist China from the United Nations was "a blatant injustice to the Chinese people."
Asked about this, the conference's spokesman, Auxiliary Bishop James P. Shannon of St. Paul, Minn., told reporters, "If we don't know, you don't know."
Malik would have no part of the proposal to seat both the Peking and Taipei regimes here. He said it would "perpetuate the alienation of Taiwan Formosa from China."
The United States has introduced a resolution that would require a two-thirds vote of the Assembly to turn the Chinese seat over to the Communists.
The drafting committee was expected to make further refinements overnight and there was the possibility formal debate on the letter would begin Thursday. It is tentatively scheduled for public release at the end of the week.
Increasing cloudiness or mostly cloudy. Highs today 55-60 degrees. Low tonight 35-40 degrees. Precipitation probabilities 30 per cent, 20 per cent Friday. Winds light and from the northeast.
Shannon said the problem of priests leaving their posts for marriage is "very serious."
"The bishops are gravely concerned," he said. "They are doing
Weather
(Continued on page 12)
Attorney says no facts kept secret
No lid of secrecy has been clamped on information surrounding the death of Bruce Mallin, 20-year-old Kansas City junior, Dan Young, county attorney, said.
A Kansas City radio station reported that authorities were witholding information concerning the fight that took place Thursday in the parking lot behind Naismith Hall.
Young said he will not speculate on the cause of death. He is waiting for the completion of the autopsy report, which should take about a week. He will report on the cause of death after he receives this report.
Questioning of witnesses is continuing and no charges have been filed as of yet. Young said it would be about a week before charges would be made.
A 17-year-old Kansas City freshman has been questioned and released, but investigation continues
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
U. S. troops attacked
SAIGON (UPI) Swarms of North Vietnamese troops charging behind a mortar barrage attacked U.S. Air Cavalrymen near the Cambodian border shortly before midnight Wednesday. The Americans beat off the assault and killed at least 120 Red soldiers, military spokesmen said.
Oil firms face limits
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Office of Foreign Investments yesterday proposed strict limits on U.S. oil companies' spending for exploration and development overseas during 1969.
The limits were to prevent oil firms from boosting foreign investments next year by writing the sums off as development expenses.
The OAFI administers the government's program limiting overseas lending and spending by American firms in an attempt to curb the dollar outflow and correct the nation's balance of payments.
Youths shout 'Nazi'
BRUSSELS-Young Belgian demonstrators shouted "Nazi Kiesinger" and threw firecrackers Wednesday night in an unsuccessful attempt to break up a rally at which Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger of West Germany was featured speaker.
Earlier Wednesday police arrested Beate Klarsfeld, the West German woman who last week slapped Kiesinger.
Missing execs found
QUITO, Ecuador-The government reported Wednesday the rescue of two kidnapped executives of a plantation near Guayaquil owned by New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.
An official statement said the men were kidnapped by leftist workers at the plantation seeking higher wages.
11.
10
Kansan photo by Gary Mason
Moving day for special collections
Library employees began moving Special Collections and other research materials from Watson Library to their new home in Spencer Library. The new building will be formally opened Friday. The transfer of materials to Spencer has not been completed.
Poem to be printed
Material for the "Cottonwood Review," a KU literary magazine, has been returned to the KU Printing Service for typing.
Last week the printing service returned the material to the magazine's staff. Robert W. Jaeger, assistant director of the printing service, said a poem submitted for the first edition was obscene and needed approval from the Chancellor's office before it could be typed.
James Surface, KU provost, said he was unaware of the problem until yesterday morning. After talking to Thruston Moore, advisor to the magazine, Surface said he simply called Jaeger and told him to continue work on the magazine.
"It was a big misunderstanding, which was settled 10 minutes after I talked with Mr. Jaeger," Surface said.
Su: surface said he had not read the poem.
"I consulted with the advisor and I felt that his word was enough," he said.
work was enough. Ken Irving, Rochester, Minn., senior and editor of the magazine, said the KU printing service will only type the copy.
"The printing service should really only check for libel," Irving contended, "and not for the rest of it. So we're no longer obseene."
Irving said this was the last edition he would serve as editor. He said he would rather edit his own magazine so he could experiment and do different things.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 14, 1968
Panama relations resumed
PANAMA CITY (UPI)—The United States yesterday resumed diplomatic relations with Panama. They were suspended Oct. 15 following the National Guard ouster of President Arnulfo Arias.
U. S. ambassador Charles W. Adair Jr., notified the Panamanian foreign office of the American action. Twenty-six other
countries have recognized the new military junta regime in Panama since Arias was overthrown.
Arias himself and most of his former cabinet members are in exile abroad. It was Arias' third election to the presidency and his shortest—11 days. Twice before he had been overthrown, in 1941 and again in 1951.
The U.S. decision to resume relations with Panama came after Washington consultation with other Western Hemisphere governments.
The provisional ruling junta headed by Col. Jose Maria Pinilla, acting president, has publicly pledged to hold elections.
Yale prof gives Spencer recital
A Yale University music professor will give a recital at 8 p.m. Friday in the University Theatre, the music history department announced yesterday, Nov. 13 as part of the opening of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library
newspaper Research Library
Ralph Kirkpatrick, also a fellow of Jonathan Edwards College,
will play the 2-manual
harpsichord owned by Ottawa University and designed after a 17th century model by Frank Hubbard.
The Deutsche Gramaphon Society chose Kirkpatrick to record the complete works of J. S. Bach for its archive series. He also has recorded 60 Scarlatti for Columbia University.
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Thursday, November 14, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Journalists ordered to submit to Soviets
PRAGUE (UPI)—Journalists throughout Soviet-occupied Czechoslovakia were ordered yesterday to submit to absolute Communist Party control in an intensifying crackdown on the press.
The demand, the harshest yet in a long and largely unsuccessful campaign to censor the press, came on the eve of a crucial meeting of the party's Central Committee.
Stalinist conservatives were expected to push for more power in a conference-table showdown
Author of 6 books to lecture at KU
The Rev. Walter J. Ong, a Jesuit priest and professor of English at St. Louis University, will lecture on "The End of the Age of Literacy," at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Immediately after the lecture, which is free and open to the public, an informal reception will be held.
Father Ong will spend three days on the KU campus speaking to French and English literature, contemporary religious thought, American studies and dramatic literature classes.
Father Ong is the author of six books. The latest, "Knowledge and the Future of Man," was published this year. His writings have dealt with Renaissance literature and the history of ideas.
Father Ong has been on the St. Louis University English faculty since 1941. He has also taught at Regis College, the University of California and in Tours, France.
He is now a member of the advisory board of the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and has held several national offices in research and advanced-study associations.
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Until now the news media had been the only area of Czechoslovak public life operating much as it had before the Warsaw Pact invasion last August.
He said the Foreign Ministry would "consider the great number of foreign correspondents" in the country and evaluate their dispatches.
There had been numerous appeals from the party to editors and bradcasters to censor themselves, but most of these appeals and decrees had little effect.
Appeals from party
Some Czechoslovak journalists faced with the choice of conformity or removal have said they would quit and become factory workers rather than bow to the old restrictions.
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Lady Bird to take final tour
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson will make her final cross-country trip as First Lady next week. The four-day tour beginning Nov. 22 will emphasize advances in education, art, space, health and urban renewal-programs promoted by President Johnson.
in Washington with an oath-taking ceremony for new American citizens. Then she will fly to New Orleans with members of the National Council on the Arts to attend the opening of a repertory theater that was partially financed by the council.
The 6,000-mile tour will begin
At Cape Kennedy, Mrs. Johnson will be briefed on the Apollo flight to orbit the moon, expected about Christmas. She will tour the spaceport and meet the astronauts.
It will be her sixth major tour as First Lady. In the past five years, she has traveled more than 100,000 miles, visiting about 125 cities.
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 14, 1968
The 'fast' gimmick
Good ol' American pragmatism has struck again.
A gimmick to rival the ingenuity of Madison Avenue, a "fast meal," is being employed by students to solicit contributions for a scholarship fund.
Dub it "Yankee ingenuity" or better yet, with respect to the University community and apologies to the history department, label it manifestations resulting from the days of frontier individualism.
Whatever it's colored, the ascetism of the East is being ridiculed by a commercial fast, complete with the back home chow of corn bread and beans. Only the addition of apple pie could further bastardize the practice of fasting.
This is not to say the goal of contributing to a KU scholarship fund is not a worthwhile project. Scholarships and encouragement to "high-
achievement youth from the Lawrence area" are no doubt admirable aims. But why commercialize and socialize the ancient and noble act of fasting to secure funds?
Fasting is as universal as religion, with its most famous adherents ranging from Gautama Buddha to Mahatma Gandhi. And if Westerners want an authoritative source, a bearded radical from Nazareth is recorded to have said, "When you fast . . . your fasting may not be seen by men but by your Father who is in secret: and your Father who sees in secret will reward you."
Surely there is a more honest way to solicit money than making a gimmick of ascetism, and perverting an honorable practice in the process.
Richard Lundquist
Assistant Editorial Editor
Kansan Book Review
'Soul on Ice'
By SCOTT NUNLEY
High. Very high. Flying. Look! where I am, snatched up, clutching Eldridge Cleaver by the hand.
It's dizzy up here shouting in rhythm "Yesyeses" from the gut and my cautious moderate skepticism left far behind. (No clouds, clear gold.) Its chill cramp may catch up with me, of course, but for this moment let my mind leave me high on the beautiful poetics of "Soul On Ice."
The dynamics of Cleaver's book alone is staggering in its intoxicating rush from the despair of 400 winters of Castration, through the suicidal determination of yesterday's Black Resurrection, to a final catastrophic affirmation of hope in tomorrow's Coronation.
"Soul On Ice" ultimately is not preaching the momentary surge of Black Power. Its scope includes all Americans (perhaps all men) and its "power" demands the sexual and psychological health of the entire species.
If it's not a message you want to hear, then stand back from the source: I certainly wouldn't recommend a personal barring of the schoolhouse steps that might bring you entirely too close to the blazing tongue of that damnable Black Panther, ex-convict, Black Muslim prophet at the podium inside.
It would be much safer to unbar every door and drag all the old furniture out under the sky, unpinning the uptight hinges if they squeal.
Because the message will get through anyway—the book, the voice, the man have burned past the watchdogs—and they will listen (you will listen, I will listen). It is worth the pain in your ears. It is eloquent. It is fantastic in its feeling of Truth. And it is healing.
Healing, heal me. When I cry. Because Eldridge Cleaver is preaching beyond the fires (to the final end of combustible ragpiles), beyond the hatreds (to the wedding of strong and admiring opponents), and beyond the current pessimism (to a health so vast and profound that hope will be its in-breath and its out-breach).
In the prisons of California, Cleaver read and led and thought through the degradation of his fellow black inmates. The lyrics of their needs pour from its embarrassingly honest letters:
"He has imperative need of the kindness, sympathy, understanding, and conversation of a woman ... to sniff are crossed and uncrossed beneath a table..."
But the black man is denied this natural sexuality by a social system so insidious that it victimizes the white masters as well.
All of us are convicts of this class-stratified sexual prison that divides Mind from Body, white-thinking Administrator from black-laboring Menial. Forced by his class image to downgrade the brutal strengths of the Body, the white boss cuts himself off from the source of his masculinity.
“. . . she achieves an image of frailty, weakness, helplessness, delicacy, daintiness. . . The mechanism of her orgasm, which begins in her body and ends in the psychic depths of her mind, becomes short-circuited in the struggle between her mind and her body.”
Attempting to make her man more masculine by contrast, the white woman only ultra-feinizes herself:
Any society that fragments its sexual models along lines of class difference must fail to achieve any one, unified sexual image. Failing then to provide whole and healthy directions for the sexual growth of its men and women, the divided society will finally fail to achieve any real and satisfying fulfillment.
These Body-oriented whites took rhythm and blues from the Black Menial, renamed it rock and roll, and turned on the White Administrator to an ecstatic return to the source of his own masculinity—to his own long-taboo body.
Cleaver's vision of hope, of rescue from this horrible schizophrenia of the sexes, began with Elvis and triumphed in the Beatles.
As the Beats and Hips opened the vanguard of a return to guiltless association with the black man, the entire white population was re-learning the health of its body and expressing the great immediate joy from high school to White House.
"Soul On Ice" consumates its own fantastic message in a final overwhelming letter "To All Black Women, From All Black Men:"
"I have returned from the dead. . . . I have danced the limbs of the cat, have seen Satan face to face and turned my back on God. . . Black woman, without asking how, just say that we survived our forced march and travel through the Valley of Slavery, Suffering, and Death. . . But put on your crown, my Queen, and we will build a New City on these ruins."
Chant this book in the company of your friends.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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A student newspaper serving the university of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.
PUBLISHED by the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Acceptance fee is $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, religion, national origin expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
News Adviser George Richardson
Advertising Adviser Mel Adams
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Haney
Managing Editors
Pat Crawford
Google Jenkins
Alan T. Jones
Steve Morgan
Allen Winchester
City Editor Bob Butler
Editorial Editor Alison Steimel
President
Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor
Ron Yates
Assistant Sports Editor, Bob Kearney
Feature and Society Editor
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Associate Feature Team
Sharon Woodson
Copy Chiefs
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Promotion Pam Flatton
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The Hill With It by john hill
"Mommy," said the six-year-old twin boys simultaneously from their respective twin beds.
"What?" said Mommy, coming into the room and turning on the light.
"Mommy," said little Matthew, "would you sing us a lullaby before we go to sleep?"
"All right, all right. Hold my beer and I'll see if I can find one on the radio."
"No," said his brother, Mark, "read us a story from the Story Book." He pointed to a book between A Child's Garden of Perverse and Candy.
"Look," said their mother, "just one quick nursery rhyme before the commercial's over. Here goes. HumptyDumptysatonawallHumptyDumptyhadagreatfallandalltheking'shorsesandalltheking'smencouldn'tputHumptytogetheragain. Now you two go to sleep and don't—"
"Obviously a Christ figure," said Matthew thoughtfully, more to himself than anyone else, "although I'm bothered somewhat by the obvious symbolism of the King's horses, especially by the way they come ahead of the Kings men. . .."
"It's just a stupid nursery rhyme," their mother said, exasperated,
"now just—"
"Perhaps," said Mark, "approaching it from a more sociological level on a slightly different plane than the martyred hero symbol, the King's horses, inherently being inferior, were called upon, however, in a crisis to work as equals along side the King's men, which would be a commentary on minority groups frustrations and their—"
"For Crissake!" said their dear, sainted mother. "It's just a nursery rhyme. So stop with the King's horses already!"
"Then on a philosophical level," Matthew said, pausing for the length of time it would take to thoughtfully puff on a pipe, "it is enigmatic that Humpty-Dumpty was left broken, reminiscent somehow of Jack left with a broken crown, at the conclusion of his epic, with Jill tumbling after, apparently symboling the Freudian theory that—"
"Epic!" their mother screamed, "I'll epic you! Now it's just a nursery rhyme. So go to sleep now, and no more discussion!"
She turned the light out and started to leave.
"But mother," said a small voice in the darkness, "we find it meaningful to explore and evaluate the various sub-levels of-"
"I'll meaningful you if I hear one more word. Now when I was a kid, it was just a nursery rhyme and you're talking all about it not's going to make it any different. You've evaluated the hell out of it so go to sleep."
She shut the door and ran back to the second exciting half of Lost in Space, not hearing the sound of the pitter-patter of little feet heading straight for a copy of Candy. . . .
Letters to the editor
Gen. Walt, the other minority
To the Editor:
To the Butler:
In response to the speech by
General Lewis Walt:
Dear General Walt:
I was one of the civilians that witnessed your speech on Monday afternoon. I was not one of those who popped their gum or commented aloud, but I regret that I share in their disbelief as I heard about Vietnam as it has never been told before.
While you paced back and forth in the shadows as if telling a secret, you told of alleged atrocities committed by the Vietcong and the North Vietnamese. In fact, since most of your speech dealt with these acts, I got the impression that you enjoyed these the most. You told us about a war that wasn't a war but one that we're going to win anyway. You told us about the people of Vietnam who flocked to the polls to exercise their new freedom but you forgot to mention that several newspapers were recently closed for criticizing the Saigon government.
You told us about your giving the purple heart to a "colored boy" and how proud you were of him. You told us about the many American boys re-enlisting to stay and fight. You told us how your experiences in Vietnam had been some of the "most rewarding of your life"
and how the enemy had lost some three-hundred thousand men.
You told us about a little Vietnamese girl who walked five miles to return a soldier's watch, thus reassuring us of the moral fiber of the Vietnamese people. I'm sure she has a bright political career ahead of her.
And lastly you told of a soldier who having been wounded three times, wished to return to the states, and who in your opinion had a "type of attitude that we don't need over there."
To these comments and the others that you made, I can only reply that yes, there is a war in Vietnam, General Walt. It is being fought by American men. And someday, General Walt, there will be peace.
Richard Johns
To the Editor:
Overland Park sophomore
We are not saying we love the
After reading the Kansan almost every day for the last year and a half, we find a great deal has been said concerning Peoples Voice and SDS. It has come to our attention, however, that no one has spoken for the other minority group on this campus: the average students who support this country, right or wrong.
war in Vietnam; in fact we find it deplorable, but in all seriousness, we don't think much can be gained by parading around with a coffin. True, it gets you publicity, but what kind and which group do you think it impresses?
Also, we don't think our present system of government is ideal; there is infinite room for improvement, but personally speaking, it is the best form we've got. Like Mike Warner we feel now is the time for unity, but although we will share our food, our ideas and our money, we have no great desire to share our bodies.
In regard to the military, we feel the draft system could and should be changed or destroyed altogether, but harassing a group of veterans, who fought in the past to protect this country against such trivial things as Nazism, during their evening meal, will only promote indignation as well as indigestion.
Our suggestion to Peoples Voice and SDS is to apply their talents to areas where it would be more effective. And to the Kansan we suggest that there are others on the campus who are just as newsworthy.
Wanda Daniels
Eudora sophomore
Jackie Saltzman
Lenexa sophomore
Thursday, November 14, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Grand jury indicts three
NEW YORK (UPI)—A Brooklyn grand jury backed up conspiracy charges brought by police against three Yemeni immigrants by indicting them Wednesday on four counts each in connection with a plot to assassinate President-elect Richard M. Nixon.
The jury acted after hearing two days of testimony from witnesses presented by the Kings County district attorney's office. The star witness was a fourth Yemeni, as yet unidentified, who tipped police to the alleged plot last Friday.
Those indicted were Ahmed Namer, 43, and his two sons—Hussein, 20, and Abdo, 18. They face maximum prison sentences of 24 years each if convicted of conspiring to murder, criminal
Education instructor illustrates textbook during leave in India
An art textbook for junior and senior high school students, illustrated with pictures of Indian animal sculpture, may be the outcome of a 10-month leave for Mrs. Marguerite Baumgartel, a KU assistant professor of education.
While in India, Mrs. Baumgartel said she studied traditional and modern Indian sculpture and made slides of sculpture in museums, temples and shrines.
Mrs. Baumgartel, who applied and received a Fulbright travel grant, made her second trip to India last year with her husband. Howard Baumgartel, a KU psychology professor, went as a Fulbright lecturer.
When not traveling and viewing Indian sculpture, Mrs. Baumgartel sculpted. She said she completed six pieces in Indian teak wood during her stay. The sculptures, she said, were displayed at the United States embassy in New Delhi.
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The Nammers were arrested in a police raid on a $57-a-month Brooklyn tenement apartment last Saturday. Two guns, ammunition, switch blade knives and correspondence with individuals in the Arab world were confiscated in the raid.
Federal authorities were investigating the possibility that the alleged plot was related in some way to the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy last June in Los Angeles and that one of the Namers had made a trip to California this year. Sirhan B. Sirhan, accused in the Kennedy slaying, is a Jordanian who is said to have resented Kennedy's espousal of the Israeli cause.
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The Namers are reported to have offered the mystery informer "a large sum" to join the plot. Authorities are especially interested in how three men who work as shipping clerks could have obtained such a large sum.
Education costs marked up again
An average student is paying a total of $1,160 this year to be educated at the state college or university in his home town,the survey says.
The college price tag has been marked up again, according to the 1968-69 annual survey of student charges of the National Association of State Colleges and Land-Grant Colleges (NASCLGC) and the Association of State Colleges and Universities (ASCU).
Tutition, fees, room and board are rising so rapidly and so often, today's public college student is paying about 23 per cent more for his education than his classmates did in 1963.
Four-fifths of the nation's state colleges and universities have increased their fees. The survey showed a 2.9 per cent increase in in-state tuition and a 9.4 increase in out of state tuition.
Room and board rates have leveled off this year following major increases last year. At NASCLGC institutions, the room rates rose 3.1 per cent for men and 4.1 per cent for women.
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6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 14, 1968
KU students hope to find drug to control seizures
Two KU graduate students hope to finish developing a new drug which will possibly be an effective control for all types of epileptic seizures.
Bob Robinson, Rome, N.Y., and Jim Ayres, Twin Falls, Idaho, said none of the drugs currently marketed are completely effective and some produce undesirable side effects.
Their two main problems, the medicinal chemistry doctoral candidates said, are the difficulty of testing the new chemical compounds, never made before, and the long time required to make enough of a new agent to test on a large scale. Huge amounts of ingredients are needed to derive an ounce of the compound used, they said.
Robinson and Ayres are working from the premise of Roland P. McKay, professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His premise is that all epilepsy is the same process but evokes varying physiological responses.
The two registered pharmacists said they spend nearly 12 hours a day, 11 and a half
Ex-ambassador to speak Tuesday
Madame V. L. Pandit, sister of the late Indian Prime Minister, will speak on "Search for Unity in a Changing World" at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom, said Zuhair Duhaiby, president of KU International Club.
As former Indian Ambassador to the United States, Soviet Union and Great Britain, Madame Pandit is the only woman who has presided over the United Nations General Assembly, Duhaiya said.
The talk is sponsored by KU International Club.
months a year in laboratories and classes, or doing outside research on the project.
Robinson said he became involved in the study in 1964, three years after it began at KU under the direction of Edward E. Smissman, chairman of the School of Pharmacy's medicinal chemistry department. Ayres joined the study in 1966.
Robinson said he expects to earn his doctorate within months and will work in industry. Another graduate student will then become Ayres' lab partner in this project, he said.
The students are supported in their work by National Institute of Health research grants.
Spencer library opens tomorrow
Kenneth Spencer Research Library will formally open Friday although the opening is just a formality as the library will not be ready for public use until Dec. 2.
The activities will include: the keynote speech by Robert Vosper, the former director of the KU libraries and now the librarian at the University of California at Los Angeles; Richmond P. Bond professor of English at the University of North Carolina will give the 15th annual Books and Bibliography lecture on "Growth and Change in the Early English Press" at 3:30 p.m.; and highlighting the day will be the harpsichord concert by Ralph Kirkpatrick, at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre.
Informal tours will be given throughout Friday afternoon from 1 p.m.
The library was dedicated last Friday.
A group of interested KU students, faculty and Lawrence High School counselors are working on a scholarship program for potential University students.
Scholarship program to be set up
The purpose of the program is threefold :
- To assure them the financial backing if they meet the above requirements.
- To encourage Lawrence High School students to begin thinking about a college education and to take college courses and keep their grades up.
- To get KU students and faculty interested in social responsibility.
The committee, whose slogan is "Support Educational Opportunities—Fast," has a series of fund raising drives and events planned. Pam Fankhauser, Lions junior and publicity chairman of the KU group, said:
"On November 21, the residence halls will be serving a 'fast meal,' consisting of cornbread and beans, in addition to the regular meals. For every student who chooses the fast meal, 35 cents will be contributed toward KU's scholarship fund.
Miss Fankhauser explained that other living groups, such as Greek houses and scholarship halls, are being asked to come up with their own participation plan.
"For those who choose the regular meal, there will be a place for contributions at the end of the meal line," Miss Fankhauser said.
In addition to the fund raising activities, members of the groups are planning a "full fast" Nov. 20 and 21 for all interested.
"We are urging all KU students and faculty members interested to come to an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union, Room 101. After the meeting all interested people will 'fast' until 6 p.m. Thursday," Miss Fankhauser said.
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Robert Billings, director of financial aids, said matching funds from governmental sources or the Ford Foundation may be available.
Mrs. Barbara Maxwell, counselor at Lawrence High School, said the high school was cooperating with the University to help
make the program a success.
She said a committee of seven teachers from different departments was selected by the faculty and these teachers will submit names of deserving seniors based on the criteria of academically average, financially below average and potentially hopeful students.
The Castle Tea Room
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!
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1301-11 Moss. St.
Phone V1 3-1151
Reservations Suggested
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Thursday, November 14, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Card's Bob Gibson named MVP; completes domination by pitchers
NEW YORK (UPI)—Bob Gibson, the strong righthander of the St. Louis Cardinals, completed a sweep for the pitching fraternity yesterday when he brushed back the challenge of batting champion Pete Rose to win the National League's Most Valuable Player award for 1968.
Gibson, whose earned run average of 1.12 was the best in the history of the league, won the MVP award from the Baseball Writers Association of America. He received 14 out of a possible 20 first place votes and wound up with 242 points.
Rose, the Cincinnati Reds outfielder whose .335 batting
average was the best in the major leagues, got six first place votes and a total of 205 points.
It was the second major award won this year by the Cardinal mount ace. Earlier this year he won the NL's Cy Young award. His accomplishments enabled him to match the exploits of Dennis McLain of the world champion Detroit Tigers, who won the same two awards in the American League. Thus, the four major awards given by the Baseball Writers went to pitchers for the first time since 1924.
Gibson, who rose from the ghettos of Omaha, Neb., to become one of baseball's premier pitchers, compiled a 22-9 record
during the 1968 season in leading the Cards to their second straight NL pennant.
His designation as MVP gave the Cards back-to-back winners. Last year first baseman Orlando Cepeda won the award. Cepeda didn't get a single vote this year.
first baseman Willie McCovey and pitcher Juan Marichal, both of the San Francisco Giants, were the only players besides Gibson and Rose to be named on all 20 ballots. McCovey had 135 points and Marichal 93.
Barry's 44 points are not enough
The Oakland Oaks are finding out, much to their dismay, that it takes more than a one-man scoring attack to carry the burden in the American Basketball Association pennant race.
The Oaks, who were threatening to make a runaway in the league race, were sidetracked last night even though superstar Rick Barry collected 44 points.
The hot-shooting Denver Rockets, capitalizing on balanced scoring and superior rebounding, gunned down Barry and the Oaks, 134-127.
Gibson's teammate, outfielder Curt Flood, was fourth in the balloting with 135 points.
It was only the second defeat in 11 games for the Oaks while Denver won its third straight game on its home court after dropping four contests to start the season.
Larry Jones, a former Toledo player, was the big-scorer for Denver, hitting 33 points. Teammate Byron Beck, who played his collegiate ball at Denver University, had 29 points and a game-leading 20 rebounds.
In the only other game played, the Minnesota Pipers, leaders of the Eastern Division, also went down to defeat. The Los Angeles Stars downed the Pipers, 123-116, behind the shooting of Steve Chubin, Chubin hit a field goal and a free throw late in the overtime period to give the Stars the win. He wound up with 34 points. Connie Hawkins led the losers with 29.
Charter Flight Direct To
KU-MU GAME.
Tickets available with plane reservation.
Leave Municipal Airport 11:00 a.m. Sat., Nov. 23, direct to Columbia. Return after game. Room for 5 passengers.
Flight Time—50 Min.
$20.00 Round Trip
Call V1 2-3329
VENEZUELA
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- if you want to accept the challenges in a city of 40 communities...each with its distinct identity.
- if your inner commitment is to inspire, improve and impart.
- if you want to teach where the climate does not interfere with outdoor activities.
- if you wish to supplement your own academic life,
- if you aspire to professional advancement+
- if you value an environment of progress and experimentation.
- if you are dedicated to developing the thinking process as well as the curriculum.
Make an appointment with the placement office.
Our representative will be on campus
Gibson made 34 starts during the regular season and had 28 complete games. The 32-year-old pitcher, known as a wit off the mound, had a streak of five straight shutouts and had a string of 47 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings. Over one stretch of 95 innings he allowed only two runs, one on a wild pitch.
Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1968
Los Angeles City Schools
Six French Directors on VIETNAM Godard Ivens Klein Lelouch Resnais Varda FAR FROM VIETNAM
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 14, 1968
Bowl poll evaluation
Students prefer Miami
Nearly six of ten KU students want to see the Jayhawks play in the Orange Bowl New Year's Day, according to a poll taken by the Kansan sports staff.
Although 58% of the students said that they would prefer to see KU play in the Orange Bowl, only 21% said they could travel to Miami. More students, 27%, said they could attend the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. Another 27% claimed they could go to any bowl game.
More students would be able to attend the Sugar Bowl mainly because of its geographic closeness. "It's a lot closer than Miami," one student pointed out.
Most of the people who hope KU is invited to the Orange Bowl favored this annual classic because of its high reputation. "It is considered the greatest honor to play in the Orange Bowl." one person wrote.
The liveliness of New Orleans was another influencing factor. "Bourbon Street on New Year's Eve isn't such a bad idea, you know," somebody suggested. Several students picked it because of Louisiana's drinking laws which allow 18-year-olds to buy hard liquor.
Business interests also affected the students' responses. "I am one of the six investors in the 'Miami Bound' buttons," an Orange Bowl fan admitted. One student selected the Sugar Bowl because "KU gets more money."
Cotton Bowl supporters picked Dallas because of its proximity and this game because of its prestige. "A trip to Dallas would be more practical than a trip to distant Miami," one student said.
People gave various other reasons for choosing a specific bowl. Some favoring the Orange Bowl look forward to "beaches, sun, weather conditions and pretty girls."
The poll indicates that two-thirds of the students will provide their own transportation and that one-third would travel to a bowl game by a SUA-sponsored trip.
$175. Offers ranged from 25
cents to $250.
More than a third of those polled would pay between $75 and $125 for SUA's package deal. Twenty-six per cent of the students are willing to pay between $50 and $75, twenty-one per cent less than $50, twelve per cent between $125 and $175 and six per cent more than
If KU is selected this would be its third bowl game.
KU played in its first bowl game in 1948 when Georgia Tech edged the Jayhawks 20-14. In 1961 Kansas defeated Rice 33-7 in the Bluebonnet Bowl.
Poll results
Question 1. Which bowl game would you prefer KU to play in?
a. Cotton Bowl (Dallas) $ - 12 \% $
b. Sugar Bowl (New Orleans) - 30%
b. Sugar Bowl [New Orleans]
c. Orange Bowl [Miami] - 58%
Question 3. Which bowl game would you be able to attend?
a. Cotton Bowl=15%
b. Sugar Bowl-27%
a. Cotton Bowl-15%
b. Sugar Bowl-27%
c. Orange Bowl—21%
d. Any bowl game—27%
d. Any bowl game-27%
d. Any bowl game----21%
e. No bowl game----10%
c. Orange Bowl-21%
Question 4. Seventy-eight per cent answered this question.
a. Will travel to bowl game by own means—67%.
Question 5. If SUA sponsor a trip, what would be the highest price that you would pay for its package deal?
a. Will travel to bowl game by OWI means 37%
b.Would prefer to go to the bowl game by a SUA-sponsored trip----37%
a. Under $50-21%
b. $50-75-26%
b. $50.75-26%
c. $75.125-35%
d. $125-175-12%
e. $175 and over - 6%
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"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
Thomas quits KU cage team
Rich Thomas, 6-2 senior guard from Dietrich, Ill., was dropped from the KU basketball squad yesterday upon advice from his doctor not to continue because of a chronic foot injury.
Ted Owens announced that Thomas would be retained in the basketball program as an assistant freshman coach. "We're sorry that Rich can't continue as a player in the program, but are happy that he will continue on as a coach," said Owens. "He is a dedicated young man and we feel he will continue to be a
Thomas, a letterman, was used sparingly last season. He appeared in 13 games, scoring 17 points for a 1.2 average.
The difference between last year and this year, according to Kansas' Pepper Rodgers?
"Last year, I was getting phone calls from St. Francis, Kansas. This year, I'm getting them from New York City," he quips.
THE NEW FOLK
Tonight at the Red Dog
8:00 p.m. The New Folk 8:00 p.m.
Adults $2.00 Student $1.50
SET A NEW PACE HERE!
MADAME PANDIT
will speak on:
Search For Unity in a Changing World.
The first woman president of the U.N. General Assembly
★ Former Indian Ambassador to U.S.A., Soviet Union, and Great Britain
Sister of the late prime minister Nehru.
Tuesday, November 19
at 4:30
in the Kansas Union Ballroom
Sponsored by KU International Club
Thursday, November 14, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Speaking of sports
Which bowl will it be?
By Ron Yates, Kansan sports editor
A mild brand of sorcery transpired after KU lost to Oklahoma Saturday.
Just when everyone thought they were seeing oranges—PUFF—all of a sudden they were hit with visions of sugar bowls. When a person is orange-oriented, well, let's face it, sugar can be a letdown—at least for an hour or two. Right now at least, KU appears to be high on the Sugar Bowl list, low on the Orange Bowl list and somewhere in the middle on the Cotton Bowl roster.
Somehow, through wishful thinking by KU football fans or through Orange Bowl scouts who had watched the Jayhawks demolish several opponents until their loss to Oklahoma, many people got the idea that KU was number one on the Orange Bowl invitation list. Perhaps we were.
Orange Bowl officials apparently want two undefeated, high-scoring teams to play in their bowl and right now, Penn State and Georgia fill this bill. Georgia has an added attractiveness to Orange Bowl officials because it is a Southeastern Conference team and could certainly draw thousands of fans into the New Year's day classic. Kansas, on the other hand, is from the midwest and a match-up between Penn State of the East and Kansas might not draw as many southerners who normally make up the majority of the audience in the Orange Bowl.
Current rumor, however, has it that Penn State (7-0) and either Georgia (6-0-2) or Auburn (6-1-1) are now the top choices for an Orange Bowl invitation. Evidently, Kansas (7-1) which supposedly had been the top choice for the Orange Bowl all these weeks, has dropped out of the picture. This is hard to believe.
If Auburn upsets Georgia in their game this Saturday, then Kansas could come back into the picture—but only if KU survives the "Purple Pride" in Manhattan Saturday. There is no guarantee, of course, that KU would even be considered for the Orange Bowl even if the Hawks win and Georgia loses. Auburn is a southern team, and as always, good southern teams apparently are more attractive than good midwestern teams when the final bowl selections are made.
Missouri head coach Dan Devine has indicated he would "walk to the Cotton Bowl" if he had to. Thus, MU appears to have arranged a deal with Cotton Bowl officials, though the "deal" probably hinges- on whether or not the Tigers can beat Oklahoma in Norman this Saturday. If Missouri loses and if KU wins, then the Cotton Bowl may come knocking at the Jayhawk door.
Talking about who is going to what bowl can only be considered small talk at best. The big talk usually comes on the Monday after a school's ninth game. If KU beats K-State, then KU fans could possibly know by Monday, Nov. 18, if we are going to a bowl or not. Most bowls will announce their selections on this date.
If KU wins, then it is highly probable the Jayhawks will receive a bid from a major bowl. "Major" bowls, including the Rose Bowl which always matches a Big Ten team with a Pacific Eight team, are most often considered to be the Orange Bowl, the Cotton Bowl and the Sugar Bowl.
However, there are several "minor" bowls which KU might consider if a major bid does not come.
They are the Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla. (Penn State 17, Florida 17 last year); the Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston, Tex. (Colorado 31, Miami (Fla.) 21 last year); the Liberty Bowl, in Memphis, Tenn. (North Carolina State 14, Georgia 7 last year), and the Sun Bowl in El Paso, Tex. (Texas (El Paso) 14, Mississippi 7 last year).
True, these bowls do not carry the prestige with them that the big bowls do, but if KU does not receive a bid from a major bowl, then the smaller ones should be considered. After all, the team has earned a bowl game this year. If it must be a small bowl, then let it. Whoever we play won't be a pushover.
But perhaps thinking big is more in line at the moment. KU is still high on the Sugar Bowl and Cotton Bowl lists. Kansas may still be high on the Orange Bowl list . . . nobody really knows for sure and won't until Nov. 21.
Right now, Jayhawk fans should be concerned with going to Manhattan en masse to help KU turn the "Purple Pride" pale.
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If the Hawks don't take the game Saturday, it might mean the end of bowl talk until next year.
No matter what happens during the rest of the year, Jayhawk football fans can be proud of the 1968 KU football team and its coaches. It's been a long dry spell between winning teams at KU and somehow one cannot help feeling that with Pepper Rodgers and his staff in the picture, the drought is at an end.
"Ive never seen our team more disappointed with its own play than it was a halftime at Kansas," says Colorado assistant Chet Franklin. "They were determined to do a better job in the second half, and did. If you would have taken a vote at the end of the game on playing a fifth quarter, our people would have been all for it.
V13-4321
Firestone Town & Country
"At Missouri, I'm not so sure we would have voted the same way- we were glad to get the heck out of there," Franklin adds.
STANLEY'S TOWELS
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Photo by
Jon Maxwell
Cheryl Mehan
models an Alvin Duskin Fashion—a Monsanto Acrilan Knit—No ironing, wear dated Sizes 5-13
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Open Till
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Jay SHOPPE
Photo by Jan Maxwell
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VI3-4833
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 14, 1968
Campus interviews
With today's issue, the University Daily Kansan begins a new service to its student readers.
Each Thursday the Kansan will publish a list of job interviews scheduled for the following week in various schools and departments. The interviews will be for both full-time and summer positions.
Dates and information for the interviews will be furnished by the individual school placement offices. Placement offices whose interviews are not included in this week's listing should contact Malcolm Applegate, 105 Flint Hall.
Nielsen conducts career project
The company that can make or break a television program, the A. C. Nielsen Company, is now conducting a project at KU to supply major corporations and companies with information relating to career objectives of prospective employees.
The purpose of the project is to find out why college students choose a certain company or pick a particular job, Dave Wilson, Shawnee Mission senior and on-campus representative for the Nielson Company, said.
Utilizing the placement offices of the colleges and universities involved in the project as well as the services of the campus representatives, the project requires interviewing students to fill out a two-part questionnaire.
The first part of the questionnaire involves the student's perceptions of a company and why he selected a particular company for an interview. It asks questions concerning a student's goals, interests and thoughts prior to actual contact with the company, and is completed by the student at the time he signs up for an interview.
The second part of the questionnaire is completed only if the student receives an employment offer or a plant visit from the company interviewed. The second part re-evaluates the organization once a student has completed the interviewing process
In the long run, the project allows companies to find out if what they're doing is right or wrong, he said, as well as giving students the opportunity to judge a company.
Wilson has set the project up in the business office at Summefield Hall.
Although the program is at present only available to students in the School of Business, Wilson said that if everything goes well, the project may be expanded to include other school at KU.
Interested students should check with the individual placement offices listed for job descriptions, eligibility requirements and to sign up for the interviews.
The list of on-campus interviews for next week includes:
School of Business, 202 Summerfield.
Nov 18 National Bank Examiners—business administration, economics, law National Life Insurance company management; TWA- finance, accounting, operations research, economics, industrial relations, marketing, general business all at graduate level, Waddell & Reed—sales and sales manage-
Nov 19 Ford Motor Co—finance, accounting, business administration, industrial management, economics, data processing & Sells—accounting, data processing
Nov 20, AT&T (Long Lines)—general business, accounting, manage-
ment, sales; General Telephone and Elec-
tronic Services Corp.—general business
sales; General Telephone and Elec-
tronic Services Corp.—general busi-
ness sales; University Graduate School—B.S. in
discipline; Standard Oil Company of
Ohio—business administration, sales
Nov 21. Rural Electrification Administration—accounting, economics,
economics, accounting, auditing; Union Economic Company—business administration
Nov. 22. Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Co.—accounting, auditing, computer technology, management, marketing E. i duPont de Nemours & Co. Inc. analysis; Federal Highway Administration Department of Transportation accounting.
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences,
of San Diego Law School—an
interested student. Educational Placement
Hall, San Diego Hall. Nov. 19. Los
Angeles, Calif.
School of Engineering, 111 Marvin Hall.
Nov. 18: Celanese Corporation—CHE, EE, ME, PE, Math, Phys, Ma-
Oil Company, CE, ME, PE, Cities Service Res. and Dev—CHE, EE,
Engr M., PE, Geol., Math, Physics CHE Graduate students); FMC Corpora-
tion—CHE, EE, ME (Summer Employment); Missouri Highway
Commission Gas Co—CHE, CE, EE, ME, Natural Gas Co—CHE, CE, EE, ME,
PE, Math (Summer Employment); Naval Ship Systems Command—CE,
PE, Math (Summer Marine Highways CE, Summer employment)
Nov. 20 Atlantic-Richfield—CHE,
EE, ME, PE, Math, Phys. Majors
Mortgages Corp—CHE, E. Phys., Me.
Cement Corp—CHE, CE, EE, ME;
Stearns-Roger Corp—Arch. E., CHE,
CE, EE, ME. (Summer Employment);
CHE, CE, EE, Engr. Phys., ME,
Chem. Math. Phys.-Majors; Western Union Telegraph—E.E, Phys., ME,
Math. Phys. Majors, Worthington Corp. Arch. E. E. Phys., ME, EE, PHYS.
Nov. 21 Leo A. Majors D. Arch Co.-21 Leo A. Majors -Arch Co.
Me. Chem. Majors. Minn. Mining &
Manufacturing -CHE Me. Chem. Majors.
Standard Oil of Calif -CHE CE.
Nov. 22—Celotex Corp.-EE, ME;
Link Group-AE, EE, E.Phys, Math.
Phys. Majors; Marvel-Schebler-ME;
Department of the Navy-AE, CHE,
CE, EE, ME; Union Electric-CHE,
EE, ME.
School of Journalism, 105 Flint Hall.
Nov. 19: Western Auto, adv. Nov.
20: Southwestern Bell Telephone—
public relations; Nov. 21: Garnett
Newspapers—news; Nov. 22: USIA
(group conferences), adv. news, rtfv,
public relations.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE
presents
"SONG OF A GOAT"
by
J. P. Clark
Experimental Theatre November 14-23
8:20 p.m.
Tickets available at Murphy Box Office UN 4-3982
Tickets are $1.50 or 75c with KU ID
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Metal Sculpture
Supplies
Tires and Batteries
Credit Cards Accepted If Over 21.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
AUTO WRECKING NEW AND USED PARTS
T.G.E.Y.
T.G.E.Y.
Jose Feliciano
"Feliciano"
Reg. $4.79 Stereo LP
$299
KSU Fine Arts Council presents Michaelmann production of "FUNNY GIRL"
Sat., Nov. 16, 8:15 p.m. Ahern Field House
Tickets-K-State Union Cat's Pause or at door $2.50 & $2.00
K-State Union Kick-off buffeteria from 11 a.m. Park free at the Union, ride the shuttle bus to the game. 50c round trip
One college does more than broaden horizons. It sails to them, and beyond.
Now there's a way for you to know the world around you first-hand. Away to see the things you've read about, and study as you go. The way is a college that uses the Parthenon as a classroom for
a lecture on Greece and illustrates Hong Kong's floating societies with an hour's ride on a harbor sampan.
o know hand.
we u go.
uses the room for
Every year Chapman College's World Campus Afloat takes two groups of 500 students out of their classrooms and opens up the world for them. And you can be one of the 500. Your new campus is the s.s. Ryndam, equipped with modern educational facilities and a fine faculty. You'll have a complete study curriculum as you go. And earn a fully-accredited semester while at sea.
Chapman College is now accepting enrollments for Spring '69 and Fall '69 semesters. Spring '69 circles the world, from Los Angeles through the Orient, India, South Africa, to New York, Fall '69 leaves New York for Europe, the Mediterranean, Africa, South America, ending in Los Angeles.
The world is there. Here's a good way for you to find out what's happening. Send for our catalog with the coupon at right.
Safety Information: The s.s. Ryndam, registered in the Netherlands, meets International Safety Standards for new ships developed in 1948 and meets 1966 fire safety requirements.
XII
WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT
Director of Admissions
Chapman College, Orange, Calif, 92666
Please send your catalog detailing curricula, courses offered, faculty data, admission requirements and any other facts I need to know.
SCHOOL INFORMATION
Mr.
Miss
Mrs.
Last Name First Initial
Name of School
Campus Address Street
City State Zip
Campus Phone ( )
Area Code
Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale
HOME INFORMATION
HOME INFORMATION
Home Address Street
Home Address
City State Zip
Home Phone ( )
Area Code
Until ___ info should be sent to campus ☐ home ☐
approx. date
I am interested in □ Spring Fall □ 19___
□ I would like to talk to a representative of WORLD
CAMPUS AFLOAT.
...
Thursday, November 14, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
...
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
new Kansas are offered to
well students. Welcome to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization" Carduff's Campus Madhouse. 1241 Oread. 1-9
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Sea Blue & Cloud White, black leatherette interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T. buckets, console,
P.S., P.B., air. 383 V8, show
video card.
vinyl top, just $1895 at Jerry Allen
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1963 Volkswagen deluxe sunroof,
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carsice cars, I green, I white, elite
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1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$2,885.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owner miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-see it, see it, drive it, buy it! There's not another like it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1964 MG Midget, white w/ wire wheels, this hard-to-find car yours this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 illa. f1-20
1963 Olds Cutlass 2 dr., spt. cpe., V-8,
auto PS & PB. Excellent mechanical
condition. Call VI 3-1445 after 6:00
p.m. 11-15
Kalimar Instamatic type camera for sale. Uses 126 cartridges, color, black and white. slides. Call Donna. VI 3-0352, after 5:00 p.m. 11-15
1965 Chevelle - For Sale - 283 cu. in.
V-8 engine, blue, 4-door, power steering,
standard transmission. 812.
25th St. Apt. #4 or call VI 2-6881
Magnificent 72-point diamond, Tiffany mounting. Exceptional color, satin finish. Stainless Steel Sail for $1 purchase price or best offer. Inquire Box 3, Flint Hall. 11-18
1964 Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed,
buckeet seats; perfect condition inside
and outside. Must sacrifice. First $3,600 takes. Call Al Alderson VI 3-690. 11-18
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
Be prepared—
get antifreeze—starting service
2434 Laws YL2-1008
--toiletries
2434 Iowa V1 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos. Regular $495.00 models curent to $393.00 Ray Cabinier cabinet tuned music! BACK's 2022 MV3. Mass. St. 11-20
1963 Classic Rambler Station Wagon
automatic 800 V. 240 hp,
turbostrom 1963 V. 1540 V. 240. Rm. 230. 11-18
Must Sacrifice. 270 Bolt Action Rifle,
4X scope and covers, Amount. Contact
Dave, 357 MeColium after 6 p.m. 11-18
Former Harvard and Univ of Minneapolis, teaches the themes, ports, these. VI 3-7287. 12-5
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excelent condition, 4-speed, British racing race factory, tachometer, superstock wheels, 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must sell! Contact: Sam H. Rm #616, McColum, 11-19
6000.
1964 Chevelle V-8, 4-speed, positrac,
recent overhaul on engine and brakes,
excellent condition. VI 3-8165. Also
small, enclosed trailer. 11-19
1959 Triumph TR-3. Including a hard top, convertible top and tonneau cover. A new clutch and transmission assembly, an optional oil filter changed 158 miles ago. Engine recently overhauled a two tires; dual carburizers. Bucket seats and a four-speed. Tach, oil temperature, amps and mileage gauge. Windshield washer. Broken zipper on the tonneau cover. Disc brakes. Rack and pinion steering. Left taillight is cracked. Phone VH-120 to the tonneau's house. Ask for Kay. Test drive 2 to 5. $595.99. It's the $600 excitement. 11-15
Garrard Lab 80 + 54 records Everything from "My Fair Lady" to "Surrealistic Pillow"—Must sell—Ask for Mike Blake at VI 3-1711 11-19
Roberts Tape Recorder, C-90. Professional quality, perfect condition. Original price $450, first $195 takes. Call Jim Belcher, VI 3-1711. 11-19
1968 Corvette Coupe. White with tobacco interior, 427 cu. in., 4-speed, only 8,000 miles. Vall VI 3-8959, after 5 p.m. 11-19
MUST SELL NOW-getting married soon. Gibson Tornbird base plus Ampel Gecenni II amp plus cover, new Shure Unidyne mike plus stand. fuzz tone Tornbird Call Jim Hatthe TR6 with 7922 or VI 3-8819 after five. 11-20
MUST SELL 1965 IMGS S.S., 327.4
speed, P B. P/S excellent condition inside $200 pool paint job. $125
playroom player heater after V 2-1568 after 5.00 p.m. 11-20
'53 Chevy Strap-Mobile, $100 Engine
-prime condition. Body and Interior
-still there. Call Scott Stinson at
VI 3-5770. 11-20
8 inch Full grown Red Piranha. Perfect physical condition. Call Dave Hill or Tim Reynolds at VI 3-7922 11,20
PIRANHA
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St.B-A-B—outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order; $1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; *1* chicken, $1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Closed Sunday and closed Monday. WITH UPGHT FOR THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Peace Center, 107 W. 7th, VI 2-7932, and in the Kansas Union lobby on Tuesdays. 11-19
BUSSES TO PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH start ing Sunday, Nov. 17-
Worship at 9 & 11. Buses leave 9th and Mass. 8:30 & 10:30. Route: GSP Corby Mountain, ENGLAND; GSP Mountain, ENGLAND; Engel Road to Daisy Hill. Sunnyside to Oliver and Natsimith Halls; 19th to Stewart Dr. Return bus after worship. 11-18
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 12-3
Holland, Denmark, Mexico, Italy, Japan, Switzerland, Germany, India, Israel, England, and you can buy over the Internet for you. Come see Haas Hardware, 1029 Mass. 11-19
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages- anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 11-15
Gottstein's 13th street auction sale,
every Sat. night at 7 p.m. We buy
and sell used furniture. Consignments
welcome. Opened Mon. thru Sat 8:00
a.m to 5:30 p.m., formerly Carnegie
Auction. 1301 Delaware.
I V 3-0481. 11-14
HELP WANTED
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tt
Kwiki Car Wash
Part-time for 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. ft
Male on female baby sitter and household helper. Preferably to live in, not necessarily. For two children. Call anytime—Mrs. Owens, VI 2-9372.
612 North 2nd
(Next to Shaw's Auto Service)
North Lawrence
North Lawrence
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
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Personal service
B.Conn. Low, Pet.Ph. V1 3-29
1218 Cann., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Charter Flight Direct To
Newest Place
For
Now Fashion
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
Behind Don's Drive-in—2500 West 6th
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
RANEY DRUG STORES
Leave Municipal Airport 11:00 a.m. Sat., Nov. 23, direct to Columbia. Return after game.
Room for 5 passengers.
Newest Place
THE LIBRARY BUD & COORS ON TAP
Flight Time—50 Min
$20.00 Round Trip
Call V1 2-3329
3 locations to serve your every need
WANTED
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Need household help 8 or 10 hours a week, preferably afternoon $1.50 home. Must have own car. Must be small children. 3-4$385 evenings. 11-19
Male, part time, evenings, apply in person Smacks Drive-in, 1404 W. 23rd, St. Louis
Flight Time----50 Min.
Wish to employ noon-time lunch room play ground supervisor for elementary school in Lawrence 11:30-12:30. Phone VI: 3-4688 or VI 3-2632.
Mon.
LA PETITE
GALERIE
PITCHER
Four Male Students Wish to Rent a large house, preferably within walking distance of campus. Need for secrecy. Please refer Ron Chan Cass VI 2-6600, Room 740. 11-14
Complete prescription depart-
HOURS
8:00-9:00
Need a ride to Washington, D.C., for Thanksgiving vacation. Will help with gas and oil expenses—Can leave. Saxon, 9, at 23rd, at 10:30. Call Bell I: 3-34343. 11-15
KU-MU GAME.
Tickets available with plane reservation.
Female grad. student needs immediate room accommodations. prefer to 1-10 in classroom.
Male roommate wanted to share ground floor of a house. $50 a month.
Call Terry, VI 3-1879 after 9 p.m.
11-18
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
ments and fountain service.
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high fidelity Haynes Ray Audio. VI Center Aft, Eav, Eell. Hirstie Shoping Center 11-22
Fri.
8th ST. SHOE REPAIR
105 E. 8th
Closed Sat. at Noon
EAGLE
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
Themes, Theses. Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI S-2873.
3:00 - 4:00
Experienced in typing thesis, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
writer with pien press. Prompt and
complete reports. Phone VI: MTV
Mrs. E. Wright. 12-9
7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
at
Typist: theses, dissertations, miscellaneous works, by experienced typist, electric pica typewriter. Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440. 11-14
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
RENT A NEW FORD
From
THE STABLES
John Haddock Ford
VI 3-3500
23rd and Alabama
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
Kitchen Opens at Five Daily
FOR RENT
Apartment, furnished, close to campground
Barnett Park, #789. Vibr. 2-103, 929 Kentucky, #24, 11-19
LOST AND FOUND
10 the Scorpion in Astronomy Seat 88.
Happy Nineteenth Birthday from Virginia in 165. 11-15
In case you're interested—Call VI 2-
9595 11-20
Top of tie-lack square design with small diamond in center. **Reward.** Tel. VI 3-4345. Lost between Strong and School of Religion building 11-18
LOST
Lost in bathroom at Union during carnival, one gold Longine watch. Reward offered for return. Mark Law, VI 3-7102. 11-15
5 yr. old Black Labrador Retriever (large black short haired dog) with tan collar in vicinity of W. 28th St. Children's pet. Reward — II 7-2782
REWARD offered for the return of a brown suede wallet, lost Nov. 4. Contact Roberta Kukernik, VI 2-6600, 928. If not leave, home. 11-15
5486.
PERSONAL
Found—Raincoat (38R). Lost—Raincoat (44L or 46L). Both in Kansas Union Bowling Alley after Homecoming game. Call VI 2-3474. 11-20
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation and talent in the joy of worship. Let's plan a concert. Ron Sundbye or Dennis Bowers. First United Methodist VI 3-7134. 11-14
Kustom and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
ANTE PEARL'S CHUCK WAGON
at
THE STABLES
Charcoaled Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers
Suzie Q French Fries
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
snoopy
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact: Barry Arthur
University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
Classified Rules
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
Classified Rates
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 14, 1968
Sinatra blasts L.A.; goes to Palm Springs
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPI)
—Frank Sinatra blasted the city of Los Angeles as an unfit place to live yesterday and said he is selling all his interests there to make his permanent home in Palm Springs.
KU political science Prof. John G. Grumm wrote the Kansas section in the book "Midwest Legislative Politics" recently published by the University of Iowa Institute of Public Affairs.
"I've had it with Los Angeles and Hollywood," the singer said. "The smog is so bad I had to visit my doctor three days a week because my nose and throat are affected by it.
"The air isn't fit to breath, so I'm clearing out. I'm selling my house and everything else I own in Los Angeles."
Prof. Grumm's section is "The Kansas Legislature: Republican Coalition." The other three parts deal with the legislatures of Iowa, Nebraska, and Missouri.
The new book is a collection of papers prepared for the 1966 Mid-America Assembly on State Legislatures in American Politics, held at the University of Iowa.
Professor writes section of book
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Regional Police School. All Day Kansas Union.
Blood Drive 9, a.m.-3.15 p.m. Main Lounge, McCollum Hall
**Speech Exemption Exam.** 3:30 p.m.
200 Learned
*Course: 7:30 p.m.* *Film: Who*
269 Learned
Math Club 7.30 p.m. Film, "Who
Strong?" 118强
Killed Determinants? 119 Strong
Public Reading. 8 : p m Marital
Race Relations. 9 : p m
chen" . Forum Room, Kansas Union
Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Someone's Got a Feeling."
Hope, Serem, etuit
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
Kansas Union
Student Education Association. 7:30 p.m. McCollum Hall.
Social Work Field Instructors Conference All Day, Kansas Union
Regional Police School. All Day
Kyungon Union
Societ
Conference
All Day Kansas Union
KU
Mesodynamic Society
12:45 pm
Missouri State
Midwives
Informal Tours of Spencer Library
1 p.m. Continues throughout after-
ward.
Opening of Kenneth Spencer Research Library. 1:15 p.m. Chancellor W Clarke Wescoe Remarks by Robert Vosser UCLA Librarian
Lecture. 3:30 p.m. Richmond P. Bond, U. of North Carolina "Growth and Change in Early English Press." Suenger Library.
Lecture: 3:30 p.m. Boyd Meffert,
New York in Contemporary Art
Davis, 170 East 49th Street
SUA Film 4, 7 and 9 p.m. "Far
Barn" (10 p.m.) 14, 28 and 36 p.m.
, 303 Bailey (7 & 9 p.m.)
p. 167, 302
International Club Dancing Lesson,
6 p. 210, 211 Robinson
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
7 o.m. 829, Mississippi.
PRESENTATION:
Popular
Adventures of a Young Man Dybe
9:30 p.m.
Folk Dance Club. 7:30 p.m. 173
Robinson
Concert , 5 p.m. Raphael Gillespie
Concert , 6 p.m. Michael Keller
Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m.
Experimental Theatre 8.20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
Sinatra's home is in posh BelAir where the air is generally considered less polluted than in other areas of the city.
"It's all the same," an angry Sinatra said. "I haven't got too many years of singing left and I have to take care of myself. It's a matter of my own personal welfare."
The singer's disenchantment with the City of the Angels was not restricted to its foul air.
"I don't like the city government or the way things are run in Los Angeles," he went on. "There is no public transportation system, and the voters turned down the latest proposal for one.
For
Complete
Automobile
Insurance
Gene Doane
Agency
824 Mass. St.
VI 3-3012
"The opera and symphony go begging for money and the Museum can't get great paintings to put on the wall. The whole city needs cleaning up.
"I'll have to work in Los Angeles—to record, make movies and television shows. But I will live in hotel rooms and get back out here to the desert as soon as I can where a man can get a breath of fresh air. There's no such thing in Los Angeles."
their best to understand the reasons and to see what can be done."
Secret vote in
(Continued from page 1)
Auxiliary Bishop Joseph M. Breitenbeck of Detroit said a similar problem concerned nuns who leave their duties for other pursuits. He said U.S. religious orders were "deeply concerned" about the shrinking number of nuns.
Breitenbeck asked the bishops to give special consideration to spiritual and personal problems of nuns and to urge the Vatican to speed up its present procedure for acting on applications of nuns who seek release from their religious vows.
Shannon said the discussion about marrying priests focused on whether there is a need to change the procedures by which a priest seeks "laicization," or release from his priestly vows.
20% Coed Discount on Frostings and Permanents CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS 10 E. 9th VI 2-7900 No Appointment Necessary
Antitrust suit filed against clothiers
CHICAGO (UPI)—The Justice Department filed an antitrust suit yesterday seeking to force Hart, Schaffner & Marx, a major manufacturer of men's suits, to divest itself of 30 companies acquired in the past four years.
The civil complaint was filed in U.S. District Court here against Hart, Schaffner & Marx, one of the nation's four largest makers of men's suits and the largest manufacturer of high quality suits.
The 30 companies operate 48 men's clothing stores throughout the nation. The government petition said the effect of the purchases may be to substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in violation of antitrust laws.
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Schlesinger analyzes '68 election
FORMER AIDE
Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., special assistant to both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, tells K-State students Hubert Humphrey needed only another 72 hours to win the presidency.
By LINDA LOYD Kansan Staff Writer
Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., historian and former White House aide, in an analysis of the 1968 election yesterday, called for the Johnson administration's outdated New Deal politics to be replaced with the new politics of mass involvement advocated in the presidential campaigns of Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy.
"I cannot help feeling that the old politics' has run its course." Schlesinger told 4,000 persons in K-State's Ahearn Field House. "My guess is that the future lies between the McCarthy and Kennedy ways."
The Pulitzer prize winning author said these conflicting political ideologies could be seen in this year's election which he labeled one of the "oddest" in American history.
"Each major party nominated
the man whom many observers considered the weakest of its available candidates. Neither candidate developed an effective theme, made a memorable speech or uttered a fresh idea."
Intellectual's reaction to the election was disgust, Schlesinger said, while non-intellectuals registered their protests by supporting George Wallace who became a "repository for general resentment and rancor."
"Mr. Nixon waged a campaign of mechanical bansality and evasions intended to minimize the risk of saying anything which might offend anybody. Mr. Humphrey, carrying the burden of an unpopular war, an unpopular president and an unpopular administration, seemed frantic and ineffectual."
Discussing the primary campaigns of Kennedy and McCarthy, Schlesinger said McCarthy forces represented a coalition of the college-educated, emphasizing the limits of presidential
power and the limitation that must be placed on that power.
"Kennedy saw the Democratic party not as a coalition of college graduates but as a link between two Americans—between the educated and the uneducated, between rich and poor America, between black and white."
Schlesinger attributed the closeness of the 1968 election to dissatisfaction of Americans with the administration's Vietnam policy and their dread of a "mechanical" man, Hubert Humphrey, in the White House.
Explaining the necessity of political change, the noted historian said that Roosevelt's New Deal coalition was economically oriented, while today the United States is affluent and the concern lies with the level of education rather than income.
Schlesinger expressed hope that the 1968 election would go down in history as the "last hurrah of the old politics" and
that the major parties would understand political imperatives of the new age.
Schlesinger has won two Pulitzer prizes for his "Age of Roosevelt" and for "A Thousand Days," an account of the administration of the late President John F. Kennedy.
Landon receives professorship
Former Kansas Governor and 1936 presidential nominee, Alfred M. Landon of Topeka, was named distinguished professor of political science at Kansas State University yesterday.
Landon's appointment by the Board of Regents was announced in Manhattan at K-State's Landon lecture of public issues featuring former White House aide Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
N. Viet accuse U.S.
PARIS-North Vietnam today accused the United States of breaking its word on war negotiations. It also said charges of Communist violations of Vietnam's Demilitarized Zone (DMZY) were a "maneuver designed to hide American policy of aggression."
Nguyen Thanh Le, chief spokesman for the Hanoi delegation here, told a news conference the United States had agreed to separate Vict Cong and North Vietnamese delegations at planned talks here.
Soviet probe returning
MOSCOW—The Soviet unmanned lunar probe spacecraft Zond 6 streaked toward a return to earth today, repeating the spectacular round-the-moon trip made by Russia's Zond 5 spaceship last September.
Zond 6 looped the moon Thursday and conducted "studies of physical characteristics in the near-lunar area," the Soviet news agency Tass said.
Bombers hit camps
SAIGON-U.S. Air Force divebombers and allied artillery today blasted two North Vietnamese camps in Vietnam's Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), killing 34 Communists and triggering 12 explosions in guerrilla fuel and ammunition stockpiles.
Unofficially, the new Communist supply camps were the 11th and 12th violations of a Hanoi agreement that it would not "abuse" the zone if the United States would stop the bombing of North Vietnam.
1
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year. No.44 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, November 15, 1968
Prof charges bias
By FRED PARRIS Kansan Staff Writer
Pope Paul, Catholic and Jewish relief agencies, and the major news-gathering organizations, including AP and UPI, have been biased against the Nigerians in the Biafran conflict, Joel Adedeji, a visiting professor at KU, charged yesterday.
Adedeji, a Nigerian, made his accusations at a Biafra forum sponsored by the International Club.
Father Brendan Downey, pastor of KU's Catholic students and a supporter of last month's Biafra Vigil and Teach-In, was in the audience and swiftly responded to Adedei.
"This is undoubtedly true," he replied to the Nigerian's charge. "The Pope is undoubtedly partisan towards those who are starving."
The forum began with ten-minute
Adedeji was one of three featured speakers who took part in the forum. The others were Hyacinth Ubamadu, a Biafran student, and Gerald Brown, a U.M.K.C. instructor who was living in Nigeria when the war began.
statements by each of the participants. Each African voiced his own country's stand and Brown gave the views of a foreign observer.
The Nigerians heatedly disputed many of the remarks by Ubamadu, the Biafran, and accused him of ignorance, emotionalism, provincialism, and distorting the facts. Ubamadu, in turn, hurled counter-charges at his accusers.
In his earlier formal statement, Ubamadu had said the Nigerian troops had ravaged the Biafran university town of Onitsha, leveling every school building and burning the library. He also charged the government in the largely Moslem Northern region with systematically attempting to massacre Ibo Biafran tribesmen.
Adedeji hit the Bifrans equally hard, charging they had used monies intended for refugee resettlement to buy arms.
"Biafa is the dream of an elite who want to form an empire," he charged. "They know that with propaganda they can persuade others to their point of view."
Brown, "middle man" in the discussion, attempted to reconcile some of the wildly contrasting statements made by the other two forum speakers. Many Ibos had been killed in the North, he said, but the attacks had not been supported by the local governments. Quite to the contrary, efforts were made to get the Ibos out of the territory safely. The troops who slaughtered the Iboses were mutineers who had already slain their non-Ibo officers, he said.
Weather
Cloudy and cool with northerly winds 10 to 20 mph today. Partly cloudy and a little cooler tonight. Becoming mostly cloudy with no important temperature change Saturday. High today near 40. Low tonight around 30. Precipitation probabilities 10 per cent today, 10 per cent tonight, 20 per cent Saturday.
Pershing Riflemen, students give blood
The KU campus Blood Drive ended yesterday with a march to donate by 16 Pershing Rifflemen from the Military Science Building to McCollum Hall lounge.
Mrs. George Byers, executive chairman of the drive, said although she was somewhat disappointed with the results, the Red Cross is glad to get any blood it can.
The drive ended well short of the goal of 600 pints of blood. Only about 350 students donated blood to the Red Cross in the three days that tables were set up in McColum.
She said some students were willing to donate but were rejected for minor medical reasons. Recent vaccinations or diseases were common reasons for rejections. If blood contains any "impurities" from these causes, both the donor's and the recipient's health may be impaired, Mrs. Byers said.
Several Pershing Rifflemen were rejected because they recently took smallpox vaccinations for next summer's camp. The Pershing Rifles, a tri-service honorary military fraternity, hoped to win the award for the greatest participation by a fraternity.
The blood drive will return to campus in February, but Mrs. Byers urged students to donate at the Community Building here in Lawrence also.
A
15
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 15, 1968
HANNA KNABER
History museum has old-fashioned store
An historic general store motif, complete with rows of jars appearing to contain multicolored sweets which are actually rocks, highlights a new shop which opens Monday on the main floor of the KU Natural History Museum.
The shop, a subsidiary of the Kansas Union Book Store, offers materials intended to stimulate the interest of children and adults in the natural sciences and history, a museum official said.
To visitors, the brick red tile flooring, the shuttered and stained-glass windows, the heavy wooden counter and the hobnail lamps dangling from the beamed and paneled ceiling are faintly reminiscent of an old-fashioned general store.
Items available at the shop include books, pamphlets and
museum publications on plant, animal, rock and mineral studies, and rock and fossil specimens.
it offers handicraft and folk art collected around the world, with emphasis on crafts from North and South America, and original works and reproductions of such items as Indian jewelry, ceramics, shoulder bags, wall hangings and hand-carved toys.
Kill the 'Cats,Hawk it to 'em
Money from the shop will go to the expansion of the public education and public service program of the museum.
The museum also plans to expand and modernize facilities already available there.
Shop hours will be 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Monday through Saturday, and 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sundays.
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Sue Kenney tries for Grange title
Sue Kenney, Ozake freshman and recently selected Kansas State Grange Princess, will know tomorrow night whether or not she has been chosen to succeed another KU student, Lynn Aaron, Carbondale sophomore, last year's National Grange Princess.
Miss Kenney, who competed in local and county contests before winning the state contest in Pittsburgh last month, is facing national competition this week at the National Grange Session in Peoria, Ill.
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Hungry People Come to Sandy's
Hamburgers Cheeseburgers Hot Cherry and Apple Pies
Pork Tenderloins
French Fries
Pepsi, Root Beer, Dr. Pepper
Milk Shakes Vanilla, Chocolate, Strawberry
Sandy's
2120 West 9th VI 2-2930
Speedy Service Quality Food
Friday, November 15, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
ASC meets bi-weekly Youths at CSU protest until code is passed
All-Student Council (ASC) will meet every other week, instead of weekly until the University Senate passes its version of the proposed Senate Code.
Rick von Ende, Abilene, Texas graduate student and ASC chairman said:
"The University Senate began with the same Senate Code as did the ASC. Members of the University Senate are making amendments to the code, just as ASC members did. After the University Senate's code has been completed, a compromise committee of ASC members and University Senate members will be formed.
"This committee will work out the differences between the two amended codes and then the committees will relate the results to their respective group."
Von Ende said the USC related each amendment as passed by the Council to the University Senate so the Senate could know what the ASC was doing.
Passage of the final revision of the Senate Code will -probably take place at the next University Senate meeting, according to Dr. Ambrose Saricks, a member of the University Senate.
"I think we are coming along pretty well on the Senate Code. We will be having a meeting next Friday afternoon. We have a drafting committee that is already working on the final form of the Code," Saricks said.
Tape recorder stolen; no signs of force
A $241 tape recorder was stolen Monday afternoon or Tuesday morning from a room in the Military Science Building, the Traffic and Security Office reported today. Officials said there was no evidence of forceable entry into the room.
Ring making at its loveliest in new
"What will happen is that we will probably complete all of our amendments to the Senate Code at the meeting, and the drafting committee will then take another week to complete the final revision of the Code. After this is completed we will probably take one more week to present the completed Code to the members of the Senate," he said.
Saricks said those members on the drafting committee will probably be on the joint committee with members of the ASC to work out the differences in the two codes.
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The youths, many of them students at the school, put up no resistance to the officers. The demonstrators, four of them women, said they were protesting the appearance on campus of a Dow Chemical recruiter and a
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Damage was mainly confined to desks, chairs and other items that were used as the makeshift barricades.
Which could grind out up to 23 miles on one gallon of gas. And take in over 176 cubic feet of whatever you wanted to carry.
Prediction: people who buy Volkswagen Station Wagons will have it soft in 1968.
For the last 17 years, Volkswagen has been making a big, tough, never-say-die station wagon.
Yet in spite of all that, certain people have been avoiding the VW Station Wagon. There's no need to mention names. You know who you are.
Okay, all you people. Get ready for a surprise. We have taken the VW Station Wagon and padded the stuffing out of it. We've put extra padding on the armrests, the dash, the front of the ash tray, even the window crank knobs. And if our wagon can't exactly be called a bed of roses even now, it can at least be called a seat of them. (We went somewhat crazy with padding in that particular area.)
And we know why you've been avoiding our wagon. Because driving it was something of a big, tough, never-say-die experience. The fact is, our wagon lacked luxury.
Then we put in 6 ventilation ducts all over. (You'll be able to give yourself airs if you own a new VW wagon.)
Okay, all you people. Get ready for a surprise.
And with all of that, the new bus for softies still has the old bus' hardy virtues.
So 1968 should be a good year for all you people who love your comfort. You've been going without the Volkswagen Station Wagon's wonderful gas mileage and storage capacity for a long time.
But you don't have to deny yourselves anymore.
We also added a whole new suspension system underneath. (It'll be easy come, easy go- all the way.)
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Burns B. Crookston, dean of students, said he had telephone contact with the group before the police removed the barricades and went in.
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Dow Chemical has been a target of criticism on campus because it supplies napalm for use in bombs.
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 15, 1968
Distrust hurts charity
Political campaign contributions, tax statements and general frustration could all be reasons for the goal shortage in the United Fund drive, Jack Landreth, Fund chairman, said earlier this week.
However, he admitted that his committee chairman had estimated 80 per cent of the refusals they received were attributed to the Ballard Center Fund.
Many cited a distaste for the Center's director, Leonard Harrison's views on black power and his arrest last month in Wichita on charges of assault and kidnapping as a reason not to contribute to the Fund.
For some, this was just an excuse not to give, Landreth said. Others seemed convinced Harrison might use United Fund money to further black power causes instead of helping the underprivileged.
The United Fund has never been organized to solicit from students although a few students volunteered this year to collect donations from some of the residence halls.
The Fund's goal was originally set at $129,956 but yesterday Landreth announced the goal had been reduced to $11,000. "Perhaps the goal was just too high," he said. But last year the Lawrence community broke all previous records with $128,404.
Landreth touched a now familiar card when he said that citizens of Lawrence as well as the rest of the country suffer from a general frustration this year.
But it's sad that the frustration has to be vented upon a charitable fund.
The refusal of citizens to contribute at all to the Fund because of suspicions about the honesty of Leonard Harrison is an especially discouraging aspect of the frustration.
The Ballard Center, located in North Lawrence, is a community center for the poorer, predominantly black section of town. It especially benefits children and youth with Head Start programs for pre-school youngsters, books and activities for older children and equipment such as typewriters for self-help and tutoring for older students. The center is a self-help program designed to educate and improve the underprivileged of Lawrence.
It is truly disheartening that so many Lawrence citizens distrust their fellow men so intensely that they will bypass all the beneficial aspects of the Ballard Center to concentrate on prejudice against its director. Besides this, because of one prejudice they have refused to donate to any of the other charitable organizations.
This year's fund drive has displayed the surlish temper evident in not only Lawrence citizens but of much of the nation.
"Unless we can be absolutely sure our money is used just for what we deem proper, we won't give at all." seems to be the attitude.
"Play ball our way or not at all," the nation seems to be saving.
The United Fund is over for this year. For charity's sake, hopefully the temper of the times will improve by next year.
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
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'Goat' similar to Greek tragedy
THE STATUS CIVILIZATION, by Robert Sheckley (Dell, 60 cents)—No, children, this is not a new sociological attack on American society. It's science fiction, about an earth of the future when society ejects all who fail to conform. Hmmm. Maybe it IS an attack on American society.
by LINDA FABRY
Viewing the Experimental Theatre's production of "Song of a Goat," an African drama, is a rewarding and thought-provoking experience, regardless of how much you know about theater. For even those of us who have been frequently exposed to this literary form, find that when it comes to African drama, we are as "illiterate" as the person who never goes to see a play.
"Song of a Goat" is not "foreign" to an American audience as one might expect it to be. Although the culture and myths of African society seem strange and different to us, we find something very familiar in the form and structure of this drama. It is truly reminiscent of Greek drama, of works such as "The Oedipus Cycle" and "The Orestia," two surviving Greek trilogies. Like "Oedipus," "Song of a Goat" has an oracle, a crippled one who is similar to the blind seer in "Oedipus." And "Song of a Goat" also has a prophetess, like the tragic Cassandra in "The Orestia" who no one will listen to because they think she is mad. And also like Greek drama, in "Song of a Goat," the audience is told of violence by a narrator, but never witnesses it. Catharsis, the purging of emotions which the Greeks sought, is also the end result of "Song of a Goat."
"Song of a Goat" is indeed a tragedy after the Greek tradition. It is the story of Zifa, a fisherman left impotent after the birth of his first child, who is hopelessly torn between the old values and customs of his society and the new ones just beginning to emerge.
Kansan Movie Review
Stumbling ending ruins 'Game'
by SCOTT NUNLEY
When "The Game Is Over" is good, it is very rich in the lush imagery of physical love. But when "The Game Is Over" is bad, it is a crashing bore.
Roger Vadim's latest hymn to his new wife, Jane Fonda, concerns an oedipal romance in which blood proves thicker than lust. "Phaedra" exploited this classic triangle for tragic power, but in Vadim's mechanized passion the truly Greek blast of confrontation is reduced to the rusty squeal of giant gears slowly coming to a corrupted stop.
Vadim's first hurdle was his source, Emile Zola's "La Curee," from which he unfortunately retained the depressingly dehumanized ideology of the Determinist. With his actors in the grip of this mechanical philosophy, it is only surprising that Vadim achieved any feeling of life and spontaneity at all.
The second hurdle surgically separated Vadim's Oedipus from the more memorable tragedies. Without an important relationship between the husband and the wife, in a blaise modern atmosphere, the "incest" of stepmother and son is woefully pale. Instead of fire, we have innocent fun. Instead of furv. calculation.
The aristocratic father plays baron with his family, demanding meaningless obedience from them and drilling into the rialistic kisses of his son the unshakeable sense of Family Duty.
The student son is busy playing at life, masquerading in various disguises and hiding behind facades of pop art and neo-Orientalism. (Unfortunately, he begins to include his attractive stepmother into the exuberant play activity.)
The mother is robbed of even the dignity of degradation: her affair with her stepson is only
The coldly feudal Baron cannot dismiss his wife's infidelity or endanger his only heir. The father is a dehumanized victim of his own nature, all those precisely-cracked breakfast eggs, and the conclusion of "The Game Is Over" becomes a tired victim of this naturalistic predictability.
When all this beautifully studied, and actually rather harmless, activity begins to grow too serious, the "Game" draws to a close. Sadly, the better four-fifths of the film closes with it.
At this point the audience has been given enough data concerning the human machine at work here to accurately predict its next set of functions.
But if these hurdles of philosophy and passion trip up the movie, they certainly do nothing to detract from another outstanding example of Claude Renoir's brilliantly lush camera work. Or of the outstanding performances from the entire cast.
Slowing, slowing, slowing, the long anti-climax "winds its inexorable way" to its unhappily unavoidable conclusion.
another in a series of casual adulteries. Her soul (like her fair-fair skin) is not only still spotless but intrinsically un-spottable.
In fact, Vadim even manages to rescue bits of his dreary ending with exciting visual images of costumed dancers and the lonely collapse of the wife.
Vadim's final point is clear, of course. "Games" that start out harmlessly enough soon end and more serious relationships emerge from the social chaos of the innocently broken rules.
"The Game Is Over" is generally a beautiful evening's entertainment—but not a great film in its crippled stumbling to a creaky halt.
In the old society a man's wealth was measured by the number of children his wife bore and he was an outcast if he had only a few children or none at all. And, according to the old ways, if a man was impotent, as we know Zifa is, it was acceptable for him to let his wife sleep with another man just to have a child.
The oracle, spouting the mores of the old society, suggests to Zifa that he do this, but Zifa cannot accept it. And when his wife commits adultery with his brother Tonya, Zifa tries to kill his brother. However, before he can kill him, Tonya hangs himself much like Jocasta in "Oedipus," and Zifa, in the manner of a true Aristotelian tragic hero, also commits suicide. Thus there is a catharsis for the audience just like there is in classical (Greek) drama.
Judging the performance of the all-Negro cast of "Song of a Goat" is a difficult job for any critic, mainly because the majority of the cast are inexperienced actors who have had their first and most likely their last appearance on the University stage. Unfortunately one of the sad things about theatre, especially college theatre, is that it trains few Negro actors. Theatre at the University of Kansas is still "lily white" except for maybe one "black" show a year. At any rate, most of the cast were able to overcome their inexperience and present rather good performances.
Horace Bond, an actor with great potential, was excellent as Zifa. In fact, watching Bond, one couldn't help thinking that he was too good for the rest of the cast. Bond had one tremendous hurdle to overcome in the person of Janet Williams who played his wife Ebiere. Miss Williams was terribly amateurish and high-schoolish, making it very difficult for Bond, as well as the other cast members, to react to her. Veda Monday, as Orukorere, the prophetess turned in a quite remarkable performance considering she had never acted before. At times she was a bit "too much," however, overacting is much easier for a director to correct than its opposite. And Dvegnaude Browne, as Zifa's brother, turned in a thoughtful and moving performance.
All in all, "Song of a Goat" is an interesting theatrical experience. It was a bit boring at times, especially the beginning, but it is the kind of play that should be seen just because it is different. Just as music is a common language for the people of the world, one realizes that theatre is too.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kanam Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
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. Attendance packages are 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 Stan
News Adviser George Richardson
Advertising Adviser Mel Adams
Managing Editor Marc 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 Joanna Wiebe
Editorial Editor Alison Steimel
Editorial Assistant Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Ron Valets
Assistant Sports Editor Bob Kearney
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Sharon Wooden
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCrerey, Don Westhaus, Sandy
Zahradnik, Marilyn Zook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager Kayden Sanders
Promotion Pam Flaton
Circulation Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Classified Manager Barry Arthur
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Friday, November 15, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Nigerian 'Song of a Goat' opens with all black cast
Last night a near-capacity crowd viewed the opening of an all-black cast in "Song of a Goat."
The Nigerian drama, by J. P. Clark, was presented in the Experimental Theatre. It is directed by guest Nigerian professor, Joel Adedeji.
"Song of a Goat" tells the tragic story of a fisherman and ship pilot, Zifa, who finds himself caught in conflict with tradition. Zifa, portrayed by Horace Bond, Lawrence graduate student, becomes impatient after the birth of his first child, a son. He feels it is a temporary condition related to the ebb and flow of the tides.
The conflict comes sharply into focus, however, when a masseur suggests to Zifa's wife, Ebiere, played by Janet William, Kansas City senior, that an incestuous relationship with Zifa's younger brother Tonya would remedy the situation.
Though their small community would find such a solution completely acceptable, the idea repulses both Ebiere and Zifa. Traditional society recognizes individuals only as members of a group and therefore regards a wife as wife of the whole clan. But Zifa's life on the River Niger and contact with passengers from other areas have made him think as an individual and influence his wife's views.
Although the drama is a tragedy, the audience found humor
—On the KU scene—
CONCERT-Ralph Kirkpatrick, harpsichordist. 8 p.m. tonight in University Theatre.
SPECIAL FILM SERIES-Six French directors present "Far from Vietnam," tonight at 7 and 9 in 303 Bailey.
RED DOG INN-Tonight featuring the Red Dogs and Saturday night. the Young Raiders.
VARSITY THEATER—"The Game is Over," starring Jane Fonda.
GRANADA THEATER—Kirk Douglas staring in "A Lovely Way to Die."
SUNSET DRIVE-IN THEATER "Berserk" starring Joan Crawford, and "Torture Garden."
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
1—"If He Hollers, Let Him Go."
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
2-Alan Arkin starring in "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter."
HILLCREST THEATER NO. 3—Ingmar Berman's "Hour of the Wolf."
MR. YUK-This weekend featuring the Glass of Sherry.
EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE
—"Song of a Goat," at 8:20 p.m., Nov 14 to 23.
MUSEUM OF ART-Modern Art from Midwestern Collections.
SUA POPULAR FILM-James Stewart starring in "Shenandoah," at 7 and 9 p.m. tonight, Saturday and Sunday in Dyche Auditorium.
HUMANITIES LECTURE SERIES-Rev. Walter J. Ong speaking on "The End of the Age of Literacy," at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA-Fall '68 concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in University Theatre.
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6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 15, 1968
Cleveland QB Nelsen visits ex-teammates
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Perhaps the trade that sent quarterback Bill Nelsen from Pittsburgh to Cleveland has to play second fiddle to the one that sent Earl Morrall from New York to Baltimore. But from the Brown's point of view, the acquisition of Nelsen could be the deal of the Century.
Cleveland, which meets the Steelers in Pittsburgh Sunday, leads the National Football League's Century Division by one-half game, and much of the credit belongs to Nelsen.
The former Southern California star, who came to the Brown's in a trade that sent quarterback Dick Shiner to Pittsburgh, won the starting job from Frank Ryan after Cleveland lost two of its first three games, and has led the Brown's to a 5-1 mark since becoming No. 1.
Nelsen's first start was against his former teammates, and he
led the Brownys to a 31-24 victory. In six games, the 27-year-old Nelsen has completed 90 of 175 passes for 1,306 yards and 13 touchdowns, eighth-best in the NFL.
In other action Sunday, the Colts are 12 points over St. Louis at Baltimore, Minnesota is two over the Lions at Detroit, Los Angeles is six over the 49-ers at San Francisco.
The Packers are two touchdowns over New Orleans at Milwaukee, Atlanta is at Chicago, the Giants are 14 over winless Philadelphia at New York, and Dallas is 13 over the Redskins at Washington.
Dallas (7-2) has never been able to sweep a season series from Washington (4-5) but may have a chance if Redskins quarterback Sonny Jurgensen can't play because of his broken ribs. However, Dallas quarterback Don Meredith is also hurting.
P.E. instructor organizes women's gymnastics team
A women's gymnastic team is being organized at KU with tentative meets planned with the University of Missouri and the Kansas State Teachers College in Emporia.
Mrs. Anise Cattlett, women's physical education instructor, announced plans for organizing
the new team. She said tryouts for the team would be at 4:30 p.m., Nov. 20th and 21st in Robinson Gymnasium.
In her announcement, Mrs. Catlett said the five events which would be open for tryouts are: uneven parallel, vaulting, balance beam, free exercise and tumbling.
Soccer club vs. K-State here Sunday
Intra-state rival K-State will be the KU Soccer Club opponent Sunday, in what students hope will be a weekend of Wildcat defeats.
The team already beat K-State, 2-0, earlier in the season. Freezing temperatures caused the cancellation of last Sunday's game against Missouri at Columbia.
The game will start at 2 p.m. in the soccer field behind Robinson Gymnasium.
Mike Radakovitz, one of the three American players in the team, said he hoped students would go watch the soccer game. "There was a large crowd at K-State, which adds enthusiasm to the game," he added.
Many players have dropped the team because "they saw no glory or felt any recognition in playing." They practiced hard and then only a few people went to the games, explained Fred Mandel, player-coach from France.
The squad has a 3-1 record, having lost their first game, to St. Benedict's College without their ace scorer Guy Darlan, Central Africa Republic. They defeated Missouri (8-2), Kansas City Metro (16-0), and K-State.
Starting lineup: forwards Luis Ballivan, Guy Darlan, Fidale Waura and Mandel; halfbacks Herve Pensee and Tom Purcell; fullbacks Radakovitz, Gunther Pfister, Christian Kloesel and Carl Rinhardt; and goalie Jose Fonseca.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Jayhawk Jottings
KU
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
KANSAS STATE'S frustrating football saga invites ribbing from Jayhawk devotees. The Wildcats, over the past dozen years, have endured a 20-97-2 record. "Lose" received ho-hum acceptance, but now it's the driest four-leter word in Vince Gibson's vocabulary.
PURPLE PRIDE, the Gibson-copyrighted byword, has become a mania as much as a study in futility. Vince and his "We gonna win!" cry brought K-State boosters (there were a few die-hards) out of the woodwork in 1967. And the Wildcats defeated Colorado State, a football non-entity, in the '67 opener before proceeding to lose nine straight games.
"WILL BE" is now the medicine that sustains K-State followers. Its sophomore-dominated club "will be" the Big Eight kings of the future. Its freshmen, rated the best anywhere by pro scouts, "will be" on the bandwagon to success. Recruiting "will be" aided significantly by the finest athletic dormitory in the country—now more noteworthy for its purple carpeting than the football players it houses. Its new 35,000-seat stadium, scooped out of the Kansas farmlands, "will be" an added recruiting boost—though now it resembles a scene from "Hud" to see the Wildcats file into the pit for another massacre.
FLATTENED by Missouri in its last home appearance (56-20). Vince and his Wildcats offered such impressions three weeks ago. My apologies, Kansas State. Three weeks ago, such observations might have been appropriate. But now it's time to say something nice about our Kaw brethren.
TO A DRIZZLE—drenched Oklahoma crowd, the Wildcats almost broke those losing shackles. It was closer than the final 35-20 count—the Sooners scored on the game's final play after K-State's last-minute gamble. Then last week, one of those sophomores engineered a stunning 12-0 upset of Nebraska. Quarterback Lynn Dickey completed 15 of 28 passes for 217 yards, hiking his season total to 1116 yards on 88 of 104 passes. Another sophomore, Max Arreguin, boomed a record 50-yard field goal along with a 28-yarder.
OF GRAPE JUICE and glue-fingered pass receivers—that's the K-State story. Split end Dave Jones holds conference records for pass receptions and yardage (115 for 1,724 yards), including 34 catches for 442 yards this fall. Speedster Mack Herron, a :09.3 juco transfer sought by 170 schools, has been electrifying with 29 receptions for 482 yards. Of his seven touchdowns, two were on kickoff returns of 99 and 100 yards. Two lettermen and seven sophomores comprise the defensive unit, along with two juco transfers—middle guard John Stucky, the 220-pounder who leads the club with 79 tackles, and 225-pound end Manuel Barrera, who has thrown opposing backs 11 times for 61 yards in losses.
SATURDAY, the Wildcats hope to stun bowl-conscious KU at Manhattan. Nothing would better climax K-State's climb to football respectability. "It's hard to start from the bottom," says Oklahoma Coach Chuck Fairbanks of Gibson. "You can't just wave a magic wand. It takes years of hard work and recruiting, and he's made a lot of progress." K-State was still in contention in the fourth quarter in six games last year, and the 'Cats have a respectable 3-5-1 mark this night. Nobody is looking down their noses at Vince's boys anymore.
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31 The contact is open to all residents of the United States except the employees and their immediate family members. Residents verifying agencies and the judging organization Contact is subject to application Federal, State and local laws.
With a record of six straight victories, including the Big Eight championship, the KU cross country team travels to Chicago where they will compete in the Central Collegiate championships tomorrow.
"For example, Bowling Green, Kent State, Ohio U., Toledo and Western Michigan will be there from the Mid-America conference—and that conference is the best in cross country in the United States," Timmons explained.
Track coach Bob Timmons believes it will be a very tough meet. "I don't know very much about the other teams, but most of the power areas in cross country will be competing," Timmons said.
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Defending team champion is Miami (Ohio). KU took seventh place last year, running behind Miami (Ohio), Western Michigan, Notre Dame, DePaul, Kent State and Drake.
KU harriers to Chicago
Kent State's Sam Bear, last year's individual winner, graduated. But back will be teammate Ed Norris, who placed second with an identical time. Top Jayhawk was Roger Kathol, 28th.
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The harriers will run five miles around a figure 8 course in Washington Park, starting at 10:30 a.m.
Because of the tough competition the Jayhawks will face, Timmons said it made the runners "very anxious to compete."
Though the KU squad has only participated once in a meet more than five miles long-at
(See Harriers page 12)
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 15, 1968
It was a sultry day..
The fireflies gone now the trees low bending with the weight of winter rain I listen for the sound of winters past The years I walked the rainy streets And filtered through the parks in search of music people. Creeping home to bed alone to be with imaginary lovers and hear the sound of Eden ringing in my young ears.
-Rod McKuen
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Friday, November 15, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
KU geologists study water problems
Two new publications issued by the State Geological Survey at the University of Kansas report irrigation can damage water and land resources, depending on where and how the irrigating is done.
"Ground Water in the Republican River Area, Cloud, Jewell, and Republic Counties," and "Water Level Changes in Grant and Stanton Counties, Kansas, 1939-1968," include many geological details involved in finding and using water.
Stuart W. Fader, author of the Republican River study, wrote that surface water irrigation "has raised the water level in some of the upland areas causing flooding of pump pits at well sites and waterlogging of fields."
The declining water table in Grant and Stanton counties of western Kansas is the subject of the second publication. Authors of "Water Level Changes in Grant and Stanton Counties, Kansas, 1939-1968" are John D. Winslow, Harold E. McGovern and Harris L. Mackey.
Fader, Winslow and McGovern
Resources, Kansas State Board of Agriculture.
This publication, third in a series of short reports on the subject, presented data indicating the seriousness of the water-supply problem. It provided a preview of conditions that may develop in other areas of western Kansas as the use of ground water for irrigation expands.
Coffee forum features Jesuit priest, professor
The Rev. Walter J. Ong, a Jesuit priest and professor of English at St. Louis University, will speak at the SUA Coffee Forum on "Intellectual Freedom and Religious Commitment," at 2:30 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
Father Ong is coming to KU to give a Humanities Series lecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Both publications may be ordered from the State Geological Survey headquarters at KU.
are members of the Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, working in cooperation with the state survey. Mackey represents the Division of Water
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KANSAS
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 15, 1968
Teacher -composer finds work stimulating
By MIKE SHEARER Kansan Staff Writer
Often creativity suffocates when an artist also has a profession.
John Pozdro, chairman of the Department of Music Theory and Composition, finds his position with the School of Fine Arts stimulates him as an artist.
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"Some people can't be creative with classroom work to do," Pozdro said. But for him, "teaching clarifies ideas."
Pozdro received his third award from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) this month. He has been able to compose music of significance despite his many obligations as teacher and administrator.
At 45, Pozdro said he is writing more music than ever before. He composes during "blocks of time" in his rigorous schedule.
While teaching is his first responsibility, he said, he finds he can work quite creatively during bits of freedom snatched from committee meetings and from duties as instructor and administrator.
"Weeks will go by sometimes," he said, "before I am in the right frame of mind."
While some of his friends can
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compose on a schedule such as from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m., Pozdro said. "I can't force it."
When he finds "blocks of time," his schedule is clear and his mind is in the right frame, Pozdro works rapidly. In 1968, he has composed "Music for a Youth Symphony," "Etude for a String Quartet" and "March" (piano).
He is now working on "Sonata No. IV for Piano" which he plans to complete in 1969.
"I stick with the thing I've been doing since I started," Pozdro said. "But I don't know where I'll be 10 or 20 years from now."
He said he will not be controlled by fads in music. While many of the modern trends appeal to him, he said he finds there are just as many people today "turning out trash as ever."
Some modern composers have done some exciting things with electronic music and tapes, he said. Music is not valuable to him, though, just because of its vehicle.
He earned bachelor's and master's degrees in composition from Northwestern University and was awarded a Ph.D. in
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composition from the Eastman School of Music in 1958.
His second and third piano sonatas have been recorded by a recording company in Argentina.
and his teaching.
Since coming to KU in 1950, Pozdro has received various awards for both his composing
What does he think about his earlier works?
"Some of it I like just as much as what I'm doing now . . . but one has to be writing better music at the age of 45 than at 27," he said.
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Friday, November 15, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
newspaper announcements are served
to all students who regard to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Sea Blue & Cloud White. black leathertec interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
NOW UNSAL Revised, coauthored 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse. 1241 Oread. 1-9
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T., buckets, console,
P.S., P.B., air, B38, V85 shows
in vinyl top, just $1895 under Jerry Allen
Volkswagen, 2522 lowa 11-20
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$2,588.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-miles owner, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr-50,000 mile warranty, 72,000 miles by by! There's not another like it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1963 Volkswagon deluxe sunroof, choice of 2. both 100% guaranteed, nice cars, I green, white elec. prices $95 at Jerry Allen Volkswagen 2522 Iowa 11-20
1964 MG Midget, white w. wire wheels, this hard-to-find car youars this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa 11-20
1963 Olds Cutlass 2 dr. spc., spt. V-8.
auto PS & PB. Excellent mechanical condition. Call VI 3-1445 after 6:00 p.m.
p.m. 11-15
Kalimar Instastic type camera for sale. Uses 126 cartridges, color, black and white. slides. Call Donna. VI 3-0352, after 5:00 p.m. 11-15
Magnificent 72-point diamond. Tiffany mounting. Exceptional color. $18,000. Sell for $14,995 purchase price or best offer. Inquire Box 3, Flint Hall. 11-18
1964 Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed, bucket seats, perfect condition inside and out. Right awning must sacrifice. Fuel $200 takes Al Alderson, VI 3-6960. 11-18
MUST SELL NOW—getting married soon. Gibson Thunderbird base plus Ampeg Genuin III Jazz guide plus Ampeg Genuin III plus cover, new Shure Undyne mike plus stand, fuzz tone kite, FX cable Call Jim Hafted at VI 3-7922 or VI 3-8819 after five.
20% Coed Discount
No Appointment Necessary
Frostings and Permanents
CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS
10 E. 9th VI 2-7900
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Lower Level
GOODYEAR TIRES
Passenger Tires 125% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Complete Service Service
Brake Adjustment 98c
Grease Job $1.50
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment.
1963 Classic Rambler Station Wagon
Roadster 255, Mint/New. $1400. Rm. 225
1964 Classic Rambler Station Wagon
Roadster 255, Mint/New. $1400. Rm. 225
Page Fina Service
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos. Regular $495.00 mods. $390 cash bay cabin different buffers. Cash bay back's. 829-331 Mass. St. 11-20
Must Sacrifice. 270 Boll Action Rifle.
Davec, 37 McCollum after 6 p.m. 11-18
McCollum.
1965 Chev. Impala SS, excellent condition, auto, trans, air-cond, radio, red, white vinyl interior $1450. Call 842-3813. 11-15
1968 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Exeelent condition, 4-speed, British racing factory, t a c h o m e r s b u l e superstog wheels, 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must sell! Contact: Sam Mee. Rm #616. McColum, 11-19 6600.
1964 Chevelle V-8, 4-speed, positrac
racent overhaul on engine and brakes,
excellent condition. VI 3-8165. Also
small, enclosed trailer. 11-19
1959 Triumph TR-3. Including a hard top, convertible top and tonneau cover. A new clutch and transmission assmiblge. Radio and heater. Lubrication system. Engine recently overhauled. 2 new tires; dual carburizers. Bucket seats and a four-speed. Tach. oil water temp. amps and fuel guage. Windshield washer. Broken zipper on the tonneau cover. Dis brakes. Rack and pinion steering. Left taillight is cracked. Phone 1-800-760-7430. Ask for Kay Test drive 2 to S. $595.99. It's the $600 excitement. 11-15
Garrard Lab 80 + 55 records. Everything from "My Fair Lady" to "Surrealistic Pillow"—Must sell—Ask for Mike Blake at VI 3-1711. 11-19
Roberts Tape Recorder, C-90. Professional quality, perfect condition.
Original price $450, first $195 takes.
Call Jim Belcher. V 1-371-11. 11-19
1968 Corvette Coupe. White with tobacco interior, 427 cu. in., 4-speed, only 8,000 miles. Vall VI 3-8959, after 5 p.m.
11-19
MUST SELL 1965 impauls S.S., 327, 4-speed, P/B. P/S, excellent condition inside $200 player. Good job. Player, higher. Call Offer V-1 2-158 after 5:00 p.m. 11-20
'53 Chevy Strap-Mobile, $100. Engine —prime condition. Body and Interior —still there. Call Scott Stinson at VI 3-5770. 11-20
- inch Full grown Red Piranha. Perfect physical condition. Call Dave Hill or Tim Reynolds at VI 3-7922. 11-20
PIRANHA
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SUPPORT NEEDY CHILDREN
at KU BOOKSTORE
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
Plenty of Free Parking
HILLCREST CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
- Components
- Records
- Tapes
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Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
1967 Mustang, six-stick, radio, white walls. Excellent condition—only 5,000 miles. Call Larry Powers, VI 2-7170; if no answer, call UN 4-3973 11-21
Folk instrument—Appalachian Mountain Dulemakes Traditional & Modern design. Stock & custom Walnut. rosemask, rosewood $50 and up. 8378. 11-21
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St.B-B—outdoor pit, rib slab to go $3; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; l2 chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9811 or DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence
Peace Center, 107 W. 7th, VI 2-7932,
and in the Kansas Union lobby on
Tuesdays.
11-19
BUSSES TO PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH startling Sunday, Nov. 17—Worship at 9 & 11. Buses leave 9th and Mass. 8:30 & 10:30. Route: GSP & Corbin, Jayhawk Blvd. to Chipmunk Hill, Corbin & Day Hill, Sunnyside to Oliver and Naishtown Halls; 19th to Stewart Dr. Return bus after worship. 11-18
Holland, Denmark, Mexico, Italy, Japan, Switzerland, Germany, India, Pakistan, the United States, but out the world for you. Coe see Haas Hardware, 1029 Mass. 11-19
Personal Loans: Seniors $2 Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 12-3
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages-anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 11-15
NOW STRAWBERRY FIELDS has Persian beddens, bedcloths and material, wire rim sunglasses, pet borders, earrings, rings, peace and zodiac medallions, ankhs, leather belts, wrist bands, sandals, clothing, men's shirts and ties, paper flowers, art nouveau postcards and posters, ponchos, boxes music, pencil cases, peppermint品 now STRAWBERRY FIELDS, 712 Mass. open 10-6, 11-21
Place to practice. Haynes-Ray Audio & Music Co. VI 2-1944. 11-19
BANDS!!
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Lawrence, Kansas 66044
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Good Food—Reasonable
Cold Beer—Pool Tables
Students Welcome
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
"Open till 2 a.m."
EVERYONE SAYS
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Kustom and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd
(Next to Shaw's Auto Service)
North Lawrence
HELP WANTED
Part-time for 1 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. tf
COUNTER HELP WANTED Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Male or female babysitters and household helper. Preferably to live in, not necessarily. For two children Call anytime—Mrs Owens, I V 2-9377
Need household help 8 or 10 hours a week, preferably afternoon $1.50 hour. Must have own car. Evening, to small children 3-4598 evenings. 11-19
Male, part time, evenings, apply in
person Smacks Drive-in, 1404 W. Mason
M320
I need two men to work about 2-5 hrs. per night, Sun. thru Thurs. Very easy work—car necessary. Must have knowledge of fraternities and sororities on KU campus. Excellent pay. VI 3-7267. 11-19
WANTED
Female grad. student needs immediate recommendation, prefer CHC UNI U8585 11-10
Need a ride to Washington, D.C., for Thanksgiving vacation. Will help with gas and oil expenses—Can leave Sat-
day; 23rd, at 10:30 to IPSC; I V-3-34434. 11-15
Male roommate wanted to share ground floor of a house. $50 a month.
Call Terry. VI 3-1879 after 9 p.m.
11-18
Friend drafted. Needs someone to continue contract at Naismith for dural pain in a child with URTI urgent. (Please help. He can use a bit of luck). Call Jerry Levine. VI 3-7198
4th Roommate for cooperative living unit in spacious house. Rent $50/mo. Utilizing village facilities. To camp at warring Harburg. Nov. 15. Camp nings. VI 2-7920. 11-18
SERVICES OFFERED
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high f-hity Haynes Ray Audio. VI Center, Aft, and Eve. Hillel Shopping Center. 11-22
TYPING
Former Harvard and Univ. of Minnesota Secretary will type themes. reports, theses. VI 3-7207. 11-25
Pay-Less SHOES
1300 W.23rd
Lawrence
From
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VI 3-3500
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RENT A NEW FORD
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education, SCM elec. located near Oliver Hall VI. 3-2873.
Experienced in typing thesis, themes,
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Mrs. E. Wright.
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
Use our gas Budget card—costs no more
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
FOR RENT
FREE CAR
WASHES (all the time)
LOST
Apartment, furnished, close to campus
1 2-487 929 Kentucky, #21-19
Robo-Phillips 66
1764 W.23rd
REWARD offered for the return of a brown sues wallet, lost Nov. 4. Contact Roberta Kukerkim, VI 26066-928. If not home, leave a note sage. 11-15
Top of tie-tack square design with small diamond in center. Reward. Tel. VI 3-4345. Lost between Strong and School of Religion building 11-18
Lost in bathroom at Union during carnival, one gold Longine watch. Reward offered for return. Mark Law, VI 3-7102. 11-15
Tan wallet near Robinson gym. if found, call G. Dickerson at VI 2-5223 or VI 3-5770. Reward. Thank you! 11-19
LOST—one pair glasses with brown frames in Fraser or Dyche on Friday. Nov. 8. If found, contact Mary, VI 2-240, Room 527. 11-21
LOST AND FOUND
PERSONAL
Found—Raincoat (38R). Lost—Raincoat
(44L or 46L). Both in Kansas
Union Bowling Alley after Homecoming game. Call VI 2-3474 11-20
CHILDREN
66
To the Scorpion in Astronomy Seat 88:
Happy Nineteenth Birthday from Virgo
in 165.
Once you've interested—Call VI 2-
9595
11-20
HAROLD'S SERVICE 66
1401 WEST 6$^{th}$ STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557
Lawrence Lumber
Complete Supply
- paints
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MAGIC SLIDE
VI2-8615
6th & Colo.
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 15, 1968
University Theatre has new resident cast of actors
The KU University Theatre has an all new "cast" of resident actors this year.
Formed three years ago, the resident actors are a "core company," said James Hawes, assistant professor of speech and drama. They must be graduate students and are paid for their work. Most of them have had more experience in the theater and are older than the undergraduates.
Hawes is in charge of the company while Jack Brooking, professor of speech and drama, is on sabbatical.
The actors are needed "to bolster and inspire student participation by people who have been in the theater for several years," said Hawes. Since the KU theater is in an academic setting, resident actors can set more professional standards by their work with undergraduates on and off stage.
There is also the demand for mature actors in the community.
Hawes said, because the theater serves both the University and Lawrence. For example, the December production of Edward Albee's "A Delicate Balance" has no young parts in it. Most times older people will fit more easily and believably into these roles, Hawes said.
The only female member of the company, Billi Wolf, Lomira, Wis., graduate student, could not
be here for try-outs. Instead, she sent a video tape for her audition. At the time, Miss Wolf was in a production of "Hedda Gabler" at Michigan State University.
The other graduate student members are Bill Meikle, Lawrence; Gene Cassasa, Fitchburg, Mass.; Roy Sorrells, Long Beach, Calif., and John Myers, Springfield, Ohio.
Harriers-
(Continued from page 7)
Southern Illinois-Timmons does not think the distance will affect the KU runners.
"We've been running long distances in practice sessions and are ready to run longer distance meets," Timmons said. "I wish we'd run more longer races but the conference only runs three miles. I'm hoping they'll change
to 4 to 6-mile runs soon," he added.
Official Bulletin
Students. Sign up now for the Christmas vacation trip to Mexico. International Club, Kansas Union basement floor.
TODAY
Foreign Students. Sign up now for the People-to-People tour to Kansas City next Tuesday-guided jour of Northwest Art and the Federal Reserve Bank.
Social Work Field Instructors Con-
cessions. All Day. Kansas Union
terrence. All Daily. Kobras Chault.
Regional Police School. All Day.
Känsas Unihorn
KU Moslem Society 12:45 p.m.
Palmaria Union
Informal Tours of Spencer Library.
1 p.m. Continues throughout after-
Opening of Kenneth Spencer Research Library. 1:15 p.m. Chancellor W Clarke Wescoe Remarks by Robert Vosser, UCLA Librarian.
Traveling to Chicago will be freshman Doug Smith, who placed third in the Big Eight meet, freshman Rich Elliot, junior Roger Kathol, and sophomores Thorn Bigley, Jay Mason, Paul Mattingly and Mike Solomon.
Lecture. 3:30 p.m. Richmond P.
Bond, U. of North Carolina. "Growth
and Change in Early English Press."
Spencer Library.
Lecture. 3:30 p.m. Boyd Meffert,
'Contemporary Art': Dyneke Audilium.
SUA Film, 4. & 7 & 9 p.m. "Far from the
Room" (4 p.m.), 303 Bailey (7 & 9 p.m.)
International Club Dancing Lesson
6:30 p.m. 211 Robinson.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
p. 78. m. 895 Mississippi.
p. 30. m. 39. p. "Shern-
Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Shen-
andoph." Dyche Audible
Folk Dance Club. 7:30 p.m. 173 Robinson.
Concert. 8 p.m. Ralph Kirkpatriek,
harpsichordist. University Theatre.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
song of a Goat.
SATURDAY
Third Annual Conference On Early Primary Education. All Day Kansas
Last Day To Drop A Graduate Course. All Day.
Football. 1:30 p.m. Kansas State at Manhattan.
Manhattan.
Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Shenandoah " Dyche Auditorium
Exameninget, Theatre. 8 20. p.m.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
KU's six victories have been posted at the Oklahoma State Jamboree, the Southern Illinois meet, the KU Invitational, the KU-OSU dual, the State Federation meet and the Big Eight meet.
Buses to Presbyterian Church start today. Worship at 9 & 11 a.m. Leave GSP & Corbin, Jayhawk Bivd, to Chi Omega fountain, Engel Rd. to Daisy Hill, Sunyside to Oliver and Nalitte. Return Stewart Dr. Return bus after worship.
Carillon Recital. 3 p.m. Albert Gerken.
University Symphony. 3:30 p.m.
University Theatre.
University Theatre.
Mixed Faculty League Bowling. 6
mixed Faculty League Bowling. 6 p.m. Jay Bowl.
p.m. Jay Bowl.
KU Moslem Society 7 p.m. Pine
KU Moslem Society. 7 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union.
Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "Shen-
andoah." Dyche AUDitorium.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
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SMAKS-JAYHAWK WINNER DINNER
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KU GOES ORANGE
KU is going to the Orange Bowl.
The Jayhawks have accepted an invitation to the Orange Bowl classic and will meet third-ranked Penn State, it was announced this morning.
State. It was announced that Coach Pepper Rodgers, the grid magician who brought KU into national prominence in two years, made the announcement at 11:20 a.m. in Kansas City. Rodgers' statement came to a KU Strong Hall rally via a loudspeaker hook-up.
a loudspeaker hook up
"I don't know where you're going to be New Year's Day, but when this football team lines up for the kick-off New Year's night in Miami, I hope everyone of you is there with us," Coach Rodgers told the more than 1,000 students gathered.
1,000 students gathered. "You can ask Coach McCullers and Coach Travis what to wear—they both come from the state of Florida and they can tell you all about it."
Ranked seventh in the country, the 8-1 Jayhawks will oppose Penn State. The Nittany Lions crushed Maryland, 57-13, to up their mark to 8-0 and earn the ticket to Miami.
ticket to Miami.
First word of KU's accepting the bowl bid came from the players after last night's squad meeting. It was believed that the acceptance of the Orange Bowl bid was unanimous among the players.
"Certainly, it's their decision, not mine," said Rodgers following the K-State triumph. The KU coach said
then that there were no firm bowl offers, and that the team would decide once a bid was presented.
"BRIMS is the order of the day." Coach Larry Travis said while a light snow fell. "We've got a big game coming up Saturday at Missouri and we've got to show Mizzou."
Under NCAA regulations, however, the bid could not be officially accepted until today.
The Jayhawks, whose only loss was a 27-23 verdict to Oklahoma last week,挫获 rival Kansas State, 38-29, for their eighth triumph. KU had rolled to seven consecutive victories—Illinois (47-7), Indiana (38-20), New Mexico (68-7), Nebraska (23-13), Oklahoma State (49-14), Iowa State (46-25), and Colorado (27-14).
KU is now locked in a three-way scramble for the Big Eight championship with Missouri and Oklahoma. Both the Jayhawks and Tigers own 5-1 conference marks with their showdown coming Saturday in Columbia. Oklahoma (4-1) has league games remaining with Nebraska and Oklahoma State.
the bowl situation seemed undecided until it was finally announced by Sugar Bowl president Dr. Fred Wolfe Jr. that Georgia had a definite berth in the New Orleans classic. Rumblings last week had the Orange Bowl candidates narrowed to the winner of Saturday's Georgia-Auburn clash against Penn State with KU
more prominently in the Sugar or Cotton bowl picture.
Representatives of all three major bowls witnessed the KU-K-State game at Manhattan, Late in the game, KU athletic director Wade Stinson was called into separate conferences with Orange and Sugar officials. Stinson's only comment was that the situation "looked good."
It's the second Orange Bowl invitation in KU's football history, and only the third bowl bid ever. The Jayhawks appeared in the 1947 Miami classic and bowed to Georgia Tech, 20-14. In 1961, the Hawks posted a 33-7 Bluebonnet Bowl victory over Rice.
The Orange invitation also marks the climax of Rodgers' instant success formula for KU football. Pepper came to KU after 2-8-0 and 2-7-1 seasons signalled the end of Jack Mitchell's tenure here. Rodgers' club won 5 of 7 after dropping the first three games on the 1967 season, and now the Jayhawks are a national power.
KU has never met Penn State, and the two schools have only one common opponent. Kansas State dropped a 25-9 decision to Penn State the second week of the '68 season.
There was no disclosure of the number of bowl bids offered KU, but it was speculated that all of the three —Orange, Sugar, and Cotton—were knocking at the door.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No. 45 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, November 18, 1968
Aneurism caused Mallin Death
The findings of a preliminary report from District Coroner James Reed state that the probable cause of death of Bruce Mallin, 20-year-old Kansas City junior, was the bleeding of an aneurism.
was the bleeding of No charges have been filed in connection with the death. Mallin died last Monday after a fight which took place in the Naismith Hall parking lot No. 7.
"In view of the coroner's report, which indicates that death might not have resulted directly from a blow, I will wait until receiving the final report before determination of the filing of any charges," County Attorney Daniel A. Young said yesterday. The final report is expected in about a week.
An aneurism is an abnormal dilatation of a blood vessel filled with fluid or clotted blood. This diseased vessel wall forms a pulsating tumor.
Dr. Reed's report said the tumor was a pre-existing condition, and rupture would probably not have resulted directly from a blow.
"Extreme emotional or physical stress could have caused this aneurism to rupture sooner or later," Reed's report stated.
Although it shows no other evidence of a physical problem which would have resulted in death, this is a preliminary report, the District Coroner emphasized.
★★
SUA will sponsor trip to Bowl; $165
Student Union Activities (SUA) is sponsoring a "packaged deal" trip and round-trip flight to the Orange Bowl in Miami, Irv Robinson, Prairie Village sophomore and SUA Special Trips chairman, announced today.
The "Packaged deal," costing a maximum of $165, includes the round-trip flight, a $10 game ticket, three days and four nights lodging in Miami and charter bus service to and from the airport and game to the hotel.
For students interested only in the round-trip flight, the cost is $100, Robinson said. The SUA flight will leave Kansas City Dec. 30 and return dan 2.
"Hotel reservations are in downtown Miami-close to night life and 20 minutes away from Miami Beach." The special trips chairman said that KU's hotel reservations are on the same street as the Orange Bowl parade.
Watkins reports VD cases at KU
A sizeable number of cases of veneral diseases have been reported on the University of Kansas campus.
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said that about 64 persons probably contracted the disease from one or two carriers. A major problem arises in detection, he said.
"With males infection is visible. However," Schwegler said, "female organs house silent reservoirs of infection that become complex with multiple exposure."
Schwegler said so far, infected organisms have been sensitive to antibiotics and he is hopeful that high concentration on pencillin will stamp out the problem.
Watkins Hospital is working with the Public Health Service to seek out disease victims and administer treatment.
The Public Health Department interviews possible carriers and traces spot cases which they refer to Watkins for treatment, he said.
"It largely emphasizes my uneasiness about the pill," he said. "People use the pill to measure promiscuity-it makes them feel more secure."
"This is a world-wide problem, not just KU." Schwegler said. "Promiscuity among young people and the high exposure rate, make the problem dangerous and difficult to control.
Benweger pointed out that few people are well-informed on the subject of veneral diseases and suggested discussion groups to educate those persons.
P.O.P.P.
100
Pepper Power vs. Purple Pride
The Snob Hill crew invaded Silo Tech Saturday and four hours later, KU emerged with a nine-point victory. A large Jayhawk crowd was on hand complete with signs encouraging the Jayhawks to offset the K-State "Kazoo KU" campaign by "pushing over Purple Power."
10
Photo by Greg Sorber
A man named Pepper . . .
...brought KU from a "no-body" in the football world to one of the contenders for the 1968 Orange Bowl title. For a feature article on this "Georgia Jayhawk," see story, page 7.
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
NEW YORK (UPI) An agreement was reached Sunday to end a bitter citywide teachers strike that deprived most of New York's 1.12 million public school children of instruction for nearly 2% months.
Strike may end
Manhattan sun shines on Hawks
By PAM SMITH
Kansan Staff Writer
The sun broke through an overcast sky above Kansas State University's West Stadium Saturday exactly six times.
Each time KU scored in the high-spirited game, the sun came out and warmed the day—to KU fans it apparently showed some favoritism. Several KU students remarked that someone was evidently telling KU to "Go South, KU, go south."
However, it really didn't bother K-State fans that the sun wasn't shining on their team. they maintained their "Purple Pride" Homecoming spirit throughout the game.
Carrying through their theme, "Kazoo KU," the K-State fans turned out with hundreds of kazoos and played them whenever their team came through with a good play.
a good play. KU students, whose number seemed to be almost as large as K-State's when judged by cheering, kept with their tradition of "waving the wheat."
One KU student admitted that this was practically the first away game KU fans had had the number to "wave the wheat" without feeling dispersed among the opponent's fans.
K-State's "soul" yell leader certainly helped build (continued to Page 7)
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 18; 1968
Spencer formally opened
Spencer Library will open for use Monday, Dec. 2, David W. Heron, director of libraries, said Friday.
The library was formally opened at 1:30 p.m. Friday with a ceremony in the building's main lobby.
Heron said the two-week delay was needed to finish moving books from the special collections area in Watson Library.
Spencer Library was dedicated Friday, Nov. 8. Lord C. P. Snow, British author and scientist, gave the dedicatory lecture.
Praising KU's library system, Vosper said, "The library momentum must and will rise steadily if KU is to play its part in the nation."
The building, directly north of Strong Hall and facing the Campanile, has four floors, the bottom floor being currently unoccupied. The library will house books of the Department of Special Collections and its subdivisions. Some of its space may be use later for temporary storage of books from the main library system, Heron said.
The new research library was opened with a speech by Robert Vosper, director of libraries at UCLA and former KU library director. Vosper called the "launching of Spencer Library" the "second stage of the library program" at KU. He said Watson Library was "stage one" of the library program.
About 130 persons, mostly faculty and staff members, attended the opening ceremony. Others came later to tour the new building following Vosper's talk.
Heron and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe spoke briefly before Vosper's 15-minute speech. Wescoe introduced Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer, who donated the $2,125,000 building to the University in memory of her late husband, who died in 1960.
Rock conference Nov.21 & 22
The president of the National Limestone Institute, Inc., Robert M. Koch, Washington, D.C., will be among the featured speakers at the eighth biennial Rock Products Conference Nov. 21 to 22 at the University of Kansas. About 80 person are expected to attend the conference.
The participants ranging from consulting engineers, rock producers, contractors and city and county engineers to members of the State Geological Survey and the State Highway Commission will hear discussions on "Low Cost Housing," "New Housing Construction Concepts," "The Federal Aid Highway Act of 1968" and other subjects relating to rock products.
The Kansas Limestone Association Inc., the State Geological Survey, University Extension and the State Highway Commission are the conference sponsors.
Advance registration is requested and should be sent to Dana A. Leibengood, University Extension, Lawrence.
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Heron said Spencer Library "will be open to anybody who needs to use it." He said use of the facilities will involve "less restrictions than did special collections" in Watson Library.
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Heron said if patronage of Spencer Library proves heavy some restrictions on use of study space may be necessary, but said no such regulations are currently planned.
The bottom floor of the structure may be used to house the map library, now in Lindley Hall, Heron said.
Johnson Room graces Library
- Badges
- Novelties
- Lavaliers
- Sportswear
- Paddles
- Cups
- Guards
- Favors
- Rings
- Mugs
- Trophies
- Awards
The William Savage Johnson Reading Room—the furnishing, equipment and decor—has been transferred intact from the basement of Watson Library to the northeast corner of the newly opened Kenneth Spencer Research Library.
The Johnson Room was the gift of Mrs. Claudia Pendleton Johnson, a 1908 KU graduate, in memory of her husband. Johnson was a member of KU faculty from 1924 to 1940.
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
New vaccine coming soon for Asian flu
Vaccine against a new strain of Asian flu will be available by the end of November, said Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital.
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In an American Medical Association report, Schwegler said, the U.S. Public Health Service asked that the "first supply of the vaccine be used for persons over 65 and those with chronic illness who are most susceptible to respiratory infection."
He urged that students first receive immunization with the present serum, and take the new vaccine later as a supplement.
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Monday, November 18, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
SNOOKER BILLIARDS
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Lawrence reaction to march
Photo by Halina Pawl
Citizens in Lawrence were not exactly tolerant of the protest marsh staged last Monday following the V.F.W. Veterans Day parade. Most townsfolk stayed inside during the protest, but many kept a close lookout nonetheless.
Citizens criticize peace marchers
By MIKE SHEARER Kansan Staff Writer
While geography binds KU's student activists to the citizens of Lawrence, ideologically they remain continents apart.
Although Lawrence's citizens have grown accustomed to student demonstrations, they react negatively when students protest as they did in the peace marche which followed the annual Veterans' Day parade last Monday, six prominent Lawrence citizens said.
Frank Raley Jr. president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said he could not understand how anyone who is for a democratic society would want to "tear down the government of our country and the heritages of our country."
It is up to the "many, many good students" to suppress students who protest against our government, Raley said.
Raley said he believed most students would disagree with the activists but are too complacent to react to them.
He said he thinks students who "oppose SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) should be in or adjacent to the group trying to put down the participating group."
Police Chief Robert E. Richardson said he thought the students marching on Veterans' Day represented a "small minority."
"I don't think that they (Lawrence citizens) think this very small minority represents the student body as a group," the chief said.
Richardson said that while the student marchers "didn't attract very much attention," the people lining the streets "were not cheering."
He said he was glad the student demonstrators had the right "to speak their piece like everyone else."
Likewise, Jim Owens, president of the Lawrence School Board, said, "This is a free country and I'm glad they can do it."
Owens said he felt, however, that the Veterans' Day countermarch was "ill-advised and unappropriate" and "pretty deplorable."
Owens said he could "hardly move anymore" without students protesting his actions on the school board. The school board was flooded with protestors twice this year after approximately 50 black students
"A lot of people feel the same way I do." Owens said.
Richard Gibson, commander of Veterans of Foreign Wars post No. 852, said, "It's ridiculous when a bunch of these hippies lay down and chew gum during playing of the taps."
"Veterans of foreign wars don't like war either," Gibson said, "but they picked the wrong time to protest."
Letters and telephone calls he has received have brought only praise for the V.F.W. and scorn for the protestors, Gibson said.
He said he planned to continue the annual Veterans' Day festivities next year even though demonstrators hurt "ticket sales tremendously" this year.
James R. Haney, vice president of the Lawrence Outlook and VFW parade chairman for the Veterans Day parade, said he was disappointed in the student protestors because, "We were not glorifying the military or endorsing the war in Vietnam." Haney said the Veterans' Day activities had been to honor the post's 30 Vietnam veterans.
"I think the only way they are going to accomplish anything is to get a shave and a haircut," Haney said, "and meet others on their own ground."
Haney described the Veterans'
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QUAN TRI, South Vietnam (UPI)-The U.S. Army has always stressed the "buddy system" in which one soldier helps the other in time of need. A 38-man platoon of the U.S. 5th
Day parade and activities surrounding Lt. Gen. Lewis Walt, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, as "strictly a patriotic effort on our part."
When shaving time came the next morning, all 38 men got rid of their whiskers--using the same razor blade.
Infantry Division may have stretched the point recently.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 18, 1968
Conscience crisis
"I drink to the Pope—but I drink to the Conscience first.
John Cardinal Newman, the great Catholic theologian and philosopher of the 19th century, gave this interpretation to the dilemma of spiritual authority of the Roman Catholic Church once when asked to toast the Pope.
Today the Church again is facing this dilemma in the aftermath of Pope Paul VI's encyclical, Humanae Vitae, which reaffirmed the Church's traditional stand on birth control.
Pope Paul deemed all contraceptives "evil" and against nature and told the faithful to accept the hardships of large families willingly.
In doing so, he completely disregarded the recommendation of a committee of cardinals first set up by Pope John XXIII and then enlarged by Paul himself to study the problem of contraception and population in the modern world.
Immediately following the Pope's announcement of July 30, a group of about 200 American theologians and clergy answered the encyclical by publishing a retort to the Pope's ideas on birth control and, in effect, to the Pope's authority to decide the spiritual conscience of the Church's members.
"... the encyclical betrays a narrow and positivistic notion of papal authority, as illustrated by the rejection of the majority view presented by the commission established to consider the question as well as by the rejection of the conclusion of a large part of the international Catholic theological community. . ."
Most of the European Catholic authorities are managing to sidestep the encyclical by relying on the doctrinal fact that such statements are only guidelines for the faithful and therefore not part of infallible teachings of the Church.
But in the United States, where there is an outstanding mixture of conservatism and liberalism in the Catholic Church there is also the greatest danger of outright division in the Church over Humanae Vitae.
Last week, despite conservative bishops such as Patrick Cardinal Boyle of Washington, D.C., who has suspended more than 17 priests for dissenting from the Pope's encyclical, the American Council of Bishops voted in a liberal viewpoint. Although they affirmed the Pope's teaching, their official announcement was that Catholic couples who choose by conscience to practice birth control would not be cut off from the Church and the sacraments.
The American Catholic Church is on one side taking the encyclical more seriously and on the other using it to argue for the rights of individual conscience over doctrinal authority.
Humanae Vitae, therefore, could have set off reactions in the United States which will encompass much more than population problems and determine the future trend of the Catholic Church.
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
Student affairs
Bad teachers
By WILLIAM BALFOUR Dean of Student Affairs
Question: What can I do about a teacher who is unfair in my grading? What can I do about a bad teacher?
Answer: If it is your grade that you feel is unfair, you should discuss it first with the teacher. The great majority of teachers at KU are willing to discuss the reasons for a particular grade. If you still feel that the reasons for the grade are unfair, the next step will differ in various schools. Some departments are setting up grievance committees to which you might appeal. Generally, the department chairman is willing to discuss the matter. It is also possible to talk with a Dean of the particular school.
The determination of poor teaching is difficult. It has been frequently shown that the same professor may be considered an excellent teacher by part of the class and a poor one by others of the same class. However, there are occasionally men whose teaching is thought to be poor by the majority of his students, even several years after their graduation. (Surveys after graduation frequently show changes in opinions about a teacher's ability.)
If the majority of a class agrees that the teacher is not doing a good job, it is sometimes possible to suggest changes in teaching techniques directly to the professor. This of course is not easy for students nor for a professor to accept. Perhaps a better approach is through the department's chairman, who is generally receptive to a reasoned, objective discussion of the problem.
The course and teacher evaluations that are used on many campuses is a good method of improving the quality of teaching. I hope that such evaluations by students will become a reality on this campus.
John Marshall
Loyalty's a funny thing
Johnny's Bar sits out on the east side of Highway 40 on the other side of the tracks. The bar is in that part of North Lawrence which used to be more prosperous until the turnpike came and made 6th Street and 59 Highway better streets for business. The people who sit in Johnny's Bar are older than most college students, and they like the songs that are on the Wurlitzer near the partition that divides the pool room and the bar room.
They sit and drink after work, listening to Johnny Cash or Ernest Tubb or Eddy Arnold. They talk about things that have happened or are going to happen.
Old men are there, with the dust around the edges of their eyes where their safety goggles habe been for eight hours. A woman who probably works on Sunday and has Monday off sits in a corner booth with potato chips and half a glass of beer. She puffs on a cigarette butt that has lipstick on it. And the younger men come in every now and then to talk about football or politics or wages or a new pickup truck.
Most of the men who regularly sit at the bar are veterans of some war or another that the United States has had to fight. They long ago traded fatigues for jackets with WYNN'S FRICTION PROOFING or STAN'S TEXACO or CITY OF LAWRENCE on the back.
There were two rumpled, unfolded copies of the Topeka Daily Capital on the bar and two men with the jackets were talking over the papers about the Marine General who came to Lawrence Monday and the protest march that followed.
"You've got to be kidding." the man said.
The man was wearing a red-and-white polkadot cap. It was tipped back far enough so that you could see the red rings that the safety helmet had made on his forehead.
“These students,” he says, slapping an inside page of the paper, “are getting paid by their parents who are probably World War II veterans to protest against something that must be done.”
The man with the red-and-white polkadots believes that the war in Vietnam is necessary. "Why not stop Communism before it spreads?" he says. "Why the hell not stop people who want to destroy the concept of freedom?"
Johnny told the man he owed him twenty cents for the last beer.
Johnny, the bartender, is a World War II veteran, and if you don't ask him about politics or sports or pheasant hunting in western Kansas, he will tell you how he and a friend of his—when they were harvesting wheat from Texas to Canada in the late 40's—introduced tomato-beer to "this part of the country."
The man who was sitting beside the man with the polkadot cap says the students protested against the American system—"the only system in the world that would allow them to protest in the first place."
He was putting salt in his beer, and told me that his name was Sam—but not really, because he did not want to be quoted with his name. Sam does not like protesters.
"Look at it this way," he says, puffing out his cheeks with foam from the top of the glass. "We had a helluva war . . . 17 years ago. It was a war against facism and imperialism, and the veterans of that war marched yesterday in Lawrence. The radical students at KU protested.
"They protested that their fathers and the people in their fathers' generation fought against a system which wanted to destroy the concept of human freedom. They are dead wrong."
The man who told me to call him Sam does not like protesters because he is a veteran and was shot in the stomach by the Japanese on Bataan. "I know what it is like to fight in the jungle," he says. "But sometimes we have to. I do not like this war because I have fought against people who hide in caves and trees and behind the big leaves in the jungle."
Sam almost died with a .30-caliber slug in his stomach, and nobody likes war. But sometimes it’s necessary, he will say. He doesn't like it when people protest—his country has been good to him, he says.
The man with the safety helmet rings on his forehead ordered another beer. The edges of his rimless glasses did not hide the folds of skin under his eyes. The frayed cuffs on his jacket could not quite conceal wrinkles and scratches and dirty cuts on his hands where the gloves had not quite protected them. His jacket was dusty from the dirt that had floated up from the jackhammer all day. You could tell he had worked hard for that beer.
Johnny, the bartender, said that when the students protested after the veterans' march in Lawrence Monday they were protesting against what some of his customer-friends had done in another war. They were protesting against falling on the grenade, the bullet in the stomach and the others who did similar things because they "thought their country was a good one to live in."
Sixteen years ago he had pulled the pin on a hand grenade and it fell out of his hands inside the foxhole in Northern France. He fell on it. And nothing happened. "My country had been a good one to live in," he had believed. He doesn't like people who protest either.
The old shoulders that had felt the gun stocks in jungles and in Europe, and the stomach that held salt and beer which had once been ripped by a big piece of lead, the strong hands that had washed glasses in the Lawrence bar for 15 years.
They do not like war. They do not advocate war. But the protesters had angered them because of what they had once done.
Loyalty is a funny thing.
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THE SPIRIT OF THE CLASSICAL WORLD, edited by Wade C. Stephens; THE BIRTH OF LEARNING, edited by William Bryar and George Steneng; THE ENLIGHTENMENT, edited by Nicholas Capaldi; ROMANTICISM AND EVOLUTION, edited by Bruce Wilshire (Capricorn Books, $2.25 each)—Four volumes in the series called "The Spirit of Western Civilization." The books are attractive, quality paperbacks, and combine philosophical thought with poetry and drama. The first includes Homer, the great names of Grecian drama, Plato and Aristotle, Cicero, Caesar, the great Romans. "The Rebirth of Learning" treats Christian, Judaic and Islamic traditions in the first 1,200 years of the Christian era. The third is actually Volume 5 in the set, this being a treatment of Locke, Voltaire, Hume, Condorcet, Malthus, Kant and others. And the fourth, dealing with the 19th century and its fireshadowings, considers Rousseau, Wordsworth, Goethe, Emerson, Hegel, Marx. Mill, Darwin, Nietzsche and many more.
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Managing Editor Monte Naune
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Monday, November 18, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Journalism grad will head printing service
William T. Smith Jr., an honor graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism, will return early next month to become director of the University Printing Service.
As a plant superintendent and administrative assistant to the State Printer of Kansas since 1964, Smith succeeds William E. Kukuk, who resigned to join a Topeka printing firm.
After working as a linetype operator while earning his B.S. in journalism in 1948, Smith became a reporter and feature writer for the Minneapolis (Minn.) Star-Tribune. Preferring the mechanical phase of publishing, he returned to Topeka as linetype operator and printer for the Topeka Newspaper Publishing Co. and later in production work for Capper magazines.
Exam scheduled for Western Civ.
All persons planning to take the Western Civilization Comprehensive Exam must register December 2 and 3 in room 130, Strong Hall. The exam is scheduled for 2 p.m. January 11.
Raw questions for the exam are submitted by discussion leaders, said Don Marquis, acting associate professor of Western Civilization.
"Late in the semester a committee composed of the directors, myself, senior instructors and some members of the regular staff (discussion leaders) go over the questions which have been submitted. We select the best questions and make up the exam from them."
He said the exam would be divided into four sections: one-quarter multiple choice, one-quarter matching, two 30 minute essays and one hour essay.
"The hour essay is intended to make the students think carefully and write intelligently about some major theme in the history of western civilization," Marquis said.
He said the short essay questions are more specific. The student is expected to know enough about individuals studied in the course to write about their views thoughtfully.
In 1960 Smith went to the State Printing Plant as assistant foreman of the composing room. He then became public relations director of Employment Security division of the Kansas Department of Labor and filled the same position for the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce.
Smith, now 46 years old, is immediate past president of the Topeka Club of Printing House Craftsmen and edited its Bulletin, which won first place in international competition the past two years.
BID FOR CLUB
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Four groups are bidding for the Washington Senators franchise in the American League with sale of the baseball club expected to be completed before the end of the year at a price of $10.5 million.
A club spokesman said one group bidding for the club included Robert E. Short, treasurer of the Democratic National Committee and Jeno F. Paulucci, a foods company executive.
Rhodesia stands firm
LONDON (UPI)—British envoy George Thompson returned from Rhodesia Sunday amid reports that his mission had brought no break in the deadlock over the African country's independence.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 18, 1968
Lau calls ceasefire only a stage
PARIS (UPI)-North Vietnamese diplomats Sunday cast doubts on any early cease-fire in the Vietnam War. They said a
truce was unrealistic until a political settlement was reached and the United States withdrew its forces from South Vietnam.
Students can win grand prizes for photographs in KU contest
Anyone has the chance to win in the KU photography contest regardless what experiences one has, said Bill Seymour, director of the KU Photojournalism sequence. The photography contest is co-sponsored by Student Union Activities and Kappa Alpha Mu (Photojournalism fraternity), Seymour said.
"In addition to the $10 for first place, ribbons for first, second, third place and two honorable mentions in each category," Seymour said, "There will be four cameras worth $800 for the grand prizes which were donated by Lawrence Photo-Supply in Wichita and Zercher Photo in Topeka."
To enter the contest, he said, student has to be enrolled at KU, and must not be full time professional photographers, or employed in a professional photographic capacity on a part time basis.
Seymour said the contest is divided into nine categories. Each participant can have no more than eight entries which can be submitted in any category with no limitation as to the number in one category.
The nine categories are:
- News-Pictures can be of any scheduled event which would be of interest to the public and might be or have been published in a newspaper or magazine. Events such as demonstrations, fires, wrecks either taken on campus or off campus.
- Picture Story—A series of pictures (at least three) mounted on as many as four boards which tell a story of a person, an event or the like. Prints in this category can be of any size, but it is usually good to have a larger beginning and ending picture.
- Sports—Any sport from football to table tennis could be the subject of entries in this class.
- Human Interest-Good pictures of animals and portraits of human emotions of love, hate, happiness, sorrow, joy or other expressions.
- Color- All color prints, not slides, can be entered in this category. This class is designed for the best use of color.
- Abstract—Prints of texture, tone or light patterns are good entries in this category. This is generally a class for more of the art form rather than pure representation.
- Scenic or Pictorial-This class would include nature studies, architectural studies and other prints which would be designed to show beauty and not merely to represent the structure.
- Portrait-Personality—Unusual shots of people are the prime target for this class. Older people make ideal subjects. Good off beat shots of famous people are good entries in this class.
"Students must submit their entries with $2 entries fee to the SUA Director's Office no later than 5:00 p.m., February 28, 1969." Seymour said, "Though it seems quite a while away, it's the time to work now."
All entries which must have been done since Jan. 1, 1968 have to be mounted on 16” x 20” matte boards, with no limitation on board colors. All single picture must be at least nine and half inches for the longest dimension. Seymour explained.
- Category x-An open class designed to allow the photographer to enter prints which he feels may not belong under of the other eight classifications. Use of photographs are usually found in this category as well as other experimental shots.
Three photographers from different fields will decide who the winners are on March 2, 1969, he said. The winning entries will be exhibited for two weeks from March 3 to March 15.
"There were 185 entries last year. I expect 500 entries this time." Seymour added.
"Cease-fire is only a stage that is part of the process of settlement," Col. Ha Van Lau said in an interview with the Paris news magazine L'Express. He is the No. 2 man in the North Vietnamese negotiating team here.
Lau said any settlement would have to involve on one hand a withdrawal of all American and allied troops from South Vietnam and destruction of their bases there and on the other hand a political settlement in accordance with the program of the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front (NLF).
"A cease-fire before we arrive at a conclusion of these two points is not realistic," Lau said.
On another matter, Lau said United States claims that North Vietnam had agreed to expanded two-way negotiations in Paris was "absolutely false."
Lau said the United States proposed such a two-sided conference but it was rejected and "we finally came to an agreement of the formula of a fourway conference in which the United States, the Democratic Republic of North Vietnam, the National Liberation Front and the Saigon administration would each have a complete separate delegation."
In a separate interview with L'Express, Cyrus R. Vance, deputy chief of the U.S. negotiating team, disputed Lau's interpretation of the agreement which provided for South Vietnam and the NLF.to join the preliminary peace talks.
"We categorically reject this manner of describing these negotiations," Vance said. He described the agreement as a "pragmatic" one for both the United States and North Vietnam to expand their delegations so that "the principal belligerents could start talking about how to achieve peace."
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Poet Edsel Ford to read his work
partment of English.
Poet Edsel Ford will read his work at 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
The reading is another in a series presented by the KU de-
Ford is the 1968 winner of the Devins Memorial Award, and the first Midwestern poet to win this award.
The all new
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Friday & Saturday
November 22, 23
Featuring
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★ Former Indian Ambassador to U.S.A., Soviet Union, and Great Britain
Sister of the late prime minister Nehru.
Tuesday, November 19
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Monday, November 18, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Pepper spices Big 8 race
By PATTY BEHAN Kansas Staff Writer
A man named "Pepper" is adding spice to the race for the Big 8 championship.
The name began 36 years ago when Pepper Martin, a Cardinal pitcher was the star of the World Series. In tribute to the Cardinal victory, Franklin Cullins Rodgers Jr., was nicknamed "Pepper."
"It's a wooden frame house with a front porch and situated across from grammar school where I use to go."
When he was five years old, Roduces was an entertainer.
"My mother used to make me dance and in the Kiddy Review. I used to sing and dance to 'Ding Dong Daddy from Dumas' and tap dance to 'Yankee Doodle Dandy.' "' Pepper demonstrated the way both the songs go.
Rodgers said sheepishly,
"Even in grammar school, I used to be a prankster. I always had fun-great at starting fights, but I always staved out of them."
The KU coach said that the name originated with his grandfather, who was an avid baseball fan. He later earned it through his school years.
Rodgers grew up in Atlanta, Ga., in the same house that his parents live in now.
Rodgers first contact with football began when he was a Bov Scout usher at the Georgia Tech football games. His hero at
these games was Clint Castleberry, freshman football player in 1942 for Georgia Tech. Castleberry was killed in WW II.
"After Georgia Tech lost a bowl game I called him and told him how well he played."
when I was 15 in Brown High School, I decided to become a coach. I played football in high school and loved the sport." Pepper was awarded an outstanding athlete award at Brown High. He was also recognized when he played with Georgia Tech in the Sugar Bowl in 1953.
For his acts as an athlete and citizen he was presented an outstanding citizens award by the state of Georgia.
His wife Judy was an old school sweetheart.
"Judy lived about a five rock throw from where I lived, and her brother used to shase me around the school and hang my britches on the flag pole, and I would have to wait until after dark to get them down. All the big boys used to do that. Even I did when I got older."
The Rodgers children have varied interests in football. Rick is the Little Lions manager, Kyle plays in the little league. Pepper says that his daughter Terri is only interested in football because the boys are. Kelly is only five years old and hasn't had much encounter with the sport.
Asked if he visualized a nationally ranked team his second year, he said, "everyone envisions something even when your as young as five years old."
"We sure have done better than last year," he said.
Plenty of tickets on hand for Bowl
KU fans should "not panic" concerning Bowl football tickets, said Vince Bilotta, field director for the alumni association.
An adequate amount will be on hand at Allen Field House.
The alumni association is planning a special travel package to Miami, including air charter and hotel accommodations. A specific announcement will be made in the next few days, said Biltotta.
Newspaper answers female dissatisfaction with handling of news
NEW YORK (UPI)—Women, who have been getting their own cigarettes, their own key clubs and their own pants suits lately, reaped another chauvinistic benefit of emancipation Sunday—their own newspaper.
"Carousel," a weekly tabloid, appeared on news stands to answer female dissatisfaction with the way other publications are covering women's news.
Personality, appearance and horsemanship gave Jan Vandeventer, Kansas City, Mo., senior, the title of first runner-up in the Miss Rodeo America contest held last week in Las Vegas.
Coed wins runner-up title in national rodeo contest
Contestants ranging from 17 to 22 years of age were required to make impromptu speaches and were judged on personality, appearance and horsemanship. The horsemanship competition consisted of contestants taking horses they had never ridden before through reigning and barrel racing patterns.
Miss Vandeventer was one of 22 contestants competing for the title which was won by Patricia Eawes, 18-year-old contestant from Sante Fe, N.M.
Competition, which began last Sunday, heightened with the announcement of the five finalists Wednesday afternoon, said Miss
Besides her title as first runner-up, Miss Vandeventer also won the Miss Appearance Award which made her the only contestant to win two trophies.
Sun shines on Jayhawks
Vandeventer. The finalists, Miss Oklahoma, Nebraska, New Mexico, Montana and Kansas, then rode again. The announcement of the winner and the coronation took place Wednesday night at the Stardust hotel in Las Vegas.
Babe Ruth was known as the Sultan of Swat, the Bambino, the Behemoth of Swing and the Colossus of Clout.
"The contest was a lot of fun," said Vanda Vandeventer. "We were chaperoned the whole time, so we couldn't go out. They took us around Las Vegas, though, and everyone was very nice to us."
Miss Vandeventer won two trophies, a $250 scholarship, a pair of handmade boots, a shirt and a hat.
"I'm enjoying it more than I ever have," says Kansas' Jim Ryun of running now. "Before, I knew exactly what I was trying to do. It was work. Now, it is not so intense. I'm noticing the cars that approach me and the trees and if it is getting cold. I'm aware there are a lot of other things going on. You might say I'm enjoying the scenery."
That cheer had become a tradition as the team always seems
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A roar of laughter went up from the K-State fans.
(Continued from Page 1)
up the "Purple Pride." During the opening minutes of the game, he said to the fans, "Quit throwing those oranges on the field, now--you came here to see a game, so let's all cooperate or the teams will have to leave the field."
Leave Lawrence Airport 11:00 a.m. sat., Nov. 23, direct to Columbia. Return after game. Room for 5 passengers.
to need some sort of a boost during that quarter, said one K-State student.
K-State also had another cheer which they began yelling at the beginning of the fourth quarter. "Four. Four. Four." they yelled.
The "Feathers" cheer originated from our old cheer, "Blood makes the grass grow, kill, kill, kill," said one K-State fan. However, she said, the administration or the yell leaders decided to change it.
KU students just smiled knowingly.
The yell leader also led the K-State fans cheering. "Feathers make the grass grow, pluck, pluck, pluck."
KU's cheering squad, however, evidently didn't feel the need to retailiate the ieers.
As K-State came up to tie KU 21-21, the fans made several comments. One KU student, almost ready to admit failure too early said, "There goes my Christmas present." evidently meaning the bowl game.
However, most KU fans maintained their high spirits and cheered their team without tiring.
K-State fans, then payched at the possibility of at least tying KU, made comments to the effect of "Let's see what KU's got now. If they're a team, they need some help," as one fan velled.
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Then, as always, the sun came shining brightly through K-State's purple, almost gray clouds.
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After the game, K-State students, at least a good number of them, stumbled blindly out of the stadium. KU fans ran, and many were jumping and yelling. "We're No. 1—Miami Bound" buttons were seen on smiling faces everywhere.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 18, 1968
10 53
Crucial Dive
Photo by Jim Wneeier
KU's Junior Riggins dives to the K-State 3.
KU recovers, tips 'Cats
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
For a few agonizing minutes Saturday, KU's chances of a major bowl invitation were once again muddled. The Jayhawks were staging an impromptu bowl of their own—the Charity Bowl—as Kansas State turned two KU fumbles into touchdowns and a 21-21 deadlock.
"Let me tell you," said Coach Pepper Rodgers, "I'm proud of our football team. They came back after that crowd roaged."
KU tuned-up its powerful offensive machinery, scored on its next three possessions, and dealt the Wildcats a 38-29 defeat before a full house of 36.000.
The Jayhawks eased in front, 24-21, when Bill Bell boomed a 41-yard field goal with just over two minutes remaining in the third quarter. It was the longest fielder ever for Bell, who re-writes his KU kicking records every time the ball splits the uprights.
But KU's situation was still ticklish moments later as the Jayhawks were backed to their 9-yard-line. The call went to 230-pound fullback John Riggins, and the sophomore bruiser charged 83 yards before being dragged down at the State 8.
"That big John Riggins busted the big one," said Rodgers, beaming. "He got us out of that hole."
Riggins' jaunt was followed two plays later by quarterback Bobby Douglass' 5-yard touchdown burst on the first play of the fourth period.
The 31-21 margin was fattened by a 79-yard scoring drive climaxed by a 9-yard Douglass rollout with just 8.04 left. Thirteen plays, exclusively on the ground, consumed much of the fourth-quarter clock.
Kansas State chopped the margin to respectability, pushing 50 yards following another KU fumble. The final 38-29 count
★★
It was the new locker room in Kansas State's recently built stadium, but the old taste of defeat remained. K-State had not won a game in the KU series since 1955. The story was no different in Manhattan Saturday as the Hawks prevailed 39-28.
"Got beat," K-State head coach Vince Gibson said. "We got beat by a real good team, I am real proud of my boys. They kept coming back."
After finding out how many times his quarterback Lynn Dickey threw the ball, Gibson whistled and said, "You don't see many sophomores throwing more than that."
"That Bobby Douglass is the difference between KU being a good team and the great team they are," said the head coach. "We'll be so glad to see him go it isn't even funny. KU will make a real good bowl representative."
Riggins' 83-yard run brought KU from their own 9-yard line to K-State's eight. It set up Douglass' five-yard touchdown scamper when KU was leading by only three. 24-21.
Asked if he had planned to pass that much, Gibson replied, "We got behind, and when you get behind you pass more. I was real pleased with Dickey's passing."
"I felt good about the season. We won some that I felt we might lose and lost some I thought we should have won," he said. He said that Iowa State was an example of one that K-State should have won and that Nebraska was one that he hadn't counted on at the beginning of the season.
was an all-time scoring high in the 66-game Sunflower rivalry.
The Kansas victory, coupled with Missouri's 28-14 loss to Oklahoma, left KU and Mizzou with identical 5-1 Big Eight marks heading into next Saturday's clash at Columbia.
"If I had any players who heard that score, I'd be disappointed in them. They're supposed to be concentrating on the game."
Rodgers was asked if the announcement of the Missouri defeat (during KU's winning spree) had had any effect on his squad.
But Pepper admitted he got an earful.
"Sure, I heard it. But I wasn't getting hit up the side of the head."
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A fake field goal enabled the Jayhawks to take an early 7-0 advantage. Don Shanklin, holding for Bell at the 20, darted around the oncoming Wildcats and was tackled just shy of the goal line. Douglass sneaked across on the next play with 5:24 showing in the first quarter.
"That was our secret practice play," Rodgers said with a chuckle, referring to K-State's two secret practices last week.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Tomey pleased with frosh
By JACK PAULEY
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times."
That phrase by Charles Dickens might well be used to describe this year's freshmen football season. Especially if you asked coach Dick Tomey about it.
The young Jayhawks fought back from a 22-8 deficit before losing to Kansas State Friday 22-21. A missed two-point conversion attempt was the difference between winning and losing for KU.
And, although this year's team finished with an 0-4 record, Tomey said he had better players this year than he did last year.
"We didn't play as well as a team," he said, "but this team still has better players than we did last year. There are more
guys on this team that will play on the varsity next year. I'd say there are twice as many as last year."
Fullback Wayne Miles led the KU frosh with 67 yards on 26 carries. Quarterback Bo Tiger threw 36 times for 136 yards with 15 completions.
But K-State intercepted four of his passes—and turned two of them into touchdowns.
With KU behind 22-8, a Tiger to Mark Geraghty pass at the end of the third quarter moved the ball to the K-State 5-yard line. Two plays later, in the fourth quarter, Miles went over from the one to narrow the gap to 22-14. Yogi Pinckney's kick made it 22-15.
Next came an exchange of punts before KSU fumbled on their own 13-yard line and KU linebacker J. D. Armstrong recovered.
ROME (UPI)—Al Balding and George Knudson of Canada, laying back while America and Nationalist China battled three days for the lead, came on strong in the final round Sunday to capture the World Cup golf trophy with a 569, two strokes better than the United States' team.
Canadians win World Cup golf
It was the first time the Canadians had won the World Cup, formerly known as the Canada Cup, since the tournament was initiated in Montreal in 1953.
baiting, who fired five-under-par 67 on the final round, also captured the individual title with a 14-under-par 274. It was the fourth time a Canadian had won the individual title.
College scores
Big Eight
Kansas 38, Kansas State 29
Okahama 28, Missouri 14
Okahama State 26, Iowa State 17
Nebraska 22, Colorado 6
Area College
south'w'st n. 33, Col. of Emporia
Washington and Lee 14, Washington
(SI) 56,
Southeast State 34, Central State 7
Northeast State 14, Central State 7
Northeast State 14, Rolla Miahi 7
Northeast Oksa L. 14, Pittsburg S. 7
Bethel 9, Bethany 3
Missouri Valley
(5) Louis
Lincoln Jewell 28, Missouri Valley 0
Lincoln 24, Central State (O.) 0
Idaho State 16, Omaha 13
Sterling 28, McPherson 13
Big Ten
MISSION
Ohio University 60, Cincinnati 14
Memphis 60, Wichita State 18
AF Force 28, Tulsa 8
Illinois State 28, Bradley 26
Drake 28, South Dakota 20
N Texas State 36, Louisville 14
Illinois 14, Northwestern 0
Minnesota 20, Indiana 6
Oregon 37, Iowa 5
Wisconsin 34, Wisconsin 9
Purdue 9, Michigan State 0
Southeast Conference
Georgia 8, Florida 16, Kentucky 14
Tennessee 31, Mississippi 10
Louisiana St. 20, Mississippi St. 16
Alabama 14, Miami (Fla. 6)
Conference
Arkansas 35, Southern Methodist 29
Baylor 42, Texas Tech 28
Texas A&M 24, Rice 14
Texas 47, Christian 21
Atlantic Coast
Clemson 24, North Carolina 14
Duke 18, Wake Forest 3
Florida St. 24, Carolina St. 7
Fresno 47, Tulane 5
Penn State 57, Maryland 13
Virginia Tech 17, South Carolina 6
Pacific Eight
California 36, Oregon 8
Southern Calif. 17, Oregon St. 13
Washington St. 14
Washington St. 46, San Jose St. 0
Stanford 24, Pacific 0
Air Force 28, Tulsa 8
Army 26, Pittsburgh 0
Syracuse 44, Navy 6
Notre Dame 34, Georgia Tech 6
Penn State 57, Maryland 13
Carolina St. 7
Virginia 63, Tulane 47
Virginia Tech 17, South Carolina 6
Alabama 14, Miami (Fla) 6
Major Indeper
New York Cleaners
For the best in;
926 Mass.
- Reweaving
- Reweaving V1 3-0501
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
Miles then went to work and finally scored again to bring the Hawks within one at 22:21 with 9:31 remaining in the game.
--morning than in all of our first seven games combined," Rawlinson said after treating the teams bumps and bruises Sunday. "We've got a lot of injuries, but only one serious—Killingsworth," he said.
Pro standings
Tomey decided to try for two and go for the win instead of a tie. A run by Phil Basler fell short and KU was still behind.
National Football League Western Conference Central Division
W L T Pct. Pts. Ops.
Minnesota 6 4 0 100 216 153
Chicago 6 4 0 600 116 153
Detroit Bay 4 5 1 444 203 150
Detroit 3 6 1 .333 109 188
"Tomey said after the game that he was 'going for the win that he didn't want a tie."
W L W T Pct. Pts. Ops.
Baltimore 9 1 1 .900 293 108
Los Angeles 9 1 0 .900 293 108
San Diego 4 5 1 .444 197 220
Atlanta 4 5 0 .200 197 220
The Jayhawks tried twice after that to score again, but were stopped on downs once, and by another interception the other time.
Eastern Conference Century Division
W L W T Pct. Pts. OL
Cleveland 7 3 0 .700 282 209
Everett 5 4 1 .700 262 190
New Orleans 3 4 1 .356 168 241
Pittsburgh 2 7 1 .286 168 241
Capitol Division
Pinckney's interception in the second quarter led to KU's first score, a two-yard run by Dick Hertel.
W L W T Pct. Pts. O.p.
Dallas 8 2 0 .800 312 146
New York 8 2 0 .800 312 146
Philadelphia 7 4 0 .490 187 275
Philadelphia 0 10 0 .000 131 263
American Football League Eastern Division
Eastern Division
New York W L T Pct Pts. O.P.
Houston 3 2 0 .455 213 261
Miami 3 6 1 .333 180 272
Boston 3 7 1 .333 180 272
Indiana 1 9 1 .100 151 285
Kansas City W L J T Pct Pts. OT
San Diego 9 2 2 800 300 176
Oakland 8 2 2 800 339 169
Indiana 4 2 0 800 139 158
印尼曼谷 8 2 0 375 187 235
Western Division
Yesterday's Game National League
National League
16. Chicago 13
Atlanta 18, Cleveland 29, New Orleans 7
Cleveland 45, Pittsburgh 24
New York 7, Philadelphia 6
Dallas 44, Washington 24
San Francisco 20, Los Angeles 20, tie
Minnesota 20, Detroit 71, St. Louis 0
American League
Cincinnati 38, Miami 21
San Diego 67, Chicago 42
New York 32
Kansas City 31, Boston 17
Houston 17
Miami 15
Nationals Sunday
Philadelphia at Cleveland
Atlanta at St. Louis
Atlanta at St. Louis
New Orleans at Detroit
New York at Los Angeles
San Antonio at San Francisco
San Francisco at Pittsburgh
Green Bay at Washington
Miami at Boston Oakland at Cincinnati Fort Washington D.C. New York at San Diego New York at Houston do not olay next Sunday
Games Next Sunday National League
Kansas led in almost all statistical categories in the game, but the four interceptions by K-State erased that advantage.
American League
TEAM STATISTICS
| | KU | KSU |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| First Downs | 19 | 14 |
| Rushing Yardage | 101 | 71 |
| Passing Yardage | 136 | 85 |
| Passes | 13-5-3-4 | 7-18-1 |
| Runner Yardage | 28 | 128 |
| Punts | 8-31.1 | 18-50.7 |
| Fumbles Lost | 0 | 2 |
| Yards Penalized | 50 | 61 |
SCORE BY COUNT
Kansas 0 6 1 23-12
Kansas State 7 7 8 0-22
KSU—McLane 1 run (Saekbaure
kick)
KSU-Melane 1 run (sackbairn kick)
KU-Hertel 2 run (kick fight)
KSU-Outlaw 14 pass from Morrison (sackbairn kick)
KU-Safety, Narush tackled Brooks in end zone.
KSU-Best 59 pass interception (McLeane, pass from Morrison)
KSU-Mile 1 run (Pinkney kick)
KU-Miles 2 run (run failed)
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
DUAL STA RUSHING
Kansas—Miles 26-67, Hertel 11-23,
Basker 6-20, Tiger 1-(minus 9).
K-State-Butler 13-36; Outlaw 6-19;
Brooks 6-12; Crosby 1-2; Johnson 1-
(minus 6). Morrison 7-(minus 43),
McLane 24-51.
Kansas=Tiger 15-36-136 (four in-
tergrated) Beech 0-1-0
K-State - Morrison 5-12-61, Johnson 2-5-24 (one intercepted), Crosby 0-15-
Kansas - Gerghery 3-38, Bock 2-1
Bock 3-13, Underwood 4-39, Rosch
3-25
Oklahoma bruised following win
RENT
A NEW
FORD
From John Haddock Ford VI 3-3500 23rd and Alabama
FREE CAR WASHES (all the time)
Robo-Phillips 66
1764 W.23rd
Use our gas Budget card-costs no more
NORMAN (UPI) - Oklahoma end Joe Killingsworth will miss the rest of the football season because of a knee injury suffered Saturday in the Sooners' 28-14 victory over Missouri.
Killingsworth underwent surgery yesterday at an Oklahoma City hospital.
"I had more business this
Bo Denton, also an end, has a troublesome hip pointer.
Playtex·invents the first-day tampon
(We took the inside out to show you how different it is.)
Outside: it's softer and silky (not cardboardy).
Inside: it's so extra absorbent...it even protects on your first day. Your worst day!
In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent. Actually 45% more absorbent on the average than the leading regular tampon.
Because it's different. Actually adjusts to you.
It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect every side inch of you. So the chance of a mishap
is almost zero!
Try it fast.
Why live in the past?
playtex
self-adjusting
tampons
PETER TYRRELL
TUESDAY NIGHT OUT!
Beautiful KU coeds from various living groups are now eager to serve you your favorite beverage at SPECIAL PRICES every Tuesday from 7-12. Only at . . .
THE STABLES
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 18, 1968
Concern shown through fasting
A scholarship drive and "fast" will begin Tuesday by interested KU students and faculty to show concern for providing better educational opportunities to students in the Lawrence area, Cliff Conrad, Bismark, N.D. senior and president of the student body, said.
"I think that we need to do something here on the campus for the Lawrence students," Conrad said. "There is not enough emphasis placed on this responsibility."
Conrad said that in such Universities as UCLA, much work is and has been done to help the underprivileged students that are not allowed to go to college.
"There are many students in the Lawrence area." Conrad said, "that are not financially able to continue a college education. Therefore, they do not prepare for college, nor do they think about it."
Conrad said that one of the purposes of the drive is to make Lawrence students aware of a college opportunity at the University of Kansas and prepare them for the college transition.
"There is a tremendous jump from your senior year in high school to college. This program is designed so that the high school students in Lawrence are better prepared and are also encouraged from their sophomore year in high school on."
"It is important that the high school student begin by taking the right courses and thinking about the idea of an actual college education."
"After this, we want to be able to assure them the financial backing if they meet the requirements." Conrad said.
Conrad explained that it was also necessary to understand the reasoning behind the "fast."
"It is not that we are talking about people starving. We are talking about giving up something, whether it be money,
food, or both, for something that is important." Conrad said.
The committee, whose slogan is "Support Educational Opportunities-Fast," has the following activities planned:
An organizational meeting at 7 p.m. in room 101 of the Kansas Union for all interested students and faculty members.
A "fast" following the meeting until Thursday at 6 p.m. will be conducted by all interested people.
The residence halls will be serving a "fast meal," consisting of cornbread and beans, in addition to the regular meals which will be served. For every student who chooses the fast meal, 35 cents will be contributed toward KU's scholarship fund. A place for contributions will be at the end of the line for those students that choose the regular meal.
Ambassador doubtful
WASHINGTON (UPI)—J Russell Wiggins, the United States ambassador to the United Nations, expressed doubt Sunday that a settlement of the Vietnam War could emerge from the Paris peace talks before Richard M. Nixon assumes the presidency.
"I've always felt these negotiations are more likely to be difficult and protracted," Wiggins said, commenting on the prospect of a start of broadened talks with the participation of the Viet Cong and the South Vietnamese government as well as the United States and North Vietnam.
THE UnderDog ...A Very Private Club Nightly Entertainment Now
get ready girls
Something's coming Something good
Moonlight Capers Tues., Nov. 19
7-11 p.m.
Savings, surprises for you
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
Dr. Victor E. Frankl
A world renowned psychiatrist, he wrote the book, "Man's Search For Meaning." He is professor of psychiatry and neurology at the University of Vienna and President of the Austrian Medical Society for Psychotherapy. Out of his life experience he has developed what is termed "Logotherapy" which essentially means therapy through finding meaning in life. His revolutionary concepts have developed a new dimension in the psychiatric field. The Los Angeles Times made this statement of him—"The most important contribution to psychiatry since the writings of Freud."
He will speak at Unity Village (12 miles
S. E. of the Plaza on U.S. 50):
Nov. 21,8 p.m.'-"Existential Frustration as a Challenge to Psychiatry"
Nov. 22,2 p.m."Logotherapy as a Concept of Man"
Nov. 22,8 p.m."Logotherapy as a Philosophy of Life"
get ready girls
Something's coming Something good
Moonlight Capers Tues., Nov. 19
7-11 p.m.
Savings, surprises for you
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
WINNER DINNER
Smaks hamburgers are always ranch-fresh . . .
now they're American-Royal-fresh. Smaks bought carloads of prize beef at the American Royal and are using it now in all their hamburgers.
Here’s the Smaks-Jayhawk winner dinner:
SMAK-A-ROO 64c
FRENCH FRIES 19c
10c DRINK 10c
Regular 93c
SPECIAL 79c
During November at Lawrence Smaks Only
TASTY SMAKS HOME OF THE RANCH-FRESH HAMBURGER
JUST SOUTH OF ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
Tickets in advance at the office of the Unity Tower, Unity Village on East Highway 50 or mailed by request.
Donation of $5 for the 3 lectures or $2 each for single lectures.
For information call the Education Department at Unity School, LA 4-3550
SMAKS – JAYHAWK
WINNER DINNER
Smaks hamburgers are always ranch-fresh . . .
now they’re American-Royal-fresh. Smaks
bought carloads of prize beef at the
American Royal and are using it now
in all their hamburgers.
Here’s the Smaks-Jayhawk
winner dinner:
SMAK-A-ROO 64c
FRENCH FRIES 19c
10c DRINK 10c
Regular 93c
SPECIAL 79c
During November at
Lawrence Smaks Only
TASTY SMAKS
HOME OF THE RANCH-FRESH HAMBURGER
JUST SOUTH OF ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
THE RANCH-FRESH HAMBURGER
OUTH OF ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
TASTY
SMAKS
Monday, November 18, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
17
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
university manual will be given to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1-9 2141 Eread.
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Sea Blue & Cloud White, black laceh瑟ter interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T. H, buckets, console,
P.S. P.B., air. 383 V8 shows
vinyl top, just $1895 at Jerry Allen
Volkshagen, 252 Iowa. 11-20
1963 Volkswagen deluxe sunroof,
choice of 2, both 100% guaranteed.
sleeps cars, 1 green, 1 white, either
$995 at Jerry Alton Volkswagen
iowa
11-20
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$5,288.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owner miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr-$50,000 warmer, warranty included; it! it! it! There's not another like it.
Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1964 MG Midget, white w/wire wheels, this hard-to-find car yours this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa 11-20
Magnificent 72-point diamond, Tiffany mounting. Exceptional color, stain-resistant. Sail for $14 purchase prize or best offer. Inquire Box 3, Flint Hall. 11-18
1964 Falcon Sprint V-8. Four-speed, bucket seats, perfect condition inside right away. must sacrifice. Fiat $900 must sacrifice. Al Alderson, VI 3-686. 11-18
MUST SELL NOW—getting married soon. Gibson Thunderbird base plus Ampge Gemini II amp plus cover, new Shure Unidyne mike plus stand, new routine. Call Jim Huntford TR6 with 7922 or V 3-8189 after five
1968 OLDSMOBILE. 442. Excellent condition. 4-speed, British racing tractor. 3-cylinder factory. t a c h o m e t r e . superstock wheels. 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must sell! Contact: Surnie R. #616, McColum, 11-19-600.
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd (Next to Shaw's Auto Service) North Lawrence
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample. Console Stereos. Regular $495.00 and up for magnificent music! Ray Stone back's. 929-931 Mass. St. 11-20
1963 Classic Rambler Station Wagon.
Automatic Transmission. Air-conditioned, $595. VI 2-1340. Rm. 230. 11-18
Must Sacrifice. 270 Bolt Action Rifle, 4X scope and covers, Ammo. Contact Dave, 57 McCollum after 6 p.m. 11-18
1964 Chavelle V-8, 4-speed, positrac
recent overhaul on engine and brakes,
excellent condition. VI 3-8165. Also
small, enclosed trailer. 11-19
Garrard Lab 30 + 55 records Everything from "My Fair Lady" to "Surrealistic Pillow"—Must sell—Ask for Mike Blake at VI 3-1711. 11-19
Roberts Tape Recorder, C-90. Professional quality, perfect condition.
Original price $450, first $195 takes.
Call Jim Belcher, V 1-371-11. 11-19
1688 Corvette Coupe. White with tobacco interior, 427 cu. in., 4-speed, only 8,000 miles. Vall VI 3-8959, after 5 p.m.
11-19
MUST SELL 1965 Impauls S.S. 327, 4-speed, P/B. P/S, excellent condition Std's tape player. Holds tape player. Highest offer. Call II 1-2586 after 5:00 p.m.
'53 Chevy Strap-Mobile, $100 Engine —prime condition. Body and Interior still there. Call Scott Stinson at VI 3-5770. 11-20
PIRANHA
PIRANHA
8 inch full grown Red Piranha. Perfect physical condition. Call Dave Hill or Tim Reynolds at VI 3-7922.
11-20
1967 Mustang, six-stick, radio, white walls. Excellent condition—only 5,000 miles. Call Larry Powers, V 2-7170; if no answer, call UN 4-3973. 11-21
Folk instrument—Appalachian Mountain Dulcimer. Traditional & Modern design. Stock & custom. Walt Disney. rosewood. $50. 11 and 12-8378. $12. 11-2878.
SACRIFICE--Kingston eight string
electric mandolin. Has new Gibson
string and plays heavier than
$25 Call Harvey at VI 3-7939 or see
at 730 Ark.
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters Complete Music Supplies
Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals
Lessons and Rentals
18 E. 9th VI 2-0021
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
Be prepared——
get antifreeze—starting service
VL2-1008
Sony Tape Recorder, console with
audio cable. Includes bookend
bookend speakers. $300 VI-2 30-120
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
2434 Iowa
Singer Budge Sewing Machine with attachment to handle.ampshire. Cali V 2-0511.
Mustang snow tires - Last year's design. New 1st line 685-14 Kelly cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Rock Stainebacks 11-22
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. B: Bar-B-Q—outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $.325; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; $2 chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.45; Hours,
11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Telephone. TV 2-9510. tt
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence tote, 1017 Union, V9235 and in the Kansas Union lobby on Tuesday. 11-19
BUSSES TO PRESBYERIAN CHURCH startling Sunday, Nov. 17—Worship at 9 & 11. Busses leave 9th and Mass. 8:30 & 10:30. Route: GS & Corbin; juniors, junior BSA. (2) General Angel Road to Daisy Hill, Sunnyside to Oliver and Naismith Halls; 19th to Stewart Dr. Return bus after worship. 11-18
Holland, Denmark, Mexico, Italy, Japan,
Switzerland, Germany, India,
Spain, France.
迎世而功 for you Cove see
Haas Hardware, 1029 Mass. (1-19)
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 12-3
Now STRAUBRYBerry FIELDS has Persian bedspreads, tablecloths and material, wire rim sunglasses, powder bowls, earrings, earrings, earrings, rings, peace and zodiac medallions, ankhs, leather belts, wrist bands, sandals and purses, hammers and other items, ties and paper flowers, art nouveau postcards and postons, boxes from museums, candles, pottery. STRAUBRYBerry FIELDS, 712 Mass, open 10-6. 11-21
Place to practice. Haynes-Ray Audio & Music Co. VI 2-1944. 11-19
BANDS!!
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
Turtle
8th ST. SHOE REPAIR
105 E. 8th
Closed Sot. at Noon
7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tt
Part-time for 11 a.m. till 2 p.m.
Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week
$1.25 per hr. Apply in person to Griff's Burger Bar. 1618 W 23rd, ft
HELP WANTED
Male or female babysitter and house-
hold helper. Preferably to live in,
not necessarily. For two children.
Call anytime—Mrs. Owens, VI 2-8372.
Need household help 8 or 10 hours a week, preferably afternoon $1.50
Must have own car family, no small children. VI 3-4598,
evenings. 11-19
Male, part time, evenings, apply in
person. Smens Drive-in, 1404 W. 22th St.
I need two men to work about 2-5
hrs. per night, Sun, thru Thurs. Very
easy work—car necessary. Must have
knowledge of fraternities and sororities on KU campus. Excellent pay.
VI 3-7867. 11-19
WANTED
Male roommate wanted to share ground floor of a house. $50 a month.
Call Terry, VI 3-1879 after 9 p.m.
11-18
Friend drafted. Needs someone to continue contract at Naismith for the next urgent. (Please help. He can use a bit of luck). Call Jerry Lavey. VI 3-7198.
4th Roommate for cooperative living unit in spacious house. Rent $50/mo.
Available at start of year. May 15. Campus.
VI 2-7920. 11-18
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high fidelity Haynes Ray Audio. Viol Center, Aft, and Evel. Hillcrest Shopping Center 11-22
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
Former Harvard and Univ of Minnesota
ports, theresa, VI 3-7267. 11-25
HAROLD'S SERVICE
66
1401 WEST 61st STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
phone 843-3557
Pay-Less
SHOES
Self Service
1300 W.23rc
Lawrehe
PERSONAL
FOR RENT
In case you're interested—Call VI 2-
9595.
11-20
Buy UNICEF Cards and Calendars now at KU BOOKSTORE
of KU BOOKSTORE
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
SUPPORTE NEEDY CHILDREN
Found—Raincoat (38R). Lost—Raincoat
(cool 44L or 46L). Both in Kansas
Union Bowling Alley after Home-
coming game. Call VI 2-3474. 11-20
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education, SCM Ii classes. Located near Oliver Hall, SMI 3-2873.
Apartment, furnished, close to campus and downtown. $110 monthly.
VI 2-16^2* 929 Kentucky, #F. 11-19
LOST
LOST AND FOUND
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
STRICK'S DINER
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
Top of tie-tack square design with small diamond in center. Reward. Tel. VI 3-4345. Lost between Strong and School of Religion Building. 11-18
experienced in typing thes, themes,
trm papers, etc. Have electric type-
spec type spec. Type efficient.
efficient service. Phone VI 3-95544,
Mrs. E. Wright. 12-9
THE STABLES
Good Food—Reasonable Cold Beer—Pool Tables Students Welcome
Charcoaled Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers
Tan wallet near Robinson gym. If found, call G Dickerson at VI 2-5232 or VI 3-5770. Reward Thank you!
LOST—one pair glasses with brown frames in Fraser or Dyche on Friday, Nov. 8. If found, contact Mary, VI 2-4240, Room 5271. 11-21
Suzie Q French Fries
"Open till 2 a.m.'
at
- Records
- Components
HEAD SKIS
- Tapes
VI 3-2363
Route 2, Lawrence
Unusual Gift Ideas Artist Supplies
The Sound Inc.
We are now taking orders
Mont Bleu Ski
Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
HILLCREST CENTER
- Complete decoupage materials — Boxes, purses, decorations.
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
furnish decorative plaques, lining paper
- Art supplies and canvas
- Liquitex now in 8 oz. jars
CONCORD SHOP Div of
Div. of McConnell Lumber
GOODYEAR TIRES
Passenger Tires 25% Off
Page Fina Service
Wheels
& Balancing
Complete Mechanical Service
Brake Adjustment 98c
Grease Job $1.50
Motor Tune-up with
fun Equipment.
THE LOUNGE Budwieser on Tap
9TH & IOWA
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
HOME OF
THE CHALK HAWK
WEST END OF HILLCREST BOWL
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Owl
Bamboo Paddle
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
RANEY DRUG STORES
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
V1 3-5304
3 locations to serve your every need
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Drive-In
900 Miss.
V13-5804
Pick Up Station
2346 Iowa
VI 1 3-9868
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
图示
Downtown Plant
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
GARDENLAND, INC.
914 West 23rd
VI 2-1596
Aquariums & Fish
Route 2, Lawrence
Lodge
VI 3-2363
Mont Bleu Ski
A fish in a tank.
The Party Place!
V12-8615
THE MAGIC CARPET SLIDE
6th & Cole.
Now Catering To PRIVATE PARTIES
25 People—$10.00. Per Hr.
50 People—$20.00 Per Hr.
Over 50 People—$.10 a Person
Weekends—Open Till 1:00 a.m.
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 18, 1968
Jayhawks trim Sunflower foe
(Continued from page 8)
"We put it in Thursday in the fieldhouse when we couldn't get outside."
Kansas State didn't show any "secret" offense, said Rodgers. The Cats just did what they've been doing all year—and a good job of it.
"They've got some dangerous football players." Pepper commented. "They have a well-organized passing offense."
Rodgers also praised the passing of K-State soph Lynn Dickey, who completed 25 of 48 passes for 297 yards. Dickey was victimized by four interceptions.
"We intercepted their passes, but we gave them three fumbles, and that's how they got three of their touchdowns," Rodgers said.
The KU coach then explained the defensive adjustments that blunted Dickey's effectiveness in the second half. Occasionally, defensive backs Skip James and Dale Holt were substituted for the ends—giving KU six backs on pass defense. The Jayhawks also went to double-coverage on K-State's wide receivers.
K-State's luck with the passing game had KU in dire straits during the first half. Dickey engineered a 98-yard touchdown march that earned a 7-7 deadlock. His six completions in nine attempts did not include a 40-yarder and 11-yarder nullified by penalties.
Dickey fired a 26-yard scoring strike to split end Dave Jones, and the Wildcats had knotted the count, 7-7, with 8:35 left in the half.
KU responded with a 68-yard trek to paydirt, capped by Shanklin's three-yard spurt around right end. A pass interception by KU's Emery Hicks killed K-State's bid for the equalizer, and a pass theft by Pat Hutchens set up the third Jayhawk TD.
Douglass took the 'Hawks 46 yards in five plays. The KU quarterback missed the bomb on the first play, then shot a 17-yard pass to George McGowan and a 14-yard pass to Shanklin. John Jackson was standing all alone in the endzone when Douglass sent a 10-yard scoring strike on its way with .47 to go.
The Wildcats converted a fumbled punt into a TD, moving in from the KU 15 and scoring on a 4th-and-goal dive by Cornelius Davis from just a foot away. Less than a minute later in that third period, K-State had surrired 30 yards after another KU fumble. Mack Herron sailed over the top of the line from a yard out, and it was 21-all with 4:54 left.
But KU's powerful offense, which accumulated 513 yards total offense—including Riggins' 189 yards rushing and Douglass' 184 yards total offense—was not to be denied.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Law Students. Dean Sinitheo of the University of San Diego, Calif., will teach those interested in all California Law Schools. Hours: 10-noon and all afternoon. Make an appointment with Mrs. Brennan at the College Office, 206 Strong Hall.
People-to-People Tour to Kansas City. Departes at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday for Federal Reserve Bank and Nelson Gallery of Art.
Deadline for Signing up for Speech Exemption Exam. Noon.
**Poetry Reading.** 4 p.m. Edsel Foer
reads his poetry. Room Forn, Kansai
Church
Department of Physics Colloquium 4.30
University of Illinois 292 Marlott, University of Illinois 292 Marlott
Faculty Rectal 8 p.m.
Science Rectal Green, soprano SWarthwolf
Green, lead
Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
Lecture. 3 p.m. Dr. John Parasacan-
tology, physiology and Proba-
bition. 203 Hall
Reception for Madame V. L. Pandit.
3:30 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom.
TOMORROW
Lecture. 4:30 p.m. Madame L. L. W. Cohen, Jr.,
IF YOU HAVE PROBLEM SKIN START HERE.
1st day. Nothing but clean, clean skin.
2nd, 3rd & 4th days. Have patience.
5th day. Perseverance.
6th day. Skin looking clearer?
7th day. And clearer.
It's really working.
Your mirror's a friend.
Your friends look twice.
Your phone starts ringing and ringing
Life is beautiful.
IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS FOR ACQUIRING YOUR STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE OFFICE HOURS FOR STUDENT TICKETS
8:30 A.M. - NOON and 1:30-5:00 P.M.
Starting Wednesday, Nov. 20 thru Friday, Nov. 22, $ ^{*} $ 1968
(° Or until the 7,000 Season Tickets are sold, whichever comes first)
1. Go to the main lobby (East) of Allen Field House. EACH STUDENT MUST APPLY FOR HIS OWN TICKET.
2. Present I.D. Card and Imprinted Certificate of Registration at the appropriate table and pick up your IBM card.
4. Sign your Student Season Ticket and write your student number on the ticket in the presence of the ticket seller.
$ ^{o} $ Students enrolled in less than 6 hours will be charged an additional activity fee.
SINGLE GAME STUDENT TICKET
A total of 500 student tickets will be available on an individual basis for students who do not purchase a season ticket. These individual game tickets will be sold at Allen Field House (same hours as above) the day before that particular game (exception: games that occur on a Monday, student individual game tickets will be sold the same day) and the student price for individual game tickets is 50c. The spouse price for individual game tickets will be 75c.
The Athletic Seating Board guarantees every student who buys a season ticket a seat for every home game. The A.S.B. further encourages all students to arrive early to watch the freshman team (preliminary Frosh games start at 5:45 p.m.) and to support the varsity Jayhawkers during their pre-game warm-ups. ALL VARSITY GAMES WILL BEGIN AT 8:05 P.M. EXCEPT THE DOUBLEHEADER DEC. 14 WHICH STARTS AT 7:05 P.M. and the Kansas vs. Missouri game Feb. 15 at 2:05 p.m.
BE SURE TO SEE THE 1968-69 BASKETBALL PREVIEW, THE ANNUAL FROSH-VARSITY GAME MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25th. AT 8:00 P.M. IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE. YOUR K.U. I.D. CARD AND CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION WILL ADMIT YOU TO THIS GAME.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.46
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
UDK News Roundup By United Press International.
N.Y. teachers return
NEW YORK-Striking public school teachers voted overwhelmingly yesterday to accept an agreement ending a 10-week-long dispute which kept most of the city's 900 schools closed.
Some teachers returned to the classrooms immediately and all schools were expected to be open today.
PARIS—Pemier Maurice Couve de Murville said last night "unreserved" financial support from France's Western allies and a belt-tightening program would save the franc from devaluation. He pomised Frenchmen there would be no tax increase.
French try to save franc
Speaking in a nationwide radio and television address, Couve said "unbridled" money speculators were creating an international monetary crisis involving all of Europe and the United States.
Communists disagree
BUDAPEST—Moscow's attempt to force unity upon the international Communist movement met firm resistance yesterday from nonruling Communist parties still unable to swallow the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia last August.
The issue was being fought out at a preparatory conference called to work out date and agenda of a world summit of Communist party leaders in Moscow.
Weather
Clear to partly cloudy and not so cold today through Wednesday. Light mostly westerly winds today. Highs to lower 40s. Lows tonight upper 20s. Precipitation probability today, tonight and Wednesday 5 per cent.
Wescoe to China post
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe yesterday was elected president of the China Medical Board of New York, Inc., a Rockefeller-endowed foundation which extends financial aid to medical schools in the Far East, it was announced today.
The position will become effective upon Dr. Wescoe's retirement as Chancellor of the University of Kansas, June 30, Dr. Joseph C. Hinsey, Chairman of the Board, said.
The China Medical Board was created in 1914 as a division of the Rockefeller Foundation to care for the developing interests of the Foundation in China. In 1928, it was incorporated as a separate organization.
The funds of the Board, before and after incorporation, were devoted largely to support of the Peking Union Medical College in China until nationalization of the College by the Chinese Communists in 1951. Since then the Board has used its funds to help a number of medical, public health and nursing schools in East and Southeast Asia.
In some areas of the Far East, the China Medical Board of New York is the principal agency to provide outside aid to medical, public health and nursing education.
Endowment funds of the Board now amount to more than $50 million and annual income is about
Two-day fast begins tonight
Several student leaders are planning to fast for two days to help provide scholarships for high school students in the Lawrence area, said Clif Conrad, Bismarck, N.D. senior and student body president.
An organizational meeting for the "pre-fast fast" will hold at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Room 101 of the Kansas Union. The meeting is open to the public.
(Continued on page 16)
"We're going to fast from Tuesday night through Thursday night," said Conrad.
$2,200,000. Last year, appropriations were made to schools in China (Taiwan), Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and the United States.
The funds were given for fellowships, books and journals, medical libraries, visiting professorships, laboratory supplies and equipment, research projects, training programs and the construction and renovation of school buildings. Grants to medical schools in the United States were for projects bearing on the interests of the China Medical Board in the Orient.
Dr. Wescoe came to the University of Kansas in 1951 as a professor of pharmacology and experimental medicine. The next year he
was appointed dean of the School of Medicine and later Director of the KU Medical Center. In 1960, he became Chancellor of the University.
While Chancellor, Dr. Wescoe made important contributions to medical science and education. He was a member of the Council on Medical Education of the American Medical Association for 10 years, serving as chairman for four years. He was president of the State Universities Association from 1964 to 1966, and in 1967 was elected president of the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges.
In 1960, Dr. Wescoe was elected a trustee of China Medical Board of New York, Inc.
Miami travel plans begin as KU accepts bowl bid
How to get to Miami became a matter of prime concern to many KU students as the word was made official-KU had been invited to the prestigious Orange Bowl.
The temperature hovered in the 30s and snow flurried briefly, but 4,500 Jayhawk fans standing outside Strong Hall pictured hot sand, pounding surf, oranges and a football game under sunny skies.
Coach Pepper Rodgers announced to the student rally via a telephone and loudspeaker hook-up from Kansas City that the Jayhawks would meet Penn State in the bowl classic Jan. 1. KU officially accepted the bowl bid at a Big Eight meeting with a conference telephone conversation between KU athletic director Wade Stinson and Penn State President Eric Walker. Jim Liewellyn, Orange Bowl president, offered the invitations.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, contacted in New York City, said he was delighted over the prospect
of playing in Miami. He said the coaching staff deserved much of the credit for the bowl bid. Speaking of Rodgers, Wescoe said, "He is, in my opinion, the best coach in the country."
The Chancellor said he would attend the game.
Gov. Robert Docking, in a telegram to the KU football team, said he also would be in Miami to watch the Javahawks in action.
In the telegram, Docking said Kansas are proud of the team's performance this year and that the bid has brought national attention to the University. The game will be nationally telecast.
KU representatives already are in Miami making arrangements for the onslaught of KU students and alumni.
Student Union Activities has made plans for a tour to be arranged by Maupintour Assoicates to Miami
Walt Houk, Maupintour manager of travel services, said the tour (continued on page 16)
(Continued on page 16)
COURT OF CALIFORNIA
Part of the crowd of 4,500 students and KU football fans signal their hopes for a New Years night victory over Penn State after hearing head football
coach Pepper Rodgers' telephoned announcement that the Jayhawks had accepted an Orange Bowl bid. Although temperatures were near freezing, the crowd
Photo by Mike Gunther
reacted warmly to assistant coach Charlie McCullers' statement that bikinis would be proper dress in Miami.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 19, $196^{\mathrm{p}}$
KU again a member
K-State may join NSA
By STEVE HAYNES Kansan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas already is a member of NSA.
MANHATTAN-Kansas State University students will decide tomorrow whether to affiliate with the National Student Association (NSA), once a front group for the Central Intelligence Agency and now an allegedly far left organization.
K-State students, considered by campus leaders to be more conservative than those at KU, will vote on affiliation. KU students did not have such an opportunity—they were enrolled by the All Student Council (ASC) last March, said Clif Conrad, Bismark, N.D. senior and KU student body president.
NSA had long been accused of being "ultra-liberal" by Young Americans for Freedom (YAF), a national conservative group, and by campus Republican groups.
Last year Ramparts Magazine revealed that NSA had been taking funds from the CIA. The then president of NSA later admitted that the group had been receiving CIA money since 1952 and was receiving "most" of its funds by last year from the intelligence agency.
Since the CIA scandal, NSA has been scorned by both the political right, which thinks it too liberal, and by the far left, which thinks it not liberal enough. National Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) called NSA "not radical" and refused to support it, despite the fact that the group has moved further toward the left since last year.
The NSA question has stirred up quite a controversy here, if
Five Medals of Honor awarded
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Johnson awarded Medals of Honor today to five Army men, including the first chaplain to receive one for extraordinary heroism in Vietnam.
The chaplain, Capt. Angelo J. Liteky, 37, a Roman Catholic, received the nation's highest award for valor for helping to save wounded servicemen.
CLUB'S BOOK
On Dec. 6, 1967, he moved within 15 yards of a Communist machine gun to rescue two wounded men. Despite wounds on his neck and foot, he helped carry more than 20 other wounded men to a helicopter evacuation area.
PINCHED FOR TIME?
-- UNDERSTANDING COMES
FASTER WITH
CLIFF'S NOTES!
the letters column of the Kansas State Collegian, the student paper, is any indication. The Young Democrats, the Collegian, the student government and several other groups have actively supported NSA membership. Others, notably the College Republicans and YAF, have opposed NSA.
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Cliffs Notes
KU, K-State, and more than 150 other schools dropped NSA affiliation a few years back because of the "ultra-liberal" nature of the group. YAF lead the fight, locally and nationally, to end NSA.
NSA positions on civil rights, the draft, and other issues were at the root of the discussion. At Lawrence, YAF, the Collegiate Young Republicans and the University Daily Kansan led the anti-NSA campaign. Some ASC members and the local NSA committee supported affiliation.
LINCOLN. NEBRASKA 68501
The ASC voted to end KU affiliation in 1961. They voted last year to resume affiliation with little opposition. The only notice of the action in the Kansas appeared in a brief report of the ASC vote.
At K-State, the road back to NSA will be much more difficult, if, in fact, K-State goes back at all.
Much of the debate here has centered around the comparative advantages of NSA membership.
Opponents of NSA affiliation point mostly to its liberal political nature and claim it is not representative of the student body. They are, by and large, the same groups who have opposed NSA all along.
Pro-NSA forces have pointed to international programs, conventions (the last one was held here), seminars and educational programs. They have said NSA sponsors programs and provides information on Free Universities, teacher evaluation, student power, pass/fail grading, and student stress and lobbies for students in Washington, all of which would benefit K-State.
Both K-State and KU are currently members of the Association of Student Governments, which was formed in 1963 as a more conservative alternative to NSA. Conrad said KU's membership would be allowed to lapse this year because it was "no longer needed."
He said that he did not think NSA had done much for KU, but said this was because KU had not "fully utilized" its services. These services cost the ASC $200 per year, he said.
No one knows which side will win here tomorrow, but if KU's recent experiences are any indication, the only difference may be who gets K-State's money.
Artists' deadline tomorrow
Artists wishing to exhibit work in the 15th Annual Kansas Designer-Craftsman Exhibition, which opens at the KU Museum of Art Dec. 1, must have their entries submitted by tomorrow.
The exhibit will be open to any Kansan or former Kansan who wishes to submit ceramics, jewelry, metalwork, sculpture, weaving and textile design, furniture, wood and leather crafts.
Wendell Castle, KU graduate now teaching at the Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, N.Y., will be the juror for the exhibit. No prize under $50 will be awarded, exhibit officials said.
glass and enamels or artwork in related media.
Entries should be taken to the Museum of Art.
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Reopen S.F. State now
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—The California State College Board of Trustees yesterday ordered President Robert R. Smith to reopen embattled San Francisco State College immediately and to "use force if necessary."
The 18,000-student school was closed last Wednesday after a series of disturbances. Smith said 50 fires were deliberately set on Thursday.
The disturbances were sparked by the dismissal of George Mason Murray, an English instructor and member of the Black Panthers, who allegedly told Negro students to bring firearms to the campus.
After a daylong trustees meeting, State College's Chancellor Glenn Dumke told a news conference the "reopening process will begin immediately." He said classes would resume "no later than Wednesday."
Gov. Ronald Reagan, ex-officio president of the board who said the campus should never have been shut down, said
he was satisfied with the trustees' resolution.
Dumke told the news conference, "Force will be used if necessary but it will be avoided if possible."
'Doppelganger'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Tisha Sterling, daughter of Bob Sterling and Ann Sothern, will star with Roy Thinnes in Universal's "Doppelganger."
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ENGINEERS & SCIENTISTS
You are cordially invited to an interview with our representative
You are cordially invited to an interview with our representative
You are cordially invited to an interview with our representative
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3
This is a copy of a copy of an invitation to interview a company you may not know well enough.
Making copies is only part of the story.
You can get the other part straight from the source. Talk to our representative and ask him about R&D looking ahead to major advances in education...in areas like color xerography and 3-D imaging...about refinements in combined xerography and EDP systems to process and graphically reproduce any theory or fact available...at any distance.
Ask anything imaginable and you'll discover you're probing a company that's involved with every phase of the information and education explosion.
We place great emphasis on individual initiative. Additional schooling aimed at advanced degrees. Brainstorming. A variety of short-term project groups. And benefits. In short, your career, not simply a job for you to fill.
So while you're looking us over for career opportunities, we'll be looking you over for career potential. Fair enough?
Why not make an appointment with your Placement Director. A half hour of your time could be the start of a great future in fundamental and applied research, developmental and manufacturing engineering, or programming.
XEROX
An Equal Opportunity Employer (m/f)
XEROX IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF XEROX CORPORATION, ROCHESTER, NEW YORK
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Madame Pandit to speak
Indian diplomat here
Madame V. L. Pandit, sister of the late Prime Minister of India, Jawaharl Nehru, will speak on "Search for Unity in a Changing World" at 4:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Ballroom, sponsored by the KU International Club.
The 68-year-old diplomat now busily fulfilling several American lecture engagements, has had a very active life during the past half dozen years including high governmental duties and a great deal of world travel.
Until Sept. 1968, Madame Pandit was a member of the Indian Parliament, from which she resigned after serving two terms. Government missions have taken her to Australia, the Philippines, Germany, France and the United States.
She also was appointed India's representative at the funeral of the late President John F. Kennedy.
She is the only woman to have
led a delegation to the U.N., serving in that capacity at the United Nations' 7th Session in New York City in 1952. Madame Pandit was elected president of the 8th Session of the U.N. General Assembly on Sept. 15, 1953
Besides six Honorary doctor of laws degrees from American Universities and Colleges, Madame Pandit has received several citations from national organizations. She received the Wendell Wilkie One* World Award and was also awarded a medallion as outstanding woman of the year 1949 by the women's International Exposition in New York.
Madame Pandit was India's Ambassador to Moscow for two years from 1947 to 1949. Later she was Ambassador to the United States and Mexico from May 1949 to November 1951. In 1954 she served as India's Ambassador to the United Kingdom and Ireland.
Best dressed coed judging tonight
Preliminary judging for KU's Best-Dressed Girl Contest will be held at 6:30 tonight in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
★ ★ ★
Each living group has selected candidates for the contest. Large living groups have five candidates small living groups have one.
The candidates are:
Corbin Hall, Barbara Brooks, Leawood freshman; Rosalind Gulley, Lompoc, Calif.; freshman, Debbie K. Smith, frankie freshman; L. K Smith, Prairie Village freshman; Vicki Snyder, Shawnee freshman; Elsworth Hall; Manette Huza, Madura City freshman; Amy Duffield City freshman; Marilyn Marshall, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Chris Parfitt, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Suzanne Verbeck, Kansas City fresh-
Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Gracie Dexter, Topeka junior; Vicki Evans, Leawood freshman; Susan F Johnson, Evanstown junior; Prairie Village freshman; Kim Wendt, Shawnee freshman. Hashinger Hall: Jannell Clements, Emporia junior; Judy Lehman, Kansas City, Mo.; mo freshman; Joan McCormack, Bobra Schreiber, Heisinger junior; Susan Taylor, Overland Park freshman.
Lewis Hall: Carol Boney, Storm Lake, Iowa sophomore, Wichita junior; Ellen Messman, Wichita sophomore; Pam White, Winfield junior; Terry Morel, Hardin junior; McCollum more, McColum Gallpall, Lawrence sophomore; Alice Henderson, Newton sophomore; Millie Moore, career sophomore, Sherry Vrattil, Larned sophomore
Naismith Hall* Pam Koher, Beloit junior; Lakey Roberts, Sarasota, Fla. sophomore; Krista Sarpau, Sarasota sophomore; Teresa Seibinder, Tonganoxie sophomore; Carolyn Wingate, Topeka junior. Oliver Hall; Casey Eike, Kansas City.
ALEXANDRIA
Work in Europe
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.
Mo. freshman; Carol Firestone, Prairie Village freshman; Carolyn Gibbs, Galesburg, Ill., freshman; Janet Young, SL Joseph, Mo., freshman
Douthart Hall: Sherry Love, Topeka sophomore. Watkins Hall: Pamela Meador. Hutchinson freshman. Loveland High School junior. Sellars Hall: Marinell Williams, Kansas City, Mo. freshman. Alpha Chi Omega: Beth Donhowe. Prairie Village sophomore. Alpha Delphine. North Oral English. Odehalten, St. Louis, Mo. sophomore.
Alpha Gamma Delta: Barbara Lask.
Western Springs, III., junior. Alpha Phi: Bonnie Tomek, Omaha, Neb.
sophomore. Chi Omega' Shary Star.
female junior. Delta Delta:
Delta Strader. Evanson, Ill.
junior.
Delta Gamma; Sally Wells, Shawnee junior. Gamma Phi Beta: Amel Miller, Overland Park sophomore. Gamma Phi Beta: Bradley Leawood sophomore. Kappa Kappa Gamma: Anne Putnam, Salina junior. Pia Beta Phi: Kathryn Bricker,伯尔Springs sophomore. Sigma Kappa Gamma: Brentwood, Mo. sophomore.
HISTORY
Jim Greg
Marty Joni
President Greg SCHIEFFER
Vice President Jim RAYL
Secretary Marty LONGBINE
Treasurer Joni WILDE
These Freshmen Support Our Ideas
Jeanne Gorman-President G.S.P.
Barby Turner-Executive Secretary Oliver Hall Herk Russell-President Sigma Chi Pledge Class Fritz Arko-President Phi Gam Pledge Class Sue Tagg-A.W.S. Freshman Representative
Support Our Coalition - Vote, Nov. 20-21
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday. November 19, 1968
Volunteer vs. draft
An all-volunteer army, the much talked-about panacea for draft-age men, appears headed for a confrontation in Congress
Sen. Mark Hatfield of Oregon says he will initiate a bill calling for immediate change-over to a volunteer army. If he does, it will be the first step to implement one of Richard Nixon's campaign promises.
Although Nixon recommended a volunteer army during his campaign, he now differs with Hatfield on the matter of timing. The President-elect wants Vietnam securely out of the problem bag before a move is made toward a volunteer army. But in a divided nation, time spent could be damaging.
Nixon would be wise to give immediate support to a proposal aimed at creating a volunteer army. Such support would do much to soothe dissident youth and cast a hopeful light on the Nixon administration.
But with or without the support of Nixon, the proposal to change-over to a volunteer army will likely run into insurmountable opposition in the armed service committees of Congress.
Criticism of a peacetime draft is not new. Voices ranging from Daniel Webster to Gen. Douglas MacArthur have been raised against the draft. But now, with guerilla wars and major skirmishes occurring around the globe and the potential, even the promise, of more to come, the draft has become a firmly entrenched institution in our society. Rooting it out will be difficult.
No one can reasonably argue that a draft is consistent with ideals of democracy to which this country supposedly adheres. To a country which claims to be the bulwark of freedom, the draft remains a disgraceful autocratic institution.
The surest grounds on which to rest an
argument in support of conscription is to question the feasibility of maintaining an adequate force at a minimal cost via the volunteer system. Although all the evidence is not in, there is substantial reason to believe a volunteer army would not only be practical, but preferable.
Brigadier Gen. Lyman D. Smith, head of the army's enlisted personnel directorate, has stated that the army does not need a system where 95 per cent of the draftees quit, rather a system where those trained will stay in the military for an average of ten years.
Smith has said the money saved by training 50,000 to 75,000 new men each year, instead of the present 200,000 or 250,000 would more than compensate for the cost of qualifying the 10-year veteran for a place in the civilian economy.
Dr. Walter Y. Oi, professor of economics at the University of Washington, has estimated that a pay raise of 68 per cent would attract enough men to compensate for those now drafted and for those who enlist under pressure from the draft.
Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri has said, "A force made up of volunteer professional military personnel is more effective and less costly than one dependent upon involuntary draftees."
More evidence can be assembled on behalf of a volunteer army, but the evidence along with Sen Hatfield's bill will probably go for naught. It certainly will if Nixon feels it is too early to move for change.
If Congress and the executive reject the proposal, Washington will have destroyed what possibly is the only hope many youth have in the Nixon administration.
Richard Lundquist Assistant Editorial Editor
Letter to the Editor
Election coverage, sympathy
To the Editor:
The national elections are now over and it will be another four years before we are exposed to another "fighting campaign" between the presidential candidates and their running mates. This election has proved to be one of the closest in our country's history. When the campaigning began, it appeared to be a runaway victory for Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew. The only question that seemed to remain was whether Hubert
Humphrey could come in second place ahead of George Wallace. As the election neared, the race began to suddenly narrow and the whole campaign took on the overtones of a fight to the finish.
The press, in my opinion, did a very good job of keeping the public informed as to what was happening along the campaign trail. Reports on what each candidate was doing in his campaign were given nearly daily in the University Daily Kansan. This,
along with editorials and other articles dealing with the candidates and the issues was appreciated by many of the newspaper's readers.
I, for one, would like to take this opportunity to thank the UDK staff for keeping its readers well-informed during the campaign.
Sincerely,
Marilyn Vrbenec
Kansas City junior
HANOI
U.S.
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL.
All rights reserved. Uncle Paulson, Nail Polishers
'Yes sir, general. We shook them commies up so much they decided to get down to business!'
The Hill With It by john hill
"Mayflower Power"
or
"Never Cut Your Tuesday-Turkey Classes." A short play in one weak act by Tennessee Hill
Characters:
Captain John Smith—obviously traveling under an assumed name, he is the one the pilgrams laughingly refer to as their leader.
Excited Young Pilgram-young, excited. A pilgram.
Mrs. Capt. John Smith—nag, nag, nag. Jeez, what a nag.
Thousands of Screaming Extras—somewhat noisy.
Scene: (Our story opens in a log cabin. Mrs. Capt. John Smith and the pilgram women are setting the first Thanksgiving dinner on a long wooden table. Radio is blaring Plymouth rock. Capt. John Smith is on his hands and knees behind the sofa looking for his wife's Mayflower compact, as an excited, young pilgram bursts in the cabin door.)
Excited, Young Pilgram: (bursting in the cabin door) Capt. Smith! Capt. Smith! I've got some bad news! The Indians just got back from a scalping raid near the football stadium and demand to eat Thanksgiving dinner with us. I have a list of their demands.
Capt, John Smith: (from behind sofa) What do they demand?
Ericited. Young Biggrey. Turkey. dressing. teamed sake.
Excited, Young Pilgram: Turkey, dressing, corn, tossed sal-
Capt. Smith: (from behind sofa) No, you idiot. What do you mean they demand to eat with us?
Excited, Young Pilgram: They say they have a right to eat with us as equals. They even want us to carry the table outside since that's where they're used to. And they want a turkey for the main course, with a bowl of oranges to give thanks for.
Capt. Smith: (from behind sofa) That's ridiculous! Whoever heard of eating outdoors in Massachusetts in the middle of November, what with the snow drifts as high as—
Excited, Young Pilgram: (exasperated since he's not making much progress) They say it will look good in the history books if we all eat outside together. We had better do it, sir.
Capt. Smith: (from, of all places, behind sofa) Why?
Mrs. Capt. John Smith: (naggingly, in a Flip-Wilson falsetto voice) John! The pizza we ordered arrived now you get out here and carve.
Capt. Smith: (from behind sofa) Forget the pizza, dear, I think we're having turkey. Jeez, what a nag. What happens if we don't let them eat with us?
Excited, Young Pilgram: Well, they could move their wigwams closer to our settlement, and you know what that would do to the property values. Or they could threaten to marry our sisters or daughters.
Capt. Smith: (partly to himself) They could marry my wife . . .
Mrs. Cant, John Smith: What?
Capt. John Smith: (from behind sofa) Nothing, dear. What makes them think they have the right to join us?
Capt. John Smith: (from behind, interestingly enough, the sofa) But that's different. They have natural rhythm. Besides that, we were in a hurry and they just shuffled around—
Excited, Young Pilgram: Remember when they helped us plant the corn and chop firewood?
Excited, Young Pilgram: Doesn't matter. We're going to have to make a decision. sir.
Capt. John Sofa: (from behind smith) Well, this is what we'll do. This year, and this year only, we'll invite them. That way all this will never happen again. That will satisfy them.
Pocahantus: (from behind sofa) Wanna bet on that, Kemo Sa
Pocahantus. (from behind sorry) Wanna be on that, Remogabe? Mrs. Capt. John Smith: (screaming, as she chases Smith and Pocahantus around room, with large carving knife) John! How could you! You've ruined out marriage, wrecked our settlement, and changed the entire course of American history!
Capt. John Smith: (to himself, as he quickly exits stage left) Jeez
... what a nag.
(fast curtain)
THE UNIVERSITY DAYTON
KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
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 by Lawrence, Kansas. Mail to: University of Kansas Student Services for 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
News Adviser George Richardson
Advertising Adviser Mel Adams
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Hanye
Assistant Managing Editors Pat Crawford, Charla Jenkins, Alan T. Jones,
Steve Morgan, Allen Winchester
City Editor Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor Jonna Wiebe
Editorial Editor Alison Steimel
Editorial Assistant Richard Lundquist
Sports Editor Rob Maes
Assistant Sports Editor Bob Kearney
Feature and Society Editor Rea Wilson
Associate Feature Editor Sharon Woodson
Copy Chiefs Judy Dague, Linda McCredery, Don Westherhaus, Sandy
Zahradnik Paula Zook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Promotion Paul Flames
Circulation Manager Jerry Bottenfield
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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
V
bee
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Letters to the Editor
New politics, movie star
To the Editor:
An article in today's UDK attributes the following quote to Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.; "I cannot help feeling that the old politics has run its course. ... My guess is that the future lies between the McCarthy and Kennedy ways." The article also gives his endorsement of "new politics." I feel that this article warrants an in depth analysis of both Bobby Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy and the "new politics."
Bobby Kennedy first entered the national limelight as an aid to the late Senator from Wisconsin, Joe McCarthy. Joe McCarthy was a facist. Bobby Kennedy worked for Joe McCarthy. Joe McCarthy was a manifestation of an American sickness. To picture his behavior one must look at the late Representative from Texas, Joe Pool. Most students will be able to recall Joe Pool and the HUAC wildly hunting Communists in the new left just a few years ago. Joe Pool, like Joe McCarthy, was a professional Communist hunter. The only difference between the two men was that millions of people believed in Joe McCarthy while hardly anyone took Joe Pool as more than a joke. Bobby Kennedy worked for Joe McCarthy.
Happily, Bobby Kennedy quit working for Joe McCarthy. It would be nice to be able to say that he quit because he disagreed with Joe McCarthy, but we can not. Bobby Kennedy quit because of personal disagreements with another member of McCarthy's staff, Roy Cohn.
After Bobby Kennedy left Senator Joe McCarthy he worked as an aid for various other Senators. In 1960 he directed his brothers presidential campaign, and after the election he was appointed Attorney General by his brother, the President-Elect. While there is nothing wrong with his being appointed Attorney General by his brother, his actions showed that he was not fit for the job. He engaged in, and won a personal feud with James Hoffa. Even though Hoffa belonged in prison "Government by Feud" is an evil. Another evil attributable to Bobby Kennedy during his tenure as Attorney General was wire tapping. Advocates of the "new politics" now complain that "Big Brother is Watching." Yet they have forgotten that just a few years ago "Little Brother was listening."
Some of Eugene McCarthy's more "objective" supporters
have compared McCarthy's preNew Hampshire actions with Bobby Kennedy's actions before the primary upset there. There people have reached the unbiased conclusion that Bobby Kennedy was a coward because he would not risk his political life in a challenge to the President whereas Eugene McCarthy was brave because he put his beliefs on the line. The only thing there people forget is that before New Hampshire Eugene McCarthy was a "nothing" and therefore risked nothing. Before the New Hampshire primary Eugene McCarthy was a nothing, and during the campaign he proved that he had well earned the distinction. During the campaign Senator Eugene McCarthy showed an ability to make statements that put George Romney, and even Spiro Agnew to shame. After one primary primary lose Senator McCarthy said that an analysis of the vote showed that rich educated people voted for him while poor uneducated people voted for Senator Kennedy. Perhaps Senator McCarthy feels that the votes of poor uneducated and in many cases black voters are not as good as the votes of educated whites. If Senator McCarthy feels this way he should have the intelligence not to voice his prejudices
These are the two advocates of "new politics" that Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. supports. They are as hypocritical and as vain as "new politics" is itself, the "new politics" which says that those whom you disagree with you can shout down, that which you don't like you can tear up, and that which you don't understand you can ignore.
Yours truly,
Jonathan Jordan,
Washington, D.C., freshman
To the Editor:
Ever meet a movie star? Well, I never have, but the prospect of meeting one was exciting; so with the aid of two girlfriends we went to find our star.
The search began Monday night at the preview of the new Julie Andrews' motion picture "Star,"" the musical version of Gertrude Lawrence's life. The usual trite superlatives could never adequately describe our enthusiasm for the movie.
Daniel Massey, who plays Gertrude Lawrence's life-long friend Noel Coward, was in town for this preview and the following night's benefit performance. Thoroughly impressed by his convincing portrayal of Coward, we decided to attempt an interview with Massey at his Tuesday morning press breakfast in his suite at the Hotel Muehlebach. As uninvited guests, we were somewhat uncertain of our reception; but were soon surprised to find ourselves engaged in a personal conversation with Massey and two or three others present.
Unexpectedly, the subject of the conversation was not "Star!;" in fact, for the two hours we were there, the movie was not even mentioned. Instead, the discussion centered around politics and youth. Massey, a charming, intelligent, Cambridge educated Englishman, had definite opinions on both these subjects and discussed them candidly. We were somewhat amazed to learn that this 35-year man shared many beliefs of the college student. Massey feels that the youth of today are unique in their idealism, and he stresses the importance of maintaining this idealism for the future.
At this point Massey was reminded of a luncheon engagement and the interview came to an end. Our search had also come to an end; we had found our star. But even as we were leaving, we couldn't be sure if we had talked to a real movie
ENDS
TUESDAY
JANE PEYER
FONDA McENRY
ROGER VADIM
THE GAME
IS OVER
(LaCurée)
film by ROGER VADAM
THE GAME
IS OVER
(LaCurée)
STARTS WEDNESDAY
THE MIRISCH CORPORATION
of America
Alan Arkin
"Inspector Clouseau"
COLOR by Deluxe PANAVISION*
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Mnt. 2:30 - Eye. 7:15-9:15
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ENDS TUESDAY
"THE
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ENDS TUESDAY
"THE
UGLY ONES"
COLOR by Delure United Artists
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
CLINT EASTWOOD
- Swimming pool—party room
CLINT EASTWOOD in "COOgan's BLUff"
SALE AT Kief's RECORDS
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"THE BEATLES"
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star, or a sensitive, intelligent man one might expect to find instructing a graduate English seminar.
MIRSCH FILMS
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PLAYBOY SAYS THIS MOVIE MAKES BARBARA McNAIR "AN INSTANT SEX STAR"
BARBARA
and Special Guest Star
FROM CRC
if he
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let him
A FORWARD FILM PRODUCTION
DANA
WYNTER
RAYMOND
ST. JACQUES
KEVIN
McCARTHY.
Introducing BARBARA McNAIR as City
and Special Guest Star
ARTHUR O'CONNELL
FROM CRC
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THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 910 AND IOWA
FEATURE STARTS: 2:40 - 7:40 - 9:40
if he hollers let him
GO!
THE Hillcrest
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40 - 9:40
A
Alan Arkin in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter TECHNICOLOR* W From WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS NOW! THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 81TH AND IOWA FEATURE STARTS: 2:25 - 7:25 - 9:40
Alan Arkin in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter TECHNICOLOR* W From WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS
THE Hillcrest
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INGMAR BERGMAN'S "HOUR OF THE WOLF"
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INGMAR BERGMAN'S "HOUR OF THE WOLF"
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Hillcrest SHOPPING CENTER - 5TH AND NINTH
FEATURE STARTS: 2:40 - 7:45 - 9:45
THE Hillcrest
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
KS
Excedrin headache No. 38 - 29
Vince Gibson, K-State's head football coach, wiped the beads of toil from his forehead in the fourth quarter of Saturday's KU-K-State football game and with that "It's been a blue, blue day" look on his face, walked toward the Wildcat locker room. His 'Cats had just dropped a 38-29 decision to KU. Photo by Greg Sorber
Bowl fever high
By STEVE SMILANICH UPI Sports Writer
After powerful Penn State, determined to prove that Eastern football is on the upgrade, and Kansas, surprise team of the midlands, yesterday accepted invitations to play in the Orange Bowl, post-season bowl sponsors across the nation began the task of lining up opponents for the holiday season extravaganzas.
The Orange Bowl, scheduled to be played Jan. 1 at Miami, was one of two major bowl games filled during the day in which three teams from the Southwest accepted bids.
The other bowl game filled was the Bluebonnet scheduled Dec. 31 at Houston, Tex. It will involve Oklahoma of the Big Eight and Southern Methodist of the Southwest Conference.
Oklahoma's sudden late-season surge, which claimed back-to-back victories over Kansas and Missouri after only two wins in its first five games, has given the Sooners a chance at winning a second straight Big Eight championship under Chuck Fairbanks.
If the Sooners defeat both Nebraska and Oklahoma State, they gain no worse than a title tie and could win it outright if Missouri and Kansas play to a tie Saturday.
The Southeast teams landing bowl berths were Georgia, Tennessee and Auburn.
The Tigers accepted a bid to play in the Sun Bowl, Dec. 28, at El Paso, Tex., while Tennessee signed to compete in the Cotton Bowl at Dallas, Tex., on New Year's Day.
The post-season puzzle began to take shape last Saturday night after top-ranked University of Southern California beat Oregon State to nail down the host berth in the Rose Bowl at Pasdena, Calif. on New Year's Day.
Georgia, champion of the Southeastern Conference, accepted a Sugar Bowl bid at New Orleans, La., Jan. 1.
The visiting team's spot in the Rose Bowl will be filled by the winner of next Saturday's Big Ten title game between Ohio State and Michigan.
Here's how the bowl games shape up;
Rose Bowl-USC vs. Big Ten champion Ohio State or Michigan.
Sugar Bowl—Georgia vs. Texas or Arkansas.
Cotton Bowl-Tennessee vs. Southwestern Conference champion Texas or Arkansas.
Bluebonnet Bowl- Oklahoma vs. Southern Methodist.
Sun Bowl-Auburn vs. Wyoming. Arizona State or Missouri.
Orange Bowl—Penn State vs. Kansas.
Bowls still to be filled are the Liberty Bowl at Memphis, Tenn. Dec. 14, the Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Fla., Dec. 28, and the Peach Bowl at Atlanta, Ga.
Have You Tried
MINNIE PEARL'S
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By RON YATES
Kansan Sports Editor
In State College, Pa., Penn State students were less enthusiastic about KU going to the Orange Bowl.
The word spread like a trail of ignited gasoline. In a matter of minutes after the announcement yesterday almost three-fourths of the student-faculty population at KU knew the Jayhawks were headed for Jackie Gleason land and a New Year's date with Nittony Lions of Penn State University.
Ron Kolb, sports editor of the Daily Collegian, the Penn State student newspaper, said last night in a telephone conversation with the Kansan sports editor, that many students at Penn State were surprised at KU's selection as an opponent for their Lions.
"We were counting on playing Georgia," Kolb said, "but a KU-Penn State matchup should be pretty interesting."
Penn State wanted Georgia
Kolb said most Penn State students feel teams from the Southeastern conference, of which Georgia is a member, are stronger than Big-Eight teams.
Kolb said Penn State plans to "airlift" at least 1,000 students to Miami. He said plans are being made to reserve about 1,000 hotel rooms in Miami for students going to the game. He said most Penn State students would travel to Miami on their own.
"As far as I know," Kolb continued, "the team will get to Miami about two weeks before the game in order to work out and get ready for KU.
"It's going to be the Penn State defense against the KU offense." Kolb said.
This year's trip to the Orange Bowl will be the first for Penn State. Last year Penn State tied Florida State 17-17 in the Gator Bowl. KU has not been in a bowl game since 1961 when the Jayhawks beat Rice 33-7 in the Bluebonnet Net球.
Penn State has two more
games remaining on their schedule before they meet the Jayhawks. The Lions must play Pittsburgh this Saturday and
Syracuse the following week
Syracuse the following week:
"We're worried about Syracuse," Kolb said. "This is one of those rivals like KU-K-State."
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Tuesday, November 19, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
12
Past KU defenders .. Photo by Greg Sorber
K-State forward Regis Leal fights past KU defenders Gunther Pfister (17) and Mike Radakowitz (2). . . .
KU harriers lose by one; breaks string of six wins
One point separated the KU harriers from the Central Collegiate cross country championships Saturday at Chicago.
The Jayhawk team took second place behind the winner, and defending champion, Miami (Ohio). KU's runners accumulated 84 points to Miami's 83.
Hawks climb to 6th in poll
NEW YORK (UPI)—Southern California's bid for a second consecutive national championship looks like it will go down to the wire.
The Trojans remained unbeaten in eight games Saturday by knocking off Oregon State, 17-13.
But the remainder of the top five also remained in contention. Ohio State held on to No. 2, beating Iowa, 33-27; for its eight victory without defeat, and Penn State, also 8-0 held its No. 3 ranking by ripping Maryland 57-13.
Michigan maintained fourth by beating Wisconsin, 34-9; while Georgia held on to fifth by downing Auburn, 17-3.
Kansas moved up to No. 6, with Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas and Notre Dame completing the top 10.
Ninth Week
Team Points
1. So. Calif. (27) (8-0) . . . 338
2. Ohio State (6) (8-0) . . . 309
3. Penn State (2) (8-0) . . . 280
4. Michigan (8-1) . . . 207
5. Georgia (7-0-2) . . . 192
6. Kansas (8-1) . . . 156
7. Texas (7-1-1) . . . 155
8. Tennessee (6-1-1) . . . 80
9. Arkansas (8-1) . . . 55
10. Notre Dame (7-2) . . . 52
This "defeat" broke the Jaya hawks' string of six straight victories. Saturday the KU squad travels to New York where they will compete in their last meet, the NCAA championships.
Second 10-11, Houston 31;
12, Oregon State 16; 13, Missouri 15; 14, Oklahoma 13; 15,
Alabama 9; 16, Purdue 8; 17,
Ohio Univ. 4; 18, Yale 2; 19, tie,
Southern Methodist and Minnesota 1.
Individual winner Saturday was Jerry Hinton of Southern Illinois University with a 24min... 44-sec. time.
The Hawks' first runner was freshman Doug Smith who placed 13th with a 25.27 time. He was followed by junior Roger Kathol, 16, 25.30; sophomore Jay Mason, 18, 25.31; freshman Rich Elliot, 21, 25.35; sophomore Thorn Bigley, 27, 25.47; sophomore Paul Mattingly, 34, 26.00, and sophomore Mike Solomon. 26.45.
Team standings:
1. Miami (Ohio) ... 84
2. KU ... 84
3. Eastern Michigan ... 91
4. Western Michigan ... 100
5. Drake ... 105
6. Ohio U. ... 169
7. DePaul ... 190
8. St. Johns ... 210
9. Bowling Green ... 224
10. Notre Dame ... 269
Team standings:
SOCIAL ENTERTAINMENT
... shoots ... and saved
Photo by Greg Sorber
KU goalie Jose Fonseca stretches between the goal posts to stop the ball kicked by Leal
Handful view soccer loss
Soccer didn't prove as fruitful to Jayhawk fans this weekend as football did.
Unlike the packed stadium and TV coverage of Saturday's football win, the KU soccer club lost to K-State 4-1 at KU before a handful of spectators—mostly Wildcat fans.
Playing under chilly 33 degree weather, the Jayhawks were unable to unfold an effective attack they used to beat K-State earlier in the season 2-0.
The first half ended 1-0 in favor of the Wildcats on a goal by Regis Leal of Brazil.
After about 15 minutes of play in the second half Leal again scored for K-State after a perfectly centered corner kick. A few seconds later he scored again to make the score 3-0 for the Wildcats.
KU started penetrating the K-State defense more effectively during the latter part of the half. They managed to kick what appeared a sure goal except for a stretching save by the K-State goalie. The Jayhawks scored
Tigers go Gator
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)
—Missouri's Big Eight-
contending Tigers have
accepted a bid to play in the
Gator Bowl Dec. 28 at
Jacksonville, Fla., it was
announced Monday night
by athletic director and
head coach Dan Devine.
Devine said the Tigers' opponent would be named later in the week by the Gator Bowl Association.
Missouri's acceptance marks the third Gator Bowl trip for the Tigers, who lost to Clemson 24-23 in 1948 and bowed to Maryland 20-7 in 1949. Both Toger teams were coached by Don Faurot.
their first goal a few minutes later when Fred Mandel, France, took advantage of a false move by the K-State goalie to penetrate the goal posts.
The last goal was again scored by Leal when he took advantage of a KU defender's error to kick unmolested for his fourth score.
The KU soccer club, now with a 3-2 record, will play the Wichita Soccer Club Sunday at 2 p.m. behind Robinson Gymnasium.
Sandy Koutaf pitched four no-hitters during his career.
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THE
THE STABLES
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
Bowl tickets on sale
Football fans who plan to order Orange Bowl tickets through the University of Kansas for the Jayhawks' New Year's night clash with Penn State must do so by mail and must limit their requests to four tickets each, the KU athletic department announced Monday night.
Mail orders for tourney tickets on sale Wed.
Mail orders for tickets to the 23rd annual Big Eight Pre-Season Basketball Tournament, December 26-27-28, 30, at Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium, will be accepted by the Auditorium beginning Wednesday, November 20.
The tournament, which yearly attracts more than 50,000 fans from the six-state area comprising the Big Eight Conference, matches all eight Conference teams in a four-day, 12-game tipoff to the regular season.
In addition, more than 3,000 high school players and coaches participate in a clinic conducted by the Conference's basketball coaches on Saturday morning, December 28.
Open round pairings match Colorado against Oklahoma and Kansas vs. Nebraska on Thursday December 26, and Oklahoma State against Missouri and Iowa State vs. Kansas State on Friday, December 27. Semifinals will be played Saturday, December 28, and the finals on Monday, December 30.
Tickets are priced at $2, $3,
and $4, with priority in location
given to those ordering for all
four nights of competition.
Checks are to be made payable
to the Municipal Auditorium,
Kansas City, with either a self-
addressed stamped envelope or
25 cents mailing charges.
Wade Stinson, KU athletic director, said Kansas will be allotted 12,500 tickets for the Miami, Fla., bowl game. The tickets are priced at $6.50 each.
Here is the plan the KU ticket office will follow:
1. Only mail orders will be accepted.
2. Orders must be postmarked prior to midnight, Friday, December 6.
3. No more than four tickets may be ordered by any person.
4. Full payment by check or money order must accompany each order. Ticket prices are $6.50 each. A 50 cent mailing charge must be added to each order.
5. Checks or money orders should be made out to the KU Athletic Association and orders mailed to: KU Athletic Ticket Office, Allen Field House, Lawrence, Kansas 66044.
6. Orders will be filled on a priority basis to the following
groups: University of Kansas students for their personal use; KU athletic scholarship contributors; 1968 football season ticketholders; paid up members of the KU Alumni Association.
7. Orders will be filled within the above priority groups on the basis of when the orders are postmarked.
8. If KU's block of tickets is not large enough to fill all orders, refunds will be made as quickly as possible to those fans whose orders could not be filled.
Lafayette moves up
NEW YORK (UPI)—Lafayette's 14-10 victory over Colgate Saturday gave it extra impetus in voting for the Lambert Cup—aawarded annually to the best middle-sized college football team in the east—and into first place ahead of Amherst, last week's leader.
Hawks will not encounter any additional pressure
KU's invitation to the Orange Bowl will not place any added pressure on the Jayhawks for this Saturday's game with Mizou, head coach Pepper Rodgers said.
Rodgers said that the team would resume practice some time in December since the af-
"If we were playing Missouri with only the game at stake, there would be pressure on us." Rodgers said after yesterday's practice. "We're going to try just as hard to win this Saturday as we did against Missouri last year," he added.
KU's coach said that Orange Bowl officials will probably bear the most pressure. "They undoubtedly want us to win this Saturday," he said.
ternon sessions would be called off for a couple of weeks after the Missouri game. "It wouldn't be worth going to the Orange Bowl if we had to practice for five weeks," he said.
The Jayhawks practiced for nearly 90 minutes yesterday in near-freezing temperatures. Rodgers admitted that he did not expect this type of weather in Miami on New Year's Day.
He joked that KU could have accepted a bid to a bowl game in the cold north lands. "We had an invitation to the Eskimo Bowl but we turned it down," he quipped.
"Where's that?" one person asked.
"In Alaska," Rodgers said
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking yesterday sent a telegram to coach Pepper Rodgers and the KU football team congratulating them on their Miami invitation.
Docking wires congratulations
It said: "Congratulations! Kansans are proud of you on winning the Orange Bowl invitation. We wish you success. I am looking forward to joining you in Miami for the big game."
Hawk it to 'em!
--thru GARDENLAND
SOCIAL CHAIRMAN
Plan your CHRISTMAS PARTY
for:
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- Roping
- Wreaths
- Mistle Toe
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Candies
● Decorations—a wide selection
GARDENLAND
914 W. 23rd
IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS FOR ACQUIRING YOUR STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE OFFICE HOURS FOR STUDENT TICKETS
8:30 A.M. - NOON and 1:30 - 5:00 P.M.
Starting Wednesday, Nov. 20 thru Friday, Nov. 22, $ ^ { \ast } $ 1968
( $^{\circ}$ Or until the 7,000 Season Tickets are sold, whichever comes first)
1. Go to the main lobby (East) of Allen Field House. EACH STUDENT MUST APPLY FOR HIS OWN TICKET.
2. Present I.D. Card and Imprinted Certificate of Registration at the appropriate table and pick up your IBM card.
3. Take IBM cards to the ticket window and receive your Student Basketball Season Ticket upon payment of $4.00*
4. Sign your Student Season Ticket and write your student number on the ticket in the presence of the ticket seller.
- Spouse season tickets may be purchased for $9. - Housemother season tickets may be applied for at this time.
$ ^{*} $ Students enrolled in less than 6 hours will be charged an additional activity fee.
SINGLE GAME STUDENT TICKET
A total of 500 student tickets will be available on an individual basis for students who do not purchase a season ticket. These individual game tickets will be sold at Allen Field House (same hours as above) the day before that particular game (exception: games that occur on a Monday, student individual game tickets will be sold the same day) and the student price for individual game tickets is 50c. The spouse price for individual game tickets will be 75c.
The Athletic Seating Board guarantees every student who buys a season ticket a seat for every home game. The A.S.B. further encourrages all students to arrive early to watch the freshman team (preliminary Frosh games start at 5:45 p.m.) and to support the varsity Jayhawkers during their pre-game warm-ups. ALL VARSITY GAMES WILL BEGIN AT 8:05 P.M. EXCEPT THE DOUBLEHEADER DEC. 14 WHICH STARTS AT 7:05 P.M. and the Kansas vs. Missouri game Feb. 15 at 2:05 p.m.
BE SURE TO SEE THE 1968-69 BASKETBALL PREVIEW, THE ANNUAL FROSH-VARSITY GAME MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25th. AT 8:00 P.M. IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE. YOUR K.U. I.D. CARD AND CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION WILL ADMIT YOU TO THIS GAME.
Tuesday. November 19,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Reeves worried about MU
Most Jayhawk football followers know that sophomore fullback John Riggins runs the 100-yard dash in 9.8 seconds. But they probably don't know that the player who backs up Riggins, junior Mike Reeves, runs the 100 in 9.9
tuned the football.
Reeves, who started the first game this year against Illinois, won high school all-state track honors two years at Concordia.
He made all-state in basketball and football his senior year, and won All-America honors in football that year as a tailback.
After yesterday's announcement that KU would go to the Orange Bowl, Reeves was still thinking ahead to Saturday's game with Missouri.
"They play good football at Missouri," he said, "but we're up for this game. It could mean the conference championship."
Reeves said he knew if KU could beat K-State, and if Oklahoma could beat Missouri, both of which happened, KU still would be in contention for the Orange Bowl.
Reeves says KU football is great because it is so exciting to watch—and, more important to him, to play.
"We never get into a rut playing our brand of football." Reeves said. "We go for the big play. It's exciting."
Riggins starts at fullback now, and Reeves has high praise for the sophomore.
"He's a real good player," Reeves said. "He hits good, he runs real well, and he's an adequate blocker, I think he'll be All-America someday."
For Reeves, Nebraska was the toughest game physically. But he said the toughest chore mentally was to stay alert when the Jayhawks were winning 68-7 over New Mexico, or 49-14 against Oklahoma State, earlier in the season.
Being 8-1, and ranked 3rd, and then 7th in the nation have been Reeves' biggest thrills in college football.
The KU coaches have a lot to do with that record, and Reeves thinks they are "tremendous."
"They're with you enough . . . so that it makes me feel like they are one of the guys," he said. "They know what they are doing, and they know what you're doing, both on and off the field. I respect them for that."
Playing offense suits Reeves' likes better than defense.
"The offensive backfield is in the limelight," Reeves said. "And anyone would be a fool to say they didn't like being there. I'd play anywhere the coaches put me, though, because I love to play football."
The 6-5,205-pounder is majoring in physical education,and is taking some other courses in pre-law. He wants to coach,and possibly teach business law after graduation.
17
Over 100 schools offered Reeves football scholarships. His final choice was between UCLA, Air Force, West Point and KU.
Mike Reeves
He chose KU because it was only 180 miles from his home, and because he had been exposed to KU more than any of the others.
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Another reason was that he wanted his dad to be able to see him play.
Reeves is engaged and will be married next August to Deborah Behan, Youngton, S.D. sophomore.
He is looking forward to next year, when he may try out for tailback, since seniors Junior Riggins and Don Shanklin will be gone. His 9.9 speed may help him get that position.
In Vain
KU fencers, after an impressive showing in a six-team meet at Kansas City Junior College Saturday, will defend its title in the Central Plains Invitational this Sunday at Kansas City Metro.
ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Jack Smith bowled 659 and his son, Danny, contributed 646, with father and son each rolling 254 in one game, but their team lost.
KU fencers dominated women's foil in the matches at Kansas City Juco by seizing four of the top six places. Marilyn Shalz, who has only practiced with the team this year, captured first place.
KU to defend fencing title
"It's the first really important meet of the year," player-coach Steve Keeler said after yesterday's practice. KU will compete against at least five and possibly seven other teams in the tournament.
enter one of the four events, which include women's foil, men's foil, men's sabre and men's epee.
Keeler said that two 4-man teams would represent KU in the meet. Each of the fencers will
KU's Nancy Campbell grabbed second place, followed by teammates Martha Miller (fourth) and Connie Poff (sixth).
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
Pre-season blues Same ol' song from coaches
Sports editor's note: This is the first of a nine part series on Big Eight basketball teams, their personnel and their title chances for the 1968-69 season.
By DICK DEAN
Kansan Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Big Eight basketball coaches cried their woes here Sunday during the annual Big Eight basketball clinic at the Muehlebach Hotel. All eight coaches appeared pessimistic about their team's chances of winning the Big Eight crown.
After each coach spoke, the floor was open to questions. Perhaps the most concern of the sportswriters and sportscasters lay in how junior college transfers and sophomores were helping out. This is a year when many new players are on the scene.
Reason is that many fine seniors were lost by all the teams. Leading with lettermen back are Kansas and Iowa State with nine apiece. Oklahoma, Missouri, Colorado and Kansas State have six returning.
Oklahoma State coach Henry Iba, fresh from guiding the U.S. Olympic basketball team to a gold medal, said that his team
"is the best since my 1964 team." The '64 team won the championship.
KU coach Ted Owens said later, "as much respect that all of us (coaches) have for Mr. Iba, we sure wouldn't like to see history repeat itself." Owens was referring to the 1964 season when Iba coached the U.S. cage team to victory in the Olympics and came back to win the conference that year.
Coach Norm Stewart said that his Missouri team will be small. The tallest player is 6-5 Doug Johnson, a 23-year-old junior who joined the team after completing a hitch in the Army. Stewart quipped, "For your information, Doug is not up for social security benefits (referring to his age). He also entered the Army on our side."
Oklahoma coach John MacLeod said, "Our progress has been extremely slow, but we've had a good effort."
Nebraska coach Joe Cipriano said that his team has more rebounding potential and fairly good shooting. "Our defense is the real question mark," he said. He hinted that the Huskers might not resort to the pressing defense for which they have been known.
"It will be a great amount of physical risk for us to play the other teams this year," joked Iowa State coach Glen Anderson, referring to the tremendous height of the other teams. "We had a hell of a time beating our frosh in an overtime last week," he said. "We don't have any positions, we just go out and play." In a more serious mood, Anderson said that he had experience to work with, but all starting spots were up for grabs.
Russell (Sox) Walseth of Colorado said that his team was "in a state of flux," and that "it will take us a while to figure out what we have." There is no definite starting lineup, but the Buffs have 7-2 Ron Smith to intimidate opponents.
Kansas coach Ted Owens cites a group of good sophomores plus improved shooting of Rich Bradshaw and Bruce Sloan to help KU contend for the championship.
When asked if that will mean that KU will run the fast break more, Owens replied, "I've said that for the last four years, but we've lacked the rebounding."
(See tomorrow's Kansan for the second part of the report of the coaches' basketball clinic.)
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Oklahoma linebacker Don Pfrimmer seems to make a habit of demolishing the Missouri offense.
Last year he had a tremendous day against the Tigers as the Sooners won 7-0 at Columbia, Mo., and went on to capture the Big Eight Conference football championship with a perfect 7-0 record.
Saturday, the 6-0, 185-pounder had another field day against the then sixth-ranked Tigers. He was credited with being in on 20 tackles as the Sooners whipped Missouri 28-14 to stay in title contention.
"Pfrimmer played his best game of the year Saturday," Oklahoma coach Chuck Fairbanks siad after the senior was named Big Eight Lineman of the Week yesterday.
OU's Pfrimmer named Big 8 lineman
Sooner coaches credited him with 10 solo tackles and 10 assists. Two times, he knifed
through the Missouri line to tackle backs for three-yard losses.
"It looks like Don Primmer knows something about Missouri nobody knows," Fairbanks said. "Don had a great ball game for us. This was by far his best game of the year."
Last season against the Tigers, Pfrimmer was also named conference lineman of the week.
Pfrimmer's numerous tackles helped keep Missouri's running game to only 174 yards while Oklahoma tailback Steve Owens was outrushing all the Tigers with 177.
Fairbanks commenting on the number of tackles credited to Pfrimmer, said, "That's a pretty good day's work for anybody."
Other top nominees included Nebraska defensive end Sherwyn Jarmon, who was credited with eight tackles and kept pressure on Colorado quarterback Bob Anderson in the huskies' 22-6
victory, and Kansas State split end Dave Jones, who caught seven passes for 115 yards and one touchdown in the 38-29 loss to Kansas.
Others nominated were Iowa State defensive tackle George Dimitri, who was in on 13 tackles in the 26-17 loss to Oklahoma State; Kansas offensive guard Dave Aikins, who had a fierce blocking day against the Wildcats; Colorado defensive end Mike Snitterk, who had another great day for the Buffs at defensive end, and Oklahoma center Jon Kolb, who coach Phil Cutchins says "had his best day yet, even better than against Colorado last week."
Competing against the top talent of five other Big Eight gymnastics teams, KU's Kirk Gardner captured a share of first place on the rings in the KU Invitational Gymnastics Championships at New Robinson last Saturday.
fifth. Iowa State, Colorado and Oklahoma took the top three places while Nebraska ranked sixth. Results
The Atchison sophomore posted a score of 9.30 to tie Iowa State senior Meythaler for first place.
Floor exercise 1—, Snow, KSU, 9.1
Sexton, OU, 8.95 — 3, Ito, US, 8.875
(4) tie, Pierson, KU, Berry, ISU, 8.775
(6) tie, Ware, KU, Bergeran, CZU
8.55, 8. Male, QUI, 0.875
High bar—1, Sexton, OU, 9-375. 2 B. Simmons, IU, 9-025. 3 Blea, CU. 4 Butzman, IU, 8-85. 5 Pomeranz, UU, Show, KSU, 8-52. 7 Mazur, IU, 8-225.
KU performers Robert Pierson, Lawrence senior, and Stan Clyne, Wichita sophomore, also advanced to the finals in this six-tteam meet. Pierson, an all-around gymnast, earned a second in the long horse, tied for fourth in floor exercise, and took a seventh in the rings.
Rings—1, i (tie) Gardner, KU, Methaler, ISU. 8.30. 3, Rettbeg, OU. 9.175, USU. 8.704, USU. 9.075. 5, Maher, ISU. 8.074, USU. 8.955, ISU. 8.95, T. Plergon, KU. 8.875.
Parallel bars-1, Mazur, ISU. 9325,
2 B Simmons, ISU. 925. 3 Sexton,
4 German, ISU. 895. 9 Graves,
ISU. 895. (tie) Blea, CUA,
Pomeranz, UU. 8.65.
Side horse—1. Taylor, OU, 8.875. 2. Hoffman, ISU, 8.80. 3. Edwards, CU, 8.5. 4. Repp, OU, 8.275. 5. Pomeranz, KL, 7. Sliner, CU, 7.625. 7. Howland, KSU, 7.525.
Soph leads KU's gymnasts
Long horse—1, Snow, KSU, 9.3.2
Pierson, KU, 9.0875, 3. R, Simmons,
Clyne, KU, 9.0875, 3. Blea,
KU, 9.1925, 6. Sexton, OU, 8.8625,
May, KU, 8.4875
Although only individual awards were presented, team scores were calculated. In the final standings K trailed K-State by 1.2 points to place
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Tuesday, November 19, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Juco study funds granted
KU's School of Education has received a federal grant of $8,520 to conduct a study on the characteristics and opinions of Kansas community junior college students.
Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education and director of the study, received confirmation of the grant last week from the Kansas City, Mo., regional office of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
In his report requesting the grant, Anderson said the research is primarily for informational purposes. The completed results will be published in "Kansas Studies in Education," a research information booklet distributed throughout the United States.
Research questionnaires will be sent to about 13,000 students in Kansas' 19 junior colleges. The questionnaire asks the student to evaluate himself as an individual and on the basis of his activities in school.
Anderson's request said the "inquiry" will attempt to analyze students on the basis of socioeconomic background, finances, interests, value of guidance and counseling, educational and occupational aspirations and reasons for attending college.
Robert D. Michal, professor of education and psychometrist for the KU Guidance Bureau, is assistant director of the program.
The study, which officially be gan Nov. 5, will continue through August 15, 1969.
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Viktor Frankl, Austrian psychiatrist and theologian, will make three appearances in this area this week.
Psychiatrist to talk locally
Frankl will speak at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Rice Auditorium at Baker University, Baldwin. His address, entitled, "Youth's Search for Meaning," is sponsored by the Paul Dana Bartlett Memorial Lectureship. The address is open to the public.
At 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, Frankl will speak at Unity Village, Lee's Summit, Mo. Admission to each of these lectures is $2 and seating capacity is limited to 500.
Frankl is the originator of an existential approach to psychotherapy he calls logotherapy, or therapy of the Word. He is head of neurology at Poliklinik Hospital, Vienna, Austria, and professor of psychology and neurology at the University of Vienna.
Frankl has written 14 books, among them "Man's Search for Meaning" and "The Doctor and the Soul."
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12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
Supreme Court to rule on Powell case
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to rule this term whether the House had the constitutional power to bar Adam Clayton Powell from his seat in the 90th Congress on grounds of unethical behavior.
By accepting Powell's appeal, the court faced a possible new confrontation with the legislative branch of the government. Oral arguments in the case will be heard later this session and a written opinion handed down subsequently.
The controversial Harlem Negro, who was re-elected to the next Congress in the Nov. 5 balloting, was denied his seat by a vote of the House on March 1, 1967.
The action stemmed from charges that Powell had misused congressional funds as chairman of the House Labor and Education Committee; that he refused to answer questions asked by two investigating committees and that he had defied state court orders in a New York law suit.
The House countered by citing another section of the Constitution which says that both branches of Congress "shall be the judge of the . . . qualifications of its own members."
Powell's attorneys argued that the House exceeded its authority because the New York Democrat had met the requirements of the Constitution for membership—age, citizenship and residence.
Powell lost in the U.S. Court of Appeals on Feb. 28 and carried his case to the Supreme Court.
Six weeks after the House voted to disbar him, Powell was re-elected in a special election but never sought to claim his seat. Instead, he decided to pursue his claims through the courts and spent most of his time on the Bahama island of Bimini.
In this year's election, he won again almost without campaigning and several leaders of the fight against him in the 90th Congress have indicated they will make no effort to block his seating in the new House which convenes in January.
His attorneys said that even though the 90th Congress has ended, Powell's legal claim is important as a matter of principle and because he would be entitled to salary and other benefits if he wins.
Powell was stripped of his chairmanship of the House Labor and Education Committee and lost his seniority in the proceedings against him but these issues are not involved at this point in the court case.
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Tuesday, November 19, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Devins Award winner reads poetry
Award-winning poet Edsel Ford read his works yesterday in the Kansas Union Forum Room. Ford won the Devins Memorial Award for the best poetry manuscript, "Looking for Shiloh," in the 1968 Kansas City poetry contest.
Ford, the first midwestern poet to receive the Devins prize, began his readings with "Everyman," a poem which to some would immediately bring to mind such persons as Martin Luther King Jr. or John F. Kennedy.
He included during his reading a group of family poems. Ford grew up on a small far in northwest Arkansas, and poems such as "Storm Cellar," "The Night of the Fox" and "At the County Fair" bring to mind the youth of his life. His family poetry tells a story, often about his youth—things he saw or did or things he might have experienced. "There is a vein of fantasy that an artist in any field likes to pursue," he said.
Candidates on vacation at beaches
MIAMI (UPI)—President-elect Richard M. Nixon swam and basked on the sunny beach of a Bahamian island off the Florida coast yesterday while his defeated rival, Hubert Humphrey, rested in the Miami area.
Humphrey arrived in Miami Sunday almost unnoticed after a Virgin Islands vacation, and rested yesterday at nearby Bal Harbour.
Nixon, accompanied only by Secret Service agents and his close friend, C. G. Rebozo, made the 140-mile trip to Grand Cay in the northeast Bahamas aboard a Coast Guard helicopter. He was expected to return to his Key Biscayne, Fla., retreat today.
Nixon had planned to go fishing but instead swam in the Atlantic Ocean and read in the sun on Grand Cay's beach. He was the overnight guest of Robert Ablanalp of Bronxville, N.Y., a close friend who owns the small island.
Before Nixon left for Grand Cay, he met with his White House staff manager, H. R. Haldeman, for a brief discussion on additions to the president-elect's staff when he moves into the White House on Jan. 20.
Ronald L. Ziegler, Nixon's press assistant, declined to discuss a plicy-making post in the new administration offered to Herbert C. Klein, campaign communications director, except to say that there have been "many areas of discussion" about Nixon's staff.
In Washington, D.C., Klein said he had been offered a post but had not made up his mind whether to accept. He declined to describe the job in detail.
Ziegler also refused to comment on a report that Nixon plans to replace Republican National Chairman Ray Bliss. "Nothing would be served to discuss it," he said.
The president-elect plans to return to New York late tomorrow. He has spent his time since arriving Friday mostly in seclusion in a house rented from Sen. George Smathers on Biscayne Bay.
Coral Gables Attraction
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (UPI)
—One of 103 points of interest on a 20-mile self guided tour of Coral Gables is the Musicians Club of America, a cosmopolitan club for musicians and music lovers.
The club is a shrine to the great in music where grants, gifts and bequests perpetuate their memory. Free copies of the tour map are available by writing Community Development, P.O. Drawer 1549, Coral Gables, Fla., 33134.
He also read a few short love poems: "Before the World Ends," "Honest Praise," "Lines for the First Day," "The Road to Hanoi."
to Hancox.
Ford graduated from the University of Arkansas in 1952. His poems appeared in The Stars and
Stripes while he served two years in the U.S. Army in Germany. He has had poems printed in such publications as Saturday Review, The New York Times and The Christian Science Monitor.
Dean visits seminar
Ford doesn't consider his poetry written in one particular style. "Sometimes I tell people I'm the one Ford manufactured with an automatic transmission and a straight shift so I can drive (write) in all directions," he said.
Ford's visit was sponsored by the KU English department.
Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of KU School of Education, attended a seminar on "Statistics in Experimental Design" from Nov. 13 to 15 in Silver Spring, Md. Dean Anderson was the only education leader among the 20 participants from the fields of science, engineering, industry and the federal government.
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14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
Sympathy for 'dissatisfied student'
AAUP studies teacher evaluation
By MARLA BABCOCK Kansan Staff Writer
Focusing on methods of evaluating faculty teaching, KU's American Association of University Professors committee on analysis and improvement of instruction has begun research for the current year.
The committee is in sympathy with students who are dissatisfied with teaching in the modern university, not just at KU, said James W. Hillesheim, professor of education and chairman of the committee.
Hillesheim said the group is undertaking a two-stage program.
The first stage, which will continue through this semester, involves collecting information on teaching evaluation from KU and other campuses.
The committee is collecting teaching evaluation sheets used
in classes in hopes of compiling the best questionnaire for use by all KU faculty members.
Hillesheim said this might help remedy the present "communication" problem among faculty in different departments. Presently, he explained, faculty members have no means of sharing evaluation ideas and techniques.
The committee encourages interested students and faculty members to submit any such information available to them, Hillesheim said. "It will be impossible to go about doing this unless we can get expression and involvement from students," he said.
In addition to collecting evaluation sheets, the committee is trying to determine the desirability and effectiveness of such
evaluation projects, Hillesheim said.
Early next semester, after data collection is completed, the committee hopes to meet with representatives of the faculty and the student body.
The meeting will discuss how departments or individual instructors can obtain accurate teaching evaluations and what students can do to improve teaching.
Any resolutions or suggestions resulting from research and discussions are pending the outcome of the two initial stages, Hillsheim said.
The committee is larger this year than it has been in the past. "There is probably more interest than ever before," Hillsheim said.
Calling for KU's leadership in
PRAGUE (UPI)—The Czechoslovak Communist party yesterday announced the return of complete party control of all phases of society, including the news media, and indicated abandonment of most of the reforms initiated by Alexander Dubcek last spring.
No Mention
Czechs abandon Dubcek reforms
The party's new post-invasion policy was spelled out in a lengthy Central Committee document, setting the course of the nation under the watchful eyes of Soviet occupiers.
The document made no mention of freedom of press, travel and assembly that were promised by the same central committee in its "action program" last April.
The only reforms repeated in the committee resolution, as released by the national news agency CTK, were the federation of the Czech and Slovak republics and a pledge not to return to the terror methods of the Stalinist era.
The party resolution, adopted at a three-day meeting that ended in the small hours of Sunday morning, announced the "continuation" of economic reforms already started.
But it did not mention the "workers councils" of the April party action program and spoke
only of democratic participation of the working people in directing and controlling the economy.
Newsmen Protest
Year abroad has openings
As television began to broadcast the new program, more than 1,000 journalists met in Prague to protest censorship of the mass media ordered even before the Central Committee session and an expected purge of press, radio and television writers.
The journalists joined a nationwide sit-in strike by students protesting the rollback in the springtime reforms. Students already have occupied buildings in Prague, Ostrava, Oolomouce, Usit Nad Labem, Brno, Plyen and Bratislava to back demands for continuation of the democratic reform movement.
An opportunity to study in Germany is open for 12 to 15 KU students next year. As participants of the German junior year abroad program, they will study at the Universitat Bonn.
The Central Committee resolution said tightened party control again would extend to science, culture and art in which the party would have the role of "inspirer."
Requirements include completion of 60 semester units by fall, 1969, a B-average in four semesters of college-level German and a fairly strong over-all academic average, said Mrs. Sandra Tra versa, foreign study adviser.
MORY DICK
In September students attend a six or seven-week orientation program in Germany. They then enroll in regular courses of the university.
Prof to read poetry
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teaching evaluation, Hilesheism said, "We want KU to work on the leading edge of improving instruction, instead of being forced to do it (by other schools)."
KU English professor Edward Grier will read selections from the poetry of William Carlos Williams at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Music Room, said Jeff Lough, Salina sophomore and SUA Poetry Hour chairman.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Games for weekend
11/22-24
TOPS
Wardrobe Care Centers TOPS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
featuring:
- In By 9—Out By 5 Same Day Service
- Shirts on hangers 5 for $1.39 or folded
- Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th — 1526 West 23rd
"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—
Oklahoma State at Kansas State
Air Force at Colorado
Nebraska at Oklahoma
Arkansas at Texas Tech
Stanford at California
Indiana at Purdue
Michigan at Ohio State
Oregon at Oregon State
Southern Cal. at U.C.L.A.
Kentucky at Tennessee
Penn State at Pittsburgh
Wyoming at Arizona
Baylor at S.M.U.
Yale at Harvard
Michigan State at Northwestern
— Pick These Scores —
KANSAS ___ at MISSOURI ___
Name ...
Address ...
CONTEST RULES
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 score of KU game. In case of tie, earliest postmark decides.
★ LAST WEEK'S WINNERS ★
1st Place—Gayle Henderson
2nd Place—Natalie Wall
3rd Place—L. D. Rickman
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
...
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
university brochure will be to all
students without regard to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse. 1-9. 1241 Oral.
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Sua Blue & Cloud White, black leatherette interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon. 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T. buckets, console,
P.S., P.B., air. 383 V8 shows excel-
culent performance.
V8 top, just $185 at Jerry Allen
Volkwagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
MUST SELL NOW-getting married soon. Gibson Thunderbird ii amp plus case. Ampeg Genuini II amp plus cover. new Shure Undyne mike plus stand. new Denon DENON mike plus new engine. Call Jim Hatfield at VI 3-7922 or VI 3-8819 after five. 11-20
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$2,588.05. Never hit, never dented -perfect in every way, 9,959 actual one-owner miles, $195.39 in factory option lists, 5-yr.-500.00 warranty claim, drive it. ! This is not another like it. Only $3,995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1964 MG Midget, white w/wire wheels, this hard-to-find car yours this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1963 Volkswagen deluxe sunroof,
choices of 2, both 100% guaranteed.
nissan cars, 1 green, white,
$995 Jerry Alien Volkswagen
2522 Iowa
11-20
1969 OLDSMOBILE, 442. Excellent condition. a- speed, British racing green, power-stering, power brakes, factory tachometer, superstock wheels, 5,000 actual miles. Owner's sacrifice—must sell! Contact: Sami Saeed, Rm. #616, McCollum, VI 2-6600. 11-19
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos. Regular $495.00
- magnificent music! Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St.
11-20
1964 Chavelle V-8, 4-speed, positrac,
recent, overhaul on engine and brakes,
excellent condition. VI 3-8165. Also
small, enclosed trailer. 11-19
Garrard Lab 80 + 53 records. Everything from "My, Fair Lady" to "Surrealistic Pillow"—Must sell—Ask for Mike Blake at VI 3-1711. 11-19
Roberts Tape Recorder, C-90. Professional quality, perfect condition. Original price $450. first $195 takes. Call Jim Belcher. V 1-371-1. 11-19
1968 Corvette Coupe. White with tobacco interior, 427 cu. in., 4-speed, only 8,000 miles. Vall VI 3-8959, after 5 p.m. 11-19
MUST SELL 1965 impauls S.S., 327, 4-speed. B/P, P/B, s/excellent condition inside. Tape player. Highest job. Tape player. Highest call. C/II 1-2568 after 5.00 p.m. 11-20
'53 Chevy Strap-Mobile, $100. Engine
-prime condition. Body and Interior
-still there. Call Scott Stinson at
VI 3-5770. 11-20
PIRANHA
8 inch full grown Red Piranha Perfect physical condition. Call Hill or Tim Reynolds at VI 3-7922
11-20
1967 Mustang, six-stick, radio, white walls. Excellent condition—only 5,000 miles. Call Larry Powers, V 2-7170; if no answer, call UN 4-3973 11-21
Folk Instrument—Appalachian Mountain Dulcimer Traditional & Modern Stick & custom & modern spells, rosewood $20 and VI 21-8378, wood $10 and VI 11-23
SACRIFICE-Kingston eight string electric mandolin. Has new cello and piano plays at VI 3-7939 or see at 130 Ark.
Sony Tape Recorder, console with speakers in either end and matching bookand speakers. $300. VI 2-3010.
11-22
1966 Honda 450 in excellent condition,
low mileage. Helmet included. $450.
Also 150Honda F 2.5 lens for Pentax $20.
2551 Redbud Lane #1, VI 2-683-1263
Vustang snow tires - Last Year's design. New 1st line 685-14 Kelly cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Rock Stonebacks 11-22
Conn Connistellation Trumpet, with trigger. Used one year, excellent condition. Will sell cheap. Call Jim Burke at VI 21-900, rm. 320. 12-3
FREE POSTERS with gasoline at SMITTY'S CHAMPLIN, 1802 West 2rd St. Also we have tires $15; Batteries $25; Antifreeze $1.39; Galn Change Oil. Sandwiches and picnic items. 1-9
Must sall set of wedding rings. Large 4 pt. diamond and interlocking wedding ring. Cheap! Call Larry. VI 3-7809. 12-3
20% Coed Discount on
Frostings cnd Permanents
CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS
10 E. 9th VI 2-7900
No Appointment Necessary
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
Be prepared—
get antifreeze—starting service
2434 Iowa V12-1002
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
2434 Iowa V12-1008
Two tickets to Missouri-Kansas game,
Nov 2. Best offer takes both. Call
Dave Lancy at either VI 3-4811 or
VI 2-8434.
Double bed mattress, new $25.00.
Washing machine which needs a transmission. $5 to $10.00. VI 2-0358.
ANTE PEARL'S CHUCK WAGON
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Q--outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; 1 chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tt
Now STRAWBERRY FIELDS has Persian bedspread, tablecloths and material, wire rim sunglasses, powder and stick incense and burners, posters, earrings, rings, peace and zodiac medallions, anks, leather bracelets, bands, sandals and shoes, handmade pottery and paper men's shirts and men's flower, art nouveau postcards and posters, ponchos, boxes from Iran, strobe candies, peace and music. STRAWBERRY FIELDS. 712 Mass., open 10-6. 11-21
Holland, Denmark, Mexico, Italy, Japan,
Switzerland, Germany, India,
Spain, France.
the world for you. Cove see
Haas Hardware, 1029 Mass. 11-19
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 12-3
BANDS!!
Davis' practice. Haynes-Ray Audio
& Music Co. VI 2-1944. 11-19
THE STABLES
UPTIGHT WITH THE DRAFT? Information available at the Lawrence Lawrence office 107th Wing, 92nd and in the Kansas Union lobby on Tuesdays. 11-19
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times
a week delivery. Diaper an-
lays. Laundry Service $16 a month. Family.
Dryer 756 for 9 lbs. Call SMITTY'S
I-3 807-7807 1-9
Charcoaled Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers
Kwiki Car Wash
612 North 2nd
(Next to Shaw's Auto Service)
North Lawrence
Pay-Loss
Salt Service SHOES
at
Suzie Q French Fries
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
8 E. 9th VI 2-002
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
RANEY DRUG STORES
3 locations to serve your
every need
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable.
Personal service
218 Conn., Law. Pt Ph. VI 3-29
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics toiletries Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
EAGLE
8th ST. SHOE REPAIR
105 E. 8th
Closed Sat. at Noon
7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
RENT A NEW FORD
From John Haddock Ford VI 3-3500 23rd and Alabama
HELP WANTED
LA
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation in the workshop. Let's plan our services together. Call us. Ron Sundy or Dennis Bowers. First United Methodist VI 3-7134 11-21
Male or female babysitter and household helper. Preferably to live in, not necessarily. For two children. Call anytime—Mrs. Owens, VI 2-9372.
Part-time for 11 a.m. till 2 p.m. Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week. Start $1.25 per hr. Apply in person to Grifft's Burger Bar. 1618 W 23rd. tf
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN BUS each Sunday from 9th & Mass. at 8:30 and 10:30. Route: GSP & Corbin, Jayhawk Blvd to Chicagoland Road, Jayhawk Blvd to Sunyside Summerdays to Oliver and Nalamith; 19th to Stewart Dr. Worship at 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. 12-33
BUD & COORS ON TAP
LA PETITE
GALERIE
Behind Don's Drive-in—2500 West 6th
Male, part time, evenings, apply in person. Smacks Drive-in, 1404 W. Marsh St. 11-20
THE LIBRARY
I need two men to work about 2-3 hrs. per night, Sun, thru Thurs. Very easy work—car necessary. Must have knowledge of fraternities and sororities on KU campus. Excellent pay. V1 3-7267. 11-19
WANTED
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Lev
Friend drafted. Needs someone to continue contract at Naismith for dui-urgent, or amester for Urgent. (Please be in the car) use a bit of luck.) Call Jerry Levine V 3-7198
SERVICES OFFERED
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high quality Haynes Ray Audio. VI. 24,140 Aft, and Eave, Hillcrest Shopping Center 11-22
Mon.
TYPING
Former Harvard and Univ. of Minnesota Secretary will type themes, reports, theses. VI 3-7207. 11-25 Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM electric. Located near Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873. tr
FOR RENT
8:00-9:00
Experienced in typing theses, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
ing machine type. Promote effi-
cient service. Phone. VI 3-9554.
Mrs. E. Wright. I 12-9
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
Typing of these and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley VI 3-6048. 11-21
Apartment, furnished, close to campus and downtown. $110 monthly.
VI 2-16*2" 929 Kentucky. #F. 11-19
LOST
Tan wallet near Robinson gym. If found, call G. Dickerson at VI 2-5232 or VI 3-5747. Reward. Thank you! 11-19
LOST—one pair glasses with brown frames in Fraser or Dyche on Friday. Nov. 8. If found, contact Mary, VI 2-3420, Room 5271. 11-21
LOST AND FOUND
Found—Raincoat (38R). Lost—Raincoat (44L or 46L). Both in Kansas Union Bowling Alley after Homecoming game. Call VI 2-3474. 11-20
PERSONAL
PITCHER
HOURS
In case you're interested—Call VI 2-
9595. 11-20
at
Fri.
3:00-4:00
THE STABLES
Kitchen Opens at Five Daily
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
snoopy
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact: Barry Arthur
University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
Classified Rates
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
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 19, 1968
B52 crashes,explodes Orange Bowl travel plans begin at Okinawa air base (Continued from page 1)
NAHA, Okinawa (UPI)-A U.S. B52 bomber loaded with 750-pound bombs crashed on takeoff at Kadena U.S. Air Force Base today. Its seven crewmen ran for their lives as the bombs exploded, destroying the huge jet.
Two of the crewmen were reported in serious condition with undisclosed injuries at the hospital of this central Okinawa base.
Two-day fast begins tonight
(Continued from page 1)
There are three purposes for holding the two-day fast.
"We want to publicize the fast, to make a sacrifice to help the fast, and to find out what it's like to be hungry," Conrad said.
"If anyone has other personal reasons for fasting, we would like to have them join us," he said.
Thursday night is the major night for the fast. "A significant number of living groups have reported that they will be fasting then." Conrad said.
The scholarships, which will hopefully be able to help 10 to 15 high school students, have been set up in a two-part program, Conrad said.
"The first part encourages high school students who otherwise would not have the opportunity to go to college, but have the potential to do so. The second part is to support them financially while they're in college and help them work with various aspects of the university to help them psychologically," he said.
All funds raised by the drive will be matched by the university.
Faculty members and off-campus students who would like to contribute to the funds should send their money to the All Student Council office in the Kansas Union, Conrad said.
A table will be set up in the Union tomorrow and Thursday where people may contribute, Conrad said.
KU law students start to compete
Law students will temporarily become "practicing lawyers" this week (November 19 through 22), during the James Barklay Smith Moot-Court competition at the University of Kansas Law School.
The court's purpose is to exercise law students' ability to do legal researching, present arguments and write briefs in hypothetical situations. In a sense they are doing all that a practicing lawyer would do, said Jim Bagley, third-year law student and president of the Moot-Court Council.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Lecture 3 p.m. Dr. John Parascan-
ley, 2014 physiology and Probi-
lation, 300 Room
Reception for Madame V. L. Pandit, 3:30 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom.
Lecture, 4:30 p.m. Madame V. L.
Pandit "Search for Unity in a Changing World." Kansas Union Ballroom
SUA Film. 7 & 8 p.m. "Anderson Platoon." Dyche Auditorium.
*Arthritis*
Christian Science Organization, 7-30
n.m. Danforth Chapel
Jayhawk Rodeo Club. 7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union.
Humanities Lecture. 8 p.m. Rev. Walter J. Ong, S.J. St. Louis University. "The End of the Age of Literacy." Swarthout Recital Hall.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
Quarterback Club. 12:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
Lecture. 4 p.m. Peter G. Snow, University of Iowa. "Argentine Coup of 1966" Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Physical Therapy Club. 7 p.m. Pine Bark Center.
Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Classical Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m. "My Uncle," Doe Audio, Bethesda
Uncle "Dyche Auditorium,
Quarterback Club. 7:30 p.M.
Forum on
Victory Day
Senior Recital. 8 p.m. Jo Anne Ferrell, pianist, Swhout挣扎Recital Hall.
An Air Force spokesman said the eight-engine jet bomber was en route on an operational mission with "conventional weapons" when the crash occurred.
An eyewitness told UPI that the giant bomber failed to gain altitude as it left the base runway just before dawn today pancaked at the end of the runway and came to a skidding stop.
He said the crewmen bolted out of the hatches and were sprinting away when the first explosion knocked them sprawling.
A panel of officers was named to investigate the crash. The names of the crewmen were not released.
A series of secondary explosions then tore through the plane, hurling wreckage across a base perimeter highway and touching off small brush fires. Windows shattered in base buildings and houses as far as two miles away.
Although the B52s were brought to the island for strike missions against Vietnam targets only in February, the U.S. has been using Okinawa as a military base since it gained jurisdiction after World War II.
Residents of Naha, 20 miles away, reported hearing the explosions from the bomber, biggest in America's air arsenal.
would cost about $165 including hotel reservations, plane fare and game tickets. He said the tour would comprise three nights and four days.
Houk said a tour for only one night may be arranged later. He was dubious about the chances for the short tour, however because most Miami motels and hotels require a minimum of three day's stay during the Bowl game.
Houk doubted eating expenses in Miami would be too different from Lawrence. "They have their hamburger stands just the same as we do here," he said.
Hotel rooms on the beach normally cost $20 per person, Houk said, but motel rooms outside the beach area are only $12 to $15 per person.
Houk warned KU visitors that some hotels he had contacted would not accept reservations for less than 10 days. However, he believes that most will accept reservations for a minimum of three days.
Kenneth Bloomquist, director of the marching band, Richard Wintermote and Vincent J. Bilotta, representing the alumni association, left last night for Miami.
Bilotta, who is also the pom pon squail and yell leaders' adviser, said, "We're going down to
fire up the tentative arrangements that we've had for the past few weeks."
He said alumni would be offered group travel packages which would include chartered air service, hotel accommodations, shuttle bus service to and from the airport, the parade and the game. He said tickets for the King Orange Parade and the football game would be included in the package.
Bilotta said he hoped to have several options available for alumni interested in going, probably ranging from three-to five-night stays in Miami.
Bus line officials said the individual fare to Miami would be $90.70 round trip. A spokesman for all bus lines serving Lawrence said charter buses could reduce rates considerably
Groups chartering a 33-passenger bus would pay about $63 per person, and a 46-passenger bus would cost about $59 per person.
Charter Flight Direct To
KU-MU GAME
Tickets available with plane reservation.
KU-MU GAME.
leave Lawrence Airport 11:00
a.m. Sat., Nov. 23, direct to
Columbia. Return after game.
Room for 5 passengers.
Flight Time----50 Min.
$20.00 Round Trip
CV1 V1-3-329
SALE AT Kief's RECORDS
NEW BEATLES L.P.
"THE BEATLES"
regular LP stereo $9.95
2 record set
$6.99
(available Nov. 22)
Is it possible to be passed by at 30?
Absolutely. If you're a 30-year-old engineer who's failed to keep up with the latest developments in his field.
Because Western Electric's an acknowledged industrial leader in graduate engineering training, that's one worry our engineers don't have. Our nearly-completed Corporate Education Center near Princeton, N. J., for instance, will have a resident staff of over 100. More than 310 engineering courses will be
offered, and about 2,400 engineers will study there in 1969. It's the most advanced facility of its kind.
Ask around. You'll find that when it comes to anticipating change, Western Electric is way out in front. And we make every effort to keep our engineers there too. See our recruiter or write College Relations, 222 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10038.
A lot of study, and hard work, never hurt anyone.
BELL SCHOOL
Western Electric MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.47 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, November 20,1968
UDK News Roundup See page 10
ASC ticket probe See page 2
Frosh class votes See page 3
KU undergrads teaching classmates
★ ★ ★
1972
Prof says grads should not teach low-level classes
By JOE NAAS Kansan Staff Writer
A visiting professor from the University of Chicago yesterday advocated banning graduate students and assistant professors from teaching lower-level courses.
George H. Sorter said the KU students he has known are timid and non-involved in class. "They're very hard to draw out in class discussion and they're much too reverent," he said.
Photo by Rick Stone
Sorter said the students were probably intimidated during their freshman years. "Being taught a beginning course by a beginning professor who might not even want to teach can have a deadening effect on the student," he said.
Sorter, professor of accounting and business at Chicago, is teaching accounting here this year as a visiting professor.
He explained the beginning courses are probably the most important, since they shape the students' attitudes toward college.
Sunny days at last
"If they don't get turned on early, they don't get turned on at all." Sorter said.
At the University of Chicago, Sorter said, the beginning courses are taught by senior professors. He said, "This could be the reason the Chicago student is intensely involved and intensely questioning."
As an illustration of their activism, Sorter pointed to the Chicago business students' involvement in Operation Breadbasket. In this pro
(Continued on page 14)
After clouds and rain for days on end, a KU coed braved chill temperatures to bask in the sun today-the second consecutive day for sunny skies here.
Oriental connections not new to Wescoe
In 1959, W. Clarke Wescoe stepped off a plane in Manila to teach at the University of the Philippines as a visiting professor and fellow on the China Medical Board of New York.
Love for the orient and a desire to resume work in medical education will bring Wescoe back to the orient in 1969, as the new president of the China Medical Board.
Chancellor Wescoe, whose appointment was announced yesterday, said he decided to accept the position about a week ago.
Contacted in Garden City, Wescoe said:
"It's in my field of medicine and education and I feel an international responsibility. It will give me an opportunity to return to my fields of interest." he said.
At his new post, Wescoe will travel once a year to the orient, visiting medical schools. "I will see what their requirements are and check on problems and progress," he said.
Wescoe said he went to New York to attend a China Medical Board meeting, although speculators talked of a cabinet post appointment and possible conference with President-elect Richard Nixon.
Not only is Chancellor Wescoe looking forward to returning to the orient. Mrs. Wescoe said she is "very anxious to get back," also.
During past trips to the Far East, the Wescoes have compiled a large collection of oriental furnishings and Mrs. Wescoe said she is looking forward to enlarging her collection.
When asked if she was excited about the move to New York, Mrs. Wescoe said, "We're certainly looking forward to it—it's going to be an interesting life."
(Continued on page 16)
By SUSAN BRIMACOMBE
Kansan Staff Writer
More than one University of Kansas department is relying, not only on graduate students, but upon undergraduates to carry part of the teaching load.
Convright 1968. The University Daily Kansan
About 30 undergraduates are teaching courses in Western Civilization, zoology, economics, chemistry, English, speech and engineering. The students are teaching laboratories and lectures.
Most of the undergraduates teach one or two class sections weekly—three to six hours. Most departments using undergraduate instructors began the practice last year.
While the majority of the undergraduates are paid for their teaching about $250 a semester biology and zoology undergraduates get course credit in addition to a salary, said Kenneth B. Armitage, chairman of the undergraduate department of biology.
Spokesmen for both groups said undergraduate assistants should work under a senior faculty member.
Yet, in beginning speech courses and in Western Civilization discussions, undergraduates have complete charge of the classes. They also have complete charge of chemistry II labs and both the lecture and laboratory sections of a petroleum engineering course.
(Continued on page 16)
Law dean named
HAYS—The Kansas Board of Regents, meeting here today, approved the appointment of Lawrence E. Blades, an associate professor in the KU School of Law, as the new dean of the School.
Blades, who will assume duties December 1,
succeeds James K. Logan, who resigned in June to
run for the Democratic nomination for U.S.
Senate and to go into private law practice.
Provost James R. Surface indicated that William A. Kelly, associate law school dean, and John Strong, grandson of the late KU Chancellor Frank Strong and associate professor of law at Duke University, "were probably" among those considered for the position.
William R. Scott, professor of law at KU since 1947, has served as acting dean, but indicated he did not desire the dean's position permanently. Rather, he said, he wished to return to a full-time teaching position.
A native of Evanston, Ill., Blades was graduated
(Continued on page 14)
--met, but later backed down. In several meetings this year and again last week, members argued about disrupting a VFW Veterans' Day Banquet in the Kansas Union.
Weather
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts generally fair and warmer weather today through tomorrow. Today's high should be in the upper 40s with tonight's low 25 to 30. Winds should be southwest at 10 to 15 m.p.h. today. Probability of precipitation is less than 5 per cent today and tomorrow.
Voice leaders quit, future uncertain
By STEVE HAYNES Kansan Staff Writer
Leaders of Peoples Voice have quit.
As he opened the meeting at the Wesley Foundation, temporary chairman Rick Atkinson informed the 40 attending persons that the entire Voice coordinating committee had resigned from their positions. The move left the group without leadership or organization.
However, members voted to continue Voice in some form—but in just what form was unclear.
Atkinson, Belleville graduate student, said Voice would have to reorganize itself or disband.
Although he suggested the organization might be disbanded, Atkinson said he did not think this would happen.
The old leaders, he said, felt the present structure was "not accomplishing enough."
"Organization will probably be settled at the next meeting, some time after Thanksgiving," he said.
Atkinson will continue as temporary chairman until then.
While the fate of Voice was not settled during the meeting, a decision was made to organize a staff and publish a newspaper. The paper is planned to be a means of communicating with Voice members and other students, leaders said.
Discussion on the future of Voice centered around the purpose of the organization—whether it should be "radical" or "reformist." This has been a continuing theme of Voice discussions. "Radicals" have argued for "confrontation"—forcing the administration, police or other authority to either back down or use force-while "reformists" (moderates) have argued for an educational approach designed to avoid confrontation.
This division within the group was evident last year when the group threatened a sit-in at Strong Hall unless its demands for more student participation in University government were
In all cases, Voice members have so far backed away from confrontations with the administration or police when the critical point has been reached.
Members suggested turning Voice into a radical group, a reformist educational group, merging with Students for a Democratic Society and forming a dual organization aimed at both goals. No final decision was reached.
Several members said they feel Voice has not been militant
enough. Others said it has not tried to educate students. One member suggested that before Voice can decide between confrontation and education, it must decide what its ultimate goals are. Abolition of the ROTC program at KU was suggested as one possible goal.
The only concrete result of the meeting was the formation of an editorial board for the proposed newspaper. Members of the board include: Lenny Zeskind; Miami, Fla., sophomore; Bill Berkowitz, New York senior; Wayne Sailor, Lawrence graduate student, and Rosanne Piazzza, Omaha freshman.
(Continued on page 16)
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
ASC challenges season ticket policy
By TOM WEINBERG Kansan Staff Writer
Members of the All-Student Council (ASC) last night criticized the system of selling basketball season tickets at KU, saying students often are unable to purchase the tickets. ASC also formed a committee to try to solve the problem.
Members of the ASC discussed the problem of the availability of season tickets and the headache involved in purchasing them.
Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student and chairman of the ASC, said, "Last year the tickets ran out before all the students had a chance to buy them."
Season tickets went on sale today at Allen Field House. Sales are scheduled to continue through Friday.
Rusty Leffel, Prairie Village senior and fraternity representative, said, "I think it is unnecessary that students have to stand in line for hours when all they
One member of the ASC expressed concern over the fact that many children are reserved the right to purchase tickets for 50 cents when these tickets could go for KU student season tickets.
would need to do is make an X on a card at the beginning of the year if they want a season ticket, just like when they want a yearbook."
At present, only 7,000 season tickets are available for 17,000 students. 500 tickets are available to students up through high school for 50 cents.
Contacted later, Wade Stinson, KU athletic director, said the season ticket situation has not changed lately. Stinson said:
"Until members of the ASC sit down with me and discuss the matter, and I would be glad to discuss it with them anytime, I see no existing problem in the selling of season tickets."
The committee formed to try to secure more season tickets for KU students and talk to the seating board were: Dave Miller, Glennview, Ill., senior; Martha
Fowler, Osawatomie sophomore;
Frank Zilm, St. Louis junior,
and Jim Craig, Waterville, Ohio,
pharmacy student.
Leffel, reporting the work the ASC committees are doing, said:
"We have more than 100 people on these committees. The Athletic Cooperation Board is now studying people drinking at games. Tomorrow night the Academic Affairs Committee will meet to discuss several issues of concern. Other committees are working on various projects."
In other business, Von Ende disputed the number of people the Student Advisory Board is considering for the selection of the next Chancellor.
"The 20 people listed as considered for the job of chancellor in the Lawrence Journal World is incorrect. We have at least 150-200 names under consideration. More names have been and still are being considered for the job."
Seniors support 'fast'
The officers of the class of 1969 have asked all seniors to support the ASC-sponsored Educational Opportunity Fund. The fund will help make it possible for Lawrence area students to attend KU. The ASC is urging all students to fast tomorrow night in support of the fund drive.
"Senior Power" is being called on to give;
"Speaking for all class officers, I would like to urge all seniors to take the lead in donating to this worthwhile cause," John Hill, class president, said. "The officers have decided to donate $100 from the class treasury to the fund."
Hill, from Prairie Village, said the money is being donated through the newly formed senior class committee on social concern. Les Watson, Silver Lake senior, is chairman of the committee, he said. Anyone with ideas for this committee should
contact Watson at 1647 Missis sippi Street.
Gremlins were at work on the inwards of an ad that ran here recently for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
Three members were appointed to meet with three members of the University Senate to iron out differences in the proposed Senate Code. They were: Bob Van Cleave, third year law student from Kansas City; Karen Walker, Omaha sophomore; Bob Howard, Wichita, Kansas senior.
GOOF.
elections were also discussed at last night's meeting, and members of ASC signed up for poll work.
The next meeting of ASC will
The CPA people, after telling us a bit about the profession, and why it offers a rosy future for a college man, offered to send interested students a booklet with the whole CPA story.
That part got left out of the ad.
There was just white space, starring up blankly at the reader. Disconcerting, Phantasmal. Spooky.
The booklet, with the whole CPA story, will be sent to you if you write: Dept. A-11, AICPA, 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10019.
STOCKCENTER
be December 3. Members of ASC hope to have a report from the University Senate on its amended version of the Senate Code at that time.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Freshman class elections are today, tomorrow
Freshmen go to the polls today and tomorrow to elect officers for the class of 1972 and to select a freshmen women's representative to the All-Student Council (ASC).
The names of members of four full coalitions and one student running independently for president will appear on the ballot for class offices, said Bill Ebert, Topeka sophomore and co-chairman of the ASC election committee.
"Students are under no obligation to vote for the full coalition, although they are given the opportunity to do so." Ebert said.
Freshmen can cast their ballots from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. at any of the polling places located in
Strong Hall, Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union.
Candidates were required to obtain 50 freshmen signatures on petitions provided by the ASC in order to have their names placed on the ballot, Ebert said.
The candidates for freshmen class offices are:
President—Ed Dallam, Shawnee Mission; Bradley Smoot, Sterling; Greg Schieffer, Topeka; Rick Schmidt, Prairie Village; and David Mannering, Kansas City.
Vice-president—Randy Herrington, Wichita; George Pierson, Kansas City; Jim Rayle, Hutchinson; and Tom Trabon, Shawnee Mission.
ASC sponsors 'fast' fund
Fifteen KU students began an All-Student Council (ASC) organized "fast" last night to support educational opportunity. They will eat nothing and drink only fruit juices and water until Thursday when they will break their fast with a cornbread and beans dinner at the Kansas Union cafeteria.
Freshmen women's representative—Mary McGovern, Kansas City; and Sandy Johnson, Overland Park.
The fast is part of a larger all-University fast set for tomorrow night. On that night, University dormitories will serve cornbread and beans in addition to their regular fare. Students who choose the less expensive "fast" meal will have the approximately 35 cent difference in meal price contributed the ASC Educational Opportunity Fund. The University will automatically match the contribution.
In smaller living groups and Greek houses different methods have been selected to participate in the fast. Some houses will serve no meal on Thursday evening. Some will employ the "fast" meal idea. In either case,
Treasurer—Ann Lowen, Hutchinson; Patsy McCoy, Topeka; Joan Wilde, Wichita; and Lee Lyerla, Overland Park.
money saved by the living group will be added to the fund.
"The No. 1 reason," Conrad said, "is straight, honest-to-God publicity. And secondly, and perhaps most importantly, to find out what it's like to be hungry."
The fifteen students are maintaining their nearly complete abstinence from food for two reasons, Clif Conrad, president of the student body and one of the fasters, said.
The fasters will neither carry signs nor demonstrate as a group.
Registration for the Western Civilization comprehensive exam will be Dec. 2-13 in room 130, Strong Hall. The exam is scheduled for 1 p.m., Jan. 11.
Exam correction
The Kansan erroneously reported the registration as being only Dec. 2 and 3.
Secretary—Carol Reber, Wichita; Marty Longbine, Leawood; Kim Wendt, Shawnee Mission; and Martha Fankhauser, Lyons.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
Find help for Watkins
Long exposure to a problem induces boredom. And when the problem is as complicated and as full of dead-end answers as is that of KU's Watkins Hospital, indifference sets in.
For years now Watkins has been the subject of many a wrathful editorial writer and letter to the editor besides the criticism, sympathy and derision of countless students.
This semester is no exception.
However, familiarity with Watkins' problems unfortunately doesn't dissolve them.
And today the approximately 15,000 students of KU are serviced by a hospital technically alone only staffed for 8,000.
Watkins is a state institution financed by private funds. Because of this, its operating budget comes from student fees. Appropriations from the state legislature, such as the $25,000 granted this fall, are hard to come by and can be used only for construction.
Staffing is presently perhaps Watkins' most crucial problem. The intricacies of its state-owned, but privately financed status, put Watkins' physicians under Civil Service laws and these dictate their wages.
Top wages for a Watkins' doctor is $17,736 annually. The University of Missouri pays its beginning doctors $18,000 with generous benefits.
A salary increase for a Watkins staff member comes only after about 10 years service when a five per cent longitudin increase can be given.
Although Watkins advertises both nationally and internationally for doctors, it is understandably difficult to find physicians willing to accept these wages.
This is only one of the problems facing Watkins; there are many others and have been for years. The student population of KU is not likely to diminish in the coming years. Nor is the future bright that, without help, Watkins will be magically transformed overnight into an adequate service.
All and any possible solutions to ease Watkins' problems should be looked into, including increasing state appropriations, encouraging private donors to designate money for Watkins, or perhaps even changing the status of the financing of Watkins.
But the attitude of throwing one's hands up into the air is also no answer.
Don't just complain about Watkins. Ask why it must be so and encourage KU student organizations and administration to find solutions to its problems.
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
the rock hound
By WILL HARDESTY
The Electric Prunes, after creating a sensation with MASS IN F MINOR, bring forth another liturgical rock work in RELEASE OF AN OATH on Reprise.
The album is sub-titled "The Kol Nidre." The liner notes say that many times peoples have been conquered and forced to forswear their principles and adopt the beliefs of their conquerors. "But no man of principle can live with himself having forsworn the ideals that he lives by. In yearning to free his spirit of the conqueror's yoke, he has conjured up a psychological release that enables him to break the chains that bind him to an oath made under duress and in violation of his principles. Such a lament is the Kol Nidre—a prayer which cleanses the spirit and enables man to start anew, with his eyes again on the stars."
The album is kind of an auditory "2001: A Space Odyssey." The music is now or in the future, but the religious idea is primeval.
“Release” is better than “Mass.” “Mass” was traditional music played on modern equipment. “Release” is modern music based on traditional forms. The traditional and modern are blended in just the right amounts-neither is dominated by the other, but they compliment each other.
After listening to the album, you feel established religion might not be so bad after all, if it would only adapt to now.
The album is developed like a church service: "Kol Nidre," "Holy Are You,""General Confessional,""Individual Confessional,""Our Father, Our King,""The Adoration,""Closing Hymn."
While the album may never sell a million copies, it is worth buying, particularly if you liked "Mass."
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 packages, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
A student newspaper serving the university of Kansas, Lawrence.
Executive Staff
City Editor ... Bob Butler
Assistant City Editor ... Kathy Hall
Editorial Editor ... Alison Steinel
Editorial Assistant ...
News Adviser George Richardson
Advertising Adviser Mel Adams
Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Analyst Jack Haney
Content Managers
Pat Crawford
Charla Jenkins
Alan T. Jones
Steve forgan
Allen Bindel
Bob Butler
Kathy Hall
Sports Editor Ron Yates
Feature Editor Bob Kearney
Feature and Society Editor
Rea Wilson
Sharon Woodson
Jesse Burridge
Linda McCray
Don Westhausen
Walter Weissman
Marilyn Cook
Advertising Manager Mike Willman
National Advertising Manager ...
Kathy Sanders
Promotion Pam Flaton
Circulation Mgr. Jerry Bottenfeld
Classified Mgr. Barry Arthur
Letters to the Editor
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Walt misrepresented; patriotic values.
To the Editor:
I read with interest the letter by Richard Johns in the UDK of Nov. 14 because I also attended General Walt's speech on Monday afternoon and saw and heard exactly what Mr. Johns saw and heard. So I was greatly surprised to find that Dick had apparently only partially listened to the General.
Mr. John writes that General Walt "paced back and forth in the shadows as if telling a secret." My own impression was that the General left the podium to speak from the edge of the stage so that he might speak in a more personal manner with the "troops," the cadets, midshipmen, and servicemen who comprised the majority of his audience.
Mr. Johns writes that, "since most of (General Walt's) speech dealt with these acts (Communist atrocities), I got the impression that you enjoyed these the most." I was given a paper by an SDS member not long ago which spent its entirely decrying American atrocities in Vietnam. Does
this mean SDS enjoys American atrocities the most? I doubt it! Mr. Johns writes that General Walt "told us about a war that wasn't a war." But Mr. Johns neglected the fact that Walt said it was a struggle for peace, freedom, and a better way of life.
Mr. Johns contrasts the Vietnamese people flocking to the polls with the fact that several newspapers were closed for criticizing the government. He "forgot to mention" that the General was not supporting regime, but was using this as an example of the fervent desire of the Vietnamese for free, popularly elected leaders.
Mr. Johns makes the General smack of racism by calling attention to Walt's use of the term, "colored boy." I think Walt is proud of all our soldiers who risk their lives so that Mr. Johns can speak out, and he was trying to show that, regardless of trouble at home, men of all races love and will die for their country.
Mr. John writes of the little Vietnamese girl who, he's cure,
"has a bright political career ahead of her." His comment, I'm sure, was an insult to the Vietnamese people, about whom he knows absolutely nothing. Mr. Johns writes of the American soldier that General Walt spoke of as having the "type of attitude that we don't need over there." He "forgot to mention" that the soldier later asked General Walt to forget what he had said and to let him stay in Vietnam.
I was shocked upon reading this defamation of character, and so, as Dick Johns is a friend of mine, I went to his residence hall to get his views on my criticisms. I was stunned to hear from his own lips that he had deliberately misquoted and misrepresented General Walt just to heap discredit upon the military!
Owen K. Ball
Evergreen, Colo., sophomore McColum Hall
To the Editor:
1 would anticipate a rash of responses to the "student infuriated" letter of November 7, so I
will condense my response to allow others space.
I have on repeated occasions been treated with skill and consideration by the dedicated staff of Watkins. A great many "civilians" would go far to be seen by the physicians and nurses that work (unfortunately with vastly inadequate facilities) at our hospital.
The plant and equipment have been outgrown, however, I am saddened to have this factor generalized to include the staff that rather heroically carries on there.
Watkins, please don't take your cue from the outburst of one or a few irate writers.
Orv Wiebe Graduate student
... quotes ...
By United Press International
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Richard Strickler, a Harvard junior, hailing arch-rival Yale University's decision to admit women:
“. . . Girls add something.”
F
I DUG JAZZ-
AND WHITEY PICKED UP ON IT.
I DUG HIP-
AND WHITEY PICKED UP ON IT.
I DUG ROCK-
AND WHITEY PICKED UP ON IT.
I DUG FREEDOM-
AND FINALLY LOST WHITEY.
11-17
AND
WHITEY
PICKED
UP ON
IT.
I DUG ROCK
© 1974 JIMS ENTERPRISE
I DUG
HIP-
JACKSON POLY
MARCELA SCHRODER
Jimi Hendrix
923
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Europe's money crisis may affect U.S.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The price of those little German automobiles may go up. The price of French perfume may go down. Maybe both. Maybe neither.
That's thoroughly indefinite, but it was as far as government economists here would go as they watched the currency crisis developing over the sickly French franc and the robust West German mark.
One reason for the vagueness was that many key U.S. policy makers were in Europe trying to head off a repeat of last year's world monetary crisis.
Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler and key aides were ending a week-long tour of European capitals with a series of meetings in Bonn with West German officials.
Arthur M. Okun, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, left Sunday night for a Paris meeting with French economists and other European trading partners.
Treasury and Commerce De
partment monetary analysts agreed changes in either the france or mark could bring important changes in the prices of goods those two nations sell Americans, as well as the price of American exports to France and West Germany.
Prices change slowly
However, like the British pound devaluation a year ago, prices may not change immediately or even by the full amount of any currency change.
But this is assuming the Germans revalue their mark and the French devalue their franc.
Why do either?
The argument for revaluation of the mark is that Germany is doing too well, capturing too large a share of other nation's currencies, especially the franc.
For the French, the story is just the opposite. Spring and summer strikes, paralyzing student uprisings and the hangover from last winter's gold crisis all have weakened the French economy and the franc.
The West German mark is worth 25 American cents. The German economy has been booming to the point where currency speculators are buying large quantities of marks as a hedge against world monetary uncertainty.
U. S. observers predicted if the Germans did increase the value of the mark, it would fall in the range of a 5 to 10 per cent boost.
The franc is exchanged at 4.93 per dollar. The French don't want to, but they may have to stop the strain on the franc by devaluing-by offering more francs per dollar.
This would mean a German would demand 5 to 10 per cent more dollars for this mark - perhaps exchanging 3.75 marks for a dollar, instead of four.
One of the problems facing the French government is that Frenchmen and other speculators are taking francs at 4.93 per dollar and trading them for marks at four per dollar.
Speculators hope the franc will fall in value and the mark
France will tighten its money belt
PARIS (UPI)—President Charles de Gaulle's government yesterday tightened its budget belt to save the French franc from devaluation.
Premier Maurice Couve de Murville was expected to outline spending cuts in a speech in parliament later today. Cuts in subsidies to nationalized industries were expected.
De Gaulle's chief lieutenant pledged in a nationwide broadcast Monday night France would put its own financial house in order. He stressed however the United States and the other rich nations of the non-Communist world were ready to help if needed.
"All the help France needs or will need in the future will be given to her without reserve," Couve de Murville said.
He did not mention devaluation. Speculators on the world money markets were waiting to see if France's actions now could successfully avoid eventual devaluation of the once-strong franc.
The draining away of at least a third of France's $6 billion gold reserves had led to a loss of confidence in the franc last week, resulting in mass selling of the franc and a lunge for stronger currencies on the money markets, especially the West German mark.
Couve de Murville was expected to move toward ending
West Germany will raise taxes
BONN (UPI) - West Germany yesterday announced a series of "immediate tax measures" to prevent revaluation of the German mark and increase its value during Europe's monetary crisis.
The new taxes would increase imports and curb the country's export surplus.
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the government's spending more than it takes in.
In the current year, sparked by almost unprecedented student-labor unrest, De Gaulle's government had pushed ahead in major programs for education, housing and other social fields. Some of the military programs De Gaulle had designed to enhance his rebuilding of French "grandeur" already had been snipped.
The Premier's emphasis on French self-help reinforced reports from Basel, Switzerland, site of world banker meetings, that France rejected an offered $500 million short term loan from West Germany.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20,1968
Team doctor wants to be psychiatrist
By DICK HVALE Kansan Sports Writer
An Englishman training to be a psychiatrist also patches up KU football players.
It sounds as unusual as a sunny day in London. Yet, Dr. John L. Barton, a native of Nottingham, England, has been Jayhawk team physician since September, 1967.
Barton attends to any KU athlete but accompanies only the football team to out-of-town games. He also sits on the bench for Jayhawk basketball games played at Allen Field House.
He handles "anything that comes up from colds to broken bones." Sometimes he refers serious cases to other doctors.
"I'm kind of a sorting station." he quipped.
Barton said that Don Autry's broken leg was the most serious case that he has treated this semester. Autry, a sophomore tailback, sustained the injury in the Indiana game Sept. 28. Dr. Leonard F. Peltier, head of the department of orthopedic surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center, has since taken over the case.
This season, Barton has been frequently attending to athletes sidelined with pulled muscles.
"As the season has progressed, we're now getting more sprained ankles and minor knee injuries," he said.
Barton has worked at KU on two occasions, once from January 1964 to July 1965, and again from September 1967 to next February. He took over as team physician for six months in 1965 when his predecessor, Dr. Kollbjorn Jensen, left for his home in Norway.
Although he will go back to England next February to complete his training in psychiatry, Barton said that he hopes to return to the United States some day to practice psychiatry in a student health center.
Barton likes the U.S., particularly the Midwest mainly because of the people.
"The people in the Midwest are by far the friendliest people my wife and I have ever met," he said. "The people in England
or the East and West coasts of the United States are not as outgoing."
He said that he is also attracted to this country by the higher standard of living and by the weather.
Barton first heard of the available exchange fellowship at KU's Student Health Center in 1963 while he was talking with a friend in a pub on the outskirts of Leeds, England. His friend, Dr. Kerry Finlay, who was from the Leeds Student Health Center, was informed of the vacated exchange fellowship at the 1963 World Student Health Congress in Rome.
Barton, who was doing a residency in psychiatry at the time, applied for the fellowship because he "thought a year in the States would be broadening."
After working at Watkins Hospital from January 1964 to January 1965, he shouldered the additional position of team physician. During the six months that he held the job, Barton spent most of his time taking care of the football players at spring practices.
Barton sailed home to England in July, 1965, so that he could continue his psychiatric training. In September, 1967, Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, asked Barton to come back to Kansas on another exchange fellowship.
"Having nothing to lose, my wife and I came," he said. After arriving at KU, Schwegler asked Barton to resume his duties as team physician.
"I was not keen on the idea," Barton recalls. "I would have to be away on five weekends and be at practice until late at night."
He eventually accepted the position with some reluctance. Now, however, he does not regret that decision.
"I am happy that I did (accept the position) and have found it rewarding," he said.
Barton said he has enjoyed the job, partly because of the athletes and coaches he has met. "I have felt the same things they felt," he said. "I have seen them in their moments of despair and their moments of glory."
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NEW YORK (UPI) — Stan Bahnsen, a 23-year-old right-hander who won 17 games to help the New York Yankees to their first finish in the first division in four years, was named the American League's Rookie-of-the-year yesterday.
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Bahnsen, who'll be 24 on Dec. 15, recorded a 17-12 mark with a 2.06 earned run average to win the accolade in the balloting of the Baseball Writers Association of America
Ralph Houk, manager of the Yankees, said, "He richly deserves the honor. He owes it all to himself. I've never seen a fellow in better shape when he reported. He came down to spring training with the idea in mind of being a starting pitcher, and if more players had that attitude, they would be better off."
Bahnsen, who said, "I was just worried about making the team when I went to spring training," received 17 of the 20 votes in the balloting of two writers in each of the 10 league cities.
Del Unser, the fine Washington Senator centerfielder who led both leagues with 22 assists, received the other three votes.
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John L. Barton, KU's team physician, examines the left leg of middle guard Emery Hicks. Barton will return to England, his native land, shortly after the Jayhawks play Penn State in the Orange Bowl.
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STARRING RUTH GASSMANN • WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY MICROCAMERA BY DR. ERWIN BURCIK
(2)
RUTH GASSMANN • ERICH F. BENDER • DR. ERWIN BURCIK
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Big 8 statistics
LEADING PASSERS
Player, School
Ronnie Johnson, OSU 8 205-103 Pct. 10 Int. Gain Avg. TI 3
Lynn Dickey, KSU 8 195-104 Pct. 12 1265 18.1 31
Olivier Orr, University 8 149-83 956 5 1227 153.4 3
Bob Douglass, KU 8 158-78 494 1 1173 130.3 11
Bob Anderson, CU 8 192-92 478 12 1116 124.0 14
John Warder, SU 10 202-98 479 12 1194 114.4 6
Joseph Clemens, MU 8 132-66 500 4 867 96.3 4
Garnett Phelps, MU 8 82-34 414 5 531 59.0 5
Terry McMillan, MU 8 89-40 414 7 512 56.9 3
TOTAL OFFENSE LEADERS
| Player, School | Attushing | Passing | Total | Play, Game |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| G. Jeffrey, SU | 9 | 70-125 | 92-116 | 362-185 | 5.1 | 205.7 |
| Romile Johnson, OSU | 9 | 112-209 | 103-205-1265 | 317-1474 | 4.6 | 184.3 |
| Bob Douglass, KU | 9 | 127-452 | 78-158-1173 | 285-1625 | 5.7 | 180.6 |
| Bob Warmack, OU | 9 | 85-179 | 83-149-1227 | 234-1406 | 6.0 | 175.8 |
| Steve Owens, OU | 9 | 88-174 | 81-139-1227 | 234-1406 | 6.4 | 175.8 |
| W. Worden, WSU | 9 | 151-355 | 89-201-1184 | 352-1539 | 1.4 | 153.9 |
| Lynn Dickey, KSU | 9 | 24(-136) | 113-228-1413 | 252-1377 | 5.4 | 153.0 |
| Terry McMillan, MU | 9 | 76-323 | 40-89-512 | 165-835 | 5.1 | 92.8 |
| Ernie Sigle, NU | 9 | 63(-71) | 66-132-867 | 195-796 | 4.1 | 89.4 |
| John Riggins, KU | 9 | 63(-71) | 0-1-1 | 191-791 | 4.4 | 87.4 |
| John Lozano, KU | 9 | 110-725 | 0-1-1 | 111-725 | 6.0 | 80.6 |
| Joe Orduana, KU | 9 | 176-660 | 1-1-45 | 177-705 | 4.0 | 78.3 |
| Greg Cook, MU | 9 | 148-638 | 1-1-45 | 148-638 | 4.3 | 70.9 |
LEADING RUSHERS
Player, School G Att. Net Play G
Steve Owens, OU 8 282 1244 4.4 155.5
John Riggins, KU 9 124 791 6.4 87.9
Joe Hancock, KU 9 124 791 6.4 87.9
D Shanklin, KU 9 110 725 6.6 80.6
Joe Orduna, NU 9 176 660 3.8 73.3
Greg Cook, MU 9 148 638 4.3 70.9
Dick Eagle, NU 9 157 638 4.3 70.9
Dick Eagle, NU 9 157 638 4.3 70.9
Steve Engel, CU 9 157 452 3.6 50.2
Ben King, ISU 10 124 437 3.5 43.7
Tom Nigbur, SU 9 64 384 6.9 42.7
L. Brown, KSU 9 97 364 3.8 40.4
Ben McRide, MU 9 81 362 4.5 40.4
PASS RECEIVING
Player, School Yds. Yds. TD
Eddie Hinton, OU 43 715 5
Eric Mills, OU 45 552 4
Terry Brown, OSU 40 552 2
Mack Herron, OSU 35 624 4
Otto Stowe, ISU 34 399 2
Michael Osborne, OSU 30 193 8
George McGowan, KU 29 472 4
Tom Dearinger, OSU 27 308 0
Tom Penney, NU 22 403 2
Joshua Moser, KU 22 248 1
Jim McFarland, NU 22 239 4
Sam Campbell, ISU 21 372 4
Hermann Eben, OSU 19 127 6
Hermann Eben, OSU 19 126 2
Player, School No. Yds.
Dana Stephenson, NU 5 106
Roger Wehrl, MU 5 80
Clarence Scott, KSU 5 27
Tom Hilden, KU 4 88
Steve Barrett, ISU 4 0
Tom Hilden, ISU 4 0
PUNT RETURNING
Player, School No. Yds. Avg.
Roger Whirl, MU 37 148 12.6
Don Shanklin, KU 13 210 16.2
Benny Goodwin, OSU 12 180 9.5
Tom Ellott, UM 17 82 6.5
Pat Murphy, NU 14 175 12.5
Pat Murphy, CU 14 142 12.9
Al Larson, NU 14 77 5.5
Mike Byrnum, CU 13 75 5.8
Player, School No. Avg.
Bob Coble, KSU 62.3
Bill Bell, KU 34.1
Bob Brouillette, ISU 63.1
Steve Kenemur, MU 51.9
Steve Zebel, MU 42.9
Kevin Johnson, OSU 55.3
Dick Robert, CU 46.5
Dane Stephenson, NU 58.3
KICKOFF BETURNING
Player, School No. Yds. Avg.
Jeff Allen, ISU 23 199 26.0
Mack Herron, KSU 20 154 28.2
Eddie Hinton, INO 15 294 19.2
Don Shanklin, KU 11 182 17.5
Jon Staggers, INO 18 185 16.0
Dick Davis, NU 9 166 18.4
Wayne Hallmark, OSU 9 161 17.9
SCORING LEADERS
Steve Owens, OU (90), Bobby Douglass, KU (66), Bill Bell, KU (63), Orda Jordna, NU (60) Doe Doyle, Harrold, KSU (54), James Harrison, MU (48), Bob Anderson, CU (42), Nigbur, CU (36), John Riggins, KU (36), Paul Rogers, NU (35), Eddie Hinton, OU (25) or riggings, KU (30), and Ward Walsh,
Mantle will attempt to play next season
NEW YORK (UPI) — Mickey Mantle and the New York Yankees said it again Tuesday. Mantle hasn't decided to retire.
The Yanks denied the report last Saturday night when Dick Young of the New York Daily News wrote that Mantle had decided to quit.
President Mike Burke and general manager Lee MacPhail, speaking at the press conference Tuesday at Yankee Stadium when Stan Bahnsen was named the American League rookie of the year, denied the story again.
And Mantle, speaking on a taped phone interview from Atlanta, where he's promoting a business, said, "I think I told him that I was going to spring training and try to play again if I can make the club. But I'm sure going to be at spring training and I'm going to at least try and play one more year."
He added, "I did tell him it was
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Burke said Mantle would not play just to get the $100,000 salary, either, because the Yanks have already reached a financial agreement with Mantle to cover his non-playing days.
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getting harder to hit the young pitchers but I don't remember saying I was going to quit."
Manager Ralph Houk, added,
"Mantle's average wasn't that
high but I think he had a good
year and I think there's good
baseball left in him. He may just
need more rest. But in the seventh,
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he was our best offensive player.
And he was on base a lot because
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KANSAS CITY, Mo. Two extremely durable Big Eight conference records could be erased amid a fandom flurry befitting their burial Saturday by a pair of Oklahomans, Bobby Warmack and Steve Owens, on national television against Nebraska.
Warmack, the Wicked Worm who already stands statistically as the greatest quarterback in tradition-steeped Oklahoma's history, has now passed and run enough so that he is in need of only 120 total yards to break Paul Christman's league total offense mark of 4,246, which he established for Missouri in 1938-39-40.
'Durable' Big Eight milestones may become casualties Saturday
A skittery, sleight-of-hand artist, Warmack, with at least two games left this season, has now pushed his career total to 4,127 yards. The accumulation includes 814 on the ground and another 3,313 passing. The aerial level ranks as the second best in Big Eight history and is just 138 under—the league mark of 3,451—another record well within Warmack's grasp.
While Warmack and Owens rest on the edge of setting new marks, Colorado's Bob Anderson and Kansas State's Lynn Dickey got the job done in major fashion last weekend.
Thus, Owens, with 2,113, has now become only the second in Big Eight annals to rush for over 2,000 during his first two seasons. Sayers, after two full campaigns, had 2,042. Owens is also making a shamble of the scoring race, running his total to 90 with three more TD's Saturday.
However, it seems certain now that Owens will slash by the standard. It is just 98 yards away after Owens recorded his seventh straight big ground day—177 in 46 shots against Missouri, the Big Eight's rushing defense leaders—to put his seasonal effort at 1,244, an average of 155.5 yards a game.
Dickey really made it a bad day for Van Galder marks, tying the Iowa Stater's standard for most completions in a game (25) and breaking Van Galder's most-attempts mark (48). Dickey, second in league passing for the
While the mark Owens threatens isn't quite as old as the one Warmack is after, it was perhaps thought to be more invincible. In 1950, a Nebraska sophomore named Bobby Reynolds ran wild, gaining 1,342. His effort has withstood the challenges of some great backs, including Kansas' Gale Sayers and Wade Stinson, Oklahoma's Buck McPhail and Bill Vessels, and Kansas State's Cornelius Davis.
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year (1,413 yards) just 37 lengths away from becoming the most productive sophomore passe in league history. His seasonal total has him fourth on the Big Eight's all-time list and in position to take second by hitting his average next week.
Other leaders this week include Oklahoma State's Ronnie Johnson, passing (158.1 average), Oklahoma's Eddie Hinton, receiving (43 for 715), Kansas State's Bob Coble, punting (42.3), Missouri's Roger Wehrli, punt returning (468), and Iowa State's Jeff Allen, kickoff returning (599).
Pepper says Missouri has better backs this season
"Missouri has better backs this year," he said. "When you have better backs, you have a better offense."
KU will face a Missouri team with a more potent offense this Saturday than the Mizzou team that the Jayhawks defeated 17-6 last November, coach Pepper Rodgers said after yesterday's practice.
Rodgers praised Mizzou which
The Jayhawks practiced 90 minutes in pads yesterday for this Saturday's crucial game with the Tigers. Rodgers said that he didn't want to talk about the Orange Bowl until after the Missouri game.
accepted an invitation to the Gator Bowl Monday. "They've always had a good football team at Missouri," he said. "They play the same defense they did last year and do a great job."
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20,1968
Owens selected top Big 8 back
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — Oklahoma tailback Steve Owens, who outrushed the entire Missouri team last Saturday and prompted coach Chuck Fairbanks to say he ought to be a "national hero of the Week," has been unanimously named Big Eight Back of the Week for his part in the Sooners' 28-14 victory.
Owens carried the ball 46 times and piled up 177 yards to Missouri's 174 Saturday, scored three touchdowns and passed for another as the Sooners handed the Tigers their only loss in the conference.
When Fairbanks was asked who his nominee was, he fired back, "Owens! Criminy! He ought to be made national hero of the week! He gave us a super effort Saturday."
Owens not only figured in on every Sooner scoring play, but he also picked up 11 of Oklahoma's 16 rushing first downs. Seven were on third down and one on fourth down.
"I'm awfully proud of Steve Owens and he's done a great job for us," Fairbanks said. "In my mind he has to be one of the great backs in the country."
Rocky Wallace, defensive tackle for Missouri, said, "The big difference was Owens, period. He is a great back."
Missouri coach Dan Devine said he couldn't remember of anyone running that well against a Tiger team "and I've got a pretty good memory."
Fairbanks said the best thing about Owens is that he is so outstanding against good teams.
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Tentative schedules of three home games and three games away plus state sportsdays have been planned for both teams.
Plans for intramural sports competition between all women's living groups will be announced after Thanksgiving vacation.
The Women's Recreation Association (WRA) today announced plans for the formation of women's intercollegiate basketball and volleyball teams.
All coeds interested in joining the women's basketball team should sign up in the Women's Physical Education Office before
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Tryouts for the basketball team will begin Dec. 3 from 7:30 to 8:15 p.m. and Dec. 5 from 8:15 to 9 p.m.
Those coeds interested in joining the volleyball team should sign up before 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Women's Physical Educa-
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STUDENTS SUPPORTING
Ed Dallam President Randy Herrington-Vice-president Carol Reber Secretary Ann Lowen-Treasurer
Steve Tippin—Past Student Council President, Wichita Southeast
Scott Wallace—Past Student Body Vice-president, Ottawa
Jay Patterson—Past Student Cong. Vice-president, Shawnee Mission North
Mike Boyle—Past Student Body Pres., Wichita East, All American Swimmer
Kathy Hines—Past Senior Class Treasurer, Wichita Southeast
Bill Anderson—Past Chairman of Student Congress, Shawnee Mission East
Marty Hill—Cheerleader, Ottawa
Jim Aldis—Pledge Class President, Phi Delta Theta
Dave Boles—Pledge Class President, Delta Upsilon
Maureen Callahan—Floor President, 4 West G.S.P.
Jim Dye—Past Senior Class Vice-president, Wichita Southeast
Sis Merrill—Cheerleader, Wichita East
Mary Rudiger—President, Crossbar G.S.P.
Dave Nichols—Past Senior Class President, Wyandotte High School
Pam Porter—Cheerleader, Shawnee Mission East
Dale Winetroub—Past Student Congress President, Leavenworth High School
Frank Stuckey—Past Student Congress Vice-president, Hutchinson
Dick Griffith—Pledge Class President, Delta Tau Delta
John Dalton—Past Student Body Treasurer, Wichita East
Gloria Jahn—Head Cheerleader, Leavenworth High School
Craig Phelps—Pledge Class President, Delta Chi
Boomby Eagle—Cheerleader, Rock Island, Ill.
Gale Bartlett—Past Student Council Secretary
Paul Dewey—Valedictorian, Garden City High School
Tom Shea—Past Student Congress Treasurer, Sacred Heart H.S., Salina
FROSH CROSS COUNTRY
Doug Smith
Roger Laushman
Bob Hendee
Randy Williams
Rich Elliott
FROSH FOOTBALL
Dick Hertel
Steve Johnson
Yogi Pinckney
Bo Tiger
John Harris
Mel Quevedo
Gary Copper
Mike Borlend
Doug Underwood
Mike Sullivan
Greg Crowley
Wayne Miles
Steve Madison
Bill Sweetman
John Clinger
Jim Maher
FROSH BASKETBALL
Neal Mask
Tim Peterson
John Poindexter
Bob Kivisto
Phil Basler
Jimmy Jukes
Steve Roach
Joe Schadler
Gary Alyesworth
Roger Bock
Greg McClelland
Roy Norwold
Chuck Schmidt
Al Krist
Mick Narusch
Kenny Page
Rick Hale
Mike Gorbett
Phil Edwards
Dave Nichols
J. D. Armstrong
Wednesday, November 20,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Top scorers missing from '68-69 rosters
By DICK DEAN
Kansan Sports Writer
(This is the second in a series of Kansan reports on Big Eight basketball for the 1968-69 season.)
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—It's the year of the newcomer in Big Eight scoring and rebounding. Only seven of the top 17 scorers return—none of those in the top seven.
The leading point-producers from last year are Iowa State's Bill Cain, who averaged 17.1 points for the Cyclones, and Missouri's Don Tomlinson, fresh from an outstanding sophomore year when he scored at a 16.8 clip.
The situation is much the same with rebounding as many of the league's big men have graduated. Five of the top 12 rebounders are back, including Oklahoma's Garfield Heard—who ranked second with a 10.4 average.
Only four of the Big Eight clubs will have over 50 per cent of its scoring punch back this year. Oklahoma State (84 per cent) and Kansas (75.4) show the greatest amount of offense while Colorado-smarting from the graduation losses of Pat Frink, Chuck Williams, and Mike Rebich--has lost 75 per cent of its scoring output.
Colorado and Kansas boast the league's biggest teams this year, both showing a composite 6-5/4 average height. The Buffs will uniform the Big Eight's tallest cager of all time in 7-2 Ron Smith. KU's tallest five average 6-9 while Colorado can average 6-10 with its tallest men on the court at the same-time.
Despite the losses of the scoring and rebounding leaders, many familiar faces are returning. Three teams—Iowa State, Oklahoma State, and Kansas—have four starters back. Defending champion Kansas State, along with Nebraska and Oklahoma, have three front-lineeners from last year. Missouri (2) and Colorado (1) will have a new look.
The only returnee from the all-Big Eight team selected by the major war services (AP and UPI) is KU's Jo Jo White, and even he has but one semester of eligibility. Graduated stars include Iowa State's Don Smith, Oklahoma's Don Sidle, Nebraska's Stu Lantz, and KU's Rodger Bohnensiehl.
Kansas coach Ted Owens has indicated that since his Jayhawks play 18 of their 26 games in the first semester (and four of their seven Big Eight road games), White will probably play the first semester.
If White were to play in the second semester, and if KU would qualify for the NCAA tournament, the Jayhawk guard would be ineligible for post-season play. NCAA rules limit a player to three post-season tourneys, and White has already appeared in three.
The head coaches predict another championship scramble, discounting only Missouri and Oklahoma as title contenders.
Cops arrest Denver QB
DENVER (UPI) - Marin Briscoe of the Denver Broncos has been arrested for trying to steal one phonograph record, the suburban Jefferson County Sheriff's office said yesterday.
Briscoe, currently the Denyer Broncos' No. 1 quarterback, was arrested Monday and released the same night without bond.
Bronco coach Lou Saban said Tuesday, "We're going to discuss the situation. We won't have anything further."
Jefferson County Sheriff Harold Bray said Briscoe was spotted Monday afternoon in a suburban department store where he bought two records. Bray said he slipped a third record into his package without paying for it.
The 5-10 quarterback is a rookie in the American Football League this year after an outstanding college career at Omaha University.
Mary Jo K.
Sugar Yawn—Pi Phi wearing a bright new
holiday TAMI outfit.
Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 MASS. Uptown
Country
NEW YORK (UPI) — Second-ranked Ohio State is favored by four points over fourth-ranked Michigan for Saturday's Big Ten title game and No. 1 Southern California is a 14-point choice over arch rival UCLA, the oddsmakers say.
KU favored over Tigers by 1 point
Among the Top Ten teams, seventh-ranked Kansas is expected to have the toughest battle, with the Jayhawks quoted a slim one-point pick over Missouri. Ninth-ranked Arkansas is favored by six over Texas Tech.
Third-ranked Penn State and eighth-ranked Tennessee are such overwhelming choices over Pittsburgh and Kentucky, respectively, that no point spreads have been listed.
Fifth-ranked Georgia, sixth-ranked Texas and 10th-ranked Notre Dame are all idle.
In other top games, Yale is a seven-point choice over Harvard in "The game" matching two unbeatens for the Ivy League championship. Columbia is 13-point pick over Brown, Dartmouth 5 over Pennsylvania and Princeton 7 over Cornell.
In the pros, Baltimore, the Coastal Division leader in the National Football League, is a 10-point pick over Central Division paceetter Minnesota, Cleveland is favored by 17 to send Philadelphia down to its 11th straight loss, Los Angeles gets the nod by 10 over the New York Giants, Detroit is 11 over New Orleans, Green Bay is an 11-point pick over Washington, San Francisco is 5 over Pittsburgh and St. Louis is 11 over Atlanta.
The odds-makers do not quote any odds on Chicago Bears games
since Gale Sayers was injured and so there was no spread on the Bears-Dallas Cowboys game.
THE LIBRARY BUD & COORS ON TAP
In the American Football League; San Diego is the choice by three over the New York Jets, Boston is one over Miami and Oakland is 16 over Cincinnati.
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Drawing Nov. 27th-You Need Not Be Present To Win GRAND PRIZE-R.C.A. PORTABLE T.V.
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★ Two Polaroid Swinger Cameras
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★ Two Gillette Techmatic Adjustable Razors
Register for the above prizes every time you shop at Varsity Values during the next one week. You need not be present to win. Drawing Nov. 27th----5:30 p.m.
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Corner of 9th and Mass. "Bus Stop Corner"
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
UDK News Roundup By United Press International.
Russia will discuss arms
MOSCOW—Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin told two U.S. Senators yesterday his country was ready to negotiate new arms control agreements with the United States, but expressed concern at President-elect Richard M. Nixon's views on the matter.
Kosygin made his hopes and uncertainties known to the senators during a "lively exchange" that covered the chances for world peace and the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia.
After the 80-minute meeting in Kosygin's Kremlin office, Sens. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., and Claiborn Pell, R-R.I., said the Russian leader had expressed concern over statements by President-elect Nixon about maintaining American military superiority.
The senators said Kosygin told them it would be difficult to improve relations between the two superpowers if one was trying to become stronger than the other.
Two K-Staters suspended
MANHATTAN—Two Kansas State University students suspended because of an obscene sign in connection with selection of a Negro coed as homecoming queen will be permitted to return "when they and their parents are ready to talk about it," officials indicated yesterday.
Dean of Students Gen Kasper said the sign, posted in a dormitory, concerned the homecoming queen and a Negro student living in the dormitory. It was torn down by another Negro student. He, with the student named, contacted other Negro students assembled in the lobby of the dormitory to protest.
Kasper said two white students admitted they were responsible for the sign but said they "had no intent of causing trouble."
He said the students apologized privately to the student named on the sign and publicly to the group assembled in the dormitory lobby.
UN won't seat Red China
UNITED NATIONS—The General Assembly for the 19th time in the history of the United Nations last night refused to expel Nationalist China and seat the Communist Chinese.
The vote was 58-44 with 23 abstentions.
Mali regime overthrown
BAMAKO, Mali—A group of leftist army officers yesterday overthrew the homegrown Socialist regime of Modibo Keita, 53, the founding father of this landlocked country in northwest Africa.
The apparently bloodless coup was announced by Mali radio. Army Maj. Mussa Traore, believed to have led the coup, said all power would not be in the hands of a "National Revival" military committee.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Lecture. 4 p.m. Peter G. Snow, University of Iowa. "Argentine Coup of 1966." Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Physical Therapy Club. 7 p.m. Pine
Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Classical Film. 7 & 9 p.m. "My Uncle." Dyche Auditorium.
Ontario, Dynegy, Union.
Boom, Kansas Union.
7.30 p.m. Forum
Boom, Kansas Union.
Senior Recital. 8 p.m. Jo Anne Ferrell, pianist. Swarathout Recital Hall.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
TOMORROW
Children's Theatre. 1:15 p.m. "The Little Princess, Universe" 1:20 p.m. "The
p. Forum Room, Kansas Union,
Exemption Examination 4, p. 4; 200
Learn
SUA Poetry Hour 4:30 p.m. mED
SUA Film Katrina 4:30 p.m.
SUA Film, 7 & 8 p.m. "Big Store,
SUA Film"
KU basketball tickets are on sale this week
Dyche Auditorium
Universidad Women Newsroom 7:30
University Women Newcomers. 7:30 p.m. Watkins Room, Kansas Union.
Sigma XI Lecture. 7:30 p.m. Otto Tiemiel, K-State. "Digestion and Nutrition in the Channel Catfish" 233 Malott.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
Poor march must pay park damage
WASHINGTON — The federal government is contemplating going to court for $71,795 it claims the Poor People's Campaign owes it for tearing down Resurrection City here and restoring the park land it occupied.
The bill represents the costs of tearing down and removing plywood shanties erected by the demonstrators.
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KU-Missouri; Away Game Bus Trip Saturday, Nov.23, 1968
Cost—$12—Includes your ticket Make your reservations in person at SUA office
Jim's DX Station
is now equipped to do minor tune-up and lubrication
on all foreign cars
(VW's included!)
reasonable rates
DX
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842-9578
make the tract team.
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BACK TO GOD TRACT TEAM
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Fri., Nov. 22 is McCollum night. Half price ($1.00 per couple) and 75c per pitcher for residents of McCollum.
THE 21 STREET BAND
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For reservations contact Mike Seregi VI 2-1200
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Opening Fri. & Sat., Nov. 22, 23
Dance to the soul sounds of
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Wednesday, November 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
'Don't disregard Pope' says priest
By FRED PARRIS Kansan Staff Writer
While Pope Paul's birth control stand is only a "teaching," if you're a Catholic, "you can't disregard it."
This warning comes from the Rev. Walter J. Ong, S.J., speaker at KU's third Humanities Lecture and professor of English at St. Louis University.
During an interview yesterday, Father Ong commented on the present state of affairs within the Catholic Church.
"It's still a problem which we must work out within the Church," the Jesuit said of the birth control controversy. "The Pope's declaration, the views of the bishops and the feelings of laymen, as dictated by their consciences, will all be considered."
Despite the recent changes, Catholicism will never become democratic in the sense that the people will make the "laws," Father Ong said.
Notions that the Church is permitting more internal freedom of expression because of the Ecumenical Council are misleading. Father Ong said.
"The Church will not attempt
to be a 'popular' institution as such. People must be told the truth whether they like it or not."
Democratic channels will be used more frequently in the future, however, he said.
Father Ong declined to discuss the question of clerical celibacy and the growing number of married priests. "It would be arrogant of me to comment on them," he said.
Likewise, he had no comment on Catholicism in South America, except to say, "democracy has not permeated the Church in Latin America like it has here."
Father Ong approves of the dialogues in Europe between Catholics and Communists which have followed the Ecumenical Council.
"I believe opposing forces must talk together, provided they face the problems squarely."
Catholics should be proud of this nation's parochial school system, Father Ong said.
"It is a unique achievement, which is as 'American' as it is Catholic."
Lecture is on oral dialogue
The relationship of reading to the complex of society has undergone a tremendous change. This change has resulted in a lack of interest in reading and a new emphasis on oral communication, said Rev. Walter J. Ong, S.J.
Father Ong lectured on "The End of the Age of Literacy," at 8 p.m. last night in Swarthout Recital Hall. His lecture was the third of eight scheduled for this year's Humanities Lecture Series.
Father Ong said oral dialogue is and always will be man's favorite and most effective way of expressing himself.
"Regardless of the advancements made in printing and technology, the twentieth century has placed greater emphasis on oral dialogue," said Father Ong.
Father Ong said oral dialogue has been the most effective force in modernizing theology.
"Oral dialogue has opened the way to greater secular-religious understanding. It has facilitated unity among Catholic, Protestant and Jewish religions," Father Ong said.
"I am not however, underestimating the value of the printed word. Oral dialogue has gained from printing developments, because printing it gives its permanence. Often one media reinforces the other." Father Ong said.
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He discounts charges of "exclusiveness" by comparing the Catholic school system with the Negro "black power" philosophy.
"Negroes need to be proud of their heritage," the Jesuit said. "By the same token, Catholics should be proud of their Catholicism."
He added, however, more cooperation between the parochial and public school systems is desirable.
KU basketball tickets are on sale this week
TRAVEL TIME
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12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
Bumblepuppy
Sign of the times?
Madame Pandit asks for peace, world unity
Madame V. L. Pandit, sister of the late Prime Minister Nehru of India, yesterday challenged KU students to search for world unity, labeling it "the greatest of all problems."
"Not a unity superimposed or forged in times of crisis, but a lasting unity which emerges from understanding."
The former United Nations General Assembly president told 300 persons in the Kansas Union Ballroom that instead of unity today, there exist small areas of conflict. "Democracies must consider themselves leaders and collect people together." The 68-year-old diplomat cited the United Nations as unsuccessful recently in avoiding conflict because of the rising number of deaths and destruction of values and ideas.
Referring to the opening statement of the UNESCO charter, Madame Pandit said wars begin in the minds of men. She added it is in the minds of men that the defenses of peace and a search for unity must be met.
"Until peace is made as glamorous as war; until peace is the great challenge of our times and people aren't allowed to die, we won't build peace in men's minds."
The Indian ambassador called for the artificial boundaries of superstition between men to be replaced with patience, tolerance and recognition of the necessity of differences.
"What we need are alert, thoughtful leaders to anticipate and control events. Because people don't want to face reality, more and more issues remain unsolved."
Madame Pandit explained that she likes young people because they look to the positive side of things. "While most people think too much in terms of the negative, youth know what they believe and what they would like to do."
In a question-answer session later, Madame Pandit says she
sees prospects for a Middle East settlement as dim, explaining that a solution "will require more statesmanship and probing of viewpoints."
Madame Pandit's KU lecture, sponsored by the International Club, is one of several American lecture engagements. She has served two terms in the Indian Parliament resigning in September 1968. The well-traveled diplomat was president of the 8th session of the U.N. General Assembly in 1953 and was appointed India's representative at the funeral of the late President John F. Kennedy.
'Review' posts 'Bumblepuppy' signs
The sounds of words have connotations all their own.
"Raspberry" is a jazzy word;
"slice" a cold one.
Bumblepuppy is a warm word, and since signs bearing the word appeared mysteriously earlier this week, it has been a mysterious word.
Kenneth Irving, Rochester, Minn., senior and editor of the "Cottonwood Review." KU's literary magazine, said last night the signs may have been tacked on the campus' trees and hallway walls by a member of his staff.
"The main thing about it is, it's a nice warm word," he said.
He declined to comment on the reason the signs had been posted but would not deny they might be tied into a publicity campaign by the Cottonwood staff
The unabridged edition of Webster's Third New International Dictionary defines bumblepuppy as, "the old game of nineholes," "whist (a card game) played poorly or without regard for rules."
It might be an identity crisis...
Irving said the persons who
Thefts reported
A $120 stereo tape player, and two bicycles valued at $15 and $75 were reported missing recently.
James Lee Davis, Springfield, Mo., junior, reported his stereo tape player missing from his car early Monday morning.
Raymond Ho, graduate student,
reported his bicycle was taken from Lindley Hall, Saturday.
the Mizzou Tigers. Maybe it should read straight. Humble the pupv (tiger). "
"It could be the English department in protest over the proposed moving of the business office to the vacated space in the library," guessed another student.
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Two students came closest to the probable intention of the signs, the first suggesting, "It could be a shout of elation."
"It's kind of spooky," said one student, "that it should appear and no one knows anything about it."
Meanwhile, KU students puzzled over the meaning of the inscrutable word.
Another student thought the signs might be an art student's protest.
Further from the still-shadowed truth was one student who said, "It could be a slam against
The other said, "That could be the whole purpose of it—to make people wonder."
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Wednesday, November 20, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Thieu still objects to NLF
Saigon boycott postpones negotiations
PARIS (UPI)—High allied sources said yesterday the Paris negotiations on Vietnam have been postponed again because of U.S. failure to break down South Vietnam's boycott of the talks.
The sources said there would be no meeting today, the usual day for formal sessions of Vietnam talks. It will mark the third straight week the beginning of the broadened talks has been put off because of South Vietnamese objections.
A diplomatic official with direct access to the negotiations said last night:
"We can report no progress in our effort to reach an accord with Saigon on terms of reference that would overcome their hostility to the presence of the National Liberation Front (NLF)."
But the United States was reported to have redoubled its efforts, and the source said hopes remained high in the allied camp that President Nguyen Van Thieu soon would work out a formula with U.S. envoy Ellsworth Bunker that would send a delegation to Paris.
South Vietnam has balked at taking part in Paris talks that would include a separate, independent delegation of the NLF, political arm of the Viet Cong.
The expanded talks originally were scheduled to open in Paris Nov. 6 under the Washington-Hanoi accord that led to the halt of U.S. bombardment of North Vietnam. They have failed thus far to get off the ground because of Saigon's boycott.
ine head of North Vietnam's
N.Y. students return to classrooms
NEW YORK (UPI)-The 1.1 million students in the nation's largest school system and most of their 57,000 teachers returned to classrooms yesterday to resume the task of education interrupted by the longest teachers' strike in the city's history.
Drafted grads can finish term
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Draft Director Lewis B. Hershey has advised local draft boards to allow drafted graduate students to finish out their school term before they are required to report for induction, Selective Service headquarters said yesterday.
The new policy was adopted to ease the impact of the draft on the students and the nation's graduate schools.
Last Feb. 15, on the advice of the National Security Council, Hershey ordered an end of academic deferments for graduate students other than those in medicine.
Many first-year graduate students declined to enroll even though their 1-A status could make them eligible for the draft at any time.
Hershey's new policy was intended to ensure the students' investment of time and funds for tuition, housing and books would not be lost by the arrival of a draft notice while the students were in the middle of a term, a spokesman said.
Members of the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) voted Monday to accept an agreement ending their citywide strike, latest in a series of three since schools opened Sept. 9. The vote was 17,058 for the agreement and 2,738 against.
Public school pupils have missed 36 days of classes as a result of three teacher strikes this term.
Under the agreement announced by Mayor John V. Lindsay, three principals in the Ocean Hill-Brownsville experimental school district were suspended along with the tocal governing board of the largely Negro and Puerto Rican district.
Luis Fuentes, one of the three suspended principals, said Monday he would report to his desk today and it would take "five or six of New York's finest" to remove him. Fuentes is the only Puerto Rican principal in the city.
The agreement also named Dr.
HEAD SKIS
Herbert F. Johnson, associate state education commissioner, to administer the Ocean Hill-Brownsville district, whose local governing board triggered the strike by attempting to transfer 79 union teachers.
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Johnson said Monday the return of the 79 teachers to Ocean Hill-Brownsville's eight schools would be delayed until today
Because of the school crisis most students in New York City's 900 public schools missed all but 11 days of instruction since Sept. 9. They will have to go to school longer each day and attend classes on 10 holidays to make up the time, but there will be no compulsory classes next summer.
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delegation to Paris, Xuan Thuy, said in an interview Monday there would be no expanded peace talks unless the Viet Cong is recognized as an equal partner at the conference table.
High Communist sources told
UPI Tuesday that once talks did get underway, the Viet Cong delegation would submit to the first meeting a plan demanding priority for the drafting of a timetable for withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Vietnam.
TONIGHT 9-11
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14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
Prof says grads should not teach low-level classes
(Continued from page 1)
gram, they aid operators of small businesses with consultation and advice.
These students have helped the small firms with their biggest problem—the distribution of their products, Sorter said. They have also helped in setting up accounting systems for the firms, he added.
Sorter said Chicago students have also demonstrated their activism by seeking out small firms to participate in campus recruiting.
"I don't see this sort of involvement here in Kansas. There is a lack of zeal," he said.
Sorter said KU students seem to approach their education without much inspiration. They expect to be taught routinely in "cookbook fashion." They won't get excited, he said.
Students should go into a classroom ready to think for themselves. "Too many of them sit and wait for that 18-year-old demigod teaching assistant to reveal truths to them. Learning is too complex to come that easy," Sorter said.
Sorter said he was surprised to hear KU students addressing him
WAF captain to talk to physical therapy club
A WAF captain will outline opportunities for physical therapists in the armed forces at the 7 p.m. meeting tonight of the Physical Therapy Club in the Kansas Union Pine Room.
Capt. Nancy Wiseman, a physical therapist stationed at Randola Air Force Base, Tex., will show slides to accompany her lecture.
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as Dr. Sorter. At Chicago no one but physicians are called doctor he said.
He said the title, doctor, is a psychological obstacle to a student's challenging the professor in debate. A favorite sport in Chicago is to catch a professor in a fallacy, he said. "The students pounce like starved animals."
Sorter said at KU he could make a mistake on purpose and the students would just copy it down in their notebooks.
Because of this, Sorter said he thinks the students here need to be shaken up. "You can't have a viable learning process without first shaking up people. You have to wake them up. There has to be some trauma," he said.
Sorter said he does his best to get his students to start thinking. The test he recently gave his beginning accounting class didn't have a single number in it, he said.
He wanted the students to investigate and understand the interrelationships in accounting, he said. "I want my students to think, not follow rules blindly."
Many courses would be more inspiring if the instructors broke from the traditional presentation of the material. Sorter said.
"Some professors here are highly imaginative," he said. But, he added, it's too bad they're not teaching where they're most needed—in the beginning courses.
Law dean named
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
in 1957 from Dartmouth College where he was a history major and a varsity basketball and baseball player. He received a law degree from the University of Michigan School of Law in 1960, earning the Juris Doctor, a designation awarded honor students there.
At Michigan he was a member of the Order of the Coif, an honor distinction in law comparable to Phi Beta Kappa in the liberal arts. He served as a member of the Board of Editors and assistant editor of the Michigan Law Review.
After graduation, he practiced with the firm of O'Melveny and Myers in Los Angeles and later with Margolin and Kirwan in
Kansas City. He joined the KU faculty in 1964 as an assistant professor and was promoted to associate professor in 1967.
At 35, Blades is one of the youngest deans in KU's history. He is four years older than James K. Logan, who when he became dean of the Law School in 1957, at the age of 31, was the youngest law dean in the United States, as well as the youngest dean in KU history.
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sua
NEW YORK—Christmas Trip-$105 Iry Robinson-Chairman
Offers Its Travel Plan
EUROPE—Summer Trip—$270 (June-August)
Jim Portwood—Chairman
Jim Morley—Asst. Chairman
BAHAMAS—Spring Break Trip Dave Reibstein—Chairman
HAWAII—Summer Trip (August) Mike Waring-Chairman
NEW ORLEANS—Semester Break Trip—$68.50 Rick Volweider—Chairman
KU basketball tickets are on sale this week
SKI TRIPS—Semester Break—Vail—$107.42
SPRING BREAK—Winter Park—$112.50
For Further Information Stop by the SUA Office or Call UN 4-3477
Travel with SUA on Your Vacations This Year
Sincerely,
Craig Crago
FREE CAR WASHES (all the time)
Travel Board Member
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The Castle Tea Room
1301-11 Mass. St.
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!
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.
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Wednesday, November 20,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
%
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
matter will be served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse. 1-92141. Leiden. 1-9
NOW ON SALE
1965 Karmann Ghia, one owner, beautiful Sea Blue & Cloud White, black leatherette interior, white wall tires, deluxe trim, AM-FM radio, see it today at Jerry Allen Volkswagon. 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1966 Dodge 2 dr. H.T., buckets, console,
P.S. P.B., air, air3, 838 V8 shows
the same shape as the 850 V8, vinyl top, just $1855 at Jerry Allen
Volkwagen, 2521 Iowa 11-20
1968 Chevrolet Caprice Hardtop, list new—$5.288.05. Never hit, never dented-perfect in every way, 9.959 actual one-owner miles, $1959.35 in factory list options, 5-yr.-50.000 mile, not to have to give it buy! It'll be the not another like it. Only $3.995 this week at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1964 MG, Midget, white w/wire
wheels, this hard-to-find car youres
this week only for $995 at Jerry Allen
Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 11-20
1963 Volkswagon deluxe sunroof,
choice of 2, both 100%, guaranteed,
very nice cars. 1 green, 1 white, elite.
Jerry Allen Volkswagon 2522
11-20
MUST SELL NOW—getting married soon Gibson Thunderbird base plus amp; Gibson 44 Jazz guitar plus case, ampler Genuin Powered new Shure Unidyne mike plus stand, fuzz tone, Call Jim Haffed TR6 with 7922 or V-3 8189 after five. 11-20
MUST SELL 1965 Imperial S.S., 327, 4-speed. B, P, B/S, excellent condition job. Stereo tape player. Highest offer. Call VI 2-1568 at 5:00 p.m. 11-20
Final reductions on 1968 Floor Sample Console Stereos. Regular $455.00 cabinets, magnificent cabinets, Ray back's. music! ' 529-931 Mass. St. 11-20
'53 Chevy Strap-Mobile, $100. Engine
-prime condition. Body and Interior
-still there. Call Scott Stinson at
VI 3-5770. 11-20
PIRANHA
8 inch Full grown Red Piranha. Perfect physical condition. Call Dave Hill or Tim Reynolds at VI 3-7922.
11-20
Folk instrument-Appalachian Mountain Duliemets Traditional & Modern design Stock & custom. Walnut.
rosewood $50 and up 11-21
8378 11-21
1967 Mustang, six-sick, radio, white walls. Excellent condition—only 5,000 miles. Call Larry Powers, V 2-7170; if no answer, call UN 4-3973 11-21
1401 WEST 61st STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
HAROLD'S SERVICE
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66
EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable
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The Sound Inc.
- Components
HILLCREST CENTER
Sony Tape Recorder, console with speakers in either end and matching bookend speakers. $300. VI 2-3010.
11. 32
SACRIFICE-Kingston eight string electric mandolin. Has new Gibson trombones and plays beautifully. First $25 ATKAVI at VI 7-9389 at 730 Atk
- Tapes
Mustang snow tires.-Last year's design. New 1st line 685-14 Kelly cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Ray Stonebacks 11-22
Conn Connestellation Trumpet, with trigger. Used one year, excellent condition. Will sell cheap. Call Jim Burke at VI 21-900, rm 320. 12-3
FREE POSTERS with gasoline at SMITTY'S CHAMPLIN, 1802 West 23rd. St. Also we have tires $15; Batteries $25; Antifreeze $1.39 Gal. Change Oil, Sandwiches and picnic items. 1-9
1966 Honda 450 in excellent condition,
low mileage. Helmet included. $450.
Also 185mm F 2.5 lens for Pentax $20.
2551 Redbud Lane #1, MV #1 2-6833 12-6833
- Records
Lawrence, Kansai
842-6331
Double bed mattress, new $25.00
Washing machine which needs a transmission. $ to $10.00 VI 2-0358
12-3
Must sell set of wedding rings. Large 4 pt. diamond and interlocking wedding ring. Cheap! Call Larry. VI 3-7809 12-3
Two tickets to Missouri-Kansas game.
Nov. 23. Best offer takes both. Call
Dave Laney at either VI 3-4811 or
VI 2-8434.
RUMMAGE SALE, Sat. November 23.
7:00 a.m. to noon at Community Building Lawrence Insurance Women.
11.29
Two KU-MU tickets for sale to the highest bidder. VI 2-1073. 11-22
Pair of snow tires 6.50x15 in good condition Reasonable price Calibrated 203 11-22
1960 VW Microbus—newly overhauled,
1963 engine, good tires. Skin diving
flippers, mask, snorkel, and knife.
Call VI 2-6574 after 6 p.m. 11-22
64 Chevrolet V-8, 4-speed, excellent chap. it will soon sell soon chap. V 3-8165 I 12-4
Honda Super 90, 160 miles. Runs
great $175. VI 2-9322. 12-4
Big Trees, Squat Trees, Short Trees,
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the bottom of the screen, you can
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STRICK'S DINER
Good Food—Reasonable Cold Beer—Pool Tables Students Welcome
SUPPORT NEEDY CHILDREN
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
Buy UNICEF Cards and Calendars now at KU BOOKSTORE
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
"Open till 2 a.m."
Be prepared—
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
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HOME OF
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THE LOUNGE Budwieser on Tap
NOTICE
Owl
515 Michigan St. St. B-A-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,
11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Telephone. TV 2-9510. tt
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph VI 3-8074. 12-3
Now STRAWBERRY FIELDS has Persian bedspreads, tablecloths and material, wire rim sunglasses, powder and stiee incense and burners, post-stick incense and mordants, medallions, ankhs, leather barts, wrist bands, sandals and purses, handmade cardboard boxes, paper flowers, art nouveau postcards and posters, ponchos, boxes from Irish candles, peace and music. Now STRAWBERRY FIELD'S Mass, open 10-6, 11-21
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times a week delivery. Diaper and Baby Laundry Service $16 a month. Family Kit 75c for 9 lbs. Call SMITH I-3 8077-19
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN BUS each Sunday from 9th & Mass. at 8:30 and 10:30. Route GSP & Corbin, Jayhawk Blvd to Chicago Omnium Mountain, Engel Ave to Northwestern University Verver and Nalismith; 19:00 to Stewart Dr. Worship at 9:00 and 11:90. a-12
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16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 20, 1968
Undergrads teaching classmates
(Continued from page 1)
Glenn Taliaferro, El Dorado senior, is one of the undergraduate teachers. He is in charge of the lecture section of a petroleum engineering class—a position he got last summer when a professor became ill.
Not only his lecture, but the course's laboratory sections are taught by independent undergraduates, instructors said.
She concedes, however, that "often times, students know more about a particular area and force me to look up answers to their questions."
They, like other undergraduate teachers, say they enjoy the work and find the student-to-teacher transition easy to make although their students are their own age, classmates and, in many instances, good friends.
"It has been a good learning experience for me," says Wendy Berg, Mission junior and zoology lab assistant.
Joseph J. Semrow, of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, echoed other accrediting associ-
tion spokesmen, saying, "Our policy is related to regular faculty hiring."
He said, however, "We expect them (regular faculty) to be professionally trained; qualified to teach either by experience or degree."
Semrow and others agreed,
"The student assistants should be under the supervision of senior instructors whom they assist in preparing exams, quizzes and lectures."
While many department heads and many faculty members approve of the undergraduate teaching program, the undergraduates employed apparently would be hard-pressed to find teaching positions anywhere else in Kansas.
The Kansas State Department of Education requires both a 4-year degree, either a B.S. or A.B. in education, and a teaching certificate to teach in public schools—but not in colleges.
Dr. Robert D. Ramsey, assistant of instruction at Lawrence High School, said:
"Our instructors must be certified by meeting educational requirements. The state law says 'no to' hiring of persons without a teaching certificate."
Linda Burton, Mission junior, who previously was taught by graduate students, said she felt she had been cheated.
She said they plan to go to their home in Minnesota in June for nine months while Wescoe writes.
With the employment of undergraduates, the age-old gripe of graduate teaching takes on a new perspective.
"My parents are financing my education and I felt like I wasn't getting what they paid for," she said.
Carn Gentry, Lawrence sophomore, said she is satisfied with her Western Civilization course taught by a senior, but feels most undergraduates are not qualified to teach.
"We will spend the next three months traveling in the orient and probably won't take an apartment in New York until a year from this June," she said.
Mrs. Wescoe said her husband's appointment will be full-time and will not permit him to work at another occupation.
"Some of them couldn't teach my little brother to write his name." she said.
(Continued from page 1)
Wescoe
A junior in education said she felt employment of undergraduates was unfair.
Chancellow Wescoe flew to Lawrence from New York early yesterday morning and then boarded a plane for a meeting in Garden City.
Members of the coordinating committee who resigned are 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. Atkinson resigned as press coordinator.
Voice
(Continued from page 1)
"I'm taking education courses so I can teach someday. These students are teaching now on a college level without educational training," said Jen Clader of Winnetka, Ill.
While the chemistry department requires a training program at the beginning of the semester for undergraduate teaching chemistry II, the departments of chemical engineering, biology and zoology do not sponsor a training period.
tential in undergraduates that hasn't been utilized. Undergraduates bring enthusiasm and a vitality to the classroom which is unique," said Robert P. Cobb, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Cobb said selection of the students is based on the number of hours accumulated in their major field, and past performance in course work.
Hiring of undergraduates in the zoology and biology departments is preceded by faculty nomination of outstanding students in addition to student interest, spokesmen said. Other departments solicit aid and rely on student response.
Several KU professors said, however, they are pleased with the teaching performance by the undergraduates and point out they are hired to gain experience before graduation.
"Personal attention is needed at some level. It is often lost as teaching becomes like habit," he said.
"There is a great deal of po-
Department heads said the juniors and seniors work on an equal basis with graduate students, the only difference being salary. Teaching assignments are determined by qualification and faculty request, and in some cases are made irrespective to the grade level.
"Often faculty members request undergraduates, giving both graduates and undergraduates equal opportunity to teach advanced courses," said Philip S. Humphrey, chairman of the zoology department.
"The bright undergraduate mixing in the graduate program puts graduate students on a mental alertness," Armitage said. "Undergraduate are more enthusiastic, become more deeply involved and at the same time solve the teaching responsibility of the department."
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KANSAN
79th Year, No.48
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, November 21, 1968
UDK News Roundup By United Press International.
Mine blast traps 78 men
MANNINGTON, W. Va.-A fresh explosion at 11 p.m. last night rocked a huge coal mine where 78 miners were trapped by a series of blasts and fires that raged along a four-mile stretch.
Twenty-one men escaped the first and largest blast, which occurred about 5:30 a.m. EST.
Rescue attempts previously had been put off at least until Thursday morning because of smoke, fire and the threat of additional explosions.
Grad student draft eased
WASHINGTON — Draft director Lewis B. Hershey has advised local boards to allow drafted graduate students to finish their school term before they are required to report for induction, selective service headquarters says.
The new policy was adopted Tuesday to ease the impact of the draft on the students and the nation's graduate schools.
Feb. 15, on the advice of the National Security Council, Hershey ordered an end to academic deferments for graduate students other than those in medicine.
B-Office won't move
KU's Watson Library will not house the University business office as had been earlier proposed.
Provost James R. Surface said he called the Kansas Board of Regents, meeting at Ft. Hays State College in Hays, to inform them and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe that the cost of the proposed move would be too high.
Surface declined to state the estimated cost—given him yesterday by the Buildings and Grounds Department—but said the expense of the necessary remodeling and moving would be "way beyond our means."
Discussion of transfer of KU's fiscal department to the area vacated by the Department of Special Collections was on the Regents' agenda but was removed after the phone call. Surface said.
The move was considered for the cramped business office after the completion of Spencer Library gave the University a surplus of library space.
Surface said plans called for the move to be made only if the costs were within the budget.
The former special collections area in Watson Library encompasses approximately 6,000 square feet on the east end of the library basement. The Department of Special Collections is now housed in Spencer Library.
"We were worried it wouldn't be within our means all along," he said.
Unofficial reports of the proposed move provoked some opposition among faculty and library personnel. A petition circulating in the
Council delays code vote
Final action on the proposed University Senate Code by the University Senate Council has been delayed until after Thanksgiving vacation, Ambrose Saricks, chairman of the Senate Council, said last night.
The Code was to have been passed by the council in time for a University Senate meeting Oct. 29.
Voting on the Code by the Senate Council has been delayed repeatedly by extended discussion of amendments, Saricks said. 'The Code was passed by the All-Student Council (ASC) last week and some observers had predicted Senate Council action at a meeting tomorrow.
The Senate Council has not released the texts of its amendments. The ASC passed several amendments, including one calling for open meetings of the University and Faculty Senates.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences read:
"The library is the academic heart of the University and we regard the utilization of library space for any non-academic purposes to be wasteful and detrimental to the needs of the University as a whole."
David W. Heron, director of libraries, said last week, "the disadvantages of the move for the library are quite obvious. We could use the space, of course." But he said other departments "are in quite serious straits" and the decision "should rest with the Chancellor and the Provost."
Heron said plans were being considered to locate bound periodicals or government documents in the special collections area. Surface doubted that anything along these lines could be done this year for lack of funds.
In other action, the Board of Regents:
Named the proposed KU humanities building Wescoe Hall, in honor of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, whose resignation is effective June 30,1969.
Named the new health, physical education and recreation building at Ft. Hays State College Cunningham Hall, in honor of retiring president Morton C. Cunningham.
Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents, said last night no decision had been reached regarding a replacement for either Wescoe or Cunningham.
Harrison strikes out at 'racist' law schools
The nation's law schools are citadels of racism, Leonard Harrison told KU law students yesterday.
Harrison, director of Ballard Community Center in Lawrence, was one of nine persons charged several weeks ago on seven felony counts, including assault and kidnapping of two employees of the Wichita Model Cities Program.
The Regents will meet in Wichita on Dec. 12.
"I'm charged with a law that has never been utilized in the state of Kansas," Harrison told the students, who met in the Moot Court Room of Green Hall.
"Can the existing forces put Leonard Harrison away because he tried to save the black personality? If I can be put away, then the streets are not safe." he said.
Harrison and the eight others are said to have made the alleged attack because the Wichita Model Cities Program did not hire a man they had chosen for a responsible position in the program.
Laws which are used to help one race and destroy another must be changed, he said.
"I challenge all law students to work for social justice through law," he said.
He called for more law students like the "freedom riders." These were a group of students, lawyers and others who worked to build legislation supporting integration in the South, in the early 1960's.
Both blacks and whites must believe in black power. Harrison said.
"If you're black and don't believe in black power you're either insane or a damn fool.
KU is largely responsible for racial problems in the Lawrence community. If more black students from Lawrence would attend KU, the black community in Lawrence could develop its own leaders, he said.
"When this law school, this University and this community address themselves to these problems, there will be no more need for Leonard Harrisons and Ballard Centers." he said.
"The same goes for whites," he said.
"Even black leaders are picked by whites. Dr. King was an instrument made by the white media. The white press made Eldridge Cleaver. The white middle-class college student financed him," Harrison said.
The white community has done much to shape the black power structure, he said.
Black power doesn't mean militancy any more. It means survival. Harrison said.
(Continued on page 24)
KSU vetoes joining NSA
Kansas State University students yesterday overwhelmingly voted not to affiliate with an allegedly far-left student organization.
K-Staters voted 3,731 to 943 not to join the National Student Association (NSA). NSA membership at K-State was dropped in the early 1960's because NSA was once a front group for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). NSA reportedly had been taking money from the CIA since 1952.
KU dropped its NSA membership in 1961 because of the CIA scandal. Last year, the All Student Council (ASC) voted to re-enroll KU in NSA, but the K-State refusal to re-join NSA was more controversial.
Comparative advantages of NSA membership were the focal point of the K-State controversy.
Opponents, pointed to NSA's "new left" political nature, citing
(Continued on page 24)
Electrical needs grow
Some older KU buildings must operate at reduced operating levels during the coming year because an outdated power system cannot supply present electrical load requirements.
R. Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor in charge of operations, said yesterday that growth of the University and increased research requiring more sophisticated equipment have increased KU's power needs "exponentially."
But Lawton emphasized that KU is in little danger of a massive power failure.
"Unless there is some major disaster, our emergency power outage is not likely to persist for very long."
The immediate problem lies in the inadequate size of KU's central
transformer. However, Lawton said. "major power supply capacity revisions are planned and in process."
Lawton explained that all KU buildings erected before 1961 are connected to central power supply which comes from a single transformer located near the south edge of the campus. The transformer receives electricity from the Kansas Power and Light plant and distributes it to various buildings.
Since 1961, buildings have been equipped with individual transformers which supply nearly three times as much power as is presently available for older buildings, Lawton said.
The old transformer supplies each (Continued on page 5)
CAROLYN RICKINSON
Photo by Mike Gunther
Getting out to vote
Voting for her choices for freshman class officers, Nancy Pile, Louisville, Ky., freshman, deposits her decisions in the ballot box. Turnout for the elections which are continuing until 6 p.m. today was termed "moderate, but not as heavy as it should be." by Bill Ebert, Topea sophomore and co-chairman of the ASC elections committee.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Dean Bell to be editor of Oxford publication
The opportunity to be the editor of a magazine does not happen to a man everyday, but a KU associate professor has his chance.
Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was selected as editor of the American Oxonian.
The journal, published five times a year by the Association of American Rhodes Scholars, contains a variety of articles written by Rhodes scholars.
"The articles concern Oxford, British affairs and anything of interest to its readers." Bell said.
"Each year, one issue of the American Oxonian publishes the names and addresses of approximately 1,500 Rhodes scholars who are residents of the United States. It also lists the 1,700 or so graduates of Oxford University who live here." he said.
Although the magazine is written primarily for the readership of Rhodes scholars and graduates of Oxford University, Bell said both public and private institutional libraries in the United States receive it.
With the editorship of this magazine, Bell also becomes a member of the Board of Direction of the Association of American Rhodes Scholars.
Bell attended Oxford University as a Rhodes scholar from 1951 to 1954. He received his Ph.D. degree in British and modern European history.
Although this journal is published in Pennsylvania, Bell said he will remain at KU and oversee its format and copy from here. This editorship, he said, is not a salaried job, merely an honorary position.
"I have a wide range of people to draw upon for stories and information. There are two members of the Supreme Court and Congressional members who are Rhodes scholars. Also, 50 Rhodes scholars serve as presidents or chancellors of American colleges and universities. I am hoping some of them will write a symposium about university life." Bell said.
The editorship of this journal has an unspecified term of office, so Bell does not know how long he will remain in this capacity.
Bell replaces as editor Deric O'Bryan, who is a member of the Presidential Commission on Natural Resources.
The American Oxonian has been published since 1913 and has a circulation of 10-12,000, he said.
Student lawyers compete in court
Two KU law students won the regional Moot-Court competition in St. Louis last weekend.
Larry Ward and Dean Wolfe, both third year law students from Garden City, competed with students from other law schools in Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and Arkansas.
They were judged by members of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the U.S. District Court, and judges and lawyers from Missouri. They are now eligible to attend the national competition in New York City next month.
The court's purpose is to exercise law students' abilities to do legal researching, present arguments and write briefs.
This week, Nov. 19-23, law students at KU are competing with each other in the James Barkley Smith Moot-Court competition, named for a KU enervius professor of law.
Eight pairs of students, at a rate of two each night, will compete before a panel of judges and lawyers from Kansas in the law school courtroom. Next semester, Bagley said, the first-round winners will compete.
Faculty kids compete in league at Jaybowl
A 9-year-old adjusted and readjusted his grip on the 8-pound bowling ball. Checking his stance, he rolled the ball toward 10 pins at the other end of the alley.
An excited squelal announced his first strike-as a member of the Jaybowl's junior bowling league.
The league is set up for children from 8 to 12 years-old of KU faculty members, said Warren M. Boozer, recreation manager of the Kansas Union Jaybowl. It meets every Monday at 4 p.m.
While the league was organized for experienced bowlers, Boozer said, instruction is offered to learners. Two varsity bowlers, Bill Bott, Kansas City senior, and Cletus' Pruessner, Bonner Springs sophomore, are supervising beginners.
As in the past three years, Boozer said, response was "small compared to what I'd like to have." About 20 children attended the first session.
Each session costs 50 cents which includes shoe and ball rental and two games.
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Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
VISTA meeting in Kansas City
Workers tame teen gangs
By TIM RICHARDSON Kansan Staff Writer
KANSAS CITY - VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) volunteers in St. Louis undertook what most people would have considered a dangerous assignment . . . taking three teenage gangs and turning them into constructive neighborhood clubs.
The volunteers even accomplished what most police juvenile officers have been trying to do with little results for years . . . they have the parents interested and playing a part.
J. Peter Bunce, 23, a Boston University graduate in political science, said the job was not easy and it took the volunteers a great amount of time to win the kids confidence.
Bunce is attending a 4-day conference in Kansas City, Kan., for in-service VISTA volunteers. About 105 persons are attending the conference at the Town House.
Bunce credits his blond hair and red beard with helping him make the contacts necessary to meet the gangs he calls the Montgomery Hoodlums, the Black Diamonds and the Corals.
The first important contact was in the all-Negro neighborhood where he rented an apartment. There he met eight boys from 15 to 20 years of age with police records-all were high school dropouts.
"Winning their confidence was important. I had to become one of them, yet stay away from using knives or guns as a means of strength or leadership." Bunce said.
Next was the problem of finding a leader. One VISTA regulation says volunteers can only organize and urge others to lead, but cannot lead themselves.
The leader he found was a 43-year-old ex-convict named Douglas. "Doug" had spent 22 years in prison, but possessed the leadership qualities needed.
"I never did get 'uptight' with Doug," Bunce said, "but he got so he could tolerate me and took me around with him.
"My beard became somewhat of trademark. Apparently the kids I met told their friends about me because I could be walking down the street and one of them I had never seen before would say 'Hey Pete, what's happening?' "
Bunce revealed his identity as a VISTA worker to Doug after four months but waited another two months before telling the gang. Doug was instrumental in organizing the "Hoodlums,"
which had a membership of 35 boys and girls. With the help of other VISTA volunteers in the area who organized gangs into the Corals and the Black Diamonds, the ball started rolling.
When Bunce first came to St. Louis, he and the other VISTA volunteers had agreed to form a team working toward community development. Ironically, they were a year ahead of the regional headquarters decision to implement the team concept as a major part of its program.
An article in the St. Louis Post Dispatch helped the groups gain community help. The community responded with a pledge of $25,000 to help the group set up a shop to manufacture the "dashiki," an Afro-American shirt.
The group also set up a wholesale meat-buying club in the community with the cooperation of one of the St. Louis meat packing plants. The group plans to develop this into a store complete with canned goods and other commodities to compete with the large chain stores. The store will be owned and operated by the community.
One of the projects with the most impact has been the radio show sponsored by the Montgomery-Hyde Park Neighborhood Corporation. The show is manned by people from the community who attempt to tell the white community what black people are doing to solve their own problems, Bunce said
When asked how the black militants responded to this approach to the problem, Bunce said:
"The militants realize their appeal is to the youth and if this is what the kids want to do, then they have to go along with it. Besides, the militants are not concerned with violence as much as they are establishing black businesses and creating jobs.
"The militant group here is so sophisticated that it has even gone as far as to join a young white militant group in working towards solutions."
Although the emphasis has been placed on the youth, Bunce said the group had not forgotten about the elderly people or the importance of education.
It is in this area that parents have played a major role by participating in the tutoring sessions and organizing themselves to deal with the problems of their community.
Bunce has completed one year in VISTA and will return to St. Louis for another year to work on another problem.
LBJ reports on water shortage
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Johnson, submitting a "sobering report" on the nation's water resources, urged Congress yesterday to give top priority to solving the problems of drought, floods and water pollution.
"A nation that fails to plan intelligently for the development and protection of its precious waters will be condemned to wither because of its shortsightedness."
The President's warning was expressed in a letter forwarding to Congress a 472-page report on water problems facing the country in the next 50 years. It was prepared by the Water Resources Council, created by Congress in 1965 and headed by Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall.
Johnson said ample supplies of water to support a growing population and an expanding economy could not be taken for granted. He saw "stark warnings" in pollution destroying the nation's rivers, the recent drought in the northeast and the "nightmare of ravaging floods still hovering over too many American communities."
612 North 2nd
(Next to Shaw's Auto Service)
North Lawrence
Kwiki Car Wash
Summer study open in Copenhagen, Rome
The Office of International Programs this week announced the opening of summer study programs in Copenhagen and Rome for KU students.
Unlike KU's language institutes, the new programs require no knowledge of foreign language.
Mrs. Sandra Traversa, foreign study adviser, said the two programs will feature liberal arts courses taught in English. Students will carry two courses for six hours credit.
KU joins Washburn University of Topeka in arranging the Coppenhagen tour. Washburn is serving as program coordinator with the Danish International Student Committee.
In Copenhagen, students must choose one course from each of two groups. The first series includes courses in government, politics and post-war economic development in Scandinavia. Scandinavian art and architecture and design are among choices in the second group.
In its first year, the Copenhagen tour will cost $580 for tuition, room and board. Optional round-trip transportation from New York is available for an additional $305.
KU is one of five universities participating in the Rome study tour, Mrs. Traversa said. It was organized by the American Universities Field Staff, which outlines foreign study programs all over the world.
Students from the University of Alabama, Louisiana State University, Michigan State University and the University of Wisconsin will join KU students in Rome.
No language prerequisite is required for these programs. The Copenhagen program is open to students who have completed at least 60 hours of university-level courses.
Mrs. Traversa said the curriculum in Rome will include courses in architecture, art and political science. There are openings for about 60 KU students, she said.
Either graduate students or undergraduates are eligible for study in Rome, Mrs. Traversa said.
Riot news faulty researcher writes
Applications for both programs are available at the Office of International Programs. 224 Strong Hall.
Large segments of the American press were guilty of inaccuracy and sensationalism in their coverage of the recent urban civil disorders, a research assistant with KU's Governmental Research Center has charged.
Thomas McMillan, a graduate student in political science, published his views in the Nov. 15 issue of Your Government, the center's monthly bulletin. His findings were based on a study of newspaper accounts of the 1967 disturbances in Detroit and Newark.
Inaccuracy arose most notably in reports of property damage, McMillan said, with the initial press reports differing considerably from the final government figures. He suggested that reporters at future disturbances make it clear that they are only giving estimates, when that is the case, and not verified figures.
In his survey of sensationalism, McMillan compared the wire service coverage with that of the New York Times and the Christian Science Monitor.
Wire service releases during the disorders tended to emphasize sensationalism, he said, while the major newspapers stressed mild commentary. This gap closed after the disturbances were put down and the wire services also concentrated on providing interpretative commentary.
Another defect in the riot coverage, McMillan said, was the tendency to overemphasize the black-white racial confrontation,
Limited room for men in scholarship halls
A limited number of openings in men's scholarship halls are available for next semester. Applications may be obtained in 26 Strong Hall and are due by Dec. 11.
The five men's scholarship halls at KU are set up to save students about $300, as compared to living in a University residence hall, according to the Office of Student Financial Aid.
while overlooking the socioeconomic causes.
During the week of the disorders, he stated, 82 per cent of the wire service releases stressed the racial angle, while only 18 per cent portrayed the disorders as a reaction to ghetto conditions. The newspapers presented a more balanced coverage, he found, with a rough 50-50 split in emphasis.
Because some family financial information is required in the application, it is recommended that students pick up their applications before going home for Thanksgiving vacation.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Misleading headlines also contributed to sensationalism, McMillan said. He urged that headline writers pay more attention to the facts within a story.
McMillan cited three factors as being responsible for the lack of accuracy and other failings during the riots. These were, first, a misunderstanding by reporters of the effects which the initial press reports would have on the public; second, an unwillingness by reporters to make decisions on their own about treatment of news; and third, a subtle racism within the white press, a racism which is imbedded in our society.
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Third party assets and liabilities
American political history is rich with the legacy of third or minor parties. But third party movements in this country have historically captured more interest than votes.
A recent speech by Sen. Eugene McCarthy touched off speculation that he may attempt to organize a third political party. While admittedly the possibility is still in the speculatory stages, with one eye on history and the other projecting into the future, we may speculate further and attempt to determine how a third party might arise in the U.S. and to what degree it would meet with success.
Third parties have historically led short and relatively unproductive lives in the national political arena. This year George Wallace became only the fourth third party presidential candidate since the Civil War to capture more than 10 per cent of the popular vote. The others were James Weaver, Theodore Roosevelt and Robert LaFollette.
Minor parties have traditionally fallen into four general categories: single issues, broader, racial ideology, personality-oriented and splinter parties. These are not absolute classifications, and it is entirely possible that a single party may fall into more than one of these categories. But the fact that minor parties can be classified explains to some degree their failures in this country.
The Prohibition and Vegetarian parties exemplify the single issues parties. Although the Prohibition party, for example, has broadened its platform, it remains more an interest group than a truly national political party.
Other parties, with broader bases of ideology, have from time to time appeared in American history. Some of the most successful include the Progressive and Populist parties, and to a lesser degree, the Socialist party and its various offshoots. These parties, aiming at few issues and/or a particular class of people and often with a radical platform, can not match the broader coalitions of the major two parties. The effect of parties led by the likes of Eugene V. Debs, Norman Thomas, and Bob LaFollette can be measured more in terms of later policy change by the major parties than in immediate popular support.
Minor parties may also arise from the strong, charismatic appeal of a certain leader. The obvious case in point is Teddy Roosevelt and his Bull Moose party. Parties in this category frequently overlap with those of splinter parties. Indeed, George Wallace may fit into this overlapping category. Spliner parties often arise due to the divisiveness of a single issue, and consequently these major party offshoots have a narrow unperpetuating ideological base.
In all these historical examples can be seen a few predominant trends which may aid in forecasting the likely outcome of a contemporary third party movement.
A majority of these third party movements, because of their single issue, class or sectional
Editor's note: This is the first in a two part series examining the possibility of a third party led by Sen. Eugene McCarthy and the probable outcome of such a third party.
appeal, remain sectional or regional parties. The Greenback party, for example, was unable to move out of the Midwest, while the Socialist party is not likely to make inroads into the American rural sector.
On the other hand, splinter parties and personality-dominated parties tend to be spontaneous causes which arise for one election, often only running a candidate for the presidency. Consequently, these parties have no opportunity to organize fully at the grass-roots level. Furthermore, with no solid base or framework to fall back upon, these parties tend to vanish with their leaders or become absorbed by the major parties.
With these observations of past third party efforts in mind, it is possible to speculate as to the nature and possible success of a McCarthy-led third party.
third party.
Although there was considerable talk of a splinter party movement coming out of the national Democratic convention last summer, it is fortunate for the supporters of a third party that such a move did not materialize at that time. Such a party could have gotten on the ballot in few states and probably would have been doomed to failure following the national election. The lack of structure and organization would have been its major liability. But now, to a greater extent at least, a third party would not necessarily be doomed to such organizational failures.
A third party movement, beginning this year, would have the seldom held advantage of planning and organizing for at least two years, prior to state elections, and four years prior to national elections. In this period there would be time to organize at the grass-roots level. Precinct level organizations could be formed and manpower and financial support could be recruited for years instead of the usual months prior to national elections.
But if these resources are to be recruited and utilized, the party must have a sufficient appeal to sufficient numbers of people to make it a political power. This is where the variables exist, and herein lies the crux of the problem.
The most significant variables at this time appear to be the Vietnam War, the present third party of George Wallace, and the stability or instability, as it may be, of the present Democratic party.
A rallying point and/or symbol is a necessity for organizing a third party. The movement that McCarthy led (or the movement that thrust McCarthy into the role of leader, depending upon
one's view) had as its focal point the war in Vietnam. While there were and are other issues, they remain secondary to the issue of Vietnam. Not only was Vietnam an issue in itself, but Vietnam also provided an environment of discontent and subsequently a stimulus for the participation in the democratic process by numerous previously uninvolved individuals, primarily the young.
The Vietnam war operated as both a support and a target for the McCarthy movement. What happens then if this issue is removed from the political arena? It is true that Vietnam has been stressed as an example of a generally misdirected U.S. foreign policy. But will the issue of a misdirected U.S. foreign policy, without a focal point which personally affects his would-be supporters, be enough to arouse support? This argument can be extended to all of the alleged failures McCarthy pointed to in the political process. The responsiveness of the political party to the electorate, and the redefining of the role of the presidency, were brought to the forefront because of the ferment generated by Vietnam. Whether these secondary issues can stand alone without Vietnam to bolster them could determine the success of a McCarthy movement. The essential question is whether the McCarthy movement is a one-issue movement.
The second major variable is to what degree George Wallace's American Independent party will be successful.
The present American two-party system has for more than 100 years checked off threats of an established third party. It can be assured that two minor parties could not long find room in the American political system. They no doubt would strangle each other.
Right now the party of the militant right, the American Independent party, is having its day. When the sun will set on that day will be determined largely by the course of events. Prior to the election many political analysts said that Wallace was building towards '72. This, however, overlooks or assumes too much.
Wallace has built up a frenzied following, but no party organization of lasting significance. Wallace has started from the top. He has no truly national party organization to fall back upon. One of the strengths of the two-party system has been that it has had numerous one-party states which have been pockets of strength when national candidates are defeated. These one-party pockets keep the party that is out of national office from being totally obliterated and provide a base on which to build in the next election. There is no secure pocket outside the South in which Wallace may take shelter.
Richard Lundquist Assistant Editorial Editor
PARIS TALKS
THE EU GOV't
GARDEN C
THE MIWAI KEE JOURNAL
All rights reserved, 1902
Patterson Hall Syndicate
Puppet
Letter to the Editor Biafra
To the Editor:
Do 6,000,000 People = 20 minutes?
The government of the United States will spend $30,000,000,000 in Vietnam this year. That is $2.5 billion a month, $83 million a day, $7 million an hour; $2.5 billion is about 20 minutes worth of guns, bullets and napalm. The last monetary figure is all our government can spare to save 6,000,000 starving people. God is Dead: He starved in Biafra.
Michael Duby Lyons freshmar
ASSIGNMENT—NUCLEAR NUDE, by Edward S. Aarons (Gold Medal, 60 cents)—Now THERE'S a title. This new bit of foolishness is about adventurer Sam Durell and the many people he has to get rid of to prevent a Red Chinese torture queen from getting a secret atomic formula. Shades of the Dragon Lady!
Paperbacks
THE LONG WINTER, by John Christopher (Gold Medal,
60 cents)-Science fiction stuff.
The end of the world and what happens when a new Ice Age moves in on the Northern Hemisphere, and we all start fighting for survival.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAN
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金
---
21.12
Thursday, November 21, 1969
MARMAN YUJIAO TI729BVIMU 3RT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
New Law dean: casual,
A.
Photo by Mike Gunther
Dean Lawrence E. Blades
More power needed
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) building with a maximum of 10,000 kilowatts, while the new system can supply about 30,000 kilowatts per building.
The University is working on a plan to install individual transformers in all buildings, replacing the lower power supplies with increased power systems;
Under the plan, Lawton said, three or four year old systems will be phased out each year until the work is completed. Lawton estimated the changeover will be completed in three to five years.
The University expects to request $200,000 from the coming legislature for the current phase of the project.
Until replacement can be completed, some buildings will have to regulate their power usages.
"If granted, we would expect to have completed the switch-over of selected buildings within a year from the time funds become available," Lawton said.
Lawton emphasized, however,
"This does not mean there is any
emergency imminent or any
breakdown threatening."
SDS plans libraries
SDS made plans at a meeting last night to establish lending libraries in KU's residence halls. Fourteen persons attended the meeting at the Wesley Foundation.
The libraries will consist of tables placed in strategic locations and manned vy SDS members. The books, to be contributed by the members, will express the New Left point of view.
This is one phase of SDS's plans to convey their ideas and activities to the students living in residence halls. They also discussed the possibilities of sending representatives to speak to the living groups.
ROD TAYLOR
CLAUDIA CARDINALE
HARRY GUARDINO
THE HELL
with HEROES
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ROD TAYLOR CLAUDIA CARDINALE HARRY GUARDINO THE HELL with HEROES A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR
"We have capacity for giving them (KU) as much power as they want and need," said A. W. Stedham, division manager of Kansas Power and Light in Lawrence.
While KU's power usage has increased about 5 per cent over the last year, Stedham said, Kansas Power and Light has available about 15 per cent more power than the University has ever required.
He explained that KU has two alternative emergency power sources. A secondary transformer northwest of campus is capable of carrying the load now supplied by the regular transformer. The University also has an emergency generator to maintain power.
The problem became known after a meeting between Lawton, representatives of the department of buildings and grounds, and William O. Seymour, professor of photojournalism.
DANGER:
DIABOLIK
Kansas Power and Light sending station apparently has enough power available for KU's needs.
Watkins Hospital also has emergency facilities available in case of power failure, Lawton said.
The men met Tuesday to discuss electrical power available for the new photography laboratory, recently approved by the Board of Regents.
Sunset
DRIVE IN INFAIRL - West on Highway 90
Open 6:30 - 5:15
As a result of findings on low power availability, Seymour said air conditioning and water cooling facilities will be installed in the lab but not put into operation until Flint Hall can be converted to the new power system.
confident
Youthful, relaxed, confident and casual—this is Lawrence E. Blades, the newly-appointed dean of the University of Kansas School of Law.
By SUSAN BRIMACOMBE
Steff Staff
Kansan Staff Writer
Reclining in his office chair amid a barrage of congratulatory phone calls, Blades said he hopes to strengthen ties between the Law School and the practicing bar.
"The Law School is not an island. We need to widen communication lines with the bar and University departments," he said.
The 35-year-old lawyer whose appointment was announced yesterday said he had not anticipated the offer, but had known of his selection for a short while.
Students in the Law School reacted with surprise, but all were pleased with the Board of Regents' selection.
"I was surprised; I expected them to bring in an outsider. Blades was considered with two others, one of whom was from Duke," said Pete Kellogg, Salina third year law student.
Ted Ambrosini, Mission third year law student, said, "I was surprised because he's so young, but it was an excellent selection. He's as fine as any."
Blades, who looks more like one of his students than an administrator, said he enjoys both teaching and practicing law and several times has considered returning to regular practice. However, at his new post, Blades said he will continue to teach.
The new dean spoke highly of his predecessor, James K. Logan, who resigned last June to wage an unsuccessful campaign for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator. Logan now is in private law practice.
"Logan left the Law School a much better place than when he came. I hope I can say the same for myself when my tenure is up," Blades said.
"Logan established a great deal of potentiality in the School-my job is to make sure this potential is realized."
Blades also praised Professor William R. Scott who has been acting dean of the school since Logan's resignation.
Blades said he was extremely sorry; that Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe was resigning.
"He was always genuinely concerned with and responsive to matters concerning the Law School," Blades said. "I am hopeful that his successor will have a like attitude."
"With the work of Provost James R. Surface and Dean of Faculties Francis Heller, we will be guaranteed a continuing rapport between the Law School and the Chancellor's Office," he said.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson has given her inaugural gown and accessories to the Smithsonian Institution.
Lady Bird gives gown
CLINT EASTWOOD gives New York 24 hours...to get out of town!
CLINT
EASTWOOD
"COOGAN'S BLUFF"
IN COLOR - A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
Cleaver may return to jail
Evening
7:15-9:15
Sat. & Sun.
Mat. 2:30
Granada
THEATRE ...Telephone VI 8-5746
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—The California Supreme Court yesterday let stand a lower court decision ordering Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver back to prison as a parole violator.
Attorney for Cleaver, 33,
sought release from the order
with the argument the Negro
writer was being held because of
his political views.
The Supreme Court affirmed a State District Court of Appeals decision that parole officials could suspend Cleaver's parole because of a shooting incident in which he was involved last April 6.
The Black Panther leader could be picked up and returned to jail Nov. 27, 61 days after the appeals court reversal. However, his attorney, Charles R. Garry, said he would take the matter directly to the U.S. Supreme Court.
"I don't believe the California Adult Authority has the authority to pick up Eldridge Cleaver," Garry said. "We're going to try
and stop this thing."
Cleaver, who served nine years in state prison, was arrested after a shootout between a group of Panthers and Oakland, Calif., police and was sent back to prison for violating parole.
Superior Judge Raymond J. Sherwin of Solano County, in which Cleaver was being held, ordered the release. The Appellate Court reversed Sherwin Sept. 27 and Cleaver's attorneys appealed to the high court.
Cleaver is the author of a book about prison life, "Soul on Ice," He was originally convicted of assault to commit rape, assault to commit murder and assault with a deadly weapon.
Cleaver was the focus of a controversy between the University of California at Berkeley and the university regents. The regents decided he could not give more than one lecture during an experimental course on racism if the course were given for credit. Considerable student unrest followed this decision.
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Trap him! Tease him!
Throw him in a coffin...
BUT DONT GET THE STRANGER MAD!
Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents
An Allen Klein Production
starring Tony Anthony
"THE STRANGER RETURNS"
METROCOLOR
Trap him! Tease him!
Throw him in a coffin...
BUT DON'T GET THE STRANGER MAD!
Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents
An Allen Klein Production
starring Tony Anthony
"THE STRANGER RETURNS"
METROCOLOR
NOW!
The Hillcrest
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Feature: 2:45-7:45-10:00
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PARKER SMITH
Alan Arkin
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Feature: 2:25-7:25-9:40
Alan Arkin
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TECHNICOLOR® W
From WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS
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THE Hillcrest2
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
Feature: 2:25-7:25-9:40
INGMAR BERGMAN'S
"HOUR OF THE WOLF"
HELD OVER!
Feature: 2:45-7:45-9:45
THE Hillcrest3
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER NEAND IOWA
10
INGMAR BERGMAN'S "HOUR OF THE WOLF"
THE Hillcrest E
ESTATES SHOPPING CENTER IN NASH AND IOWA
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
JY
Thursday, November 21, 1968
75 11 20 30 40 50
K-State's sophomore quarterback Lynn Dickey scans the field for an open receiver . . .
61
but finds KU middle guard Allen Jacobic instead. Although the K-State signal-caller completed 25 of 48 passes, the Wildcats bowed to the Jayhawks 38-29.
Current football season is 'unreal'
★★★
TEAM STANDINGS
All Games
All Games Opp.
Team W 1 P 0 Pct. Opp.
Kansas 8 1 0 889 359 156
Missouri 7 2 0 .778 254 105
Nebraska 6 3 0 .677 155 114
Oklahoma 5 3 0 .625 228 -190
Colorado 4 5 0 .444 180 -186
Kansas State 3 6 0 .333 173 233
Iowa State 3 7 0 .330 173 233
RUSHING OFFENSE
Conference Games
| | G Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 9 | 538 | 2816 | 312.9 |
| Missouri | 9 | 585 | 2450 | 272.2 |
| Oklahoma | 8 | 478 | 1926 | 222.2 |
| Iowa State | 10 | 477 | 1626 | 162.6 |
| Nebraska | 9 | 519 | 1612 | 156.9 |
| Oklahoma State | 8 | 379 | 1165 | 145.6 |
| Kansas State | 9 | 331 | 1802 | 89.1 |
PASSING OFFENSE
^Conference^ Games^ Opp.
Team W L I T F53 206
Kansas 5 1 1 833 197
Missouri 5 1 1 833 197
Oklahoma 5 1 1 800 192
Nebraska 3 3 1 500 94
Colorado 3 3 1 429 150
State 3 2 1 429 169
Kansas State 3 2 1 607 189
Iowa State 1 6 1 143 189
RUSHING DEFENSE
| Comp. Att. Int. Pct. Yds. Avg. |
| :--- |
| K-State | 141 283 19 498 179.1 189.0 |
| Okla. St. | 112 224 16 500 139.1 174.1 |
| Oklahoma. St. | 85 154 15 551 129.1 156.1 |
| Kansas | 85 154 15 551 129.1 156.1 |
| Colorado | 99 208 13 476 121.3 134.8 |
| Nebraska | 91 189 13 476 121.3 134.8 |
| Iowa State | 97 226 12 429 130.0 130.0 |
Missouri | 76 175 12 434 108.6 120.7 |
| | G | Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 92 | 142 | 108.9 | 121.0 |
| Nebraska | 93 | 108 | 121.0 | 121.0 |
| Kansas | 436 | 144 | 162.0 | 180.2 |
| Oklahoma State | 10 | 596 | 2182 | 218.2 |
| Iowa State | 944 | 2091 | 223.3 | 232.3 |
| Colorado State | 482 | 1492 | 268.0 | 268.0 |
TOTAL OFFENSE
PASSING DEFENSE
| Comp. Att. Int. | Pct. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 68 | 175 | 15.3 | 101.3 |
| Nebraska | 95 | 229 | 8.415 | 115.4 |
| Colorado | 90 | 189 | 8.416 | 115.4 |
| K-State | 92 | 189 | 8.417 | 115.2 |
| Oklahoma | 112 | 230 | 16.487 | 152.2 |
| Okla. St. | 92 | 204 | 9.451 | 128.0 |
| Oklahoma | 115 | 218 | 18.527 | 174.4 |
| Iowa State | 138 | 239 | 15.77 | 180.8 |
SCORING OFFENSE
| | G | Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 9 | 708 | 4094 | 454.9 |
| Oklahoma | 8 | 632 | 3175 | 396.9 |
| Missouri | 9 | 632 | 3155 | 394.9 |
| Mississippi | 9 | 657 | 3213 | 357.0 |
| Oklahoma State | 8 | 603 | 2558 | 319.7 |
| Iowa State | 10 | 703 | 2926 | 292.6 |
| Nebraska | 9 | 708 | 2608 | 289.8 |
| Kansas State | 9 | 614 | 2508 | 278.1 |
TOTAL DEFENSE
| | G | Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 9 | 617 | 2061 | 229.0 |
| Nebraska | 9 | 626 | 2184 | 242.7 |
| Kansas | 9 | 666 | 2812 | 317.3 |
| Colorado | 9 | 115 | 3812 | 372.3 |
| Kansas State | 9 | 745 | 3355 | 372.8 |
| Oklahoma | 8 | 612 | 3020 | 377.6 |
| Iowa State | 10 | 805 | 3990 | 399.0 |
| Oklahoma State | 8 | 686 | 3424 | 428.0 |
| | G | Pts. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 9 | 359 | 19.9 |
| Oklahoma | 8 | 228 | 28.5 |
| Missouri | 8 | 254 | 28.2 |
| Colorado | 9 | 185 | 20.6 |
| Kansas State | 9 | 178 | 19.1 |
| Iowa State | 10 | 178 | 17.8 |
| Oklahoma State | 8 | 140 | 17.5 |
| Nebraska | 8 | 155 | 17.2 |
SCORING DEFENSE
Missouri G Pts. Avg.
Nebraska 9 105 11.7
Kansas 9 114 12.7
Colorado 9 156 17.3
Oklahoma 8 186 20.7
Kansas State 9 192 23.9
Iowa State 10 273 27.3
Oklahoma State 8 226 28.2
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Huskers' 16-14 loss to Missouri, a team which beat Oklahoma State 42-7, and so goes the vicious circle.
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KANSAS CITY, Mo.—This has been an unreal football year in the Big Eight Conference. Not that the games have been exceptionally close like they were last year, when less than a touchdown was the average between winning and losing, but the reverses in "form" have been unbelievable, somewhat psychedelic.
Confusing? Just wait till the untangling is tried in the scoring round-robin to figure who might have the edge this week, when the Conference's top offensive team, Kansas (leader in rushing, 312.9, total offense, 454.9, and scoring, 39.9), meets the league's top defensive team, Missouri (best in rush defense, 117.1, pass defense, 111.3, total defense, 229.0, and scoring defense, 11.7).
So unpredictable has been the nature of the Big Eight game this year, it has boiled down to basically a matter of a team playing its best football every time out or a loss is imminent. And sometimes the best hasn't been good enough.
Somewhat indicative of this topsy-turvy year is the virtual three-way tie in the championship race involving Kansas and Missouri (both 5-1) and fast-rising Oklahoma (4-1). A key, too,
Or try to solve what might happen when the Big Eight's No. 2 offensive team, Oklahoma, takes on the Conference's No. 2 defensive team, Nebraska, in a nationally televised game.
could be that each league member has recorded at least one Conference win for the first time since 1959.
But for an inside look, consider this circle. Hottest team in the Big Eight right now is Oklahoma, winner 27-23 over Kansas and 28-14 over Missouri, but a 41-27 loser to Colorado, which was a 27-14 loser to both Kansas and Missouri and a team which first beat Kansas State 37-13 before losing 22-6 to Nebraska, a team which was socked by Kansas State 12-0 in the Big Eight's only league-game shutout of the season. Kansas State was beaten by Iowa State, 23-14, a team which was beaten by Oklahoma State 26-17 after the Cowboys had been beaten by Nebraska 21-20, which was a tighter game than the
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Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
BANKS
Dale Evans
Evans' play justifies switch in freshman year
By JACK PAULEY Kansan Sports Writer
In 1966 KU was the only college to offer Dale Evans a football scholarship. Now he is one of the top centers in the Big Eight.
Evans, a 6-1, 210-pound junior from Russell, has started 23 straight games at KU, including four games when he was a freshman.
Evans went out for football his freshman year as a fullback, but when he saw several fullbacks and only two centers the first day of practice, he decided to play center.
"I was from a small town," he said, "and when I saw all those fullbacks, I decided to try center."
After Monday's announcement that the Jayhawks were going to the Orange Bowl, Evans said that the upcoming Missouri game is more important to the team now.
"Pepper Rodgers said that 'nothing more will be said about the Orange Bowl until after our win over Missouri'," Evans said.
"It's a big game," he added. "It could be KU's first Big Eight championship in many years and everyone realizes it."
Against K-State last week Evans played across from John Stuckey, who, Evans said, is one of the toughest nose guards in the Big Eight this year.
"He's real quick—he was a quarterback in high school," Evans said. "I had trouble blocking him."
Evans likes KU's style of football because he says it allows the little man to play. He classifies himself as small for a center.
"We emphasize quickness, explosiveness and variety," he said, "and we mix our running and passing games."
"Last year we lost our first three games. This year we won them," he said. "This year our loss to Oklahoma was similar to last year's loss to them, but we beat Colorado where we lost last year."
"The team as a whole is very happy to be going to the Orange Bowl," Evans said. "It kind of messes up Christmas vacation, but it's worth it."
By DICK DEAN Kansan Sports Writer
Cowboys want to repeat history
(This is the third in a ten-part series on Big Eight basketball for the 1968-69 season.)
Seven Big Eight basketball coaches hope Oklahoma State coach Henry Iba doesn't repeat history.
In 1964 Iba successfully coached the U.S. Olympic basketball squad to a gold medal. Then he returned to guide his Cowboy team to the Big Eight Conference championship.
This summer he won another gold medal in Mexico City with the U.S. cage team and might have a college team in contention for the Big Eight title.
Along with other teams, Iba says, "We should be better too. In fact, we could be up there with some of the leaders." Experience is the main strength as Oklahoma State returns nine lettermen including Gene Hawk, Bill Christopher, Charles Savell and Joe Smith, all of whom started last year.
Iba is, by far and away, the senior member of the Big Eight coaches. He is entering his 35th season as head coach. Last year his team, which plays its home games in Gallagher Hall (7,200), compiled a 3-11 Big Eight record and a 10-16 over all season.
Oklahoma State has long been noted for its balanced scoring attack and this year will be no different. Smith, Hawk and Savell were the top three scorers last year, averaging 13, 11.2 and 8 points a game respectively. Savell, who was the most improved player in the Big Eight last year, is an important factor in the Cowboy's rebounding strength.
Iba admits that the big lead scorer, or two, is missing although he feels that Smith will improve and has a good chance to become only the ninth player in OSU history to score 800 points or more in a three year career. He has 566 in the past two seasons.
The Cowboys might have a problem with ball handling and consistency although both are expected to improve. Iba's "must" is to find a way to win the close ones.
Iba might very well find all the answers to his problems in Amos Thomas, a 6-7, 200-pound center or forward, who is labelled as the best sophomore prospect in a decade at Oklahoma State.
He averaged 30.9 points a
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game with a single game high of 43 in his record-shattering freshman year.
Iba has nothing but praise for Thomas. "I like his moves. Others like his shooting. He has an excellent touch, good speed, bounds well and above all, he is a fine young man."
In an evaluation of his team's chances this year, Iba said, "Our experience should help us in those close games and we had plenty of them last year."
Last season the Cowboys played 15 games which were decided by three or fewer points, the Oklahomaans winning only four. Overall, 11 of the losses were by a total of 20 points, or 1.8 points per loss.
"We won't be any taller than last year, but we should be better in rebounding because of improved quickness. All in all, we will have a better ball club with improved shooting and quick guards." Ia concluded.
Looking at the conference
race and how it shapes up, Iba commented, "I guess you'd have to go along with Kansas despite the fact that K-State won last year." He expects Nebraska, Colorado and Oklahoma as well as his own team to give the Jayhawks some trouble.
The statistical chart finds Oklahoma State losing three lettermen and returning nine, tied with KU for high in that department. OSU has only lost 16 per cent of its offense, lowest in the league. It follows that they are high in returning offense with 84 per cent.
However, the Cowboys are tied with Iowa State in for being the shortest team in the conference, averaging only 6.3%. If OSU's five tallest were averaged the composite would be 6.7%. The tallest on the squad is the 6-9 Savell. The average height of all Big Eight teams is 6.4% while the five tallest of each average 6.7%. The average tallest player on each team is 6.10%.
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
His eligibility terminated. Bohnenstiehl now coach
By LUIS SANTOS Kansan Sports Writer
Rodger Bohnenstihl's basketball eligibility ended last year, but his contributions to the team have not.
After lettering three years at KU Bohnenstiehl was drafted by the Minnesota Pipers, an American Basketball Association team, but broke a finger a week before practice began. He is now assisting coach Gale Catlett, with the freshman cagers and aiding head coach Ted Owens with the varsity. Bohnenstiehl also teaches an intermediate basketball course.
"I only spent about a week with the Pipers and didn't get to play much because of the finger." Bohnenstieli said, "but from observing pro ball and comparing it with college I'd say it's faster—there's a lot of running involved; there's a greater physical demand—everybody is so big; and it's a lot rougher."
Bohnensiehl will try out with the Pipers again next year.
Although Bohnenstiehl set-a Big Eight conference record in field goal percentage last year he said, "I don't think the team lost much in losing me; it gained more in (Dave) Robisch and (Roger) Brown (both sophomores)-losing only experience, but gaining height and strength."
Bohnenstiehl had the top shooting percentage among the KU players last season, scoring 162 field goals from 309 attempts for a .524 percentage in 30 games. He was second to Jo White in shots scored and second, behind Dave Nash in rebounding with 182 rebounds and a 6.1 average per game. Only All-American White, with a 15.3 point average per game, bettered Bohnenstiehl's 13.7 point average.
In 10 games Bohnentiehl was the Jayhawks' top server last season, netting his season high, 21 points, against Iowa State. He was top rebounder in six games, having a high of 12 against Villa-nova.
Watching the team practice every day isn't easy for Bohnenstiehl. "Playing doesn't wear off that easily," he said. "When I'm coaching I really miss it."
Coaching has helped Bohnen-stiehl's game. "I've learned more in this last three weeks about the game than what I knew ... and I'm still learning," he explained.
"Things look tremendously different from the coaching seat. You get to see the little things and their value. As a coach you observe what is happening on the court and then use it, while as a player you tend to overlook many things," Bohnenstiehl added.
Evaluating this year's team, Bohnenstiel said perhaps the lack of experience might hurt it some. He doesn't think anyone has earned a starting position, yet. "They're all still battling for them," he said.
"The loss of White may be a big factor in the final outcome of this team-he's such an all around player," Bohnenstiehl added. "I feel that the people we have will compensate. Hopefully it won't take long." White's eligibility ends after the first 18 games of the season.
(1)
"Good men are coming into most teams, and I don't feel there's going to be a weak team," he said.
Bohnenstiehl said the Big Eight conference this year is going to be tougher than last year.
As a high school star in Collinsville, Ill., Bohnenstiehl received more than 100 basketball scholarship offers. He came to KU because "here they played the kind of basketball I like to play -not all running, you set up your offense," he explained.
Bohnensiehl visited New Mexico, Missouri, Illinois, St. Louis and Evansville, but preferred the KU campus because "it wasn't too close or far from home, not too large or too small, and was what I wanted academically."
Jeff Butterfield, Lawrence junior, and Larry Green, Topeka sophomore, practice for Friday's tourney in Wichita. Green, the National Golden Gloves Middleweight Boxing Champion in 1965, won the National Golden Welterweight division this year.
★
Thirty-five men belong to the boxing club which is not yet entirely organized. Seven club members will travel to the meet in Wichita.
KU boxers will compete in their second tourney Dec. 1 and 2 in Topeka.
Ridiculous behavior by fans reaches highest peak late during Jet-Raider game
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The ridiculous behavior of football fans reached a new peak in sports Sunday evening when the National Broadcasting Co. cut off the final minute of a televised game between the New York Jets and the Oakland Raiders.
Some fans in New York were so outraged they called the police department. Which is downright aburd.
It doesn't do any good to call the police about a thing like that. They should have called the FBI
"There I was, flat on my back on the couch in the den. The Jets were ahead by three points and Oakland had the ball in their own territory. We were only 60 seconds away from victory. Then it happened."
--by a 25 cents per man entry fee. The release said that each entering organization is limited to one "A" team, two "B" teams and four "C" teams. Trophies will be given to division, league, and Hill champions.
My friend Harvey Grimitch, a Jet fan with true grit, loyalty, dedication and determination, was still seething with anger when I talked with him the day after the game.
"You should be glad you didn't see it," I said. "I read in the paper that Oakland scored two touchdowns in the last minute and won the game."
"That's what I'm so mad about." Harvey said. "I'm holding NBC responsible for causing the Jets to lose."
"All of us Jet fans who were watching the game on television were sending out telepathic waves of support. The players could feel it and were inspired by it. They had victory within their grasp."
"But when the contact was broken, they suddenly felt let down and Oakland won."
"You're crazy," I said. "The outcome of the game couldn't have been changed by cutting off the telecast."
I said, "You're just being a poor loser, Harvey. I never heard' of such an outlandish excuse for refusing to admit defeat."
"Of course it could." Harvey insisted. "Haven't you ever heard of extra-sensory perception?
"It isn't outlandish at all," Harvey replied. "The facts speak for themselves. When the game was being telecast, the Jets were ahead. When the telecast stopped, they lost."
"It's like Marshall McLuhan said in his book—'medium is the message.'"
Intramural basketball starts Dec. 4
Plans for KU's intramural basketball program have been completed with play scheduled to begin Dec. 4.
The KU intramural department announced yesterday that all entries must be in by 4 p.m. Monday. Competition will be divided into three leagues of "A," "B," and "C."
Each entry must have at least 10 men and must be accompanied
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Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
KU, MU resume one of nation's oldest rivalries
By United Press International
One of the oldest rivalries in the nation will be renewed Saturday before a sell-out crowd at Columbia, and both teams, Missouri and Kansas, are working hard and long before the encounter.
Missouri coach Dan Devine and Kansas head skipper Pepper Rodgers both declined comment on their upcoming bowl clashes. As far as they are concerned, Saturday is all that is important.
More is riding on the outcome of this year's annual classic.
The Big Eight title is at stake.
The Jayhawks are bound for the Orange Bowl, which carries more prestige than the Gator Bowl, where the Tigers play Dec. 28.
Missouri fans wanted a trip to a bowl on New Year's day.
Besides clinching at least a tie for the Big Eight title, a Tiger win would give the Orange Bowl selection committee some afterthoughts about its choice.
"They've always got a good football team at Missouri," Rodgers said Tuesday after practice.
After sending his squad through a rigorous practice on a wet field in 30-degree weather, coach Dan Devine said Tuesday that he was concerned with every aspect of the Kansas attack.
"They just do everything well."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Lawrence grid star ends prep career this Friday
Lawrence High School fullback Mike Cerne will finish his prep career tomorrow night at Haskell Stadium against Shawnee Mission South. When he does he should be swamped with college football offers Lawrence coach Al Woolard said.
Two weeks ago against Topeka High, Cerne was held to 20 yards on 10 carries but scored one touchdown on a 79-yard punt return and threw one pass—good for 25 yards and another touchdown.
Lawrence is the state's No. 1 team with a 7-0-1 record, and Cerne has had a big hand in those games.
Early in the season a national football magazine marked Cerne as one of the best prep backs in the country. Woolard has no less enthusiasm for his star player.
He has carried the ball 107 times for 657 yards and scored 12 touchdowns.
"In't see it something though?" Woolard said after a victory early
this year. "He's one of the best football players I've ever seen."
football players I've ever seen. After Lawrence's first two games, Woolard was asked why Cerne was so highly regarded as a college prospect.
"He has great speed, ability and dedication. He is a good student and has a wonderful personality," Woolard said.
And before the season even started Woolard said, "Cerne will undoubtedly be one of the most sought after athletes in the United States after this season."
He was "courted" early in the season by two colleges, and they found out the hard way that they shouldn't have talked to him until after the season.
Two schools have already found out that any college who talks to Cerne before the end of the season (Saturday) will be put on a blacklist, and we will guarantee that he won't go to that school." Woolard emphasized.
Ex-coach objects to so many bowls
ATLANTA (UPI) — Bobby Dodd had 13 bowl teams during his 22 years as coach at Georgia Tech but he thinks the bowl market has become glutted.
"They should have quit when they added the Gator Bowl 1946," said Dodd. "Now, they've got so many that a lot of them really don't have any meaning."
"A lot of the players, really don't care that much about going to a bowl," Dodd continued. "Sure, the coaches get a lot of publicity and a pay raise, the schools make a lot of money, and the alumni are delighted."
"But about all the players get for missing their holiday at home is a wristwatch."
"I always let my players make the decision—and there are plenty of coaches who can't say that," said Dodd. "One year, they turned down a bowl offer because they had been the previous two years and didn't want to miss a third straight Christmas with their families.
Dodd, who gained a reputation for taking it easy on his players
prior to bowl games—and yet winning eight in a row, also pointed out that coaches often make it pretty rough on their players because of their great desire to win a bowl game.
"Some coaches make it no fun for their players at all," said Dodd. "It's work, work, with no time out to see the sights or do any of the things that players look forward to when they make a bowl trip.
"A bowl game should be considered sort of a reward that a team earns by having a good season. And, as such, they should be allowed to enjoy it."
Dodd pointed out that the large number of bowls creates a tremendous scramble for teams. "The Gator Bowl tries to figure out ahead of time who the Orange and Sugar bowls will pick and some of the other bowls try to outguess all three," he said.
Jayhawks, Tigers preparing for battle
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)—Missouri's Tigers worked for nearly two hours in pads but without contact yesterday in preparation for their crucial Big Eight battle against Kansas Saturday.
"The end result is that deals, let's call them 'gentlemen's agreements,' are usually made weeks before the official announcements," said Dodd.
Coach Dan Devine said the squad was in good condition. He noted that sixth-ranked Kansas is the biggest team Missouri has faced since the 1964 Nebraska aggregation.
Devine also indicated he is concerned with the quickness of the high-scoring Jayhawks.
"Anybody who did not have spirit would have quit long ago," Rodgers said after yesterday's practice. "If a guy doesn't have spirit, he shouldn't be in this game, it's too hard," he added.
KU football coach Pepper Rodgers hopes his players are mentally ready for Saturday's clash with Missouri.
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The minor injuries that fullback John Riggins and middle linebacker Emery Hicks suffered
in the K-State game will not hamper their play this Saturday against Missouri, Rodgers said
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Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Campus interviews
Because the Daily Kansan will not be published during Thanksgiving vacation, today's list of campus employment interviews includes the schedule for the week of Dec. 2-6, as well as next week's interviews.
Architecture council applications are due
Frank Zilm, St. Louis, Mo., junior, has announced a Tuesday deadline for architectural advisory committee applications—a committee which will have equal student representation.
Applicants for the University Architecture Committee to be formed under the proposed University Senate may submit applications through the All Student Council (ASC) or in 303 Marvin Hall.
The committee will have seven faculty and seven student votes, although more than seven students may collaborate to determine student votes.
"As many students who apply will be used to work on the committee," Zilm, a committee organizer, said. "The committee has a lot of potential and has been needed for a long time.
"There seems to be no definite plans (of continuity) unless hidden; there is a different style in buildings and the whole campus meeds to be coordinated."
The committee will undertake such tasks as assessing and advising the University on the needs which might be included in the proposed satellite union, also to work on the acoustics problem in Allen Field House, and to propose some changes and additions to campus lighting.
Zilm added, "We have one of the finest sites in the country, for a campus, now we need some building coordination."
The purpose of the new committee is to be "wide and objective" and to include a variety of students, not just architect majors.
Most of the committee's faculty members will be architecture faculty, Zilm said, because "we have some of the best architecture faculty in the country" they can use "cost analysis and esthetics judgments" in advising the University. Faculty from other subject areas like fine arts are also desirable, Zilm said.
The committee wants to give the students a "voice in the planning of good sound architecture for the University," Zilm said.
The committee will not be official until the University Code is passed but work has already begun, Zilm said. If the Code does not pass, the committee will still exist and "it will be easier if the code goes through."
The committee will work "to establish an objective channel between Strong Hall and the student, faculty needs of the University," he said.
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Dates and information for employment interviews are furnished by the individual placement offices. Students interested should check with those offices for job descriptions and eligibility requirements.
Dec 4: Brunswick Corporation—B.S. M., M.S. MBA, business administration, accounting, finance, A.B. or B.A. liberal arts with strong accountancy skills. B.S. business administration and/or B.S. business administration and/or librarian arts for store management.
School of Business, 202 Summerfield Hall
The interview schedule:
Dec. 5: General Foods—B.S. business administration, B.A. liberal arts, sales; Household Finance Corp—any degree, general business and rel. business; Uplojn Company—B.S. M.B.A. business, B.A. liberal arts, sales.
Dec. 6: Commerce Trust Company—business administration with economic and accounting background.
Owens-Illinois, Inc.-B.S., M.S. economies, business administration, marketing, data processing; Yellow Transit Freight Lines, Inc.-B.S., operating management trainees.
School of Engineering 111 Marvin Hall
Dec 3: Campbell Soup Company—CHE, EE, IE, ME; NASA Langley Research Center—AE, CHE, CE, EE, Engr. M, Engr., Phys, Me, Math, Phys.; Xerox Corp—CE, Engr. M, Engr., Phys, Me, Chem; DEC 4: General Foods—CHE, CE, Engr. M, IE, ME, Chem; Texas Water Development Board—CE, GEoal; Union Oil of Calif. CE, ME PE, Vestal Laboratories, Chem, Bact. Veterans - Administration Hospital-Arch. E, CE, EE, Engr. M, ME
Dec. 5: North American Rockwell- AE, EE, Engr M, Engr Phys, ME, Math, Phys, CHE, CE, Pratt & Whitney Aircraft-AE, ACE, CHE, E, Engr M, Engr Phys, IE, ME, Chem, Math, Universal Oil Products Co.-CHE, Chem.
School of Journalism. 105 Flint Hall
Nov 25 Vance Publications, Kansas City—news and adv.
Mayor builds bad road
sas City—news and adv
adve 3 Chicago Tribune—news and
adve
NAPLES, Italy (UPI)—Former Mayer Ferdinando Clemente recently was ordered to stand trial on charges of using $25,600 in city funds in 1962 to pave a private road leading to his home.
Any humanly propelled vehicle that can go 45 mph in a 20 mph zone must have disadvantages and benefits—like speeding tickets or sleeping late and still getting to class on time.
Some KU students know both, but most who ride see only the advantages of bicycling.
Lt. Jack Evans, head of the Traffic Division of the Lawrence
Bikes cross Mt. Oread-a bit fast
Student protests may be dangerous Red leaders fear
PRAGUE (UPI)—Czechoslovak Communist leaders warned last night "immense" consequences could result from "dangerous" protests which university students have spearheaded against cancellation of most of the nation's liberal reforms.
The official warning and appeal came after trainmen threatened to back sit-ins by thousands of students by halting rail traffic.
Government and Prague University student representatives sat down together late yesterday in an attempt to resolve the dispute in Prague. In the Slovakian capital of Bratislava, university students ended a two-day strike when Slovak party leader Dr. Gustav Husak promised to consider their protests.
A government announcement said all members of the party central committee agreed unanimously on the appeal to the nation because "any other approach could lead only to unforeseen events."
"Iresponsible people are taking the initiative and are organizing strikes at secondary schools," the party leaders said.
Railroad workers had warned they would join the strike if any action were taken against the students.
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Police Department, estimated 200 to 300 KU student bicycles are registered, but "there are probably more unregistered than registered bikes."
Steve Leach, Perry senior, said he rides a bike because "it's something not everyone does." He said he thought it was an inexpensive way to move around and after all "it's sort of European, don't you think?"
Leach said he doesn't get "ribbed" about riding a bike, but he does get strange looks when riding down Massachusetts Street "with a bottle of brandy in my basket."
"You could get killed in rush hour traffic," he said, "but traffic on campus is light. You can get to and from class quickly."
Blaine Krebs, Garden City sophomore, said he likes to ride his bike to "get out and get the wind in my face."
Berry and Jo Klingman, seniors, ride bikes to class because of economic reasons. They ride to class from their apartment on Massachusetts Street for "fun
mainly, but also because it saves on gas."
Lawrence police said the most common violation by bicycle riders is speeding, followed by riding on sidewalks, riding without lights and riding an unregistered bike.
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Engineering and Science at IBM
"The interdisciplinary environment keeps you technologically hot."
"Working in data processing today pretty much means you work in a broad spectrum of technologies,"says Nick Donofrio.
AnAssociate Engineer at IBM, Nick is a 1967 graduate in Electrical Engineering. He's using his technical background to design circuits for computer memory systems.
"Circuit design used to be a narrow job," he says. "Today it can take you into the front yard of half a dozen different fields.In my job, for example I work with systems design engineers, chemists, physicists, metallurgists and programmers."
Nick describes a hypothetical case history: "A memory systems man comes to me with memory circuit requirements. Before I can start designing the circuit, I go to see a physicist. He helps me select an appropriate technology for the monolithic circuit.
"As the design develops, I work with a test group and also check back with the systems and semiconductor people to make sure I'm on the right track."
Keeping up
The interdisciplinary environment at IBM helps you keep up to date technologically. As Nick puts it, "You're constantly exposed to what's happening in other fields."
IBM needs technical graduates to work in research, design and development, manufacturing, product test, field engineering, and space and defense projects. We also need technical people in programming and marketing.
Check with your placement office If you're interested in engineering and science at IBM, ask your placement office for more information.
Or send a resume or letter to Irv Pfeiffer, IBM Corp., Dept. C, 100 So. Wacker Dr., Chicago, Ill. 60606. We'd like to hear from you even if you're headed for graduate school or military service.
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Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Movie depicts life of foreign students
The loneliness and dulness of foreign students' lives in the United States is depicted in the movie "A Dream is a Dream" produced for his master thesis by Ivan H. H. Wong, a graduate student in KU Radio-TV-Film department.
The movie, a semi-documentary, was shot this summer on the KU campus. Wong said it was half a year in the making.
Lasting for 20 minutes, the movie will soon be shown in the Dyche Auditorium, he said.
Wong said he tried to show the central theme of the movie in a first-person narration which starts: "Well, another brand new
'Lin, where are you going?'
In a scene from Wong's film, "A Dream is a Dream," Lin, a foreign student, contemplates his future as an intruder in a strange land.
day begins. A new day means different things for many people. But to me, it's only a copy of the past days.
"I know there are still 172 tree trunks on the way to the campus, and 85 steps to the corner and go right up, I know a few things around here, but I don't know many things about myself.
"How many times I kept asking about myself 'Lin, Where are you? What are you doing?' Well, of course, I am here in the United States. And I am going to school. No, that sounds too obvious for a foreign student. Well, then I must be hunting some kind of fortune in a wonderland. No, that sounds too cynical.
"Then, I suppose I must be in a place I don't know. Well, what difference does it make? There are some times I can hardly tell whether a dream is a reality or the reality is an expansion of the dream."
Despite the fact the film was made on the KU campus and with Chinese students playing the parts, Wong said the film describes the loneliness facing all foreign students throughout the States.
Psychologically, Wong continued, the film is trying to depict how a man reacts to the new surroundings.
"I feel happy that I have the opportunity to show the life of foreign students on screens. I believe most foreign students will share this feeling with me," he said.
Lawsuit charges bias in Pasadena's schools
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—The Pasadena school district is charged with racial discrimination in the first school desegregation suit filed by the Justice Department on the West Coast.
The government asked permission of U.S. District Court Tuesday to intervene in a $775,000 racial discrimination suit filed by three parents and their children.
The Justice Department complaint charged that Pasadena school officials adjusted school zones on a racial basis, causing some schools to enroll more Negro students than under a nondiscriminatory setup.
Pasadena, a suburb of Los Angeles, encompasses the largest Negro community in Southern California outside of Watts.
The government asserted school officials adopted policies that would keep Negro enrollment at predominantly white schools no higher than the percentage of Negro students in the entire system.
Officials assigned most Negro teachers to predominantly Negro schools, the government also charged.
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BONN (UPI)-The world's 10 richest trading nations met in emergency session yesterday to review the crisis over the French france which has shaken the Western monetary system and threatens the stability of the U.S. dollar and British pound.
Many stock and money markets in Western Europe, Africa and Asia were closed in obvious attempts to prevent panicky speculation while efforts are made to resolve the crisis.
While finance ministers and Central Bank governors of the "group of ten," including the United States, gathered behind closed doors, Swiss banking sources predicted complete chaos in the world markets and possibly a panic unless there is another international conference soon to revalue the world's major currencies.
Nations evaluate franc crisis
German border points reported French citizens driving in with suitcases filled with French francs in hopes of converting them into the stronger Deutschmark. But a number of German banks already had imposed ceilings on the purchases of the faltering franc.
The emergency meeting was called by West German Economics Minister Karl Schiller, current chairman of the group of 10. Members are the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Italy, West Germany, Holland, Sweden, Japan and Belgium, also representing Luxembourg with which it has a joint currency system.
In addition, there were observers from neutral Switzerland, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
The talks were held in private but informed sources said Schiller appealed for a common solution to the crisis while reaffirming that West Germany will not revalue the mark upwards despite pressures from some circles.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1969
KU professor seeks water on the moon
If an American astronaut ever runs out of gas on the moon he may be able to find a reserve fuel supply handy should the research of a KU professor be successful.
"The results of these experiments are of specific interest to the lunar landing phase of the Apollo project," he said. "We report our findings directly to NASA."
Edward J. Zeller, professor of geology, is attempting to discover the effects of radiation at the surface of the moon, through grants from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the United States Air Force and the Atomic Energy Commission.
Zeller was in Houston, Tex. Oct. 28-31 to discuss problems in landing astronauts on the moon with NASA officials at the Manned Spacecraft Center.
The moon is in a vacuum, Zeller explained, and has no source of water. "But we must create a source of water if we are to do an adequate study of the lunar surface," he said.
A water source on the moon is also important as a rocket fuel supply, Zeller said, explaining that the component parts of water-hydrogen and oxygen could be separated and used as fuel.
To provide that source of water, Zeller has been probing the possibility of water formation, caused by irradiation with protons from the sun, in the rocks of the moon's surface.
New SDS chapter won't be national
MANHATTAN Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) has come to Kansas State University this week—but will not affiliate with the national SDS.
The newly-formed K-State chapter decided to deal primarily with the issue: "Are we citizens first and students second, or are we students first and citizens second?"
They plan to formulate policy concerning the urban renewal projects dealing with the "Foot" district in Manhattan, an economically sub-standard area of the city. SDS members claim many homeowners have been forced to move from the district.
SDS members leveled criticism on the university for Department of Defense contracts taken without university-wide discussion.
A group spokesman said they didn't affiliate with the national SDS because SDS does not have a set of national programs and because each individual chapter may set its own goals.
They also attacked the ROTC program at K-State. The Morrill Act of 1862 does not specifically require that ROTC programs be part of a land-grant institution, only that some military training be taught.
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Zeller uses the accelerator laboratory in Malott Hall to conduct these experiments. He uses the Van De Graff accelerator there as a source for proton irradiation and rocks from this planet which are believed to be similar in make-up to rocks on the moon.
Cooperating with Zeller on the project are three other KU professors—Larry Kevan, associate professor of chemistry; Robert J. Friauf, professor of physics, and Jack Culvahouse, professor of physics.
One concern of the NASA officials with whom Zeller has been working is that possible living organisms on the moon might be brought back by astronauts and could contaminate the earth's atmosphere. Zeller said.
Zeller said he doubted there was life on the moon, "but I suppose it is possible. The probability is low, but the possibility does exist."
Black Panthers may be indicted in murder
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—The foreman of the San Francisco Grand Jury said yesterday the group would be asked to investigate the militant Black Panthers as a result of the shooting of three policemen.
The investigation would consider possible indictments of Black Panther leaders for conspiracy to commit murder, said foreman Don Fazackerley.
The Panthers, whose public
No flu problem yet
Flu and winter colds have not yet taken a hold on KU students.
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins hospital, said out of 17 patients now in the hospital only five have been admitted with colds and sore throats.
"Hospital cases are ten lower than this time last week. A few of the cold patients have respiratory infections," he said.
Schwegler said he thought conditions were better than normal and could see no evidence of illness in epidemic proportion.
speeches have frequently included threats on the lives of police and public officials, have been involved in four shootouts with police in the San Francisco Bay area in the last 13 months.
Fazackerley's announcement was in response to a request by Mayor Joseph L. Alioto who called, without using names, for investigation of "any organization which advocates the killing of policemen." The jury meets again today.
The policemen were shot Tuesday when a van, emblazoned with "Black Panther Community News Service," was halted as the suspected getaway vehicle in an $80 gas station robbery.
Witnesses said a barrage of shots came from the front of the truck where three Negroes were sitting. More police arrived at the scene, a block from headquarters, within a minute.
The three men ran but were cornered in a blind alley and surrendered. Five other Negroes were in the rear of the truck and all eight were booked on charges of robbery, conspiracy and attempted murder.
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You say big business has no social conscience?
We beg to differ.
Like most other businesses, Southwestern Bell has a welldefined idea about its social role in the community.
It's sometimes tempting to condemn all business for the misbehavior of a few bad apples within the business community. This is about as realistic as writing off all college students as hopheads and beatniks based on the actions of a handful.
We're concerned about the same things that concern the people who live in the towns we serve.
...about the need to support education.
We make financial and equipment contributions to almost 70 colleges and universities in five states. We sponsor "science recognition days," an educational program for high school science students. We arrange for student visits to Bell Telephone Laboratories and we maintain a speaker's bureau to share our business knowledge with interested student and professional groups.
... about beautifying the areas we serve. We try to design our buildings to be both functional and attractive. We're placing more and more of our wires and cables underground.
... about helping the disadvantaged. We've conducted special programs to train high school dropouts and hard-core unemployables.
... about air pollution.
We began equipping all our new
service trucks with anti-pollution devices a full year ahead of federal requirements.
... about the hundred and one other "nonbusiness" things people are concerned about in today's world.
Does this mean we're complacently satisfied that what we're doing is enough? No!
It does mean we're trying.
And will keep on trying.
And will keep on trying.
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Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
Black culture ignored by 'melting pot myth'
Baratz told an audience of about 60 persons that although the formal aspects of the African life-styles have disappeared, the Negro has not melted into the mainstream of American life. Basic song and dance styles and family patterns remain, he said.
Social scientists have failed to understand the black culture in America, Steve Baratz, of the National Institute for Mental Health, said yesterday.
Speaking at the first clinical psychology preseminar in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room, Baratz said social scientists have never considered the black culture as a real culture, but rather a disturbed version of the white "American ideal." He added this is true of all minority ethnic groups.
Because the black family is not like the white family, it is said to be disorganized, Baratz said. Really it conveys just another way of looking at the family and one cannot evaluate the black family by white middle class standards, he said.
"Social scientists have bought the myth of the American 'melting pot' hook, line and sinker," Baratz said.
Black family patterns are often blamed for the "abnormal" performances in schools, said Baratz. He said many programs had been devised to improve the records by "making the child bi-lingual and bi-cultural." The child cannot communicate in standard methods so programs like Head Start attempt to force him to adopt
Orange Bowl Balloons to be sold at discount
What do you do if you've got 3,000 orange balloons that say "Miami or Bust?" If your football team is headed for the Orange. Bowl, you sell them. And that is exactly what the sophomore class is doing.
Members of the sophomore class are visiting individual living groups this week in an attempt to sell the balloons for 5 cents apiece, said Bob Hines, Overland Park sophomore and class president.
Prior to the KU-Colorado game, the sophomore class purchased 4,000 balloons which claimed KU was Orange Bowl bound.
Unfortunately, rain on the day of the Colorado game made it impossible to sell the helium-filled balloons. Hines said.
Prospects for big sales still looked good, however, since the KU-OU game remained to be played and orange fever was running high.
Further complications on the day of the Oklahoma game plagued the balloon pushers.
Poor communications resulted in not enough workers at the OU game, said Hines.
After Oklahoma pulled an upset, KU's Orange Bowl hooes dimmed and orange balloons proclaiming "Miami or Bust" weren't the hottest commodity on campus.
"We thought we'd lost out altogether," said Hines, "and I was ready to chalk the whole project up as a loss."
Now that KU is once again bowl bound, the sophomore class hopes to sell the remaining balloons.
"Even though the 'balloons aren't helium-filled, we hope students will buy them before this week's Missouri game and perhaps attach them to car antennas for the drive to Columbia," said Hines.
white middle class standards, he said.
The money from the balloons, which originally sold for 25 cents when helium-filled, was to be used to bolster the sophomore class budget, he said.
Baratz said he feared this intervention because the only way to change the child is to get to the child early enough. He said this could lead to removing the child from its parents at earlier and earlier ages, and in the extreme, only selective eugenics would be successful.
We wanted to get some service projects going and perhaps donate some of the proceeds to Project Concern. "Now it looks like we'll be lucky to break even." Hines said.
Baratz said he abhored the assumption of most social scientists that something is wrong with the child who does not conform to white middle class standards. He emphasized that different is not necessarily wrong behavior.
"The only people who really understand ethnicity are the politicians and the advertising men—their lives depend upon it. Social scientists only depend upon grants," Baratz said.
Evangelist to lecture
The Rev. Richard Cannon, associate candidate secretary of Evangelical Alliana Mission, will speak to the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship at 7 p.m. Friday at 829 Mississippi.
Rev. Cannon recently has been stationed on an island off the coast of New Guinea ministering to the cannibalistic Awju tribe.
Plans for the Alumni Association-sponsored charter flight to Miami and the Orange Bowl continued to shape up yesterday as more information became available to the Alumni Association.
Jerry Hutchison, assistant director of the Alumni Association, announced plans for two
Alumni plan to charter flights to Miami
separate package deals to be offered by the association.
A five-day package deal which will leave from Kansas City on Saturday, Dec. 28, and a threeday package which will leave from Kansas City on Monday, Dec. 30, are included in the plans, Hutchison said.
The cost of both trips, which
will not be definite until tomorrow, will include round trip air fare, hotel reservations, game tickets, bus tickets
Registration for the trip will begin tomorrow and all reservations must be in by Dec. 6, he said. Full payment must accompany all reservations.
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16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Foul fumes dirty once-clean skies
Industry and the automobile, which have brought jobs and the convenience of modern life to Douglas County, have also brought an unwanted companion. Air pollution
Despite the insistence of local industrialists that Douglas County factories are not an air pollution hazard, Douglas County has the third worst air pollution problem in the state, said J. Lee Mays, chief engineer and director of the Kansas Environmental Health Services.
Mays said Douglas County's air, which is surpassed in pollution only by the Kansas City and Wichita areas in Kansas, is being polluted by air blown in from the Kansas City area, as well as by factories and automobiles locally.
A. J. Winfrey, an environmental engineer for Midwest Research Institute, seemed to believe Douglas County's polluted air might contain more than floating fragments of somebody's imagination.
Dr. Dale Clinton, Douglas County health office, said, however, "We have no sign of air pollution that I know of". It's a figment of somebody's imagination if you have statements to the contrary."
He said automobiles, power plants and open fires are the major source of air pollution in Kansas.
"The worst air pollution problem in Kansas would have to be automobiles, and the pollutant of course would be carbon monoxide." Winfrey said.
At the Co-operative Farm
I
Photo by Alan Hansberry
Chemical Co. plant east of Lawrence, some pollution combative techniques have been employed, plant director John Anderson said.
And the 'steam' pours forth.
He described the process as combining nitric oxide with methane to form water, nitrogen and carbon dioxide.
"We used to have a lot of yellow vapors (nitric oxide). We've been trying to improve it for a long time. There just-wasn't any technology for it up to several years ago." Anderson said.
Anderson said the improvements came at an original cost of $500,000 and annually run up to $100,000.
Residents of the plant vicinity, while not hostile to the plant's location there, indicated that they smell something in the air besides pure steam.
Anderson said the clouds which now rise from his plant are harmless. "It is steam which comes from our cooking towers," he said.
Dr. Clinton, who said he had studied the plant, said he believes the nitric oxide now is actually being converted into electric power, a secondary source of revenue for the plant.
Winfrey, who said he also studied the plant, contends the cloud cannot be completely steam. He explained that steam will remain visible only a few feet from the stack.
"I doubt they could do this completely. If they had perfect operating conditions, they could," he said, "but I don't think they do."
One woman agreed that the plant did smell, but said, "I just live with it. They've brought a lot of industry and a lot of work for people in the valley."
"It smells like Purex," said one woman who lives east of the plant.
When science brought her industries to Kansas, it was apparent she meant to stay, and the fast growth of industry in Kansas has caused several Kansans to become concerned about this unwanted by-product—air pollution.
Howard Saiger, director of the
"Francis Albert Sinatra Does His Thing"
No kidding. That's what Frank has titled his newest Budweiser TV special. (Would an Old Scout tell you a falsehood?)
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newly formed Air Quality Conservation Commission, said his committee will try to determine exactly how and where Kansas air is polluted.
However, Saiger explained the commission is only in the formation stage and sampling of air will not begin for 12 to 18 months. At that time, Douglas County will be tested too, he said.
Midwest's Winfrey said most of the polluted air in Kansas contains particulate matter, tiny bits of debris floating in suspension.
Until sampling begins, all scientific data on Kansas air pollution must come from private firms such as Midwest Research of Kansas City.
Before recent state legislation empowered the Air Quality Conservation Commission to set
standards and to take statewide samples, the air pollution fight had been waged on a local basis.
Dr Clinton said county health commissions have had "pretty broad powers under just general laws governing public health."
Saiger, who is building a staff he hopes will be able to combat air pollution effectively, said, "The idea of air pollution is being recognized all over the country by more and more people. This is certainly going to continue.
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FOLLOW THE ORANGE BOWL BOUND HAWKS TO MIZZOU!!
BUT forget the hazards of fighting
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HOW? A staunch KU alum has chartered a bus for the game.
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★ Transportation to and from the game.
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★ The jovial companionship of fellow KU students and alums.
The bus leaves Lawrence Saturday morning at 7:00 a.m.
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18
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Coeds, professors, anyone can drive in a...
Above, Bucko Entriken,
Route 5, Lawrence, picks up a 2-second penalty for hitting a pylon in his MGA. At right, Entriken (left) and Duane Bailey, Scranton senior, take an exploratory walk around the course before the start of morning practice.
T.L.D.
A
G
The driver sits at the gymkhana start line, his engine noisily throbbing. He may be piloting a sleek Jaguar or the family bus but whatever his car, he will compete in one of several classes established to enable all cars to participate on a nearly equal basis. If the driver is female, she may run in a ladies class. As the green flag drops, the driver stands on the gas and heads for the first turn. He is all alone on
A
A
the course trying to win a trophy by posting the lowest one-lap time in his class. A gymkhana is not a race so he does not have the hazard of other cars on the course. Nor is he required to have special safety equipment other than seat belts although the car must pass a safety inspection. Helmets often are mandatory, but if they are the sponsoring club will lend him one. Zipping around a corner it seems he is going quite fast, yet chances are he will never shift higher than second gear. The course is small and tight, usually laid out on a large parking lot and marked with rubber pylons. Rounding the final turn the driver knocks one of the pylons flying and adds
SUNDAY, JULY 10TH 2013
CAR WORKSHOP
FOR THE NEW YEAR
Getting her Austin Healey 3000 ready for the gymkhana, Paula Dolbier, Lawrence freshman, makes a minor carburetor adjustment.
PARKING LOT
Y M
Y M
flying and adds a penalty of two or more seconds to his time. Then he is done and as the next entrant takes his turn he gets back in line to await his second run of the day.
A
Gordon Fitch, assistant professor of business administration, powers his Mini Cooper S around a tight corner.
A
K H
Duane Bailey, in an Oldsmobile Cutlass, digs out from the start line, weaves through an S-turn, then tromps the "cloud pedal" as he completes the chicane. The dented fender is not a gymkhana mishap but a souvenir from an encounter with a deer a week earlier.
CHEVROLET
C
A
N
AN
FORD FACILITY
While waiting for their class to run, the owners of two Corvettes and an MGA succumb to the urge to fiddle with their engines while other drivers offer inevitable advice on fuel mixtures and timing settings.
A !
Photos by Robert Entriken Jr.
THE WILLIAMS RACEWAY
Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
19
Replaces 'citizenship' course
New poly sci class studies issues
By GLORIA VOBEJDA Special to the Kansan
Presidential power, civil rights, gun control legislation, the New Left, narcotics regulations these were among the topics selected by students for Political Science 52, renamed "Contemporary Issues in American Government."
"This year we have restructured our introductory courses to be more meaningful and relevant," said Burt English, assistant professor of political science. "For example, we now include state and local politics instead of stressing only national politics," he said.
"In the past we would have dismissed the protest groups as being outside the realm of politics," he continued. "Now we are more inclined to study the behavioral movements of groups such as Students for a Democratic Society and the Black Panthers."
Old textbooks never criticised American politics. They explained the way they worked and described the U.S. government as the most democratic in the world, which may or may not be the case, said English.
"Political Science 52 used to be more like a citizenship course," English said. "Now we are trying to make informed citizens."
The old American Government courses, Political Science 1 for freshmen and sophomores and Political Science 52 for juniors and seniors used to be part of the introductory program for political science majors as well as a principal course in the social sciences for students majoring in such fields as engineering, journalism or a foreign language.
"The course was a misfit and was almost abolished," said Harold E. Riehm, assistant professor of political science who teaches one of its two sections.
Riehm said he and James E. Titus, associate professor of political science, who teaches the other section, decided last summer to change the format to make it more meaningful to students who were taking it to fulfill a requirement.
"By excluding political science majors, we found we could devote more time to contemporary issues, and, at the same time, create an aura of flexibility." Riehm explained. "In this way we could explore current issues with students as they arise."
Ever wonder what it would be like to be Dan Gurney, Stirling Moss or Mark Donohue?
A gymkhana may not allow speeds attainable at Indianapolis and your car may not be a McLaren M6A, but in a low-key manner the experience of competition driving is still present.
Ever daydreamed of driving Le Mans, Sebring or the Nurburgring?
Khana set for Sunday by Lawrence car club
The Hillcrest Theaters' parking lot at the Hillcrest Shopping
Center will be the site Sunday of "Mystickhana," a gymkhana sponsored by the Jayhawk Sports Car Club of Lawrence (JSCC) and Kansas Region of the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA).
Riehm said both he and Titus were surprised that no one in either section suggested the draft as a topic for discussion.
While Titus said it was too early to evaluate the new format, he noted the large size of class sections as a drawback.
Registration for the event will begin at 10 a.m. and will be open all day. Entry fees are $2.50 for JSCC and SCCA members and $3.50 for non-members.
Linda Boone, Kansas City senior, said, "I think it is a good course, but the section is too large. As it is, it's extremely interesting but with more than 100 students, discussion is fairly difficult."
"This is my first political science course," said Phil Olsen, El Dorado senior. "I enjoy this sort of thing."
Karen Walker, Omaha, Neb. sophomore, said, "I think it could be better. We don't discuss the textbook material enough."
PERSONAL
REWARD to anyone knowing the where-abouts of Jim Conrad! He left an ugly old bug with us while he took a fabulous FIAT out for a test drive. We wonder if we'll ever see him again. Why don't you make friends with a FIAT ... and watch it turn into love!
Midwest Imports 1035 Minnesota Ave. Kansas City, Kansas
WICHITA, Kan. (UPI)—The director of Wichita's new Civic Center said yesterday there was a "strong" possibility the inauguration of Gov. Robert B. Docking for his second term will be held here.
Docking's second inauguration site could be in Wichita or Kansas City
Jim Clancy, following a meeting here late yesterday, said a final decision is expected before the end of the week.
Kansas City also is being considered as a possible site for the inauguration, which would be
the first in state history held outside of Topeka.
It was revealed this week that the Topeka Municipal Auditorium could not be used for the ceremony because it has been reserved by the Kansas Association of School Boards.
Paul Pendergast, executive secretary of the state Democratic party, said both Docking and Lt. Gov.elect James H. DeCoursey Jr. were favorable to holding the ceremony outside the city if necessary.
SIN*
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ORANGE BOWL
CELEBRATION
FEATURING The 21st AM ENDMENT
at the
SAT NIGHT
TEEPEE
Buy Three Pitchers
GET ONE FREE
and an Orange
$2.00 per couple Open Fri. & Sat.
For reservations call Mike Seregi
VI 2-1200
MIRANDA
SAT NIGHT TEEPED
JANE FERRELL
20
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
8201 15 x 40
4
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Sensitivity class forms
Group grope stirs tactile sense
By FRED PARRIS Kansan Staff Writer
At first, you feel like a damned fool.
Sitting on the floor in the midst of twenty people, crazily slapping your head with both hands, no other reaction seems quite so appropriate.
Later on, though, you begin to relax.
After all, everyone else is behaving in the same way and the occasion is somewhat special. It's a "Trust, Touch and Tenderness" course in sensitivity training, a part of KU's "Free University" program.
Patterned after sessions at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, Calif., "Tenderness" uses physical contact to help individuals become aware of their own bodies—and the bodies of others. David Leonard, a Lawrence senior in English who helps run the course, believes it develops a keen inner perception.
"It allows individuals to become more aware of their senses," he says, "to notice what's going on within them and around them."
The class, free, informal and open to everyone, meets on Thursdays at 8 p.m. Tonight's session, Leonard says, will be held in an apartment "party
"Allow whatever wants to happen. Let your partner know if he's not touching right..
room," south building, ground floor, at 1515 W. 9th.
Leonard claims no special qualifications to teach the course—which is based on exercises in their textbook, "Sense Relaxation" and feels none are needed.
The exercises, or "experiences," as the book calls them, make use of all parts of the body. Some demand self-examination, others require working with a partner, still others involve group cooperation.
One sensitivity experience concerns the beauties of the humble foot.
. . Don't make anything happen or keep anything from happening."
While the experiences are supposedly highly personal, the book often provides detailed instructions on how participants should think and behave.
"Become aware of its softness," the reader exhorts. "Gently pinch-poke the entire bottom of your foot. Scratch it, caress it, close your eyes and . . ."
The following suggestions are found in a chapter entitled "Partner Touching."
So far, the most popular exercises have been the communal cooperative efforts and the "partner" experiences. The latter involves, among other things, tapping and touching the sides, back and buttocks of your unseeing partner.
This sort of activity seems to be popular with local students.
ner" exercises, a rather quaint technique known as "milling" has been used. Theoretically, "milling" means that everyone wanders aimlessly around the room until the word halt is given. Then each individual takes the person nearest him as his partner.
Things don't always work out so well. Some persons have the selfish habit of constantly "milling" towards certain, especially desirable mates. The result is that while a few guys have lots of fun, others keep getting bearded Larry.
If the instruction book is any indication, future sessions should be even more exciting. Partner lifting, exploring, and something called "Intimate Games" are just a few of the "advanced experiences" in store
Volunteer Thanksgiving and Christmas hosts are being sought by the "Home Stay" program of KU's People-to-People organization for about 85 foreign students.
"We need families who would be willing to receive one or more foreign students for any part or all of the Thanksgiving holiday (Nov. 26 to Dec. 1), or the Christmas holiday (Dec. 21 to Jan. 5)," said Elizabeth Ann Barnes, Kenilworth, Ill., junior and chairman of the program.
The foreign students understand they are responsible for their own transportation, Miss
Barnes explained.
W
KU residence halls are closed during these vacations, and students who cannot return home must make other arrangements.
"Many foreign students have expressed a desire to visit farms and small towns, so we would welcome invitations from there as well as the nearby cities," Miss Barnes said.
The "Home Stay" program at KU has never had enough hosts for the foreign students desiring to participate.
Volunteer hosts should contact People-to-People in the Kansas Union.
'Home Stay' needs hosts
Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown
New Writing
New Writing:
The Pook-
of-the-Month
Club
College
English
Association
Award
Anthology
Prize-winning poems, short stories
and novel excerpts by
twenty-two college writers—
the best of campus writing today.
WSP WASHINGTON
SQUARE PRESS, INC.
$1 25
Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10020 A Subsidiary of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
1970
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THEATRE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
presents
A
LITTLE
PRINCESS
AN OPERA FOR CHILDREN BY KAY BETHEA
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 7:30 P.M.
(FAMILY NIGHT)
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2:00 P.M.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE MURPHY HALL
Tickets: 50c UN 4-3982
Marsha Brin, Oliver Hall,
wearing our DENISE.
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
New Writing:
The Book-
off-the-Month
Club
College
English
Association
Award
Arthology
NC. $125
* Schuster, Inc.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THEATRE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
presents
A
LITTLE
PRINCESS
AN OPERA FOR CHILDREN BY KAY BETHEA
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 7:30 P.M.
(FAMILY NIGHT)
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2:00 P.M.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE MURPHY HALL
Tickets: 50c UN 4-3982
Makhu
---
Thursday, November 21, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
21
SUMMER SESSION IN ROME
SPONSORED BY THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF MILAN
6 WEEKS
JULY 19 - AUGUST 30, 1969
$650 (approx.)
PAYS FOR FLIGHT, LODGING, MEALS, REGISTRATION, TUITION
CLASSICAL. MEDIEVAL, RENAISSANCE STUDIES (IN ENGLISH)
LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE COURSES (IN ITALIAN)
101—Elementary Italian
Prof. F. Jannace, Fordham University; Prof. Rocco Pallone,
Bronx Community College.
A course for beginners with special emphasis on grammar,
reading, writing, and conversation.
M. T, W. Th, F 2:00-3:45
201—Intermediate Italian
Prof. George Carpetto, Fordham University.
A review of grammatical structure through composition and
conversation.
M, T, W, Th, F 3:45-5:30
301—Advanced Italian
Prof. Giovanni Lonardo, Georgian Court College. The course will concentrate on reviewing and polishing the skills of more advanced students through composition.
M, I, W, Th, F 3:45-3:30
351—Conversational Italian
Prof. Walter Temelini, University of Guelph
Prof. Walter Temelini, University of Guelph.
A course designed to develop fluency in the spoken language.
M, T, W, Th, F 2:00-3:45
$ ^{352} \mathrm{a}, \mathbf {b} $ — History and Archeology of Rome
Prof. Bluma Trell, New York University; Dr. Mario Torelli
Issettere, Sopraintendenza all'Antichita, Erutria Merida
spectre, soprainthefemale art. a The political, military, economic patterns, laws, literature religion and art of Rome from its foundation to its fall. M T W Th F. 8-20-10:15
b) A detailed study of the archeological evidence of Roman Civilization. Classes will be conducted at the sites, monuments, and museums of Rome and Southern Latium.
M. T, Th. F 3:30-7:00
353—Legacy of the Ancient World
Prof. George Shea, Fordham University. A survey of the classical contributions of the Western Literary tradition.
T, Th 10:20-12:05; T 5:30-7:00; F 11:15-12:05
354 Greek and Roman Mythology
prot. Oliver C. Phillips, The University of Kansas.
Studies in the mythic traditions of the Graeco-Roman Culture
(no knowledge of Latin or Greek is required).
M. W 8:10-10:15; W 5:30-7:00; F 8:30-9:20
355—History of Latin Literature
Prof. L. R. Lind, The University of Kansas. Readings, in modern translation, from the literature of ancient Rome.
T. Th 8:30-10:15; Th 5:30-7:00; F 9:30-10:15
356 "Mediterranean Art and Architecture"
356 Medieval Art and Architecture
Prof. Marshall Fishwick, Lincoln University
Prot. Marshall Fishwick, Lincoln University. A study of the visual arts of Italy and their role in the formation of the new spiritual, intellectual and social attitudes of Western Europe.
M, W, F 10:20-12:05; W 4:00-7:00
357—Aspects of Renaissance Humanism
Prof. Sesto Prete. The University of Kansas
A course dealing with the origin and development of Humanism in Florence and other Italian centers. Visits to the Vatican Library and relevant Renaissance buildings in Rome will be arranged.
M, W 8:30-10:15; W 5:30-7.00, F, 8:30-9.20
358 - Survey of Italian Art and Architecture Prof Diane Kabel Finch College
Prof. Diane Kelder, Finch College.
A historical survey of Italian art and architecture from its foundations through the great classical revival in the eighteenth century.
T. Th 8:30-10:15; Th 4:00-7:00 (trip): F 9:30-10:15
359—Survey of Italian Literature
Prof. Vincenzo Traversa, The University of Kansas.
The course will present a limited survey of major developments in Italian Literature from Dante to the pre-romantics.
T. Th 10:20-12:05; Th 5:30-7:00
Prof. Mario Bizzarii, Ispettore d'Antichita, Orvieto; Prof. Laissa Bonfante Warren, New York University; Prof. Claireve Grandjouan, The City University of New York, Hunter College. Fifteen students will be permitted to participate in the excavation of an Etruscan Tomb, from August 1st through 15th. Only students with classical background are advised to apply. Applications will be examined by a team of specially appointed professors.
400—Special Seminar in Archeology
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE:
PROFESSOR OLIVER C. PHILLIPS, ACTING CHAIRMAN OF CLASSICS
PROFESSOR VINCENZO TRAVERSA, DEPT. OF FRENCH & ITALIAN
CARRUTH O'LEARY
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22
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Psychiatrist sees society as vacuum
BALDWIN CITY-A Viennese psychiatrist and neurologist yesterday shot barbs at the vacuum of today's society while finding both virtue and fault in persons protesting the status quo.
Viktor Frankl spoke to a standing-room-only crowd at Baker University's Rice Memorial Auditorium. He appeared under the Paul 'Dana Bartlett Memorial Lectureship.
"The human situation has become an existential vacuum." Frankl said. "Unlike animals, man is not told by drives what he must do and he is no longer told by tradition and values what he should do. More and more, he is out to do just what others are doing—and that is conformism.
"Being human beings means reaching out for a meaning to fulfill oneself or for another human being to encounter," Franklin said. "The sense of meaning is self-transcending and provides a sustaining base for living."
Protest movements, he said, show a sense of responsibility that recently has made itself known. However, he criticized protesters for always campaigning against things instead of fighting for a cause.
"There is so much to fight against," Frankl said, noting that this approach so prevalent among protest movement can cause frustration among its participants.
Frankl cited a study made in Prague, Czechoslovakia, indicating that increasing political involvement by students has increased the degree of existential frustration and feelings of meaning-
Persons seeking meaningful experiences through drugs or sex, Frankl said, find only subjective, self-defeating experiences.
"Acid heads . . . no longer care for the real meanings out there in the real world," he said.
KUOK marathon scheduled Friday
KUOK radio will broadcast its first marathon of the year from Ellsworth Hall beginning at 9 a.m. Friday.
Promotions director, Phil Higdon, Prairie Village senior, said all broadcasting will originate from Ellsworth Hall until midnight Sunday.
Programming will consist entirely of rock music and regular news braodcasts. "We want lots of requests," Higdon said.
Listeners will be offered prizes, such as food, incense candles, leather watchbands and records, furnished by downtown merchants.
The 63-hour length of the marathon is scheduled because KUOK operates on a 630-megahertz broadcast frequency—"radio 63" in disc jockey jargon.
Higdon said the marathon is a promotion stunt intended to make students aware of the station. Advertisers and businesses contributing prizes will benefit through public relations, he added.
KUOK will probably hold another marathon in one of the residence hauls before the end of this semester, Higdon said, McCollum and Naismith Halls hosted similar marathons last year.
Dave Winegardner, Atchison senior and program director, and Bob Newton, Tulsa, Okla., junior and operations manager, organized the marathon. Rich Schaffer, Hutchinson junior, is station manager.
KUOK is a student training station which broadcasts for an average of 18 hours a day through an electrical hook-up from studios in Hoch Auditorium to the University residence halls and Naismith Hall.
Higdon said the station recently expanded programming to reach Sigma Chi and Lambda Chi Alpha fraternities. "Hopefully we will reach four more Greek houses by the end of the semester," he said.
"Sex in human beings must be human sex. It is human sex only if it is the expression of one's love . . . rather than a subhuman, impersonal, depersonalized pleasure."
The Viennese psychotherapist is the originator of logotherapy, an existential approach to psychotherapy. He has authored 16 books on logotherapy, a theory developed while a Nazi concentration camp prisoner during World War II.
In the camp Frankl studied his fellow prisoners, noting those who lost their will to live and those who did not. Later, he theorized that the prisoners who retained their desire for survival felt a sense of meaning for their lives.
Frankl is a professor of psychiatry and neurology at the University of Vienna, president of the Austrian Medical society for Psychotherapy and director of neurology at Vienna's Poliklinik Hospital.
He is scheduled to speak again tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m. at Unity Village, Lee's Summit, Mo.
Kennedy children visit grave sites of RFK and JFK
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., accompanied by seven Kennedy children, visited the grave of Robert F. Kennedy yesterday morning on the 43rd anniversary
of the assassinated senator's birth.
Although the temperature was in the 30s, the Massachusetts senator wore no coat. He kneeled briefly at the simple
grave of Robert F. Kennedy and then, for a few minutes, at the grave of John F. Kennedy. Tomorrow is the fifth anniversary of the late President's assassination.
GRADUATE SOCIAL HOUR
NOVEMBER 22, 4:30-6:00
PINE ROOM, KANSAS UNION
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
OPPORTUNITY: TO MEET GRADUATES OF OTHER DEPARTMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT: BARRY LEIDICH,
PIANIST, FORMALLY OF MARTHA'S VINYARD
CASUAL DRESS
FREE COFFEE
THE AIR FORCE FIGHTS AGAINST THE NAZIS IN IRAQ.
VIETNAM...1968
AN AMERICAN LIFE
AND IT'S ON THE LINE FOR THE PRESERVATION OF THE AMERICAN IDEAL WHICH GUARANTEES THE RIGHT...
TO FREE SPEECH
TO ACADEMIC FREEDOM
TO ORDERLY DISSENT
DOES HE HAVE YOUR SUPPORT?
JOIN VIVA
Yes, AND I WOULD LIKE TO HELP BY PARTICIPATING IN THE EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES AND CONSTRUCTIVE PROGRAMS OF VIVA.
NAME ___ PHONE ___
ADDRESS ___
CITY ___ STATE ___ ZIP ___
VIVA
NATIONAL OFFICES: 1211 Westwood Blvd., L.A., Cal. 90024
Thursday, November 21, 1968 $ ^{1} $
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
23
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
workplace are reserved to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Garduff's Campus Madhouse. 1241 Oread. 1-9
1967 Mustang, six-stick, radio, white walls. Excellent condition—only 5,000 miles. Call Larry Powers, V 2-7170; if no answer, call UN 4-3973. 11-21
Folk instrument -Appalachian Mountain Dulemuth Traditional & Modern design. Stock & custom. Walnut, rosewood $80 and up. 8378. 11-21
Sony Tape Recorder, console with
speakers in either end and matching
bookend speakers. $300. V1 2-3010.
11-22
Mustang snow tires -Last year's design. New 1st line 695-14 Kelly cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax, Rock Stonebets 11-22
1966 Honda 450 in excellent condition,
low mileage. Helmet included. $450.
Also 150Mhz F 2.5 lens for Pentax $20.
2551 Redbud Lane #1, VI 2-6830-12
www.honda.com
Conn Constellation Trumpet, with trigger. Used one year, excellent condition. Will sell cheap. Call Jim Burke at VI 2-9100, rm. 320. 12-3
FREE POSTERS with gasoline at SMITTY'S CHAMPLIN, 1802 West 23rd St. Also we have tires $15; Batteries $25; Antifreeze $1.39 Gal. Change Oil, Sandwiches and picnic items. 1-9
Must sell set of wedding rings. Large 4 pt. diamond and interlocking wedding ring. Cheap! Call Larry. VI 3-7809 12-3
Double bed mattress, new $25.00.
Washing machine which needs a transmission $5 to $10.00. VI 2-0358.
19.3
Two tickets to Missouri-Kansas game,
Nov. 23. Best offer takes both Call
Dave Laney at either VI 3-4811 or
VI 2-8434. 11-22
RUMMAGE SALE. Sat, November 23,
7.00 am to noon at Community
Building Lawrence Insurance Women.
11-22
Two KU-MU tickets for sale to the highest bidder VI 2-1073. 11-22
Pair of snow tires. 6.50x13 in good
reasonable price. Calibrated.
11-22
1960 VW Microbus - newly overhauled,
1963 engine, good tires. Skin diving
flippers, mask, snorkel, and knife.
Call VI 2-6574 after 6 p.m. 11-22
64 Chevelley V-8, 4-speed, excellent
price, well sold, sell soon. Wins 12-4
cheap VI 3-8165
Big Trees, Little Trees, Short Trees,
Tall Trees, Squat Trees, Long Trees,
Many Trees, any Tree, Your Tree. All
Christmas - past pieces even EXPERIENCE
YOURS — at TINY TIM'S CHRISTMAS
TEE STAND. 23rd & Louisiana. 12-4
Honda Super 90. 160 miles. Runs
great. $175 VI 2-9322 12-4
1966 MG 1100 sedan, white w.bik. interior—local one—owner—exceptional car. This is one a 4 Dr. See it at Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 12-5
1963 Olds Convert-. very nice rag-top.
one of the hard-to-find clean ones.
Jerry Allen Volkswagon. 2522 Iowa.
12-5
See your local Volkswagen dealer (Jerry Allen Volkswagen) for 100'-sized trucks, 65'-sized trucks, 66, 66, 67 & 68 used VW's in stock. These cars are fully re-conditioned and ready to go. Bugs, Glias, Sq. Volkswagen, Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa 12-5
1965 Ford Wagon, 4 dr. w/air & all the extras. This week only $1469 at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa
Almost new 8-track stereo and stereo
speakers and speakers
GLL V1L3-1745
12-5
Brother Zig Zag sewing machine for
cross stitching, 6.5-inch trusses,
traso Also Royal Ultronic electric
typewriter $120, and Sony AC porta-
ture tape recorder $65. 842-6258-12
6 pts. 12-5
1959 Triumph TR-3 Roadster. Including a hard top, convertible top and tonneau cover. A new clutch and transmission assemblage. Radio and stereo system. A rear window changed 158 miles ago. Engine recently overhailed. 2 new tires, dual carburators. Bucket seats and four-speed Tach. oil water temp, amps and power steering. Mileage gauge. Windshield washer Broken zipper on the tonneau cover. Disc brakes. Rack and pinion steering. Left taillight is cracked. Phone answering machine. Winterize Ask for Kay. Test drive 2. Winterize Ask for Kay. $600 excitation. 12-
Fender Stratocaster guitar with case, and Fender Concert amp—good condition. Like new Conrad bass guitar and offers affordable offers 12-5 Phone VI 3-6305
1961 Oldsmobile Hardtop, power-
merged #423 mollie McCollum V1 2-600 12-5
423 McCollum V1 2-600 12-5
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-q--outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $2.25; 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. tt
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times a week delivery. Diaper and Baby Laundry Service $16 a month. Family Laundry Service for 9 lbs. Call SMITH I-3 807-4071 1-9
20% Coed Discount
Frostings and Permanents
CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS
10 E. 9th VI 2-7900
No Appointment Necessary
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 12-3
Thirsty? Come to Sandy's. Pepsi Hour 3 to 4 every afternoon. Get a 15c Pepsi, Dr. Pepper or Root Beer for just 10c. 12-4
Now STRAWBERRY FIELDS has Persian bedspreads, tablecloths and material, wire rim sunglasses, powder and stick incense and burners, posters, earrings, rings, peace and zodiac medallions, ankhs, leather belts, wrist bands, sandals and purses, handmade tattery and elothes, men's shirts and tops, brooches, cards and posters, ponchos, boxes from Iran, strobe candles, peace and music STRAWBERRY FIELDS. 712 Mass, open 10-6. 11-21
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN BUS _each Sunday from 9th & Mass at 8:30 and 10:30. Route GSP & Corbin, Jayhawk Road to Daisy Hill Sunside to verver and Naismith; 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. 12-3
Are you a playwright with no audience? A poet needing exposure? A great hymnist, folk singer, interpretive dancer? We welcome your participation and talent in the joy of performing together. Call us. Ron Sundbye or Dennis Bowers. First United Methodist. VI 3-7134. 11-21
We wish to disassociate ourselves completely from this weekend's 63-hour UKUOK tour north Marathon. We delight in knowing nothing to do with setting it up or with the free prizes being given away. We'd never allow ourselves to be with all that music and sound. Do not believe all that you've heard—B&G J —11-22
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages-anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 11-22
The International Club trip to Mexico—Everyone invited. Amount $150 each includes emergency fund of $10 which will be returned. The only profits gained is the pleasure you gain from seeing Mexico at Christmas celebration. Gary Napier VI 3-9745 or Steve Schultz VI 2-5486 or during day from 9:30 to 3:30 International Club office. 109 Student Union. 11-22
Orange Bowl fever got you? Cool it with this Orange Bowl Special.
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rfECORDS: I tape new records and sell them, played once. Classical, both vocal and non-vocal, baroque, etc. $6 list for $2 David Fisher. VI 3-9188
Former Harvard and Univ of Minnesota,
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TYPING
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Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 11-21
Multilingual Secretarial Service: to have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
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Male Needed to work 3-4 hrs, 5 days a week. Work would include janitorial type work at a sorority house. Call VI 2-6303 & ask for Mrs. Mitchell
Horses boarded—large box stallows
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LOST—one pair glasses with brown frames in Fraser or Dyche on Friday. Nov. 8. If found, contact Mary, VI 2-2420, Room 527. 11-21
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24
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 21, 1968
Council delays code action
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
Last spring Peoples Voice, then Student Voice, presented a petition to the administration demanding reforms in student governance and threatened a sit-in at Strong Hall if the demands were not met. Voice's chief demand then, as now, was 50 percent student representation on the University Senate and all governing bodies affecting student affairs.
This demand would not be met by the proposed Code. The new Code, which would replace the present University Senate Code and the constitution of the Associated Students of the University of Kansas, provides for a student-faculty University Senate, a Faculty Senate replacing the present University Senate, and a Student Senate replacing the ASC, with student representation pegged at about 15 per cent in the University Senate.
Members of the student-faculty committee point out that this is the highest percentage of student involvement in university affairs of any major college studied by the group.
No to NSA bid
(Continued from page 1) its apparent domination by SDS and DuBois clubs, both mentioned by the U.S. Attorney General as subversive.
The opponents also claim NSA is not the most representative student organization in the United States. K.State is a member of Associated Student Governments (ASG) whose backers claim that ASG takes a "more representative cross section of the students ideas."
Affiliation advocates thought NSA a good place to "exchange ideas." Five Big Eight schools are members of NSA and because Big Eight schools have "about the same political and academic leanings as K-State." K-State could have a stronger representative voice in NSA.
Regardless of the pros and cons, the election and the K State students unquestionably stated their preferences-no NSA.
Saricks said the council may consider amendments included in the ASC version of the Code, but not in the Senate Council version, at its meeting tomorrow. The council would also consider the other recommendations made by the student-faculty committee in its report, he said.
Members of the Senate Council drafting committee have been considering the ASC amendments since last week, Saricks said. Members of this committee include Russell Bradt, associate professor of mathematics and chairman; Edwin Stene, professor of political science, and Keith Weltmer, professor of business administration. Charles Oldfather, professor of law, who was chiefly responsible for drafting the Code, is advising this committee.
Saricks said these same people would represent the Senate Council on the joint committee. The ASC members of the joint committee are to be Bob Van Cleave, Kansas City third year law student; Karen Walker, Omaha sophomore, and Bob Howard, Wichita senior.
LONDON (UPI) -Queen Elizabeth II and her husband, Prince Philip, marked their 21st wedding anniversary yesterday.
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THE DOG DOG BOT
AT THE RED DOG INN THIS FRIDAY NOV. 22-8 P.M.
Dog Boy
THE BEATLES
THE FABULOUS
This Friday, November 22
FLIPPERS
. . Advance Tickets on Sale at The RED DOG Ticket Office.
THE DAD DOG BUN
THE Bad Dog DUN! THE Bad Dog DUN!
THE Dood Dog Inn
Saturday—HAPPY MEDIUM
Students end two-day ASC fast
Two days after they began their fast in support of the All-Student Council (ASC) Educational Opportunity, 15 KU students last night ended their diet of fruit juice and clear water.
In KU's residence halls nearly one quarter of the 4,500 students who ate dinner chose the fast meal of beans and cornbread rather than regular fare, shows a preliminary count by J. J. Wilson, KU housing director.
The 35-cent price difference between the cost of the fast meal and the regular meal will be donated to the ASC Educational Opportunity Fund by the University. Total receipts have not been counted.
Student leaders who participated in the complete fast commented that they suffered no ill effects except hunger pains and a little fatigue.
"To tell the honest truth, you get hungry," said Rick Von Ende, chairman of ASC and Abilena, Tex., graduate student. "Last night it got bad," Von Ende said. He broke down and ate a bowl of rice.
Early yesterday morning, faced with five books to read for a course, Joe Goering, student body vice president and Moundridge junior, broke his fast.
"It got so that I couldn't concentrate," Goering said.
Another of the fasters, Cathy Seitz, Fort Bragg, N.C., junior, said: "I wasn't really hungry. I slept all day. I bought a jar of Tang. I don't know if that was cheating but it has more vitamins than orange juice."
In a Kansan survey at McCollum Hall, more than 80 per cent of those who chose the beans and cornbread meal
In the Kansas Union cafeteria, Philosophy 15 students discussed John Stuart Mill at a dinner meeting without dinner. The two members who bought a meal sat at a separate table.
were women. Several sororities served no evening meal last night and donated the cost of the meal to the fund which will be used by the ASC to help underprivileged students reach colleges. Most fraternities, a fund official said, continued their regular meal but collected donations.
In Gertrude Sellards Pearson, a freshman women's residence hall, 348 women chose the fast meal—more than in any other hall.
"More girls are sensitive to this kind of thing," Mary Ellen Burke, Kansas City, Mo. senior explained.
"I actually think the meal was better than the other one."
"Girls are more compassionate than men," Nancy Dunton, Areadia junior said.
Frank Zilm, St. Louis junior, stood at the end of the cafeteria line at McCollum Hall counting fast meals. Many students took the cornbread and beans, Zilm said, but took a dessert or vegetables. Their meal could not be counted. Zilm asked donations from students as they emerged from the line.
However, he ignored Arab students who could eat only after the sun goes down because they are fasting. During this month (Ramzan), on the 19, 21, or 23, some part of the Koran was believed to be revealed to Mohammed.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.49 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, November 22.1968
ROTC study begins
By STEVE HAYNES Kansan Staff Writer
Campus police may be the only persons wearing uniforms on campus soon, depending on the outcome of two studies of the Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) underway here.
Committees of the University Senate and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are now beginning studies of the entire matter of ROTC on campus and college credit for ROTC courses as a result of a request presented to the groups last April by 13 students and faculty members.
Members of Peoples Voice, some of whom signed a letter which initiated the current studies, have mentioned ROTC as the next problem with which Voice would deal.
it is not clear, they said, just what
Voice would do.
The committee investigations now under way could lead to the abolition of ROTC on campus or the end of academic credit for ROTC, as some Voice leaders and faculty members have demanded.
Harold Orel, professor of English and chairman of the College educational policies committee subcommittee on ROTC, said his committee will discuss the problem of the College giving academic credit for ROTC courses. He indicated other schools in the University would have to deal with this question individually.
Ambrose Saricks, chairman of the University Senate Council, said the Senate committee would investigate the history of ROTC at the University of Kansas, whether ROTC
should have a place here in the future, and whether credit should continue to be given for ROTC.
Both committees said they plan to hear the opinions of students and faculty during their studies. The College committee has already begun to seek these opinions.
Several persons spoke before the committee yesterday and a letter has been sent to all members of the College faculty by acting Dean Robert P. Cobb asking them to submit their views.
Orel said he had received only 10 letters, but expected more. A meeting has been scheduled for Dec.5 to hear those who wish to speak to the committee.
Opinions seem to be about equally divided between pro and anti-ROTC, Orel said. Suggestions
(Continued to Page 16)
Brad Smoot wins fresh class election
Freshman elections ended last night with a coalition led by Bradley Smoot, Sterling freshman, sweeping all four offices.
Smoot will serve the freshman class as president with George Pierson, Kansas City, vice president, Martha Fankhouser, Lyons, secretary, and Patsy McCoy, Topeka, treasurer. Sandy Johnson, Overland Park, and Mary McGovern, Kansas City, candidates for freshman women's representatives to All-Student Council (ASC) were elected
Announcement of the coalition's sweeping victory was made at 9:10 last night after the computerized results were tabulated by members of the ASC elections committee.
Smooth, in Wichita for a debate tournament, was not present when the results were posted in the Hawklet, in the basement of Summerfield Hall.
Excited members of the coalition said they were ready to start work now on freshman class business.
"We've won the election, but now we have to earn what we've achieved," said Pierson.
"Participation is our main goal," he said, "but we also want to organize some type of serious project. We also plan to send out a freshman newsletter based on dialogue rather than monologue."
Members of the coalition agreed that Smoot deserved most of the credit for their victory.
"Brad came to KU from a small town. He was the only one from his high school graduating class to come here and he didn't know anyone," said Miss Fankhauser.
"He made a tremendous effort to get around and meet a lot of people."
Four coalitions and one independent candidate for president ran for the class offices.
Dean Taylor rehearses cast
With Hoch Auditorium nearly empty Dean Emily Taylor and cast rehearsed their "surprise" act for the Project Concern variety show to open 8 p.m. tonight.
With only the directors, Gina Bikales, Shawnee Mission sophomore, and John Young, Shawnee Mission junior, and backstage crew present (the student cast was asked to leave the room) Dean Taylor presented the act that surprised even the directors. The surprise, in part, was the addition of cast members. At the rate Dean Taylor was recruiting faculty and administration into show business, the University could be in trouble. Those now in her act include: Dr. Raymond Schwegler, Student Health Center director; James Surface, provost;
Francis Heller, dean of faculties;
William M. Balfour, dean of student
affairs; and, Charles H. Oldfather,
professor of law. Chancellor W.
Clarke Wescoe will not be in the
show because he will be out of
town.
The dean of women would not let the cast see her act, nor would she disclose its contents. "It's a surprise," was Dean Taylor's only comment.
Of course, then there's the orchestra for the show—a Dixieland jazz band. The Gaslight Gang has done all the arranging for the show and even wrote a song called appropriately enough "Simple Joys."
BROOKLYN ELECTIONS
Oh, yes, one can't leave out those
(Continued to Page 16)
Motley crew
Photo by Greg Sorber
Prof. Charles Oldfather of the Law School provides the accompaniment for Dr. Schwegler, Dean Balfour, Dean Taylor and Provost Surface during a scene from "Simple Joys," which opens tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
KU law grad aids Harrison By JUDI DIEBOLT Kansan Staff Writer
Chester Lewis, former KU student body vice president, and a graduate of the KU law school, has returned to Lawrence as defense counsel for Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Harrison. Harrison is director of the Ballard Community Center.
Lewis, a Wichita attorney, recently resigned as vice president of the Natoanl Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Lewis spoke to the Black Student Union last night in the Kansas Union Forum Room. White students and the press were denied seating at the speech.
"I guess the black students decided that we should talk it out by ourselves. We were talking in depth about problems that face blacks. They felt we could talk about their hangups better if whites weren't around."
In an interview later, Lewis commented on the exclusion of white students and the press at his speech:
Lewis expressed disappointment with the "liberal, white middle-class college student" working for civil rights.
"The white liberal will work for civil rights but he can't get it through his thick head that he belongs to prejudiced organizations like fraternities, Lewis said. "He continues to live in prejudiced suburbia. He's not really making any progress toward the black cause at all when he does this."
(Continued to Page 16)
UDK News Roundup Chief, three others die in Wichita fire
WICHITA, Kan. (UPI)—Four firemen, including Fire Chief Tom McGaughey, died last night under tons of debris from a collapsing roof while battling a second alarm fire in a downtown automobile agency.
In addition to McGaughey, 55, the victims were Jimmy L. Austin, 25, Merile C. Wells, 45, and D. J. Mishler, whose body was later discovered buried under the rubble.
Heavy smoke covered the city and forced several thousand spectators away from the scene at the Yingling Chevrolet Company.
Sirhan may have chromosome test
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—The attorney for Sirhan B. Sirhan, accused of the murder of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, said Thursday he was considering "chromosome" sanity tests for his client.
Russell E. Parsons said in an interview on a local radio station that he might seek the tests to determine if the 24-year-old Sirhan was biologically "pre-destined" to violence.
Some genetic experts have testified in murder trials that men with a chromosome count of "YYY" rather than the normal distribution of "XY" are "super males" with a hereditary compulsion that leads them to criminality.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 22,1968
Peace symbol proves popular with all types
Fashion has accepted the peace symbol, if not what it represents.
At first the trademark of the love generation, the symbol now is worn by Greeks, teeny-boppers, instructors and other straight persons.
100
Jennifer Russell, Lawrence one of the co-owners of Strawberry Fields, displays several styles of peace medallions, which seem to be popular in this area.
Symbolic of Peace
Local hippie-supply shops have trouble keeping peace medallions in stock. Shopowners and hippies welcome the new popularity of the peace sign but complain that many who wear it don't know what the symbol stands for.
It also appears on purses, shoes, plastic buttons, belts and notebook covers, posters and restroom walls.
The symbol, usually worn as a metal medallion, is a circle enclosing an inverted "Y" and hangs from the neck by a chain or leather thong.
Kay Hughes, Kansas City, Mo., said that her shop, The Sandalwood, 1235 Oread Ave., has sold more than 1,000 medallions in the year and a half since it opened. There are only twelve left in the store right now, she said.
Miss Hughes said that the "long-haired don't buy them as much as the average-looking straight person. They (the long-haired) don't have the money."
"We've run out of them from time to time," said Mrs. Eleanor Womack, 1817 Louisiana, of the Campus Mad House.
Strawberry Fields, 712 Massa
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1817
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Harper Row
Everyone wears them, said Mrs. Womack. "Some of those who wear the symbol have long hair, others look like they ought to be athletes," she said.
Marijuana use okayed by CYR committee
The Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR), working as a committee of the whole, last night approved a resolution to legalize the sale and use of marijuana.
CYR also approved resolutions for ending capital punishment and the draft, a state referendum concerning liquor by the drink, lowering the voting age and withdrawal of troops from Vietnam if the South Vietnamese government refuses to participate in peace talks.
The resolutions will be voted on for final approval at a later CYR meeting. If passed the proposals will be sent to a statewide CYR meeting this year.
-On the KU scene-
COLLEGIATES FOR CONCERN-"Simple Joys," wescape Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Dean Emily Taylor and Dr. Raymond Schwegler, tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
TEE PEE-Grand opening Friday and Saturday night, featuring the 21st Amendment. Tonight is McCollum night. Admission is half-price for McCollum Hall couples.
CHILDREN'S THEATER— "Little Princess," 2 p.m. Saturday in University Theatre.
RED DOG INN—The Fabulous Flippers tonight and the Happy Medium Saturday night.
EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
to night and togomox night.
SUA SPECIAL FILMS— "Strike" and "Alexander Nevsky," 7:30 tonight in 303 Bailey.
MR. YUK'S-This weekend featuring the Chosen Few.
MUSEUM OF ART-Paints and Plastics by Richard Schira on display.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE- Performance by Concert Choir, 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
SUA POPULAR FILM—"One Potato—Two Potato," 7 and 9:30 p.m., tonight, Saturday and Sunday in Dyche Auditorium.
VARSITY THEATER-Alan Arkin as "Inspector Clouseau."
GRANADA THEATER
SUNSET DRIVE-IN THEATER- Claudia Cardinale in "The Hell with Heroes," and "Danger Diabolik."
"Coogan's Bluff," starring Clint Eastwood.
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
1—Tony Anthony in "The Stranger Returns."
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
2—"The Heart is a Lonely Hunter." starring Alan Arkin.
HILLCREST THEATER NO.
3—Ingmar Berman's "Hour of the Wolf."
Jesus G. Tutor in concert at 8 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
CONCERT—Sofia Noel and
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Friday, November 22, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Statue has colorful past
ALEXANDER POLITIAN
By STEVE NAFUS Kansan Staff Writer
This year Jimmy Green offers oranges to passers-by; in years past he has been more colorful and less generous.
Nearly every student at the University of Kansas knows that at least once a year the statue of James Woods Green is painted the hue of his last name. But this year, "Uncle Jimmy" has been left alone by the frustrated artist-types.
Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of Buildings and Ground's physical plant, called this the best year his men have ever had. There have been a few incidents, but none have been too vicious.
During the Red Cross blood drive on campus, Uncle Jimmy wore a Red Cross banner, Buchholz said. Then he added, "I fully expect Uncle Jimmy to carry an orange the rest of the year." Buchholz explained that
his men have removed the orange several times already, but it keeps reappearing.
In the early years, only engineering students painted the landmark in front of the law school—and then only on St. Patrick's Day. This practice stems from the Great St. Patty's Day Row of 1892. It seems that on the fateful day 76 years ago, the engineers wore green ribbons on their hats and the lawyers contrived to remove the ribbons.
By the mid-1940's some sharp-witted KU students began to paint the statue and blame it on marauding K-Stataters. This is when tradition began to give way to mere vandalism and now Buchholz thinks the statue is painted "at the drop of a hat."
Over the years Uncle Jimmy has been painted almost every color by almost every method. The statue was once given white shoes, red pants, green coat, blue vest and a white tie. Ordinarily the campus police do not allow time for such fancy work, so many painters have found it worthwhile to merely splash paint on the statue and run.
Hawk it to Mizzou
Uncle Jimmy was voluntarily cleaned by students apparently only once. In 1945 a harem of independent women cleaned and oiled the statue from top to bottom. It was painted again four days later. In 1950 Uncle Jimmy was tarred and feathered. A large replica of a slide rule was fastened around his feet with a chain and four padlocks.
Uncle Jimmy has ignored the paint, weather, beer buckets in his hands, cigars in his mouth and Red Cross banners across his shoulders. Now he has oranges to ignore.
Buchholz termed Uncle Jimmy a "working statue. We just let him weather—that is when he is the most beautiful. B & G only cleans Jimmy after he has been painted, all other times he is allowed to become beautiful." Buchholz said.
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20
Acme Salutes Player of the Week Tommy Ball
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This Week's Lucky No.—478
- 1 Long Play Kief's Album
- 1 dress or suit cleaned free
Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 22, 1968
Third party depends on many variables
In addition to the organizational liabilities of the American Independent party, is depends heavily if not entirely upon a backlash that the course of events could dissipate in a hurry. A few years of tranquility at home and abroad could dull the Wallace cutting edge. It would take crisis far in excess of what we are now experiencing to broaden the Wallace support. And it seems clear that Wallace will not broaden his appeal. Rather, if he is to get national support, the elements he appeals to now must flourish.
Another variable which could determine the success of a new third party would be the amount of dissent occurring within the present Democratic party. Not only would defections from the Democratic party nbe needed, to provide the necessary surplus in the electorate, but more importantly, a third party effort would be greatly assisted by the addition of present ranking party and national leaders.
This then would add a still more conservative element to the present two major parties, which in turn could have the possibility of driving some liberal elements out of the present parties; increasing the ranks of the steadily increasing bloc of independent voters.
Other recognized politicians, besides McCarthy, could broaden the appeal of a third party while at the same time adding the possibility of an expanded power base. For example, if activists like Julian Bond of Georgia, Don Peterson of Wisconsin, Al Lowenstein of New York and even Jesse Unruh of California could be persuaded to affiliate
Barring then some unforeseen crisis, the Wallace movement is likely to dissipate. What then of his followers, who now apparently account for roughly 15 per cent of the population? They most probably would be taken into the folds of the present parties.
Editor's note: This is the final part of a two part series examining the possibility of a Sen, Eugene McCarthy-led third party arising. Today's article continues the discussion of some of the variables which could determine the success of such a party, and speculates as to the probable degree of that success.
--with a new third party, the party would have the makings of a diversified national organization.
In a sense, it would take the effort of politicians not only sympathetic to a third party movement, but politicians with strong personal vote appeal who count that as their biggest asset, rather than the present Democratic party organization in their state. But indeed, this kind of politician is a rare commodity and, as we shall see later, there are liabilities on the other side of the ledger which likely would prove fatal.
From this elite would come the core of a proposed third party. But obviously, more support would be needed to form a viable political force.
The immediate appeal of McCarthy led third party would be to the young and the intellectuals. This is what made up the core of his early success in the regular Democratic party. The remaining support came from the periphery of the regular Democratic party and dissidents of nearly every persuasion.
But assuming that some other key politicians could be persuaded by McCarthy to support a third party movement, the appeal of maverick McCarthyism would have to be broadened if such a party were to survive.
The most apparent source for this additional support would be the disenchanted black and white minorities and the low income groups in general. With the addition of these elements, this
proposed third party takes on the appearance of the old Democratic coalition. But as blue collar workers and the black minorities indicated this year, they are no longer firmly in the Democratic camp. If it seems absurd that blue collar workers, who appeared to be a Wallace gold mine late in the campaign, could be enlisted in a radical new politics movement, it would be well to check the polling results of this year. Ironic as it may seem, a substantial number of people who voiced preference for candidates such as Sen. Robert Kennedy, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, and McCarthy later indicated preference for Wallace.
But the aggregate of these hypothetical situations amounts to an enormous "if." It is doubtful that other notable public office holders, regardless of their sympathy to the new politics or their dissatisfaction with the present two-party system, would sacrifice the one foot they have now in the Democratic party or relinquish the power base they have formed in their respective states. Politics is not a game of uncalculated chance. A rising politician is not as likely to risk a promising career for a shot in the dark of a new party. Also, there is no certainty that the course of events will provide the stimulus needed to bolster a third party.
Even if the course of events and the ambitions of individuals would play into the hands of a third party, it is doubtful that such a party would have any lasting affect upon our political processes. Most likely the party under discussion would, like so many other third parties in U.S. history, be absorbed by one or both of the present parties, most probably the Democratic party. And its greatest achievements would likely be to influence into the ideology and platform of the present parties.
Richard Lundquist Assistant Editorial Editor
Creative madness
By SCOTT NUNLEY
It is a simple matter for the art commentator, any "judge" whether dignified with a pulp by-line or not, to step back in pursuit of objectivity and lose complete contact with the actual world of the artist.
Experiencing creativity only at second hand, we all need what Ingmar Bergman's new film "Hour of the Wolf" so powerfully offers—a trip, a step, a moment's ascent directly into the divine creative madness of the artist.
Or perhaps more precisely, into the madness that we, the Public, "generate" when we reach out to clutch at our poets and painters and filmmakers.
So very righteously aware of our own sanity, we define the world we see as being Real. We apply our own acid tests and our own semantic labels and we order its Reality in logical plodding patterns after the ponderous process of our usually rather mudbound minds. Nothing new about that.
But the hypersensitive man, the visionary, the artist who can fly before or above us and who dares to bring back a description of the new perspective he has found is obviously un-sane. We may be charitably condescending and call him by pet names such as "imaginative" or "eccentric" but we all understand what we mean. In the world of safely Revealed Reality (even is the Priest is now our Scientist), where value equals utility, of what tangible value is the sadly un-sane poet?
Un-sane productions, such as the cineramic "2001," disturb us
Un-sane productions, such as the cinerakis 2001, by The thousands we sit in the darkened theatres and struggle to order the mad vision, to explicate its potent symbolism, to pull its stark raving fangs. Sometimes some of us, perhaps on a second visit, do succeed in abandoning our "judgment" and in entering directly into the world of the vision itself.
As more and more contemporary commercial films, " $ 8\frac{1}{2}, $ " Blow-Up," reach in to this source of highly personal prophey within the artist himself, contemporary audiences are more and more often left too distant from the primary creative experience. Denying its sweet madness to their own structured lives, they must overthrow themselves first in order to recognize its power on the screen.
Within the special environment of the University, of course, we foster an Elite Public—and without our cash support, filmmakers like Bergman would not reach the town at all. We are young, we are curious, and (hopefully) we are iconoclastic. Trying new things and refuting old rules is why we've called this meeting together.
So, complacently, we may nod that we would never buy an expensive painting and hang it callously upside-down merely so that we could ask the painter to dinner and watch him suffer. This is the General Public's usual mode of behavior toward the freak artist, of course. But not us: not the Elite Public? We'd never torture our sensitive men—?
Bergman's "Hour of the Wolf" lets us sit in the chair, lay on the rack, and experience at least a flash of the other side of the horrible blood feast that is held between the Public and its artists. "Hour of the Wolf" is neither difficult nor depressing to view. It is brutally enlightening and so, yes of course, it is frightening.
Letters to the editor
Different ideas on patriotism
As of now I've read enough "reporting" on how things were during the Veterans Day parade. My greatest desire now is to express a somewhat different view—that of the student marcher, marching for peace.
To the Editor:
In the University Daily Kansan, Nov. 18, I read of the Lawrence citizens criticizing the peace march. It was said that "the many, many good students should suppress those who would protest against our government." The march was "pretty deplorable" because we "tore down the government of our country and the heritage of our country. The only way they (the peace marchers) will ever get anything done is to get a shave and a haircut."
So now we're all branded as being a pretty deplorable bunch of bearded bad students who lack respect for our country. It seems to me that someone has really missed the point . . . by about eight miles.
Before the march was started, a man and lady broke into the line to tear up signs. They didn't stop to ask why we were against the inevitable "what has to be, has to be." A fat lady leaned out her window, after the march had started, to spit and yell obscries at the participants. As we
KANSAN
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence.
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national background necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Rogens.
prog assed down Massachusetts, I noticed that the "peace march critics" seemed, for the most part, to be those staggering out of nearby bars. One yelled, "You guys are a bunch of phonies."
Well, that's how things are in Lawrence, Kan. People preoccupied with seeing only what they want to see will open their minds only that far. I marched, as a participant of the march for peace, in question of a need for such a war. Open to hear opposing views, I question the absence
of General Walt after promising to talk to all those outside the dinner held that night at the Kansas Union.
One hundred and 50 conscientious people join together to express their deepest desire for peace and the commander of Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post No. 852, says, "It's ridiculous when a bunch of these hippies lay down and chew gum during playing of taps." Yes, that really explains a lot.
Bill Higgins Lawrence sophomore
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'Next thing y'know they'll be tellin' us the earth is not flat!'
Friday, November 22, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
the rock hound
Potpourri of albums
By WILL HARDESTY
Surely/ Donovan Leach must be a holy person. And his music, too, for it is ethereal, angelic, good, beautiful—the music of the spheres.
He has produced another heavenly work entitled THE HURDY GURDY MAN on Epic.
As per usual, it is a collection of songs in which Donovan revels in the natural beauty seen by his eyes and created in his mind. The beauty of the songs lies in their simplicity. The subjects are nature, the sea and people-all kinds of people from medieval castle dwellers to modern Greenwich Village dwellers. The 13 songs on this album show the same intensity of living and seeing, thinking and feeling as past Donovan works have. And throughout is the sense of a musical Christ, or saint, or Brahman, or guru or Buddha singing of his religion.
THE HURDY GURDY MAN also shows Donovan is not limited by one musical genre. The album contains swing, acid rock, folk, folk rock, raga rock, jazz and calypso.
And, also as usual, Donovan has something to say. "Get thy bearings.' Know the time./ Don't you worry./ The weather's fine. . . . Get together./ Work it out./ Simplicity/ Is what it is about. . . ."
- * * * * * *
Another new Donovanesque record is DONOVAN MY WAY by Vic Lewis and his Orchestra also on Epic.
This album contains most of Donovan's major works—"Sunshine Superman," "There Is a Mountain," "Mellow Yellow," "Hurdy Gurdy Man," "Catch the Wind," "Jennifer Juniper," etc. And this album shows why few persons have orchestrated Donovan's music—it is Donovan's music, and something is lost when it is not performed by him. The simplicity which makes his music so beautiful is lost when the music is orchestrated. On DONOVAN MY WAY, the delicate and refined instrument which is Donovan's voice is not there. Also, the lyrics are missing.
If you had never heard Donovan, this album would be very good, but for Donovan, it can't compare with the real thing.
- * * * * *
THE HOLY MACKEREL by The Holy Mackerel on Reprise is a very good album.
It is the first album for the
group, but they have a first-class sound which is quite well developed and allows them to play a variety of musical forms. Their music doesn't fit into any real category. The album shows everything from nice, unamplified, bouncy stuff to electronic rock to Country & Western-rock.
What is amazing about the group is they look so young, yet play so well. None of them look like they could be more than freshmen, but as far as their music goes, they've got their drees.
The front side of the album is kind of a warm-up. The first song, "The Secret of Pleasure," is gentle and swinging, but the beat picks up, peaking in "Wildflowers"—a very rocky song, which is the only band on the album to be heavily electrified. Next is "The Somewhere in Arizona at 4:30 a.m. Restaurant Song (And Now I Am Alone)." This sets the pace for side two by trotting out the Country & Western guitar, phrasing, harmonica and drums. Unfortunately, the first side ends with a real dud. The old story of Prinderella and her sisty uglers is the only detriment to the whole album.
PHILIPP
66
The second side of the album really gets into the CW-rock. "Bitter Honey" is more like something which would be played for an upbeat number on a "good music" FM station, but "Nothin' Short of Misery" sounds like a hip version of The Grand Ol' Opry. "Golden Ghost of Love" is more rock than western, but the group then does the best song on the album—"The Wild Side of Life." The song opens with an introduction: "Wellcum, fokes, to the Mack-rel Jamburree, en heers Mentor Mack-rel to sing fer ya." The song is about, "I didn't
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They do everything from James Brown to Mick Jagger to Burt Bacharach to their own stuff-14 songs all together—in a swinging 45 minute show. And they are good.
Their music is definitely soul through and through, but it's more, it's better. For one thing, it is more jazzy than the average soul. With nine men, all of whom are musicians, their sound is more tuneful than a lot of soul—which sounds like a singer backed only by a beat.
When Arthur Conley sang of that "Sweet Soul Music," he must have had the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band in mind. Their first album, TOGETHER, on Warner Brothers-Seven Arts will give you a good taste.
The last two songs on the side are good, but are paled by "The Wild Side of Life." They should have been put before "Wild Side" and the album would have had a spectacular ending with the crowd crying, "More. More."
Kinda makes ya wanta get out yur ol' Hank Williams and Johnny Cash albums and listen to them and smoke dope.
The Holy Mackerel should be heard from in the future. They are a good group, and they know how to get the most out of all their talented personnel. They have a good, strong, unified sound. It is just the right blend of CW and rock.
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know God made honky-tonk angels./ Well, I mighta known you wouldn't make a wife./ You gave up the only one who ever loved you., And went back to the wild side of life."
One of six finalists announced Tuesday will reign over the annual ROTC Military Ball, Dec. 6, in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Don Willoughby, Hutchinson senior and director of public relations for the ball said the queen will be selected by three prominent persons in the University community.
Military Ball to be Dec. 6; six queen finalists picked
The finalists include:
BELGRADLE. (UPI)—The Yugoslav army will spend $153 million to modernize its army next year.
Ann Henry, Shawnee Mission freshman, Corbin Hall; Sandy Hoagland, Palo Alto, Calif. Freshman, Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall; Judy Jarrell, Shawnee Mission junior, Kappa Alpha Theta; Lorlyn Seelbinder, Tongonzie sophomore, Naismith Hall; Cathy Steinmitz, Parsons sophomore, Delta Gamma, and
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 22, 1968
New storybook character
Jets to battle 'Bambi'
SAN DIEGO (UPI)—The New York Jets, who bowed to Oakland and "Heidi" last-time out, move South to take on San Diego and "Bambi" Sunday.
The Jets, still only a step away from their first Eastern Division championship, were beaten in a bizarre windup last Sunday when the Oakland Raiders scored two touchdowns within nine seconds in the final minute to win, 43-32.
Most of the nation's television viewers didn't see the fantastic finish, however, because the network switched to a children's movie, "Heidi."
New York will be on TV again Sunday, taking on the San Diego Chargers, and this time the storybook character who poses a problem—a much more real one, too—is "Bambi." That's the nickname given Lance Alworth, San Diego's deer-fast flanker who'll lead the chargers in their bid for revenge of an earlier loss to the jets.
The Chargers (8-2), battling to stay alive in
the Western Division title chase, are favored by 5½ points to sink the Jets (7-3).
In other AFL games Sunday, Oakland is heavily-favored at Cincinnati, the Patriots play host to Miami, and Buffalo travels to Denver. Kansas City and Houston are not scheduled.
New York's Jim Turner has tied a pro football record with his 28 field goals and seems a sure bet to break it with four games remaining. He booted three against San Diego when the two teams met earlier.
Don Maynard had 10 receptions for 228 yards against the Raiders and now has grabbed 39 tosses this season. Teammate George Sauer leads the league with 53 catches.
Joe Namath was 19-of-38 for 381 yards against the Raiders and finally threw a touchdown pass after being shutout for six games.
But the Chargers duo of Gary Garrison (36 grabs) and Alworth (48 receptions) are just as explosive and maybe even more so—if Johnny Sample of the Jets doesn't fully recover from his bout with the flu.
Coaches'outlook gloomy for lowly 'Skins, Eagles
CLEVELAND (UPI)—Joe Kuarich, the harassed head coach of the hapless Philadelphia Eagles, no longer is the only member of the exclusive club reserved for losing coaches-now that Otto Graham of the Washington Redskins has joined.
Graham's non-voluntary enrollment came about when a
Red Raiders' safety a danger with punts
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI)—Safety Larry Alford has the second smallest foot on the Texas Tech Red Raider football team, but when he starts making tracks, he's a real crowd pleaser.
Alford's specialty is punt returning. He has been among the top three punt returners all season, and he's in the process of winning his second straight Southwest Conference punt return championship, making him a candidate for national honors.
Alford also covers the long scoring pass and has done so well this year, that only four have been completed this year when he was in the game.
Alford captured the SWC punt return title last season as a sophomore with 320 yards on 32 returns.
With only tomorrow's crucial SWC bout with Arkansas remaining on this year's slate, the 5-10, 180-pounder has returned 35 punts for 416 yards and an 11.9 average per return.
"It's been our goal all along to have the best defensive team in the conference," says Alford. "We believed that we could all along, and now we're doing it."
The Raider pass defenders, of which Alford is a prominent member, have allowed 182 yards per game. Although Tech has faced four of the nation's top 10 passers this season, it has allowed only 127 of 271 passes to be completed while intercepting 17.
"I'm real proud of the way our defense has come through this season," said Alford. "The big difference this year has been the play of our line. I can remember getting 14 to 15 tackles in a game last year, but this season I'm lucky if I get four or
five. They don't leave us much work."
Saturday the Tech defense faces another tough job in Arkansas and top-notch quarterback Bill Montgomery.
Alford says his job as a "free safety" is to help out the rovers and halfbacks, and catch the free man nobody else covers. "It is just a big job of helping out," he says.
"All our whole defense wants to do is to get the ball back in good field position for the offense," Alford says. "If I look up and see the opposition coming down on me real fast, I like it because there is a good chance they will run past me."
Alford said from there he just played it by ear—"Know where to run, when to run, and what your blockers are going to do for you."
On interceptions, Alford says:
"When you catch it, you've really got to have an instinct about which way to go because there is a lot of traffic. You can't completely decide while the ball is in the air."
"Sometimes you decide wrong, and you end up walking off the field in two parts."
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Washington newspaper suggested editorially that the Redskin coach wasn't doing the job and "Otto Must Go" slogans, similar to the "Joe Must Go" signs in Philadelphia, went on display in the nation's capital.
Things are expected to get worse for the two coaches Sunday when the winless Eagles meet the stampeding Cleveland Browns at Cleveland and the Green Bay Packers invade Washington.
Green Bay, fighting for survival in the Central Division race, is a 12-point choice in its first meeting with the Redskins since 1959.
The big game on the NFL slate takes place at Baltimore where the Coastal Division leading Colts host Central front-runner Minnesota in a battle between the league's two defensive giants.
Cleveland, possessor of a 5-game winning streak, longest in the NFL this season, is an $18\%$ point favorite to hand Philadelphia its 11th straight loss.
In a key game on the West Coast the New York Giants (7-3) face the Los Angeles Rams (8-1-1) with the Rams favored by 11.
In other games Capital Division leader Dallas (8-2) is favored over ailing Chicago, Detroit is a 12-point pick over New Orleans, and the San Francisco 49-ers are favored by $ \frac{5}{2} $ points over the improved Pittsburgh Steelers.
OU's Owens real powerful
COLUMBIA, Mo.—Pile-driving Steve Owens of Oklahoma left a vivid impression on Missouri's fandom after buckling Tiger defenses with a 177-yard rushing effort last Saturday.
Volunteered one head-shaking believer, "that guy was running so well against us that if he ran
smack into any one of our Columns, he'd make three yards."
The Columns, landmarks on the red campus at Mizzou, are 43-ft. high Ionic stone remnants of the University's first administration building that burned in 1893.
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Friday, November 22, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Tigers dig in for Hawks
By Ron Yates. Kansan sports editor
In 1891 KU and Missouri met for the first time on the football field. They have been doing it ever since and by so doing, have established the oldest football rivalry west of the Mississippi. In fact, their rivalry is the fifth oldest in the nation.
But, to pinch an old cliche, "history marches on" and this Saturday in Columbia, Mo. won't be a day for reflecting.
Members of the Orange Bowl committee will be wringing their hands in hopes of a KU victory—they want a 9-1 team New Year's Day, not an 8-2 team. On the other hand, if Missouri (heaven forbid) should win, then the Gator Bowl Committee can walk away from the game with that smug, contented look on their faces. They will have apparently gotten the better team for their bowl and the Orange Bowl would be left with second best. (Of course, Jayhawk fans would argue with this assumption.)
tans would argue with this assumption. Predicting this weekend's games requires extreme care. I'll have to shoot for 100 per cent in order to reach my personal goal of an .800 guessing average. What all this means is that I'll have to toss the coin a little higher this weekend.
Last weekend, the predictions were ready to go into the paper but somehow they didn't. I kept track anyway and wound up with a 15-5 record which brings the grand total to 129-45-5 for a .722 average.
Here we go for this weekend:
Colorado 25. Air Force 19 -Buffs stave off pesky Falcons.
Kansas State 24, Oklahoma State 20-Wildcats want to win four bad this year and the Cowboys must play in the "Den."
bad this year and the Cowboys must play it. Oklahoma 23, Nebraska 18-Huskers just can't seem to beat the Sooners when they need to . . . and they need to in order to get a Sun Bowl bid.
Iowa State—finished its season last week against the Cowboys.
KU 29, Missouri 25- Jayhawks and Tigers always mix it up well but because I am prejudiced I'll take KU by four. (How's that for reasoning?) Both teams want this game bad and the Tigers will really be up for it after losing to the Jayhawks last year 17-6.
OTHER GAMES
Penn State 40, Pittsburgh 17-Nittany Lions warm up for Syracuse next week.
Syracuse next week.
Purdue 25, Indian 14-Boilermakers avenge last year's 19-14 defeat.
Texas 30, Texas A & M 21-Aggies put up a fight, but Longhorns prevail. (Nov. 28.)
Longhorns prevail. (Nov. 28.) Arkansas 20, Texas Tech 16-Hogs wallow past slipping Red Raiders.
Raiders. Miami (Fla.) 24, Florida 13-Hurricanes breeze past toothless Gators.
Ohio State 20, Michigan 17—This is for the Rose Bowl.
20, Kentucky 19—Volt blast Wildcats
USC 34, UCLA 20—Trojans dispense Orange Juice all over vitamin conscious Bruins.
SMU 21, Baylor 13-SMU too much for Baylor.
SMU 21, Baylor 13-SMU too much for Baylor Syracuse 24, West Virginia 16-Orangemen plow up Mountainers
California 17, Stanford 10-Golden Bears are a little tarnished now, but should put down the Indian threat.
now, but should put them out.
Yale 23, Harvard 17—It's the 85th meeting for these two schools and rah, rah if it ain't gonna be a humdinger. (Apologies to THE colleges in America.)
Arizona 24, Wyoming 20-Picking an upset here.
Arizona 24, Wyoming 25 Oregon State 23, Oregon 13-Ducks can still swim despite being Orange Juice logged and they should swim about 10 better than Oregon.
Nittany Lions build on winning tradition
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI)—Penn State's football teams have turned in winning seasons since 1938, and Coach Joe Paterno believes that tradition has developed a sense of responsibility in his players.
"It helps a team to have a winning tradition," Paterno said. "The players go into the games expecting to win most of the time. Because of this attitude they are prepared to meet adversity. They realize it won't be the end of the world if something might happen.
The Nittany Lions, who are favored to stretch their season record to 9-0 tomorrow when they meet once-victorious Pitt in Pittsburgh, close their campaign
"Our squad has a real sense of responsibility because of this tradition."
against Syracuse Dec. 7. They will meet Kansas in the Orange Bowl.
"Because of their tradition, the boys have more pride, and that helps to win," Paterno said.
The Lions' last losing season was 30 years ago when they had a 3-4-1 record.
"We played like our lives depended on it today," was the way Oklahoma offensive guard, Ed Lancaster, summed up the Sooners' effort against Missouri last Saturday in a game won by the Oklahomans, 28-14.
"Sports Quotes"
"We've had the best two weeks of practice I've ever seen and I've been here five years."
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KU squad bound for nat'l meet
KU's harriers travel to New York where they will compete tomorrow in the NCAA cross country championships, and their final meet of the season.
Villanova, winner of the last two team titles, is expected to report this year. But individual champion Jerry Lindgren will not be back to defend his title.
The 7-man Jayhawk squad will be the same which won the Big Eight title, and last Saturday missed being Central Collegiate champions by one point. Miami (Ohio) defeated them 83-84.
KU enters into the meet with an impressive record. Before last Saturday's second-place, the Jayhawks had accumulated six consecutive team victories.
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It's last NCAA cross country title came in 1953. Individual winners for the Jayhawks have been: Herb Semper, 1950-51; Wes Santee, 1953; Allan Frame, 1956, and John Lawson, 1965. Last year's KU team placed in 13th place, and its top runner was 62nd.
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Going to New York will be juniors Roger Kathol and Paul Mattingly, sophomores Jay Mason, Thorn Bigley and Mike Solomon, and freshmen Doug Smith and Rich Elliot.
KU's victories have been posted at the OKlahoma State Jamboree, the Southern Illinois meet, the KU Invitational, the KU-OSU dual, the State Federation a.d the Big Eight Conference meet.
Nebraska was "helped" in its winning effort against Colorado by sniffs of oxygen each time a Husker player trotted off the field in the high, frosty altitude.
Beat Mizzou
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 22, 1968
Owens to make loan to frosh
With football still in their minds KU students and basketball fans will nevertheless pour into Allen Field House Monday for the first basketball clash of the season-between freshmen and varsity.
Coach Ted Owens plans a onenight "tend-lease" program of some of the varsity players to the freshman squad for the 8 p.m. dress rehearsal only five minutes ahead of the season opener with St. Louis University Nov. 30.
"I haven't made up my mind just yet which players we'll use with the freshmen," Owens said, "but we are going to do this for two reasons.
"First, I want to give all the varsity players all the playing time I can, and second, the freshmen need the additional strength to make the game competitive."
Owens is working with eight experienced players and five newcomers in what he hopes will be his fourth consecutive 20-plus victory team.
Three varsity players who participated in early practices have recently quit the squad: sophomores Jim Hoffman and Ken Norgaard, and senior Rich Thomas.
In discussing the early practice sessions, Owens explained that he has worked "a lot more on team organization than on individual skills."
Owens has been particularly pleased with the early progress of newcomers Roger Brown, 6-10 pivot from Chicago; Pierre Russell, 6-3 forward from Kansas City (Wyandotte), and Tim Natsues, a junior guard who played the past two years at Fresno (Calif.). City College.
The other two sophomores are Dave Robisch, 6-9 forward from Springfield, Ill., whose 26-5 point average led the freshman squad to an undefeated season; and Fred Bosilevac, 6-4 forward from Kansas City (Rockhurst).
Top freshman players who'll be against the varsity are Bud Stallworth, 6-5, Hartselle, Ala.; Neal Mask, 6-6, Tulsa, Okla.; Aubrey Nash, 6-2, Hyattville, Md., and Bob Kivisto, 6-1, Aurora, Ill.
Everybody's THE game taking place tomorrow
By United Press International
This is the week of THE game, but it all depends where you happen to be.
In every section of the country tomorrow, a college football game will be played which bears the title of THE game. Many of the games are traditional rivalries while others will decide conference championships.
Some of the traditional match-ups include Michigan at Ohio State, Stanford at California, Yale at Harvard, Washington at Washington State, Kansas at Missouri, Southern Cal at UCLA, Oregon at Oregon State, Utah at Utah State, and South Carolina at Clemson.
Two of those—the Michigan-Ohio State (Big Ten) and the Yale-Harvard (Ivy League) will also decide league championships. Other decisive conference battles include the Kansas-Missouri (Big Eight) and Wyoming-Arizona (Western Athletic).
Most of the national interest will be focused on Columbus, Ohio, where second-ranked Ohio State meets fourth-ranked Michigan. In New England, however, people are more concerned with the Yales and the Harvards. For the first time since 1909, both teams are entering their traditional finale with undefeated records.
Michigan's offense has been solid all season, and Bump Elliott figures it should be good for
the Big Ten championship game with Ohio State.
"If it doesn't work, then we'll try something else. I guess." Elliott said.
The game also will decide the Big Ten's representative to the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day.
"We hope our regular plays work," was Elliott's understatement regarding the game that pit the Wolverines (8-1) against the Buckeves (8-0).
Those regular plays are built around record-breaking halfback Ron Johnson, who gained an incredible 347 yards and scored five touchdowns against Wisconsin last Saturday. This set an NCAA single-game rushing record, broke three Big Ten marks and a bevy of Michigan records, including one built by Tom Harmon when he was a Michigan star.
The 205-pound senior from Detroit now is Michigan's all-time rusher with 2,349 yards, replacing Harmon (2,134). With Johnson leading the Michigan offense, one of Elliott's problems is going to be the Ohio State defense, which he highly praises.
Of Buckeye roving linebacker Jack Tatum, Elliott said: "If I knew how we would play him. I probably wouldn't say anyway."
"It should be a good-hitting game," he adds.
N. D. State lies helpless at 9-0
New Mexico Highlands, also finished with a 9-0 mark, took third.
NEW YORK (UPI)—It's hard to believe that a team with a 9-0 record is helpless, but that's North Dakota State's current situation.
The Bison, who completed their regular season schedule last week, know their hopes for derailing San Diego State from a third consecutive small college championship lies completely with the unbeaten Aztecs.
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San Diego State, which retained its top ranking this week with 29 first place ballots, has two games remaining. North Dakota State's only hopes to surpass the Aztecs now lie with Tennessee State, which faces San Diego State Saturday, and major college Utah State, the Aztecs' opponent the following week.
"Sports Quotes"
Informed that Missouri had been beaten by Oklahoma, Colorado's Eddie Crowder said: "It is a surprising league. No, it is no surprise what Nebraska did to us today, though. That's what they
were supposed to do as determined by you experts (writers) back in July.
"Balanced teams are so much more numerous in the Conference it is a tough, tough league."
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Cost----$12----Includes your ticket Make your reservations in person at SUA office
Bowl tickets still available
An approximate number of tickets requested was not determined because of the heavy amount of mail that has been coming into the department.
Tickets for the Orange Bowl contest between the University of Kansas and Penn State are still available, the KU athletic department announced last night.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
KU-Mizzou battle spiced with 'extras'
21
Photo by Jim Wheeler
Running to daylight
Although there's not much room, KU tailback Junior Riggins (21) squeezed through two Kansas State defenders—Greg Marn (33) and Lon Austin (55) for a short gain. Austin was blocked out of position by KU's John Mosier (not pictured), and Riggins sidestepped Marn. The 38-29 Jayhawk victory nailed down an Orange Bowl berth and set the stage for tomorrow's conference showdown with Missouri.
Attorneys blast validity of Kentucky racing rules
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)—Attorneys for Boston millionaire Peter Fuller, owner of 1968 Kentucky Derby winner Dancer's Image, have challenged the validity of a Kentucky racing rule which disqualifies a horse from participating in the purse if evidence of phenylbutazone, or a derivative, is found during urinanalysis.
Arthur Grafton, one of three attorneys for Fuller at a State Racing Commission hearing, made his challenge during the fourth day of testimony.
He pointed to the state racing act, which directs the commission to make regulations to prevent the use of improper devices or the administration of drugs or stimulants "for the purpose of affecting the speed or health of horses in races in which they are to participate."
Under the commission's current rules, a horse is prohibited from participating in distribution of the purse on the basis of evidence that the drug was in his system, regardless of whether it affects the horse's speed or health.
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"If a trace of phenylbutazone doesn't affect the speed or health of a horse, maybe the commission doesn't have the authority to make such a rule," Grafton said.
His action was considered groundwork for a possible court appeal if the commission rejects this appeal by Fuller.
Most of the testimony yesterday came under cross examination of Kenneth W. Smith, the 52-year-old state chemist who conducted the post-race tests on the urine of Dancer's Image,
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
It would be convenient to consider the 77th renewal of Kansas-Missouri border hostilities in terms of an explosive offense vs. a rock-ribbed defense.
But a couple of variables—KU's sometimes gritty defense and Mizzou's sometimes devastating offense—have left the second guessers scratching their heads. The battle for at least a share of the Big Eight championship and the chance to vindicate major bowl invitations add extra spice to the showdown tomorrow in Columbia.
Missouri's defense, long a hallmark of Dan Devine-coached teams, has permitted its nine opponents only 11.7 points and 229 yards total offense per game. In both categories, the Bengals rank second nationally.
The Jayhawks (8-1) and Tigers (7-2) share the No. 1 spot in the conference with 5-1 marks both being thwarted by Oklahoma. The Sooners (4-1) must still meet Nebraska and Oklahoma State.
And Missouri also tops every defensive category in the Big Eight, allowing only 118 yards rushing and 111 yards passing per game. It's nothing new for the Devine era (67-19-6) during which Mizzou has held 27 opponents scoreless.
But the Tigers, switching to an I formation this fall, have added a new dimension. For a change, a Devine club displays some offensive finesse—and scores points.
Missouri ranks behind Kansas in rushing with an average harvest of 272 yards rushing and 393 yards total offense. The Tigers peaked with 56 points against Kansas State and have scored at a 28.2-point clip.
Still, it's the Mizzou defenders that draw deserved attention. Mainstays include All-America safety candidate Roger Wehrli and tackle Jay "Rocky" Wallace.
Wehrii has nabbed six of the 15 Missouri interceptions. The 187-pound senior is also a dangerous punt returner. Wallace, a 217-pound junior, leads a rugged six-man front.
That defensive wall includes tackle Mark Kuhlman (218), guards Carl Garber (203) and Roger Boyd (215), and ends Elmer Benhardt (201) and Bill Schmitt (21). The MU ends have
given quarterbacks fits with their pass rush all year.
Linebackers Steve Lundholm (191) and Nip Weisenfelds (193) have also been steady performers, and Wehrli has talented cohorts in the backfield with Butch Davis and George Fountain. Only five of the MU defensive starters are seniors.
But Mizzou's vaunted defense will face its sternest test. The Jayhawks lead the nation in scoring (39.9 average), rank third in rushing (312.9 average) and fourth in total offense. KU's 454.9-yard total offense figure easily leads the Big Eight.
The Tigers boast a rare two-quarterback combination in scrambler Terry McMilland and passer Garnett Phelps. Its stable of running backs is paced by tailback Greg Cook (642 yards), but with alternating fullbacks Ron McBride (202) and James Harrison (237), Missouri has a combined rushing output of 681 yards.
MU's passing attack, while not statistically awesome, carries
the "big play" potential in reserve wingback Mel Gray—the fleet :09.3 juco transfer from Fort Scott, Kansas. Gray has latched onto 12 aerials for 265 yards, including a 79-yard touchdown bomb.
Gray plays behind a shifty 182-pounder, Jon Staggers, whose 332 yards rushing and 18 receptions for 159 yards makes him a double threat.
A record Missouri crowd of 60,500 is anticipated.
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THE BIG BLUE The Big 8 CHAMPS ORANGE BOWL BOUND
American Graphics Ltd., foremost promotional Photographers, asked the Kansas Jayhawks to become one of the first football teams in America to participate in the country's most unique color display print program. The Big Blue responded, and the result is a complete squad picture 22 x 28 in full color with a gorgeous fall setting in the background highlighted by the Campanile.
This print is being made available for every loyal Jayhawker to keep as a memory of this great victorious season. Great for the den, recreation room, office, this framing print will be loved by everyone.
Here is a genuine keepsake and collector's item so be sure and order now as there is a limited quantity, and this offer expires February 1, 1969.
Net proceeds will be used by the Kansas City Alumni Association to support programs in the Athletic Department.
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Friday, November 22, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Robinson pool washes away cares
Praised as one of the outstanding swimming facilities in the United States, the swimming pool in Robinson Gymnasium and Natatorium presents a form of recreation that is both entertaining and invigorating.
The T-shaped pool has a main swimming area which is 75 feet long and 45 feet wide. Six lanes available in either direction provide adequate space for the competition swimmer or for the person who swims for fun and likes to imagine himself competing.
The entire pool area is surfaced with ceramic tile. Two one-meter diving boards and one three-meter board are available.
Special features of the pool include underwater lightning, underwater sound, and an underwater observation window.
Students can use the swimming pool from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Members of the faculty, staff and their immediate families can enjoy the swimming facilities during the faculty-swim hours from 4 to 6 p.m. Sunday.
Besides the swimming facilities, Robinson Gym houses basketball, volleyball, badminton and handball courts.
Wichita offered for inauguration
TOPEKA (UPI)—Representatives of Gov. Robert B. Docking will fly to Wichita Friday morning to tour facilities which have been offered for the governor's inauguration Jan. 13.
Patrick Burnau, the governor's press secretary, said they plan to tour the new Civic Center, and discuss the possibility of having the inauguration at Wichita. He said a decision on the site of the ceremony probably would not be made until Saturday or Monday.
The governor's inauguration is traditionally held in Topeka at the Municipal Auditorium, but on Jan. 13, the date of the ceremony, the state convention of the Kansas Association of School Boards (KASB) is scheduled in the auditorium.
The local Chamber of Commerce reached an agreement with the association yesterday to free the facility for state use Jan. 13.
Tom Schwartz, president of the Greater Topeka Chamber of Commerce, said the KASB has agreed to have its business sessions that day in a movie theater across the street from the auditorium, and go to the Mid-America Fairgrounds exhibition hall for a dinner that night.
The governor's representatives are looking elsewhere for a site because most of the hotel and motel rooms in the capital city have been reserved by the KASB. Several thousand persons usually attend the inauguration and the ball, many from out of town.
Intramural and intercollegiate programs have been organized in all of these sports as well as some outdoor sports such as tennis and softball.
Progams for most intramural sports this semester are already filled, however, said Miss Delores Copeland, instructor of physical education.
In the spring besides the usual men's and women's intramurals,
a co-ed volleyball and softball program is also conducted, she said.
Women's intercollegiate basketball team tryouts will begin Dec. 3, Miss Copeland said.
Miss Copeland encouraged women to try out for these teams and said, too often women think they're not good enough for intercollegiate competition, but don't realize that we give instruction.
Students clash with police second time in one month
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Hundreds of jeering students clashed with police Thursday in an attempt to shut down strike-orn San Francisco State College for the second time this month.
Several students were seized by police squads during a short-lived melee.
Three policemen were injured, including a campus guard. No injuries were reported among the demonstrators.
Big Eight selects 'Queen of Queens' at OU-NU game
Susan Wassenburg, Topека junior and KU's 1968 Homecoming Queen will be participating in the "Queen of Queens" contest this weekend at the Okla home-Nebraska football game in Norman, Okla.
For the second year, the Big Eight is bringing to one of its season games the homecoming queens from all of its eight members. From this "Queens' Weekend," the Conference representative to reign over the Centennial Year of Collegiate Football next season will be chosen.
The winner of the contest will be the guest of collegiate football's "Wild Card" television game. There she will compete against representatives from 10 major collegiate athletic conferences. The queen of collegiate football will be chosen from three coeds.
Artichoke Progress
DAVIS, Calif. (UPI) — The artichoke season is being extended by 10 to 50 days through the use of a natural plant-growth hormone discovered in University of California agricultural research.
The hormone, known as gibberellin, makes the artichokes grow faster and bud earlier, thus extending the harvest from late fall through spring. The longer season can be expected to bring about a more uniform supply-price relationship, benefiting both consumers and producers.
It was the fourth clash between students and police this fall. The school reopened Wednesday under police guard after being closed for several days because of sporadic violence.
The uproar began with a march on campus buildings from a noon rally attended by nearly 1,500 of the campus's 18,000 students. About 500 persons participated in the march as administrators summoned police.
Within 45 minutes the demonstration was put down and uniformed officers departed. An hour later, however, militants again attempted to disrupt classes.
The noon rally was called after talks collapsed between President Robert R. Smith and representatives of militant groups, including the Black Student Union (BSU) and the Third World Liberation Front, an organization of non-white minorities.
"We have no alternative except to make it impossible for this school to function," declared Roger Alvarado of the Third World at the rally. As the march began, the students chanted, "On strike, shut it down."
Within minutes, the crowd on the college commons swelled to more than 2,500. A group of about 30 climbed to the top of the main administration building as "observers" but were later removed by police.
Similar demonstrations, plus scores of fires and small bomb blasts, led Smith to close the campus Nov. 13, seven days after the BSU and Third World went on strike to support a series of demands. One involved reinstatement of George Murray, a Black Panther suspended as a part-time English instructor for urging students to carry guns on campus to defend themselves against "racist administrators."
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AURH to host rally Sat. evening
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) is organizing a pep rally to greet the Jayhawk football team at 8:15 Saturday night when they return from Missouri.
The pep rally will be in front of Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
AURH social committee, said recordings of "Hawk It To 'Em," a song recently written and recorded by a local rock group, will be played.
Barbara Gille, Kansas City junior and co-chairman of the
The pep band, which usually plays at rallies, will not be back from Missouri, Miss Gille explained.
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12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 22, 1968
ASC works on basketball sellout
Are you a KU student wanting to buy a basketball season ticket? Forget it, they sold out at 4:15 yesterday afternoon.
In 1936, the All-Student Council limited the number of student basketball season tickets sold to 7,000. Now ASC members feel the number is outdated and want it changed.
At their meeting Tuesday night, the ASC set up a committee to study the problem.
"I can't speak for Stinson but I think he tended to agree with us that there is a problem and that more tickets should be available to the students," Craig said.
Committee member Jim Craig, Waterville, Ohio, fifth year pharmacy student said members of the committee met with Wade Stinson, athletic director and Stinson seemed concerned.
Sky team seeks highs in Florida
At the present time, only 7,000 season tickets are provided for nearly 17,000 students. Last year, tickets were sold out on Thursday also.
A three-man team will represent the University of Kansas at the National Collegiate Parachute meet in Florida over Thanksgiving vacation.
K-State, Oklahoma, Missouri and other Big Eight schools will be among the more than 40 colleges competing.
The meet consists of two events, said John Koenig, Rochester, N.Y., senior, one of the participants. Accuracy is judged by how close one can come to a target. Style is judged by how well one performs maneuvers in free-fall.
Mike Canella, Melean, junior and Dave Hammel, Wichita freshman, are the two other KU participants.
Craig said while the group talked about the problems involved they did not come up with a solution.
"We talked about the possibility of raising the price of student season tickets so we could afford to raise the allotment to students. We talked about limiting the sales of season tickets to non-University people."
Craig said finding a solution would take a while and probably no action would be taken this year for those students who did not receive tickets.
Monte Johnson, assistant athletic director, said season tickets sold out three hours earlier than last year.
A record will be kept of the number of students who came in after they were sold out, Johnson added, so the athletic department will have some idea how many students still wanted tickets.
"There were about 20 people waiting in line when we sold the last tickets and a few more came in after that. There will still be 500 single game tickets available to students for every home game." Johnson said.
Johnson said that at only two home games last year were all 500 single game student tickets sold.
Students wishing to purchase
single game tickets can do so for 50 cents per game. There are 12 home basketball games this season.
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Purchasers of season tickets this year had much less of a problem with waiting in line than last. This year, four waiting lines were used to facilitate traffic, as opposed to the two used last year.
Bar Girls Thrive In Buenos Aires
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) — The Buenos Aires area has about 3,000 bar girls who push drinks valued at a total of 14 million pesos ($40,000) daily.
The "coperas," as they are called, keep one-third of the price of the drink. The rest goes to the house.
International Club to throw party Friday
The International Club will sponsor a party from 8 p.m. to 11:30 Friday at Westminster Center (1204 Oread), said Zuhair Duhaiby, Saudi Arabian senior and president of the club.
Admission is 75 cents for members and $1.25 for nonmembers. There will be free beer and the music will be provided by "The Five of Us," Duhaiby said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Mrs. Harrison bound over,1 count
Mrs. Leonard Harrison, assistant instructor of history and wife of the director of Lawrence's Ballard Community Center, was discharged on one of two counts of felonious assault in a preliminary hearing before Probate Judge Charles Rankin yesterday.
Mrs. Harrison was bound over for trial on the other count before District Judge Frank Gray in the February session of District Court.
Rankin ruled sufficient evidence for a trial on one count but discharged Mrs. Harrison on the second count of assault.
She was arrested Oct. 29 after allegedly assaulting a Douglas County undersheriff and a Wichita police detective when they attempted to conduct a search of the Harrison home.
The same day, her husband Leonard Harrison was arrested in Lawrence and taken to Wichita where he was one of nine charged on seven felony counts.
Chester Lewis, Wichita attorney and lawyer for both Mr. and Mrs. Harrison, tried to prove from the following testimony that Mrs. Harrison was acting within her rights to resist illegal arrest.
Both Douglas County Undersheriff Wayne Schmille and Wichita police detective Gerald E. Skelton testified they took a search warrant to the Harrison home.
They were authorized to search for articles of evidence for the case against Leonard Harrison. The officers said they had a warrant for Harrison's arrest at that time.
Both Skelton and Schmille said Skelton stopped Mrs. Harrison from using the phone during their search because they thought she would attempt to call her husband, who was the object of another search at that time.
Mrs. Harrison said she had not tried to call her husband, but that she was phoning W. S. Robinson, head of the department of history, to inform him that she would not be able to teach her class.
In separate testimony, Schmille and Skelton said they arrested Mrs. Harrison after she ran from the house while they were conducting their search. Both said she stabbed them with a ball-point pen when they tried to bring her back to the house. Skelton said Mrs. Harrison also bit his wrist.
Neither officer was certain whether Mrs. Harrison had been
KU Chamber Choir performs here Sunday
The KU Chamber Choir will perform at 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the University Theatre.
The choir is composed of 60 sophomores and juniors selected by audition.
Jess Rose, assistant in the choral department, will direct the choir which will perform works by Morley, Hassler, Brahms, Berger and Hanson.
PERSONAL
REWARD to anyone knowing the where-abouts of Jim Conrad! He left an ugly old bug with us while he took a fabulous FIAT out for a test drive. We wonder if we'll ever see him again. Why don't you make friends with a FIAT... and watch it turn into love!
informed that she should not leave the house during the search.
After saying that she was not allowed to use the phone, Mrs. Harrison testified: "I said, 'Am I under arrest?' Somebody said 'no.'" She said she then walked out of the house. Mrs. Harrison said she "panicked" when the officers shouted at her.
Midwest Imports
1035 Minnesota Ave.
Kansas City, Kansas
Mrs. Harrison said she met Schmille after she had circled a neighbor's house to return to her own home.
Schmille said that Mrs. Harrison then asked him if she would be arrested if she "did something to one of the officers." In her testimony, Mrs. Harrison emphatically denied asking this question.
Schmille testified that Mrs. Harrison asked him if the warrant called for her arrest. He said he told her it did not.
Schmille contended that Mrs. Harrison stabbed him with a pen after he answered her question saying he probably would arrest her.
Mrs. Harrison told the court
she did not remember the circumstances surrounding the alleged stabbing of the officer
Skelton said he joined Schmille in restraining Mrs. Harrison, who was struggling and screaming. Skelton, Schmille and Mrs. Harrison all said Skelton hit Mrs. Harrison with a large flashlight during the struggle.
Skelton said, however, he had not intended to use the five-cell flashlight as a weapon when he went to Schmille's assistance.
Mrs. Harrison said she was screaming because the officers were twisting her arms behind her back. She said the hand cuffs were too tight.
Mrs. Barbara Pearson, 1011 Kentucky, a neighbor of the Harrisons who witnessed the struggle, testified she overheard one of the men tell Mrs. Harrison, "Shut up, or I'll break it for you."
Lewis attempted to show that Mrs. Harrison's arrest was illegal because she had not committed a crime in the presence of the officers.
Harrison's struggle was rightful resistance to an illegal arrest because, at the time the officers tried to restrain her, Mrs. Harrison had not committed assault and had not been arrested.
Lewis contended that Mrs.
County Attorney Daniel Young said, however, that because of the nature of the warrants and the situation, the arrest was valid.
Lawrence attorney Fred Six assisted Lewis in the case.
Caracas meeting draws KU profs
Two KU biologists attended the Fourth Congress of South American Zoology in Caracas, Venezuela.
J. Knox Jones, Jr., professor of zoology and associate director of the KU Museum of Natural History, and John A.W. Kirsch, a National Science Foundation post-doctoral fellow, were among the more than 300 scientists at the meeting.
RENT
A NEW
FORD
From
John Haddock Ford
VI 3-3500
23rd and Alabama
Lawrence Lumber
Complete Supply
of
- shelving
- paints
- piping
- popeting
19th and Massachusetts VI 3-1341
bulletin boards
!MIAMI BOUND?
KANSAS
ORANGE
BOWL &
UNIVERSITY
Wear
“THE ORANGE BOWL SWEATSHIRT”
The perfect attire for NEW YEARS DAY
on the beach or at the game (if you can’t get away, wear it home to impress your Silo Tech friends.)
YOUR CHOICE
ORANGE (great color) with blue lettering
BLUE (as in GO BIG BLUE) with orange lettering
275
short sleeve; designed
for a warm climate
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Mr. Galvin:
ADVERTISING IS A SHOWCASE FOR INGENUITY... THE PRODUCT SALE IS ACCIDENTAL
Franklin Thoreau
"If I were starting life over again, I am inclined to think that I would go into the advertising business in preference to almost any other. This is because advertising has come to cover the whole range of human needs and also because it combines real imagination with a deep study of human psychology. Because it brings to the greatest number of people actual knowledge concerning useful things, it is essentially a form of education... It has risen with ever-growing rapidity to the dignity of an art. It is constantly paving new paths... The general raising of the standards of modern civilization among all groups of people during the past half century would have been impossible without the spreading of the knowledge of higher standards by means of advertising."
Dear Mr. Galvin :
One mysterious aspect of business today is the mind-bending talent of the advertising agency.Increased advertising sophistication and an indefatigable quest for originality have produced campaigns which subordinate the client's chance of future profits.
Advertising theorists maintain if the campaign is creative, the product will automatically sell. Thus, ads today shock rather than sell, stimulate emotions rather than discuss the product. What is selling merchandise today is not the advantages of the product but the ingenuity of the ad.
The omnipresence of television has replaced other media in importance. Thus, TV commercials have to be more exciting than the programming; commercial breaks cannot bore the viewer. Consequently, heavily advertised products have developed distinct personalities: the Volkswagen, the Lay Potato Chip, the Coca Cola ads all have distinguishable characteristics. Alka-Seltzer's introspective conversations between a man and his stomach, Excedrin's documental analyses of the headache and Goodyear's tire for the woman with no man around are advertising marvels. But is selling the product the ultimate purpose, or is that purpose proving the ad-man's creative genius?
Thus the question are today's ad campaigns designed to shock a media-controlled public into buying or to prove the creative splendor of the advertising business? I contend business is being trampled upon by the ad agencies' quest for creativity; and, therefore, if the product does sell it is strictly accidental.
Arnold Shells
Sincerely,
Arnold Shelly
Arnold Shelby
Arnold Shelby Latin American Studies, Tulane
---
WHO CARES ABOUT STUDENT OPINION?
BUSINESSMEN DO.
Dialogue
Three chief executive officers-The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company's Chairman, Russell DeYoung, The Dow Chemical Company's President, H. D. Doan, and Motorola's Chairman, Robert W. Galvin are responding to serious questions and viewpoints posed by students about business and its role in our changing society and from their perspective as heads of major corporations are exchanging views through means of a campus/corporate Dialogue Program on specific issues raised by leading student spokesmen.
Here, Arnold Shelby, in Liberal Arts at Tulane, is exploring a point with Mr. Galvin. Keenly interested in Latin American political and social problems, Mr. Shelby toured various countries in the area last summer on a "shoe-string" budget. He plans a career in journalism.
In the course of the entire Dialogue Program, Arthur Klebanoff, a Yale senior, will probe issues with Mr. Galvin; as will Mark Bookspan, a Chemistry major at Ohio State, and David G. Clark, in graduate studies at Stanford, with Mr. DeYoung; and similarly, David M. Butler, Electrical Engineering, Michigan State, and Stan Chess, Journalism, Cornell, with Mr. Doan.
All of these Dialogues will appear in this publication, and other campus newspapers across the country, throughout this academic year. Campus comments are invited, and should be forwarded to Mr. DeYoung, Goodyear, Akron, Ohio; Mr. Doan, Dow Chemical, Midland, Michigan; or Mr. Galvin, Motorola, Franklin Park, Illinois, as appropriate.
Dear Mr. Shelby:
Advertising is one of the most often criticized and least understood professions. It is also one of the most complex, involving consumer needs and desires, market economics, tastes, semantics, the arts, persuasion, and a host of other factors. In advertising, as in many other fields, there is a constant quest for originality and creativity. Today's consumer—more sophisticated and better educated than ever before—demands it.
Different advertising techniques are needed to sell different products. Audiences must be carefully evaluated. Advertising that sells soft drinks could not be successfully used to sell-say-heavy machinery, surgical instruments or textbooks. Effective techniques must be visually or graphically arresting-and augmented by carefully chosen language to express the salient features of the product or service to the listening, viewing, or reading audience. A "creative" ad that merely displays ingenuity, or shocks, without presenting the product in such a manner as to persuade its purchase on the basis of merit, as well as its intangible benefits, cannot be considered really creative.
Advertising is never an end in itself; its goal is to communicate knowledge so that the consumer may exercise his freedom of choice, his intelligence, and his desire to buy or not. However, even the most creative and persuasive advertising will not sustain sales of inferior merchandise for very long.
Television has not replaced other media in importance. While the impact of television cannot be denied, use of print advertising, billboards, direct mail, and other media are at an all-time high.
Like you, I deplore pedestrian and tasteless advertising. Likewise, I deplore "trashy" books, inferior movies, poor plays. Advertising has the complex task of appealing to all tastes, all intelligence levels, all ages, and both sexes. A person is subject daily to over 16,000 advertising messages. Many are informative, entertaining, motivating, precise, practical; many show a lack of creativity, poor taste, and over-use of gimmicks. In the final analysis, judgment is passed by each of us in our buying decisions.
In our sensitivity to that which we may find objectionable, we should also note that the advertising business donates some $260 million dollars' worth of public service advertising each year. Smokey the Bear, the Peace Corps, Keep America Beautiful, the Red Cross, the United Negro College Fund, Mental Health, CARE, UNICEF, Radio Free Europe, and many more worthwhile campaigns.
From what I know of advertising firms and their people, I believe the profession offers one of the most challenging, fulfilling careers available. Keen young critics like yourself are needed to constantly upgrade the quality of its services, and shape them to fit the precise future needs of society. This will continue to assure responsiveness to the needs expressed by the consuming public.
Sincerely,
John W. Eaton
Robert W. Galvin
Chairman, Motorola Inc.
Friday, November 22,1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread. 1-9
Sony Tape Recorder, console with speakers in either end and matching bookend speakers. $300. VI 2-3010. 11-22
Mustang snow tires--Last year's design. New 1st line 695-14 Kelly cut to $15.00 each plus $1.91 Federal tax. Ray Stonebacks 11-22
1966 Honda 450 in excellent condition,
low mileage. Helmet included. $450.
Also 105mm F 2.5 lens for Pentax $20.
2551 Redbud Lane #1, VI 2-6833 1-623
1-623
Conn Connstellation Trumpet, with trigger. Used one year, excellent condition. Will sell cheap. Call Jim Burke at VI 9-1000, rm. 320. 12-3
FREE POSTERS with gasoline at SMITTY'S CHAMPLIN, 1802 West 23rd. St. Also we have tires $15; Batteries $25; Antifreeze $1.93. Gal. Change Oil, Sandwiches and picnic items. 1-9
Two tickets to Missouri-Kansas game,
Nov. 23. Best offer takes both. Call
Dave Laney at either VI 3-4811 or
VI 2-8434.
Must sell set of wedding rings. Large 4 pt. diamond and interlocking wedding ring. Cheap! Call Larry, VI 3-7809. 12-3
Double bed mattress, new $25.00.
Washing machine which needs a transmission $5 to $10.00. VI 2-0358.
12-3
RUMMAGE SALE, Sat. November 23,
7:00 a.m. to noon at Community
Building. Lawrence Insurance Women.
11-22
Two KU-MU tickets for sale to the highest bidder. VI 2-1073. 11-22
Pair of snow tires, 6.50x13 in good
condition. Reasonable price, 124.
7203. 11-22
'64 Chevette V-8, 4-speed, excelent
Chevy V-8, sold soon. Will
cheap. VI 3-8165. Will 12-4
Big Trees. Little Trees, Short Trees.
Tall Trees, Squat Trees, Long Trees,
Many Trees, any Tree, Your Tree, All
Christmas trees, your tree.
Christmas trees pay. See them—BUY
exer pay. See them—BUY
YOURS—at TINY TIM'S CHRISTMAS
Tree STAND, 23rd and IUMALE. 12-4
160 VW Microbus—newly overhauled,
1963 engine, good tires. Skin diving
flippers, mask, snorkel, and knife.
Call VI 2-6547 after 6 p.m. 11-22
1966 MG 1100 sedan white w/blk in
loreal—local one—owner—exceptional
car. This one is a Dr. See it at Jerry
Allen Volkswagen. 2522 Iowa. 12-5
1963 Olds Convert., very nice rag-top,
one of the hard-to-find clean ones.
Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa
12.5
Honda Super 90. 160 miles. Runs
great. $175. VI 2-9322. 12-4
See your local Volkswagen dealer (Jerry Allen Volkswagen) for 100% brand new cars, 64, 65, 66, 67 & 88 used VW's in stock. These cars are fully re-conditioned, such as Bugs, Glias, Sq. BK's, Brads, Buess, Jerry Allen Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa. 12-5
1965 Ford Wagon, 4 dr. w/air & all the extras. This week only $1469 at Jerry Allen Volkswagon, 2522 Iowa 13-7
Almost new 8-track stereo and stereo
speakers and tapei
VIII V-17453.
Brother Zig Zag sewing machine for only $100. Originally $328—many extras. Also Royal Ultronic electric typewriter $110, and Sony AC portable tape recorder $65. 842-6358 after 6 p.m. 12-5
1959 Triumph TR-3 Roadster. Including a hard top, convertible top and tonneau cover. A new clutch and transmission assemblage. Radio and navigation systems changed 158 miles ago. Engine recently overhauled. 2 new tires, dual carburators. Bucket seats and four-speed. Tach oil water temp, amps mileage gauge. Dual mileage gauge. Windshed washer Broken zipper on the tonneau cover. Disc brakes. Rack and pinion steering. Left tailight is cracked. Phone 212-648-7020. Ask for Kay. Test drive 2 to 5. $955.99. It's the $600 excitement. 12-2
Fender Stratocaster guitar with case,
and Fender Concert amp—good condition.
Lite. New Concord bass guitar
Recommended offers accept
Phone VI 3-6305. 12-5
1961 Oldsmobile Hardtod power-
vault 3800 EFI Nake: #425 McCollum V1 2-600-125-5
Nake: #425 McCollum V1 2-600-125-5
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Blar-B-Q--outdoor pit, rib slab to go; $3.25; Rib order;
$1.50; Brist sandwich, $8.5; chicken;
$1.15; Bristet sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tt
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times a week delivery. Diaper and Baby Laundry Service $16 a month. Family Laundry for 9 lbs. Call SMI9-1 - III V-807-3
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 12-3
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages-anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 11-22
Pay-Less
SHOES
1300 W.23rc Lawrence
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Downtown Plant
202 W. 6th
V1 3-4011
Drive-In
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
Pick Up Station
2346 Iowa
VI 1-3-9868
TOMBOW
LA PETITE GALERIE
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
Mont Bleu Ski Route 2, Lawrence VI 3-2363
TRAVEL TIME LET
LFT
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
TYPING
We are now taking orders
The International Club trip to Mexico—Everyone invited. Amount $150 each includes emergency fund of $10 which will be returned. The only profits gained is the pleasure you gain from seeing Mexico at Christmas information. Gary Napier VI 3-9745 of Schultz VI 2-5486 or during day from 9:30 to 3:30 International Club office, 109 Student Union. 11-22
We wish to disassociate ourselves completely from this weekend's 63-hour KUOK Ellsworth Marathon. We'll go for nothing to do with setting it up or with the free prizes being given away. We'd never allow ourselves to be linked with all that music and sound. We'd believe all that you've heard—B—BGY 11-22
Make Your Christmas Reservations now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
RECORDS: I tape new records and sell them, played once. Classical, both vocal and non-vocal, baroque, etc. $6 list for $2 David Fisher, VI 3-18-90
Orange Bowl fever got you? Cool it with this Orange Bowl! Special. It includes balls, 10 each, 12 for $1.00. Great for a party or just have a ball by yourself. Topys Popcorn and Icecream Malls Shopping Center, 11-22 7175.
Former Harvard and Univ. of Minne-
saukee, the University of Notre Dame,
ports,theses,VI 3-7267, 11-25
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN BUS, each Sunday from 9th & Mass, at 8:30 and 10:30. Route: GSP & Corbin, Jayhawk Blvd to Chi Omega monastery, Engel Church, Nairn Monastery, Verver and Naismith; 19th to Stewart Dr. Worship at 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. 12-3
Thirsty? Come to Sandy's. Pepsi Hour 3 to 4 every afternoon. Get a 15c Pepsi, Dr. Pepper or Root Beer for just 10c. 12-4
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
612 North 2nd (Next to Shaw's Auto Service) North Lawrence
Kwiki Car Wash
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
Be prepared—
get antifreexe—starting service
2434 Iowa V12-1008
HEAD SKIS
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
...A Very Private Club
Nightly Entertainment
THE UnderDog
Now
at KU BOOKSTORE
SUPPORT NEEDY CHILDREN
CHILDREN
Buy UNICEF Cards
and Calendars now
at KU BOOKSTORE
Good Food—Reasonable Cold Beer—Table Tables Students Welcome
"Open till 2 a.m."
STRICK'S DINER
On H-Way 59-40 N. of the bridge
Exclusive Representative
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night burts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
- Badges
- Guards
HELP WANTED
- Novelties - Favors
- Lavaliers
- Rings
Part-time for 11 a.m. till 2 p.m. Evenings 5 till 12, 5 days a week. Start $1.25 per hr. Apply in person to Grit's Burger Bar. 1618 W. 23rd. tt
Ladulters Rings
Sportswear Mugs
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SMC elect. Located near Oliver, Hall, VI. 12873.
- Sportswear - Mugs
- Fashion - Tailoring
TERM PAPERS, THEMES, THEISI
KU graduate with new electric machine.
Fast service. Call Mrs. Currier
after 5:30 p.m., VI 2-1409.
1-8
Porter wanted. Needed to help me carry all my prizes from the 63-hour KUOK Ellsworth Marathon this weekend. I will be winning free hamburgers, ice cream, and popcorn from KUOK. Meet me at Ellsworth before midnight Sunday. 11-22
- Paddles
- Trophies
Experienced in typing thesmes, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
er with typem type. Prompt
efficient review. Phone VI 3-9584.
Mrs. E.W. Wright 12-9
FOR RENT
Male Needed to work 3-4 hrs., 5 days a week. Work would include janitortype work at a sorority house. Call VI 2-6303 & ask for Mrs. Mitchell
- Cups - Awards
Room with private bath for woman
Two blocks from campus. VI $3-7432. 12-4
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Horses boarded—large box stalls
with 12-335 horse tails
VI 2-3353 or VI 3-16268, 12-4
Furnished 2-bedroom house, South,
North. All rooms. Avail now.
now Call VI 3-0570. 12-3
Upsittai apartment. Share with male KU student. Four and one-half blocks from campus. 2 blocks from uptown. Six months plus utilities. VI 3-6305. 12-5
The Party Place!
Mont Bleu Ski Lodge
Route 2, Lawrence
V1 3-2363
WANTED
Male roommate wanted to share ground floor of a house. $50 a month.
Call Terry, VI 3-1879 after 9 p.m.
11:22
Male graduate student wants to share an apartment close to campus by December 1st. Call Rolf at VI 3-3275. 11-22
SERVICES OFFERED
Audio Equipment Service by competent personnel interested in high fidelity Haynes Ray Audio, VICT, MF, and Eve, Heller High School Center 11-22
LOST
Lost in Strong Hall—boy's gold ring with yellow paradot stone. Contact Marsha Bryan. Rm. 643 Oliver. VI 2-7000. Reward. 12-4
PERSONAL
Gold Washburn Univ. class ring,
Dome shaped with blue stone—Lost
in Robinson gym thursday. Reward.
Please call VI 2-1588 after 5:00 p.m.
Cynthia—I'm lost without you. I'm going to try to find myself at the 63-hour KUOK Ellsworth Marathon. Meet me there anytime between 9:00 a.m. this Friday and midnight Sunday. I desperate—George. 11-22
COLD?? I have a three-quarter length warm winter coat for sale. It is a ZERO KING, size 42 regular. It is made in Green with a warm pile lining. It is a $65.00 coat that is going for only $55.00. Take advantage of this offer now up to a good winter coat at a bargain. In Barry Arthur VI 3-2200 anytime. 11-22
Ebenenerz You can fill your money bags for Christmas Future by selling Christmas trees for Tiny Tim between Dec. 2 and Dec. 24. Pay? A "God-Bless-Everyone" $1.50 per hour. Call VI 3-4324 after 7 p.m. 12-4
Unusual Gift Ideas Artist Supplies
- Art supplies and canvas
* Liquitex now in 8 oz. jars
- Complete decoupage materials — Boxes, purses, decorative plaques, lining paper
CONCORD SHOP
Div. of McConnell Lumber
THE LOUNGE Budwieser on Tap
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
WEST END OF HILLCREST BOWL
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
844 E. 13th VI 13-3877
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
Plenty of Free Parking
Owl
9TH & IOWA
Mister Donut
HOME OF
THE CHALK HAWK
33
GOODYEAR TIRES
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Complete Mechanical Service
Bride Adjustment 9%c
Great Job
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment.
Page Fina Service
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Come In Anytime
ORDERS DELIVERED
523 West 23rd
842-9563
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 22, 1968
ROTC program may end
(Continued from Page 1)
range from completely abolishing the -ROTC program to increasing its size, he indicated.
Burt English, assistant professor of political science, said he had written Orel in response to Cobb's letter and suggested that ROTC did not belong on campus. Obedience and academic freedom are not compatible, he said.
Saricks said the Senate committee, not yet fully selected, should begin work some time after Thanksgiving. It will consist of five faculty and two student members, he said.
He added that public, and particularly student, opinion was "uneasy" toward the military. Having ROTC on campus might alienate many students, he said, and necessary parts of the ROTC program could just as easily by carried out off campus.
Orel said there are three faculty members and one student serving on the College committee. Its report is due Dec. 17.
English said he felt most of his colleagues would agree with him.
The final decision on ROTC rests with the University Senate and the College faculty, Saricks said.
★★
K-State College may drop ROTC
PITTSBURG-Kansas State College students may soon be relieved of compulsory Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) requirements.
Alvin Proctor, academic vice president of KSC, appointed a committee last week to "reconsider" the mandatory ROTC program here. The committee will also consider compulsory physical education courses.
Alternatives under study, he said are dropping ROTC requirements while continuing physical education, making both voluntary, or retaining the present program. A decision is expected by next semester, he said.
At the present time, KSC is under contract to the Army to require all male students to enroll in ROTC courses in order to graduate. Proctor said the college must give the Army a year of notice if it wishes to alter the contract.
KSC is not considering drop ping voluntary ROTC, he said
KU law graduate defends Harrison
"Black power has been substituted in place of civil rights. The 'we shall overcome' idea is dead. I had a right to quit the NAACP—despite all the marches, protests and pray-ins, black conditions steadily worsened."
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Foreign Students, Interested in Thanksgiving Day dinner next Thursday? Visit the Dean of Foreign Students' office. 226 Strong.
Foreign Students. Information is now available in 226 Strong on the Michigan State Christmas program as in this month's issue of the newsletter.
Lewis first became involved in the civil rights movement while attending KU law school with James Logan, former law school dean.
Lewis said the white, liberal civil rights movement is dead.
Rock Products Conference, 9 a.m.
NooF Room, Forum Kansas,
12:45 a.m.
"When the student council voted down the fair employment practice program, Jim Logan and I met and formed the F.A.C. T.S. party. We won the next election and Jim became student body president and I became vice president," said Lewis, smiling.
Prayers, Kansas Union.
Children's Theatre. 1:15 p.m. "The
Broadway Musical Theatre"
www.kansasunion.org
International Club Dancing Lesson,
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
SUA Special Film, 4 p.m. Felix
Nam, "Nam" Nation, Nam
Room Room, Kansas Union
(Continued from Page 1)
629 mts.ppt
Folk Dance Club. 7 p.m. 173 Robinson
Popular Film 7 & 9:30 p.m. "One Potato-Two Potato" Dyche Audi-
SUA Special Films. 7:30 p.m.
SUA and "Alexander Nevsky" 8:30
Bailey
When asked why more black students do not take part in campus politics and become leaders like himself, Lewis said:
Children's Theatre. 7:30 p.m. The
International Club. 8-12 p.m. Dance
International Club. 8-12 p.m.
with band Members and non-members welcome Westminster Center
*Simple Joys.* Hoch Auditorium
*Experimental* Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
*Theatre of the Taste*
Football. 1:30 pm. Missouri. There.
Ballet. 2:45 pm. Missouri. The
Little Princess." University Theatre.
**Popular Film**, 7 & 9.30 p.m. **One Potato-Two Potato**. Dyche *Audiolib*
Collegiates For Concern. 8 p.m.
"Simple Joys." Hoch Auditorium.
"I always had problems of race, but I wasn't raised to feel inferior and inadequate like most of these kids. I wasn't brought up in a ghetto or slum."
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
"Song of a Goat."
SUNDAY
Buses to Presbyterian Church. Leave 9th and Massachusetts 8:30 & 10:30 a.m. for worship at 9 and 11 a.m. Return bus after worship.
Carillon Recital. 3 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Concert Choir. 3:30 p.m. University Theatre
Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "One Potato-Two Potato" Dyche Audi-
Concert. 8 p.m. Sofa Noel and Jesus
G. Tutor, Swarthout Recital Hall.
SUA Special Film, 9 p.m. Felix
Rooms, Kansas University, Nam "Felix"
Room Room, Kansas Union
Wistfully, Lewis said, "I've often dreamed of what I might have been, had I been born a white. Who knows, I might have been President."
FABRICA
'Simple Joys' tonight
campus sex symbols, the fraternity housemothers.
Sugar Yaun - Pi Phi brightening one of our holiday LADYBUGS.
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
(Continued from Page 1)
Regardless of the problems or the aspects of the show that go just right, the cast feels it has been "fun" and for "a very good cause." Their goal, is the goal of Collegiate for Concern this year, is to raise more money than any other year. Last year, Collegiate for Concern raised nearly $400,000 to provide a pediatric center in South Vietnam.
Weather
Clear to partly cloudy with slightly above-normal temperatures was the weather bureau's forecast for today and Saturday. Highs in the 60s. Lows in the 30s. Precipitation probabilities 5 per cent tonight, 10 per cent tomorrow and Sunday.
EVERYONE SAYS
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.50 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, November 25,1969
CHEWEN
All-American
John Zook, KU's standout defensive end was named to United Press International's first team All-American squad last night. Zook said he considered his selection "a great honor" and attributed his success to the efforts of his teammates.
Discrimination charged
A suit has been filed in Lawrence Municipal Court charging Mae Burgert, 1807 Ohio St., with violation of the Lawrence Open Housing Ordinance.
The trial, which began last Wednesday, is in recess until the conclusion of presentation of evidence this Wednesday, Gerald L. Cooley, Lawrence attorney for the plaintiff, said.
Negro plaintiff Maurice Woodard, Houston, Tex., graduate student, in the suit charges the defendant with discrimination in housing after he attempted three times to rent a duplex from the defendant in August.
Variety show attracts few
By DONNA SHRADER Kansan Staff Writer
Emily Taylor, dean of women, sauntered onto the stage wearing a tattered commencement robe pushing a mop, and said, "What a hell of a way for a grown woman to make a living."
Dean Taylor was the main figure in her act for the Collegiate for Concern variety show held Friday and Saturday to raise money for Project Concern, an international medical relief organization.
The show could be considered a "flop" if you judge success in show biz by the crowds you draw or the money made. Of the over 4,000 seats in Hoch Auditorium only 125 were filled Friday and between 75 and 100 were filled Saturday. Only $450 was collected from 'ticket sales, falling far short of the hoped for goal.
The small crowd was attributed to the KU-MU game this weekend and the up-combng vacation.
Ticket prices could have been a little high, too, Mike Hall, Oak Park, Ill. sophomore and publicity chairman for the show said.
Dean Taylor with Dr. Raymond Schwegler, Dean William M. Balfour, Dean Francis Heller, Provost James Surface, and Professor Charles H. Oldfather offered their ideas of a 1988 fight for the faculty-administration to re-gain a voice in University affairs.
Songs such as "Where Has All Our Power Gone?" and "We Have Overcome" climaxed the act.
The show had a more serious side from dancing to singing. Delta Tau Delta folksinging group sang "Tobacco Road" and Molly McCray, Mission junior, and John Young, Shawnee Mission senior and co-director of the show, performed a medley of songs from West Side Story.
The show, although not a financial success, was considered "fun" by the cast, and as Dean Taylor said, "It's for a good cause, so how could I refuse."
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
103 aboard hijacked jet
MIAMI (UPI)—A Pan American jet bound from New York to Puerto Rico with 103 persons aboard was commandered to Cuba by three gunmen yesterday in the second such hijacking in 18 hours. A total of 190 persons were aboard the forced flights.
The latest act of air piracy took place about noon as the Pan Am jet clipper, the Mayflower, droned southward over the Atlantic off the coast of the Carolinas.
Miners still trapped
MANNINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)—One of two rescue teams which Sunday entered the Mannington No. 9 mine where 78 coal miners have been trapped for nearly five days reported finding "nothing unusual."
Although they reported finding no evidence of the trapped men, the team report appeared to have lifted the spirits of relatives and friends of the miners.
DeGaulle plan gets OK
LONDON (UPI)—President Charles de Gaulle's stiff austerity package won mild approval from western officials and bankers yesterday.
But some expressed doubts it will be enough to stop the stampede against the franc.
Foreign exchange markets in London and other European capitals, closed since last Wednesday, were to reopen today.
Weather
Partly cloudy and mild was the Weather Bureau's forecast for this area today. Winds should be from 15-20 mph with the high temperatures in the 60s. Lows tonight should be around 35 with cloudy and cooler weather forecast for tomorrow forenoon. Rain probabilities are 10 per cent today, 40 per cent tonight and 30 per cent tomorrow.
Jubilant Jayhawks end 9-1
By RON YATES
Kansan Sports Editor
COLUMBIA, Mo.-An hour before the Kansas-Missouri game, tickets were going for as high as $35. One man, holding a ticket triumphantly in his hand, called to a friend.
"I got a standing room," he beamed. He held up five fingers, three times to indicate the price.
At the north end of Memorial Stadium, a capital 'M' made from white stone layed on the stadium's grassy picnic area was quilted with squirmig bodies searching for a flat surface. The huge 'M' looked as if it were an M-shaped cake being devoured by an army of ants.
One half-hour before game time Memorial Stadium looked as if it were ready to spill over. Every seat in the stands was taken and still hundreds of people stood in line at the ticket windows straining and craning for
a look at the field. Ticket scalpers moved quickly and silently through the crowd. It was a good day for scalpers.
The staccato of bass drums boomed on the field and bounded into the stands. Golden-clad majortettes pulled and tugged at their costumes. A few band members polished their instruments with their sleeves. Cheerleaders, walking as if they were on trampolines, prepared the crowd for when the teams would come running onto the field. The crowd responded politely, but there would be no need for much cheer coaxing in this game.
Bands begin
Fifteen minutes before game time the bands paraded on the field eliciting cheers and jeers from the record 62,200 fans, depending upon which band was playing. The smell of popcorn, heavy under the stands in the concession areas, maundered out onto the field and
pirouetted into the sky where hovering helicopters and airplanes appeared to be massing for an attack.
In the press box, film cameras, trained on the crowd and marching bands, whirred while television cameras silently surveyed the pre-game spectacle. Sports writers bolted down Irish stew and coffee provided by the Missouri University athletic department as they waited for the opening kickoff. Tension was high even among the professional sports writers who are known for their objective "coolness" during games. The special loud speaker in the press box asked the Missouri and Kansas writers to "allay" their emotions during the game. Some thought the request was a joke.
The clicking of typewriters and teletype machines was overcome by a sonorous explosion in the stands. The Missouri Tigers had just bounded onto the field and with their appearance, hysteria ruled in the stands.
(Continued to Page 3)
TERRITORY OF CANADA
A Jayhawk command from THE MAN
Photo by Jim Wheeler
One of the 4,500 University of Kansas football fans (left) who traveled to Columbia, Mo., Saturday appeared a little over enthusiastic as KU downed Missouri 21-19 and Pepper (right) is caught in one of his more serious moments as tension mounted in the final game of the season.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 25,1968
23
Photo by Jim Wheeler
Shanklin sails
-KU tailback Donnie Shanklin goes up, and almost over a Missouri defensive end in Saturday's win at Columbia. John Riggins, (32) is attempting to block the tackler while another Jayhawk lays across a blocked Tiger defender.
Pro standings
National Football League Western Conference Central Division
W L W T Pct. Pts. Opr.
Minnesota 6 5 0 .545 225 174
Minnesota Bay 6 5 0 .545 225 174
Chicago 3 6 0 .455 183 272
Detroit 3 6 0 .455 183 272
Coastal Division
W L W T Pct. Pts. O.p.
Baltimore 10 1 1 0 .909 314 117
Los Angeles 10 1 1 0 .909 314 117
San Francisco 9 5 1 0 .900 242 148
Atlanta 9 5 0 0 .182 242 167
Eastern Conference Century Division
W L W T Pet. Pts. Opl.
Cleveland 8 3 0 .727 309 OPI. 215
Atlanta 8 3 0 .727 309 OPI. 215
New Orleans 3 7 1 .500 188 261
Pittsburgh 2 8 1 .200 188 261
Capitol Division
W L. W. T. Pct. Pts. O.P.
Dallas 9 2 0 .818 346 149
Brock 7 4 0 .818 346 149
Washington 7 4 0 .818 346 149
Philadelphia 0 11 0 .364 194 302
American Football Leauge Eastern Division
New York W L 3 T Pct. Pts. O.P.
Houston 8 5 6 .455 213 201
Miami 4 6 1 .400 214 283
Boston 4 6 1 .470 218 296
Colorado 1 10 1 .090 183 319
Western Division
W L W T Pct. Pts. Opp.
Kansas City 9 2 0 .818 .817 O.S.P.
Oakland 9 2 0 .818 .837 373 169
San Diego 8 3 0 .727 .737 151 213
Denver 5 6 0 .455 .202 294
Cincinnati 5 6 0 .250 187 269
Jayhawks open against Billikens
Yesterday's Games
KU, ranked fifth in the nation by the AP pre-season basketball polls, meets the Billikens of St. Louis University friday in the opening game of the 1968-69 season.
National League
Dallas 34, Chicago 3
St. Louis 18, Miami 12
Green Bay 41, Pittsburgh 28
Greene Bay 27, Washington 7
Cleveland 47, Philadelphia 13
Detroit 20, New Orleans 20 tie
Baltimore 21, Minnesota 9
Los Angeles 24, New York 21
American League
American League New York 37, San Diego 15 Denver 40, Chicago 18 Denver 34, Buffalo 32 Oakland 34, Cincinnati 1
The Jayhawk team, which finished 22-8 defeated the Billikens 68-64 last season. St. Louis finished fourth in the Missouri Valley Conference and finished with a 15-11 over all record.
Tipoff time is 8 p.m. at Allen Field House.
Virginia Tech to Liberty Bowl
for guard with Thomas is junior college All-America Paul Lusk.
The other guard spot is being contested between sophomore sensation Jim Irving (6-0), a speedy guard who averaged 17.2 points for the frosh, and 6-0 junior letterman Ed Tabash.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI)—The Liberty Bowl selection committee announced yesterday that Virginia Tech would return for its
Front-runner for the center position is 6-8 sophomore Jim Bryan, who led the Billiken's freshman team to a 13-2 season by averaging 21.4 points and 10 rebounds per game.Competing
Leading the new Billiken version will be $6-3\frac{1}{2}$ forward Joe Wiley, the leading returning scorer with a 14.1 point average. Wiley will get a hand from another returning letterman, 6-2 senior guard Tom Thomas.
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Monday, November 25, 1968
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Jayhawks season best in 60 years
(Continued from Page 1)
On the Missouri side of the field, a coed in a mini-skirt was picked up in the bottom row of seats and escalated to the top of the stands by a sea of flat, outstretched hands. A few rows away, a man waved a large stuffed alligator at the team. The cheers turned to boas as the Kansas Jayhawks trotted onto the field.
The "bad guys" had arrived.
Both bands blasted their fight songs across the field; feet stomped the concrete floors in the stands; cheerleaders, bouncing and somersaulting, waved bouquets of their school colors at the crowd; the crowd sitting on the big 'M' squirmed more than ever, now as they jockeyed for flatter more comfortable rocks.
Too few tickets
Large, disappointed crowds huddled outside the stadium by ticket booths and entrance gates. Two young, attractive girls stood by the press entrance. They saw a writer they knew and called to him.
Can you get us in?" one asked.
On the other side of the high gate he looked at them and shrugged his shoulders.
"No chance," he said.
Another writer looked at the two girls and whistled.
"Man, out in Colorado we don't leave girls like that standing alone," he said.
"Give 'em your press pass," said the first writer.
The man from Colorado grinned and got on the elevator which would whisk him to the press area.
Out in the parking lots, scalpers were still doing business.
On the field the teams lined up for the kickoff and when the ball was in the air the crowd exhaled its emotion in a thunderous salvo.
Before the game, uncertainty sprinkled with some optimism and hope seemed to be the general mood for both KU and MU fans. But as the first quarter
wore on and KU found itself with a 14-0 lead, Tiger fans began to mumble in disbelief.
The first blow to Missouri's hopes of finishing 8-2 with a share of the Big Eight title came when alert Dave Morgan, Jayhawk safetyman swiped a Terry McMillan pass and sped 35 yards for a score. Jayhawk fans bellowed their approval and Missouri fans buzzed.
With 3.25 gone, Bill Bell booted the extra point.
The Jayhawks were not finished, however. On their next possession, Douglass threw a 33-yard bomb to split-end George McGowan for another score. After Bell's extra point, the score was KU-14, MU-0 with 6:55 remaining in the quarter.
In the press box, pro-Missouri sports writers wiggled uncomfortably in their seats. Those from Kansas strained to "allay" their emotions.
Missouri, stymied by the Jayhawk defense, finally drove for a score with two minutes to go in the half. Quarterback McMillan pitched out to setback John Staggers who rumbled into the endzone for six. KU's Bill Hunt blocked the extra point try and KU led at halftime 14-6.
The third quarter was a draw. Both KU's and MU's defensive teams turned in glowing performances.
In the fourth quarter, the Tiger scoring machine began to hit on all eleven cylinders.
KU had gone ahead 21-6 on a one yard run by Douglass after Dave Morgan had recovered a Missouri fumble in Tiger territory. The game looked like it might be a Jayhawk rout.
Then the Tigers began to move. They took the KU kickoff and scored in eight plays when Staggers took a McMillan pitchout and scooted 2 yards into the endzone. Now it was KU—21, MU—12 and the Tigers went for two extra points in hopes of closing the gap to seven points. Their attempt
failed. The crowd was tense. It would take a touchdown plus the extra point and either a field goal or another touchdown for the Tigers to win.
technology with purpose
After an exchange of punts, McMillan took his Tigers from the KU 48 to the KU end zone in three plays. He tossed to Greg Cook for the score. After the extra point the score was KU-21, MU-19 with 2:05 remaining in the game.
Strains of "Hold That Tiger" could be heard throughout portions of the stadium. Now it was a matter of the Jayhawks hanging onto the ball until the clock ran out. On two plays after Missouri's kickoff the Jayhawks could only manage to gain one yard. With third and nine, coach Pepper Rodgers came through with his usual heart stopping play. Douglass rolled out to his left and threw 19 yards to tight end John Mosier for the first down. The clock ran out two plays later.
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For the first time since 1908, the Jayhawks had put together nine wins. Quarterback Bobby Douglass eclipsed the KU total offense record held since 1948 by Ray Evans, a former KU all-American. Douglass gained a total of 188 yards running and passing to raise his career total to 3,832 yards-98 yards better than Evans' record.
In the jubilant Jayhawk dressing room defensive end Vernon Vanoy, 6-8 and 260 pounds, zeroed in on Chancellor W. Clarke Wescow and threw him for loss—into
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Pepper Rodgers accommodated the KU pep band by leading them in the fight song. It was probably the first time in history a football coach directed a band in his undershorts.
KU's John Zook, named as all- American Sunday night, might have summed up the general team attitude in the locker room after the game.
"We can't be disappointed with this win." Zook said. "They've got to be the toughest team we've played. They're probably the hardest hitting team we we've played all year. Missouri is a physical team—Oklahoma is a finesse team."
So now it's on to the Gator Bowl and a game with Alabama for Mizzou, while the Hawks look forward to the Orange Bowl and powerful Penn State which clobbered Pittsburgh 65-9 Saturday.
MU dressing room dim
In the Tiger dressing room silence was the rule, depression the mood.
Somehow, after the game KU played against the Tigers, another game would seem like a let down. But KU fans can contemplate this as they feast on oranges Jan. 1.
Tiger quarterback Terry McMillan couldn't speak for 45
minutes after the game and team captain Carl Garber, a defensive guard, spoke for his team.
"Ive never been associated with a team that played this well and lost," he said. "We played too well to lose."
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THE U IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 25, 1968
KUOK marathon entertains crowd
Organizers of the 63-hour KUOK broadcast marathon which ended at midnight, were pleased with the student interest and success of the program.
Bill Kissel, Overland Park senior and KUOK announcer, said flow of students observing the broadcast in Ellsworth Hall was steadier than last year.
"We've had a good response—the people here have been great. Last year the enthusiasm tapered off after the first hours," he said.
Kissel explained that the marathon had a dual purpose. It helped public relations for the station he said, and was financially beneficial by increasing listenership and advertising.
The marathon, which began at 9 am, last Friday, was the first of three planned for this year.
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