KANSAN
79th Year, No.63
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, January 7, 1969
Lebanon bolsters defenses
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
SF State reopens
SAN FRANCISCO—San Francisco State College reopened Monday with militant students and union teachers setting up picket lines in what Acting President S. I. Hayakawa termed "a vicious power grab."
Except for minor scuffles on the picket lines, classes were resumed in an orderly fashion. Two persons were arrested.
Many students crossed the picket lines following a prolonged Christmas holiday during which repeated efforts were made to seek agreement with dissident factions.
Docking pays bet
TOPEKA—Gov. Robert B. Docking has accepted an offer from the Seneca Highway 36 Advertising Association to provide a live buffalo for the state of Pennsylvania to pay off the Orange Bowl bet.
Docking made a friendly agreement with Gov. Raymond P. Shafer of Pennsylvania that Kansas would deliver a buffalo to Pennsylvania if KU lost the Orange Bowl football game. Shafer put up a large pine tree from Penn's Woods.
Defense jobs filled
WASHINGTON-Stanley R. Resor will remain as Army secretary, former space agency official Robert C. Seamans Jr., will be Air Force secretary and Gov. John H. Chafee of Rhode Island will become Navy secretary under Richard M. Nixon, it was announced yesterday.
Richard M. Wickens was the secretary of Defense Secretary designate Melvin R. Laird announced the choices at a news conference and said the men created a civilian Pentagon team with scientific knowledge, political background and administrative continuity from the Johnson administration.
Deb may wed black
NEW YORK—Beryl Slocum, post-debutante daughter of one of America's first families, admitted yesterday that she and Adam Clayton Powell III, son of the Harlem congressman, are considering marriage.
"We're simply not sure yet," said the pretty 26-year-old blonde who counts Capt. Miles Standish and the founding fathers of Rhode Island among her ancestors.
Powell, 22, a local radio news reporter, had "no comment at this time." His father, reseated by Congress last week, had advised him to "take the fifth amendment" on the whole subject of a mixed marriage with Miss Slocum.
Rudd to speak tonight in Union
Mark Rudd, student rebel leader from Columbia University, will speak tonight in an SUA Minority Opinions Forum at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
A former head of the Columbia chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), Rudd was expelled from Columbia early this fall for his part in student uprisings against the university administration.
Since that time Rudd has lectured around the country and has written articles for several nationally-distributed magazines. This year he was named by Esquire Magazine as "Big Mouth of the Year."
The theme of Rudd's talk will be "Campus Uprisings," "Columbia Revolt," a film produced by Newsreel, part of the Columbia Strike Committee, will be shown.
BEIRUT (UPI)—Lebanon yesterday began reinforcing military defenses along the border with Israel and considered an army-backed compulsory military service bill which could draft 100,000 young men and women into the armed services in 1969.
Defense Ministry sources said the army high command, which was given control of national security last week in the wake of the Israeli commando raid on Beirut airport, was determined to see the bill become law.
The Lebanese-Israeli border was quiet during the day, but Jordanian spokesmen in Amman reported two machinegun duels across the Jordan River cease-fire lines between Jordanian and Israeli troops. No Jordanian casualties were reported in the clashes about 2½ miles south of the Sea of Galilee and near the Damiya Bridge about 35 miles north of the Dead Sea.
Minister Zeev Sherf presented to the Knesset, Israel's parliament, a $2.2 billion budget for the 1969-70 fiscal year, with 37 per cent-or $814 million ear-marked for military spending.
In Jersualem. Israeli Finance
An official Lebanese spokesman denied reports that Lebanese and Israeli representatives met recently on the border to seek ways of easing tensions. He described the reports as an "Israeli propaganda maneuver" and said the only contact was a technical discussion
At the same time, a military communique issued in Jerusalem said Israel had suffered 281 killed and 1,115 wounded since the end of the six-day Arab-Israeli war in June of 1967. The casualties included 234 soldiers killed and 785 injured.
The communique reported a total of 1,280 border incidents since the cease-fire 18 months ago, including 920 on the Jordan River front along.
under U.N. auspices. Israeli government sources also said the reports were untrue.
The army high command has been lobbying for a military conscription since 1966 when it was rejected because of economic reasons. The bill provides for a one-year term of military service for all Lebanese men and women, beginning at the age of 18.
Weather
Cloudy and mild today with wind becoming southerly 10 to 20 miles per hour; cloudy and a little warmer tonight. Cloudy and mild Wednesday with chance of light rain by afternoon. High today 44 to 48. Low tonight 25 to 30.
Chancellor names due
The faculty committee searching for KU's 11th Chancellor has set Jan. 15 or 16 as a target date for submitting names of five top candidates to the Kansas Board of Regents.
William P. Albrecht, dean of the Graduate School and chairman of the committee, said yesterday the dates nevertheless are tentative,
with some 20 top candidates currently in contention and additional nominations still coming in.
The names of the possible candidates under consideration by the committee have been kept a closely guarded secret. But the Topeka State Journal said in an editorial that Gen. Harold K.
Johnson, former U.S. Army chief of staff, is among those being considered for the position.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wesco announced his resignation, effective June 30, at the fall convocation ceremony, Sept. 16.
Johnson, who came to Kansas in 1946 as a student at the Ft.
(Continued on page 8)
C-W-C's pre-enroll to end chaos
By MARLA BABCOCK Kansan Staff Writer
KU's chaotic enrollment, with its infinite lines and closed classes, has long been a headache for students.
This semester, however, the five Colleges-within-the-College are experimenting with methods of minimizing the confusion.
Through variations on a lengthened advisory period, the five colleges hope to eliminate the traditional procedure of seeing an adviser in the half-day preceding scheduled enrollment time.
North College, located in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall (GSP), adopted mass
Earlier this week students went to GSP, where they picked up their folders and enrollment cards. While advisers, departmental representatives and North College administrators were available to offer advice, Mrs. Ricks said consultation with advisers was purely optional.
"Students were encouraged to do as much self-advising as possible," Mrs. Ricks said. Advisers now act as resource people, giving information on courses. They do not merely grant permission for a particular curriculum, Mrs. Ricks said.
North College sophomores
pre-enrollment this semester, said Mrs. James Ricks, assistant dean of women.
pre-enrolled Dec. 10; freshmen came the following evening. Mrs. Ricks said sophomores on the North College advisory board acted as student advisers, while advisory board freshmen served as monitors.
If students chose to complete their pre-enrollment at GSP, they turned in their enrollment card and folders at the dean's check table, Mrs. Ricks said. Students wishing more time to decide class choices were asked to return their materials to North College office by today.
Mrs. Ricks said the system worked efficiently, "We probably never had more than five people in line at the dean's check table," she said.
The other colleges are using some (Continued on page 8)
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
We're from guess where
With King Orange smiling in the middle of its formation, the Jayhawk Marching Band high-steps off the field at the end of their Orange Bowl halftime show. The
six-minute show featured precision drill and dance routines to special arrangements of "Sunny," "You Are my Sunshine," and "Sunflower" as well as KU fight songs.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, January 7, 1969
Bowl flight job is hectic
By LINDA LOYD Kansan Staff Writer
Everyone has a few problems. And Irv Robinson has heard them all.
The prarie village sophomore was in charge of both SUA charter flights to the Orange Bowl.
Beginning in October the special trips chairman arranged flight and hotel accommodations. His job ended Jan. 2 when 320 Miami-bound students returned to Kansas City.
"You wouldn't believe some of the things that happened in Miami," Robinson recalled between peals of laughter. To begin with, the second plane leaving Kansas City for Miami was three hours late because of poor weather conditions and heavy traffic, Robinson said.
"Rumors were started that we were flying an Army conveyor
plane that had been hijacked to Cuba."
Robinson expressed relief at his roommates' cooperation in Miami. "That first night I got in about 6 a.m. Ten minutes later, some girl knocked at the door: 'Irv, are you awake? I left my contact lens on the plane and they said to call you.'"
After getting dressed and walking three blocks to get change for the telephone, Robinson said he called the airport to learn that the plane could not be located. "So I called the airline headquarters in Oakland, Calif. I still don't know whether that girl ever got her contact lens!"
Although the KU sophomore found time to go to the beach and to hear the Fifth Dimension at a local nightclub, he kept busy answering complaints from students and management. "Students called me because there were no washcloths in their rooms or a window wouldn't open."
Disturbed by the KU students gathered in the street in front of the hotel at midnight New Year's Eve, the manager requested SUA to hire police protection the next night or else leave the hotel.
Irv Robinson
"Police and dogs were called out to calm students. When I walked into the hotel lobby a couple of hours later, I was told several students suffered from rabies due to dog bites."
This rumor was false, as was the manager's report that students had overturned cars, yelled profanity at police and threw water bombs, Robinson said.
"The police told me that students were blocking traffic and wishing everyone a Happy New Year."
Later than night, more than 25 persons were stuck in the
Students report bad time at the Biscayne
By TOM WEINBERG Kansan Staff Writer
Many memories will remain from the Student Union Activities (SUA) sponsored trip to the Orange Bowl, but there is one memory that most students would like to forget—the "Biscayne Terrace Hotel."
The 320 students on the SUA flights were treated to hot rooms, used towels, rusty shower water and uncashed travelers checks, they claimed.
Members of the second flight arrived at the hotel at 6:00 a.m. December 31. The 160 students joined 160 other students who had arrived in the first plane just six hours earlier.
It was a warm 75 degrees and most students were "under the weather" after spending five hours at the airport refreshment area. However, sleep did not come too quickly to most students.
Howard Forsythe, Kansas City junior, said, "We called downstairs and told the hotel our air-conditioning would not work. They acted very surprised. They sent us an "engineer" to fix it. He came in, took one look at the vent and said, "Ah, I fixy." He walked over threw open the windows and left, Forsythe said.
Members of the group said they learned later that the hotel used this as an annual excuse and that the hotel never turned on the air conditioning during the "winter" season.
The showers didn't work, either.
Pam Flatton, St. Louis senior,
said. "It was real nice stepping
Hillcrest Restaurant
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into a shower of rust. We turned on the shower and rust poured out. We were only blessed with the rust for a few minutes, though, then we had no water."
hotel elevator for 20 minutes because they exceeded the 2,000 lb. capacity, Robinson said.
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New Year's Day was comparatively quiet for the Orange Bowl flight chairman. However, his authority was questioned that evening after the game when he approached a policeman in the hotel lobby, only to be told, "You just better spread the word around that if there are any problems, we'll throw you in jail."
Walt Disney PRODUCTIONS
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APPLE FILMS PRESENTS HANK FEATURES
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Has anyone seen Jim Conrad? He left his big, old, gas hog with us while he took a fabulous FIAT out for a test drive. He hasn't come back. Why don't you make friends with a FIAT ... and watch it turn into love!
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2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
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IT'S ORANGE!
The 1969 Jayhawker is Orange!
The new Jayhawker is in the process of being printed and bound in Orange Bowl orange.
Distribution in Strong Hall: January 8,9,10
If you have not already paid for yours, the Jayhawker will be sold in the Union.
Bring KU ID
Minnie Pearl's Chicken
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Tuesday, January 7, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
CBS tied to pot party
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A government investigator said yesterday a marijuana party attended by Northwestern University students and televised by a Chicago station "was prearranged for the benefit of CBS."
James D. Cunningham, chief examiner for the Federal Communications Commission, accused Columbia Broadcasting System of improperly controlling controversial programs. He said in the Chicago case CBS failed to notify authorities that an illegal action was about to occur.
He asked the full commission to endorse his findings and recommended it take appropriate action against CBS and the station which televised the marijuana party for its news programs. The station, WBBM-TV, is wholly owned by CBS.
In a statement on Cunningham's findings, CBS said it had not seen his report. "However, we made a thorough professional investigation of the charges against WBBM-TV and found them groundless."
The marijuana party allegedly took place in Evanston, Ill., in an apartment off the Northwestern University campus. FCC investigators said.
Cunningham said the party "would never have been held" but for a request by John Victor Missett, a 23-year-old student who was graduated from Northwestern in June, 1967, and who had worked as an intern at WBBM-TV during his senior year.
Exam review set
Review sessions for the Western Civilization comprehensive examination are scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday of this week.
the sessions, to be held in Strong Auditorium, will begin at 7:15 p.m. each night and last about two hours.
Missett contended he asked only to be permitted to film people smoking marijuana but the Examiner said Spector's testimony was corroborated by four different witnesses.
The FCC ordered, an investigation last March 22 to examine allegations that "officials or employees of the Columbia Broadcasting System Inc., license of station WBBM-TV ... participated in arranging for, or at least encouraged or induced a group of Northwestern University students to smoke marijuana, in violation of law, in order that the station might film such actions for broadcast purposes."
At your newsstand NOW
JANUARY 1964
THE Atlantic
At your newsstand NOW
JANUARY 1986
THE Atlantic
Hemingway:
Living-Loving-Dying
Part I
From the new book
by Carlos Baker
Also Ward Just/Jetta Hill Fool/W. S. Merwin
THE Atlantic January 1954
Hemingway:
Living-Loving-Dying
Part I
From the new book
by Carlos Baker
Also Ward Just / Jeanne Hill Fowler / W. S. Merwin
Part one of the authorized Hemingway biography
PLUS:
- For Local Control in the Schools
- What Went Wrong in Vietnam?
* Israel and the Arabs
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, January 7,1969
Opinion forum
ROTC-right to kill?
KU's ROTC program should be retained.
It should be retained with all of its hues of red, white and blue intact.
As the earnest State Rep. Ben Foster, R-Wichita, has pointed out so eloquently, ROTC is needed to maintain the vast military of these great States. One can certainly see how Foster would consider an investigation into this American program as . . . well, it's un-American, that's what it is.
The idea that anyone would question the rights of KU men to learn the techniques of war is an outrage.
We demand the right to learn to kill, so that when our time comes to claim our right to kill, we'll be ready to serve our flag. We demand the right to learn the ways our forefathers used to get the world into the shape it's in.
Let the damned liberals say what they will, muttering things like that Adlai Stevenson did: "For it is often easier to fight for principles than to live up to them." Now, does that really make any sense at all? Haven't we always put our principles on the battlefield?
Let's not listen to those low-rent pleas for the rights of Vietnamese to live. What's that right compared to our right? Our right to kill? We earned our right through war after war and many a valiant American boy died fighting for that right and I call any man a traitor who defends foreigners against Americans.
War has always existed, you fools, and it always will. It should be plain by now that the good Lord himself must've wanted wars on this
earth of his or he wouldn't have let so many of them happen.
Oh, don't let anyone say I like war. No one likes war, but when you got a job to do, you do it. You don't ask questions. You put your faith in the men in Washington, because, after all, we elected them to do the job. When they say fight, they got reasons to say fight. If they don't tell us why we're fighting, they've got some real good reasons. Maybe that Ho Chi Minh fellow made some personal type threat to the men in Washington.
Yes, we gotta maintain the military on KU's campus so we don't let our heads get above the hard facts.
Yes, KU's ROTC program must be maintained as a link in the chain of protectives against the world's evils.
Besides all that, we need to remember that there is more to life than scholasticism and parties. We need those ROTC uniforms on campus to remind everyone that there's a war over there. Elsewise, college students are likely to start thinking those idealists they read about are really real.
We need to keep reminding these booky students that reality isn't Thoreau, Schweitzer or Gandhi. Reality is MacArthur, Churchill and Westmoreland.
Where were them idealist fellows when there was fightin' to get done? They was nestled over their silly books and everyone knows books don't win wars.
Yes, we need to keep ROTC to help Uncle Sam teach them commies to be free.
Mike Shearer
KU and housing
By WILLIAM BALFOUR, Dean of Student Affairs
Question: What is the University involvement in off-campus housing?
Answer: The University maintains a list of available housing in 226 Strong Hall for those who may live off-campus. This list is made up of apartments, rooms, etc., whose landlords have indicated in writing that they will not discriminate. This is a listing only, and does not imply that any inspection has been made of the facilities offered. The University, at present, does not have the capacity to inspect the spaces available for the some 6,000 students who do not live in residence halls, fraternities, or sororities.
The University is concerned that the student who chooses to live off campus becomes aware of safety and health factors which are important for any living situation. The Off-Campus Housing Committee, with the assistance of a group of students through the ASC and People-to-People organization have recently made available to anyone summaries of the Lawrence Minimal Housing Code which details the physical facilities of a dwelling that should be noted by the student who wishes to rent. These forms are available in the Offices of the Dean of Student Affairs. The forms, of course, are also available to those who are now living off campus who may wish to familiarize themselves with minimal standards as far as health and safety factors are concerned. In case violations of the Housing Code are present most landlords, of course, wish to be notified immediately and discussions should ensue between tenant and landlord. If the student feels that the situation has not been corrected within a reasonable length of time, a complaint may be brought to the Off-Campus Housing Committee who will forward it to the administration of the City of Lawrence for action.
It is equally important that the student carry out all his parts of the agreement between him and the landlord. The University is willing to help in any way that it can in any difficult situation that may arise between tenant and landlord, but it must be realized that the Univeristy has no jurisdiction for off-campus housing and can act only in an advisory capacity. The student who chooses to live off campus must assume the responsibilities necessary, and the University can do no more than make as available as possible the facts that the students would consider in choosing a place to live.
Letters to the Editor
ROTC defended by Vietnam veteran
To the Editor:
I have read the many letters lately on the new left and the right of students to take ROTC for credit. It seems the people who back the New Left and denounce the ROTC program are being a bit ridiculous.
The New Left demands an end to White racism in such a way as to make way for black racism such as that advocated by Stokely Carmichael and others. Have they forgotten the dream of Dr. Martin Luther King to destroy racism in all shapes and forms? The New Left, a definite minority, demands this and demands that. The one thing they really want seems to be to destroy this country. They want to get rid of the police because some cop in Chicago who hadn't
had any sleep for three days was a bit free with his club. That's exactly the same logic behind racism—one or a small group is bad, therefore, all are bad.
Then there is the ROTC bit. The letter from the law student in the December 13 Kansan makes it sound like the only purpose of the military in this country is to kill, kill, kill. I was in the Army for two years and in Vietnam for one year. I never killed anyone. Luckily, I never had to, but I probably would have if it meant saving the lives of several close friends.
It might interest a few people to know that there are more manhours and money spent on building hospitals and schools, treating ill Vietnamese, and giving them all sorts of farming aid
and equipment than in all our military operations. And the greater part of the money and labor comes from the American military man. Perhaps a few people should go to Vietnam and look at the villages that have been destroyed by the Communists because one man refused to be a slave to them, or the "military targets" of the Communist mortar and rocket attacks, i.e., the residential districts of Saigon and 25 other cities on south Vietnam, or perhaps the orphanage that the communists attacked during the Tet Offensive last February.
I'm sick of people condoning the atrocities of the communists just because they object to our being in Vietnam to begin with. I'm praying for peace as much as
anyone else, but peace isn't going to come just because we quit.
It seems to me that the situation that some people want to put our country in is the following: First, let the students take over the colleges; then, get rid of all our police; next, we repeal all laws; then we throw out all our weapons and do away with our Army, Navy, and Air Force; and finally we throw away all forms of government. That's what some of the leaders want who say they are "not Communists, but are liberators of the poor and the minority groups."
I believe in equality, I hate the type of thing that George Wallace stands for, and I'm in favor of changes from the present state of affairs, but I'd like to
point out that another man was expressing the same thing in his country only ten years ago. He was not a Communist, but a "liberator." His name was Fidel Castro. Need i say more?
Harold R. Smith El Dorado junior
THE UNIVERSITY DATA KANSAN
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence,
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examinations. Postage fees $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all student or age-eligible or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
A DANCE TO THE NEW YEAR.
A DANCE TO THE NEW YEAR.
IN THIS DANCE I SALUTE THE RETURN TO TRADITIONAL VALUES.
TRADITIONAL FAMILY TIES.
TRADITIONAL RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY.
TRADITIONAL ECONOMICS.
TRADITIONAL FOREIGN POLICY.
TRADITIONAL APATHY.
A DANCE TO 1959.
12-29 ORTLESS BROWN
IN THIS DANCE
I SALUTE —
THE RETURN TO
TRADITIONAL
VALUES.
[ ] [ ] [ ] [ ]
TRADITIONAL FAMILY TIES.
W
Tuesday,January 7,1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
KU storms past Cyclones
By JACK PAULEY Kensan Sports Writer
KU paced by the accurate shooting of all five starters, built up a huge lead early in the game and then coasted to a 94-61 victory over Iowa State last night in Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks shot 63% on the way to a 51-29 halftime lead, then cooled only slightly and finished with a 53% shooting percentage for the night.
Sophomore Dave Robisch was the sparkplug in the first half by sinking numerous close-in shots for 14 points. He added eight more in the second half to lead all scorers with 22 points.
"We had great shooting early in the game," coach Ted Owens said, "but I didn't think we were aggressive enough on defense."
KU's All-America guard Jo Jo White tormented the Iowa State guards all night with his defensive play, and tallied 12 points on offense for the dawhaws.
Owens said he was pleased with the performance of senior Dave Nash, who finished with 18 points (14 in the second half) and a game-leading 11 rebounds.
The Jayhawks set a record in the win. Their 43 field goals totaled one more than the previous high scored in 1966 in
games against Missouri and Nebraska.
Kansas only had seven turnovers in the game, a season low.
The win was the 997th in KU history, but the coach said that Kansas' primary goal now was to win the conference championship, and only secondly to be the first team in the nation to win 1000 games.
Iowa State's Bill Cain, last year's Big Eight sophomore of the year, led the Cyclone's scoring with 18 points.
The only other Cyclone in double figures was Dave Collins who scored 13 points.
Everyone on the Jayhawks' roster scored except Roger Brown, who missed the game because of a sprained ankle.
Kansas has now posted five consecutive victories over Big Eight teams.
Owens said Brown would only be out for two days, and should be ready for Saturday's game with Missouri at Columbia. His replacement, Greg Douglas, scored 10 points in the game.
KU beat Nebraska 82-56,
Colorado 60-55, and Oklahoma
State 56-45 in the Big Eight
Tournament to win the
championship over Christmas
vacation.
Two Kansas players, White and Robisch, were named to the all-tournament team. Robisch
also was the meet's second leading scorer with 66 points in the three games.
The other win came over Nebraska Saturday at Lincoln where the Jayhawks won 56-52 in a defensive struggle.
The tournament championship was the fourth for KU in the last five years, and the ninth since the tournament was originated in 1946. Owens has now won four Big Eight tournament championships to tie Tex Winter, the former K-State coach, as the winningest coach of the tourney.
The win over Iowa State was Kansas' 12th straight, the longest since the days of Wilt Chamberlain in 1957.
KU (94) FG FT RB BB TP TT
Robbish 10-16 2-4 5 2 2 22
Sloan 4-4 1-1 8 4 1 19
Douglas 4-4 1-2 8 1 1 10
Brownson 4-7 0-1 5 1 1 1
White 5-12 2-3 5 1 1 12
Bradshaw 1-7 0-1 6 1 1 2
Russell 3-5 0-0 4 3 6
Stewart 1-2 0-1 4 3 6
Lawrence 1-1 0-1 2 0 1
Nash 9-13 0-0 11 2 18
Natsues 1-5 1-1 2 0 3
Taylor 1-1 0-1 10 2 18
Totals 45-61
ISW (13) FG 1-9 RB PF TF
Jenkins 1-10 5-5 3-8 2 7
Collins 5-14 3-3 4 1 13
Cullin 7-7 4-6 1 13 8
Dvilder 4-7 0-1 1 18
Abrahamson 1-3 0-0 1 0 2
Murray 1-2 0-0 1 0 2
Hanna 1-2 0-0 1 0 2
Goodman 1-4 0-0 1 0 2
Pyle 0-1 4-4 1 0 0
Hanna 0-1 2-2 1 0 0
Hanna McPhlin 0-1 0-0 1 0
Totals 20-61 21-23 27 12 61
Kansas 51 43–94
Iowa State 29 32–61
The University of Kansas Theatre
presents
MEDIEVAL CHRISTMAS PLAYS
The Annunciation
The Offering of The Magi
The Second Shepherd's Play
Experimental
Theatre
Curtain
8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall
UN 4-3982
Tickets: $1.50
w/KU ID: 75c
January 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11
Ma.Pue
Rams' boss re-hires Allen as head coach
LOS ANGELES
(UFI)—George Allen was rehired as head coach of the Los Angeles Rams football team yesterday after a meeting with Dan Reeves, the Rams' boss who fired him the day after Christmas.
The Rams did not immediately disclose the terms of Allen's new contract but said he would be back again to head the Los Angeles team which had a 10-3-1 record in 1968.
At the time of Allen's discharge, Reeves, the majority stockholder, president and general manager of the Rams, said it resulted from a "personality clash."
Shortly before New Year's Reeves indicated that he had second thoughts on the action and that he was considering re-hiring Allen. The two men met several times and had a final meeting yesterday morning at
A dozen members of the Rams' team reacted indignantly to the firing of a winning coach and a number indicated they would refuse to play for the Los Angeles Rams in 1969 under any other coach.
which an agreement was reached.
Allen had been on a yearly contract with a salary of $40,000. It was understood one of his demands before returning to the Rams was a longer contract.
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6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, January 7, 1969
1969 Orange Bowl: Penn State 15, KU 14
MARSHALL
photos by Jim Wheeler
KU's 12th man
An utterly dejected and sobbing Rick Abernethy buries his head in his hands. "You feel embarrassed. You feel responsible," said Abernethy, who accepted the blame as KU's "Twelfth Man." But the guilt was not all Abernethy's.
Triumph, then tragedy in last-minute bedlam
By BOB KEARNEY Assistant Sports Editor
For a stunning climax, Orange Bowl followers will not soon forget the 35th Classic—the Guess Who's Coming to the Huddle episode.
issue. And Kansans, shocked and bewildered, will never forget.
With an unbelievable final minute, Penn State pieced together some fluke happenings—a partially blocked punt, a 47-yard desperation pass, an ad-libbed touchdown run, and a 12th man penalty—into a rousing 15-14 victory over KU's Jayhawks.
Probably as much will be said of the extra man in KU's defense that gave the Nittany Lions a second shot at a 2-point conversion as the man missing from KU's offense midway through the fourth quarter. The Jayhawks, riding a 14-7 margin with a 4th-and-1 from the Penn State 5, forsook the field goal and sent fullback John Riggins around the left side searching for that yard. Nowhere to go.
Riggins would bound himself to ensuring he could win by 20-20 hindsight, the field goal would have been winning insurance.
"I regret it, but I'd do it again," said Coach Pepper Rodgers.
"Even if he (John Riggins) didn't make it, we've still got them deep in their territory and chances are they'll have to punt. They did, too, but it just didn't do us any good."
Rodgers accepted all the blame for a defeat in which Dame Fortune surely had as much a part. KU played inspired defense, twice intercepting passes and twice recovering fumbles in salvaging a 7-7 first half deadlock.
7-1 first half headhook.
One of those interceptions, a diving theft by Pat Hutchens, triggered KU's first touchdown march. Eight plays, exclusively on the ground—then Mike Reeves bulls across from the 2. Penn State matched it early in the second quarter as Charlie Pittman exploded 13 yards up the middle.
13 yards up the middle.
What would have been the turning point—until the madcap finish—came midway through the third period when KU's goal-line defense blunted a Penn State threat.
defense pitched a Penn State 7 on a punt return. Riggins powered the necessary yardage in two plays, scoring from the 1.
But the Lions had no timeouts remaining. Two thrusts by fullback Tom Cherry. No gain. The seconds ticked away. Burkharth, who had never scored a touchdown in his college career, suddenly bootlegged around the left side and into the endzone.
powerful. Much later—even after many of the 77,719 witnesses had departed—Penn State ignited its spectacular rally. Neil Smith deflected Bill Bell's punt, a 25-yarder that rolled dead at midfield. Then quarterback Chuck Burkharloft left a desperation lob that somehow found its way into Bob Campbell's grasp at the KU 3.
The 2-point try failed—a pass swatted away by KU's Dave Morgan and Kansas devotees swarmed their heroes. Then a red flag. Stunned City.
"The only bad thing about winning a football team between two good teams like this is it feels so terrible to lose," said Rodgers in the glum that was KU's dressing room.
But even Pepper found a silver lining. Something like "It's good to be good enough to be here."
55
Go-ahead touchdown
Taking a handoff from quarterback Bobby Douglass, KU's John Riggins wedges between two blockers and scores on a one-yard thrust. The touchdown gave the Jayhawks a 14-7 edge. A dazzling 46-yard punt return by Don Shanklin set-up the score. Penn State linebackers Denny Onkotz (35) and Jim Kates (55) are unable to close the hole.
23
2
32
Vanoy at his best
KU's defense was brilliant, particularly the play of defensive end Vernon Vanoy (84). Here Vanoy fights off a block by Penn State's Tom Cherry (32) before slamming halfback Bob Campbell (23). Two interceptions and two fumble recoveries in the first half, then an inspired goal-line stand in the third period, marked the Jayhawks' finest defensive performance.
35
35
10
32
50
5-on-1 defense
Gang tackling much like this stopped fullback John Riggins on the much-discussed 4th-and-1 gamble midway through the fourth quarter. KU turned down what would have been a 22-yard field goal attempt, then was denied in an effort to fatten a 14-7 lead. Five Penn State defenders, including Denny Onkz (35), Mike Smith (10), Gary Hull (51), and Jack Ham (33) combine for this tackle.
Tuesday, January 7, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
--experienced in typing theses, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
er type. Prompt an engi-
cient service. Phone VI 3-9848.
Mrs E. Wright. 2-44
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
annual newsletter are accorded 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. 1241 Iadre. 2-4
NOW ON SALE
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
Vests, Belts, Watchbands, Sandals,
Purses, Moccasins, Hair Barretts and
Bands. Custom Made at PRIMARILY
Custom Made at PRIMARILY
LEATHER 812 Mass. Open at Noon.
'65 Ford, Ford 500. Must sell, must pay next semesters' tuition. Power steering. Very clean, Excellent condition. VI 3-1380. 1-7
Part of U.S. Coin Collection, $75,
$100, $300,Variable T V and
starch $100 VI $345-67
Dark Green 1963 Chev. 2-door, hard top, 6 cylinder, standard transmission, good condition. $700. Call VI 2-6885 after 6 p.m.
Second Semester Girl's Naiamish Hall
contract for sale VI 3-2750 or
VI 2-8358
Must sell before vacation. Knight stereo tape deck, with sound on sound, with sound, and other features. Best offer. Call Harley VI 3-7922. 1-7
Poodle puppies for sale—at least half
pole, half ??. Will be small pet.
$10.00 each. Call 842-4141 weekends
or after 7:30 p.m. 1-7
Pair of SNOW TIRES, will fit Volkswagon, 6.00x15. Davis 4-ply nylon, like new (100 miles). Blackwalls. Call 843-6701. 1-7
Skiers: For sale, 1 pair of wood skis
-$10.00, poles=$3.00, Men's size 11
ski boots $15.00, Ladies' size 7 ski
boots $20.00, Call 842-3794 after 6:00.
CORVAIR GOODIES: racing header set-up with dumps & new mufflers, set-up with 3-speed transverser, reverb, chrome air scoops, jaws, misc. VI 2-2459 after 6.
1968 Olds Cults S. Convertible A.T.
P.S. P.B., 7,000 miles. Call V 2-1219
or pm pr weekdays and
Sundays or VI 2-6304 after 6 o'clock
Sundays.
2-4
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. Bar-B-Q—outdoor pit, 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. tt
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times a week delivery Diaper and Baby Laundry Service $16 a month. Family Laundry Service for 9 iams. Call SMITH I-37 80077-2
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate
students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Benefi-
ficial Finances. 725 Massachusetts. Ph.
VI 3-8074. 1-8
Shoot archery every Monday at 7:00 p.m. starting December 9, $1.00 per night. Bring your own equipment. Prizes every night. Community Build-in for Education. For information call: Ray Totten, VI 3-3508 or Roy Halverstadt, VI 2-6590. 1-7
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Phone VI 3-8074. 1-8
Acoustical Research audio equipment do not need advertising. HAYNES-RAY AUDIO AND MUSIC CO. VI 2-
1944. 1-7
Lawrence's most influential people entrust the service and repair of their audio equipment to Edward Haynes. VI 2-1944. 1-7
FOLK, BLUES, BANDS, or READINGS. Presently auditioning Sundays
at WAHN SHOP V 1030 or VI 2-6333. Coffee House. 8:00
p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
FOLK PERFORMERS WORKSHOP
15 minute performance required.
Tapes will be made, but kept private
if desired. VI 2-1030 or VI 2-1944.
Fresh flower arrangements and cor-
sages—anytime. Cash. Wide selection
of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826
lowa. VI 2-1320. 2-4
Sleeping Room available Jan. 1.
Room downstreet 1-5767
Call VI 3-2993 or VI 3-5767
FOR RENT
Available now, entire upstairs furnished 2-bedroom apt. Private entrance, off street parking. $115. 1905 Mass. Call VI 3-0570. 1-7
Two contracts available for men for the spring semester at Naismith Hall. Call Dan, VI 3-2434 or Roger at VI 2-2775. 1-9
One or two bedroom apt.; close to campus; Sultanic luxury includes a washer and a view $110 a month.
VI 3-8073. 1-7
Town Manor's pent house apt. Private entrance. Completely furnished, TV, steam heat, air-cond., quiet. Parking. Business man, professor or grad student. No small children or pets. Available Bed. Ist. Call VI 3-8000, 2-4
Pay-Less$
Self Service SHOES
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
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
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education, SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall VI. VI 2873.
TERM PAPERS, THEMES, THESIS.
KU graduate with new electric machine. Fast service. Call Mrs. Currer after 5:30 p.m., VI 2-1409. 1-9
TYPING
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley VI 3-6048. 2-4
Sleeping room for boys. Cooking privileges, refrigerator, linens furnished, offstreet parking. Available No. 1-9474. No pets. 1328 Ohio. Phone 1-8
20% Coed Discount on
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Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
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Roommate for second semester to share two (2) bedroom apartment $70 monthly, includes utilities VI 2-7164 afd 90 pw AHWKER TOWERS ARPMENTS,
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Male roommate wanted for second semester. Your apt . . . mine . . .
other. Graduate student preferred.
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Luxury Apts, 941 La 2 amabile guys need one male room. Only 55 beans plus food. VI 2-6252. Urgent! Army Calling. 1-9
Male student needs roommate now or second semester. Call 842-8524 after registration.
HELP WANTED
Male. No experience necessary. Will train. Measures—uniforms and insurance ability. All pm, job jobs available—personal application. Ask for Mr. Smith or Mr. Spencer. Howard Johnson Restaurant on turnover between Lawrence and K.G. miles. 2-4
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Dark Brown Mouton fur jacket at jacket
Intials SIH 51
Call Vf 2-284
One green bilfold lost somewhere between the Student Union and Bailey Hall on red, Dec 11. Call VI 3-4061 in the Student Union or office in Hoch. 2-4
A Post Versalog sliderule in room 235 Murphy. With finals coming this engineer's life depends on his rule. Call Miller, VI 3-8454. 2-4
SUPPORT NEEDY CHILDREN Buy UNICEF Cards and Calendars now at KU BOOKSTORE
LOST
Help Wanted - Neat young men and women, waiters and waitresses in food service. Experienced. preferred, will train. Call 2-4306 evenings or VI 2-9848 days. VI 2-4306
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 W, 23rd. tt
All point needs, Custom picture framing, Wallpaper
1717 W. 6th VI 2-1411
Mary Carter Paint
for
Closed Sat. at Noon.
If the shoe fits REPAIR IT 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th — 7:30 - 5:30
WE DELIVER HICKEN ON SUNDAY
THE LIBRARY
2500 W. 6th
VI 2-8912
SKI
VAIL
SEMESTER BREAK
WITH THE SUA SKI CLUB Jan. 25-30
Skiing
Trip Includes:
Transportation-By Bus
Lodging-3 Nights
Meals-4 Breakfasts
--3 Dinners
Tows-4 Days-All Tows
1/2 Day of Class Lessons
Equipment (Optional) -Metal Skiis, & Poles
Above For Only $103.00
WITH EQUIPMENT OPTION $121.00
Full Payment Due in SUA Office-Kansas Union By 5:00 p.m., Jan. 7, 1969. For Further Information & Reservations Call UN 4-3477 or SUA Office
8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, January 7, 1969
Sirhan's trial begins today
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—In a courtroom sealed off by steel doors and with three dozen uniformed and plainclothes deputies standing guard, a "realistic" Sirhan B. Sirhan goes to trial today for the murder of Robert F. Kennedy.
The 24-year-old Arab immigrant, whose bullets cut down the brother of the late
The Joint Conference Committee, composed of three All-Student Council (ASC) members and three University Senate members, has reached agreement on the revised version of the proposed Senate Code for new University government.
ASC to vote on final code
The committee began work more than a month ago when the Faculty Senate passed a revised version of the proposed Senate Code. The ASC had passed their version in early November.
It was the committee's job to iron out the differences in the two proposed versions.
Rick von Ende, Abiline,
Texas, graduate student and
ASC chairman, said the ASC will
probably pass the proposed
Senate Code at tonight's
meeting.
"There were no major differences in the two proposed code and I see no problems in its passage, he said."
Pre-enroll
(Continued from page 1)
of the same methods employed at North College, although none have switched to the mass enrollment procedure.
In Oliver, Pearson, Centennial and Corbin Colleges students must pick up and return their materials at respective offices.
Pearson College in Joseph R. Pearson Hall has also eliminated required advisory consultation. Oliver College in Oliver Hall has followed the same procedure for sophomores.
Corbin College in Corbin Hall and Centennial College in Ellsworth Hall have retained the advisory requirement.
After students have completed pre-enrollment, each of the college offices will tabulate the number of students in each course.
The registrar will compile the college office reports and turn tentative figures over to the departments, allowing them to make possible necessary adjustments in section offerings.
Official Bulletin
Sanitary Engineering Conference. All Day, Kansas Union.
Lecture, 2:30 p.m. Peter in Huray,
Joseph in Huray, and the recital
thehedral Music," Swarthout Recital
Auditions For The Mikado. 6:30-10 p.m. Mt. Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company. Forum Room, Kansas Union.
Minority Opinions Forum, 7 p.m.
Maryland Institute for Science Education,
University, Kansas Union Bailroom.
p.m. Dantorff Chapel.
Judeo Judeo Club. 7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union.
Linguist, Colloquy. 7:30 p.m.
Mabel Hewitt, graduate student. 108
Blake
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
"Days From Medieval Mystery
Story"
LA PETITE GALERIE
Newest Place
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910 Kentucky
Lower Level
president at a moment of triumph in his own bid for the White House, was reported eager finally to face justice after seven months of virtual solitary confinement.
said, "and he is in a realistic mood."
A member of the defense staff was asked what Sirhan thought of his chances in view of the overwhelming eyewitness evidence on which the prosecution has based the charge of first degree murder with a maximum penalty of death in the California gas chamber.
"We have been realistic with him all along," the legal aide
Emile Zola Berman of New York, one of Sirhan's three lawyers, said bluntly the principal objective is "to save his life."
Should the jury return a verdict of first degree murder "with malice afoREthought and premeditation," the same jury panel would hold a "second trial" to decide on a penalty of life imprisonment or death.
Selection of the jury of 12 regular members and six alternates was expected to take as long as three weeks.
Wire service guild strikes AP
NEW YORK (UPI)-The Associated Press and the Wire Service Guild, representing 1,200 AP editorial employees in the United States, filed counter claims of unfair labor practices
Chancellor
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) Leavenworth war school, remained for two years after graduation and returned as commandant in 1960. He retired last summer as Army chief of staff.
Committee members say the final choice may not come from their list at all, but from the Board of Regents. Should this occur, the Regents will consult the chancellor selection committee before the final choice is made.
At this time no KU personnel are under consideration for the top post. Between 25 and 30 KU faculty members have been nominated for the post, but committee members say few have been given serious consideration.
®
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Dwight Boring* says...
yesterday. The union also announced members have authorized a strike.
*Dwight Boring
209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone V1 2-0767
The AP filed a charge with the New York district director of the National Labor Relations Board claiming the guild since "on or about Nov. 1, 1968 ... has threatened and coerced employees in the performance of their jobs ... and has refused to bargain in good faith."
representing
THE COLLEGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF AMERICA
AP General executive John Koehler said the vote for strike authorization was taken after AP management last Friday gave the WSG a "take it or leave it" contract offer.
...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
The guild seeks a two-year contract with a top salary of $280.
Dance to the
fabulous
Hippers
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Don't Miss The Flippers
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Home of the Ranch-Fresh Hamburger
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.64
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
Nationwide revolt touted
★★
Rudd speaks; women blush
By SUSAN BRIMACOMBE
Kansan Staff Writer
The only surprise at last night's SUA minorities opinions forum was that the speaker didn't show up nude.
Although clean-shaven and conservatively dressed, his language could sure use a good bath. Rudd sent ripples of laughter through the audience with an excessive use of the word f...k and an off-color parable.
His language was obscene.
And tales he did tell.
Photo by Greg Sorber
With sideburns short enough to pass Army standards, the military and Columbia University reject, Mark Rudd hopped on stage before a cross-section of KU students, faculty and administrators to tell his gory tale of Columbia's violent uprising.
The boyish-looking rebel casually related a story of a Japanese samurai who lined up several Japanese women, reaching orgasm upon having sexual intercourse with the final woman.
This was not the end of the fun. Rudd challenged the somewhat abashed audience to draw analogies with the story. A male student rose
(Continued to Page 12)
By LINDA LOYD and SUSAN BRIMACOMBE Kansan Staff Writers
Mark Rudd at the Kansas Union Ballroom
Mark Rudd, student rebel leader from Columbia University, last night called for a mass democratic movement to overthrow America's ruling class which perpetuates racism, diploma-factory education and "other exploitations."
The former Columbia head of Students for Democratic Society (SDS), defined the ruling class as that 3 per cent of the population which controls 60 per cent of the country's wealth.
"This movement would involve the middle class, so far composed only of students, and the working class who now support Wallace," Rudd told about 1,000 persons at an SUA Minority Opinion Forum in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Speaking of Columbia's revolt last spring, Rudd said students were protesting the power of the university to construct a segregated university gymnasium on stolen Harlem property.
"The gym is symbolic of the way the university expanded into Harlem throwing blacks out to form a white ghetto for Columbia.
"Students considered this action racist because it exploited black people worsening the situation of blacks and Puerto Ricans in New York."
During Rudd's speech, 10 KU students walked out of the ballroom carrying such signs as "Aarkvarks Eat Ants" and "Quarantine Pay Toilets."
In the film, "Columbia Revolt," which Rudd showed the KU audience, demonstrators said they refused to be produced to go out into society. "We can't accept teacher's paternalistic role. Our demands must be taken seriously."
Produced to give a visual impression of the Columbia uprising, the film showed that within two days students had occupied and held five buildings including the
(Continued to Page 12)
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
Sirhan denied two juries
LOS ANGELES—Sirhan B. Sirhan went on trial yesterday for the murder of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy seven months ago and the judge quickly denied defense motions to have two juries—one for the verdict and one for the penalty—and to delay the case 30 days.
Lebanese cabinet quits
Superior Court Judge Herbert V. Walker adjourned the 90-minute session until 2 p.m. today when he said he would hear arguments on two more defense motions—both to quash a murder indictment against Siran.
BEIRUT—Premier Abdullah Yafi yesterday submitted his cabinet's resignation to President Charles Helou, plunging Lebanon into a government crisis 10 days after the surprise Israeli helicopter commando raid on Beirut airport.
PARIS-The French government announced yesterday it has stopped shipping arms and military spare parts to Israel in an effort to ease the Middle East situation.
France halts military aid
WASHINGTON—The House voted to pay Richard M. Nixon $200,000 a year as president—double the pay of his predecessor. The Senate seems certain to go along.
Nixon gets double salary
--was called before the University's board of review Monday night. Rollinis was reviewed on threats of arson prior to the December fire which destroyed Nichols Auditorium.
ASC passes Senate Code
Members of the All-Student Council (ASC) unanimously adopted the newly revised Senate Code at last night's meeting and introduced a resolution banishing firearms from the campus police force.
The revision of the proposed Senate Code has resulted from the deliberations of a joint conference committee consisting of three ASC members and three faculty representatives which began meeting more than a month ago to iron out the differences in the ASC and University Senate Code.
The newly revised Senate Code will be voted on by the faculty Friday afternoon. If accepted by the faculty, a two week notice will be given in the University Daily Kansan as to the dates of the student body election for the proposed Senate Code.
Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student and chairman of the ASC, said the elections should be near the end of February.
Von Ende, in reviewing the ironed out version of the Senate Code, said there was very little
Five black students disrupt K-State class
MANHATTAN-Five black students, shouting obscenities, disrupted a sociology class at Kansas State University yesterday afternoon.
With the permission of the instructor, Eugene Lupir, assistant professor of sociology, the five black students conducted an open dialogue on race relations with the class of 250 sociology students.
Twenty students walked out after the militants began shouting obscenities. Before the class period ended, five of the 20 protesting students returned.
Lupri called the dialogue a "good discussion" and his two teaching assistants said the dialogue "was beneficial to all concerned."
Andy Rollins, K-State freshman and one of the five black militants,
Rollins was one of several students, who early last fall printed fliers with arson threats in copies of the Kansas State Collegian, a student publication at K-State.
The charges of "irresponsible acts" were dismissed by the University.
James A. McCain, K-State president, said: "This infident is under careful investigation. As soon as the facts are in, appropriate action will be taken."
Rollins, was invited by Lupi to speak before the class, Jan. 16, on the topic of race relations.
disagreement between the members of the conference committee.
"The proposal to incorporate a student committee on architectural affairs has been included in the fiscal affairs of planning and resources committee. Under the newly revised Senate Code, von Ende said, a disciplinary board of appeal for students who have grievances or have not reached satisfaction through their school was created.
In summing up the passed version of the Senate Code von Ende said, "I feel as if we lost absolutely no ground and held what we already had."
The proposal banishing firearms from the campus police force was postponed until the next meeting so representatives from the campus police force could be informed of the action and the ASC Traffic and Safety committee could ready a report on the situation.
Weather
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts cloudy and warmer weather today with temperatures dropping tomorrow. Occasional snow and colder temperatures are expected tonight. Winds should be northerly 20 to 30 miles per hour by evening. Today's high should be near 40 and tonight's low in the teens. Precipitation probability is 20 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight and 10 per cent tomorrow.
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
Democrats rumored for Regents posts
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI)—The Topeka Daily Capital said yesterday Gov. Robert B. Docking has selected Vincent L. Bogart, of Wichita, and Jess E. Stewart, of Wamego, to fill two vacancies on the state board of Regents.
The newspaper said a "well-informed source" revealed the appointments.
The governor's office had no comment on the story today. A spokesman said the governor's appointments would be announced Wednesday as previously planned.
The appointments of Bogart
and Stewart would give Docking the first Democratic majority on the board since his father, the late George Docking, was governor.
Bogart and Stewart would fill positions being vacated by Eldon Sloan, of Topeka, and John Eberhardt, of Wichita. Regents are appointed to four-year terms.
Stewart, 43, is a partner with his father in the Stewart Funeral Home, Inc., Wamego. Bogart, 46, is a Wichita attorney and during the past two legislative sessions has served as Docking's legislative liaison.
SUA festival committees chosen
Committees have been selected for the third annual Festival of the Arts March 16 to 22 in Hoch Auditorium, said Kent Longnecker, Mission junior and festival chairman.
Sponsored by Student Union Activities (SUA), the festival is a week-long series of films, lectures and concerts. The Dave Brubeck jazz trio and soul singer Lou Rawls will highlight this year's festival.
Wescoe named to HEW committee
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescow has been appointed to a special advisory committee to "evaluate the administrative and service functions" of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) during the Johnson-to-Nixon transition period.
Wescoe was named by Robert H. Finch, secretary-designate of HEW, late last month.
The committee will advise Finch and make recommendations pending the reports of task forces on health, education and welfare appointed by President-elect Richard M. Nixon.
Another member of the special committee is former KU Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, former chancellor of UCLA and now chairman of the board of the Times-Mirror Co. in Los Angeles.
Festival of the Arts committees are:
- Programs, Gail Kleinschmidt, Bartlesville sophomore; Judy Larson, Topeka junior; Pam Kulp, Mission sophomore, and Spice Yaun, Fort Worth, Tex., sophomore.
- Arrangements, Mike Miller,
* Pomade sophomore; Roland
Enoch, Wichita sophomore,
* Bob Wheeler, Wichita freshman.
- Tickets, Rick Thompson, Caldwell sophomore; Fran Finney, Bartlesville junior; Kathy Brinckley, Bartlesville sophomore, and Jeff Kozeny, Neodesha sophomore.
- Ushers, Mary Holman,
Leawood junior and Sherry
Huegel, Wellington junior.
Longeneker said only four of the six festival nights have been scheduled; Sunday March 16, stage production of Jean-Paul Sartre's "No Exit;" Tuesday March 18, National Pantomime Theater; Wednesday March 19, Dave Brubeck trio with Gerry Mulligan; Thursday and Friday March 20 and 21, speakers and films to be announced later, and Saturday March 22, soul singer Lou Rawls.
"Students will have an opportunity to purchase Festival of the Arts coupons by checking an IBM card during second semester enrollment," Longenecker said. The coupon, which last year cost $5, entitles students to a seat every night.
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Wednesday, January 8, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Mrs. Kahane continues Biafra relief campaign
By LINDA LOYD
Kansan Staff Writer
While thousands of children starve daily in Biafra, one KU student devotes 10 hours a day to keeping them alive.
Judith Kahane, graduate student in philosophy and wife of Howard Kahane, associate professor of philosophy, helped inaugurate the "Keep Biafra Alive" movement in Lawrence this fall.
"I've been interested in Nigeria ever since I lived there from 1958 to 1961," Mrs. Kahane explained. "Our oldest child was born in Nigeria." The Kahanes have two children-7-year-old Tony and 9-year-old Tom.
In September Mrs. Kahane contacted the American Committee to Keep Biafra Alive, a New York group of former Peace Corps volunteers organized to raise money and arouse interest in Biafra. Returning to KU with buttons, posters and new ideas, Mrs. Kahane joined two students in initiating a KU group.
They organized the 24-hour Biafra Lifeline in October in conjunction with the national observance, and later urged Gov.
Robert B. Doeking to declare November 24 as beginning the Kansas Month of Hope.
This last month Mrs Kahane has spoken to Kansas church, civic and university groups. She has been interviewed on radio and television. At one time, she spent 16 hours each day answering letters and designing posters and cards.
She expressed relief that her husband and children are cooperative and join in her efforts. Originally she had planned to cut back her Biafra efforts after the 24-hour vigil in October.
"Because the death rate is climbing from 12,000 to 25,000 daily and with hopes that the new administration will alter our government policy toward Biafra, I felt I must stay involved."
"The United States policy so far has been sympathetic with Britain in keeping Nigeria a showcase for democracy," Mrs. Kahane said. "Instead, we should examine African values to discover how similar they are to ours."
She has numerous interests. Both Kahanes work on the Lawrence Legal Defense Fund which is aimed at making the best bail money and courts available to all persons.
by the Wesley Foundation this fall and will be involved in the Institutional Racism course to be offered in February.
Calling for more planes and food is only a temporary stop-gap, she said. The United States should push for a cease fire and negotiations.
Selected as a Ford Foundation scholar at 15 years old, the former economics and German major entered Goucher Women's College in Maryland and graduated at 19. One undergraduate year she attended the University of Southern California at Berkeley and later entered New York's Columbia University graduate school in
Both were instructors in the White Racism course sponsored
iil
philosophy
"There came a time when I knew I didn't want to stay in economics or teach German. I became interested in philosophical questions and wanted to teach," Mrs. Kahane said.
She commuted to KU as a graduate student from Topeka one year and in 1965 moved to Lawrence as a research assistant. The following year she taught Introduction to Philosophy and the next year Ethics.
Starving Biafran
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
1969-down with death
Nobody died in the United States last year-by capital punishment, that is.
The number of executions has been diminishing rapidly in the past few years from an all-time high of 199 executed in 1935 to seven in 1965 (four in Kansas) to one in 1966 and, finally none in 1968.
This record, admirable in itself, also points out a contradictory fact in American opinion. Although the present trend seems to be towards law and order and a hard-line approach in dealing with criminals, a Gallup poll taken in 1967 said that the majority of U.S. citizens opposed capital punishment.
This, as the St. Louis Post-Dispatch pointed out in an editorial last week, correlates with the "fact . . . that there is absolutely no evidence that capital punishment deters crime, however much those who demand vengeance may assert that it does." The five states with the highest murder rates in the United States, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Florida and Mississippi, also lead in the number of executions per year.
The death penalty, however, does discriminate heavily against the poor, those who haven't the money for expensive and lengthy appeals and stays of execution. It also, especially in the South, discriminates against the black people, not only as a poorer class, but also in the number of death
penalty verdicts by juries on hard to prove cases such as rape.
The Legal Defense Fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has helped to reduce the death figure greatly. The Defense Fund concentrates all of its resources on capital punishment cases and currently represents about half of the 500 inmates of death row in the United States. The Fund hopes to soon be able to secure a Supreme Court finding that executions are a form of cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the Eighth Amendment.
But last fall, a bill defended by Attorney General Ramsey Louis Clark advocating the abolishment of the death penalty never made it onto the Senate floor for discussion.
Already 13 states have abolished the death penalty and 73 foreign countries no longer have executions.
And although 1968's record was clean, 1969 could be marred by executions.
Since the majority opinion is against capital punishment and since it is neither a deterrent to crime nor fair to minority groups, nor humanitarian in the least, capital punishment should be abolished in the United States in 1969.
Alison Steimel Editorial Editor
Paperbacks
MIAMI AND THE SIEGE OF CHICAGO: AN INFORMAL HISTORY OF THE REPUBLICAN AND DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS OF 1968, by Norman Mailer (Signet, 95 cents)—The best of the new paperbacks, and an original also available in hardback. Here is a truly beautiful piece of reporting, even though it is absolutely loaded with bias. And insight. The bias and insight are what make it great. Mailer has made himself an extremely informed and thoughtful commentator on the national scene, and here he surpasses himself.
The Miami section is dullest, but then was the Miami convention a pretty dull affair. A coronation, as he sees it. Mailer is particularly thoughtful as he wonders what can be happening to him: a lifelong, confirmed Nixon-hater, he has these strange flashes when he almost likes the man who was not yet candidate, let alone president-elect. He winds up still cool to Nixon. And a marvelously perceptive page when he feels impatience with Ralph Abernathy for keeping him waiting so long at a press conference and wonders why he must not get too angry simply because Abernathy is a black man.
And then Chicago, and again some fine passages. Mailer was a Kennedy man (Robert), he did not care especially for McCarthy, and he sees in McCarthy what many saw as the summer progressed: a basically conservative man with a limited concept of the presidency. Mailer thought it might be good if the Democrats could nominate Rockefeller and the Republicans McCarthy. He also has some moments of self-doubt here, for he decides that his role as reporter is too important for him to become personally involved in the hippie-yippie-McCarthyite demonstrations, even though he sympathized with these people.
Mailer has a few blind spots, in my opinion. He seems absolutely incapable of seeing any merit in Humphrey (his view coincides with that of Robert Sherrill, published last summer). He sees the shooting of Andy Warhol as one of a chain of
horrible circumstances of 1968 (why not list all the other murders and muggings as well, in any year?). His hatred for the American politician as a whole seems a bit forced and petty, though what he says about "politics as property" is extremely thoughtful. And finally one may ask, perhaps prudishly, why Mailer feels that he must be bold and brave in his use of what we squares used to term obscenities. He's old enough now that he doesn't have to prove himself this way.—CMP
SHOTGUN BOTTOM, by Bill Burchardt (Dell, 50 cents) Shoot 'em up stuff, about a guy named Frank Ledbetter, marshal of Wildhorse, and the problems he faces in his tough town.
The rock hound
Bach on Moog
By WILL HARDESTY
There's nothing unusual about SWITCHED ON BACH on Columbia-except the instrumentation. The entire album is played on a Moog (sounds like rogue) synthesizer.
And what comes out is excellent. The music sounds almost like it were being played by a symphony orchestra. However, there is always that little hint of tone which lets you know just two men are making all that music. It is a new form of music-actual, honest-to-God "electronic music." The Moog synthesizer hits its stride as an instrument.
The album is, as Robert Moog, creater of the synthesizer which bears his name, says, "... the most stunning breakthrough in electronic music to date."
Kenneth S. White
SWITCHED ON BACH, aside from being interesting because it is a new music form, sounds beautiful. The glorious creations of Johann Sebastian Bach, played well on a beautiful instrument, have to come out ear-pleasing.
"Like any musical instrument, it has extraordinary capabilities and maddening limitations," Folkman says. "Playing it beautifully requires as much skill, practice, talent and taste as playing any instrument beautifully, plus the need of a composer's ear for new and different sounds. Often two pairs of hands and several feet are needed to take advantage of all that the Moog synthesizer can do, but the instrument is constantly being improved."
A Moog synthesizer is, in principle, an over-grown electronic organ. The synthesizer has many more gizmoes and whatzits so the sound which is produced can be made to sound like almost any kind of real, live-in-the-flesh instrument-harp, strings, brass, piano, harpsichord, oboe, bassoon.
"Reconstruction," a new underground voice, is born; Mark Rudd is invited to speak at
SWITCHED ON BACH is 38 minutes of works by Bach played on the synthesizer by Walter Carlos with the assistance of Benjamin Folkman.
The musicianship on the album is good—the group is strong and heavy. The thing which wrecks the album is Reid's singing. Sometimes, he sings well and sounds something like Donovan. But most of the time, his singing is bad and he sounds like Wayne Newton or a shouting Wayne Newton. When he tries to be a "creamer," his singing turns into a shout, into a screech, into a horrible rasping on the eardrums.
BANG, BANG YOU'RE TERRY REID on Epic is the first album for the 19-year-old Reid and his trio. Hopefully, it won't be the last album the group does, but, even more hopefully, the next one will be better.
On December 16, the Daily Kansan showed signs of perception: Alison Steimel's editorial, "Remember the 'Forgotten Ones,'" summarizing Indian problems evoked at Haskell, was one overdue glimmer of responsible journalism. The series concerning Haskell student life and opinion, although slanted, was at least a mature attempt to enlighten, if merely to glimpse minority points of view, all too rarely presented in Lawrence newspapers.
Letter to the editor
Minority involvement
KU. All on December 16. May I now suggest that we admit boldly that our community is at a turning point in the reconstruction of possibilities for full life for everyone, irrespective of group or class? Do we want to act? A modest beginning: let us invite, as campus speakers, on Minority Opinion Forums or otherwise, representatives chosen by disadvantaged persons themselves (an authentic spokesman selected by Indian students, for example). In this way, I believe, we may begin to come closer to understanding, then real hard work toward all the improvements so desperately needed in living conditions, reconciliation and mutual sympathy, and a more decent quality of life in the United States. Let us try to remove some of the blinders "hiding" the sober realities of today's world from Lawrence.
To the Editor and the Lawrence community:
Wait to buy a Terry Reid album. If he settles down and improves his style, he could turn into a hard rock Donovan.
Are we in Lawrence, students townspeople, faculty administrators, honestly involved in helping minority groups to find at last some of the advantages of being fully alive?
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 plate notice. Lawrence, Kansas 6664 accommodates students with a valid advertisement 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.
THE UNIVERSITY DADY
KANSAN
EIBII
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNA
'Remove J. Edgar Hoover? Would one lower the Washington Monument? Or dismantle the Statue of Liberty?'
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Glenn Cunningham arraigned in El Dorado
EL DORADO, Kan.
(UPI)—Glenn Cunningham,
a famous Kansas track star of
yesteryear, yesterday pleaded
not guilty to' a charge he is boarding children under 16 at his youth ranch without a state health license.
Cunningham and his wife, both appeared in Butler County Court before Judge Roy B. Darlington and both entered
In his annual state-of the-state message at Sacramento, Reagan asked lawmakers to tighten penalties for campus troublemakers while providing an "qualified education plan" for all qualified students at the nine university campuses and 19 state colleges.
"I will continue to use every power at my command to insure that safety and security—and the proper academic atmosphere—is maintained on every campus. I am determined that academic freedom and the pursuit of knowledge will be upheld, protected and preserved."
"We are greatly concerned about the attacks on our educational system by small groups of criminal anarchists and latter-day fascists," he declared. "At the moment, the problem confronting all of us is not just the problem of procedure of financing. Our overriding problem is anarchy and insurrection."
pleas of not guilty. Trial was not for Feb. 4.
Hayakawa vowed to keep 18,000-student San Francisco State operating with police force and volunteer teachers if necessary.
Reagan attacks SFS 'fascists'
Acting President S. I.
Meanwhile, the American Federation of Teachers threatened to spread their strike to other state college campuses.
As the GOP governor called on the state legislature to move against campus "anarchy and insurrection," militant teachers and students picketed San Francisco State College.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan said yesterday California's educational system is under attack by "criminal anarchists and latter-day fascists."
In Augusta, Cunningham said he "didn't have any idea," such a charge was to be filed.
"The thing of it is," he said, "we have some papers here that supposedly make us legal guardians of these kids."
He said authorities "haven't asked to see them (The papers) or anything else."
Leonard Watkins, assistant Butler County attorney, said the charge, a misdemeanor, alleges Cunningham and his wife are "keeping children under age 16 years in a boarding home without having obtained a
license as required by state law."
The charge was filed following a state attorney general's report last week that revealed two children under 16 were being kept at the ranch.
Cunningham has claimed he is the legal guardian of both children, but the state Department of Health says it has "no proof" to support Cunningham's claim.
The charge was the first to be filed against Cunningham since the health department requested an investigation into the operation of the youth ranch last Sept. 30.
108
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6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
Speaking of sports
Toomey: Sportsman '68
By Ron Yates, Kansan sports editor
In selecting the 1968 Sportsman of the Year, numerous qualities are taken into consideration. Not only is the achievement considered, but the courage, character and contribution to athletics by the individual are also examined.
The athletes on this list are separated by a thin line. All are brilliant performers and dedicated athletes. They all have left new marks in the record books and their names are known throughout the country and in many cases, throughout the world.
The number one athlete as selected by members of the Kansan sports staff is the Kansan's choice for Sportsman of the Year. The others are listed in order of total votes received.
in order of total votes received. 1. BILL TOOMEY (Sportsman of the Year). Toomey, a 29-year-old schoolteacher from California, won the Olympic decathalon with 8,193 points, third highest total ever recorded in Olympic competition. Hans-Joachim Walde of West Germany was second with 8,111 points. The decathalon is a grueling 24 hour event lasting 12 hours a day for two days. It consists of 10 different events. Toomey, who before the decathalon began, was given only an outside chance of finishing third with a more probable finish of fifth, led all the way. During the first day he sprained his thumb pole vaulting and then injured his hip high-jumping. Nevertheless, Toomey continued his domination of the Decathalon. Toomey had only been training in the decathalon events since 1964 when he made the decision to become a decathalon competitor. He was 25 years old when he quit the 400 meter race for the decathalon. "I never thought I belonged anywhere but around the edges in the decathalon. Not anymore, though. After 24 hours I earned that son of a gun," Toomey said after his victory. His dedication and courage displayed in his decathalon victory was nothing short of inspirational. His spirited competition against heavy odds makes him truly a great sportsman.
Many experts in the track world had advised Toomey, on more than one occasion to "give up in the decathalon." He was often described as a medioere and average athlete who would more than likely finish fourth in most of his competition. Toomey, in winning at the Olympics, proved that there is something deeper and more mysterious in fantastic performances than mere statistics and past records. A "mediore" athlete had just won the toughest form of athletic competition known and thus became known as the "Greatest athlete in the world"—the unofficial title which goes along with winning the decathalon.
2. DENNY McLAIN, Detroit Tiger pitcher. McLain won 31 games for the Detroit Tigers during the regular season and pitched in the World Series
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against St. Louis even though on occasion he could not lift his arm above his head. McLain's 31 victories were the highest total since Lefty Grove won 31 in 1931. Dizzy Dean had won 30 in 1934 ... the last man to win 30 games before McLain's feat. Many of his teammates said McLain's radiating confidence helped the entire team to win the pennant and eventually the series.
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3. O. J. SIMPSON, University of Southern California halfback. Simpson, often described as the best ball carrier of all-time, averaged more than five yards a carry this year. Simpson, who at one time as a child had rickets, a bone disease, is a constant threat to break open and go all the way every time he gets the ball. The statement has been made that probably more defenses were changed by opponents during Simpson's two years at USC in order to stop the blazing halfback than for any other runner in history. In 21 games for USC Simpson carried the ball 674 times for 3,423 yards and 36 touchdowns.
4. ARTHUR ASHE—Currently recognized by tennis experts as America's greatest player, Ashe became the first amateur to win the U.S. Open tennis matches. He went on to lead the American team in its quest for the Davis Cup—the first time the United States had won the cup in five years. Ashe also won the U.S. National matches at Brookline, Mass.
5. K I P C H O G E KEINO - Distance runner from Kenya. Keino, after almost a solid week of distance races which included the 10,000 meter and the 5,000 meter races, upset the favored Jim Ryun in the 1500 meter run winning with a time of 3:34.9, just 1.8 seconds off the world record. (Jim Ryun holds the world record in this event with a time of 3:33.1) Keino has not only been a great distance runner the past few years, he has served as an inspiration to his fellow Kenyans in Kenya's bid to become the dominant nation in distance events.
6. BILL RUSSELL-For 12 years Russell has been a dominant influence on his basketball team the Boston
Celtics. As a player, he is respected not only by his teammates, but also by his opponents. In 1968 Russell became the coach of the Boston Celtics and not only played, but also coached in leading his team to the NBA Championship.
7. JEAN·CLAUDE KILLY—Considered the world's top skier, Killy holds the world record in the men's slalom, the men's giant slalom, and the men's downhill. Killy also won the World Cup for men in skiing competition. After doing all of this, Le Superman, as he is known in his native France, went on to win three gold medals in the 1968 Olympic Winter Games at Grenoble, France.
8. BOB BEAMON-His jump in the 1968 Olympic games in Mexico City has been called "unbelievable" by track experts throughout the world. Beamon's jump of 29 feet and $2 \frac{1}{2}$ inches is almost two feet more than the old world record of 27 feet 4 and $ \frac{3}{4} $ inches.
9. GEORGE FOREMAN—The 19-year-old American Olympic heavyweight boxer who surprised the world with his easy domination of the heavyweight division in the games. Foreman was not even considered a good bet for the bronze medal before the competition began, but after his first two fights eyebrows were being raised. After Foreman had pounded his Russian opponent into senselessness in the final bout for the gold medal, he took out a small paper American flag and waved it while the award was being made. Foreman was a graduate of the U.S. Job Corps program and said he felt deeply grateful to the country for giving him the chance to make something of himself and eventually compete in the Olympics.
10. ELVIN HAYES—In his first year of NBA competition, Hayes is leading all scorers. He is a key member of the San Diego basketball team and as a rookie has become a leader on the team. Hayes was voted the outstanding college basketball player in 1968 and is on the way to being selected outstanding rookie of the year in the NBA.
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Hayes leads NBA scorers
Here is the opportunity to earn good money while waiting for the call from Uncle Sam or for things to open up in the Spring.
We are particularly interested in graduates with business, accounting, economics, or law backgrounds, but will consider others who like to work with figures and people.
H&R BLOCK, America's Largest Income Tax Service offers pleasant, interesting work with good pay. Most openings are temporary in nature beginning in January and terminating on April 15th, but chances do exist for permanent positions.
For more information please contact Mr. Andersen at our local office, 723 Massachusetts, Phone VI 2-3207 or (816) JE 1-6400 for an interview.
Positions open in our local office or in any one of more than 3,000 offices in the United States and Canada.
NEW YORK (UPI)—Elvin Hayes, who yielded a berth on a goal medal-bound U.S. Olympic team for an early opportunity to make good in the pros, held the scoring lead in the National Basketball Association today with 1,226 points.
Hayes, keeping San Diego in contention for a playoff berth, averaged 30.7 points a game for the first half of the season. Oscar Robertson of Cincinnati was runnerup with 1,034 points through last Sunday's games.
The 54 points by Hayes against Detroit on Nov.11 is the NBA high this season and established the former Houston
All America as a top candidate for rookie of the year honors.
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"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432
Wednesday, January 8, 1960
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
KU still No.6
NEW YORK (UPI)—St. John's University, where winning basketball is a tradition, is also a success at the ballot box as the Redmen continue their surprising rise in the weekly United Press International major college ratings.
Coach Lou Carneseca's charges, who cracked the list of the elite last week by upsetting No. 2 North Carolina, used the same formula again this week to move into eighth position.
The Redmen toppled No. 3 Davidson from the ranks of the unbeaten in a hair-raising overtime battle, and the second consecutive upset of a high ranking team helped boost the New York school from 10th to eighth.
The 35-member UPI Coaches Rating Board once again gave mighty UCLA unanimous support as the No. 1 team. Coach John Wooden's Bruins received all the first place votes for the fifth consecutive week.
North Carolina, rebounding with a convincing victory over Duke following the upset loss to St. John's, held on to second place but the Tar Heels were being challenged for the runnerup spot by powerful Santa Clara.
The Tar Heels received 249 points in the weekly balloting while Santa Clara, unbeaten in 12 games and anxious to get another crack in the playoffs against UCLA, compiled 201 points. Davidson, now 7-1, slipped to fourth with 199 points.
Illinois and New Mexico State, both unbeaten, also moved up in the ratings while Kentucky and Villanova slipped slightly and Kansas held on to its No. 6 position.
Illinois, 10-0 under second-year coach Harv
Schmidt, moved to No. 5 while Kentucky, a loser to Wisconsin, dropped to seventh. Villanova 7-1 slipped to ninth while New Mexico State 11-0 climbed from 15th to the No. 10 spot.
New Mexico headed the second 10 with 31 points, followed in order by Notre Dame, Purdue, Duquesne, Columbia, Louisville, Drake, Tulsa, Northwestern and Detroit. Northwestern and Detroit tied for 19th with nine points each.
Morgan gets NCAA award
Dave Morgan, Wauwatosa, Wisc. senior, has been awarded a $1000 scholarship for post graduate study by the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
Morgan is a three year letterman in football. He played for the Jayhawks as a defensive back and punter.
Majoring in mathematics, he has a 2.5 grade point average.
He is the second KU football scholar that has been honored by the NCAA. Ronald D. Oelschlager, Marion senior in the school of medicine was presented the award in 1965.
Thirty-three such awards were made nationally in the university and college divisions.
Lake ready for skates
Cyclones set national record to defeat Jayhawk gymnasts
Potter's Lake has now frozen solidly enough to support ice skaters, said Henry Shenk, professor of Physical Education. The ice is about five inches thick, Shenk reported. He said that ice must be about four inches thick.
Although Iowa State's gymnasts posted the highest team score in the nation, they only clipped the Jayhawks by slightly more than four points in a dual meet at New Robinson Dec. 20.
The Cyclones broke the 9.0 barrier nine times and amassed a whopping 160.75 points in the meet. "Iowa State's score is the best in the nation so far," Bob Lockwood, KU's gymnastics coach, said.
Kansas finished the meet with 156.375 points to register the second best score by a Big Eight gymnastics team. This score also erased the previous KU record for total points.
The two teams will clash again in the conference meet March 20-22 in Ames, Iowa.
Ed Gagnier, ISU's gymnastics coach, told Lockwood after the Dec. 20th meet that he was impressed by KU's gymnasts. "Kansas is easily the second best team in the conference and I hope you don't beat us in the conference meet," Gagnier said.
KU spotted the Cyclones a four-point lead after the first three events (floor exercise, side horse, and rings) when three
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Jayhawk gymnasts did not score as well as they usually do and because Tom Johnson, a side hourse specialist, was sidelined with the Hong Kong flu.
KU's long horse vault, parallel bar and high bar teams rewrote Kansas' gymnastics record book but could not overcome ISU's early lead.
carry lead.
The Jayhawks' parallel bar team of John Brouillette, John Edwards, Bob Pierson and Stan
Clyne established a new KU record for total points scored in this event and finished only 3 of a point behind the Cyclones' parallel bar team.
"I would consider Iowa State's parallel bar team the best in the country," Lockwood said. He said that this four-man team took three of the top four places in the Midwest Open in Chicago Nov. 30.
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Inspection Invited
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When you want to—
SELL YOUR BOOKS!
Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE
January 14 through 24
8:00 to 5:00, Monday through Friday
8:00 to 1:30 Saturday
Now paying patronage refunds
for period 43-Valid through June'69
kansas UNION BOOKSTORE
NOTICE
WINTER CLEARANCE SALE
图
SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTIONS ON...
...SUITS
... SPORT COATS
... DRESS SHIRTS
...TIES
...SLACKS
...SPORT SHIRTS
...SWEATERS
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SPECIAL GROUP OF LATE ARRIVALS V-NECK SWEATERS $10.00
Open Thursday Until 8:30
Enter Stock
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MISTER
GUY
TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
920 Massachusetts
Normal Alterations Included
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
KU students meet Miami police dogs
By STEVE HAYNES Kansan Staff Writer
Penn State may have won the Orange Bowl, but it wasn't because of a lack of KU enthusiasm.
Jayhawk fans threatened to change the entire face of downtown Miami after the game, and had KU won, they probably would have. They made a good start New Year's Eve.
It took ten Miami police officers and three hungry-looking German shepherds to disperse the more than 300 KU students who had blocked traffic on Biscayne Boulevard, Miami's main street, for half an hour.
A KU victory would, no doubt, have brought the students, and the police, back in force.
The trouble started New Year's Eve when KU students—including most of those from the SUA flights staying at the Biscayne Terrace hotel, plus a few who were there just to drink—gathered in the
Property stolen from fraternity
Delta Upson fraternity house was broken into and more than $2,000 worth of property was taken during Christmas break.
The burglar apparently broke the basement window in the house and took the DU's color television valued at nearly $600. Other property belonging to house members was taken, including a stereo record player, tape recorder, two cameras and some clothing.
A DU spokesman said, "People were here off and on during the break, and some people here in town checked periodically on the house so the burglary occurred sometime between checks."
Lawrence police are investigating the theft.
lobby of the hotel and performed the Rock Chalk chant at midnight.
It was a short step from the lobby to the sidewalk to the street. The group refused to allow traffic, other than Jayhawk fans and Greyhound buses, to move on the southbound lane of the street. Anyone who claimed to be a "Hawker" was allowed through. The buses simply refused to stop. No one stood in their way for long.
Less daring motorists were not so fortunate. One car bearing Pennsylvania license plates was bounced on its springs for a few minutes. Others just had to wait as the cheering, chanting, bottle-waving crowd told the world about the 'Hawks!
Despite its drunken and boisterous nature, the crowd remained non-violent. Four or five Penn State students wandered around the edges of the group.
No one was bothered other than the hapless motorists and
the enthusiastic crowd, which got wet. Other KU fans, it seems, were dropping pitchers of water on the street from their rooms.
The first police car arrived about 12:05, red light flashing, and the students ceased shouting "We're number one" and returned to the sidewalk. As soon as the police car was out of sight, the crowd returned to the streets.
Police came in force at 12:25 a.m. When the crowd saw the unsheathed nightsticks, and the police dogs, which acted as though they had not had a square meal since the last Orange Bowl, it broke up. Fast.
The officers pursued into the hotel with the dogs. About 20 students crowded into the stairwell in the lobby, hoping to escape possible arrest. Four officers, one with the dog, opened the door and told them to come out. Since the dog was at the door, straining its leash no one would come out. It was a stand-off, though, since the
Date selected for McCoy talk
The date of the next in the current series of Humanities Lectures at KU has been changed from January 9th to February 6th.
That lecture will feature a KU professor of history, Dr. Donald R. McCoy, who will speak on "The Foundations of the Modern Civil Rights Movement, 1940-1954."
Professor McCoy's lecture will begin at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Auditorium in Murphy Hall.
Other lectures for the Humanities Series this season will present Professor Roger Shattuck of the University of Texas on February 18; Dr. Emily Vermeule of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts on March 18; Professor Donald M. Frame of Columbia University on April 10; and Dr. Jacques Barzun, the noted critic of education, the arts and society, on April 29.
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Which was not quite true
The police, giving up, locked the dog back in its cage, and cleared the lobby at the request of the manager, who said, "They are tearing my place apart."
on
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police could not get past the dog either.
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1301-11 Mass. St.
The KU students dutifully returned to their rooms, but their spirit was subdued.
Phone VI 3-1151
Police made one arrest—they ushered a scantily-clad male into a squad car.
Reservations Suggested
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.
The Castle Tea Room
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!
STILL THE MOST UNIQUE RESTAURANT IN LAWRENCE
The University of Kansas Theatre presents
MEDIEVAL CHRISTMAS PLAYS
The Annunciation The Offering of The Magi The Second Shepherd's Play
Experimental Theatre
Curtain 8:20 p.m.
Mia Pue
Murphy Hall UN 4-3982
Tickets: $1.50
w/KU ID: 75c
January 6,7,8,9,10,11
the VILLAGE SET
ELCOMES YOU BACK TO KU
We are making large reductions on an Excellent Selection of Full and Winter Clothing
FRESSES - SKIRTS SWEATERS
SALE 30% - 50% Off
DRESS COATS-JACKETS-CAR COATS ALL SPORTSWEAR AND ENSEMBLES
M
SALE 30%-50% Off
All Sales Final
No Exchanges or Refunds
M
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised to the
student may be offered 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. 1241 Iadl. 2-4
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
Vests, Belts, Watchbands, Sandals,
Purses, Moccasins, Hair Barretts and
Bandlets. Custom Made at PRIMARILY
LEATHER. 812 Mass. Open at Noon.
1968 Olds Culls S. Convertible. A.T., P.S., P.B., 7,000 miles. Call VI 2-1911 before 6:00 p.m. weekdays and urdays or VI 2-6156 after 6:00 and 2-4
1965 Pontiac Lemans, 2 dr., hd. top,
326, 4-speed, excellent condition. Call
VI 2-8915 by 7 p.m.
1-10
1963 V. W. Must sell immediately.
Leave name and phone. Call VW.
1-10
100% Human Hair fall with bangs (detachable). Dark brown. Contact Barb Schruber, Room 113. VI 2-4240.
1-10
"Fender Stratocaster" with case. Cait
Gleave at V2-74525. 1-16
1960 Volkswagen—Body perfect, Good motor, Real good shape throughout. Radio and reclining seat. $450. VI 2-
6046.
Naismith Hall contract. Save $25 on contract for Spring semester. Call VI 3-3382. 1-10
Antique set of 12 encyclopedia diationaries. Dated 1897. In Good Condition. Also antique dishes and miscellaneous. 615 Mass. 1-10
NAIMISHM (Delicious Girls) . . Beautiful Food) CONTRACT(S) -1 or 2 MEN-2N -10 Semester. Contact: Joe Mikesic, 842-2711. 1-10
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-q--outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.25; Rib order. $1.50; Rib sandwich. $8.5; $1/2 chicken. $1.15; Brisket sandwich. $7.5; Hours. 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tr
Pay-Less$
Self Service SHOES
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times a week delivery. Diaper and Baby Laundry Service $16 a month. Family Therapy 75c for 9 Ibs Call SMITH IV-3 8077-2-4
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Ph. VI 3-8074. 1-8
Personal Loans: Seniors & Graduate students. Contact Mr. Ruge. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. Phone VI 3-8074. 1-8
Town Manor's pent house apt. Private entrance. Completely furnished, TV, steam heat, air-cond., quiet. Parking. Business man, professor or grad student. No small children or pets. Available Feb. 1st. Est. Call VI 3-8000. 2-456
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages—anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 lowa. VI 2-1320. 2-4
Two contracts available for men for the spring semester at Naimith Hall. Call Dan, VI 3-2434 or Roger at VI 2-2775. 1-9
FOR RENT
Sleeping room for boys. Cooking privileges, refrigerator, linens tunished, street parking. Available on street. No pets. 1328 Ohio. Available VI 3-9474.
3-rm. basement apt., utilities paid, off street parking, private bath, private entrance, suitable for 2 people. Also sleeping room. No pets. Call V1-3-10
Openings for second semester! One and two-bedroom furnished apartments, very nice. Lots of closets and storage space. Junior League. Apartments, 1741 West 19th, Apt. 5-B, VI. 3-8220. Located near Allen Field House. 1-10
Room and private bath for two graduate men. $ _{1/2} $ block from campus. In West Hills. Phone VI 3-3077. 1-10
Furn. 2-bdrm, house, walk to KU, $130
Rental, now. Edmonds 1-100
Estate V. 3-0570.
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Unusual Gift Ideas Artist Supplies
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- McConnell Lumber
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- Art supplies and canvas
- Now taking enrollments for Jan. Beginning classes in Decorative Painting
- Liquitex now in 5 oz jars
- Now taking enrollments
- Ligustex now in 5 oz jars
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
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Brake Adjustment 98c
Grease Job $1.50
Motor Tune-up with
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TYPING
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Andrews Gifts
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To make manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
Plenty of Free Parking
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. Located near Oliver Hall VI 3-2873. tt
TERM PAPERS, THEMES, THEISIS.
KU graduate with new electric machine.
fast service. Call Mrs. Currier after 5:30 p.m., VI 2-1409.
1-9
Experienced in typing thesas, themes,
t-term papers, etc. Have electric type-
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Phone VI .3-9554.
Mrs. E. Wright. 2-4
Typing of thehes and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs.Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 2-4
Former Harvard and Univ. of Minn.
secretary will type reports, term papers,
theses. VI 3-7207. 1-10
Do you need an accurate typist for term papers, theses, dissertations, letters, etc. if? So, call; VI 3-5023 and ask for Mrs. Jackson. 1-10
Term papers, thesis and miscellaneous.
Contact: Mrs. Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama,
VI 3-1522. 2-18
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Mrs. Ruckman, 1V.3-3281. 2-earn
WANTED
Roommate for second semester to
hare two (2) bedroom apartment.
$8 per month including utilities.
Phone VI 3-4993 or VI 3-7888 after
7:00 p.m. JAYHAWKER TOWERS
APARTMENTS. 1-10
If the shoe fits REPAIR IT
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th — 7:30 - 5:30
Closed Sat. at Noon
Kustum and Fender Headquarters Complete Music Supplies Lessons and Rentals 18 E.9th VI2-0021
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Buy UNICEF Cards and Calendars now at KU BOOKSTORE
SUPPORT NEEDY CHILDREN
EVERYONE SAYS
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get antifreeze—starting service
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Male roommate wanted for second semester. Your apt . . . mine . . .
other. Graduate student preferred.
VI 2-3515. 1-8
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Male student needs roommate now or
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5 p.m.
Al Lauter
- Awards
Luxury Apts., 941 La. 2 ambiuges you need one male rooie. Only 55 beans plus food. VI 2-6252 Urgent! Army Calling. 1-9
Position available immediately to female grad, student or student wife. Work will include some supervisory and administrative duties. Experience computing necessary for Bob Mason at UN-4-4291. Full-time work. 1-10
Graduate coed is looking for home spring semester; apartment with roommate or city apartment with cooking experience. Call I-2 7402 evenings. Call I-1
2 amable guys need an amiable group (of 3) or an amiable roomie. Swiss Villa beats $55 a month. 2 big bedrooms. Beats draft. VI. 2-6252. 1-9
Experienced musician; lead guitarist and singer, to play with established bookings already 3 months in advance. Call GV. II 3-7689 or IV 2-5170 1-10
Male roommate wanted for second se-
cond year. Graduate student preferred. VI 2-3515.
Talented serious musicians to re-organize top area band and jazz, opera, vocalists especially desired. Play soul, blues, jazz, rock—anything. Bookings, tours, sound recordings, jections. Box 373, Lawrence. Particulars and experience. 1-10
Male. No experience necessary. Will train Mechs—uniforms and insurance pimped. 3 p.m.-11 p.m. Jobs available—personal application necessary. Ask for Mr. Smith or Mr. Spencer. Howard Johnson Restaurant on turnpike between Lawrence and K.C. 8 miles. 2-4
HELP WANTED
New York Cleaners
- Reweaving
for the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-
time openings available in day or
night shifts. Apply in person only.
Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. If
VI 3-0501
926 Mass.
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. *
Help Wanted—Neat young men and women, waiters and waitresses in hospitality, experience in preferred, well trained. Call VI 2-0360 evenings or VI 2-9848 days 2-04
LOST
For
Students for delivery work on Saturday,
Sunday, Sunday, Jan. 11, $2.50 per hr.
Send name, address, telephone to Jim McFall, Box 153, Lawrence. 1-10
One green bilbillfold lost somewhere between the Student Union and Bailey Hall. 12:11 Cc1 VI 5-3 or turn in to the Student Union or flight office in Hoch. 2-4
Reading glasses. Lost somewhere be-
needed for calls. Call VI 2-1920. . 1-10
A Post Versalog sliderule in room 235 Murphy. With finals coming this engineer's life depends on his rule. Call Miller, VI 3-8454. 2-4
SERVICES OFFERED
FREE CAR WASHES (all the time)
Mister Donut
Complete your winter wardrobe, and get started on spring clothes. Learn about the kinds of stylist clothes. Experienced. Reasonable. Cherry Klein. 842-697-0 2-10
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Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
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842-9563
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THE LOUNGE Budwieser on Tap
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HOME OF
THE CHALK HAWK
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, January 8, 1969
Nationwide revolt sought
Photo by Greg Sorber
Eight-ball in the corner pocket
This photo was taken by a Kansan photographer while he and Mark Rudd wei laying pool in the basement of the Kansas Union. The game took place while a movie, "Columbia Revolt," was being shown in conjunction with Rudd's appearance at the SUA's Minority Opinion Forum last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Jayhawker ready for pickup today
To pick up the winter edition, Miss McCreyer said students who have previously purchased the books need only their KU-ID's.
Distribution of the first edition of the 1969 Jayhawker Magazine Yearbook began today in Strong Hall rotunda.
Linda McCreery, Honolulu,
Hawaii, junior and Jayhawker
editor, said distribution will
continue tomorrow and Friday.
Students will receive the Jayhawker hard cover and the first section of the yearbook during this distribution.
(Continued from Page 1)
Rudd speaks
and told listeners that people should live every moment of their life to the fullest—not just the final moments.
Several other males voiced their opinions but finally one brave co-ed volunteered to reveal her conclusion from the stage.
She connected the tale with the common fear of talking openly about sex, and seemed to receive the approval of the uninhibited speaker.
For the students and faculty members who attended last night's performance, some may have left disappointed, others contented, many surprised, but none escaped outstretched dixie cups at the doors into which Rudd's companions requested donations for his speaking campaign.
Three Kansan reporters win national awards
Three University Daily Kansan reporters are recent recipients of national awards given to student journalists, George Richardson, Kansan adviser announced yesterday.
Mike Shearer, Topeka junior,
was named one of the top 10
collegiate feature writers in the
nation by the William Randolph
Hearst Roundation. Diane
Samms, Wichita senior, and
Ruth Rademacher, Arkansas
City junior, were selected to
participate in the Newspaper
Fund Editing Intern Program for
1969. Linda Loyd, Ottawa
junior, was selected as an
alternate in the editing intern
competition.
competent.
Shearer was awarded a $150 scholarship grant by the Hearst Foundation in cooperation with the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism (AASDJ) for a feature article about homosexuals which was submitted in the ninth annual competition. KU's School of Journalism will receive a matching grant.
Shearer competed against students from 52 schools throughout the country.
Miss Samms and Miss Rademacher are among 45 students across the nation selected to begin intensive editing training in June.
IT'S ORANGE!
GET YOURS TODAY!
The 1969 Jayhawker is Orange
Distribution in Strong Hall: January 8,9,10
(Continued from Page 1)
If you have not already paid for yours, the Jayhawker will be sold in the Union.
university president's office. While students awaited police invasion, communication and food lines were set up between buildings.
KU viewers saw Columbia students dragged from buildings and ushered by police with night sticks into paddywagons.
"Universities are factories and you are the raw materials." Rudd told students. "The ruling class, which includes university trustees, uses the university and the university uses us."
Rudd said the university solves private industries need for personnel. "At Columbia we were reacting against a system of Vietnams."
Also protesting Columbia's connection with the Institute for Defense Analysis (IDA), students demanded severing ties with IDA for development of military weapons for war.
Bring KU ID
"In reality we were reacting against society," Rudd said. "We would do anything to stop the use of weapons in Vietnam because they are tools responsible for creating empires."
Prompted by a questioner at the close of his speech, Rudd said the solution to the society's problems lies in socialism. "Such problems as imperialism and capitalism would not exist under socialism," Rudd said.
The SUA Poetry Hour will feature Max Douglas at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Music Room.
Douglas to read poetry
Similar plane crashes perplex FAA experts
BRADFORD, Pa.
(UPI)—Perplexed federal accident experts yesterday investigated the carbon-copy similarity of two passenger plane crashes 13 days apart. The crashes killed 31 persons and injured 44.
Except for the number of victims-20 killed and 27 injured Christmas Eve and 11 killed and 17 injured Monday night—the crashes showed "amazing parallels," according to members of a 10-man investigating team of the National Transportation Safety Board.
Both planes were Allegheny Airlines Convair 580s. Both
crashed at about the same time, 8:30 p.m., EST, and in the same way-striking trees and flipping over after striking the ground-while attempting landings at the Bradford regional airport.
The crashes occurred on sister flights. The plane Christmas Eve was flying from Detroit to Washington and Monday night's plane was going from Washington to Detroit.
It snowed on both occasions, but the weather was not considered a causative factor in either crash.
The same team of air accident experts investigated both crashes.
SUA Flight to Europe
Price: $270 round trip
via Air France
Leaves from New York June 12
Returns from Paris August 13
Information Available at SUA office
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Regents to get committee suggestions
By MARLA BABCOCK Kansan Staff Writer
KU's Chancellor selection committee has interviewed nearly 20 prospects for the Chancellor's position and hopes to send its recommendations to the Kansas Board of Regents this month.
Five to 10 names will be presented to the Regents for further consideration, said Ambrose Saricks, associate dean of the Graduate School and committee chairman. The committee is composed of both students and faculty.
Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents, said last night that no date has been set nor plans made for selection of the new Chancellor.
The student committee is "advisory to the faculty in the same way that the faculty is advisory to the Regents," Saricks said.
Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student committee member, said the All-Student Council (ASC) organized the selection mechanism for the seven-member student committee.
Because the selection committees needed to begin
explained. Instead, the ASC called for nominations to be submitted from the student body at large.
functioning, the ASC didn't have time or organize a complex election system, von Ende explained.
Von Ende called the system "as democratic as you could have with such limited time." Both undergraduate and graduate students are represented on the committee.
Since the selection of the student committee last fall, members have met regularly with the six-member faculty selection staff.
"We have had from one to
three members of the student group at each of our meetings," Saricks said.
Two faculty members and two students interviewed prospects in New York during the holiday break, Saricks added.
Both Saricks and von Ende seemed pleased with the student-faculty cooperation among committee members.
Von Ende said the students meet separately from the faculty to discuss matters surrounding the selection.
"The students have been valuable and very active," Saricks said.
Von Ende said the student committee is always invited to a meeting or luncheon with each candidate. The luncheons give committee members an opportunity to meet and talk with candidates on a more informal basis.
Both men indicated that determining the final list of candidates to be recommended to the Regents will be a difficult task.
BULLETIN
"Most of the candidates we've interviewed have a long list of academic as well as administrative credits," von Ende said.
MANHATTAN, Kan. (UPI)Two Negro students, arrested on charges of disturbing the peace on the Kansas State University campus this week, were expected to be brought before a hearing today.
The exact nature of the hearing and the time were not disclosed by the county attorney's office.
Arrested Wednesday night were Andy Rollins and Alexander Cleveland.
(See KSU, page 16)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.65
Thursday, January 9, 1969
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Arabs deny charge
JERUSALEM (UPI)—Israel charged Wednesday that Arab guerrillas crossed the Lebanese border and blew up a building just inside Israel during the night. Lebanon denied the charge and later asked a leftist anti-Israeli politician to form its new government.
government Israeli chief of-staff Gen. Haim Bar-Levi said he doubted Arab commando raids would stop soon but warned Lebanon and other Arab countries they would not be worth the reprisals they would bring.
"The price they must pay is too high," he said.
In other major developments: Lebanon's President Charles Helou summoned six-time former Premier
Rashid Karami, well known for left leaning and anti-Israeli politics, and asked him to form a government to replace that of Premier Abdullah Yafi. Yafi's government resigned under fire.
The Lebanese government of Premier Abdullah Yafi resigned and President Charles Helou immediately began the search for a new cabinet.
Bar-Lev's sharp warning followed the dynamiting of an unoccupied farm building at the village of Shetula 500 yards from the Lebanese border. Lebanon denied it had anything to do with it.
The incident was the latest spark in the powderkeg Middle East situation which is growing worse
and involving more countries each day.
The Soviet Union blamed Israel Wednesday for pushing the region once again toward a "likely" war.
Moscow radio said, "it is likely that large-scale military conflict will occur again" and that the Jewish state was "the root cause."
French President Charles de Gaulle defended his country's arms embargo as necessary to avert another war. De Gaulle appeared unperturbed at Israeli criticism that the embargo was a stab in the back.
Government sources in Jerusalem said the Israelis probably would press for an early refund of more than $60 million paid for
(Continued to Page 16)
ROCK
CHLK
1879
J.
HAWK
?
(1)
Dyche gargoyles have KU spirit - 1873 style
Kansan photos by Carl Ricketts
Police break S.F. State picket
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Club-wielding police drove a wedge through a picket line of screaming student strikers Wednesday at San Francisco State College.
during the outburst.
The 200 police moved swiftly against the strikers after dispersal orders twice were nearly drowned by taunts of "on strike, shut it down," and "kill the pigs." When the militants attempted to regroup across the street, 16 horse troopers forced them from the area.
At least four persons were arrested and the melee erupted when some 200 dissidents refused police demands to open a corridor through a picket line of more than 1,000 students and union teachers at the campus' main entrance. Pickets threw rocks at police during the outburst.
kitters Wednesday at Sun Prairie.
At least four persons were arrested and two injured.
Among the injured was a television newsman who was struck during the barrage of rocks, bottles and boards.
Blood streamed from his forehead as volunteer medical corps provided emergency treatment.
At the height of the violence, a student was struck by a street car. He was taken away by an ambulance.
He was taken away by an ambulance. The violence broke out as the striking teachers spread their walkout to another school and threatened to involve others. Gov. Ronald Reagan moved to cut off their salaries.
At San Jose, 60 miles away, a professor was hit with a cherry bomb as union teachers began picketing the state college there for the first time in sympathy with the San Francisco crisis.
The governor, reiterating his vow to keep the colleges open, warned the American Federation of Teachers "there will be no pay for unauthorized absences."
(Continued to Page 16)
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
Rejection freezes talks
PARIS—North Vietnam dashed American hopes Wednesday that it might still be willing to accept allied proposals aimed at breaking the deadlock over the Paris talks.
A North Vietnamese spokesman rejected a U.S. suggestion that the Communists reconsider seating and speaking arrangements proposed by the allies.
"All these arrangements aim at making the conference two-sided," the spokesman said.
Blacks seize building
assessment BD The blacks took over Sydeman Hall in the early afternoon and refused to allow calls to go through the switchboard. They ejected all whites from the building, permitting only newsmen to enter.
WALTHAM, Mass.-Negro students took control of a Brandeis University building including the central telephone switchboard Wednesday after accusing the college of welching on demands made following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King.
Sirhan's lawyer shifts
LOS ANGELES—Sirhan B. Sirhan's defense attorney Wednesday challenged the entire jury selection system in maneuvers designed to save his client from a death sentence in the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
Chief defense attorney Grant B. Cooper attacked the constitutionality of the list of prospective jurors arguing certain groups, including lawyers, doctors and teachers, were exempt from it under California law.
Russell gives up command
WASHINGTON—Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., who led Southern forces through more than a decade of civil rights battles, Wednesday relinquished to Sen. Spessard Holland, D-Fla., the command of the conservative defense of the Senate's filibuster rule.
Debate was expected to start Thursday on a new liberal attempt to abolish or modify the Senate rule requiring a two-thirds vote to invoke cloture, or shut off debate.
(Continued on page 14)
(Continued on page 14)
Weather
Today sunny and cool. Light northerly winds. High upper 20s. Clear to partly cloudy tonight and Friday.Not so cold Friday.Low tonight in the teens. Precipitation probability today and tonight near zero. Friday 5 per cent.
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2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 1969
T
'Sherman'
Armadillo found in trash
Although an armadillo is usually described as living in warm climates, two KU students captured one in Lawrence Tuesday.
Don Hineman, Dighton senior, and Dave Weber, Overland Park senior, said they saw the animal as they were driving along 9th Street near University Terrace apartments.
The two caught "Sherman" in a box obtained from a near-by trash pile, which had apparently been the armadillo's home.
Weber said he thought it was an opossom, while Hineman argued it was a motorcycle helmet.
Weber said they contacted a Lawrence veterinarian and the Dyche Museum of Natural History to determine that Sherman would eat lettuce, insects and earthworms. They were told armadillos seldom carry rabies.
The museum informed them that one variety of armadillo is infrequently found as far north as Kansas, Hineman said.
Weber and Hineman plan to give the animal to Stan Roth, a
'Henry V' shown at 4:30 p.m.today
Lawrence Olivier's film version of William Shakespeare's "Henry V" will be shown at 4:30 p.m. today in the University Theatre.
The two hour film is regarded as Olivier's best film and one of the finest Shakespearean films made. Admission is free.
biology instructor at Lawrence High School.
MACBETH
CLIPS
EXHAUSTED?
When asked why they chose the name "Sherman," Weber said, "... because he looks like a tank."
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Mrs. Mae Burgert, 1807 Ohio St., has been found not guilty in the first Lawrence open housing case to be brought to court.
Open housing case solved
Maurice Woodard, Negro graduate student from Houston, Tex. charged Mrs. Burgert with hous
Medieval cycles opened yesterday
Written sometime between 1350 and 1450, the plays originated with verses from the Bible. They grew from a church practice of instructing congregations through drama. The plays became popular and in time, performances were moved outside the church.
Three plays from the medieval mystery cycles are playing tonight through Saturday at the University Experimental Theatre. Curtain time is 8:20 p.m.
Two of the plays are "The Annunciation" and "The Offering of the Magi." A third, "The Second Shepherd's Play," is considered the most outstanding of all the medieval cycle plays, said Virginia Hirsch, Milwaukee graduate student and director of the cycles.
The plays are called cycles because they were performed in a series beginning with the Creation and ending with the Last Judgment.
ing discrimination after attempting to rent a duplex from her in August.
The charge was filed in Lawrence municipal court and heard by Judge Jack Maxwell. Judge Maxwell, in a written opinion, ruled that the evidence failed to establish beyond reasonable doubt that Woodard was refused the apartment because of his race.
The building should be completed within six weeks, Lawton said, but installing equipment should take until late summer.
The new Life Sciences and Experimental Biology Building should be open by September, said R. Keith Lawton, vice chancellor
The housing ordinance, passed by the Lawrence City Commission in July, 1967, forbids refusing to rent to a person because of "race, color, religion or national origin."
Bio life to open
The new building, located just east of Summerfield Hall, has not been officially named.
The eight-story structure will be the home of the departments of microbiology, family life and human development and comparative anatomy, physiology and biochemistry.
Police chief wants guns for KU police
The All-Student Senate will soon vote on a proposal to ban firearms from the campus police force.
"We're police officers and we wear guns like any other policemen," said Moomau.
Campus police chief E. P. Moomau strongly disagreed with the proposal.
The police chief admitted some policemen at other universities are unarmed. Based on information gathered at a recent National Conference of Traffic and Security Directors, however, he said the majority of university policemen are armed.
One of the most important reasons police carry firearms is to protect the daily money shipments entering and leaving the university, Moomau said.
The police chief said he had no knowledge of a firearm ever being used against a KU student. He did cite one instance when pistol-armed police were called because a group of non-students attempted to remove equipment from a construction site.
The number of young born to the polar bear is nearly always two.
We encourage job-hopping. We do try to keep it intramural—within Du Pont that is—and we do have a more formal title for it, "planned mobility."
Saylor Gilbert, CH.E., V.P.I., 1962, tells it like it is.
It only means we don’t put you in a training program. We put you in growth jobs—to help you get to the top of your field the way you want to get there.
“Take a good look around you, and you'll see people at Du Pont who’ve had a lot of movement through very different kinds of jobs. There’s no doubt that this diverse experience helps you. For example, I had four assignments concerned with different aspects of polymerizing, casting, stretching and finishing our polyester film base.”
“Having had all this, I feel I was better prepared for my present position of training supervisor. But aside from the fact that variety can help you, I believe most people just like a change after working at one job for a period of time.”
Your Du Pont recruiter will be a guy like Saylor.. Ask him about planned mobility—or anything else you'd like to know about Du Pont. Mailing the coupon is the surest way to get in touch with him.
Du Pont Company
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 1969
War 1968-bombing halt and peace talks
Editors' Note:
This poll was taken before Christmas vacation. Since the Kansan editorial staff seldom uses a crystal ball, the three astronauts, Col. Frank Borman, Capt. James Lovell and Lt. Col. William Anders, who made the Apollo 8 moon flight were probably relegated to a much lower place in the Kansan poll than they would have been had the poll been taken after Christmas.
By JIM ANDERSON and ALISON STEIMEL
In new media standards, 1968 outdid itself.
Not only was it an election year with an eventful and unpredictable campaign but the year also abounded in tragedies such as the assassinations of Sen. Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King and in exciting breakthroughs such as the Apollo moon flight and heart transplants.
The editorial writers of the Kansan voted on the most important national news story of 1968 before Christmas vacation.
Apollo moon flight is rather low in the list of top news stories, since it took place after the poll. Undoubtedly it would now be much higher on the list.
The announcement of the bombing halt on North Vietnam made this fall by President Lyndon Johnson and the subsequent beginning of the Vietnam peace talks was voted as the first place story. This story also included all of the other war news and the intangible but ever-present effect of the Vietnam war on the United States and life of its citizens.
The second news spot was the 1968 campaign with the election of Richard M. Nixon as the next president of the United States. The election
category was also comprised of the many different facets of this campaign: the unusual candidacy of Eugene McCarthy, the third party competition of George Wallace and his running mate, Curtis LeMay, and the late candidacy of Sen. George McGovern.
The assassination of Sen. Robert Kennedy in California was ranked the third top story. Killed as he was acknowledging his primary victory in California last June, Kennedy's death ended the career of one of the brightest young liberal politicians of the times and also brought back memories of his brother John Kennedy's assassination in 1963.
The fourth story was student riots on college and university campuses across the country. The year began with riots at Columbia University in New York City on one side of the continent and ended with San Francisco State College being closed by protestors' demonstrations on the other side of the United States.
Student rebellion peppered the country throughout the year with riots in Paris, Czechoslovakia and other foreign countries as well as the United States. The goals of the students were diverse, from protests against racism to complaints of French students about General Charles de Gaulle. But the protests did display the determination of many of the world's students to have more rights and more representation in both campus and national affairs.
The invasion of Czechoslovakia by the troops of the Soviet Union in August of last year was judged the fifth ranking story. The smothering of the liberal Alexander Dubek's Communist regime and the stubborn though quiet resistance of the Czechoslovakian people has continued to make news throughout the fall and winter months.
"I shall not seek nor will I accept the nomination of my party." These words of President Lyndon Johnson last April will go down in history and the story was polled in the sixth place.
Johnson's surprise withdrawal from the Presidential race opened the campaign field up and
what had been prejudged as a possible boring election year with Johnson escenced as the Democratic candidate turned into a free-for-all.
The assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King in April was judged as the seventh place story. King's death robbed the civil rights movement of one of their most effective spokesmen and the United States of a great leader. His death also touched off bloody riots in Chicago, Kansas City and other cities.
Eighth place went to the demonstrations and riots of students and police in Chicago during the Democratic convention in August. The turmoil in Chicago with its reflections on Mayor Richard Daley and his police force carried into December of 1968 when the report of the President's commission on violence stated that some of the police, under heavy provocation, lost control and committed unnecessary violence.
Pope Paul's encyclical, Humanae Vitae, banning the use of the pill or other birth control devices for Roman Catholics touched off heavy controversy in the Church not only over this issue but over the whole matter of Church authority and the individual conscience. This story was polled in ninth place.
The Pueblo incident—the capture of 26 American men by the North Korean government—and the accusation that the ship had been in North Korean territorial waters was judged as tenth place story. This story would also probably have rated much higher after the pre-Christmas release of the men and the about-face apology and rejection of apology to the North Koreans by the United States.
Other stories which rated close to the top ten were the starving millions in the Biafran-Nigerian war, de Gaulle and the franc crisis, the many heart transplants of 1968, the third party candidacy of George Wallace, the Congress commotion over the nomination of Justice Abe Fortas for Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and the New York teachers' strike.
APOLLO MOON FLIGHT
BUCK ROGERS
GARDENS
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
All rights reserved, 1968
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
All rights reserved 1981
Publishers-Hall Syndicate
Don't you guys leave anything to imagination any more?
Paperbacks
THE DOOR, by Mary Roberts Rinehart (Dell, 60 cents)—Not really a Gothic romance, even though that is what Dell chooses to call it. It is a mystery in the old-fashioned school, it takes place in a frightening old mansion, and there is murder. Murder which our heroine sets out
to solve by herself. A fairly gentle tale, considering everything, and much better than some of the claptrap appearing today (this one goes back 40 years).
HUMANISM, by H. J. Blackham (Pelican, $1.25)—In which
the director of the British Humanist Association discusses humanism not as a creed but as an attitude of mind, showing how humanists see man as being alone and as therefore responsible for himself and his fellow man. The emphasis is present-day as well as historical.
Man of the year
Campus rebels
By DON WESTERHAUS Kansan Staff Writer
Completed—a unique year which almost defies description
To date, 1968 has brought events of world importance seemingly every day. And since last New Year's day, the people who made that news have been just as unique.
For several years, the University Daily Kansan has tried to pick a "man of the year"-one who figured most prominently in the news. This year, a poll taken of Kansan editorial writers showed a collective group being chosen the top contributor to the news.
Student protestors made their presence felt—sometimes peacefully, sometimes not—in every part of the world. They stormed buildings, held sit-ins, carried signs and made demands in Mexico City and Paris, from San Francisco State to Columbia University, and even made their appearance in Lawrence.
and even made their appearance in Lawrence. This collective group has been chosen the Kansan's newsmaker of the year.
There were other top newsmakers, however. Rounding out the top five chosen in the poll were three political names and another group.
Second on the list was the late Senator Robert Francis Kennedy, who caused quite a stir and gathered a large political following prior to his assassination in June and made one of the greatest news attractions of the year.
Any President of the United States who caused as much controversy as Lyndon Johnson must be ranked high on a newsmaker list. He was ranked third.
advancement were voted fourth as a consecet group. Rising from the political ruin of defeats in 1960 and 1962, Richard Nixon overcame extremely stiff competition to become our next President. His accomplishment gained him fifth place in the Kansan poll.
The Kansan's fourth place newsmaker deviated from the political scene. Heart transplant surgery, which first made news in December 1967, made giant strides during 1968, and the several teams of physicians around the world who contributed to this medical advancement were voted fourth as a collective group.
Several other individuals figured high in the news of 1968. They were:
were:
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Eugene McCarthy; Alexander Dubeke; Pope Paul VI; George Wallace; Hubert Humphrey; Charles Daulle; Abe Fortas; Julian Bond; Richard Daley; S. I. Hayakawa; Eldridge Cleaver; Creighton Abrams; Edmund Muskie; Adam Clayton Powell, and Ronald Reagon.
Franklin Cullen Rodgers, by putting a little "Pepper" into an already salty football team, directed the Jayhawks to their first Orange Bowl appearance since 1947 and earned the nod as KU's campus man of the year.
campus man of the year. Votes were also received for woman of the year. Ethel Kennedy, widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, was the unanimous choice. She was followed by Goldie Hahn, the blonde bombshell of Rowan and Martin's "Laugh-In," and by Jackie Kennedy Onassis.
Thursday, January 9, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Student power:1968
By CHIP ROUSE Kansan Staff Writer
Greater student representation in university government has been the big cry across campuses throughout the nation this year, and the University of Kansas has been no exception.
The current Senate Code proposal and the efforts which have been set forth this year in order to secure a larger degree of student representation in University affairs have been selected by Kansan editors and editorial writers as the top campus news story of 1968.
On the basis of ten points for a first place vote, nine for second, and so forth, the drive for greater student representation received 194 votes.
The initial drive began last spring with a group which referred to itself as Student Voice. Members of this group sent a signed petition to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe asking for greater student representation in University affairs.
At the beginning of the fall semester, two reports were circulated among the student body and the administration. One, the majority report, called for 15 per cent student representation on the University Senate and equivalent representation on its various committees.
The second report was submitted by a group cal ed Peoples Voice (an offshoot of Student Voice) and was referred to as the minority report. This report called for 50 per cent student representation on the University Senate and suggested such changes as the abolishment of the office of Dean of Men and Dean of Women.
Both reports were discussed by the University Senate and the All-Student Council (ASC). On Nov. 6, the ASC passed the Senate Code proposal, which in turn was passed by the University Senate Council on Dec. 13. The Code proposes student membership on the University Senate for the first time in the history of the University.
The Senate Code proposed 15 per cent student representation on the University Senate, the establishment of a Faculty Council, which would reflect the wishes of the faculty and would exist in about the same manner as the present Senate Council. Also, it would call for the abolishment of the ASC.
In order for the Code to be put into effect, it
must be approved by the University Senate, then in a student body election and finally by the Board of Regents.
In his annual fall convocation address last September. Chancellor Wescoe stunned thousands of onlookers by announcing his resignation from the University of Kansas. This campus news story received 174 votes and second place in the balloting.
Third place in the voting went to the story which announced that KU had accepted a bid to meet Penn State in the Orange Bowl on New Year's night.
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's appearance on Mt. Oread was selected as the fourth best campus story of the year. This was the late Kennedy's first major campaign swing in his quest to become the Democratic candidate of the Presidency of the United States.
The dedication of the new Spencer Library was the fifth best story of the year. There was a tie for sixth between the firing of Norman Abrams, a professor of design, and the selection of a Negro coed to the pom-pon squad. Eighth place went to the expansion plans for Watkins Hospital; Bruce Mallin's death and the story involving the math instructor asking several ROTC students to leave his class tied for ninth.
KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom- UN 4-3644
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, for students attending at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Students are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
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News Adviser George Richardson
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Managing Editor Monte Mace
Business Manager Jack Haney
Member Associated Collegiate Press
The HIll With It by john hill
And now a few words about obsc*nity.
This is not a major problem during normal news coverage, but occasionally you run into problems when quoting a well-known campus ruddical making a speech. (Get it? Ruddical? Didja get it? Huh?)
Especially on how to go about, and around, publishing offensive words like *****, ..., and +!*@+!
The thing about the censor's pen being mightier than the sordid is that it's not the words themselves that are doily.
It's those filthy, degenerate little asterisks.
Instead, what we use is a little row of periods, a collection of which is termed an ellipsis, whenever we try to print evil, mean, nasty words like ... Or even ... when we really get brave.
So some newspapers, like this one, scorn using such a vulgar symbol to help make a suggestive term even more suggestive.
Modern paperbacks have exploited the ellipsis, a word which sounds like the way a hairdresser would describe the moon passing between the earth and the sun, resulting in some of the raciest passages in all literature being left to the imagination.
This happens whenever a sentence ends the way this one is going to by saying some lean-jawed guy named David slips his arm around some willow divorcee named Marsha, and the two of them, together, slowly, sin back, together, into the fireplace...
Each of those commas is rough enough on a person, but those teeny dots at the end are murder. Especially if the only reason you're reading it is for the heavy breathing.
The answer to all this might be to simply go along with this line of reasoning, or lack thereof. Even go a step further. Substitute the asterisks and ellipsis when you speak the little nasties, as well as write them.
The next time you crack your shin against the coffee table while stepping barefoot on a pin with one foot and on a railroad spike with the other, just yell "Son of an asterisk!!!" Or you can get Freudian about it as scream that your coffee table is a dirty mother-ellipsis.
Another way of carrying this on would be, for example, to have all Hebrew words which are offensive be replaced not by asterisks but by little teeny Stars of David. The prose of anti-war, long-haired protest poets which proved offensive could simply be replaced by miniature peace symbols. And so on.
But the point is, of course, that anything can be made to appear more suggestive the original by adding asterisks, even G*d, m*therhood, the fl*g, and *pple pie...
The dubious and the damned
Every year Esquire Magazine comes out with its "Dubious Achievement Awards" for those events and persons in the previous year that best represented human folly.
By BOB BUTLER Kansan Staff Writer
Quick to cash in on anyone else's success, the Kansan now presents the "KU Dubious Achievement Awards of 1968":
The George Wallace Law and Order Award—to
MOTORCYCLE
the campus cops for selecting at random two or three nights each week to ticket cars parked outside McColum Hall while the drivers were inside picking up dates.
The "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?" Award—to Hamilton Salsich.
The Wretched Excess Award—to the KU student who got Robert Kennedv's cufflinks.
The Mistaken Identity Award—to the KU coed who asked visiting French film director Jean-Luc Godard what had prompted him to make "A Man and a Woman."
The S. I. Hayakawa Award—to head football coach Pepper Rodgers for "funarito," "spikeartius" and "Rip City!"
The Better Dead than Red Award—to the Lawrence matron who vented her ire at the anti-Veterans' Day War-demonstrators by showing one marcher into the gutter and then attempting to smash him with her fist. The young man was a reporter covering the march for the UDK
The Rats-Leaving-the-Sinking-Ship Award—to the members of the ASC for voting themselves out of existence in favor of the new Senate Code.
The Clean Mind and Healthy Body Award—to certain University administrators who strongly suggested to the UDK advertising staff that Doug Clark's band of reknown be known as the "Hot Notes."
The Wretched Excess Award No. 2-to Peoples Voice.
The Instant Urban Renewal Award—to the K-State students who threatened to burn the school down if they didn't get their way and then proceeded to do it.
The "So What Else is New?" Award—to the UDK for its exposes on marijuana and homosexuality on campus.
The Commie Dupe Award—to Dean of Faculties Francis Heller, who last spring told a group of dissident students demanding more undergraduate participation in University affairs that students were only "transients." As a result of his realistic.
though unfortunate, remarks, Student Voice was founded and the new Senate Code brought into being.
The "Keep Clean for Gene" Award—to the residents of Daisy Hill for their epic mud fight.
The Impossible Dream Award—to KU's proposed humanities tower, originally planned to take up 25 stories of KU's skyline, then cut to 15, and now down to the three-story substructure with the tower to be added later as funds become available.
The Clarity of Thought Award—to visiting speaker Julian Bond for his poem:
"See that girl shake that thing
But we can't all be Martin Luther King."
The Dubious Achievement of 1968—the neato underground tunnel from the Kansas Union to X-Zone parking lot.
6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 1969
Speaking of sports
Top 10 sports stories 1968
By
1968. It was a great year for sports.
Ron Yates, Kansan sports editor
The record-breaking Olympic Games, a classic World Series, great confrontations on America's football fields and basketball courts-just a few of the ingredients which went into 1968's zeaty sports stew. After sampling the brew, members of the Kansan sports staff ranked the ingredients in the order of their impact upon the 1968 sports scene and gravity of achievement.
The top ten sports stories of 1968:
1. OLYMPICS—Not just one or two events, but the entire 1968 Games. The swimming, gymnastics, boxing, track, field and decathlon. For pure sports news value, nothing in the sports world matched the Olympics. More than 100 countries covered the games via television and the printed word. Almost two billion people followed the events in Mexico City through newspapers and television as the United States compiled more than 100 medals amidst racial demonstrations, unrest among Mexican students in Mexico City and strained relations between Russian and Czechoslovakian athletes due, primarily, to the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia.
z. BASEBALL-The 1968 World Series. Detroit comes back from being down, three games to one, and whips St. Louis in the series. The odds against the Tigers accomplishing this feat were enormous, but the Tigers bucked the oddsmakers and won.
3. BASKETBALL--Houston nips UCLA 71-69 last winter in the Houston Astrodome. This game was one of the most publicized college basketball games in history. It matched the undefeated Bruins with 7-2 Lew Alcindor against the undefeated Houston Cougars with the 6-8 "Big E" Elvin Hayes. The game was televised nationally and watched by more than 50 million people.
4. TRACK-Bob Beamon makes a fantastic leap to better the existing world long jump record (27 feet, 4 and $ \frac{3}{4} $ inches) by almost two feet—29 feet and $ \frac{1}{2} $ inches. "Compared to that jump, the rest of us are children," said Igor Ter-Ovanesyan, the Russian long-jumper who shared the previous world long jump record with America's Ralph Boston. "It felt like a regular jump." Beamon said recently, remembering the moment of his jump at the Olympics.
5. BASEBALL—Denny McLain, Detroit pitcher, wins 31 games thus becoming the first pitcher to win 30 games since Dizzy Dean's era in the 1930's. Dean won 30 games in 1934. Lefty Grove of the Philadelphia Athletics won 31 in 1931.
6. TENNIS—Within a two-week period, Arthur Ashe Jr. of Richmond, Va., won the U.S. Nationals at Brookline, Mass. and then won the Open Tennis Championship at Forest Hills. He was the first amateur tennis player to do this. He defeated the world's best professional tennis stars and was declared the mens international champion—the first Negro ever to accomplish this.
7. FOOTBALL—The Green Bay Packers, after winning their third straight NFL championship (the first team ever to do this) proceed to dismantle the AFL's champion Oakland Raiders in the second annual Super Bowl 34-14. (After three phenomenal seasons winning consecutive championships, Packer coach Vince Lombardi steps down from coaching to take a front office job with the Packers. After his departure, the Packers appear to crumble and do not make it to the NFL championship in 1968.)
8. BASKETBALL-UCLA wins its second straight NCAA championship by humiliating Houston in the NCAA championship round. This second meeting between the two teams was long-awaited after Houston had upset UCLA earlier in the season at the Astrodome.
9. TRACK—Kenya's Kipchoge Keino sets a blistering pace in the Olympics by racing six grueling heats in three different distance events within a five-day
period topping it all off with an upset win over KU's Jim Ryun in the 1500-meter race. Keino won every race he entered at the Olympics and showed little concern for Mexico City's thin air.
10. FOOTBALL-The New York Jets, led by the newly-shaved "Broadway" Joe Namath, beat the defending champion Oakland Raiders for the AFL championship while the Baltimore Colts smash the Cleveland Browns 34-0 for the NFL crown. The teams will meet in the third annual Super Bowl with the Colts installed as 17 point favorites.
Other top vote getters in order of their votes were;
11. FOOTBALL—The controversial Oakland Raider-New York Jet "Heidi" game on NBC. With the Wets leading 32-29 with about one minute to play NBC cut away from the game to begin its scheduled broadcast of "Heidi," a children's story. During the last minute Oakland scored two touchdowns to win the game 43-32. NBC received thousands of letters from irate fans for cutting away from the final moments of the game. Some fans said that by breaking away from the game NBC broke off "support waves" being emitted from loyal Jet fans across the nation.
12. BASKETBALL-Yugoslavia upsets Russia in the Olympics and earns a spot in the championship game against the United States. The Russian team was said to have the best chance of beating the Americans in this year's Olympics.
The United States has 64 separate wilderness areas.
Forecasts many re-runs in 1969's sports scene
By STEVE SNIDER
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)—Best bets in the world of sports for 1969:
BASEBALL PENNANTS—The division set-up is new but the pennant story is old with the Detroit Tigers and St. Louis Cardinals repeating, American League playoffs to match Detroit and Minnesota Twins with Cardinals and San Francisco in the National. Tigers and Cards go on to another donwpbrook World Series.
BATTING CHAMPS — Matty Alou of Pittsburgh and Carl Yastrzemski of Boston are the consistent ones. Both should find the new restrictions against the pitchers much to their liking.
LEADING PITCHERS — Repeaters Bob Gibson of St. Louis and Denny McLain of Detroit but neither figures to approach 30 victories.
PRO FOOTBALL — Baltimore
Colts over the New York Jets in
Hicks makes all-bowl team
NEW YORK (UPI)—Ohio State and Texas hogged the All-Bowl football team picked by United Press International from press dispatches and reports of televisioners.
Rose Bowl champion Ohio State won five and Cotton Bowl winner Texas won four of the 22 berths on the mythical team while no other team landed more than two positions.
The teams include: OFFENSE
Greg Cook, Missouri, running back.
DEFENSE
Elmer Benhardt, Missouri; end;
Emery Hicks, Kansas, linebacker.
January's Super Bowl. For the fall of '69: Baltimore over Dallas in the NFL title game, Oakland over the Jets in the AFL.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL — All those current sophomores make Ohio State's national and Rose Bowl champs the team to beat for the marbles.
PRO BASKETBALL - Uphill all the way for Boston Celtics in the National Basketball Association. Oakland in the American.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Time is running out for college coaches to figure ways and means of stopping Lew Alcindor. UCLA as usual.
TENNIS — Aussie Rod Laver and Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Va., who'll be a rookie pro, alternating in the big ones on grass. Ken Rosewall, the littlest Aussie, to win most of the better titles on clay.
GOLF—Billy Casper and Jack Nicklaus figure to lead the money parade but look for more surprises in big tournaments. A new guard is rising.
KENTUCKY DERBY — Beaut Brummel or Top Knight may have the stuff to do a mile and a quarter if they don't get lost on the way to Churchill Downs.
HOCKEY—Our favorite snooper, who picks Montreal almost every year, does it again.
HEAVYWEIGHT BOXING — It's an even money bet the tandem champs will get together by late fall and about the same odds Frazier will beat Jimmy Ellis for sole control of the division.
AUTOS—National title for Mario Andretti but only if he can finish high up at Indy.
Man on the hottest spot—Baseball's next commissioner.
Man on the coolest spot—Football's current pro commissioner, Pete Rozelle.
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Thursday, January 9, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
KANSAS 30 KANSAS 15 TT 20
Photo by Greg Sorber
DAVE ROBISCH ... holding hot hand.
Road tests ahead for KU; Missouri, I-State, KSU
Surging ever closer to the 1,000-victory plateau, KU's Jayhawks risk their 12-game winning streak in a couple of road tests this weekend.
The 13-1 Jayhawks journey to Columbia Saturday, meeting Missouri, then travel Ames for Monday night's match with Iowa State. Tipoff for both games is set for 7:35 p.m.
Should KU extend its winning ways to 14 games with a sweep, the Jayhawks would take aim at No. 1000 against Kansas State at Manhattan Jan. 18.
In the race to become the first school to reach the basketball milestone, Kansas has solidified its lofty ranking in national polls. This week's ratings peg KU No. 5 by the Associated Press and No. 6 by United Press International.
Neither of those polls included the Jayhawks' impressive 94-61 rout of Iowa State Monday night. Coach Ted Owens' club, hitting a season high in point production, bettered the school record for field goals and also established a scoring high for the Kansas-Iowa State series.
The 43 Jayhawk fielders and scorching 63 per cent marksmanship in the first half-eclipsed the former KU high of 42 set three years ago against both Nebraska and Missouri.
Again the ringleader was 6-9 sophomore pivot Dave Robisch, whose 22 points marked the seventh time in the last nine games that he has topped 20.
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the other half of KU's
sophomore pivot tandem, 6-10
This spurt has moved Robisch within three points of All-American guard Jo Jo White for team scoring leadership. White sets the pace with 253 points (18.1 ppg) while Robisch averages 17.9 ppg with 250 points.
KU scoring
OVER THE HOLIDAYS
DEC 18-Utah 86, Oregon State 54
DEC 20-Kansas 67, Utah State 61
Bigham Young 89, Oregon State 64
Kentuckie 89, Oregon State 64
Jordan 21, Kansas 67, Stanford 67
DEC 26 - Arkansas 14, Nebraska 56, Arizona 54
DFC 27 - Oregon State 46, Arizona 42
DEC 28 - Oklahoma 41, Arizona 40
DEC 21—Kansas 76, Stanford 67,
Kentucky 80, Army 64.
DEC 28- Kansas 60, Colorado 55,
Washington State 51, Oregon State
(OT): Kentucky 110, Notre Dame 90,
DEC 30- Kansas 56, Oklahoma State
64, Brigham Young 68, Oregon State
64, DEC 31- Wisconsin 69, Kentucky
JAN 4- Kansas 56, Nebraska 52
Kentucky 69, Mississippi 51
Kentucky 69, Mississippi 59
JAN 6—Kansas 94, Iowa State 61
Kentucky 91, Mississippi State 72.
NEW YORK (UPI) — Before his retirement last season Toe Blake had guided the Montreal Canadiens to eight Stanley Cups in the last 12 seasons.
Good Guide
Roger Brown, missed the Iowa State game because of a sprained right ankle. His status for the weekend trip remains questionable, but 6-10 senior Dave Nash was an impressive replacement Monday. Nash scored 14 of his 18 points in the second half and grabbed 11 rebounds.
Not since the 1957 days of Wilt Chamberlain has KU fashioned a 12-game streak. That year, the Jayhawks reeled off a dozen straight wins before Iowa State snapped the string at Ames.
Brown is the club's top rebounder with 109 recoveries, 19 more than runnerup Robisch.
Kansas basketball teams have put together only seven winning streaks longer than the current one. The longest was compiled on the mid-1930s when the 1935 and 1936 outfits strung out 23 triumphs before losing to Utah State in the Olympic playoffs at Kansas City.
For Owens, the 1,000-victory goal remains secondary to KU's Big Eight championship aspirations. And Owens himself will have reached a milestone of his own—his 100th coaching victory—one game before the 1,000 celebration.
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 1969
Colts give Michaels ribbing
BOCA RATON, Fla. (UPI)—The Baltimore Colts are exactly where they figured to be for Sunday's Super Bowl game with the New York Jets - in ideal shape.
Physically, their two convalescents, cornerback Lenny Lyles and defensive end Bubba Smith, are coming along fine. And mentally, the Colts are so loose and relaxed that they all kidded placekicker Lou Michaels yesterday about his skirmish with Joe Namath last weekend.
Michael, who nearly got into a fistfight with Namath in a nearby Fort Lauderdale restaurant Sunday night and then wound up becoming his best friend, took the kidding from his teammates during the Colts' skull session prior to their slightly more than one-hour long practice on the field.
Don Shula, the Baltimore coach, laughingly revealed that some of the Colts players "thought that Lou got bought off by Joe picking up the dinner check."
After their initial verbal encounter Sunday night, the Jet quarterback not only picked up the check, but also drove the Colt placekicker back to his hotel.
When asked what his reaction was to the entire affair, Shula said:
"I thought it was pretty humorous."
On the more serious side, Lyles, who had a siege of tonsilitis recently, looked "a little weak" during Tuesday's workout but was seen running up and down the beach before 8 a.m. yesterday and Shula had to doubt he would be ready for the Jets.
Smith, coming off a recent ankle sprain, has been working well and also is penciled in as a starter Sunday.
Shula said he is trying to keep the practice sessions short, approximately 70 minutes each, because he feels the Colt players can concentrate on their assignments that way and that there won't be any unnecessary idleness or standing around.
Despite the fine progress made here by his Colts and by the fact they rate $17\frac{1}{2}$ points favorites, Shula said there were no signs of overconfidence.
"We're not going into this game thinking we're such a superior team that we're going to man-handle them." Shula said.
The Baltimore coach conceded that Namath is coming in for a prime measure of attention in both the Colts' meetings and field drills.
"It wouldn't necessarily say we're preparing for him more
than we do for say a Roman Gabriel, but Namath is the guy everybody is talking about, and our players are aware of him. I think blitzing Namath will be tough because he has that quick release and he's so quick at getting back there to throw."
Shula, answering a question, said he didn't know Namath well personally.
Ewbank warning for blitzing QB Namath
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (UPI) — The New York Jets worked yesterday on ways to penetrate the stonewall defense of the Baltimore Colts, but Coach Weeb Ewbank dismissed any thoughts of a "get rich quick" sendoff in Sunday's Super Bowl game on the strength of Joe Namath's explosive passing.
For a second day, the emphasis was on offense as the American Football League champions prepared for the third meeting between the American and National Football League title teams, scheduled for 3 p.m. EST Sunday in Miami's Orange Bowl.
Ewbank praised Namath and his three main receivers—Don Maynard, George Sauer and Pete Lammons—to newsmen, but said he didn't expect New York's explosive passing attack to work any sudden miracles against a Colt defense that clearly has the Jets concerned.
"The rush we are going to get may be something we've never seen. We can't tell everything from the movies. We hope we'll be able to handle it.
"We have the greatest respect for the Colt rush," said Ewbank, and he went on to mention by name two members of the Colt front four: Fred Miller, "strong as a bull," and Bubba Smith, "supposed to be the best thing since peanut butter."
"We are certainly not thinking anything like get rich quick against this team. We have no visions like that at all. We have
got to go out and play good hard football."
But the Jets coach had a warning for the Colts against using the blitz. Against Namath, Ewbank said, "blitzing is not the thing to do. Joe reads the defenses very quickly and well.
"Actually I hope they do blitz. One of the first things we do in training camp is take up the blitz. We have got our blitz passes down."
Ewbank said his team is working equally hard on all phases of offense. "We want to get the ball in the end zone the best way we can, running or passing. We will have to see what the situation dictates on Sunday."
Ewbank dwelled on Namath, who turned down an invitation to a news conference. The Jet quarterback apparently felt reports of a verbal run in between him and Colt placekicker Lou Michaels at a restaurant Sunday night were exaggerated.
But Ewbank said Broadway Joe was simply "a great punster. I happened to be in the same restaurant as Joe last night. He finished eating about 11 o'clock, and when he got up to go he said to me,
"Coach this midnight curfew is killing me. I'm getting too much sleep."
About the Sunday game, Ew-bank said, Namath "is dead serious. He had been studying the films even at home before he came down here."
Countdown to 1,000
By ROBERT ENTRIKEN JR.
Kansan Sports Special
A friend of mine, knowing I had spent part of my Christmas break in Miami, greeted me Sunday with: "How was your vacation—not counting Wednesday night?"
Well, not counting Wednesday night, pretty good! While a small contingent of Kansans collected suntans and heartbreaks in Florida and a greater number froze with the snow that plagued the Midwest, KU's basketballers drove to a 13-1 record and a 12-game winning streak.
Now, only three notches separates the Hawks from becoming the first school to record 1,000 basketball victories.
On the other hand, the vacation was not so successful for another of the 1,000 contenders—Oregon State. The Beavers won only 1 of 5 games, placing fourth in the Far West Classic. Kentucky, meanwhile, lost only to Wisconsin—remember them?—in five games.
The great celebration for KU could come as early as Jan. 18 and of all places, in Manhattan
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Kentucky, with 995 wins by NCAA count (there's a dispute over a 5-game series two summers ago in Tel Aviv), could hit the magic number Jan. 27. In its path are Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, LSU, and Alabama.
Color Oregon State, eight games away with a not-so-inviting schedule that includes UCLA, out of the picture.
Should KU lose any of its next three, Kentucky could slip past while the Jayhawks sit idle during semester break.
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Thursday, January 9, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Beer sold by the gallons
TGIF profitable for local taverns
By LINDA LOYD Kansan Staff Writer
Although beer, world's oldest alcoholic beverage and long-time fermented favorite of the college student, is usually consumed by the pint, at KU it's being drunk by the gallon. More than 8,000 gallons per week.
Asked when they sell most of this beer, tavern managers agreed that Friday and Saturday are their busiest days.
This estimate, compiled from a recent survey of taverns popular with students in Lawrence, excluding pizza parlors and dancing places, is based on the volume of beer delivered in cans, bottles and kegs by area distributors. Lawrence, Topeka and Ottawa beverage companies reported monthly totals, which were broken down to a weekly average.
Streicher
Traditionally, hundreds of students discard books once a week to celebrate TGIF (Thank God It's Friday). "At least 400-500 people come and go in here on a Friday afternoon," said Jayhawk Cafe manager. "I buy $1,000 worth of beer weekly and probably gross $750 on an average Friday," she estimated that he sells
Kansan sketch by Mike Shearer
Student prepares for finals
600-800 bottles and cans and ten kegs or 150 gallons of draft beer on Fridays.
The Gaslight Tavern reported selling 2-3 cases of pints and 2-3 kegs of draft beer on Friday
afternoons. "Between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. Fridays, I sell nearly 75 cases of 16 oz. cans and 15 cases of 12 oz. bottles," manager of the Wagon Wheel Cafe reported. "I sell about 180 cases in a week."
Friday is one of Ace Johnson's busiest days at The Stables. "I sell an average of eight kegs and 15 cases," Johnson said. "I probably sell 45-50 kegs and 60 cases a week."
Johnson said 90 per cent of his business is at night and most of that is draw beer.
The Studio reported weekend sales of $150 or eight kegs of beer.
All tavern managers reported that they keep well-stocked refrigerators in preparation of special student occasions. "At boom periods such as Country Club Week or between semesters, I've sold as much as $5,000 worth of beer and 1500 half quarts.
"I keep 10 cases of each kind of beer in the storage cooler because we never know when there's going to be some student occasion such as mid-term exams," the manager of the Gaslight Tavern reported. "Final week we sell an awful lot of beer."
Chinese painter will demonstrate ancient methods
A Chinese artist-scholar, IChen Wu, will exhibit his work and give demonstrations of ancient Chinese painting techniques at Watson Library January 19.
Wu, a graduate student in guidance, will demonstrate Chinese brush techniques and explain differences between Western and Chinese painting. He will augment the showing of his own works with those from the early 18th century to the present.
The exhibit, sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, Watson Library and KU's Chinese Student Association, will be shown free to the public from noon to 6:00 p.m. daily.
A frequent prize-winner in Midwest art exhibits, I-Chen Wu, gave a series of demonstrations and lectures on Chinese art at the Chinese Pavilion at Expo '67 in Montreal, Canada, and HemisFair '68 in San Antonio, Tex. During the past two years he has traveled extensively giving lectures and demonstrations.
Several of his presentations were filmed and made into tapes.
Wu came to this country in 1966 after studying art with the professor Chi Pei-shih, a renown Chinese artist.
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The University of Kansas Theatre presents
MEDIEVAL CHRISTMAS PLAYS
The Annunciation The Offering of The Magi The Second Shepherd's Play
Experimental Theatre
Curtain
8:20 p.m.
MiaRue
Murphy Hall UN 4-3982 Tickets: $1.50 w/KU ID: 75c
January 9,10,11
10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 1960
DANIEL AND SAMUEL
Lights, camera, action
Sandra Gresham, Prairie Village senior majoring in the theater, appears with Dennis James, star of "The All-American College Show" to be televised Friday.
Liberal cheerleaders
Lean to the left, rah! rah!
By CAROL SCHOENBECK
Kansan Staff Writer
Farm boys, weight lifters, beauty queens and socially conscious liberals may be found in the ranks of cheerleaders, according to an article in the Jan. 6 issue of a national sports magazine.
Although not mentioned in the article, the KU yell leaders and pom-pon girls are similar in many ways to the squads discussed by the magazine.
Sports Illustrated examined cheerleaders and their campus positions at Purdue University, the University of Mississippi, the University of Georgia and the University of California at Los Angeles. They use their positions as cheerleaders to be elected beauty queens, to express peace loving philosophies and as a training ground for testing crowd reactions to themselves as performers.
"The legacy at Purdue is one of clean living and hard work," a Purdue administrator said.
To the south is Georgia where being a cheerleader is "more rigorous, more time-consuming, more dangerous and more fun." All male cheerleaders are members of the gymnastics
squad and a prerequisite for selection is being able to do continuous backflips for 50 vards.
Although the female members of their squad are usually the campus beauty queens, they must go through a rough and demanding training program doing flips, handsprings, cartwheels and splits.
As at Purdue and Georgia, the Mississippi cheerleaders are usually the product of hard-fought political campaigns. "Becoming a cheerleader there is a social-political activity where the sweat is largely devoted to attaining the position, not performing it," Sports Illustrated noted.
At Ole Miss, cheerleading is the biggest of all campus elections. Students' reputedly spend over $1,000 to be elected.
To the west, UCLA seems to be untypifying the "typical" cheerleader image. The present head cheerleader ran as a hoax. Outfitting himself in blue and gold custom-made overalls, he was called "Engineer Geoff" because "the locomotive was so out it had to be in."
The long-haired cheerleader's only political cheer is a nonviolent yell: "Lean to the
left, Lean to the right, Stand up,
Sit down."
Where in this range, from conservatism to liberalism, do KU's pom-pon girls and yell leaders fit?
Paul Clendening, Kansas City senior and yell leader, said he is a cheerleader because he loves sports and is proud of KU.
"We represent the University wherever we go, so naturally the administration wants us to look as nice as possible and to project a good image," he said.
As Shirley Gossett, Overland Park senior and head pom-pon girl, pointed out, KU's squad is elected after trying-out before a student and faculty committee, therefore, politics really don't exist in the selection.
"I tried out and was selected as a freshman never having been a cheerleader before. I guess I'm proof that politics really aren't a factor."
While conservative in appearance, the pom-pon girls and yell leaders have tried some liberal cheers. The "blood makes the grass grow" and "kill, Vernon, kill" cheers have brought some widespread condemnation, especially from the alumni.
Minnie Pearl's Chicken
Cousin Minnie says:
"How-dee-licious?"
Food for thought
A-plus with the readin', ritin' and 'rithmatic crowd. The "Best Chicken GOING!" is pupil-pleasin'. Chicken that's just a whisper crisper, glistening like it's tanned in an old black iron skillet. Nice and easy for moms, too. Pick up plenty for second helpin's. Minnie's word for it . . . "Dee-licious!"
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for purchases over $5.00
Minnie Pearl's Chicken
1730 W.23rd
843-8200
American Youth:
Its Outlook Is
Changing the World
The subject of this month's issue of Fortune magazine
Much has been said, and much has been published, about today's "alienated" youth and society. But to some extent, two important questions remain unanswered: Is this, indeed, a special kind of younger generation? If so, what will be its impact on U.S. life over the next decade?
To find the answers to these questions, Fortune has devoted most of its January issue to Youth and Its View of America. Here, in a single issue of Fortune, is perhaps the most thorough and searching analysis of the topic ever presented by a magazine. Some of the areas on which this special study focuses:
Why student activists demand reforms
The revolution on the square campus
Youth and the pop culture cult
Parents of the Forties
What blue-collar youth thinks
A new style of campus living
How youth is reforming business
Don't miss this special, single-subject January issue of Fortune. It's on sale now!
FORTUNE
Thursday, January 9, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Dean's home goes to Orange Bowl
By MARLA BABCOCK Kansan Staff Writer
While KU's students were cramming onto Miami-bound planes and organizing last-minute car pools, Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, was enjoying a leisurely Florida vacation in her "motor home."
The motor home, which accommodates four, is completely self-contained with the motor and driving mechanism in a front compartment. Miss Taylor emphasized the vehicle is a motor home, not a trailer.
After meeting him in Memphis, Miss Taylor traveled to Florida via Atlanta, where they visited friends.
Miss Taylor decided to travel to Miami in the motor home because her nephew, an eighth grader in Memphis, Tenn., wanted to see the Orange Bowl game.
In Miami, Miss Taylor parked the motor home at the home of William Butler, a KU alumnus and vice president of Miami University.
Miss Taylor said Miami crowds presented few problems. Because Butler is an official of Miami University, he had a reserved parking place near one of the gates at the stadium.
While she didn't have a 50-yard-line seat, Miss Taylor said her seats at both the game and the parade offered good vantage points.
Miss Taylor was surprised to meet so many Lawrence residents on the trip. "I met some people who live in the same block as I do on Avalon," she said.
The only mechanical difficulty of the trip was a split tire. Dean Taylor said that was really "no great problem."
KU's Dean of Women purchased the motor home last July with one of her assistants, Mrs. Frank Shavlik, and her husband.
Several members of Miss Taylor's staff have used the motor home since then. "We've put almost 16,000 miles on it since July," Miss Taylor said.
Coupon sale for Festival to open soon
Festival of the Arts coupons will go on sale during spring semester enrollment, the Student Union Activities (SUA) office announced yesterday.
This year's festival, featuring plays, films and the music of Lou Rawls, Dave Brubeck and Gerry Mulligan, will be March 16 to 22 in Hoch Auditorium.
Students will receive a festival IBM card in their enrollment packets. The $5 tickets can be purchased by returning the festival card with all other enrollment cards.
Cost of tickets purchased during the festival week will total $10.
By purchasing tickets during enrollment, students will receive the seat of their choice and a brochure of information on performers.
The third annual festival opens March 16 with "No Exit," a one-act existentialist play by Jean-Paul Sartre. March 17 Pauline Kael, drama critic for The New Yorker, will speak.
"Beyond Words," a production in pantomime theater is slated for March 18.
March 19 Dave Brubek and Gerry Mulligan are scheduled to perform jazz.
Two underground film makers, Jonas Mekas and Robert Kramer, will show and discuss their work March 20.
Concluding the festival Match 22 will be soul singer Lou Rawls, winner of the 1968 Playboy Jazz Poll.
AAUP to create Topeka liaison
Steps are being taken to improve communication between KU employe groups and state officials, Roy D. Laird, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), said last night.
AAUP members "are in the process" of exploring means of creating a permanent liaison with Toneka officials. Laird said.
Resolutions passed by the KU AAUP last month criticized the movement of payday from the first of each month to the fifth, and recommended that better communication with state officials be established.
The KU AAUP Executive Board met with state officials December 20 but was unable to secure a reversal of the payroll change.
KU junior elected township official
AUTO
FIRST
Table
Tops
INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
East End of 9th St.-V1 3-4416
January is the month for newly elected officials to take office, and among them is a KU junior who will become justice of the peace for Silverlake Township.
Leslie D. Watson was unanimously elected to the office in the township located 11 miles west of Topeka. In fact, he might have cast the ballot to elect himself.
He then went home, he said,
and asked his parents to write
his name in on the ballot.
Watson said he wasn't sure
whether they voted for him, but
he was elected and duly notified
by the commissioner of
elections. As few as one or as
many as three votes elected
Watson.
"When I went to vote, I saw a blank space by the office of the justice of the peace, so I wrote my name in," Watson said.
Watson shouldn't be overworked in his new job since the power of the office was severely limited by a 1967 Kansas statute. The statute gave the county courts most of the
judicial power traditionally held by the justice of the peace. The office itself, though having little power, can't be abolished without a constitutional amendment, Watson said.
"Justices of the peace can still perform marriages, administer some oaths, and deal with civil matters up to $1," Watson said. "He is paid for the ceremonies he performs." he added.
Watson doesn't think he will run for re-election when his two year term of office is ended.
Vachica-D
Need A C
1969 Caprice Coupe
Need A Camera?
Enter The
SUA
Photography
Contest!
Win One!
Cameras Donated by
Zercher Photo—Topeka
Lawrence Photo—Wichita
Deadline February 28
Pick up blanks in the
SUA and Journalism Offices
PENTAX
Nikon
GM
No clowns. No hoopla. No funny hats.
This is an event for the serious car buyer. The man who has X number of dollars to spend and is determined to get his money's worth and maybe more.
Come to a Chevrolet Showroom during our Value Showdown.
Ask the man to show you, on paper, how you can order most any
1969 Chevrolet with a big V8 and automatic transmission for less than you could last year.
Go for a drive.
Get a free sample of Chevrolet's luxurious full-coil, cushioned ride. Shut the windows and see how fresh the interior stays, thanks to Astro
Come in and spend some time.
Dig, probe, ask questions, take notes.
You owe it to yourself to be thorough.
Ventilation. Feel the kick of the biggest standard V8 in our field.
Then go down the street or across town and see how we stack up against Those Other Cars.
We think you'll wind up with a Chevy.
More people do you know
More people do, you know.
CHEUROLET
Putting you first. keeps us first.
Putting you first, keeps us first.
CHEVROLET
The Chevrolet Value Showdown is on.
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 1969
State's only slope starts fourth year
The only ski slope in the state of Kansas has opened for its fourth season.
Mont Bleu ski slopes, located about 8 miles east of downtown Lawrence, offers skiing opportunities for beginners and experienced skiers.
"The slopes are covered by 3 feet of snow," said Jim Wycoff, Independence senior, and one of the managers of the slopes. "Water to make the snow is pumped from the Wakarusa river to settling ponds," he said.
The water is then combined with compressed air to make snow which is showered on the slopes with a special blowing machine. Wycoff said snow can be made only when the temperature is below freezing and the humidity below 80 per cent.
"The hill is 750 feet long, and the drop is 230 feet," said Wycoff. There are three separate slopes, varying in degree of difficulty.
For beginners, Mont Bleu has a staff of ski instructors headed by Rudy Voldrich, a former Olympic skier.
Wycoff said Sunday is usually the busiest day, although the slope is open every day but Monday and Tuesday.
The slopes open at 10 a.m.
Film showing
"Dona Barbara," a film about the class of the old order and the new, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Dyche Auditorium.
Based on a novel by Venezuelan Romulo Gallegos, the film is in Spanish with English subtitles.
and close at 10 p.m. so that Mont Bleu is one of the few slopes in the nation with skiing under lights.
Wycoff said the cost for the average skier who rents his equipment is $7 per day.
Mont Bleu opened a few weeks before Christmas, and will remain open until the first of March.
There is a ski lodge on the grounds, and Wycoff said it may be rented by students for parties. Besides a lounge, the lodge contains a snack bar, a retail ski shop and an apartment.
Dave Kuhl, co-manager and Dodge City senior, and Wycoff live in the apartment, work at the slopes and take care of the lodge.
Code vote to be in late February
Wycoff said there are races on the slopes usually twice a season, and there will be a winter carnival at the close of this season.
KU students will vote on the newly revised Senate Code in the last two weeks of February if the Code receives approval in the University Senate Friday, said Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student and chairman of the All-Student Council (ASC).
ASC members approved the revised version of the Code Tuesday night.
Should the code pass the University Senate, the entire text will be published in the Kansan at the beginning of the next smsemester, approximately preceding the election.
The Code came into being after student demands for a restructuring of the University government to include more students.
Last summer the twelve-man Committee On University Governance prepared the original version presented to the ASC and the University Senate early in the Fall. The code was discussed and amended.
At this point, a joint
conference committee,
consisting of three members of
ASC and the University Senate,
revised the Code trying to work
out the differences in both
versions. The Code was then
resubmitted to the ASC and the University Senate. It is this edition of the Code that the ASC approved Tuesday and that the University Senate will consider Friday.
Rock Chalk skits announced
Living groups have been named for the 1969 Rock Chalk Revue, said Drew Anderson, Plainville senior and producer of the annual satire-variety show.
Groups presenting skits and their ski titles are: Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, "All the Way with K.K.K. (Kampus Krusade for Knighthood or Knighty, Knight)," Beta Theta Pi fraternity and Deltaelta
Delta sorority, "All the World Was the Stage" or "The Pogrom's Progress."
Sigma Chi fraternity and Pi Beta Phi sorority, "I'll Never Never Land" or "Hock, Line and Twinker," and Delta Tau Delta fraternity and Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, "Two Holes are Better Than One" or "A Stick in Time Save Nine."
Rehearsals will begin in Hoch Auditorium second semester.
LEVI'S
BELL BOTTOMS ARE HERE!!
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
740 MASS.
IT'S ORANGE!
The 1969 Jayhawker is Orange
GET YOURS TODAY!
Distribution in Strong Hall: January 8,9,10
If you have not already paid for yours, the Jayhawker will be sold in the Union.
Bring KU ID
this is it final January Clearance Sale
coats slacks suits
dresses
1/3 to 1/2 off!
skirts blouses
Extra Special!
The Villager
Note!
Most everything is 1/2 off!
sweaters
skirts 1/2 off!
slacks
The Alley Shop
No refunds or exchanges
Note! Most everything is 1/2 off!
Campbell's
843 Massachusetts
An Open Letter to Jayhawkers WHAT ABOUT BOOKS?
We realize you don't appreciate being reminded that finals are coming, but since final time is also used book buying time we thought we should discuss our policy for buying and selling used and new books.
Used Books—What Can I Sell? How Much Can I Get?
At each buy back period we are able to buy only those texts the teaching staff has indicated will be used again next semester.
With this commitment we are able to offer 50% of the publisher's current list price for the title. We then sell the book for 75% of the current list price. For example, if the book lists for $4.00 new, we buy it back for $2.00 and resell it for $3.00. Our major problem is how many to buy. If we overbuy on used books' it usually represents a loss to us. If we can't sell them to another store for the same price we paid for them or sell them to a wholesaler at the regular market wholesale price we must write them off as a total loss. Our used book policy stated simply in figures is as follows: Let's take a book which sells for $5.00 new and $3.75 used.
| You paid For New Book | Current |
|---|
| We buy back | Patronage refund | Total you get back |
|---|
| $5.00 | $2.50 or 50% | .35 or 7% | $2.85 or 57% |
| For Used Book | | | |
| $3.75 | $2.50 or 66 2/3% | .26 or 7% | $2.76 or 73 2/3% |
What About Books No Longer Used at KU?
During this same period (final exams) we arrange to have a buyer from a used book wholesale jobber on duty who will make an offer on most books no longer being used at KU. The best offer he can make on good current books is about 25% of the current list price. He must pay the transportation costs to his warehouse, his warehouse overhead and take the chance on selling these books to some other store at 50% of the current list price.
What Do Other Book Stores Do?
The buying back at 50% and selling at 75% of current list price is the policy in most college stores. This policy has worked successfully in a large number of college stores and makes for economical and easier means of exchange in used books.
We indicated above that the book jobber can pay a top price of about 25% of current list price. This is for a book that
What Are Old Books Worth?
has considerable use across the country and is not likely to be revised in the near future.
An old edition is almost worthless, while a book that is in the process of being revised has some value. The jobber will make an offer on some of these, but the student must decide if the book is worth more to him than the jobber.
Many students feel their books are worth more to them for their personal library than the amount either the store or the jobber can offer. This he must decide for himself. Even though we like to get all the used books we can in order to offer them to the next group of students at a saving, we have great respect for those students who keep their books to build a personal library.
New Books
We would like to point out that we have no control over publishers and their decisions to bring out new editions, or the price they set on textbooks. The publisher sets the price on a textbook and then allows us a 20% discount from this list price. In other words a book we buy new and sell for $4.00 costs us $3.20.
With respect to the decisions to change texts being used on the campus, we firmly believe the faculty honestly and sincerely tries to select the best available text for their courses and that they take all factors into consideration when they do so. The faculty would be dilatory in their duty and obligations to you if they did not keep up with changing facts and developments in the selection of textbooks.
We hope our explanations have been clear, that the book situation is now better understood and that we have given enough information to help you decide whether or not you will want to sell your used books.
Your Kansas Union Book Store is a self supporting profit sharing division of the Kansas Union. It is the desire of your Union through its Book Store division to continue to offer you your books and supplies at a savings as long as it is economically sound to do so.The following chart showing how each dollar of income of the Book Store is divided and how it is used is based on the actual percentage figures appearing in the annual financial report.
From Each Dollar Income:
Paid to Manufacturers ...73.0c
Operating Expenses ...19.0c
NDEA Loan Funds ...1.15c
Patronage Refund to Customers ...5.65c
Reserve for Emergency & Expansion ...1.20c
Total ...100 cents
Net Profit ...0.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
26
14
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 1969
UDK News Roundup (Continued from page 1)
Firefighters battle bushfires
MELBOURNE—More than 100,000 firefighters Thursday battled scores of bushfire that devastated tinder-dry Victoria state for a second straight day. At least three major fires still raged out of control, threatening a whole town and thousands of acres of land.
Police said 19 were known dead and feared the toll could reach 25 in the first sweeping broad range and forest lands around Melbourne. Firefighters called it the worst bushfire disaster in 25 years.
Rate rise causes concern
WASHINGTON—President Johnson expressed concern Wednesday over the latest rise in the prime interest rate from $6\frac{1}{2}$ to a record 7 per cent. Administration budget drafters said the President was leaning increasingly to the idea of proposing an extension of the full 10 per cent surtax at least through calendar 1969.
Knowledgeable congressional sources said Johnson would have to keep the surtax if he has any chance of realizing his hopes of submitting a new budget with a small surplus.
Vandals burn US building
FRANKFURT, Germany-Vandals hurled two Molotov cocktails into a U.S. Information Service cultural center Wednesday, starting a fire in its library that destroyed books and collapsed part of the ceiling.
and collapsed part of the ceiling. The U.S. Information Service (USIS), which operates the Amerika Haus-American House centers in West Germany, estimated damage at $4,000.
Gold prices shoot up
LONDON - The price of gold shot up to an eight-month high on the free market today $42.45 an ounce
Dealers attributed the 35-cent-an-ounce jump partly to the rise in U.S. bank lending rates, Middle East tensions and seculation on possible moves on future South African gold sales.
Today's price level was the highest since May 21. At that time it was $42.60 an ounce as French disorders mushroomed and strikes put the franc in danger.
Draft call down
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Defense Department Wednesday issued a March draft call of 33,100 men for the Army and the Marine Corps.
The total was slightly below the 33,700-man draft previously set for February. Inductions this month are scheduled to total 26,800.
The new draft schedules include provision for replacing the 48,000 reservists, called up
after the seizure of the U.S.S. Pueblo last January. These men will return to civilian life from five to twelve months before the expiration of their two year terms.
This program is expected to add 3,000 men a month to the draft quotas during the first half of 1969.
The department said that of the March draftees, 31,600 will go into the Army and 1,500 into the Marine Corps.
"THAT MAN FROM RIO" MAKES THE JAMES BOND FLICKS LOOK LIKE . .
UNDERGROUND MOVIES!
"THAT MAN FROM RIO" MAKES
THE JAMES BOND FLICKS
LOOK LIKE . . .
UNDERGROUND MOVIES!
women to the right of him...women to the left of him...into the
jaws of the improbable drops That Man From Rio!!!
THAT MAN
FROM RIO"
JEAN PAUL BELMONDO
FRANCOISE DORLEAC
JEAN SERVAIS
Distributed by LOPERT PICTURES CORPORATION Limited by EASTMANCOLOR
LATE SHOW!
Fri. & Sat. 11:30 p.m.
THE
Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
JEAN PAUL BELMONDO
FRANCOISE DORLEAC
JEAN SERVAIS
THAT MAN
FROM RIO"
Distributed by LOPERT PICTURES CORPORATION Limited in EASTMANCOLOF
LATE SHOW!
Fri. & Sat. 11:30 p.m.
THE Hillcrest
"THAT MAN FROM RIO" MAKES
THE JAMES BOND FLICKS
LOOK LIKE . . .
UNDERGROUND MOVIES!
women to the right of him...women to the left of him...into the
jaws of the improbable drops That Man From Rio!!!
THAT MAN FROM RIO"
JEAN PAUL BELMONDO
FRANCOISE DORLEAC
JEAN SERVAIS
Distributed by LOPERT PICTURES CORPORATION Found in EASTMANCOLOR
LATE SHOW!
Fri. & Sat. 11:30 p.m.
THE Hillcrest3
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
APPLE FILMS presents
KING FEATURES production
The Beatles
"Yellow Submarine"
COLOR by Delure United Artists
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
7:15 9:15
Guild officials announced no time for a walkout but the contract extension, granted while negotiations continued, was to expire at midnight last night. Negotiations, being carried on under federal mediator George Byrnes, broke off after five weeks of bargaining.
The Associated Press, with 1,300 editorial employees in the United States represented by the WSG, said it would continue to operate its basic foreign and domestic news services in the event of a strike.
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND IOWA
KANSAS CITY-Members of the Wire Service Guild struck the Associated Press at 8 a.m. today. Although AP facilities from coast to coast were affected, the wire service will continue to provide its "basic services." AP foreign offices were not affected.
NEW YORK (UPI) Contract talks between the Associated Press and the Wire Service Guild (WSG) broke off Wednesday. A union spokesman said a strike is "imminent."
"We made a final proposal we believed to be in the area management said they would accept and when they came back to the table they reneged," said Robert Crocker, chairman of the guild negotiating committee. "We are calling the first strike in AP history with the greatest reluctance but are faced with a management which allowed no room for reasonable negotiations."
Newsmen strike wire service
The Associated Press said the final proposal made by the guild, which included a top wage of $264 per week in the third year of a three-year contract and provisions for a union ship, was
Deadlines for scholarship applications were announced Tuesday by Jerry Rogers, associate director of the office of Student Financial Aid.
Applications due
Feb. 1 is the deadline for scholarship applications for the 1969-70 school year.
In the category of National Defense Student Loans, the deadlines are:
May 1 for the 1969 summer session and April 15 for the 1969 Summer Language Institute and the 1969-70 Junior Year Aboard.
NOTHING IS REAL!
A Colorgrit one
DVD movie
DVD release
London Harlem Symphony Orchestra and Submarine Limited All Rights Reserved
APPLE FILMS presents
a KING FEATURES production
The Beatles
"Yellow Submarine"
COLOR by Delure United Artists
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI.3-5784
7:15 9:15
NOTHING IS REAL!
A. Cepigni 1989
Rock
Love
Songs
Nominated for Best British Album in 1985 All Rights Reserved
APPLE FILMS presents
KING FEATURES production
The Beatles
"Yellow Submarine"
COLOR by Deluxe United Artists
more costly than the guild had calculated.
Granada
THEATR...Telephone V1.3-5788
7:15 9:15
AP management originally offered a starting salary of $145 per week and $250 for fully experienced newsmen. The guild had demanded a top of $280 per week but reduced it to $264 Tuesday night and asked that the 37½ hour week be extended to all employees.
Top scale newsmen at the AP earn $207 per week under the old contract which expired Dec. 31.
The guild represents U.S. employees of both the AP and United Press International. No strike was ever called by the guild against either wire service. The current UPI contract expires March 15.
The Toughest Hellfighter of All!
JOHN WAYNE KATHARINE ROSS "HELLFIGHTERS"
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR• PANAVISION
— NOW —
Matinee 2:30
Evening 7:15-9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
THE Commonwealth "MOVIE" MARQUEE!
THE
Commonwealth
"MOVIE" MARQUEE!
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
NOW!
8:00
COMMONWEALTH
THE Commonwealth
"MOVIE" MARQUEE!
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 5TH AND IOWA
NOW!
8:00
Now for the first time at popular prices. Direct from its reserved-seat engagement.
CAMELOT
Winner of 3 Academy Awards!
TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION® FROM WARNER BROS..SEVEN ARTS
THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
CAMELOT
Winner of 3 Academy Awards!
TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* FROM WARNER BROS..SEVEN ARTS
...
.
Victor
CAMELOT
Winner of 3 Academy Awards!
TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION® FROM WARNER BROS..SEVEN ARTS
THE Hillcrest2
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
NOW
SHOWING
Mia Farrow
In a William Castle Production
Pray for Rosemary's Baby
7:05
9:35
Pray for Rosemary's Baby
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AVE. IOWA
Bye
BYE
BRAVERMAN
7:30
9:20
"BYE BYE BRAVERMAN"
... one of Giles M. Fowler's 10 favorites!
YOU'LL LAUGH ALL THE WAY
TO THE FUNERAL!
Thursday, January 9, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily are intended to be paid without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carducci's Campus Madhouse. 1241 Iandle. 2-4
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
1968 Olds Cutlass S, Convertible. A.T.
P.S. P.B., 7,000 miles. Call VI 2-1291
before 6:00 p.m. weekdays and Sat-
Tuays VI 2-1636 after 6:00
Sundays.
1963 V.W. Must sell immediately.
save name and phone. Call V.I.
7589 1-10
1965 Pontiac Lemans, 2 dr. hd, top,
1985 V8-3818s 7 p.m., condition 1
1985 V8-3818s 7 p.m., condition 1
100% Human Hair fall with bangs
(detachable). Dark brown. Contact
Sebar Brub, Room 113. VI 2-2420.
1-10
"Fender Stratocaster" with case. Call Grease at V2-7452. 1-10
1960 Volkswagen—Body perfect, Good motor. Real good shape throughout. Radio and reclining seat. $450. VI 2-6046.
Naismith Hall contract. Save $25 on
spring for Spring semester
VT 3-3382 1-10
Antique set of 12 encyclopedia dictionary. Dated 1897. In Good Condition. Also antique dishes and miscellaneous. 615 Mass. 1-10
NAISMITH (Delicious Girls .. Beautiful Food) CONTRACT(S)-1 or 2 MEN-2nd Semester. Contact: Joe Mikesic, 842-2711. 1-10
1951 Chev. Good mechanical condi-
down payment. Call VI 3-15355. 1-10
Stereo component phono for sale.
Brand new (Sept.) and in new condition. Garrard turntable, wood trim,
$90. Please call VI 2-9021 after 4 p.m.
PRIMARILY LEATHER — Known for its fine handcrafted leather goods, this brand's collection includes several skirts and sants, plus an incentive to buy sandals early—$2.00 off. 1-10
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
18 E. 9th VI 2-002
RENT A NEW FORD
From
John Haddock Ford
VI 3-3500
23rd and Alabama
RANEY DRUG STORES
3 locations to serve your
every need
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
LA PETITE
GALERIE
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
LA P
Five New Hobe Surfboards. Original
hose for $490, original hose for
$549 for $400. Call 816-763-4944. 1-10
FOR RENT
Two contracts available for men for the spring semester at Naismith Hall. Call Dan, VI 3-2434 or Roger at VI 2-2775. 1-9
Town Manor's pent house apt. Private entrance. Completely furnished. TV, steam heat, air-cond., quiet. Parking. Business man, professor or grad student. No small children or pets. Available Feb. 1st. Call VI 3-8000. 2-4
3-rm. basement apt., utilities paid, off street parking, private bath, private entrance, suitable for 2 people. Also room no. Jets. Call VI-1-39474.
Openings for second semester! One and two-bedroom furnished apartments, very nice. Lots of closets and storage space. Umbrella Lot. Main Apartments. 174 W st. 19th, Apt. 5-B, VI 3-8220. Located near Allen Field House. 1-10
Furn. 2-bd-mir, walk to KU, $130
Furn. 2-bd-mir, now. Edmunds RI
Estate, V 3-0070.
Room and private bath for two graduate m. $ _{1/2} $ block from campus. In West Hills. Phone VI 3-3077. 1-10
Clean, comfortable room for rent to
meal. Meals if desired I 3-2988 I 1-9
COLLEGE INN-Student hotel 2nd
s semester—only 2 large single, sunny,
warm rooms available. All meals and
linens furnished. Clear atmosphere
and clean campus. Capuccus proved.
Make reservations now! Call
VI 2-8860 for appointment. 1-10
TYPING
TERM PAPERS, THEMES, THISIS
KU graduate with new electric machine. Fast service. Call Mrs. Currier after 5:30 p.m., VI 2-1409. 1-9
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Hillcrest Restaurant
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V1 2-1477
Mary Carter Paint
All paint needs, Custom picture framing, Wallpaper
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To assist clients in applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanian, Spanish, French, English, French, or Swahili. 842-853-6910.
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secretary will type reports, term papers,
theses, VI 3-7207. 1-10
If the shoe fits
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Closed Sat. at Noon.
Experienced in typing thes, themes,
term papers, etc. Have electric type-
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Phone VI. 3-9554.
Mrs. E. Wright. 2-4
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048.
Do you need an accurate typist for term papers, theses, dissertations, letters, etc. ? If so, call: VI 3-5023 and ask for Mrs. Jackson. 1-10
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Experienced typist for these, dissertations, miscellaneous work on electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Trocel at VI 2-1440. 2-6
Tissue papers, thesis and miscellaneous.
bama. VM 3-1522. Wilkens, John.
2-180 2-188
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Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. MPS. Rauckman, V 1-33281. 2-28
WANTED
Roommate for second semester to
roommate for first semester to
$70 per month including utilities.
Phone VI 3-4993 or VI 3-7688 after
workday.
HAWKER TOWEL 1-10
APARTMENTS.
Male student roommate now or second semester. Call 842-8542 at 1-8
Position available immediately to female grad. student or student nurse. Job will include some supervisory and administrative duties. Experience in administration or necessary. Woody Moore or Bob McKay at UN 4-4291. Full-time work. 1-10
Luxury Apts., 941 La. 2 amiable guys need one male roomie. Only 55 beans plus food. VI 2-6252 Urgent! Army Calling. 1-9
2 amabilie guys need an amabilie group (of 3) or an amabilie roomie. Swiss Villa apts. $55 a month. 2 big bedrooms. Being drafted VI. 2-6252. 1-9
Experienced musician; lead guitarist and singer, to play with estab$^2$hed already 3 months in advance. Good call. Pay CV 1-7389 or 2-5170 - 1-10
Graduate coed is looking for home spring semester; apartment with kitchen, bedroom apartment or room with cooking privileges. VI 2-7402 privileges. 1-10
Talented serious musicians to reorganize top area band. Need trumpet; need vocalist especially desired. Play soul, blues, jazz, rock—anything, Bookings, Sound Recordings, Box 373, Lawrence. See particular and experience. 1-10
Dwight Boring* says...
Male roommate wanted for second se-
cure. MUST be a graduate and
Graduate student preferred. VI 2-3515.
Roommate for second semester in
nairy apartment VI 2-0111
8 p. p. 1-10
1 or 2 guys to share 2 bdrm apart-
and ask for Jim or Mike. 1-10
1-10
HELP WANTED
Male. No experience necessary. Will train. Meals—uniforms and insurance benefits. Available—personal application necessary. Ask for Mr. Smith or Mr. Spencer. Johnson Restaurant on turn pike between Lawrence and K.C. 8 miles. 2-4
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shift. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tt
209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767
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
Dwight Boring
representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA
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Students for delivery work on Saturday, Sunday, Jan. 11. $2.50 per hr. Snd name, address, telephone to Jim McFall, Box 153, Lawrence. 1-10
TOM KENNEDY
...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
Help Wanted—Neat young men and women, waiters and waitresses, new chasers, security officers trained staff. Call VI 2-0306 evenings or VI 2-9848 days
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q—outdoor pit, 118 slab to glab. $3.25; B1r order,
$1.50; Rib sandwich, $8.5; chicken,
$1.15; Brixtet sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone 9-2510. tt
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times a week delivery. Diaper and Baby Laundry Service $16 a month. Laundry Service for 9 in the Call SMITTY'S VI-3-80779
fresh flower arrangements and corsages--anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 2-4
LOST
One green bilfold lost somewhere between the Student Union and Bailey Hall, on Dec. 12. Call VI 5430 or turn in Student Union or traffic office in HOC.
A Post Versalog sliduleur in room 235 Murphy. With finals coming this engineer's life depends on his rule. Call Miller, VI 3-8454. 2-4
Reading glasses. Lost somewhere be-
fore you arrived. Need for calls. Call VI 2-1203- 1-10
SERVICES OFFERED
Complete your winter wardrobe and get started on spring clothes, do some stylish fashion and try out of style clothing. Experienced. Reasonable. Cherry Klein. 842-979-6100.
FOUND
Learned Hall, second floor, gold 17
jewel Elgain ladies' watch. To claim,
call Mickle, room 830, McCollum Hall,
and pay for ad. 1-16
Happiness is...
A 1969 JAYHAWKER Buy Yours Today
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 9, 196°
New regents named
TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking today officially announced the appointment of Vincent L. Borgart, former Wichita mayor, and Jess Stewart, a Wamego businessman, to fill two vacancies on the Board of Regents.
Borgart, a Wichita attorney and former legislative liaison for Docking, will succeed John F. Eberhardt of Wichita as the board member from the Fourth Congressional District.
Stewart, owner of the Stewart Funeral Home at Wamego, succeeda Eldon Sloan of Topeka. His is an at-large appointment since regent Henry Bubb of Topeka already represents the second Congressional District.
The appointment of the two Democrats gives the governor the first Democratic majority on the board since his father, the
late Goerge Docking, was governor from 1957 to 1961. Five Democrats will sit on the board which administers the state's colleges and universities.
The four-year terms of Eberhardt and Sloan expired Dec. 31.
Atty. Gen. Robert C.
Londerholm said the appointments meet requirements of the constitution that no more than five of the nine regents be from the same party. He said the action also meets requirements that each congressional district be represented and no more than one be appointed from any one county.
MANHATTAN (UPI)—Kansas State University administrators Wednesday launched an investigation of an incident in which six students shouting obscenities and expressing "black militant" views took over a sociology class.
Upon making the announcement, Docking said, "John Eberhardt and Eldon Sloan deserve the gratitude of all Kansas citizens for their service on the board of regents."
KSU administrators to probe black militant class incident
Eugene Lupri, assistant professor of sociology in whose class the incident occurred late Tuesday, said, however, that he believed it resulted in a "meaningful dialogue between the students and the class."
"We gained from this educational dialogue," he said.
Dr. James A McCain, president of the university, said "appropriate action will be taken" as soon as "all the facts are in."
The five Negroes and one white student who comprised the group had seated themselves in Lupri's classroom, among the 250 enrolled students, before the sociology class began. Lupri had started his lecture on "The Nature of Social Stratification" when they interrupted him and took over.
He said later that for a time "he did not feel they should use the kind of language they used, but after I talked with them we agreed there should be meaningful dialogue between the students and the class."
About 20 students, apparently disturbed by the language used, left the room, but some returned before the class period ended.
Arabs deny
(Continued from Page 1)
equipment and spare parts ordered from French firms.
The embargo apparently will hit the Israeli air force hardest.
France said Wednesday it will not refund the $100 million Israel paid for jet fighters and other military equipment.
The French embargo was interpreted as de Gaulle's angry reaction to the Israeli commando raid on Beirut Airport, which not only destroyed 13 Arab commercial planes but apparently caused the Lebanese government to fall.
Premier Yafi's resignation with those of his cabinet was seen as necessary because of widespread complaints that security at the airport was so lax the commandos were virtually unchallenged.
Police calm strike
(Continued from Page 1)
When asked by newsmen if he foresaw a solution to the crisis, Reagan replied:
"The only solution you have ... is either fight or surrender and when you surrender, they have taken over. This is the day of the ultimatum. The nilitants have delivered the ultimatum at knifepoint, at firebomb point."
As AFT members picked for the third day at the 18,000 student San Francisco campus, similar action was started at San Jose, which has 23,000 students. The union represents about 300 of the 1,300 faculty members at each campus.
The AFT has demanded "meaningful negotiations" with trustees on the student crisis at San Francisco and improved salary and working conditions for the faculty. The Black Students Union and Third World Liberation Front, a coalition of non-black minorities, have been on strike at San Francisco since November over demands involving a black studies program, racism and minority enrollments.
Liberation Front member, was arrested when he struck a student crossing the picket line at the main entrance to San Francisco State.
Paul Yamasaki, a Third World
Professor James Steele was hit by the cherry bomb firecracker while picketing at San Jose near a high-rise dormitory. Otherwise, the picketing was peaceful with some students joining the striking teachers.
In Sacramento, the Republican governor noted state employees were prohibited by law from strikes. He said teachers would have their pay cut after five unauthorized absences, which could be "a surprise to some of them."
Bowman moves up
Everette Bowman, former head of pupil personnel at Haskell Institute, has been named the new Haskell principal.
Notified of the appointment by the Bureau of Indian Affairs early this week, Bowman replaces Wallace Galluzzi, now serving as Haskell superintendent.
KU
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.66
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, January 10, 1969
appy
Finals
2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, January 10, 1969
NASA building bids are due next week
By DONNA SHRADER
Kansan Staff Writer
Bids will be received January 23 for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) building to open at KU in the fall of 1970.
The $2.3 million building is
Crewman named for lunar landing in July moon shot
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The space agency said Thursday that the first U.S. astronauts to try to land on the moon will be Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin "Buz" Aldrin.
Armstrong, a former X15 rocket plane pilot, will command the landing flight, called Apollo 11. It is expected in July and there is a launch "window" for shooting for the moon between July 11 and 22.
Armstrong and Aldrin will be the two astronauts who explore the chalk-gray lunar surface, while Collins remains in lunar orbit 69 miles above them inside an Apollo spaceship similar to the one used last month by Apollo 8.
Their backup crew on the moon-landing venture, set as a national goal by President Kennedy in May of 1961, will be two members of the Apollo 8 crew that orbited the moon Christmas week and one rookie space flier.
Apollo 8 veteran James Lovell, who has spent more time in space than any other man, commands the backup crew. William Anders, systems engineer of Apollo 8, and rookie Fred Haise are the other two members of the backup team.
In April or May, Apollo 10 will carry astronauts Thomas Stafford, John Young and Eugene Cernan to the moon. Stafford and Cernan will fly within 10 miles of the lunar surface in the Apollo moon landing craft, but not actually touch down.
Opera workshop to be Sunday
The annual Opera Workshop will be presented at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Murphy Hall.
Dr. George Lawn r, head of KU operatic activities, is in charge of the program. He is assisted by David Holloway, instructor in voice, Charles Axton, Lawrence graduate student and Harlan Jennings, Topeka graduate student.
The program is accomplished with a minimum of scenery and costumes. Scenes include the Italian Grand Opera, romantic, modern folk and comedy.
The School of Fine Arts production was scheduled earlier in the semester, but was cancelled when KU's Christmas vacation began early.
Page one photo of Kathy Snodgrass, Wichita junior, by Kansan photographer Mark Bernstein.
Holloway said the lead tenor, David Borgeson, Lawrence graduate student, will fly from Chicago because of the postponement.
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being built through a $1.8 million grant from NASA for an interdisciplinary research center. The building will be located 100 yards east of the Center for Research in Engineering Science (CRES), Campus West-west of Iowa Street. The Kansas legislature appropriated $345,000 for the building and equipment and furniture will cost an additional $146,000 to be provided by the University from other sources.
VI 3-0501
926 Mass.
The University disciplines, which will be housed in the new three-story building, will include: botany, business chemistry, electrical engineering geography, geology, human development and family life pharmacy, physics, and physiology.
The building will represent a
"sort of experiment in research building design." B. G. Barr, associate professor of mechanical engineering and associate director of CRES. The building with "its openness will attempt to facilitate the communications between these disciplines."
The building will include 36 laboratories and 77 offices planned for the "greatest flexibility." The labs "will have walls which may easily be moved to facilitate changes in research needs," he said.
A major feature to expand communications is the central access tower in a domed court. The tower includes an elevator and a circular staircase, and is designed to contribute through visibility to the interdisciplinary principle. From the staircase 11
of the 36 labs may be viewed through their glass walls.
The sidewalks will "direct the professors and visitors to the central court area of the building," Barr said, "then the professors will be more apt not to slip out a side door where they would never see what else was going on in the building."
A conference room is planned for each of the upper two floors, and the main floor will have a 120-seat auditorium with a projection room and provision for closed-circuit television. The auditorium could also facilitate bilingual conferences. If "the need develops, a language set-up like that in the United Nations could be installed," Barr said.
If the bids are accepted and the building can be built for the money aavailable, Barr said, "it
"Plans for the building began back as far as 1962. It took a lot of planning to even get the grant from NASA (KU received the grant in April, 1967), and we have received many inquiries from other schools in the Midwest on how we did it. Our plans all worked out and as the NASA man said when we presented our building plans 'It may fly,' " Barr said.
will be because of the combined effort of students and faculty."
The work and the planning will all come to the "critical point when the bids are received," Barr said. After the bids are accepted and the building can be completed with the funds available, Barr hopes the building will be "an integral part of the developing KU research campus."
15
9
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839 Mess.
Uptown VI 3-5755
---
Dear Mr. Doan:
business has cast itself in the role of the doting parent, scratching its corporate head and asking: Now where have I gone wrong? We on the other side of the aptly-named generation gap can readily answer your question. The question we can't answer—and the one you must answer—is more difficult: What does, and what will, business do right?
The image that the corporate world has created in the academic world is a highly negative one. Business, which has sold us everything from living space to living bras, has been unable to sell itself. Hopefully, our dialogue will help dispel the "business myth"-although all myths are based on varying degrees of truth.
And what exactly is this image?
It's that of a potential vehicle for social change overcome by its own inertia. Business has an immense social power which is exceeded only by its inadequate social commitment. This is not to deny that many major corporations are involved in health research, agricultural improvement, etc. But what we question is whether business is really carrying—or plans to carry-its share of the social burden.
A psychologist's association test, for instance, would yield such verbal gems as "business" and "air pollution," "business" and "warprofiteering," "business" and "planned obsolescence." You yourself know only too well the two-syllable associative response generated by "Dow Chemical." It is hard for us to applaud a new measles vaccine juxtaposed with such immoralities.
Thus, many of the qualities we associate with business are contrary to our very way of life. We have awakened from the sleepy fifties and have begun to challenge both political and social tenets. Yet, while we question our involvement in a more-than-questionable war, business apparently closes its eyes and fills its wallets.
This is what troubles us. As corny as it sounds, we do hope to change the world. Business, meanwhile, is trying to change its image. But in so doing, it is merely creating a battle of antithetical stereotypes.
Thus unless it decides to give itself—and not merely its image a major overhaul, business can continue to write off a growing segment of college youth. Perhaps our dialogue will help give the corporate world the rectal kick it so desperately needs.
Sincerely,
The Chase
Forget your image, business... Overhaul yourself
Stan Chess Journalism, Cornell
SAM SCHULZ
Dear Mr. Chess:
Fred F. Hicks
I agree with you that business has done a wretched job of selling itself. We tend to feel that our role in developing the highest living standards in the world is self-explanatory, and doesn't need much selling; and we are so busy, and engrossed, in what we're doing that we don't really have time to "sell" what we do.
Simple explanations of why a company is producing a product in the national interest don't provide the answer to "selling" business, as we at Dow are all too well aware. The fact that in the judgment of our military leaders the tactical use of napalm is effectively saving lives of our troops, and serves an indispensible need in accelerating the end of a dirty and unpopular war . . . the fact that there simply is no truth to reports of massive casualties among Vietnamese women and children resulting from napalm . . . the fact that hundreds of American doctors who have volunteered their services in Vietnamese hospitals report not having a single civilian napalm burn case, all are documented facts blandly ignored by those not responsive to reason. But I have yet to hear criticism of napalm from any returning combat veteran.
Doesn't this really mean that judgments should be made on the basis of objective inquiry and not unfounded opinion? Honest differences will always arise. But a better understanding of viewpoints and motives will follow from objective discussions. Business must sell "itself" not an image of itself.
It is from this perspective that I think we should examine your central question of "whether business is really carrying—or plans to carry-its share of the social burden."
You are of course aware of business' direct involvement in contemporary community affairs through such programs as those dealing with hard-core unemployment,blight-area housing,civil rights,traffic congestion,and pollution problems. To me these programs are evidence that business today is assuming a much more active social role. But this does not answer two questions fundamental to your inquiry; to what extent should business-an economic vehicle whose primary commitment to the community lies in its economic functions assume social burdens; and how can these social responsibilities be discharged most effectively?
Obviously all of society's institutions must assume some share of the burden; there is no sole responsibility. Can you visualize a solution in which only one segment of society provides equal opportunity for Negroes?
I believe maximum long-term profit growth is consistent with, and in fact cannot be achieved without, maximum service to society. Maximum service to society can be achieved only through maximum development of, and release of. the ability of individuals. And maximum release of individual abilities brings about maximum profit-growth.
Further, in my view, service cannot be delivered best by deliberately trying to be of service. Service can more often be achieved by indirection than by any direct attempt to be of service.
Business does so many things right that I don't really see this as an issue. We have developed a system that the rest of the world is frantically trying to copy. It is the worst system going except for all those other systems. Business can't do everything for everyone, of course; it wasn't designed for that. Like all of us, it should be doing what it does best. As an economic instrument, it can best fulfill its social commitment by excelling in that respect.
H.O.CO
Our nation is going through a period of transition to new policies and new philosophies. Your generation on the campus is doing us a real service by questioning our assumptions, and by making us aware of hypocrisies and outmoded parts of our systems and institutions. You want to do away with outmoded ideologies, and so do I. As new values are accepted which emphasize the role of the individual in society today, and new relationships develop between the public and private sector of society, then more realistic answers will be found as to how business, in harness with government and education, can share the social burden by providing real rather than illusory-service.
Cordially,
H. D. Doan, President,
The Dow Chemical Company
IS ANYBODY LISTENING TO CAMPUS VIEWS? BUSINESSMEN ARE. Dialogues
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, Stan Chess, a Journalism senior at Cornell, is exploring issues with Mr. Doan.
In the course of the entire Dialogue Program, David M. Butler, in Electrical Engineering Program at Michigan State, also will exchange viewpoints with Mr. Doan; as will Mark Bookspan, a Chemistry major at Ohio State, and David G. Clark, Political Science MA candidate at
Stanford, with Mr. DeYoung; and similarly, Arthur M. Klebanoff., in Liberal Arts at Yale, and Arnold Shelby, Latin American Studies at Tulane, with Mr. Galvin.
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.
4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, January 10, 1969
1968: full cycle
1968, the Hour of the Wolf.
It was the hour when great men died,when America awaited a new birth and yearned for a deeper sleep.
If 1968 truly was the hour before dawn, that is its most optimistic note—that the most frightening nightmares are past.
It was a year turned full cycle of disparagement, hope and futility, brightened only by the flaring tail of Apollo 8 reaching towards heaven.
1968 limped into America, still suffering from the plague of Vietnam, and discontent wrought by black men and students. Before the year had passed, the discontent of the lower and middle classes would be added to the list of national ills.
At times it came in uncomfortable mixed moments, moments when trembling tears nurtured solemn hopes. April 4 was such a time. A bullet whizzing from a flop house to a motel balcony in Memphis ended the life of America's foremost peacemaker. It came at a time when peacemakers were needed most. Dr. Martin Luther King, an apostle of non-violence was dead.
But there was intangible hope.
'When will they ever learn?'
When win they ever hurt.
But the ensuing moments swelled the hope that,
because of this martyrdom the anonymous they
would learn. For a few cherishable moments, the
nation, perhaps the world, was tied together by
grief. But the intangible ties soon gave way to the
tangible. Violence. What seemed to be black
revenge, swept through forty cities in the nation,
lending an eery, ominous tone to "We shall
overcome." In Washington, 4,000 National
Guardsmen were called on to squeelch
disturbances.
assassination. Again, two months later an assassin's bullet plundered the nation into self-doubt. This time, Sen. Robert Kennedy, a candidate for the highest office in the country, was the victim. Surely, the nation wondered if it too was victim. Again, the country was bound together by days of public grief.
"When will they ever learn?"
If there were tangible moments of hope, they too were unforeseen and came as unexpected moments.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy, in a drive for the presidency, stimulated the young, the intellectuals, the doves, and those who simply yearned for a hero. The soft-spoken senator was given credit for providing the impetus to one of the major news stories of the year.
On March 31, President Lyndon Johnson announced that he would attempt to move the Vietnam war to the bargaining table and announced he would not seek re-election. Hopes were never higher than on the night following that televised speech.
But again, harsh reality intruded.
Late in August, all the hope and subsequent futility were shaped into angry aggression. Television viewers saw demonstrators at the Democratic convention bloodied by the clubs of Chicago police. The nation reeled, not knowing how to react. Sharp criticism of Mayor Richard Daley's gestapo tactics turned to popular support.
The nation-provoked by the rape of Czechoslovakia, angered by revolt at Columbia, and aroused by two assassinations, April riots, the lingering Vietnam war and the limbo status of the captured Pueblo crew-came to rest on the stage of Chicago.
Events after that became anti-climatic
Richard Nixon, like the fog, came on cat feet. All the way to the White House, as the alienated supporters of Robert Kennedy, McCarthy and Nelson Rockefeller watched.
But even after the Chicago and Miami conventions, there were moments of anxiety. The frenzied activity of George Wallace threatened to divide the nation further.
A lower-middle class backlash vote of critical proportions brought the threat of chaos to the electoral machinery. But for one of the few times during the year, crisis was averted. Wallace was confined to his electoral home in the South, and Vice-President Hubert Humphrey came dramatically close to making the old Democratic coalition work that fabled one more time.
coauthion work that turned full cycle. By Christmas, the year had turned full cycle. Hope was given substance. It was given by the god of science and technology. As Apollo 8 circled the moon, Americans listened as astronauts Frank Borman, James Lovell and William Anders read from Genesis. Despite the agony of the past year, Americans viewed the earth, "and saw that it was good."
Coming as it did, at the end of such a turbulent year, Apollo was applauded as the top news event of the year.
Surely the nation yearned for hope—and a deeper sleep.
Richard Lundquist
Assistant Editorial Editor
NIXON CAMPAIGN THREATS
GREAT SOCIETY PROGRAMS
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
All Rights Reserved 1986
Publishers Hall, Graduate
'I was only kidding.'
Social insight
by Scott Nunley
J. G. Ballard is one of the most exciting of contemporary science fiction novelists. His stories have the power, rather rare in this field, to generate an emotional as well as intellectual response.
to generate an emotional as well as interactive in inexpensive paperback editions from Berkley Medallion, Ballard's nine excellent volumes should have established for him a wide audience approaching that enjoyed by Heinlein and Clarke. Yet Ballard remains to some extent an underground phenomenon, a cult-read writer that the broader popular readership has (vaguely) heard about, but does not actually enjoy reading.
All right.
Tolkein began on the same basis—when Dr. Guy Davenport first assigned "The Lord of the Rings" at the University of Kentucky, he had to ask his class to pay $18 for the hardback edition. (It is some criterion of the Tolkein-experience that not one of the students would later resell his expensive volumes.)
Both men reach beyond the traditional audience for science fiction, an audience still escape-oriented. Wells, Huxley, and Orwell also survived the jump because a general readership recognized in them a certain truth-full-ness, a valuable insight into human dilemmas of a basically social nature.
KU's James Gunn, with his successful collection "The Immortals," is struggling with the same task, to bring social insight into a field of literature that has been occasionally scientifically prophetic but traditionally shallow in the treatment of its human element.
Ballard, however, is still cut off from a great segment of this wider audience.
His science fiction does refuse to provide mere escape and can be, in fact, distinctly unpleasant in its naturalism. But at the same time, Ballard is not a social visionary. He is not primarily concerned with the political or cultural trends of the future, but with the individual conditions of individual humans violently wrenched out of their historico-cultural environment.
historic cultural environment. If there is one drive that Ballard's varied characters seem to share, it is exactly this tendency to go backward, not forward, in seeking patterns and meanings for their disrupted lives.
In this way, the hero of "The Drowned World" begins to feel the throbbing equatorial sun as a red beacon drawing him back in a Jungian retracing of his racial memory.
Jungian retracing of his recent memory There is in Ballard a heavy weight of the mystical, of statements and actions that can scarcely be translated into denotative language.
Not only is each man reacting in a way based immediately upon his unique character and experiences, but Ballard's overall premise is apparently that the more profound grows a man's search within himself, the more necessarily ineffable it becomes.
The resulting prose is poetic, emotion-laden, even at moments obscure. The resulting plots become predominated by patterns of decay, a direction natural to men whose traditional world has been suddenly destroyed. The mixture, then, of prose and plot generates an evocative, moving, but frequently brooding reading experience.
Although "The Wind from Nowhere" appears to end "happily," for example, the last moment reprieve does little to lighten the heavy hurricane-howling that builds throughout the novel. (This reprieve does not appear before the most disturbed, disrupted character of the book has finally perished in his crumbling pyramid citadel.)
Ballard's more recent novel, "The Crystal World," follows this nightmarish pattern. With only an offhand attempt at scientific plausibility, Ballard plunges his hero baldly into the catastrophe that will force him to re-align his life.
Again, in the title story from the collection "Billenium," the hero may not literally die, but he is re-intombed in a horrible press of world overpopulation that leaves the reader with an apocalyptic picture of earthly hell, of living death.
Frequently, Ballard's characters do not seem to be able to fathom each other's actions any more than the reader can.
fictional people.
Perhaps by leaving these mysteries occasionally as inexplicable, Ballard is making a very accurate (but also a very disturbing) comment on the "human condition."
Some form of dark symbolism does seem to be underlying most of these obscurities, but it is certainly possible that at times Ballard himself is trapped outside the madly ideosyncratic worlds of his fictional people.
Here, unfortunately, Ballard's brooding sours into melodrama.
The characters' personal gestures become so openly symbolic—baptismal plunges into life-giving African rivers, self-sacrificing crucifixions at Catholic altars—that they lose the horrible immediacy of his other fictional insanities. Characters here seem to be "play-ing" at being persons, with all the poses and exaggerations of bad theatre.
"The Crystal World" will even disappoint the Ballard Cult. Conrad has said all this about the siren-call of the African forest so much better in his "Heart of_Darkness," that Ballard's 1966 version may seem to be little more than a retelling deliberately obscured with phony-profound motifs of leprosy and beatification.
The earth is being elevated into a beautifully (and beautifully described) crystalline existence, but on the human plane little meaningful transformation is occurring.
influential transformation is occurring.
J. G. Ballard, of course, does not have to depend upon the success of "The Crystal World" for his reception. His earlier and still available volumes have established his power to tell a captivating horror tale, to create memorable suffering men, and to wring from his reader the heavy emotions that resonate through the decayed landscapes of Ballard's universe.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
A student newspaper serving the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. Kansas is a university of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription required each year. Second class postage pale. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and other benefits advertised to all students without regard to national or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Friday, January 10, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
The rock hound
Artistic approach
By WILL HARDESTV
An artist may choose one of at least two methods of presenting his art works.
First, the artist may put his work in a medium familiar to his audience. The artist is thereby assured the audience will understand that which is in his artwork. However, the artist may not be able to get all he wants to or has to say in this form and what he does say may not be presented exactly the way he wants it to be.
may not be presented equally. Secondly, the artist may say artistically what he has to say in the way and manner he wants to. This way he is assured of saying what he has to say in exactly the way he sees it and wants it said. However, he runs the risk of not communicating with his audience.
J. Marks and Shipen Lebzelzer chose the latter approach in making their album entitled ROCK AND OTHER FOUR LETTER WORDS on Columbia. What is produced is something which sounds, on first listening, like a horrible mish-mashing of sounds to produce nothing. On subsequent listenings, a pattern slowly emerges and you realize, to quote that famous old TV line, "I think they're trying to tell us something."
"What?" is, of course, the biggest question.
It would appear Marks and Lebzelter are trying to say communication is bad, horrible or non-existent in much of the world today. The titles of the songs tell the basic story. The basies of communications are, of course, words such as rock and "Other Four Letter Words." Marks and Lebzelter quote from Frederic Henry Hedge writing in The Dial, a Transcendental publication, in 1841: "Has this world without me wrought Other substance than my thought? Lives it by my sense alone/ Or by some essence of its own?" "Greatest Hits—Love Your Navel" knocks rock stars as the biggest plastics and phonies of all. They, who have a great chance to communicate, don't. They, and all the rest of us, are living in the "Middle of Nothing."
Side two starts off with "They're Through." This song forecasts a violent revolution in the United States because of the lack of communication. The revolution will happen "Today." The whole "Trouble" is that people are forced to keep asking "Do You Understand What I'm Trying to Say?" "Trouble" also knocks soul singers and soul music as being just as phony and fake as any other form of music or communication. "Poop for Sopranos and Orchestra" is a musical work—the liner says—with "lyrics at random from various sportscasts."
The album finishes with "This Is the Word." The lyrics are words by Woody Guthrie: "I am trying to be a singer singing without a dictionary, and a poet not bound down with shelves of books . . . The word I want to say is easy to say, and yet is the hardest word I've tried to say . . . I will die as quick and as easy as I can to keep this one word living, because it keeps my whole race of people living, working, loving and growing on to know more and feel more. This is the word I want to say."
The whole idea of the album, however, seems to me to have been said better and much more concisely by two of today's most meaningful and articulate musical prophets. "People talking without speaking/ People hearing without listening/ People writing songs/ That voices never shared/ No one dared/ Disturb the sounds of silence."
surface:
Compare ROCK with albums by, for instance, Simon and Garfunkle, and you'll see Marks and Lebzelter are caught in the very trap they seek to avoid.
Lands Role
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Spanish actor Jose Guardiola landed a featured role in "Hard Contract" with James Coburn on location in Tangier.
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People's Voice, over the last year KU's most active radical group, plans to resume trying to change the "establishment" next semester.
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Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student and a Voice leader, said the group would probably begin a campaign to end ROTC on the campus and would continue to demand 50 per cent student representation in the University Senate and other University governing groups. Voice has been somewhat inactive after a leadership crisis two months ago.
Voice originated last year as a result of a protest against ROTC and will probably concentrate on that issue again, he said.
Atkinson said although the group was still without formal leadership or structure as a result of the resignation of its coordinating committee at that time, some tentative plans had been made. "Getting something done is the most important thing." he said.
Voice looks at its future
He added that committees would be formed to work on this and other issues, and that such devices as public forums, leaflets and petitions might be used to advance the cause.
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Atkinson said less emphasis will be placed on student government. The University Senate Code, which resulted at least partially from Voice actions, is nearing the final action by the University Senate and the student body. Although the code does not follow the recommendations of the minority report, the Voice position, student government is likely to be less of an issue, he said.
Atkinson said the final form of the code would probably not include any Voice recommendations, such as 50 per cent student representation. Voice plans no protest of the code's adoption, though, he said.
Seminar is cancelled
Today's session of the Central American Development seminar has been cancelled.
The seminar, sponsored by the Ford Co-operative Research Program, was scheduled to meet in 203 Bailey Hall from 2:30 until 5:00 p.m.
Speaker Dr. Richard Adams, well-known anthropologist from the University of Texas, will be re-scheduled if possible.
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The problems of black students will probably also receive Voice attention, he said. He did not know what form this would take, but said Voice would work with the Black Student Union.
Atkinson said the next Voice meeting will be a rally Tuesday in the Strong Hall Rotunda in support of black students at K-State. He said he would visit Manhattan Sunday and invite student radicals to speak at the rally.
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6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, January 10, 1969
1000
KU coed braves cold weather to enjoy Potters ice
Nation's colleges plagued by new violence, strikes
By United Press International
Nearly 300 demonstrating students were arrested at San Fernando Valley State College Thursday and a new police-student clash hit violence-ridden San Francisco State College.
Across the nation at Waltham, Mass., more than 200 white students staged a sit-in at Brandeis University in support of 65 protesting Negro students who held control of the campus communications complex to protest alleged racist policies.
The mass arrests at San Fernando Valley State College, in Northridge, Calif., came after the protesters defied a state of emergency order imposed by the college president.
Grim-faced police swept the campus when the demonstrators refused to disperse. There was no resistance, and many of the students tried to joke with officers as they were led away.
Dr. Delmar T. Oviatt, the college's acting president, was jeered when he appeared among the protesters, appealed to them to end the demonstration and offered to meet with protest leaders.
At least four students were arrested in the melee at San Francisco State College, which
came after union teachers rejoined the strikers' ranks in defiance of a court order.
A spokesman for the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) said the teachers voted unanimously at a rally to continue their strike. Contempt citations were readied for the teachers.
AFT teachers picketed for the second day at San Jose, Calif. State College.
At Brandeis University, white students clogged hallways in Bernstein-Marcus administration building but did not interrupt operations.
The white students sought amnesty for the black students who Wednesday took over Ford Hall, a classroom building, and the university telephone switchboard. The Negroes said Brandeis had failed to follow through on demands made by the blacks last spring after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King.
Morris Abram, president of the university, told newsmen he did not contemplate immediate disciplinary measures against the Negroes but said "amnesty will end at a time to be determined."
Abram said university officials were not prepared to "discuss issues under duress."
In New York City, Queens
College was to reopen Friday for final examinations. The campus was quiet Thursday. Officials closed the school Tuesday for two days to avoid possible violence.
KU coed killed
Laura Siviright, Clinton, Ia., sophomore, was killed in an automobile accident Dec. 19 on Interstate 80 near Davenport, Ia.
Miss Sivright was returning home for the Christmas vacation when the accident occurred.
The 19-year-old coed was a resident of Miller Scholarship Hall.
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Don't Miss This Great Film! "THE DEADLY AFFAIR"
Jame Mason, Simone Signoret and Maximillian Schell
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New Kansan staff posts announced by editor
Fri., Sat., Sun., Jan. 10, 11, 12-40c
7 & 9:30 p.m. — Dyche Auditorium
SUA Popular Film Series
Announcement of Kansan staff positions for the spring semester were made yesterday by Ron Yates, Shawnee senior and managing editor of the Kansan.
Besides Yates, the spring staff will include:
2 students cited in Viet Nam valor
Two KU students, Capt. Richard M. Eklund and Burt Lancaster, have been cited for their outstanding service in the Vietnam war.
Eklund, Medicine Lodge graduate student, has received his second Distinguished Flying Cross for meritorious service in Vietnam.
Eklund, a pilot in the Marine Corps Reserve, was awarded the medal for an attack, Feb. 22 on North Vietnamese positions in Hue. The citation said, although ground fire struck his plane during each attack, he continued, damaging 17 buildings and killing more than 70 North Vietnamese.
Eklund has also received the Vietnam Service Medal with one star, the Vietnam Campaign Medal with device and nine Air Medals.
Lancaster, Lawrence freshman, has been awarded the Bronze Star with Combat "V" for valor in March of this year.
He had previously been awarded the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry and the Purple Heart.
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Pam Flaton, St. Louis senior, business manager; Robert Entriken Jr., Brian Francisco, St. Louis senior; Don Westhaus, Marion senior; Allen Winchester, Hutchinson senior; and Tom Weinberg, St. Louis senior, assistant managing editors; Joanna Wilebe, Hillsboro senior, city editor; and Tom Weinberg, Coffeyville senior, assistant
Tim Jones, East Aurora, N.Y., senior, editorial editor; Justin Diebelt, Athleton junior, assistant editorial editors; Kobear McKay, Olathe junior, sports editor; Imbia junior, assistant sports editor; Marilyn Zok, Wichita junior, feature and society editor, and Susan Brimazian, Mio junior, student assistant feature editor.
Marla Babcock, Ottawa junior; Judy Dague, Tulsa senior; Linda Loyd, Ottawa junior; Ruth Rademacher, Mamaroo junior; Wichita senior, copy chiefs; Bob Butler, Prairie Village junior; Charla Jenkins, Emporia senior; Steve Nafus, Toniganole junior; and Donna Shraer, Salina junior; executive report-
Linda McCreery, Honolulu junior,
photo and graphics editor; Mike
Sanders, graphic designer;
graphics editor; Kathy Sanders, Law-
rence senior, advertising manager;
Jerry Burton, national advertising
manager; Jerry Bottenfield, Pittsburgh junior,
Murphy, Coway Springs junior, classifi-
ed advertising manager.
Plenty of Nuts In Automobiles
NEW YORK (UPI) - The auto industry uses more than 13 million nuts and bolts a year, according to Russel, Burdsall & Ward, manufacturer of those products.
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Friday, January 10, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Big Eight basketball statistics
All Games
THE STANDINGS
| | W | L. Pct. | Pts. | O. Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 13 | 1 | .929 | 10348 811 |
| Colorado | 12 | 2 | .857 | 1078 971 |
| Okla. State | 8 | 5 | .615 | 811 773 |
| Missouri | 7 | 6 | .538 | 924 871 |
| Nebraska | 7 | 7 | .500 | 998 1006 |
| Iowa State | 7 | 7 | .462 | 915 1036 |
| Kansas State | 6 | 7 | .462 | 966 940 |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 9 | .308 | 745 864 |
Conference Games
CONFERENCE GAMES ONLY
| | W | L | Pct. | Pts. | O Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas State | 2 | 0 | 1.000 | 160 | 137 |
| Colorado | 2 | 0 | 1.000 | 158 | 124 |
| Kansas | 2 | 0 | 1.000 | 150 | 113 |
| Okla. State | 1 | 1 | .500 | 129 | 138 |
| Oklahoma | 1 | 1 | .500 | 118 | 138 |
| Iowa State | 0 | 2 | .000 | 126 | 169 |
| Missouri | 0 | 2 | .000 | 118 | 123 |
| Nebraska | 0 | 2 | .000 | 124 | 151 |
CONFERENCE GAMES ONLY
| G | FG | PON PLASTIC | FT | FTA | FTA | REB PF | TP | Avg. G. |
|---|
| IOWA STATE | 2 | 44 | 118 | 37 | 38 | 48 | .792 | 68 | 126 | 63.0 |
| Opponents | | 74 | 150 | .493 | 21 | 35 | .600 | 95 | 33 | 169 |
| KANSAS ST. | 2 | 71 | 137 | .515 | 21 | 42 | .667 | 87 | 36 | 169 |
| Opponents | | 19 | 131 | .374 | 39 | 57 | .684 | 75 | 30 | 137 |
| OKLA. ST. | 2 | 43 | 90 | .478 | 43 | 57 | .754 | 50 | 40 | 129 |
| Opponents | | 52 | 96 | .542 | 34 | 52 | .654 | 50 | 40 | 138 |
| COLORADO | 2 | 57 | 116 | .492 | 44 | 61 | .721 | 54 | 30 | 158 |
| Opponents | | 44 | 95 | .463 | 32 | 45 | .711 | 56 | 43 | 124 |
| KANSAS | 2 | 64 | 118 | .542 | 22 | 36 | .611 | 73 | 33 | 150 |
| Opponents | | 39 | 101 | .387 | 35 | 43 | .814 | 45 | 30 | 113 |
| MISSOURI | 2 | 48 | 106 | .453 | 22 | 34 | .647 | 51 | 36 | 118 |
| MISSOURI | 2 | 43 | 88 | .489 | 37 | 47 | .787 | 55 | 28 | 123 |
| NEBRASKA | 2 | 44 | 114 | .386 | 36 | 52 | .692 | 54 | 32 | 124 |
| Opponents | | 61 | 125 | .488 | 29 | 43 | .674 | 65 | 36 | 151 |
| OKLAHOMA | 2 | 44 | 93 | .473 | 26 | 35 | .743 | 61 | 31 | 151 |
| Opponents | | 53 | 116 | .457 | 32 | 43 | .744 | 55 | 26 | 138 |
FG Percentage
TEAM LEADERS
FT Percentage
FG Percentage
Kansas 64-11-0 542
Kan. St. 64-11-0 515
Colorado 57-11-6 492
California 43-9-0 478
Okla. 44-9-3 473
Missouri 48-10-6 453
Nebraska 44-11-4 386
Iowa St. 44-11-8 373
Iowa St. 38-48 792
Okla. St. 43-57 754
Okla. 26-35 743
Colorado 44-61 721
Nebraska 36-52 692
Kan. St. 28-42 667
Missouri 22-34 647
Kansas 22-36 617
Rebound Percentage
Kansas 73-45 .619
Kan. St. 87-75 .537
Okla. 61-55 .526
Okla. St. 50-50 .500
Colorado 54-56 .491
Missouri 51-55 .482
Nebraska 54-65 .450
Iowa St. 66-95 .410
Scoring
Player and School G FG FGA FT FTA TP Avg.
Cliff Meely, F, Colorado 2 26 42 8 13 60 30.0
Jerry Venable, F, Kansas State 2 22 34 3 5 47 23.5
Amos Thomas, F, Oklahoma State 2 13 25 12 17 19.0
Bill Cain, C, Iowa State 2 13 33 9 12 35 17.5
Dave Robisch, F, Kansas 2 14 29 7 11 35 17.5
Joe Smith, F, Oklahoma State 2 12 18 10 11 34 17.0
Dave Collins, F, Iowa State 2 14 29 4 6 32 16.0
Tom Scanburyt, G, Nebraska 2 12 19 6 9 30 15.0
Don Tomlinson, F, Missouri 8 23 14 20 30 15.0
Steve Honeycutt, G, Kansas State 2 13 28 3 5 29 14.5
Garfield Heard, C, Oklahoma 2 11 18 6 8 28 14.0
Mike Coleman, F, Colorado 2 9 17 9 12 27 13.5
Jo Jo White, G, Kansas 2 10 20 7 10 27 13.5
Landy Watson, F, Oklahoma 2 9 17 8 9 26 13.0
Rebounding
| Player and School | G | KBDS | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cliff Meely, F, Colorado | 2 | 23 | 11.5 |
| Jerry Venable, F, Kansas State | 2 | 21 | 10.5 |
| Gene Williams, C, Kansas State | 2 | 21 | 10.5 |
| Bill Gain, C, Iowa State | 2 | 19 | 9.5 |
| Dave Collins, F, Iowa State | 2 | 16 | 8.0 |
| Amos Thomas, F, Oklahoma State | 2 | 16 | 8.0 |
| Clifford Ray, C, Oklahoma | 2 | 15 | 7.5 |
| Bruce Sloan, F, Kansas | 2 | 14 | 7.0 |
| Garfield Heard, F, Oklahoma | 2 | 13 | 6.5 |
| Bob Gratopp, F, Nebraska | 2 | 12 | 6.0 |
| Landy Watson, F, Oklahoma | 2 | 12 | 6.0 |
Future Games
January 11-Oklahoma at Kansas State (TV); Iowa State at Colorado; Kansas at Missouri.
January 13—Kansas at Iowa State; Kansas State at Colorado.
Charlie Sifford leads L.A. Open
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Forty-five-year-old Charlie Sifford, recovering from a flu attack and minus his usual cigar, struck a blow for clean living Thursday when he fired an eight-under-pair 63 that gave him a three-stroke lead in the first round of the 72-hole, $100,000 Los Angeles Open.
Sifford, first Negro to win a major golf tournament, carded 35-28 on the par 36-35—71 Rancho Park municipal course.
He took an eagle three on the 526-yard 13th hole when he sank a wedge shot from 40-yards
out. He had one bogey—when he missed a three-foot putt on the third hole—and seven birdies.
Australia's Bruce Crampton was all alone in eighth place with
Three strokes back at 66 were Grier Jones, a college champion who turned pro just last fall, and veteran Dave Hill. Jones shot a 32-34 and Hill 34-32.
Three other pros landed at four under par 67. They were Jimmy Walker, Los Angeles, with 32-35; Terry Dill, Austin, Tex., 34-33; and Bob Murphy, pro rookie of the year in 1967, who shot 34-33.
33-35-68, followed by defending champion Billy Casper amd eight other pros at 69.
U. S. Open champion Lee Trevino and Arnold Palmer, who has won this tournament three times, got off to slow starts and both shot 72—one stroke over par.
Sifford, who said he gave up cigars after 25 years of smoking them because of the flu last week, set a personal low record with his 63. His previous best was a 64 when he won the Hartford Open in 1967.
He said he hasn't smoked in
three days.
three days:
"The cigars made me cough so I quit them," he said, rather mournfully. "I am still full of antibiotics and I just hope I can keep going."
keep going Overcast skies and chilly temperatures apparently did not bother him nor most of the other golfers. Thirty-four in the field of 144 broke par 71.
Sifford's 63 was one stroke off the course record.
KU's Douglass in Senior Bowl
MOBILE, Ala. (UPI)—"If you watch the pro draft later this month, look fast—a lot of these players will go early." New York Giants coach Allie Sherman said Thursday, speaking about the participants in Saturday's Senior Bowl game.
"This is the one where they make their final decisions," Sherman added.
South coach Charley Winner of the St. Louis Cardinals echoed Sherman.
"This is the game all the pro scouts like to see," Winner said. "It's coached by the pros and, for the first time, we get to see how many of the outstanding seniors of '68 perform under pro conditions."
The two most notable absentees here this week are Heisman Trophy winner O. J. Simpson of Southern California and his runup, LeRoy Keyes of Purdue.
The quarterbacks for the Senior Bowl are exactly the same as for the American Bowl last Saturday at Tampa, Fla.
Kansas' Bobby Douglass, star in last week's 21-15 North victory, and Cincinnati's Greg Cook, the nation's 1968 total offense champ, will again quarterback the North, and Edd Hargett of Texas A&M and Loran Carter of Auburn will again quarterback the South.
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Friday, January 10, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
KANSAS
15
Near his last KU game
Jo Jo White, KU's All America guard and Olympic star, nears the end of his college basketball services for the Jayhawks. White has only four games to play, and only one at home against Colorado. Jayhawk fans will see no more of No. 15 this year after the Buffs game Feb. 1.
The University of Kansas swimming team faces perennial national power Southern Methodist in its home opener at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Gymnasium.
KU tankers in key meet
"This is without doubt our most important dual meet of the season," KU coach Dick Reamon said. "It gives us a chance to go against a national swimming power and many top individuals and we can use it as a yardstick to measure our progress to date."
SMU, defending Southwest Conference champion, placed fifth in the NCAA championships last year and has
finished in the top 10 for the past 10 seasons.
"They haven't lost a dual meet in at least eight years and have won more than 60 duals without a loss," Reamon said.
Kansas lost to SMU last year in Dallas, 77-36, before going on to win the Big Eight title. "We didn't lose as badly as the score indicates," Reamon said. "Many events were very close."
--errors beat you.
The Jayhawk swimmers returned from the Christmas break early to begin final preparation for this meet. Since their return on December 27 they have put in more than 66,000 yards in the water,
Reamon figures.
Reamon figures.
"The work has produced noticeable results," Reamon said. "Strokes and fundamentals are better and we are stronger overall in the water; our mental attitude is excellent."
SMU's greatest strength is in the butterfly and individual medley events while Kansas is strongest in the sprint and middle distance freestyle events. "This will probably be the finest dual meet in the country to date," Reamon said. "It comes at a good time in the year for us. We're ready to see how good we really are. I don't think we'll disappoint you."
Sports of all sorts
By STEVE SNIDER UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)—Something new has been added to this year's Super Bowl—hard feelings. . . The Baltimore Colts are bugged by some of jet Joe Namath's remarks and the New York Jets are bugged by the lop-sided odds favoring Baltimore by up to 18½ points.
"Some of this stuff is pretty hard to take," said easy-going placekicker Jim Turner of the Jets after a recent workout.
"One paper had it Baltimore 27, New York 0... Well, that'll just make us play all the harder. I don't say we'll win and I don't say we'll lose but we'll be there and we're all looking forward to it."
Coaches Don Shula of Baltimore and Weeb Ewbank of the Jets are hoping nothing so emotional as a "grudge match" emerges. . . Too much emotion breeds too many errors and
American Bowling Congress tournament scheduled at Madison, Wis., starting Feb. 22 will the richest in history... Prize money fund reached a record $585,000 two weeks before the Jan 21 deadline for entries.
Delegates to the annual NCAA convention decided not to act on a proposal to abolish two-platoon football for next year... But when the National rules committee meets next Monday to decide college Football's 1969 code, three members of the NCAA council will be on hand to lecture on the rising costs of football... Platoons are expensive... Get the message?
Allie Sherman of the New York Giants, who used to be a left-handed quarterback, coach es the North squad in Saturday's Senior Bowl game at Mobile. . Key man for the North is Bobby Douglass of
Kansas, who still is a left-handed quarterback.
Rugby meet is set for Feb. 5 at frat
The KU Rugby team will have an informal meeting at the Sigma Chi fraternity house Feb. 5 to elect officers and welcome new members to the team, Mark Bedner, Emporia senior and president of the club, announced Thursday.
"This is the first year that the Rugby Team has been recognized by the University," said Bedner. The ASC counsel gave the team $250.
"This money was used for new uniforms and to finance one of the trips for this spring," Bedner said.
In the past the team has been financed by private donations and many of the team members paid their own expenses.
At present the membership of the club is only 35 but they hope that more people will become interested in the sport.
The team schedule for the spring will include 4 tournaments that will take them to St. Louis, Chicago, New Orleans and the Bahamas for spring break. They will also play nine other single games during the season.
"This spring semester will be one of the biggest and most exciting that we have ever had," said Bedner.
Last year the team placed third in the nation at the Chicago tournament. At this tormenture were teams such as Notre Dame, Dartmouth and St. Louis University. Sixteen teams from all over the country participated.
Prosperity may not be just around the corner for lady golf pros but purses are up for the eighth straight year... Burdine's Invitational at the Country Club of Miami Jan 16-19 offers the all-time record of $25,000 to get the show on the road in style.
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NEW YORK (UPI)—During the 42 years of their existence, the Harlem Globetrotters have played basketball in 87 countries, traveling more than 5 million miles and performing before audiences totaling more than 62.5 million.
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, January 10, 1969
Jets anxious for Colts
FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(UPI)—Weeb Ewbank had to apply the brakes Thursday because he discovered his New York Jets were hitting too hard and moving too fast toward their big Sunday Super Bowl date with the Baltimore Colts.
The Jets went through their final major practice session and Ewbank said there would be no more contact work until game time in Miami's Orange Bowl Sunday.
"I had to caution them not to get as rough as they did yesterday," Ewbank explained. "We don't wanna lose a ballplayer. The way they were going at it, they scared me for a while. You certainly don't want to come up with an injury at this point."
The Jets, according to Ewbank, were at peak condition for their first Super Bowl test ever as early as last week.
"That's the problem," he said.
"You have to try to calm 'em down. The boys are all in excellent shape. What I have to do now is slow 'em down a bit."
For perhaps the 500th time since he brought his Jets down here last week, the
extraordinarily patient Ewbank was asked whether he had found any weakness among the Colts he felt the Jets could exploit.
Displaying that extraordinary patience, he said simply: "Thev're a great team."
Repeatedly, Ewbank has dodged answering only one question—which AFL team do the Colts most remind him of? "I know which one," he says, "but I'm certainly not going to tell you."
Some of his players, however unwittingly let the cat out of the bag. They say the Kansas City Chiefs are the AFL team the Colts remind them of most.
The chubby Jet coach continued saying he thinks his AFL champs will give a good account of themselves against Baltimore Sunday, but no matter what they do or whatever the final score, he thinks they have a fine ball club and nobody has to apologize for them.
"I can't understand all these references to their (Baltimore's) superiority and our not having any chance supposedly. Right now, if you listen to people talk, it would be foolish for us to dress Sunday, but we're going to."
Namath worries Shula
BOCA RATON, Fla. (UPI) -Lenny Lyles, the veteran defensive captain of the Baltimore Colts, rated the Joe Namath-directed New York Jets' passing attack among the best in pro football Thursday and said, "it's not going to be easy out there Sunday."
The Colts, like the Jets, concentrated on defense in their workout in pads Thursday. The National Football League champs will begin tapering off Friday and Saturday for the Sunday afternoon Super Bowl meeting with the Jets.
"We're not chafing at the bit at this point. We're just working along the way we regularly do. We don't want to be ready too soon," said Baltimore coach Don Shula.
Lyles, who has been playing eight years in Baltimore's defensive backfield, said of the Jets, "They have fine receivers and we know Namath can throw the ball. He's been together with his receivers for four years and when you work together that long it makes a big difference. New York has one of the best passing attacks in football.
"Their passing game is not
much different than what we work against in the NFL. Anybody can beat you if they execute well—or if you don't execute well. New York doesn't do too many things wrong. It's not going to be easy out there Sunday."
But Lyles said he figured by Sunday, "I'll be good and ready."
Shula said that in two days of working on the Colt offense he has installed "nothing especially new, although we always have one or two different wrinkles.
"But I don't think this is going to be a game that will be won with a lot of gimmicks. Good hard football is what this game will be."
The Colts expect to enter the game at full strength. Shula said that Lyles had recovered from a mild case of tonsilitis and that Bubba Smith's sprained ankle "is getting better every day."
Looking toward what the Jets might throw at his team, Shula said, "I don't believe Weeb Ewbank (Jets coach) is going to deviate much from what they have been doing all season. He has three good linebackers and a good, tough defense."
STUDENTS MISTER DONUT WANTS YOUR BUSINESS
Stop in today for coffee or hot chocolate and a donut. Also try our new muffins and our chewy, cholocate eclairs.
At the beginning of this week it appeared Kansas, riding the crest of a 13-1 season record, would easily be the first school to reach 1,000 basketball victories.
The Kansan and KU's sports information department has them at 991.
The Wildcats' venerable head coach, Adolph Rupp, claims his boys made number 1,000 by beating Mississippi State last Monday. He's adding in a five-game sweep at the International Universities Tournament at Tel Aviv, Israel, in August of 1966.
By ROBERT ENTRIKEN JR.
Kansas Sports Special
Now, one way or another, Kentucky seems determined to make it.
The NCAA official count has Kentucky at 995 after the Mississippi State win. It doesn't include the Israel junket.
MISTER DONUT
Lawrence
Kentucky's sports information director, Russell Rice, now claims the Wildcats have 1,002 career victories-or 997 by NCAA count if two more wins he has unearthed from 1903 and 1907 are accepted.
523 W. 23rd St. Lawrence Phone 842-9563 for special orders
Countdown to 1,000
KU-Kentucky in sudden deadlock
At the start of the season the Kansan and KU sports information director Jay Simon (not to mention the Associated Press, United Press International and Sports Illustrated) had Kentucky at 983 victories. This was based on figures compiled by noted basketball historian Bill Mokray of Boston.
Rice said yesterday that his school had 987 at the start of the season—and that Wednesday he had found two more early victories.
Early Kentucky records showed no result for five games played before 1907, Rice said. He said he spent a day scanning
old newspaper microfilms and found an 11-10 victory over Lexington YMCA in 1903 and another over what is now Transylvania College by a 16-14 score in 1907. The other three games were losses.
No one seems to know where the discrepancy between Mokray's figures and Rice's is.
However, taking the NCAA total of 995 (we won't count that trip to Israel either) and adding the two that Rice found (which were legitimately scheduled games and will probably be accepted), Kentucky now has 997.
So does Kansas.
What this means is this: Root like crazy for Florida or Georgia or Tennessee. According to Rice Kentucky will have its hands full against those foes. But their schedule and KU's match evenly to that point. We both need three wins.
Here's the schedules to that point:
point:
Saturday, Jan. 11
Kansas at Missouri
Florida at Kentucky
Monday, Jan. 13
Kansas at Iowa State
Georgia at Kentucky
Saturday Jan. 18
Kansas at Kansas State
Kentucky at Tennessee
The rub is that the Kentucky-Tennessee game will be televised. As in the Big Eight, Southeastern Conference television games are played in the afternoon rather than at night.
If both of us win the next three games, Kentucky gets there first by a matter of hours. Rice gives Jayhawk fans a glimmer of hope, though.
"We haven't beaten Tennessee at Knoxville since I don't know when," Rice said, citing the Wildcats' 1966 season where they lost but two: Tennessee at Knoxville and Texas Western in the NCAA Tournament semi-finals.
So come a week from Saturday, when KU plays K-State and Tennessee plays Kentucky for number 1,000, cheer loudly for the Hawks and the Vols- and hope it's a wet day for Wildcats.
Auto Race Attendance
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) — Attendance at auto racing tracks will show a total of more than 60 million persons for 1968, predicts Larry G. Truedsale, general manager of racing for The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company.
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12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, January 10, 1969
Curriculum aids kept in Bailey lab
Although it houses a collection of more than 11,500 books, the curriculum laboratory, 213 Bailey Hall, is not officially connected with the Watson Library system.
P. Rogers, director of the curriculum center said it is classified as laboratory rather than a library because its primary function is to support research.
"It's a place to work on curriculum," Rogers said. He added that the center has materials for elementary and secondary levels and will expand to higher education curricula in the future.
Teachers in the public schools and students in education use the laboratory the most, Rogers said, but it is open to anyone.
Textbooks from all publishers are available in the laboratory. Rogers said personnel from surrounding school districts use this supply of texts frequently. The center's text collection is not limited to those books used in Kansas schools.
The center also has a professional materials section for use by education students. Rogers said these materials relate to methods and subject matter taught in KU classes.
Rogers said the laboratory
recently obtained a microfilm reader-printer. "We have microfilm records of about 70 periodicals available to students." Rogers said.
The curriculum lab also has a stock of audio-visual equipment which can be checked out for use in the classroom. Records and filstrips are among the aids most commonly used by professionals and student teachers, Rogers said.
Maps and charts used as teachers' guides accompany the audio-visual materials. Rogers said the laboratory's file of teaching tools is "used in teaching future teachers."
He further explained that such charts might be used to teach education students how to teach a 5th grade social studies class. A traveling book exhibit which places new texts in the curriculum laboratory on a temporary basis provides still another service to teachers.
"It gives teachers a chance to review all the new books published in their particular fields." Rogers said.
The center also gives students a chance to see some of the innovations in visual aids through exhibits of materials furnished by various manufacturing companies.
Monstrous photographs give coed a big 'headache'
It's not a nightmare, nor any kind of dream, nor is it a tissue advertisement—it's an eight foot by four foot photography project of a KU coed.
The photo is one taken and blown up to monstrous proportions by Pat Spurgeon, Des Moines, Iowa, senior, in a painting class assignment and something she "just wanted to do."
The photos of children presented problems to Miss Spurgeon and to Gary Mason, journalism instructor, who helped with the development of the enlargements.
Miss Spurgeon hopes to make her "liquid motion on canvas" go farther than the photos. She plans to make a related series of enlarged photos with some of them having color either by tone or paint."
Miss Spurgeon said one of her instructors wanted her to "cheapen the image, that is to make it not so perfect, not so innocent, not so precious."
The instructor suggested making a large red X on it, but Miss Spurgeon said, "that would ruin the essence of the whole thing." She added, however, she plans to be "more creative and more abstract" in some others in her series.
The physical size of the pictures presented some problems, she said. Mason provided his personal developing trays which measure 24 feet by 36 feet. "Five gallons each of developing solution, short stop and hypo were used to develop the pictures," Mason said.
The enlarger projected the picture from one end of the darkroom in Flint Hall to the other, to get the picture large enough. Mason said, "It was projected nearly fifteen feet, with two persons helping focus the shot."
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The enormous paper needed for the print was cut from a roll of photographic paper which measured 40 feet by 36 feet.
After the prints were made, they were allowed to dry over night on the living room floor of Miss Spurgeon's apartment.
The photo editor of the Jayhawker, and Mason, Jerry Hoffman, sophomore; Mike Gunther, senior; and William Seymour, journalism instructor, all helped mount the two prints. The prints were mounted on boards "which needed to be sanded so the dry mounting tissue would stick." Before the prints could even be mounted, "they were ironed, with a hand iron," Mason said.
The developing process consumed "an hour to an hour and a half," Mason said, "and this was after the time consuming process of focusing the print. The prints were washed for two to three hours after that. The mounting process took at least another hour."
Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, was appointed legislative chairman of the Commission on the Status of Women for Kansas by Gov. Robert Docking Tuesday.
State committee will be chaired by Dean Taylor
A lot of time, but cheap for the money, Miss Spurgeon said. She borrowed what equipment she could and only spent $10 for both pictures. Mason said, "Commercially the prints would have cost between $20 and $30 each."
As legislative chairman, Miss Taylor will "exert pressure on the appropriate agencies to act on discriminatory practices against women," said Mrs. James Ricks, assistant dean of women.
Mrs. Ricks said Miss Taylor is familiar with studies on the status of women because of her work with the KU Associated Women Students (AWS) commission on the subject.
Mrs. Ricks cited a survey completed last fall by the AWS commission on discrimination against Kansas women in employment.
Student interest and a faculty response recently helped create a course on the New Left.
Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, said several students approached him and requested the course which will open spring semester.
Ketzel said he met with Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, John Wright, associate professor in the department of human development and family life, Wayne Penn, assistant professor of political science and Bob Howard, of the associated student council.
Political Science 98 (LAS 98) for juniors and seniors and political science 48 (LAS 48) for
"We met and discussed means by which a series of seminars could be organized," Ketzel said. Later we called a general meeting of the four professors and 16 interested students to set up two courses."
New left course offered
All University students are eligible to try out.
"Twilight Crane" and "The Red Tunic" are two of a series of folk dramas written in the New Theatre genre. "Twilight Crane" is very popular in Japan. It was made into an opera and toured the United States. It is the fantasy of a crane that becomes a wife to show her gratitude to the man who saved her life.
"The Red Tunic," never before staged in this country, deals humorously with a situation of a lustful local governor foiled by a clever and faithful wife.
The same cast of four men and four women will perform both plays to be presented March 24-28 and April 8-12.
KU theatre tryouts to be Feb. 3
Showing the frustration and bitterness of an Army squad in Vietnam, "The Day the Fish Got Away" takes place prior to the big troop build-up in 1965.
"John-John" is a realistic comedy that takes place in the restroom of a movie theater.
"Young Goodman Brown" is a theatricalist epic of witchcraft in the late 17th century. These three original one-act plays will be presented in the Experimental Theatre April
29-May 1 and May 4-10.
The University Theatre will hold tryouts for three spring semester productions at 7 p.m. February 3. Interested students are to report to the theatre lobby.
Moliere's classic farce, "The Imaginary Invalid," will be directed by Thomas R. Long.
The three productions are "The Imaginary Invalid" by Moliere; two Japanese folk dramas, "Tvilight Crane" and "The Red Tunic" by Junji Kinoshita. Three original one-act plays will be presented by KU students: "John-John" by Doug Wasson, Chambersburg, Pa., senior, "The Day the Fish Got Away" by Lannie Fellers, former KU student, and "Young Goodman Brown" by Stephen Biddle, Topeka graduate student.
freshmen and sophomores, Ketzel said, will define and evaluate the New Left movement in the United States.
The play will be costumed and styled in the period of Louis XIV. It will be presented in the University Theatre March 13-15 and 21-22.
"Juniors and seniors will exchange views on lower division teaching methods at separate meetings where they can develop a common core for the program." Ketzel said.
Political science 48 will be open next semester, Ketzel said, however, political science 98 is already filled with juniors and seniors. He said upperclassmen will act as discussion leaders for seven freshmen and sophomore sections, each of which will include 12 students. Discussion groups will meet once a week for two hours in the evening. Students will receive two hours credit for the course.
He explained the course was designed to present criticism of modern American society and foreign policy from the New Left perspective.
"We will examine alternatives of existing middle class cultures," Ketzel said. "It's hoped by the end of the semester that students can define the New Left movement in the United States."
"The course is part of an attempt by interested faculty and students," he said, "to set up a student-initiated course not regularly offered in an existing department."
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Friday, January 10, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Students to work with urban projects
By FRED PARRIS Kansan Staff Writer
Beginning this spring semester, KU students interested in problems of urban development will have the opportunity to work in actual neighborhood planning projects.
A new course, sponsored by the department of architecture and urban design, will allow participants to plan urban renovation projects for low income residential districts. Neighborhoods in Topeka, Lawrence and Kansas City will be involved.
Any student who obtains the approval of his dean and of the dean of Architecture is eligible. The number of credit points given will depend on the time committed by each student.
The new course, says Charles H. Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, is part of the University Council for Urban Action program. The Council consists of students and faculty in various academic disciplines who plan and do urban-improvement field work.
"While it is difficult to say now what specific activities will be undertaken, the 'paint-up, patch-up, clean-up' campaign of East Lawrence is one prototype program," said Kahn.
This project is part of a
long-range co-ordinated housing program for Lawrence in which the Urban Council is co-operating with civic and religious groups.
The initial "paint-up" drive will be followed by a housing rehabilitation program. The final phase will be a housing construction project funded by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
Each KU school and department participating in the Urban Action Council will handle those problems relating to its own area of experience, Kahn said. Business School personnel will help with financial problems, the School of Law with legal details, the sociology and psychology departments with human behavioral problems and so forth.
Another project in which students will work is the planning and interior renovation of the East Lawrence Community Center. Architectural designs are now being drawn and the actual work will begin in about a month.
Although the Center's plans are being drawn by the School of Architecture, funding for the construction work will come from private groups and individuals in the community.
While the KU Urban Action Council is presently doing much
of its work in Lawrence, it is also involved in urban action efforts in Kansas City and Topeka.
"We are presently operating a Community Consultation Center in Kansas City which will offer to inner city residents consultation abilities of the various disciplines on the campus." Kahn said.
All of the urban-renovation projects in which the Urban Action Council participates follow a set pattern. The Council donates the professional skills
needed while the people of the community, assisted by student and faculty volunteers, provide the time, direction and work.
Funding comes from various sources, including local contributions and federal grants.
Other projects envisioned for the Kansas City area include a housing program, extension courses for small contractor in estimating, bookkeeping, etc., and an urban college scholarship program for disadvantaged youth.
"Our intention is to bring into the educational and financial mainstream of society those groups in the population which have traditionally been excluded," Kahn said.
Recently, the Architectural School, in conjunction with the University of Missouri at Kansas City and the City of Kansas City received a two-year grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The grant is only one of six HUD gave this year for the city/university co-operative effort.
New race relations courses to be offered
Several new courses dealing with Black-White relations will be offered at KU this spring semester, announced William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs.
Courses offered this spring are: American Studies 10, Issues in American Culture dealing with the American Negro and Indian; American Studies 165, Minority Groups and Race Relations, and Anthropology 292, Seminar in Cultural Anthropology: Negro Personality.
History 80, American Negro History; History 296, Problems of American Negro, Junior-Senior research seminar in race relations in different
Kansas communities; Political Science 98, Senior seminar in the Negro in American Politics, and Political Science 154, Comparative Politics: Contemporary Political Issues, a seminar on racial decision-making in the United States, Great Britain and the West Indies, are also included.
The College 48, Topics and Problems on Black Consciousness, open only to Oliver and Centennial College students, Religion 71, Christian Ethics in Contemporary Society, a study of the contemporary "Black Revolution."
Religion 272, Seminar in Social Ethics, Sociology 165.
mimony Groups and Race Relations, and Speech and Drama 141, Human Relations in Group Interaction I.
Compensation
MANILA (UPI)—The Philippine Supreme Court has doubled to 12,000 pesos ($3,000) the award of compensatory damages for death caused by crime.
The court said in a ruling the raise was necessary because of the lower purchasing power of the Philippine peso after World War II.
A
VAN ELI
via
Europe
New Arrivals!
Sue models several of the great new styles with
the broader toe and the hardware treatment. All
styles in antique tan, some in navy and black. Sizes
to 11. Priced from twenty dollars.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
837 MASS. VI 3-4255
PETER JOHNSON
2013
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 MASS. VI 3-4255
Engineering and Science at IBM
"You're treated like a professional right from the start."
"The attitude here is, if you're good enough to be hired,you're good enough to be turned loose on a project," says Don Feistamel.
Don earned a B.S.E.E. in 1965. Today, he's an Associate Engineer in systems design and evaluation at IBM.Most of his work consists of determining modifications needed to make complex data processing systems fit the specialized requirements of IBM customers.
Depending on the size of the project, Don works individually or in a small team. He's now working with three other engineers on part of an air traffic control system that will process radar information by computer. Says Don: "There are only general guidelines. The assignment is simply to come up with the optimum system."
Set your own pace
Recently he wrote a simulation program that enables an IBM computer to predict the performance of a data processing system that will track satellites. He handled that project himself." Nobody stands over my shoulder," Don says, "I pretty much set my own pace."
Don's informal working environment is typical of Engineering and Science at IBM. No matter how large the project, we break it down into units small enough to be handled by one person or a few people.
Don sees a lot of possibilities for the future. He says, "My job requires that I keep up to date with all the latest IBM equipment and systems programs. With that broad an outlook, I can move into almost any technical area at IBM—development, manufacturing, product test, space and defense projects, programming or marketing."
Check with your placement office
If you're interested in engineering or 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.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
IBM.
I am delighted to hear that your name has been added to our list of members. Your contributions have made a significant impact on the community and your service is greatly appreciated. If you wish to be included in our mailing list, please visit our website at www.haworthbusiness.com. We look forward to hearing from you.
Friday, January 10, 1969
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
15
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
...
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the weekly newspaper are offered 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, 1241 Oread. 2-4
1968 Olds Cutlass S. Convertible, A.T.
P.S., B.P., 7,000 miles. Call VI 2-191-2
6:00 p.m. weekdays and
Saturdays VI 2-6506 after 6:00-
24 Sundays.
1965 Pontiac Lemans, 2 dr., hed. top,
VI 82-8915 after 7 p.m.
1965 VI 82-8915 after 7 p.m.
1-10
1963 VCE. W.must sell immediately.
Vise name and phone. Call V1-10
7589
100% Human Hair fall with bangs (detachable). Dark brown. Contact Barb Schruber, Room 113. VI 2-2420. 10
"Fender Stratocaster" with case. Call Grease at V 2-7452. 1-10
Naimalm Hall contract. Save $25 on
Spring for spring semester.
VI 3-3882. 1-10
1960 Volkswagen—Body perfect, Good motor, Real good shape throughout. Radio and reclining seat. $450. VI 2-6046.
1-1-73
Antique set of 12 encyclopedia dictionaries. Dated 1897. In Good Condition. Also antique dishes and miscellaneous. 615 Mass. **1-10**
NAISMITH (Delicious Girls . . Beautiful Food) CONTRACT(S)1- or 2 MEN—2Nd Semester. Contact: Joe Mikesic, 842-2711. 1-10
1951 Chev. Good mechanical condi-
tion. Call VI 3-1538. 1-10
down payment. Call VI 3-1538. 1-10
Stereo component phone for sale.
Brand new (Sept.) and in new condition. Garrard turntable, wood trim,
$90. Please call VI 2-9021 after 4 p.m.
Five New Hobe Surfboards. Original
price for five; $495.00 for four; Call 816-763-4944. - 1-10
Call 816-763-4944. - 1-10
PRIMARILY LEATHER — Known for its fine handcrafted leather goods and leather skirts and vests, plus an incentive to buy sandals early - $2.00 off. 1-10
Hillcrest Restaurant
8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. daily VL2-1477
In The Bowl Sandwiches, Dinners Students Welcome
GIFT CARD
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
Sony 550A Stereo Record Player with
Radio. One year old.
I 2-9989. 1-10
Dark blue sport coat, size 41r. Dark overcoat, size 40r or 42r. Never worn.
Best offer takes. Call VI 2-8725. 2-4
FOR RENT
Unusual Gift Ideas
3-rm. basement apt., utilities paid, off street parking, private bath, private entrance, suitable for 2 people. Also sleeps room. No pets. Call VI-3-19474.
Town Manor's pent house apt. Private entrance. Completely furnished, TV, steam heat, air-cond., quiet. Parking. Business man, professor or grad student. No small children or pets. Available Feb. 1st. Est. VI C 3-8000. 2-4
Artist Supplies
Openings for second semester! One and two-bedroom furnished apartments, very nice. Lots of closets and College Hall Manor Apartments. 1741 West 19th, Apt. 5-B, VI 3-8220. Located near Allen Field House. 1-10
- Art supplies and canvas
- Complete decoupage materials—Boxes, purses, decorative plaques, lining
Furn. 2-bdmr. house, walk to KU, $130
Estate. VI 3-0570. Edmonsdor,
1-10
Room and private bath for two grad-
uates. One room in the East West Hills. Phone VI 3-3077 - 1-10
Artist Supplies
- Complete decoupage r
terrials—Boxes, purses,
decorative plaques, lining
paper
COLLEGE INN--Student hotel 2nd semester--only 2 large single, sunny, warm rooms available. All meals and linens furnished. Quiet atmosphere and quiet environment proved. Make reservations now! Call VI 2-8960 for appointment. 1-10
TYPING
Sleeping rooms for male students.
Available Feb. 1. Phone VI 3-5767.
- Now taking enrollments for Jan. Beginning classes in Decorative Painting
Rooms for rent. Private entrance.
Call for appointment. 3 I-73535 - 1-10
Plush 1 bedroom apt for rent. 905
Midway Road. Call VI 2-8348 after 1
p.m.
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
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in Black-Speech Education. Electronic Located near Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873.
18 E. 9th
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Kustom and Fender
Headquarters
Complete Music Supplies
Lessons and Rentals
- Liquitex now in 8 oz. jars
- Now taking enrollments
VI 2-0021
Buy UNICEF Cards and Calendars now at KU BOOKSTORE
SUPPORT NEEDY CHILDREN
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th — 7:30 - 5:30
If the shoe fits REPAIR IT
Closed Sat. at Noon.
GOODYEAR TIRES
Experienced in typing theses, themes,
t:nm papers, etc. Have electric type-
er and computer type. Prompt
efficient service. Phone VI 3-8548.
Mrs. E. Wright. 2-4
Typing of theses and dissertations by experienced typist on new electric machine. Mrs. Marlene Higley, VI 3-6048. 2-4
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Do you need an accurate typist for term papers, theses, dissertations, letters, etc. ? If so, call: VI 3-5023 and ask for Mrs. Jackson. 1-10
Page Fina Service
Complete Mechanical Service
Former Harvard and Univ. of Minn.
former Harvard sports terms, short jc
pers, theses, VI 3-7207
Grease Job 11.30
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment.
Experienced typist for these, dissertations, miscellaneous work on electric writer. Call Mrs. Troxel at VI 2-1440. 2-6
Term papers, thesis and miscellaneous.
London: Wolken, 1712-
bama, VI 3-1522. 1-2-18
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Mrs. Rauckman, V 3-3281. 2-28
WANTED
Experienceed tytplat will type disertas-
ion and write it to a monitor or
electric typewriter. VI 3-8592. 1-10
EVERYONE SAYS
Roommate for second semester to share two (2) bedroom apartment. $70 per month including utilities. Phone VI 3-4993 or VI 3-7686 after 7:00 p.m. JAYHAWKER TOWERS AP.MENTIONS. I-10
Position available immediately to female grad, student or student wife Position offered. Work will include some supervise and administrative duties. Esperience required. Job may be necessary. Woody Moore or Bob McAdoa at UN-4-4291. Full-time work. 1-10
Experienced musician; lead guitarist and singer, to play with established musicians; already 3 months in advance. Good mail. Call VI 3-7689 or VI 2-5170 - 10
EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field
Graduate coed is looking for home spring semester; apartment with room with cooking apartment, room with cooking evenings. Call VI 2-7402 evenings. 1-10
Male roommate wanted for second set of
Graduate student preferred. VI 2-3515.
Come In
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Lawrence Lumber
1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Anytime
Experienced Dependable
ORDERS DELIVERED
842-9563
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Complete Supply
523 West 23rd
Personal service
- shelving
- paints
- bulletin boards
- paneling
19th and Massachusetts
Talented serious musicians to re-organize top area band. Need trumpet; need vocalist especially desired. Play soul, blues, jazz, rock—anything. Bookings, Sound Foundation jections, Box 373, Lawrence. Find particulars and experience. 1-10
1 or 2 guys to share 2 bdm, apart-
ter side, and VI back VL. Select
and ask for Jim or Mike.
1-10
Male student to assume Naismith Hall contract second semester. Best location in hall and with excellent view! Call VI 2-4450. 1-10
Roommate for second semester In-
room-nie apartment VI 2-0111 1-10
8 p. pp.
HELP WANTED
Male. No experience necessary. Will train. Meals—uniforms and insurance. Must have an able-personal application necessary. Ask for Mr. Smith or Mr. Spencer. Howard Johnson Restaurant on turntier between Lawrence and K-24 miles.
COUNTER HELP WANTED. Part-time openings available in day or night shifts. Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Help Wanted—Neat young men and women, waiters and waitresses in hospitality prefers, will train. Call VI 2-0306 evenings or VI 2-9484 days.
Students for delivery work on Saturday, Sunday, Jan. 11, 12. $25 per hr. Send name, address, telephone to Jim McFall, Box 153, Lawrence. 1-10
NOTICE
Diaper Service $13 a month, 3 times a week delivery Diaper and Baby Laundry Service $16 a month Family 75c for 9 lbs. Call SMITHY-2 9-318077-4
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 8.23d. tf
Fresh flower arrangements and corsages-anytime. Cash. Wide selection of gifts. Alexander's Flowers. 826 Iowa. VI 2-1320. 2-4
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
V13-1341
TONY'S 66 SERVICE
Be prepared—
get antifreeze—starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Dress
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
ART
SALE
33
1242 Louisiana
LA PETITE
GALERIE
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
Sat. & Sun.
Jan. 11-12,
1-5 p.m.
Donut
GARDENLAND, INC.
GARDENLAND, INC
914 West 23rd
V1 2-1596
Aquariums & Fish
A
Save $20. NOW on new Magnavox
Stereo AM-FM Component System—Reg. $239.90 - Reduced to $129.90!
cover) plays with (with cover) vanishes discernible, record and diamond stylus wear. Four extended range speakers, 9" oval plus 3½" on each side and h' quality tuning and four controls. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon. & Thurs.
Evenings. 2-14
A Post Versalog sliderule in room 233 Murphy. With finals coming this engineer's life depends on his rule. Cal Miller, VI 3-8454. 2--
SERVICES OFFERED
One green bilfoil fund lost somewhere between the Student Union and Bailey Hall, or between the Student Union or turn in to the Student Union or traffic office in Hoch. 23-24-25. Our sliderlens in room 108.
LOST
Reading glasses. Lose somewhere be-
needed for finals. Call VI 2-103. 1-10
Complete your winter wardrobe and get started on spring clothes. I do not need a lot of stylish clothes. Experienced. Reasonable. Cherry Klein: 842-6979. 2-10.
FOUND
Learned Hall, second floor, gold 17
Jewel Elgin lady's watch. To claim,
call Mickle, room 830, McCollum Hall,
and pay for ad. 1-10
Mister
Mary Carter Paint
All paint needs, Custom picture framing, Wallpaper
1717 W. 6th
VI 2-1411
TRAVEL TIME
Pay-Less
Self Service SHOES
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges
- Novelties
- Favors
- Lavaliers
- Guards
Lavanders Sportswear
Rings
- Sportswear
- Sportswear
Paddles
Cups
- Awards
- Trophies
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AIRLINES
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your Spring Reservations Now.
Make Your
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
WEST END OF HILLCREST BOWL
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THE LOUNGE Budwieser on Tap
9TH & IOWA
HOTEL DE SAFARI
HOME OF
THE CHALK HAWK
16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, January 10, 1969
Two-week final period outlined by KU registrar
Final week begins officially January 13th, said William A. Kelly, registrar.
The days of judgment, final week, are now upon us, and then comes the chaos of enrollment.
The exam periods last approximately three hours and two exams are scheduled each day. The exams are given over a two-week period.
The registrar's office enjoys the two week finals because "it gives us more time to prepare for enrollment," says Kelly.
The preliminary Timetable Schedule of classes for the spring semester is available now.
Kelly said many of the problems that arise in enrollment are because no one reads the Timetable. The
Timetable gives the step by step process of enrollment along with the different classes that are offered the spring semester. Seniors may now enroll at any time.
This is the first time the Timetable has been out this early. Kelly said "they hope students will plan their schedules early enough so as to avoid as many problems as possible."
Registration begins Jan. 29-31
Registration begins Jan. 29-31.
By making small changes each semester they eventually will transfer over to computers, Kelly said. "We are always trying to improve the enrollment process. Sometimes these improvements are not noticeable to the student," Kelly said.
7:30 MWF sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Monday January 13
7:30 TR sequence 9:00 to 4:50 Friday January 24
8:00 to 9:20 TR sequence 9:00 to 4:50 Friday January 24
8:30 MWF sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Monday January 20
8:30 TR sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Thursday January 16
9:30 MWF sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Thursday January 16
9:30 TR sequence 9:00 to 4:50 Monday January 20
10:50 TR sequence 9:00 to 4:50 Monday January 20
10:30 MWF sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Tuesday January 14
10:30 TR sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Monday January 13
11:00 to 12:20 TR sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Monday January 16
11:30 TR sequence 9:00 to 4:50 Tuesday January 21
12:30 MWF sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Tuesday January 14
12:30 TR sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Saturday January 25
1:00 to 2:20 TR sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Saturday January 17
1:30 MWF sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Wednesday January 17
1:30 TR sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Wednesday January 17
2:30 MWF sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Saturday January 18
2:30 TR sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Wednesday January 22
2:30 to 3:50 TR sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Wednesday January 22
3:30 MWF sequence 9:00 to 11:50 Tuesday January 24
3:30 TR sequence 9:00 to 4:50 Friday January 24
4:00 to 5:20 TR sequence 9:00 to 4:50 Saturday January 25
4:30 MWF sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Thursday January 25
4:30 TR sequence 2:00 to 4:50 Saturday January 25
**Language:**
French 1 & 2 )
German 1, 2, 3, & 4 )
Russian 1 & 2 ) (All Sections) 9:00 to 11:50 Wednesday January 22
Spanish 1, 2, 3, & 4 )
(In case of conflict, the language listed first follows the schedule; the language listed second arranges a special examination at a different time. In case of conflict between French and Spanish, Spanish follows the schedule and French arranges a special examination at a different time.)
English 1 (All Sections) 9:00 to 11:50 Wednesday January 15
Physics 1, 2, 5, 6, 14, 16 & 116
All Sections) 9:00 to 11:50 Friday January 17
Biology (All Sections) 2:00 to 4:50 Saturday January 18
EE 21 (All Sections) 2:00 to 4:50 Saturday January 18
(In case a student is enrolled in both Biology and EE 21, arranges an examination for that student at a different time.)
Engineering 1, 50, 31, 52, 64, 9:00 to 11:50 Wednesday January
(In case a student is enrolled in both Engineering Mechanics and an examination that student at a different time.)
Math 21, 22, 23
(In case a student is enrolled in both 11:30 TR and
Official Bulletin
TODAY
KU Moslem Society. 12 p.m. Kansas Union.
Udallis
International Club Dancing Lesson
6-20am or 211 Robinson
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
7 p.m. 829 Mississippi.
Motion pictures to be shown free during final week
International Film Series. 7:30 p.m.
"Bamlet." Hoch Auditorium.
Popular Film, & 9.30 p.m. The
Downtown Theater
International Film Series, 7:30 p.m.
Folk Dance Club, 7.30 p.m. 173 Robinson
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
*Days From Medieval Mystery Cycles*
SATURDAY
Last Day of Classes
First Annual Festival of Contemporary Band, Literature, All Day.
rary Band Literature. All Day.
western Civilization Examination, 1.
p.m.
Freshman Basketball. 5:15 p.m. Missouri, there.
Journ Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "The Deadly Affair." Dyche Auditorium.
Basketball. 7:35 p.m. Missouri,
there.
Inter-residence Council, in coordination of the offices of the dean of men and the dean of women, is sponsoring free movies to be shown in residence halls during finals.
Mrs. Frank Shavlik, assistant dean of women, said the movies, to be shown at the Kansas Union during finals will also be shown at Corbin and Gertrude Sellards Pearson (GSP) Halls.
Concert of Contemporary Music By KU Wind Ensemble, Concert Band, and Symphonic Band. 8 p.m. University Theatre.
Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m.
days From Medieval Mystery Theater
SUNDAY
Carillon Recital. 3 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Mixed Faculty League Bowling. 6 p.m. Jay Bowl.
Popular Film 7 & 9:30 p.m. "The Deadly Affair" Dyche Auditorium
Joseph R. Pearson (JRP), Oliver and Hashinger Halls will show a different schedule. Mrs. Shavlik said all of the movies will not be shown at all halls.
Mrs. Shavlik said the times and places for showings have not been set. Schedules will be posted in living groups next week.
Movies shown at JRP, Hashinger or Oliver will be "Mary, Mary." "The Pumpkin Eater," "Spellbound," "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane," "Bridge on the River Kwai," "The Barbarian and the Geisha," "Pal Joey" and "Under the Yum Yum Tree."
Movies featured in the Corbin-GSP series include" "Our Man in Havana," "Comedy of Terror," "Frankenstein," "First Man on the Moon," "Notorious," "The Mouse That Roared," "The Devil at 4 O'clock" and "Detective."
Orientation in Lewis
Transfer students and incoming freshmen will be guests at an orientation dinner at 5:45 p.m. Jan. 29 in Lewis Hall.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments
Mrs. James Ricks, assistant dean of women, said administrators, faculty and student members of the orientation committee will host the dinner.
The convenient place to live A time and money saver.
Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments All utilities included in rent
Students will receive an IBM card in their spring enrollment packet, on which to make their request for tickets. The tickets will be sent directly to them at a later date.
- Swimming pool—club rooms
New system for fb tickets
A new procedure for obtaining 1969 football tickets was announced yesterday. The new plan will eliminate the long lines at Allen Field House.
- Air-conditioned
This is the only chance students will have to receive the tickets at student price and people are advised to read the football IBM cards carefully.
Rudd's enlisting the American working class into the struggle against the ruling elite will almost certainly not succeed, Penn said.
there and studied that radical outbreak first hand.
"The working class has gained such sufficient affluence that it no longer has even a strong reformist quality behind it."
America's mass communications media was largely responsible for making student-extremists the leader-figures they became, Penn added.
- Elevators
"Most of the students were motivated by concrete issues. They had concrete grievances they wanted settled."
- Bus service
"Mario Savio only gained a substantial degree of power late in the game—after he had been portrayed by most of the media as being the central leader."
Penn has been an observer of the New Left movement for several years. He was a graduate student at Berkeley, Calif., during the 1966-67 disturbances
- Off-street parking
- Laundry rooms in each building
- Many other extras
The Berkeley protest, for example, was touched off by the arrest of an anti-army recruiting booth picket.
Likewise, Penn said, the sweeping "student power movement" claims were the ideas of a few radical leaders in the demonstrations.
Kathleen P. Smith, Overland Park freshman, died Sunday at her home as a result of spinal meningitis.
Lawrence's Finest and Safest Apartments
This created an increased interest in anarchism and in small agrarian co-operative communities, he added.
"I was surprised that Rudd was as optimistic as he was, that a large-scale industrial society could be organized along socialist lines," says Alfred W. Penn, astst. professor of political science.
1603 W. 15th
Mark Rudd appears to hold radically different views from most other New Leftists, says a KU political science professor who heard him speak this week.
Overland Park coed dies at home Sunday
"Increasingly in the New Left, you find people who think that any form of organization results in elites at the top and masses at the bottom."
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Miss Smith had served as a Head Start volunteer for two years and also worked for the Organization for Advancement of Interracial Communications.
At KU, Miss Smith was a member of the University Singers.
Tel. VI 3-4993
Rudd's views differ from most New Left
Inspection Invited
The Carriage Lamp Restaurant
on the malls
Charbroiled Steaks—Sea Foods—Italian Foods
Fine Sandwiches
Cold Beer—Soft Drinks
Complete Menu to Suit the most discriminating
Now Open Serving Fine Foods Daily
11:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Tavern & Sandwich Area open till Midnight