THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.122
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, May 1, 1969
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
U.S. mountaineers killed
KATMANDU, Nepal - Five American mountainers and two of their native guides were reported killed today at the base of 26,975-foot Mt. Dhaulagiri.
The Nepalese Foreign Office said it had received a distress call from the 10-man climbing team asking for a helicopter rescue. Bad weather kept the 'copter from carrying out its mission.
No details of the accident were available.
Chichester-Clark elected
BELFAST James Chichester-Clark, a moderate on the issue of equal rights for Northern Ireland's Roman Catholics, today was elected premier. He defeated hardliner Brian Faulkner by one vote.
Chichester-Clark won the governing Unionist party's runoff 17 to 16 to replace his cousin, Terence M. O'Neill, as premier of this country torn by religious strife.
(Continued to page 12)
Officials say arsonist 'probably' set Yuk fire
Fire department officials said yesterday the fire which destroyed the Mr. Yuk-Up club last week was probably started by an arsonist.
Deputy Fire Marshall Lloyd Davies said, "We have exhausted all reasonable possibilities of accidental or natural causes for this type of fire."
The fire, which caused an estimated $240,000 damage to the Yuk-Up and Yuk-Down also caused extensive damage to the adjacent Duckwall's Store in the Hillcrest Shopping Center, 9th & Iowa Streets.
The fire which started near the front door of the Yuk-Up spread through an area described by club owner Richard Wright as, "as fireproof as we could make it."
The fire was first detected at 12:58 a.m., April 23 by a member of the "Sound Sircus" a rock band which was practicing in the Yuk-Down.
Wright said yesterday the clean-up effort is coming along quickly. He expects to have the
Yuk-Down open for business as soon as the water damage in the downstairs area can be cleaned up and the building safely sealed off from further leakage upstairs.
Wright said the exact date the club will re-open, "depends on a million things." He said he will make no major changes in the club during repairs.
C. K. Kean, district manager of Duckwall's, the store damaged in
the blaze, said he expects the store to be reopened for regular business in approximately six weeks.
The store is holding a smoke sale beginning Thursday to clear water and smoke damaged merchandise from the store, he said.
Fire officials expect results of laboratory tests on material from the fire which was sent to he Kansas Bureau of Investigation returned within a week.
Lending bill signed
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI) — Gov.
Robert B. Docking late yesterday
signed last-minute amendments to the so-called "truth-in-lending" law and the state mandatory meat inspection act.
The governor said he still was not satisfied with changes in the "truth-in-lending" law, and he would ask the 1970 legislature to work it over again.
amendments to both measures April 26, the last day of the session.
The legislature made last minute
April 20th the last day of the season
The changes in the meat inspection measure were minor technical changes, but the amendments to the "truth-in-lending" measure came after a critical opinion by Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell.
The purpose of the measure is to bring the state into conformity with federal standards.
Pompidou receives Gaullist support from Republican Independent party
PARIS (UPI) - The key Republican Independents, led by Valery Giscard d'Estaing, swung their support behind Gaullist candidate Georges Pompidou yesterday, making him the man to beat in the election to find a
Students hold Presidio march
Approximately 500 students gathered in front of Flint Hall at 10:20 this morning to begin an on-campus march, ending at Wescoe Hole, to protest the Army's unjust treatment of the Presidio 27.
The marchers reenacted the Presidio "mutiny," a sit-down protest by 27 military prisoners held in the San Francisco Presidio stockade who demonstrated against the shotgun slaying of a fellow inmate by a prison guard.
The campus demonstration ran smoothly. Marchers remained organized throughout the rally designed to gain support for their 1:30 p.m. Saturday march in Kansas City, Mo.
Dave Awbrey, newly-elected student body president and Hutchinson junior, appeared at the rally to endorse the group's action.
"KU students are no longer interested only in parties, but also in presidential campaigns. They are no longer interested in going out and drinking, but in going into ghettos and programs like the New Jersey Project," Awbrey said.
successor to Gen. Charles de Gaulle.
The 61-member National Assembly group of the party voted unanimous endorsement of Pompidou, meaning that all Gaullist factions and allied groups now had rallied under the banner of the 57-year-old ex-premier less than three days after the fall of De Gaule from power.
The decision of the independent group, which usually supports the Gaulist in parliament, was significant because it was made with the full assent of Giscard d'Estaing. Giscard's decision to oppose De Gaulle in the referendum was considered partly responsible for the general's defeat and resignation Sunday.
The Republican Independents
acted after Pompidou, while vowing to remain faithful to De Gaulle's basic political principles, told their group he would be open to fresh ideas on many issues, including Britain's attempts to join the Common Market, repeatedly vetoed by De Gaulle.
In other developments on the French scene stemming from the dramatic resignation of De Gaulle:
A left-wing split widened as a Socialist party spokesman announced Alain Savary, an independent left-wing politician, would vie with Gaston Defferre, the self-announced Socialist candidate, for the support of the non-Communist left-wing.
The caretaker French government banned all public demonstrations in Paris on May Day.
Philadelphia policeman testifies in Wichita case
A Philadelphia, Pa., police officer testified yesterday in the trial of nine Negro men charged with extortion that an organization called the Black Guard existed in this city.
The prosecution maintains seven of the defendants belong to the militant group and were called to Wichita to discipline two Model Cities officials.
When questioned by Sedgwick County Attorney Keith Sanborn, the police officer, Lt. George Fenel, testified he knew of no branches of the organization west of Chicago.
Fenel said the only thing that might link the guard to Kansas was the name of a Kansas City man found among papers taken from Max Stanford, leader of the Guard in Pennsylvania.
He said he had found nothing among 200 to 300 pounds of Guard material that had a listing of a Kansas chapter of the organization.
The defense attorney, Chester Lewis, objected to the testimony, arguing it was highly prejudicial since the state had never proved the defendants were members of the Black Guard.
N.Y.C.
Photo by Ron Bishop
Law queen finalists
Eight of the ten law queen finalists paused before the statue of Uncle Jimmy Green yesterday. The queen will be named at Law-day activities Saturday. The girls are (front row, from left): Carol Odehnal, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore; Pam Hoviland, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Kathy Henry, El Dorado sophomore; Carol Boney, Storm Lake, Iowa, sophomore; (back row, from left) Ruby Betty, Hazelton junior; Barbara Freeman, Pratt junior; Martha Noland, Kansas City sophomore, and Janie Thayer, Hutchinson junior.
Geographic aspect ignored
Prof studies revolutions
By GLORIA VOBEJDA Kansan Staff Writer
A KU geography professor likes to study revolution, a subject seemingly unrelated to geography.
Robert W. McColl, associate professor of geography, said in most studies of revolutions, the most important factor, the geographic aspect has been largely ignored.
He said a revolution could be lost in a matter of hours if geographic factors such as terrain or access to commercial centers are not taken into consideration.
"Everything Mao has said," McColl said, "every bandit has known for centuries—you stay near the fat cats." That's why pirates stayed close to the course of rich merchants in the old days, he explained.
A common misconception is that revolution starts in the boondocks, he said. But in fact, revolution always begins in the city—often after a palace coup-fails.
Revolutions different
McColl differentiates between secessionist movements, rebellions, revolutions and national revolutions.
Official Bulletin
Todav
University Women's Club. 12:30 Pm.
President luncheon meeting.
Kansas Room.
Graduate School Faculty Meeting.
3:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium.
SUA Culture Forum. 7:30 p.m.
Rita Heiskanen, "Finnish Neutrality." Joseph R. Pearson Hall Conference room.
Student Recitals. 8 p.m. Judith Lynn Hughes, mezzo-soprano, and Jane Fager Anderson, organ. Swarthout.
Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m.
An Evening of original operas except
SUA Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. James Mersmann, "War Poetry," and a short film by Allain Resnais, "Fog into Guns."
Tomorrow
KU Moslem Society. 12 noon.
Kansas Union.
High School Football Clinic. 3 p.m. Allen Field House.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
7 p.m. 829 Mississippi.
Popular Film, 7 & 9:30 p.m.
"Charade." Doche Auditorium
Folk Dance Club. 7:30 p.m. 173
Robinson.
Lutheran Grad Group. 8 p.m.
Professor James Seaver, "Finding at Nag Hammadi." 1506 Crescent Rd.
University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "A Midsummer Night's Dream."
2 KANSAN May 1
1969
He said secessionist movements, such as the American South during the Civil War and the current situation between Nigeria and Biafra, are the attempt of one region of the country to withdrew and become independent.
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a rebellion, he said, is locally-oriented and often only limited to political objectives
"Revolution is directed toward the overthrow of the entire national political structure and government," he said. "The only difference between revolution and national revolution is the involvement of national population."
"Furthermore, the creation of an insurgent state with its own political administrative organizations lends an aura of legitimacy to the movement."
McColl believes the revolutionary movements in Thailand and in various African countries have been to declare their existence because they lack an adequate territorial base.
stupidity for his failure in Bolivia. He said Guevarra was a good practical revolutionary but he listened to the theories of a French Marxist, Regis DeBray, who was later captured and told of Guevarra's plans to revolutionize the whole South American continent from Bolivia.
Since Guevarra was not indigenous to Bolivia, he did not speak the language.
"And the involvement of the masses is really the only difference between revolution of
McColl said in comparing well-documented revolutions in China, Greece, the Phillipines, Malaysia, Indonesia and Cuba, there was a common commitment to capture and control a territorial base within a state.
A black revolution could paralyze some American cities or do some damage but they are too highly visible, and cannot be controlled, he said. Because of this we might have a recurrence of the Japanese concentration camps in the United States in World War II.
Will Thailand be the next Vietnam? If it is, McColl said, revolution will break out in Northern Thailand. The insurgents are coming in from Laos and Cambodia and organizing the people.
Thailand next?
"A territorial base provides a physical haven for the revolutionary leaders," he said. "It also demonstrates the weakness and ineffectiveness of the government to protect its own territory and population,
Cliff'S Notes
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 68501
Want land control
McColl blames Che Guevarra's
today and those of centuries ago."
"The insurgent is forced to the countryside only after failure to establish an urban base," he explained.
and provides the necessary human and material resources.
THE SERFS
Get the Serfs New Album on Capital. Available at Kief's in the Malls
Featuring MIKE FINNIGAN
FRI. & SAT. — MAY 2-3
RED DOG INN
— Coming —
May 16 – The Fabulous Flippers May 21 – The Ike & Tina Turner Review
Advanced Ticket Sales at the Red Dog Office 9-5
Campus briefs
Seven awarded AWS scholarships
Seven KU women were awarded scholarships for 1969-1970 at the annual Associated Women Students Honors Night Monday.
Sharon Baucom, Kansas City freshman, was awarded the Elma Poehler Brook Corbin Hall scholarship for $200.
The Delta Delta Delta scholarship of $350 was awarded to Vicki Swenson, Independence freshman.
Five women were awarded the AWS memorial scholarships in the amount of $200. They were Carolyn Dammann, Shawnee Mission freshman; Karen Dobbs, Great Bend freshman; Mart Torrence, Topeka junior, and Lesca Thompson, Topeka sophomore.
Last chance for Peace Corps test
Today is the last day to take the language aptitude placement test for the Peace Corps program in late summer and fall, said Walt Stern, director of Kansas recruiting.
Seniors and graduate students may take the 30-minute test at 4:30 p.m. today in Room 227 Fraser.
Sanders gets public health grant
Robert B. Sanders, assistant professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology, has received a $10,564 U.S. Public Health Service grant for hormone research, the department of biochemistry and physiology announced today.
Sanders is studying the effects of hormones on amino acids. Research has shown hormones double or triple the intake of acids, especially the protein in amino acids.
Former librarian wills KU $45,000
A bequest of $45,000 from the estate of Miss Bessie Wilder of Lawrence has been received by the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Miss Wilder, former documents librarian at the KU library for 32 years, died March 17, 1968 at the age of 81.
KU observatory open to students
N. Wyman Storer, professor of astronomy, announced yesterday the observatory in Lindley Hall would be open from 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m., May 2, to observe the planet Jupiter.
The observatory can be reached through Room 500 Lindley, he said.
Dusanic receives research grant
Donald G. Dusanic, professor of microbiology, has received a two-year National Science Foundation Grant of $40,000 for research on African sleeping sickness and the Chagas disease of South America, the department of microbiology announced today.
Dusanic is working with organisms related to the two diseases and will study how the host is infected and what effect the host's resistance has on reproduction of the parasite.
18 KU women named to AWS fashion board
Eighteen KU women have been named members of the Associated Women's Students Fashion Board for 1969-1970.
Barbara Freeman, Pratt junior;
Eva Lou Martin, Topeka junior;
Pam Miller, Overland Park
sophomore; Pam Reusser,
Cincinnati freshman; Lynn
Scheufele, Little Rock, Ark.,
junior.
Linda K. Smith, Prairie Village
The Fashion Board members are Carol Boney, Storm Lake, Iowa sophomore; Lynette Butler, Cheney sophomore; Nancy Dodge, Topeka sophomore; Casey Eike, Kansas City freshman; Debra Fox, Overland Park freshman.
freshman; Shary Stafford,
Belleville junior; Barbara Steiger,
Palos Verdes, Calif., sophomore;
Vee Ann Stephens, Prairie
Village sophomore; and Sugar
Yaun, Forth Worth, Tex.,
sophomore.
May 1
1969 KANSAN 3
Be in Berkeley this August! COLLOQUY FOR JOY
Most "education" is a puberty rite. We want to deal with the meanings of existence.
A simple plan: Each participant works at his own question. We provide room, board, and resident resource persons—in sight of Berkeley's Sproul Hall Plaza.
Colo.; Nancy Lee Davis,
Emporia.
Victoria Enlow, Prairie Village; Barbara Gall, Scotland, S.D.; Susan Goodwin, St. Louis, Mo.; Charlene Graham, Omaha, Neb.; Kristyne Hadel, Lewood
$70 week: come for the whole month if you please!
For brochure and application write:
Shellley Dieterichs, Kirkwood, Mo.; Karen Dobbs, Great Bend; Nancy Doge, Topeka; Elizabeth Eagle, Rock Island, Ill.; Margaret Earley, Kansas City.
Joy c/o Eskaton
Lynne Haggarty, Chippewa Falls, Wisc.; Natalie Ann Herold, Great Bend; Kathryn Marie Hines, Wichita; Madeline Loftus, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane Longergan, St. Louis, Mo.
C/o Eskaton
7975 Capwell Drive
Oakland, Calif 94621
Phone: (415) 562-7444
Forty-one tapped for membership in Cwens
Forty-one freshmen women at KU have been tapped for membership in Cwens, national honorary society for sophomore women, said Mrs. James Ricks, Cwens advisor.
These women have distinguished themselves as leaders in the University community during their first year on campus, Mrs Ricks said. (The four areas in which the girls are judged are academic excellence, and maintaining a "B" average, leadership in their freshman extra-curricular events,
Tau chapter of Cwens was founded at KU in 1960. There are 22 other Cwen chapters on college and university campuses across the country.
obtaining and maintaining peer support, and receiving recommendation by an advisor they had worked with.)
Mortar Board caps 28 junior women at AWS Honors Night
Each year, Cwens redefines the direction they will take in working with the incoming freshmen to help them feel comfortable in a college atmosphere and to advise them on campus events.
Cwens meet bi-monthly to plan projects and discuss problems they have found while acting as "big sisters."
New members for the 1969-70 year have been announced by Emily Taylor, dean of women: Karen Baucom, Kansas City, Mo.; Nell Bly, Arkansas City; Laurel Lee Burt, Prairie Village; Elizabeth Burtis, La Junta,
Twenty-eight KU juniors were capped into the Torch chapter of Mortar Board, national honor society for senior women Monday night at Associated Women (AWS) Honors Night, said 1968-69 president Elaine Greenach, Quincy, Ill., senior.
Membership in Mortar Board is based on academic achievement, consistent leadership in activities and service to the KU campus.
New members are: Marilyn Baltz, Millstadt, Ill.; Lynn Birney, Miami, Fla.; Janet Bass, Hickam AFB, Hawaii; Barbara Blee, Bonner Springs; Cheryl Burnet, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Pam Castor, Kansas City; Grace
Dexter, Topeka; Karen Elledge,
Mason City, Iowa.
Fran Finney, Bartlesville,
Okla. ; Joyce Goering,
Moundridge; Dixie Hiett, Haven;
Karen Humphreys, Ashland;
Mary Lippitt, Wichita; Ginny
Longley, Chicago; Rita
Matousek, Cuba; Kan; Patty
McCall, Linsborg; Linda
McCreey, Honolulu, Hawaii.
Sandra McMorris, Leawood; Eileen Morris, Falls Church, Va.; Karna Ostrum, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Patricia Scott, Topeka; Doris Soden, Great Bend; Martha Stewart, Vancouver, B.C.; Pam Withers, Kansas City; Debbie Youngstrom, Des Moines, Iowa.
Nann Goplerud, Mason City,
Iowa; Jane Longhofer,
Huchinson; Ann Lowen,
Hutchinson; Ann Markley,
Collins, Colo.; Margaret McCoy,
Hiawatha.
Pam Meador, Hutchinson; Betsy Jane Morgan, Overland Park; Mary Kathryn Nelsen, Lincoln, Neb.; Sallie Page, Prairie Village; Patricia Parks, Elmhurst, Ill.; Pam Reusser, Cincinnati, Ohio; Darei Rock, Arkansas City.
Sara Scheibe, Sioux City, Iowa; Dale Sillix, Lawrence; Linda Spilker, St. Louis, Mo.; Jean Stevenson, Leawood; Susan Tagg, Sioux City, Iowa; Diane Weinlood, Hutchinson; Judy Beth Williams, Leavenworth; Marinelli Williams, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen Zupko, Morton Grove, Ill.
Tony's Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Architecture school hosts husband and wife lecturers
The School of Architecture and Urban Design will host two guest lecturers, Robert Venturi and his wife, Denise Scott Brown Venturi for its annual awards dinner at 6:30 p.m. May 10 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Venturi will present his lecture, "Learning from Las Vegas II," at 8 p.m. May 9 in the Kansas Union Forum Room. At
Farewell plain gold band.
You can still buy a plain gold band . . . and we have lots of them. But we don't think you'll
want one after you see our new ArtCarved collection. We
have soft shimmering
have soft shimmering Florentines, imaginatively bold sculptured designs, deep- bolted facets and beautiful
collection of them, too.
gold_textures. After you've taken a look and tried come on
if you still fancy a plain one we'll show you a large
ArtCarved WEDDING RINGS
taken a look and tried on some on
if you still fancy a plain
CARILLON SET
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ArtCurved wedding rings in 14K solid gold are available from $10 to over $130
BRIMAN'S beating jewellers
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BRIMAN'S leading jewelers
the awards dinner, Mrs. Venturi will speak on "Directions in Architectural Education," said Curtis Besinger, professor of architecture and urban design.
"It works like this..."
"When you pick your writing paper from our selection of Eaton's Open Stock you can be sure that your favorite will be available always! Matching paper and envelopes are separately packaged . . . you buy what you want when you want it."
Makes sense, doesn't it? Eaton's Open Stock is so convenient, economical, too!
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KANSAN Comment
Give a damn
Give a damn. Nearly 200 students gave a damn as well as their time and talents last Saturday to the New Jersey street rehabilitation project.
This Saturday the clean-up, patch-up campaign for the Lawrence slum area will reach its final stage. In order to complete the work necessary to make the project a success, your help is desperately needed.
It is great to be an idealist, but it is even greater to make ideals realities. This is your opportunity to be involved.
Last week the School of Architecture sponsored an urban conference on university relevance. If anything on this campus is relevant it is the New Jersey Street project.
Maybe this Saturday we the great idealists and we the great liberals can put away our suntan lotion and put our beer cans down long enough to put our ideals into practice for a few hours. Maybe we can salve our pseudo-liberal consciences long enough to show that we care.
Busses leave McCollum Hall, the Union and GSP Hall at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Saturday for the New Jersey Street project.
Can you spare a few hours to give a damn? (JDK)
Hershey---- forever?
Summer's coming.
Overriding the thoughts of sunshine, beer and pretzels for most college men and college graduates is the ever-menacing cloud—the draft.
Mention the word in the presence of prospective June graduates and you can actually see the beads of perspiration lining up in formation on the unfortunate's brow.
And over it all, chuckling gleefully whenever his name is quoted in wrath or admiration, is the director of Selective Service Louis Hershey. His word is law for the nation's men of 18 to 26 years of age, and he seemingly plans to keep it that way just as long as he can.
The Supreme Court's decision on the punitive draft reclassifications against defiant and disruptive war protesters could have a lot to do with Hershey's power. The two cases the Court will pass judgment upon next term concern two men who contend that after protesting draft and the war, they were reclassified and quickly inducted.
One of the young men dropped his registration and classification cards at the feet of a U.S. marshal in 1967 while participating in an antidraft demonstration in Minneapolis. The other youth turned over his draft registration card to a clergyman to show his dissent to the war.
If the Court decides that the men's induction were speeded up and that such action is illegal, Hershey's iron fist might at least be cracked a little.
All those are eligible at some time for the draft might be able to breathe a little easier if the center of power over eight years of their young life (and sometimes over their life itself) was not totally ruled by the stern, singleminded and sometimes arbitrary Hershey. (AMS)
WHEN...A FOURTH RATE
POWER LIKE NORTH KOREA A
DARES SEIZE ONE OF OUR
SHIPS, THEN I SAY IT IS
TIME FOR A NEW
LEADERSHIP...
-RICHARD NIXON
AUG. 8, 1968
RECALYFTE!
DOWNED
SPY PLANE
THE MILWAUkee JOURNAL
All rights reserved
Publishers-Hall Syndicate
'Let's not take a position we might . . . ah . . . regret later'
ROTC dispute rages
To the Editor:
Students for a Democratic Society?
No.
Their cause isn't democratic. Neither are their methods. Neither are many of them even students.
Tuesday they put their "democracy" into action: screaming, squirming "students" harrassing disciplined Army ROTC cadets on the drill field. Had they been outnumbered by far more, the cadets would not have flinched. And anyone could see that, even on the TV screen. Anyone could see that the ROTC was not the militant group on the field. Anyone could see that the cranky kids with their cap guns weren't going to get the big boys to play.
ROTC cadets don't play war games. They attend classes and training sessions that demand mental and physical effort. And in the name of a "democratic society" the SDS demands no credit be given for ROTC classwork. In the name of "democracy," they demand that only SDS views be heard.
I think it's time other opinions were voiced. I don't want to shout SDS down; I don't want to shoot them down, either. I want world peace. I'm against the war in Vietnam. But most of all I'm against violence at home.
I'm against the SDS "democratic" wav.
Margaret Ogilvie Banman
1967-68 Commander
Angel Flight
To the Editor:
Once upon a time, in a community called Knowitall U., lots and lots of boys and girls lived and, presumably, learned. Some of them really wanted to learn; some, the sour children, thought they already knew it all and were anxious to share it with everyone else.
Executive Star
Editor-in-Chief Ron Yates
Business Manager Pam Flaton
One day, some of the boys were out in a field marching around in straight lines and generally minding their own business. They were playing at being soldiers so that when they got to be real soldiers they would know what to do. While they were marching, the sour children came over to use the field for their own games. From
their vast experience and study, these people had learned that war was a bad thing because soldiers always trample on other people's property. So, they decided to let everyone know about it. They ran between the nice straight lines the soldiers were making, they screamed all the words they had learned in their toilet-training classes that day and they shared their maturity and intelligence with everyone.
When the feathers settled, it looked as if the sour children had upset the bird cages in Weak Hall, but the doves outnumbered the hawks. Meanwhile, back at the field, the sour children were inventing a new game. Their rules said that no merit badges would be given except for peace and love courses. The meeting ended with the sour children's battle cry—Do it our way or don't do it at all!
John Banman Senior
That night, the community council held a meeting to try to arrange a treaty with the sour children. Since the councilmen didn't want to jump to conclusions, they went home and promised to send their votes by air. Sending a dove would mean the boys couldn't get merit badges for playing soldier anymore. Sending a hawk would mean the councilmen were nasty fascist pigs who agreed with all the imperfect things in the world—even the dumb war the King of the country was fighting. Worst of all, it would mean the councilmen weren't as liberal as councilmen in other communities. (Everyone knows you can't be liberal and still disagree with a sour child.)
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Accepted manuscripts must be submitted by a class postage paid at Lawrence, Kn. 68044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered by the university may not be received on national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the *University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.*
I am sending this letter to you, the editor, but I would really like to get the attention of the leaders of the recent campus demonstrations. I must first say that I sympathize with the causes. I am strongly against the war in Vietnam, racism and ROTC on campus. However, I will not participate in these demonstrations because of the way they have been conducted.
Following is a list of grievances I have against them:
1. Total disrespect of the flag of the United States.
From what I have observed a good many of the "students" demonstrating are not even students or such poor examples of students that it seems that they should do a little less protesting and a lot more studying. I don't like to say these things about my friends but it's the truth as I see it.
If the students REALLY care, someone should be able to organize a demonstration that people who sympathize would not be ashamed to participate in. I don't feel a handful of "freaky" people that onlookers laugh at gets the sympathy of anyone.
3. "Student" demonstrations should be made up of students who care more about the cause of the demonstration than "blowing people's minds."
I am considered by many to be a "hippie" or "freak" and disrespect to the symbol of our country bothers me. This action of disrespect must certainly turn the heads of many "older" generation people away from our causes. Many of the demonstration leaders may not think we need those people but they perhaps are now more important than our non-voting supporters.
When I demonstrate against ROTC or the war I don't want to be called a militant—that is the very thing I would like to see come to an end. If I wanted to be a militant I would run to the army and not oppose ROTC, the draft and war.
Our country and the world, is in very bad shape and our generation is perhaps its only salvation. We must stop the endless wars—fighting at home is not the answer. We must stop racism—black power and black militancy is racism—my brother cannot be my superior. If we are to live in peace, all forms of militancy must stop. Come on people, smile on your brother, try to love one another right now. Leaders, let's get together and THINK.
2. The demonstration of guns (toy or otherwise), warpaint, militant dress, or any other sign of militancy.
A FREAK FOR PEACE John Tredo Englewood Cliffs, N.J. junior
★ ★
KANSAN REVIEWS
KANSAN REVIEWS THEATRE: Three student plays
KWSAN REVIEWS
★ ★
THEATRE: Three student plays
By BOB BUTLER
Kansan Arts and
Reviews Editor
May 1
1969 KANSAN 5
Biddle took some liberties with the story, emphasizing the role of Satan by making him a narrator, talking directly to the audience as if addressing his congregation. I felt his initial introduction of the townspeople as evil hypocrites, however, was a mistake, weakening the impact of their sudden participation in the witches' sabbath and the uncovering of their evil souls.
"Fantastic" is the only word for the three student-written one-act plays currently being presented in the Experimental Theatre. I left the theatre shaken by some of the best work I've ever seen in a KU production.
The play has some extremely fine moments, including a prologue in which Satan climbs upon a rock while the house lights are still on and just stares gloatingly at the entering audience. An evening prayer in which Goodman Brown and his wife are drawn, almost against their will, into the swaying movement of the kneeled congregation and the wild meeting of the coven in the woods are also expertly handled by director Elizabeth Cary.
The evening opens with Stephen Biddle's adaptation of Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown." Of all the short stories I know this would be the hardest to bring to the stage. Hawthorne wrote in ambiguities. His Satan had a staff which seemed to writhe like a snake, Young Goodman Brown seemed to hear voices in the forest and he seemed to see a witch's sabbath in the New England woods. It is the relationship between Hawthorne's printed words and the mental images of the readers' mind which brings out the horror of the hidden evil in men and the overriding condemnation of Original Sin. I had always thought to present this story visually would ruin it. I was wrong.
For the most part the cast is excellent, and James Hawes set is perfect, from the obnoxious red wall tile to the Springfield toilet paper dispenser.
Standouts among the cast are Art Sloan as Deacon Gookin, Jane Frazier as Goody Corry and Ellen Lippman as Goody Cloyse.
The second offering, "John John" by Doug Wasson, is a very funny play about a girl-shy young man who flees from a disastrous date into a theater restroom and decides to stay there, forever free from women.
The only problem with "John John" is that the play is a little too long—the audience has to wait between confrontations and gets a little restless
John Ingle, as John, is excellent as he passes the time away making faces in the mirror, reading the graffiti, playing with the toilet paper and talking to himself about the world outside and his inner insecurities.
The best moments come when he is interrupted in his musings by a crew which could have come from any mens' room in America: a motorcycle greater, some hippies, a superstud preening in front of the mirror, a lethargic fat kid who breathes asthmatically and keeps hacking in the toilets.
The final play, Lannie Fellers' "The Day the Fish Came Out," was wisely saved until the last. The emotional impact of this hour is so great, the characterizations so perfect that it's hard to concentrate on anything afterward.
"The Day the Fish Came Out" is set in Vietnam in 1964 in an orderly room at Tan Son Nhut airbase. It is one of the strongest indictments of the military I've ever seen, ranking with Stanley Kubrick's "Paths of Glory."
A staff of typists overseen by a tough sergeant with 20 years in the Army (David Miller) receive a combat-weary soldier (John Young) for a rest and relaxation leave. The man is obviously neurotic and badly shaken by his three years in the service. He has put in request after request for psychiatric help, only to be called a "mama's boy" by the sergeant. He is berated for having a wrinkled uniform, for sleeping late (after all, it is an R
& R visit) and for leaving his clothes on the floor.
The approach to the play is almost neorealistic. The boredom of the soldiers, their idle talk of the whores to be had in Saigon, the dialogue, the gestures, the tacky office-all are 100 per cent Army.
Finally he breaks, grabs a rifle and tries to shoot the sergeant. He is overpowered and carried away screaming. What will happen to him? Recent happenings at the Presidio give proof that this work isn't as fictional as we'd like to believe.
away. The same happened to the neurotic soldier—when his mind couldn't hold any more it overflowed, carrying his stability away.
The effect is shattering and director Robert Sandmaier deserves special credit for bringing excellent characterizations out of his actors.
All in all, it's an evening well spent, and one of the nicest things to happen to KU theater in a long time. Let's hope the speech and drama department gives young playwrights more exposure in the future. They deserve it.
Lebanon-Israel border scene of new fighting
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Reliable semiofficial reports here said fighting broke out yesterday between Lebanese army troops and anti-Israel Palestinian guerrillas only six miles from the Lebanon-Israel frontier.
The Lebanese government of Premier Rashid Karami fell a week ago after clashes between security forces and demonstrators advocating government support for guerrilla groups based on Lebanese soil.
The reports in Beirut last night said several hundred guerrillas trying to set up bases in southeast Lebanon near the Syrian and Israeli frontiers clashed with units of the Lebanese army.
The clashes yesterday which took place at Marjayoun seven miles from Husbayh, were described as an extension of that action.
Open Daily
2 p.m. to Midnight
— north on Mass. —
at junction of 24-40 & 59
TGIF
Noon 12-6 p.m.
75c a pitcher
SAT. AFTERNOON
BLAST
band—no cover
TEE PEE
FRIDAY, MAY 2
8 p.m. - midnight
and
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
2 to 4 p.m.
THE TIDE
SATURDAY NIGHT
8 p.m. - midnight
THE SINCERES
Open Daily
2 p.m. to Midnight
— north on Mass. —
at junction of 24-40 & 59
TGIF
Noon 12-6 p.m.
75c a pitcher
SAT. AFTERNOON
BLAST
band—no cover
TEEEE
FRIDAY, MAY 2
8 p.m. - midnight
and
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
2 to 4 p.m.
THE TIDE
SATURDAY NIGHT
8 p.m. - midnight
THE SINGERES
SMILE, OLLE!
"THE CRAZY WORLD OF LAUREL & HARPY"
PRODURED BY HAL ROACH
A JAY WARD PRODUCTION
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER
RICHMOND YOUNG UNRUED
THEY'RE BACK!
... WITH A WILD SELECTION OF
THEIR VERY FUNNIEST SCENES
FROM THEM, VERY FUNNIES MOVIES!
IN A NEW FULL-LENGTH FEATURE!
"THE JAY WARD INTERgalactic Film Festival"
LATE SHOW
Fri.-Sat. 11:30
THE Commonwealth
"MOVIE" MARQUEE!
Marlon Brando / Richard Boone
in a JERRY GERSHWIN ELLIOTT ASTINER Production
The Night Of The Following DAY
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE TECHNICOLOR*
NOW! 7:20-9:05
Matinee
Sat. & Sun. 2:15
Academy Award Nomination
"Best Actor!"
CLIFF ROBERTSON as CHARLY
CLAIRE BLOOM
TECHNICOLOR TECHNISCOPE
THE Hillcrest2
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
NOW! 7:15-9:15
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
"BEST FOREIGN FILM"
CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS
NOW! 7:25-9:20
Matinee
Sat. & Sun. 2:25
The story of Zhivago —
his love for his wife and tender Lara...told against the flaming background of revolution.
DOCTOR ZHIVAGO
Matinee Showing
Sat. & Sun. 2:00
Eve. 8:00
Granada
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788
"'Therese and Isabelle'
will be the most talked-about movie around."
Matinee—2:30 Daily
Evening—7:15-9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Open Daily
2 p.m. to Midnight
— north on Mass. —
at junction of 24-40 & 59
TGIF
Noon 12-6 p.m.
75c a pitcher
SAT. AFTERNOON
BLAST
band—no cover
TEE PEE
FRIDAY, MAY 2
8 p.m. - midnight
and
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
2 to 4 p.m.
THE TIDE
SATURDAY NIGHT
8 p.m. - midnight
THE SINCERES
SMILE, OLLIE!
"THE CRAZY WORLD OF LAUREL & HARRY"
PRODUCED BY WAL ROGH
A JOHN WARD PRODUCTION
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER
RICHMOND ROAM URBUS
A JOSEPH BRENNER ASSOCIATE RELEASE
YES,
STANLEY!
PLUS
THEY'RE BACK!
...with a wild selection of
their very funniest scenes
from their very funny movies!
in a new full-length feature!
"THE STAY WARD INTERgalactic Film Festival"
FIRST TIME IN THEATRES—
THE MAD UNiverse OF
STAY "FRAUGUARD Flickers" WARD
AND HIS FABULOUS STARS; SUPERCHICKEN.
GEORGE OF THE DUNGE, DUDLEY DO RIGHT
OF THE MOUNTAINS AND OTHER FAVORITES!
LATE SHOW
Fri.- Sat. 11:30
SMILE, OLLIE!
"THE CRAZY WORLD OF LAUREL & HARDY"
PRODUCED BY HALROACH
A JAY WARD PRODUCTION
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER/
FRAGMOND NOVARUS
A ZOEPTH BRENNER ASSOCIATES PLEASE
YES,
STANLEY!
PLUS
THEY'RE BACK!
...WITH A WILD SELECTION OF
THEIR VERY FUNNIEST SCENES
FROM THEIR VERY FUNNIES MOVIES!
IN A NEW FULL-LENGTH FEATURE!
"The JAY WARD
INTERgalactic Film Festival"
FIRST TIME IN THEATRES-
THE MAD UNIVERSE OF
JAY "FRAGUARD FUCKERS" WARD
AND HIS FABULOUS STARS: SUPERCHICKEN.
GEORGIE OF THE DUNGE, DUDEY-DE-RIGHT
OF THE MOUNTAINS AND OTHER FAVORITES!
LATE SHOW
Fri.-Sat. 11:30
Hillcrest
THE Commonwealth "MOVIE" MARQUEE!
Marlon / Richard Brando / Boone
in a JERRY GERSHWIN ELLIOTT KASTNER Production
The Night Of The Following DAY
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE TECHNICOLOR*
NOW! 7:20-9:05
Matinee
Sat. & Sun. 2:15
Academy Award Nomination
"Best Actor"
CLIFF ROBERTSON
CHARLY
CLAIRE BLOOM
TECNNICOLOR TECNNISCOPE
The Hillcrest 2
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
NOW! 7:15 - 9:15
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
"BEST FOREIGN FILM"
CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS
NOW! 7:25-9:20
Matinee
Sat. & Sun. 2:25
The story of Zhivago — his love for his wife and tender Lara...told against the flaming background of revolution.
DOCTOR ZHiVAGO
Matinee Showing
Sat. & Sun. 2:00
Eve. 8:00
Granada
THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-5788
"'Therese and Isabelle' will be the most talked-about movie around."
Matinee—2:30 Daily
Evening—7:15-9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-1065
"Therese AND Isabelle"
A Love Story
PERSONS UNDER 18 CAN NOT BE ADMITTED
Faculty insurance 'unfair'
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is an analysis of the insurance and retirement programs available to university and college faculty members in Kansas through the Teacher's Insurance and Annuity Association.)
By RICK PENDERGRASS
Kansan Staff Writer
Faculty members of Kansas colleges and universities are a select group-by law they are exempt from paying taxes on life insurance.
A bill signed into law April 15 by Governor Robert Docking exempted the company, and, consequently its policyholders from the standard two per cent premium tax on life, medical and disability insurance.
The tool some members use to pry themselves from the tax burden is the Teacher's Insurance and Annuity Association, an insurance company designed to cover only college and university faculty.
T. I.A.A. is exempt in Kansas as in 48 other states from paying taxes because it is a non-profit organization serving "the needs of higher education." The only state which does not recognize this exemption is New York—the home state of the T.I.A.A.
Didn't register activities
Until Senate Bill 105 was signed, T.I.A.A. did not have to register its activities with the Kansas Commission of Insurance, Frank Sullivan, commissioner of insurance said.
The bill lists four points the company must adhere to to be exempt from the tax.
Fletcher Bell, assistant commissioner of insurance explained the four points of the bill, "The first three points will enable us (Insurance Commission) to have a record of the business T.I.A.A. does in the state, which we have never previously had.
"The fourth point, concerning the Commissioner of Insurance as the lawful attorney for the company (T.I.A.A.) was written in for the protection of the residents of the state of Kansas.
"Without that provision, any Kansas resident bringing legal
action against T.L.A.A. would have to go to New York where the company is licensed. That would naturally be expensive," Bell said.
Bill lists four points
The four points of the bill as listed are:
- Payment of an annual registration fee of $500.
- Filing a copy of the form of any policy or contract issued to Kansas residents with the Commissioner of Insurance.
- Filing a copy of its annual statement prepared pursuant to the laws of its state of domicile, as well as such other financial material as may be requested with the Commissioner of Insurance.
- Providing for the Commissioner of Insurance as its lawful attorney upon whom may be served all lawful process in any action by a Kansas citizen.
Bell said though T.I.A.A. is not mentioned by name in the bill, the exemption was designed to apply particularly to that company.
The bill states in its exemption clause;
"Any life insurance company organized and operated, without profit to any private shareholder or individual, exclusively for the purpose of aiding and strengthening educational institutions...
"... by issuing insurance and annuity contracts directly from the home office of the company, without insurance agents in this state, only to or for the benefit of such institutions and individuals engaged in the services of such institutions."
Loyd Hall, executive director of the Certified Life Underwriters in Kansas, said any exemption for T.I.A.A. is unfair because it sets aside a group of people as a select few.
Exemption unfair
He said because the company is non-profit there is no reason for it to be exempt from taxes. All of the large mutual insurance companies are non-profit. He gave as an example the Prudential Insurance Company of America, one of the largest in the country.
An attempt to get opinions from KU faculty members concerning the fairness of the program brought only comments about T.I.A.A.'s retirement plan.
Several KU faculty members who wished to remain anonymous, commented on the mandatory CREF program at KU.
Faculty complains
"I don't like the retirement program here—as far as being forced to take it," one instructor explained, "before I came to KU, I had a good retirement program of my own set up. Why should I be forced to part with that much extra money I could be using now?"
A professor had a different view, "I don't mind putting the money into the retirement fund. I'm sure T.I.A.A. can invest it better than I could, and I don't need the extra five per cent now anyway," he said.
Raymond Nichols, vice-chancellor of finance, explained the University's official policy about T.I.A.A., "The only connections we have officially with the company is through the CREF program. Since we cannot interfere in any way with the company's other business, we are not concerned with their life insurance."
Professors at KU can take the insurance offered by T.I.A.A. only through individual contracts, and since there have been no records kept in either the state offices or at KU of insurance contracts, there is no way of knowing how many faculty members at KU are insured by the company. Senate Bill 105 will make the names of those individuals a matter of record.
Nichols said KU had officially endorsed a bill in the U.S. Senate still under debate, which would exempt the company as a government charter throughout the nation.
The bill, backed in congress by Senators McClellan, Fullbright, Dirksen, Hatfield, Kennedy, Mansfield and others deals primarily with the retirement plan of T.I.A.A.-CREF but would cover the company's insurance business as well.
Nichols said the University endorsed the bill only to the point of promoting a uniform program of retirement for professionals in higher education.
Hall, Sullivan and Bell agree on the merits of a uniform retirement fund, but oppose tax exemption for insurance premiums.
Commenting on the bill in the U.S. Senate, Bell expressed fears
that other companies would use the bill as a precedent to become exempt from taxation. He said the amount of revenue the state and federal governments are losing from the current tax exempt status of T.I.A.A. would be nothing to the potential loss of tax dollars if the larger companies were exempted.
Sibelius opposed
Sibellius opposed Among' those opposed to (Continued to page 7)
BRAZIL
MMER STUDY IN RIO
— EIGHT WEEKS JULY-AUGUST 1969
UNIVERSITY COURSES: Brazilian History, Govt., Literature,
Anthrop. Econ. Devel., Portuguese, etc.
— FACULTY: Harvard, Columbia, M.I.T., N.Y.U.
— FACULTY: Harvard, Columbia, MIT, R. I. F. U.
— EXCURSIONS: Bahia, Brasilei, Sequoia, etc.
EXCURSIONS: Bahia, Brasilia, Sao Paulo, etc.
ENROLLMENT FEE includes: Air Passage, lodgings, Tuition. Excursions. Workshops: $1220.
WRITE INTERAMERICAN SUMMER STUDY ASSOC.
X, Y, Z 1027
APPLICATION CLOSING DATE: MAY 15, 1969
CLASS OF '70 SENIOR CLASS COMMITTEE INTERVIEWS
Applications may be picked up at the Dean of Women's Office and must be resubmitted by Friday, May 2
Interviews will be held May 7-8 (Thursday-Friday) at the ASC office in the Union.
THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT
SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU
THINK OF MORE THAN ONE?
BERNARDO
"Game" is a well-rounded
sport of a sandal; sturdy
enough to go stalking in,
graceful for staying at home
in. Small, medium or large,
in supple leather,
$14
McCoy
shoes
THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE?
BERNARDO
"Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in, graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium or large, in supple leather,
$14
M.Coy shoes
THE UNIVERSITY.
OF KANSAS THEATRE
AND
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
present
A MIDSUMMER
NIGHT'S DREAM
AN OPERA
BY BENJAMIN BRITTEN
APRIL 25, 26
MAY 2, 3
Murphy Hall Main Stage
Curtain 8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall Box Office Hours 10-12, 1-5
Telephone UN 4-3982
THE
UNIVERSITY.
OF KANSAS THEATRE
AND
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
present
A MIDSUMMER
NIGHT'S DREAM
AN OPERA
BY BENJAMIN BRITTEN
APRIL 25, 26
MAY 2, 3
The scene depicts a group of young children, each holding sheets of paper, standing in front of a chalkboard. In the background, there are adults observing them, likely teachers or school administrators. The setting suggests a classroom environment, possibly during a rehearsal or performance.
Photo by Ron Blshop
Members of French Club donned French costumes and gave their rendition of French
songs last night at a regular meeting in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
Insurance
(Continued from page 6)
legislation exempting the company from taxation is Keith Sibelius, U.S. Representative from the first Congressional District of Kansas. In a letter to Hall, he said, "If it is proper to exempt a company selling insurance and annuities to teachers in our society, then it is equally proper to exempt any company created to sell insurance to architects, lawyers, engineers, plumbers, farmers and every other occupation in our society."
Two organizations opposed to exemption legislation are the National Association of Life Underwriters, and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NALU and NAIC).
Ned Price, president of the NAIC said in a letter to Lullivan,
"If this legislation (U.S. Senate bill 1290) is enacted, insurance companies other than T.I.A.A.-CREF might seek to come under the federal charter umbrellas. It would be, in my opinion, a severe blow to the state regulation and I am hopeful that until such time as official NAIC opposition can be obtained to this bill, each member of the Association will take it upon himself to contact his congressional delegation and register his disapproval."
Asked to comment on tax exemption of insurance premiums, Paul Quinn, general council for T.I.A. A, described the retirement plan for college and university staff members under the CREF program. He
May 1
1969 KANSAN 7
did not comment on the insurance program.
Whether senate bill 1290 passes or not, it is safe to assume the retirement program of T.I.A.A.-CREF is not in danger, because the opposition to tax exemptions recognize the need for a retirement fund for any group.
The fate of the tax exempt status of this country's college faculty rests in the hands of
Musical program is 'Long Hair?'
The Performing Arts Foundation (PAF) of Kansas City will present their 1969 festival production "Long Hair?" May 16, 18, and 20 at the Music Hall in Kansas City, Mo.
"The three-part program of opera, ballet and concerts combines traditional musical form with contemporary rock," said Ron Zoglin, project director for PAF studies.
Zoglin said the first part of the program is an updated version of Rossini's short comic opera "The Marriage Contract."
The second part, entitled "Love In," is a semi-abstract ballet which Ellis Rabb, program director, described as "a merging of classical and rock dance techniques of today." Dances have been drafted from leading ballet companies including the American Ballet theater, New York City Ballet, and Harkness Ballet, Zoglin said.
A special student and faculty rate is available for the May 20 matinee at 3 p.m.
Free Beer!
THURSDAY
6:00 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE
"BUY A GLASS OR PITCHER OF BUDWEISER
AND GET ONE FREE" at
the
Lounge
Southwest Corner of Hillcrest
Bowl in Hillcrest Shopping Ctr.
9th & Iowa
Directly Behind Hillcrest Billards
Prison in Lansing. Sparks' term runs until 1985 with no possibility of parole until 1978.
For Complete Motorcycle Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. St. VI 3-3012
图
Congress because if S.B. 1290 is defeated, states other than Kansas have expressed concern with the situation, and are now moving toward tighter regulation of T.I.A.A.
Parents file suit in death of KU student
SALINA, Kan. — A suit on file yesterday in District Court seeks approximately $38,000 for the death of a University of Kansas graduate student, struck by a stray bullet allegedly fired by an officer while he was a hostage of two bandits.
A suit filed by Daniels' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Daniels of Bird City,named the Kansas Highway Patrol, the city of Salina, and 11 individual officers as defendants. The officers included detective Gary Hindman, alleged by the parents to have fired the shot which killed their son in June, 1967.
Lynch is serving a life sentence at the Kansas State
The victim, Thomas Daniels, worked part time as a night clerk at a Lawrence motel. He was killed and Don Lynch and Bruce Sparks, who had kidnapped him, were captured after officers unleashed a volley of shots that ended a high speed, cross-country chase.
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Pros lean to balance in '70 merger proposal
NEW YORK (UPI) Commissioner Pete Rozelle said yesterday that both the National and American Football Leagues leaned toward adopting a realignment plan for 1970 which would balance the two leagues at 13 teams each by shifting three NFL teams to the AFL.
The commissioner added, however, that no clear-cut proposal had been adopted as yet due to the many ramifications which had to be thoroughly discussed.
There currently are three plans for realignment in the 1970 season, which will be first under the merger of the two leagues. The other two plans call for a total realignment of all 26 teams, or a unit realignment whereby the AFL would be broken into two groups of five teams and placed in with two four-team NFL divisions.
Under each proposal the two conferences would be divided into divisions of 4-4-5.
Rozelle explained that the owners leaned toward adopting the plan of shifting three NFL teams to the AFL because it would enable each league to retain its identity. He said there were at least a half dozen NFL teams that were willing to
He said if the favored plan was adopted the teams going to the AFL would have to be decided at the meeting and must be accepted by 80 per cent of the AFL owners and 13 out of 16 NFL owners.
explore the idea of moving to the AFL, but he declined to name them.
Rozelle said the two leagues would meet jointly today and he
KANSAN Sports
added he hoped an agreement could be reached by Saturday.
"If we don't have a resolution by Saturday, we'll have a meeting within the next three weeks," Rozelle said.
Earlier in the day the two leagues met and established a playoff system that would be used if the new realignment resulted in two conferences of three divisions each. This new playoff system puts the three divisional champions plus the second place team with the best record into a playoff for the conference title. The conference champions then would meet in the Super Bowl.
Under this system, there would be a total of seven playoff games stretching over a period of three weekends. Two of the three divisional winners would be pinpointed in advance each year for the home playing site, but two teams from the same division would not meet in the first playoff game.
Vernon signs with Toronto
Kansas defensive end Vernon Vanoy, the No. 3 draft choice of the New York Giants, has signed to play next season with the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League, it was revealed yesterday.
Vanoy's attorney, Phillip Myles of Kansas City, said the 6-8, 270-pounder reached agreement with the Argonauts in Toronto Monday.
Terms of the contract were not revealed.
He was the Big Eight basketball "Sophomore of the Year" in 1966-67, but quit basketball and went out for football when Pepper Rodgers replaced Jack Mitchell as Kansas coach in 1967.
Intramural softball, volleyball standings
FRATERNITY A
SOFTBALL INTRAMURALS
FRATRATION
Division 1- Beta 3-0, SAE 2-0, DU
Division 2- Theta 1-2, Sigma
Chi. 2-, Phi. 2-DH
Division II-Phi Psi 2-0, Kappa Sig 2-0, AKL 2-1, Delts 2-1, PiKA 1-2, Sigma Nu 0-2-1, NiGam 0-3.
INDEPENDENT A
Division 1—Squash City 1-0,
Sophists 1-0, Mallott Chemistry 2-1,
Ellsworth 7N 0-2, BC&P 0-2-1.
Division II- Annex 2-0, Manor 1-1,
Skeptics 1-1, Boss Boys 0-1, Gaslight
Gang 0-1-1.
FRATERNITY B
Division 1 - Sigma Chi 3-0, Theta Chi BA 2-1, Sig Ep 2-1, Phi Psi 1-2, Delts 0-2, Triangle 0-2.
Division II - PK Tau 3-0, Beta Tau 1-
Sigma Gamma 1-2,
Beta 0-1 Fhl Delt 0-1
Division III—Delta Chi 2-0,
Lambda Chi 2-0, Phi Gam 1-1, ATO i-1, AEPI 0-2, Sig Ep 0-2.
Division V—TKE 1-0, PK Sigma 1-1, PK Tau 1-1, Theta Chi DB 1-1, Lambda Chi 0-1.
KANSAN
May 1
1969
Division VI - PI PK Tau 1-0, Delts 1-1
DU1 - Phi 1-1, Theta Tau 0-2
INDEPENDENT B
Division 1-Rocket Fullers 2-0,
Naismith 2-0, Degenerates 2-0,
Wonder Alpha Sigma 0-2, NESEP
2-0, Delta Functions 0-2.
Division II-MBA 2-0, Radiation Biophysics 1-1, Sigma Gamma Epsilon 1-1, Desert Coolers Ellsworth 5N 1-1, Independents 0-2-1
Division III—McCuJom 2W 2-0,
JRP 4 1-1, Los Borrachos 1-1,
Imposters 1-1, Templin 1-1, Nagy
and the Bears 0-2-1.
Division IV-Jolliffe 2-0,
Battenfeld 1-1, Grace Pearson 1-0,
Stephenson 0-1, Pearson 0-2.
Division V - Grads 1-0, McCullom Fugitives 1-0, JRP 3 0-1, College Kids 0-1-1, NROTC 0-0.
Division II- Sigma Nu 3-0, Phi
Grammar Chi 2-1, Deltas 1-2,
PK Simul 0-3.
Division 1-Beta 3-SO, ATE 3-TKE
1-2-1, Sigma Chi 1-3, ATO 1-3-2
Division III-AKL 3-0, Phi Psi 3-0,
DU 1-2, Kappa Sig 1-3, Tau Pau 0-3.
VOLLEYBALL
FRATERNITY A
INDEPENDENT A
Division 1 Grace Pearson 2-0.
Pearson 2-0. Stephenson 2-1-1.
Jolliffe 0-2-1. Battenford 0-3-2.
Division II—McCullom 2-0,
Veterans 2-0, Cthonia Squaxon 2-1,
Ellsworth 0-3.
Division I- Phi Psi 3-0, DU 1-2,
AEPI 1-3, TKE 1-3, PK Theta 0-3
FRATERNITY B
Standings
Division II-ATO 3-0, AKL 2-1-1,
Beta 1-2, Phi Gam 1-2-1, Phi Psi 1-3.
Division IV-Beta 3-0, AKL 2-1,
Phi Gam 2-1-1, Phi Psi 1-2, PK Theta
1-2, Kapp Sig 0-3-1.
Division III-ATO 3-1, TKE 2-1, DU 1-2; Sigma Nu 0-3; DU 1-0; DU 3-1.
Division V- Kappa Sig 3-0, Beta 3-0, PK Tau 1-2, Delts 1-2, AKL 1-2-1.
Division VI-Delts 3-0, Beta 3-0,
Phi Psi 2-1, PK Theta 0-3-2.
Division VII-Sig Ep 3-0, TKE 2-0
Tangle 2-1, Delta 1-1, Thetai Tau 0-
Tau 3-4.
Division VIII-PK Sigma 3-0, Delt
3-0, Beta 2-1, Phi Gam 1-2, Kappa
Sig 0-3-2.
INDEPENDENT B
Major League Standings National League
Division II-NEGB 3-0, J21-1-1,
Battenfield 1-2, Purt Hut 1-2.
Division I--Imperfects 3-0, College Kids 2-1, N2 2-1, B-Bar Association
Division III- NEGB 2-1, Ellsworth 2-1, Graduates 2-1-1, Magicians 1-2, Battenfield 1-2, Templin 1-2-1.
Danny Cox
Wed., May 7th
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Admission $1.00
Tickets available
at the
SUA office and
at the door.
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 16 | 7 | .695 | -- |
| Pittsburgh | 13 | 8 | .619 | 2 |
| New York | 9 | 11 | .450 | $1_{1/2}$ |
| St. Louis | 9 | 12 | .428 | 6 |
| Philadelphia | 8 | 11 | .421 | 6 |
| Montreal | 11 | 13 | .350 | $1_{1/2}$ |
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Francisco | 15 | 6 | 714 | -
Los Angeles | 14 | 7 | 667 | 1 |
Atlanta | 14 | 7 | 667 | 1 |
Saint Lucia | 9 | 11 | 455 | 15 |
Diego | 9 | 14 | 301 | 7 |
Houston | 4 | 20 | 167 | 121 |
Wednesday's Results
Wednesday's Results
New York 14, New Jersey 14, Philadelphia 3, Chicago 1, night
Pittsburgh 2 St. Louis 1, 1st, twilight
St. Louis 8, Pittsburgh 1, 2nd, night
Columbus 5, Cleveland 9, Cincinnati 10 Houston 6, night
San Francisco 3 Los Angeles 0, night
American League
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Baltimore | 16 | 7 | .695 | |
| Boston | 11 | 9 | .550 | $3^{1/2}$ |
| New York | 11 | 10 | .523 | 4 |
| Washington | 11 | 11 | .521 | 4 |
| Detroit | 10 | 10 | .500 | $4^{1/2}$ |
| Cleveland | 2 | 15 | .118 | 1 |
West
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Minnesota | 13 | 7 | .650 | |
| Oakland | 11 | 8 | .579 | $1\frac{1}{2}$ |
| Chicago | 8 | 8 | .500 | 3 |
| Kansas City | 9 | 10 | .474 | $3\frac{1}{2}$ |
| Seattle | 7 | 11 | .389 | 5 |
| California | 6 | 10 | .375 | 5 |
Wednesday's Results
Minnesota 6 Seattle 4
Cleveland 3 New York 0, night
Washington 1 Boston 0, night
Baltimore 3 Detroit 2, night
Kansas City 3 Chicago 2, night
Oakland 3 California 4, night
BARN PARTY!
featuring THE MIRAGE
Hayride-Beer-Grub
Saturday, May 3 8:00 p.m.
Laptads Barn
$2.00 per couple
!CLOSE
convenient banking.
Located just south of the Hillcrest Shopping Center, University State is close to the campus. It's the one bank with a youthful approach to banking ...including special checking accounts for KU students. Come in and see what we mean soon.
University
State Bank
Your community;
minded bank ...
955 Iowa Street.
Viking 3-4700. Member F.D.I.C.
1970
UDK World News
By United Press International
Sihanouk rejects Nixon's ideas
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the chief of state, did a turnabout yesterday and said he was temporarily rejecting President Nixon's moves towards reestablishing diplomatic relations between the United States and Cambodia.
Sihanouk said at a news conference there were "reservations" in the U.S. position, referring to an April 17 statement from the Nixon Administration which said the
United States recognized Cambodia's sovereignty "within its present frontiers."
The Cambodian leader, in reversing himself yesterday said the "reservations" were reported by U.S. newspapers including the New York Times and the Washington Post which quoted officials of the U.S.State Department.
"If we accepted such a declaration, the United States could draw our frontiers wherever they wished, according
to the desire of their Allies," Sihanouk said yesterday.
Was satisfied
Sihanouk had announced on April 17 he was satisfied with the American position and was proceeding with steps to restore Phnom Penh-Washington ties.
The trouble which developed in the intervening days apparently stems from the fact the "present frontiers" of Cambodia are in dispute with South Vietnam, Laos and Thailand. The "reservations" mentioned by Sihanouk may
have referred to American efforts to stay out of the thorny issue of frontier squarbles between the nations of Southeast Asia.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Robert J. McCloskey said yesterday the statement of April 17 "stands and speaks for itself."
Border problems led to the rupture in diplomatic relations between the United States and Cambodia in 1965. Sihanouk cut the ties, charging that American and South Vietnamese troops were hitting Cambodian territory in raids ostensibly aimed against communist troops in South Vietnam.
Reversal suggested
The reversal announced by Sihanouk was hinted in Washington disputehes last Saturday which said Sihanouk believed the United States was adopting a somewhat ambiguous attitude toward Cambodia's frontiers.
Sihanouk was reported to have told a provincial audience last week if U.S. spokesmen "have in fact made such ambiguous statements about Cambodian frontiers, I will categorically refuse to exchange diplomats and will consider recognition of our frontiers null and void."
Japan wants US to return Okinawa
OKINAWA - A note of desperation is creeping into Japan's increasingly insistent demands for the return of Okinawa.
Czechs put off elections
PRAGUE - New Communist party leader Gustav Husak told the nation in a May Day eve speech last night immediate Communist party congress and elections they have demanded will not be held for another year.
Student, worker and intellectuals' resolutions in recent months have demanded the 1968 reforms be consolidated by a party congress and parliamentary elections this fall.
The Soviet-led invasion last August interrupted the original plans to hold the party congress Sept. 9 last year.
Husak, in a nationally televised television address, said "I think we can call a party congress in the first half of next year, following congresses of the national Czech and Slovak parties and parliamentary and general elections."
May 1
1969 KANSAN 9
And in the U.S. State Department, over the wishes of the Pentagon, there is a growing belief the United States cannot much longer delay return of the $1.2 billion Pacific base to the Japanese-agreement before the summer of 1970 and physical turnover in 1972.
No single other issue presses the government of Premier Eisaku Sato quite so hard.
Thousands of left-wing Japanese students and labor union members gave it vivid expression when on April 28 they took to the streets in violent anti-American demonstrations marking the 17th anniversary of the Japanese peace treaty.
The Japanese observe the date as "Okinawa Day."
Less violently but with similar emotion Sato declares "it has ceased to be just a political problem. It has become a humanitarian issue ... the longer the delay in arriving at a solution to the Okinawa question, the greater will be the difficulties that face our two countries in the political field."
Sato is scheduled to visit the United States in November and is pledged to obtain at that time a firm date for the island's return.
The life of his government depends upon his success.
For the Japanese the emotional issue is the fact of some one million citizens of
Japan still living under foreign domination on Okinawa more than 20 years after the war.
There it stores nuclear weapons for emergency use in Korea, China and other Pacific areas.
Open Daily
2 p.m. to Midnight
— north on Mass. —
at junction of 24-40 & 59
TGIF
Noon 12 - 6 p.m.
75c a pitcher
Sat. afternoon blast
band—no cover
TEE PEE
TGIF
This Friday, May 2
75c PITCHERS
From Noon 'Til 6 p.m.
Get in the mood for a big night
with
THE TIDE
8 p.m. 'til midnight
TGIF at the TEE PEE — WHY NOT??!
For the United States the issue is more complex.
B52's take off from Okinawa for raids on Vietnam.
On Okinawa and other islands of the Ryukyu chain the United States maintains 124 bases, most of them on Okinawa.
LONDON FOR YOU
Exciting London Summer Job Program. Our 7th successful season for secretaries and typists. Also San Francisco. For information write Mrs. Kay
HANSELL ASSOCIATES
Agency & Bilingual Secretarial School
209 Post Street San Francisco, California 94108
We make square-toed moccasins, loafers, buckled shoes, brogues, and oxfords. A whole new line of square-toed shoes for a whole new line of not-so-square people.
NUNN BUSH
The unsquare squares
NUNN BUSH
Black Grain Similar styles in Brown
Style 2330
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
GRAND OPENING GREGG TIRE CO. 814 W.23rd 842-5451 THE BEST PLACE TO GO FOR GOOD YEAR TIRES·BATTERIES·ACCESSORIES
THE BEST PLACE TO GO FOR GOOD YEAR TIRES·BATTERIES·ACCESSORIES
Richard Erickson, Mgr.
GREGG TIRE CO.
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
GOOD YEAR
SNOW TIRE REMOVAL $2.00
OUR LOWEST PRICE...
GOOD YEAR 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRE
$9.95
6.50 x 13
blackwall
tubeless
plus $1.81
Fed. Ex. Tax
and old tire
Whitewalls
Only $3.00 more
ALL-WEATHER IV
- Your best tire buy in its price range
- Extra mileage Tufsyn Rubber
KLEINFELD
- Track tested for 100 miles at 100 miles per hour
EASY TERMS • FREE MOUNTING!
GOOD YEAR
ANY SIZE $14.00*
*plus 27c to 46c
Fed. Ex. Tax
(depending on size)
and
retradable tire
off your car
Whitewall or Blackwall listed ...
6.95x27
7.75x14 (2.50x14) 7.75x15 (6.70x15) 7.00x13
6.95x14 (6.50x14) 6.40x15 7.00x13
6.95x14 (6.50x14) 6.40x15
Larger Sizes NEW TREADS
(retrieve on
sound tire bodies)
Your choice of tubeless or
tube-type. Youget the same
famous road-gripping tread
design that comes on our
new car "Power Cushion"
tires.
BUY NOW ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN!
SEE US FOR EXPERT SERVICE FOR YOUR CAR
- FRONT END ALIGNMENT
- WHEEL BALANCING
- BRAKE SERVICE
- SHOCK ABSORBER SERVICE
- NEW & USED TIRES
- REPAIRING & RECAPPING
- TIRE MOUNTING
- TIRE ROTATION
- CUSTOM/
RACING TIRES
- FULL LINE OF MAGS AVAILABLE
INDependently GOOD YEAR
Up to twice the mileage OF OUR BEST SELLING TIRES!
GOOD YEAR POLYGLAS TIRES CUSTOM WIDE TREAD
Prices start at...
$38.95
30% off ladies dress or white shirt base
32 DD fax, ea.
Other sizes available too at slightly higher prices.
E70-14 E70-15 G70-15
G70-14 F70-15 H70-15
G70-14 F70-15
Only Goodyear makes Polyglas tires!
BUY NOW ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN!
HIT THE LONG BALL!
SPALDING
golf balls
SPALDING
golf balls
Spalding Golf Balls
Liquid Center
"Go-Flite"
3 for $133
Gives consistent long distance & accuracy. Lasting tough cover. A great value at this low-low price!
BETTER TRACTION ON WET OR DRY ROADS
OVER CONVENTIONAL WIDTH TIRES .
GOOD YEAR
WIDE BOOTS
Built much like racing tires to deliver
the strength, stability and ride needed
for today's breed of powerful cars!
"SPEEDWAY" "WIDE TREAD"
TRECORD TRACK TESTED
"SPEEDWAY"WIDE TREAD
TIRES TRACK TESTED
AT SPEEDSUP TO 120 MPHI
S
r
d
4 for $88.88-F70 x 14 Plus $2.44 Fed.Ex.Tax
Buy Now on our Easy Pay Plan • Free Mounting!
DEALER
PARKER T BALL JOTTER PEN SET $1.98 set
Gregg
BUY TIRES MADE IN KANSAS BY KANSANS
814 West 23rd 842-5451
Auto, Truck, Tractor, Implement, Boat & Bike Tires—Orbitread Electronic Processed Retreads - RCA - Westinghouse - Goodyear Batteries - Wheel Alignment and Balancing - Brake and Muffler Service. Hours 8 to 5:30 except open till 8:30 Thurs. and closed 4 p.m. Sat.
Tire Co.
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
university Daily Kansas are offered
to students. Students are accorded 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, 1914. Irred. $5.14
For Sale: SANDALS--This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts many styles of leather watchbands just for your wrist and watch. Starting at $3.812 Mass. 5-15
Harley Chopper-650 Triumph–much chrome—X-6–Suzuki–excellent con-tection—wheel crash—crash helmet. 59 VW, perfect for dune-buggy V3–5-18 after five.
New Magnavox Component Set with
New Magnavox Component Set with
-$150.00 takes ACE - Ray Stoneback's
Downtown, open Mon. & Thurs. Nites!
- Component Sets - Start 5-1
$119.90
'65 Corvette, After 5 p.m. Call VI 3-2183.
5-6
'67 BSA Shooting Star 441 Victor condition $600 or best offer, #82-9984.
New Apartment size refrigerators—white or copper only $99.00 at Ray Stoneback's (open Mon. & Thurs Nites). Ideal for study rooms & dens.
Volkswagen Owners—We have retreads for $10.99 installed! New tires as low as $13.00 + $1.91 FET. Ray Stoneback's on Mass. St. 5-1
G.E. Dryers Reduced! 3 Heat
$10.99—plus you get a free rain wear
outfit from G.E. See Ray Stoneback's,
w to n from own—open Men, & Thur
Rock!
67 Cameroon Coupe, burgundy, 6 cyl-
l, Extra clean. Call Dulis-
at VI J-2-191
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE. TIF with 75c pitchers. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
"605 Skylark 2 door hardtop, 4 speed,
300 hp. Good ET. See at 713 W. 25 St.
No. A. Lawrence, 8-2 Friday-Tuesday
or phone VI 3-2619 for appointment.
Hofner Beatle Bass with hard shell case. Both in good condition. $200 or will trade for a small cycle. Call John, 842-9940. 5-2
1964 Corvair Monza, 4-speed sport coupe. Postposition with cruise control and new tires. If interested call Berg Keshian, VI 2-1200. 5-2
Rare 1962 Mini-Cooper Woody Station Wagon. $495; also 1964 Mini-Cooper also 1968 Mini-cooper for gymkhanas. $3,274 1965 Mini-Cooper 's'; $895. VI-3-2740
CORNET, B-flat, very good condition, with case. Reasonable. Also TUXEDO, quality Hong-Kong made, size 38. Ships in NY, CA. NER JACKET, cummerbund, butterfly tie, and shirt. Purehased last year, worn once. Call 842-1953. 5-1
Honda校 10.9646 Excelent cooridation
Honda校 10.9646 Excelent cooridation
$12.50 x 12.50 x 12.50
$12.50 x 12.50 x 12.50
1959 Chevrolet Belair. Radio, power
system. Good white lighting.
Call 842-3020. 5-5
For Sale: 12 inch portable Magnavox TV–UHF (special antenna). One year old, an americana portable and plug-in, 11 transistors AM-PM Radio. Ed at Vl E 2-2092. 5-1
100%* human hair fall—extra long
150%* human hair fall—long
Contact Susan at VI 7-2445. 5-5
'64 Ford station wagon, V-8, clean,
mechanically perfect. Vinyl seats,
must be Vecto electrical tuned.
Must see and drive to appreciate.
$650. VI 3-7106. 5-5
Dark blond frosted human hair wiglet. Worn very few times. In excellent condition. Cost $70 new. Will sell for much less. VI 3-8399. 5-5
64 Monza convertible, 4-speed Per-
formance, out 33,000 actual mph
Call 843-5180
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street
Shoe Repair For Your Repairs,
Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
es, One color .50 Two color 75
Two color .75
105 E. 8th
8:00-5:00
1963 VW Bug—new engine, tires, and
other. Low mileage. One owner. Exterior and interior perfect. Call AVS 4-5661-5: 5 p.m.
Call AVS 2-8968.
For Sale: Super-Takumar F/ 4, 200 MM Lens. Virtually New and Unused. Complete with Box, Case and Strap. Call VI 2-6481. Evenings. 5-6
1965 Volks—some body damage-
needs minor engine repair. Must sell
fast. $300 or will take best offer. Dave
OWen. VI 2-2160. 5-6
Honda 305 Superhawk. Scramber pipes, electric starter, dirt track tire.
Excellent condition. $350 Call VI 2-2974. 5-2
For Sale: Must sell 1960 MGA. In good mechanical condition with much re- work done on it. Call Rick. V 7337 after 5 wkdits. 1. Sat & Sun. Sun
5-6
Honda 90. Inexpensive transportation
tennis. Call Alison 5-618-
tony, VI 3-7600
Artificial flowers for every occasion.
Artificial flowers for Paper, Paper, Straw, Antiqued, Bouquets delivered JAN'S FLOWER N GIFT GOP—a division of Hillebrander 5-7
Just arrived -Factory fresh
TC 120 "Cat" Moto-X Scrambler
Yorkshire
The Motorcycle Men"
Loweres, Highlands
Fonds
842-2044-0044
For Sale: 1965 Honda 90, 4,000 ml.
Carl Milley, 843-240-3750
5-7
Stereo AM-FM cartridge for auto tape
壕室 or track. Bargain Basement
$29. VI $18. VIII
SALE: Tables, Dinette Set, Walnut
Chairs, 5-Drawer Dresser, Oak Desk,
Equipment, Miscellaneous. Before
11:44, Apt. 2. After 5 P.M. 10:
Tennessee, Apt. A. 5-7
...
1961 Cadillac Sedan De Ville. 66,000 actual miles, PS and PB. Electric windows and doors, air conditioner, air净化器, condition, inside insulation. $895.00. Call VI 3-0638 or U 4-3545.
1960 Triumph motorcycle. T-120 Bomp
genuine, recently rebuilt.
VI 2-0044. S-5
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Q—outdoor pit, rib slab to go $;$2.35; Rib order,
$1.55; Rib sandwich, 90c; chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $.75; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tt
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Delicatessen in Jayville. 8 a.m. to midnight daily, noon to midnight Sundays. Delivery service daily 6 p.m. to midnight.
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest,
installed on HP 10c. Sharp printer,
sharper copies; faster service.
Unsurpassed results for these, papers,
books, typewriter, Typewriter, 70
field. WI, III - 3-364
PRIMARILY LEATHER - Vests, bags,
handmade at 812 Mace. 5-15
handmade at 812 Mace.
SCRATCH AND DENT SALE, we have several 1969 stores that have slightly blemished cabinets and are greatly reduced in价,some price $40. Prices:$89.95. Easy formcome arranged in our store. WHITE SEWING CENTER, 916 Mass.
Art Sale: Indian Tie-Dies & Baun-
Mon, Tues, Wed, April 28, 29, 30,
Fri, Sat, May 2, 3, 1242 Louisiana
1-5 p.m. 5-2
The TEE PEE has been remodeled!
Bands on weekends. TGIF with 75c
pitches each Friday from noon to
6 p.m.
5-14
RAY AUDIO
your new
AR-DYNACO DEALER
RAY AUDIO
offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory autOHM, DURABOX and FOR AR, RABOX, SHERWOOD and FISHER. (3-month service warranty). 1944 for prompt service Hillcrest Shopping Center (Afterson & Evening). 5-9
PILOTS—Blue sky, wind calm, economy fly in Optapoc Flybing Club 3 planes. Only two resalable shares left at $482-1124 after six. **A VENUE**
BOX 382, Lawrence, Kans. 5-5
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES: If you reteach job this summer, call Dave Wright, VI 2-7888 between 6:00 and 10:00. Jayhawkers and 5,000 other college men for the South-Western Company.
-$32.11. We'll interview you and can interview us. 5-7
RAY AUDIO your new AR-DYNACO DEALER
offers professional service for you component audio gear Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox. Sherwood and Fisher. (3-month service warranty). Call VI 1-2944 for shopping center. (Afternoon & Evening) 58 Notice: Wisconsin girls camp needs water ski, water balllet, gymnastics, and diving instructors—experience necessary. Call VI 1-2140. R69 525-9
TYPING
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
Fast, accurate, KU Graduate. Call Mrs.
Currier after 5 p.m. VI 2-1409. 5-14
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, app-
portations in German, English, disertations typed in German, Roman-
ized Japanese, Spanish, English,
French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed
and/or edited, KU graduate in B-Speech Education, KU elec-
tric. Visit near Olive Hall VI 3-2873.
Former Harvard and University of
Maryland, and former term papers. VI 3-7207. Mattia Maffiola
TYPING: EXPERIENCED in typing thesis, term papers, all kinds of writings, reports, articles, letters, writer, pica type. Fast, efficient service. Phone VI 3-9554 Mrs. Wright.
Theses, themes, papers in English,
French, transliterated Russian—typed
on IBM Selectric by experienced
thesis typist. Call Ms. Harwell, 842-
1296
Typing: Theses, Dissertations, Manuscripts typed accurately by experienced typist on IBM electric machine. Call Mrs. Phyllis Nelson VI 2-1242
Experienced typist will fast, give fast, accom-
pany papers, report theses. Call VI 3-0288. 5-8
Male students only. 1-4-room + bath
1-3-room + bath. Electricity extra.
Approxima 1 block from campus.
Car V 5120 daytime,
or VI 2-2787
Typing; Theses and Term Papers.
Electric Typewriter
Mary A. Wolken
1712 Alabama
FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR RENT
1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments, located in small quiet complex at south edge of KU campus. Unfurnished, located in elegant old-style Danish walnut furnishing. All rooms have wall-to-wall carpeting, paneled living area. Very large rooms. Two large closets and locked storage. Central room and air pair. Reasonable rent and
LOW SUMMER RATES
Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL
and 143-143 for Old Mill. 1741 West
19th, Contact Glen or Kaye Drake
apartment 5-B, VI 3-8220. 5-2
now renting for summer, University
Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Re-
taining, air conditioning,
and pool for appointment.
842-1296 for University Terrace and
843-1433 for Old Mill. 5-2
Furnished summer place, available
2 people or 2 Call People
2828 after $ 5.00
S-5
Nice 2 bedroom house, $120.00, for rent near KU, shopping and schools.
Also room for girl graduate student.
VI 2-3229. 5-5
Sleeping rooms with and without kitchen privileges for males; furnished air-conditioned apartments phone VI 3-5767 5-14
Renting for summer and fall semesters. Rooms & apts. $3, block from the university. Regular social rates. Call V1 7271 for a 5-5 SUMMER SUBLET - 3 bedroom, furnished duplex, air-conditioned, dishwasher, disposal, TV, close to campus, laundry room. Call V1 7271 at 4000 a.m. call after 4 p.m., 843-7263 5-6 For Rent; Rent furnished. Available June 1 to Sept. 1. Quiet, no pets. Call after 6:00, 843-4010 5-6 Movements in rent. June Live Museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting with Kanaan, Kanaka, live museum in "Ode English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartment at Roeland Park, 1100 St. Expressway at Roeland Park, Kansas City, Kansas CO 2-1166
WANTED
Two roommates to share spacious house for summer—option for fall—Rent $50 mo—Drop by or call for John, 1301 Vermont-VI 2-7920. 5-2 The KU student at the TEE PEE. The KU student at the TEE PEE. Free pitchers given away nightly. 5-14 Two or three hours of morning helped needed at Deefield Farm, RR 4; Lawrence. Good pay, call VI 3-6696. 5-5 Needed: 2 female roommates to share a summer apartment $\frac{1}{3}$ block from the kitchen. Low rent. Call Barb. VI 2-1340. Rm 1
Cars Painted $27.50
7 Day Special
Newest Place For Now Fashionions 910 Kentucky Lower Level
Martin's Auto Painting
792 N. 2nd—N. Lawrence
皇
PETITE
GALERIE
Pay-Less
LA
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
Self Service SHOES
PRE-MED SENIORS!
AMERICAN'S ONE
Bizza
Palace
1911 1742 ALAIO
1969 Swift Binocular Microscope
Earl's
WE DELIVER
FREE DRINK ON
Contact Barry Wood, Campus Representative V13-3677
Also available Zeiss and Lietz
- o quality buy around $450
- meets med-school requirements
Seiler Instrument Company
of St. Louis introduces the
Phone VI 3-0753
EVERYONE SAYS
Open 7 Evenings A Week
729 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kan.
Open 7 Evenings A Week
Everything in the Pet Field
and Far-Behind Me.
DELIVERY
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced Dependable
Personal service
1218 Conn., Law, Pet. Ph. VI 3-2921
3 locations to serve your every need
Raney Drug Stores
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
The driest cars in town—can be rented at the living room or only $1 at the Alpha Chipwash on Saturday, May 3, 9:00-1:00 at Smitty's Champin Service Station, 1802-52-2
SUMMER CAMP EMPLOYEES
VI3-4321
Wanted—married couple—to live in
Louisiana. Don't wait. I want male student to work mornings,
some weekends and nights. No children—no pets. Phone VI 3-1122 for
information.
STEERING
Wanted: one male roommate to share
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(Continued from page 1)
Post Office isn't dead
WASHINGTON The Post Office Department, whatever its faults, is here to stay, at least for the next few years.
Sponsors of legislation to abolish it and turn the mails over to a government corporation conceded this today, but contended the idea isn't dead.
Mistakes cause losses
WASHINGTON Brig. Gen. S. L. A. Marshall said yesterday 40 per cent of American combat losses in Vietnam are the result of "our own mistakes."
He blamed these casualties on foolishness, impatience and heroes by U.S. troops, and singled out "lieutenants, captains and platoon sergeants" as the weakest cog in the American war machine in Vietnam.
Marshall, a well-know military historian and combat journalist, made the comments in an interview with UPI in connection with the publication yesterday of his new book, "Ambush."
Institute warns U.S.
LONDON - A survey issued yesterday by Britain's Institute for Strategic Studies says an American military withdrawal from South Vietnam would open the door to communist takeovers in Laos, Cambodia and Thailand.
Panthers investigated
SAN FRANCISCO - A federal grand jury yesterday began a secret investigation of activities of the Black Panthers.
The inquiry began with the appearance of seven witnesses, all Negroes, who were subpoenaed from several U.S. cities.
U. S. Atty, Cecil Poole declined to explain the grand jury proceedings, but Allan Brotsky, attorney for two of the witnesses, said the investigation concerned Panther activities generally.
None of the subpoenaed witnesses were prominent leaders of the Black Panther organization, but they were said to be present or former members of the militant group.
Luis Siles told to quit
COCHABAMBA, Bolivia — The powerful Bolivian National Peasants Confederation yesterday gave Acting President Luis Siles 24 hours to quit the office he assumed when the late president Rene Barrientos was killed in a helicopter crash last Sunday.
The ultimatum coincided with transfer of Barrientos' body to this tin mining center, scene of the crash in which he died, for last rites. Barrientos at the time of his death was national leader of the Peasant Movement.
Gonorrhea cases at KU are widespread
The flow of patients being treated for gonorrhea at Watkins Hospital is approaching the rate one finds in the slum and ghetto areas of a large city, Raymond Schwegel, director of Watkins, said yesterday.
Dr. Schwegler said the first case of acute gonorrhea appeared at the hospital in September. A month later two or three cases showed up, and since that time, at least 10 cases a month have been treated.
33 new cardinals appointed by Pope
VATICAN CITY (UPI) — Pope Paul VI presented the red had of cardinalship to 33 new princes of the Catholic church yesterday and accepted the resignation of another, Vatican Secretary of State Amleto Cardinal Cicognani.
The pontiff announced both the resignation of Cicognani, 86, and the appointment of Jean Cardinal Villot, 63, of France, as his successor during installation ceremonies for the largest class of new cardinals in the church's history. Four of them were Americans.
The office of secretary of state is the Vatican's second most powerful, a combination of premier and foreign minister.
The central point of last night's ceremony, however, was presentation of the biretta, a square red hat with three ridges on top, to the 33 new cardinals from 20 countries.
The four new American cardinals receiving the red hat were Archbishops Terence J. Cooke of New York, John F. Dearden of Detroit, John J. Carberry of St. Louis and Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh. They raise the number of cardinals in the United States to 10.
Weather
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts a high today about 80 with a few thundershowers developing this afternoon and evening. Cloudy skies and occasional light rain are expected for tomorrow.
12 KANSAN May 1 1969
No syphilis cases have been found, Dr. Schwegler said, although it can only be "a matter of time" before they appear.
"This outbreak is due to the inevitable free-flowing overall promiscuity on campus," he said.
Symptoms noticeable
Medical authorities say the first symptom of gonorrhea in the male is burning on urination, followed by a frequency of urination, often with blood content in the urine.
The first symptoms in the female are mild, and often unnoticed until the sexual partner is infected. Female gonorrhea is often confused with appendicitis. Fever and lower abdominal pain frequently occur.
If gonorrhea is not treated, female sterility can occur. Both male and female gonorrhea victims may suffer from arthritis with permanent disability often the outcome.
The diagnostic methods of treating gonorrhea are not absolutely perfect, Dr. Schwegler said, although they are good.
Penicillin is the most common treatment.
One case at Watkins has defied treatment because it resists all antibiotics, he said.
"I believe this case came from Vietnam because venereal disease is rampant in the Orient," he said. "Most can't be treated."
Not all gonorrhea results from bisexual relations, Dr. Schwegler said. He believed a great number of the cases came from homosexuals at KU.
No matter where the disease originates, it is impossible to know how widespread it actually is because the carriers have sexual relations outside the campus community, Dr. Schwegler said.
"If one must lead such a life, we must take advantage of health measures applied in houses of prostitution," he said. "We must have frequent blood tests and health checks as well as treatment."
Dr. Schwegler stressed that gonorrhea cases are kept in "strict confidence" at the hospital.
Student tests validity of Goodyear tire ad
John Mullen, Deerfield, Ill. sophomore, has decided to tackle the multi-million dollar Goodyear Co.
Mullen bought a pair or Goodyear polyglas tires last January and now has something to say about the advertised "getting up to twice the mileage of our ordinary tire."
Only $180 and four months later Mullen finds his car socks treadbare.
Dissatisfied, Mullen went to Gregg Tire Co. in Lawrence where he bought the tires to test the validity of the guarantee. Mullen said the service manager said nothing could be done about the guarantee. The service manager blamed the poor longevity of the bald tires on Mullen's tires not being aligned.
Mullen hypothesized that since poor alignment can result from driving over a bump or over a pothole, to maintain the Goodyear guarantee one would have to get his car aligned once a week.
But, Mullen said when a friend of his went to the tire dealer the service manager said to get the wheels aligned about once a year. "He's just concerned about selling tires. He doesn't care about the service," said Mullen.
Claiming "shoddy merchandise" and "deceptive advertising", Mullen yesterday released a one page resume of his Goodyear experiment. Across the KU campus the handouts with a picture of one of his bald tires were scattered "for the benefit of other unwary consumers who can hardly afford $180 in return for such poor merchandise and service."
The crusading sophomore said he has sent copies of the handout to various news outlets including the Associated Press and Time Magazine. He hopes his efforts will be rewarded by an improvement in product, service and advertising.
Employees of the Gregg Tire Co. were unavailable for comment.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No. 123
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, May 2, 1969
Power struggle hits ISP
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Reagan supports ABM
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Gov. Ronald Reagan of California said yesterday he would like to see the Republican Governors Association declare its support of President Nixon's Safeguard plan for developing an Antiballistic Missile (ABM) system.
Speaking as chairman of the association, Reagan stopped short of saying he would press for a resolution to endorse the administration's ABM plan. He said he would explore it with other governors first.
Hitler supporters unite
HAMBURG, Germany - The first self-declared Nazi group in post-war Germany opened a secret founding convention yesterday in defiance of a government ban.
Wolf-Dieter Eckart, a 29-year-old Hamburg electronics engineer, met with four followers at the village of Bispingen near the autobahn between Hamburg and Hannover, then drove with them to a secret location in a lower Saxony state.
"We support the ideals of Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich," Eckart told newsmen who accompanied him as far as the Bispingen rendezvous. "We agree with all he did."
Costs concern Laird
WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today the Pentagon must "restore its credibility on Capitol Hill or we'll be in trouble." Laird said an investigation of cost over-runs on defense contracts is an "ungent" priority matter.
He made the comments to newsmen after appearing before the Senate Armed Servives Committee to discuss reports of a 100 per cent cost over-run on an Air Force contract for jumbo cargo jets.
Gen. Wheeler still no.1
WASHINGTON - The Senate Armed Services Committee voted yesterday to give Gen. Earle G. Wheeler another one year term as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff despite grumbling that the Air Force and Navy were not getting a chance at the No. 1 non-civilian defense spot.
The vote was unanimous on a resolution to give Wheeler, an Army man, special permission to stay on as chairman for a sixth year.
Rep. Mize accepts seat
WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Chester Mize, R-Kan., announced today he has accepted the chairmanship of the International Trade Task Force for the Research Committee of the House Republican Conference.
Mize, a member of the International Trade Subcommittee of the House Banking and Currency Committee, will head a 14-member group which will research several areas dealing with our trade relations and policies and will make recommendations to the GOP Research Committee.
The International Trade Task Force will study tariff revision and the protection of domestic industries.
--a loyalty to the Senate, student body and to ISP. He explained that ISP was the "vehicle by which he was elected," but the student body required his greater affiliation.
By MICHAEL NAGEL Kansan Staff Writer
The Independent Student party is in a state of confusion. After placing their presidential and vice-presidential candidates as well as 26 Senate candidates into office, a power struggle of political methods has broken their camp.
With the election in the lap of ISP, the party found itself divided in how to achieve the legislation it seeks. Others thought Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and ISP president-elect, was beginning to forget his party affiliation. And with the reorganizational meeting of yesterday drifting in the back of the mind of every ISP member, the interim week found persons jockeying for a future position.
But as the first meeting of the new Senate neared, the members of ISP were caught between idealism and pragmatism.
Last Thursday night, ISP found itself surprisingly successful. The party found itself with the positions and the numbers to push through its reforms.
Over the weekend, ISP coordinators, Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., senior, Gus diZerega, Wichita senior, and Abwrey met to form a slate of ISP Senate members to push for election into Senate committees which were to be formed in the Tuesday night meeting.
But when Tuesday night's Senate meeting came, all of the slate composers had decided not to push the slate which they had created. Awbrey arose to the Senate floor and publicly denounced anybody who would push any slate.
To the ISP members who were unaware of the sudden change in methods to seek committee membership, it seemed as if the new president was forsaking the party.
In explanation of his action,
Awbrey said in an interview he had
Commenting on the problems of ISP, Awbrey said, "I see a lot of wrong, pettiness and personality conflicts with ISP. I feel I have to rise above this," he said.
In an earlier interview, diZerega had said, "ISP is undergoing reorganization to allow for more democratic control in the top offices."
George had also agreed with the need for change in the ISP upper echelon. He said in the future, ISP would have to be a more open party and not so directly run by the influence of the ISP executive council.
In a Wednesday meeting to select the members of Senex, the Senate executive council, reaction to the nominations of diZerega and George were in the manner of
(Continued to page 12)
Presidio march was 'peaceful'
More than 300 persons participated in a fast-moving, orderly march with the Committee for the 27 yesterday to protest what they called the unjust treatment of the prisoners involved in the San Francisco Presidio "mutiny" last October.
After a 20-minute on-campus march, the demonstrators stopped at "Wescoe Hole" to stage a reenactment of the events which led to the Presidio mutiny.
Earl Robinson, Overland Park freshman, acted out the part of Pvt. Richard Bunch, a 19-year-old inmate of the Presidio military stockade, who was killed by a prison guard October 11, 1968, as he attempted to escape.
Three days after Bunch's death, which the Army declared
"justifiable homicide," 27 of his fellow inmates sat down during morning roll call and sang "America the Beautiful" to protest Bunch's death and the allegedly overcrowded conditions at the stockade.
John Sanford, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, narrated the campus "mutiny" and told of the allegedly bad conditions existing at the Presidio up to and including the time of Bunch's death, as the "prisoners" at Wescoe Hole peacefully protested by singing.
Intent spectators lined the elevated embankment of the hole and watched as Daryl Klippsten, Prairie Village junior, portraying Captain Lamont, commanding officer of the Presidio, read Article
94 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Using a bullhorn to read the article, which deals with mutinous actions, Klippsten could barely be heard over the singing of the "prisoners."
The march began in front of Flint Hall. Singing "We Shall Overcome," the marchers headed down Jayhawk Boulevard to Lindley Hall in a four-abreast line that extended in length from Flint to Marvin Hall. From Lindley the marchers turned down the hill to the Military Science Building.
A group of about 30 students, sitting in the grass near a flag pole at the Military Science building, gave the first few marchers hostile glances, but calmly watched the
(Continued to page 12)
1972
'Mutineers' hear charges
Photo by Halina Pawl
Actors in yesterday's Committee for the 27 reenactment of the San Francisco Presidio "mutiny" are shown here as the "charges" against them are being enumerated.
Only few couples know legal risks of shacking
By SUSAN FOHRMAN Kansan Staff Writer
Living out of wedlock is a hazardous proposition at best. How hazardous, most couples fail to realize.
Some students have been forced to clear out an apartment in half an hour . . . make up excuses for someone else's clothes being in their closet . . .
devise deceptive telephone warning routines—all to "keep their parents from worry."
Friends and roommates, in one way or another, become involved. Bitterness and resentment can result. Landlord problems are possible.
Most couples are painfully aware of these hazards. What they fail to realize are the legal pitfalls of their relationship.
This is the third of four articles on shacking-up at KU.
Kansas is one of the few states still recognizing common law marriages. Even in the briefest relationship, a woman can gain the status of a common law wife. Her "spouse" can be forced into formal divorce proceedings.
Harvey Berenson, assistant professor of law, said it is an old wive's tale that it takes seven years for a common law
marriage to be valid. "One night in a hotel (registered as Mr. and Mrs.) would be enough," he said.
By such an act, the couple agrees to marriage and cohabitation—if even for only one night—and establishes a relationship as man and wife by signing the register. These are the only criteria for common law marriage, Berenson said.
But there are additional legal pitfalls.
- Kansas statute 21-937 states that a person is guilty of a felony and can be sentenced to a term from one to five years in prison if he knowingly persuades, induces, entices or procures or assists in persuading a female for the purpose of prostitution, fornication or concubinage.
- Berenson said the success of persuading a girl to sleep with a man is enough to convict him. He added that it must be proven that the man persuaded the woman, and the fact that the girl consented is no defense. That she was persuaded is the crime
- A student who has sexual intercourse with a female under the age of 18 can face a sentence up to 5 years in prison for statutory rape.
- Berenson said it makes no difference if the girl consented.
- Statute 21-938 provides one to five year prison sentence for persons convicted of
"maintaining a house or other place of prostitution, fornication or concubinage, or where the same is practiced, permitted or allowed, on premises owned or leased by him or under his control. . . ."
Berenson said a girl can be convicted under this statute if she so much as cleans an apartment-her boyfriend's, for example—where any of these acts are practiced.
Mrs. Frances Ricks, assistant dean of women, said there are no regulations that say people can't live with a member of the opposite sex.
Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, echoed Mrs. Ricks's statement.
The University, he said, won't take disciplinary action in an off-campus "situation."
With a regularity bordering monotony, dozens of students repeated statements such as these:
- "Nobody criticized us. Nobody even took us over in a corner and tried to talk to us. Even people who believed it was wrong never showed that it bothered them."
- "My roommate asked me if I thought her shacking-up was wrong. I said 'it's your life. Lead it the way you want to.' I think as long as the relationship is bothering no one else it's alright."
KU's Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) will have its annual color ceremony and Ring Dance off campus this year.
Naval Review relocated
Originally scheduled for 6:30 p.m. tonight in front of Allen Field House, the color ceremony has been moved to the Naval Air Station at Olathe where it will begin at 5:30 p.m.
The Ring Dance, which was to have been held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom, has been moved to the National Guard Armory.
Officers of the KU Naval ROTC declined to give reasons for the moves, but it is assumed the new locations were selected after demonstrators tried to disrupt the annual Army ROTC inspection and review Tuesday in front of Allen Field House.
2 KANSAN May 2 1969
Only one student spoke out this way:
Margaret McCoy, Hiawatha, freshman, has been named the 1969 "Color Girl" by the midshipmen in the Naval ROTC honor company.
She will be presented during the review today and will reign over the dance tomorrow evening.
Music will be provided by the Pensacola, Florida, Naval Air Station Band.
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"Shacking-up is wrong. The older generation is against it. They made the rules and I can't see that they (the rules) are that bad. It's like playing a game. If I cheat, I feel bad afterward. It's a form of cheating yourself and society."
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Campus briefs
KU students win music awards
David K. Murrow, Topeka senior, is the all-divisions winner of the 1969 Naftzer Young Artists Competition in Wichita.
A clarinetist, majoring in both music education and clarinet, Murrow won a $500 prize and a guest solo appearance with the Wichita Symphonv Orchestra next season.
Other KU entries did well in the Naftzger competition.
Mrs. Jean Barnes Vigil, Osage City senior and soprano, won the $250 prize for best vocalist. She will sing lead soprano in KU's production of the Benjamin Britten opera, "Midsummer's Night Dream" which will appear at the University Theatre Friday and Saturday night.
Dennis Alexander, Copeland senior, was a finalist who received a special honorable mention for his piano playing.
Faculty on leave must pay premiums
Faculty and staff members should maintain their health insurance premium payments while on leave-without-pay, said Philip N. Rankin, KU director of personnel services.
Rankin said that faculty and staff members on summer leave may submit a personal check or a signed, bank deduction authorization form to the Business Office before the first of the month, following receipt of their last paycheck.
Faculty or staff on leave for the semester or year are asked to submit a personal check for the period of leave-without-pay.
Under the state contract, failure to pay premiums or authorize bank deductions will result in termination of health insurance. Re-enrollment is not possible until the next open enrollment period which is Nov.1, 1969.
Physics Society banquet Thursday
The annual awards banquet sponsored by the Students Physics Society will be at 6:30 Thursday in the Kansas Union Centennial Room, said Peter M. Richards, associate professor of physics.
Tickets for the banquet—which is open to the public—should be purchased by noon Tuesday in room 143 Malott. Richards said.
purchased by Wool Fashion Today in California. Lawrence K. Anderson, chairman of the Bell Telephone optical memory department, will speak on "Laser Holography and Communication."
Richards said that holography is a photographic technique by laser which produces a three-dimensional picture.
Husband, wife speak to architects
Robert Venturi, architect, and his wife Denise Scott Brown, educator, will be guest lecturers in the School of Architecture and Urban Design next Friday and Saturday.
Venturi will give an illustrated lecture, "Learning from Las Vegas II," at 8 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Miss Scott will speak on "Directions in Architectural Education" at the School of Architecture's annual awards dinner 6:30 Saturday in the
Kansas Union Ballroom.
A reception at 5:30 for Verner F. Smith, retiring associate professor, precedes the dinner.
May 2
1969 KANSAN 3
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SDS 'undercover' memocites revolutionary plans
WICHITA (UPI) — An "undercover discussion memo" attributed to the radical Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and calling for revolution was in the hands of the Wichita Police Department yesterday.
The mimeographed pamphlet, consisting of about half a dozen mimeographed sheets stapled together, was entitled "Toward a Revolutionary Youth Movement." Below the title were the words "By Klonsky." Klonsky was not identified.
dying capitalist culture," and defined the role of a youth movement in "building a revolution."
Outlining what it described as a "crucial ideological decision"
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the memo said SDS was moving from a student organization to a revolutionary youth group, aimed particularly at Negroes, "the working class," and various off-campus groups.
Police Chief Merrill Kirkpatrick declined to reveal where he got the memo, but other sources said it was obtained by an undercover agent.
The memo said SDS views racial fighting "as a primary task in the battle against the power structure."
Speaking of the "miserable quality of life in America," the memo said the "ruling class" has developed organizational forms to contain young people in "the
In identifying targets for SDS foment, the memo listed, in addition to universities, colleges and schools,"police institutes on campus," "the real estate establishment," "research and planning centers," and sociology and education courses in high school classrooms.
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KANSAN Comment
It's an old game
Message to David Awbrey, newly elected student body president: "They have not yet begun to fight."
Sometimes editorial writers must, in expressing an opinion, make predictions which they do not want to come true and sometimes those same writers must delve into history, which is supposed to be relevant.
Two years ago, a great stir in student government arose when Al Martin, student body president, and Jim Prager, chairman of the All-Student Council, proposed a radical reform of the legislative government at KU. In effect, they proposed reduction of the 37-member council to 10 school representatives, four class presidents, the president and vice president of the student body. This group, they proposed, could more effectively work with the Chancellor and the administration.
The drastic cut in council membership was thought to be too much of a change. Council members then voted not to abolish their own positions.
The reason for this short lapse into history is to point out that factionalism was what gave the opposing members impetus enough to reject the proposal.
There were those factions which existed that felt that elimination of their influence would hinder the effectiveness of student government. And those factions—most of whom normally would have opposed each other on many issues—banded together and threw out the proposal. A revolutionary proposal at that.
Reduction in size of the council, it was thought, would eliminate the possibility of forming future factions which would influence future legislation. For that is what democratic government consists of. Without factions in a representative democracy there would be no voting districts. There would be no lobbying, no back-slapping, no behind-the-scenes negotiations which are essential in any type of representative government.
And with a truly representative government you must have a free press. And with a free press, not all highly
important meetings can be made public without "tipping off" the other factions in terms of strategy or sentiment in the legislative group.
This kind of thinking has always had its place in representative governments. There are factions. There is favoritism, and a certain amount of corruption—political, ethical, or financial—whether you like it or not. It is a by-product of democracy.
And so Mr. Awbrey, who is head of a much larger legislative body than existed two years ago must come to grips with reality—regardless of how idealistic his politics are.
He must learn quickly that factions have always existed in this type of government. He must realize that they will remain. And they will grow in numbers as the group grows—a very large representative body which he must now learn to deal with.
Mr. Awbrey should learn that the power of this body can be controlled with the support of certain factions-not by alienating those very factions which may have helped get him elected.
The realities of democracy are sometimes cruel; oftentimes vicious. Politics, sir, are a tough business. Idealism has no place in the face of a 2,000-vote cigar; or a million-dollar handshake—no matter how crafty the man who owns the hand, or smokes the cigar.
Legislating is now your business, Mr. Awbrey. Not threatening to call a new election if things do not go your way the first day. That is not how it works.
More factions will come; and with them will come more debating, and more "old political games." And the influence of that "old political tradition," and those "personal loyalties" will make itself more than evident in the coming year. The new student body president must learn how to handle these facets of democracy, and channel them into effective legislative procedure.
For, whether Mr. Awbrey likes it or not, representative democracy is the oldest working political game in the world. A game he must now play. (JTM)
FORWARD TOGETHER
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
'When does the 'forward' part begin?'
The Hill With It by john hill
I was walking along beautiful downtown Lawrence when a dirty old man stepped out of an alley.
"Pss-s-s-t! Seen-yor," he said. Actually, he wasn't a dirty old man. He was filthy. "You want to buy a computer? Never been used . . ."
“A computer?” I said. “Well, no, I don't need a computer. Whenever I might do what I laughingly refer to as work, a computer couldn't—”
"No, these aren't to help in work like most computers," said Filthy McNasty. "these are to help you play."
"It's with no small amount of quiet pride that I say that I really don't need any help playing—"
"You don't understand," he said. "A computer can take advantage of the time you spend not goofing off—surely you spend some time accomplishing something?"
Minutes passed. I tried to think.
"Anyway," he continued, "take our LOAF518-9 model for example. Suppose you're busy at classes or meetings or a job all day. Think of the time wasted where you could be loafing! Our new LOAF518-9 computer is carefully programmed to sleep late, slowly get up, catch a little Dick Van Dyke, not pick up the room, and take its fat time eating plenty of lunch."
I nodded, seeing his point. These mornings when I get up and go to class, I really hate to think of all the ways in which I could have completely killed that time, butchered it really, a veritable slaughter. Time is too precious to be used in such a blatantly responsible manner.
"Or if you have a severe case of spring fever, you could use our SF518-5 model. Whenever you're stuck indoors for class, and it's beautiful outside, your computer can be outdoors, basking in the sunlight by the pool or shooting baskets or throwing a frisbee around where it gets stuck on the roof."
"Then there's our BUD37600 special computer which simply sits and drinks for you, by the hour, never pausing—"
"Wait a minute," I said. "These sound great, but they just aren't for me. Thanks anyway."
With a slight regret that I didn't get a dirty old man peddling lewd and obscene pornography which is corrupting the morals of our country's youth, I walked down the street.
"Hey," he yelled, "what's the matter with one of these computers?"
"I'll do my own loafing, and take great pride in my personal ways to kill time, or even slowly torturing it. Besides, anything worth doing," I said, deciding to cut class because it was such a nice day, "is worth doing well."
“If”
If we could drink up the water in the sea if we could talk to 31 cadavers if they could listen to us if they could,
If we could find the "flying Pueblo"
if we could excuse ourselves to their families
if they could listen to us
if they could,
If we could stay out of wars if we could defend ourselves when the time calls if we could give a damn then we could be a country.
Jose A. Clark Lawrence sophomore
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom-UN 4-3464 Business Office-Un 4-358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment policies vary by color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Summary
Editor-in-Chief Ron Yates
Business Manager Pan Flaton
Edition Editors Steve Haynes, Robert Eustin Jr., Dr. Dijk
Westernhaus, Marla Babeock, Sandy Zahraudk
News Editor Joanna Wiebe
Assistant News Editor Tom Weinberg
Editorial Editor Judith K. Diebolt, Alison Steimel, John Marshall
Sports Editor Bob Kingway
Assistant Sports Editor Jay Thomas
Feature and Society Editor Marilyn Petterson
Assistant Society Editor Susan Brimacombe
Photo and Graphics Editor Linda McClure
Arts and Reviews Editor Butler Butter
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KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Lesbians!!
By BOB BUTLER Kansan Arts and Reviews Editor
What the heil ever happened to heterosexuality? First we were treated to "The Fox," then "The Sergeant," then "The Killing of Sister George." Now we get "Therese and Isabelle" hooray.
Essey Perssen, the body you knew and vicariously loved in "I, A Woman," stars as Therese, a young lady who is shipped off to a boarding school by her new stepfather, a wise move on the old man's part—he knows when he's got competition. There she meets and falls in love with Isabelle, played by Anna Gael. They make it for a while and then Isabelle is pulled out of school by her mother. End of story.
The whole mess is told in flashback as Therese, now a middle-aged woman, returns to the deserted school to "talk to the ghosts." The only problem is that she keeps popping uncomfortably in and out of the flashback scenes like Scrooge with the ghost of Christmas something-or-other. It's very annoying.
The worst thing about this film, aside from the subject matter, is that it's the most boring two hours I've ever experienced. Even the love scenes are boring, although there is considerable material for an argument on how two school girls developed so fully.
The acting is horrible. Miss Perssen is at her dramatic best while making sexy animal noises while someone strokes her (or while she strokes herself, this movie has all those strange acts you used to look up in Mom's medical dictionary). Miss Gael's acting abilities are limited to looking innocent while sinning in the school chapel.
I was embarrassed watching this film, a confession which I am sure will be met with much disbelief by those who know me. Nevertheless, this movie is fit only for mass viewings by fraternity houses and dorm floors, when everyone can snicker and groan as much as they want. I groaned while sitting alone in yesterday's matinee and everybody turned around and stared at me.
RECORDS: Sly
By WILL HARDESTY
Slyvester Stewart had it knocked by some standards by the time he was 19. He was the top DJ in San Francisco, had lots of friends, and was writing, arranging and producing records. But disillusionment set in. So, he grabbed his brother and sister, another chick and guy who are cousins, and two other guys who are cousins and transformed him and them into Sly and The Family Stone.
That was two years ago. Since then, the group has been moving—very much up with their unique fusion of gospel, rhythm and blues and psychadelia. Sly's latest album, called "Stand!" has been released on EPIC (BN-26456, stereo).
Although The Family Stone should be seen to be fully appreciated, your whole body can feel the excitement they generate just by listening to "Stand!" If you like to dance, this disc is essential.
Their music is built around the boss bass of Larry Graham, Jr., and rumming of Gregg Errico. Usually taking counterpoint rhythm and sometimes harmony to the melody are Cynthia Robinson (trumpet) and Jerry Martini (sax). This allows Freddie Stone, on guitar, Rosie Stone on electric piano, and Sly Stone on organ to work out, trade around, hammer out and improvise on whatever melodies they can create. Their music is like speed—you are filled with energy and a desire to be moving, swaying, dancing.
The group is mixed, both in color and in sex with two white and five black and two female and five male. It is no secret after hearing "Stand!" that Sly will not be popular with militants of either race. But it is also clear his music is packed with what he thinks should be done. There is a complete statement in "Everyday People": "There is a yellow one that won't accept the black one that won't accept the red one that won't accept the white one." "Makes no difference what group I'm in. I am everyday people." "We got to live together."
Or try one song which says, "Don't call me nigger, whitey. Don't call me whitey, nigger."
"Stand!" "Stand for the things you know are right. It's the truth that the truth makes them so uptight."
AAUP poll reveals student attitudes toward student control, military at KU
Members of the student affairs committee of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), last night attempted to provide tentative answers to such questions as:
- Why should we care about student attitudes?
- Are we prepared to act on student recommendations, or will we do so out of fear of the consequences?
- Will we be content merely to know what student attitudes are, or will we try to discover the reasons behind their opinions?
- Are we willing to respect students as reasonable and rational beings?
These questions and their answers were of vital concern at the AAUP meeting as tentative results of a student attitude survey were discussed.
The meeting, held at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Forum Room, was turned over to members of the student affairs committee which conducted the survey.
Chairman of the project, Arthur Skidmore, assistant professor of philosophy, made preliminary remarks and distributed copies of test results which were tabulated last night.
Skidmore explained that the results of the questionnaire were only partially completed and limited most of his remarks to sections of the survey which dealt with student participation in University administration and with the University and its role in society.
Skidmore was primarily concerned with the interpretation of survey results. He explained that the committee did not want to correlate the results of the survey with the opinions of the entire student body.
"The survey," he said, "was completed by about 60 per cent of the students who received it. The participants were selected at random—every 20th name in the spring student directory was sent a questionnaire. But while this is a representative number of students, the committee has made no effort to date to compare these student's opinions with those of every student."
He pointed out that such efforts would be made in the future, based on distribution of graduate students and undergraduates, of male and female students and of the differences in residences. But the committee is concerned at the present time with the numerical results and with the formulation of tentative analyses, he added.
Skidmore continued by examining particular questions and making "reasonable
Bubblegummers, attention! If you liked "Yummy Yummy" and the rest of those gooey sticky sickeningly sweet songs, you can find a new star in Tommy Roe. His latest album, "Dizzy," has just been released by ABC (ABCS-683, stereo). It's so goody-goody it's disgusting. This album will make you sick—just as anything else which is too sugary and sweet.
May 2
1969 KANSAN 5
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Of primary concern to the committee were questions dealing with student control or power over administration. Skidmore pointed out that the survey indicated a marked difference between the control students have at the present time and the influence they thought student government should have. But he added that most participants indicated that students should be given a little more influence; only five persons reported a desire for complete student control.
The influences with which the survey was concerned were in the areas of selection and retention of faculty, with requirements for graduation, with decisions concerning curriculum and course offerings, with course organization and content, and with long-range University policy.
APPLICATIONS
COLLEGE BOWL COMMITTEE
A second area of concern to the committee was the political atmosphere of the students. Skidmore declined to speculate about the significance of the survey results, but pointed out "an interesting dichotomy" in student political opinions.
of 1969-1970
are now being accepted in the College Office, 206 Strong.
APPLICATION DEADLINE
conjectures” about their significance.
5:00 p.m., Wed., May 7
For further information Call Darrel Reed, VI 3-8454
The questions Skidmore cited were on recent issues with ROTC courses on campus,with military technology research on campus and with the role of the University as a "center for radical reform of society."
"We don't know what the results of this unprecedented (Continued to page 12)
"The definite majority of students approved of military technology research and with continuing ROTC courses on campus," Skidmore said. "And the majority of students disagreed with the idea of the University as a center for radical reform. At the same time, those with opposite opinions were not merely a handful; they constituted a significant minority."
(Continued to page 12)
He added that the results indicated a necessity to hear the "significant minority" if any actions were considered on the basis of the survey.
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Jayhawks venturing to Illinois
After three straight weekends on the relay circuit, KU's powerful track squad retooks this week for a Saturday dual against Southern Illinois at Carbondale.
Coach Bob Timmons will take a 28-man squad to Southern Illinois for the Jayhawks' final tuneup ahead of the Big Eight championships at Ames, Iowa, May 16-17.
Ron Jessie, one of the Jayhawks most versatile performers, will miss the Southern Illinois dual in order to play in the Kansas spring football game the same day. Jessie, a leading candidate for the tailback position, has been dividing time this spring between the football practice field and the track.
Jessie long jumped 26.4½ (wind) and ran the high hurdles in 13.9 this spring while also running with some of the KU sprint relay teams.
While competing in only four meets this spring, Jayhawk athletes have surpassed five school records and tied one in individual events and broken three others in relays.
The new individual record-holders: 100-yard dash, Mickey Mathews, 9.3; pole vault, Bob Steinhoff, 16-6; shot put, Karl Salb, 66-6¼; discus, Doug Knop, 189-8½; hammer, Bill Penny, 176-0; long jump, Stan Whitley, 26-0½ (tied record).
In the relay events the following teams set school records:
440-40.3, George Byers,
Mickey Mathews, Stan Whitley
and Julio Meade.
880-1:23.3, Mickey Mathews,
Jim Hatcher, Randy Julian, and
Julio Meade.
Distance Medley-9:33.0, Jim Neihouse, Randy Julian, Thorn Bigley and Jim Ryun.
Versatile Ron Jessie 'psyched' for football
By PHYLLIS JONES Kansan Sports Special
Always a step behind George Byers and a fraction of an inch behind Stan Whitley, Ron Jessie holds the No. 2 spot in two different track events.
But, the versatile athlete from El Central (Calif.) Junior College is working for the No. 1 tailback position on the football team.
Although he attended junior college on a basketball scholarship, Jessie, Yuma, Ariz., junior, was also a member of the football and track teams.
"I gave up basketball because I'm too short," the 6-foot-1 tailback said, "But, I like both football and track. I enjoy traveling with the track team, and football is where the money is."
Bypassing scholarship offers from UCLA and USC, Jessie came to KU second semester of 1968 on a football scholarship.
He received offers from both the football and track teams with the understanding that he would perform in both sports.
Although he participated in spring football practices last year, Jessie was redshirted this fall because he did not have enough hours to be eligible. Also, he did not run track.
This track season, however Jessie has given both Byers 60-yard high hurdles world champion, and Whitley, long jump king a scare. Both hurdlers have often been clocked at the same time. In the Kansas Relays, the 1-2 duo ran the 120-yard high hurdles in 13.9, the best time this year for both. Jessie holds the NCAA indoor long jump title with a $25^{\prime} 2\frac{1}{2}"$ jump, and was second to Whitley in two straight meets.
Two days a week, Jessie does not practice for track, but attends spring football practice to learn the plays. He will not attend the dual track meet with Southern Illinois University this weekend, because he will play in the annual spring football game.
Mizzou series this weekend
he does not enter pro ball, he plans to coach at a high school or junior college.
Referring to Ben Olison, who was hired earlier this year as KU's first black assistant coach, Jessie commented, "There has been a slight breakthrough, but still that's just one."
KANSAN Sports
Having had no previous experience playing under a black coach either in high school or in junior college, Jessie said "I dig it. I think it is important for a university to have a black coach. The black athlete needs someone of his color with the same background to understand the problems he faces as a human as well as an athlete."
"I don't believe I would get many coaching offers from universities," Jessie said.
KU's hopes still flicker for a first-division Big Eight baseball finish-the first since 1964.
An athlete who plays two sports is no longer a novelty,but one such as Jessie who excels in three is still a rarity.
This feeling of identification extends to the pom-pon squad. "I feel personally represented by a black pom-pon girl," Jessie said.
But the Jayhawks must battle Missouri's formidable Tigers this weekend at Columbia, then return home next weekend for a three-game set with potent Oklahoma State.
Coach Floyd Temple's squad, 4-6 in conference play, has much ground to cover in order to catch co-leaders Oklahoma (9-3) and Oklahoma State. Missouri (7-3), in the race to catch the clay country entries, and Kansas State (4-4) also ranks ahead of KU.
KU and Mizzou play a single game today and complete the series with a doubleheader tomorrow. Missing from the Jayhawk lineup will be first baseman John Riggins, who joined spring football practice Monday.
Lefthander Richard Slicker,
6 KANSAN May 2 1969
NEED TUTORING FOR WESTERN CIV? 4 Sessions 21/2 Hrs. a Session 1 Dollar An Hour Call VI 2-5206 for Information After 5:00 George Waterman, Instructor
After graduation, Jessie hopes to play professional football. If
pacing the Kansas pitching staff with a 4-1 record and 1.95 earned-run average, will toil in one of Saturday's games. Temple has not decided among Randy Stroup (1-3), Dave Robisch (2-2), and Corky Ullom (1-1) for his other starters.
This Weekend!
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PRODUCED BY HALROON
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...WITH A WILD SELECTION OF
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THE Commonwealth
"MOVIE" MARQUEE!
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in a JERRY GERSHWIN ELLIOTT KASTNER Production
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A UNIVERSAL RELEASE TECHNICOLOR*
NOW! 7:20-9:05
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CLIFF ROBERTSON as CHARLY
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The story of Zhivago —
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Matinee Showing
Sat. & Sun. 2:00
Eve. 8:00
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"'Therese and Isabelle' will be the most talked-about movie around.'
Matinee—2:30 Daily
Evening—7:15-9:15
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"Therese AND Isabelle"
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DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
Marlon / Richard
Brando / Boone
in a JERRY GERSHWIN ELLOTT KASTNER Production
The Night Of The
Following DAY
THE Commonwealth "MOVIE" MARQUEE!
THE Commonwealth
"MOVIE" MARQUEE!
Marlon / Richard
Brando / Boone
in a JERRY GERSHWIN ELLIOTT KASTNER Production
The Night Of The
Following DAY R
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE TECHNICOLOR*
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Marlon / Richard Brando / Boone in a JERRY GERSHWIN ELLIOTT KASTNER Production The Night Of The Following DAY A UNIVERSAL RELEASE TECHNICOLOR*
"Academy Award Nomination
"Best Actor"
CLIFF ROBERTSON AS
CHARLY
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TECHNICOLOR TECHNISCOPE
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
NOW! 7:15 - 9:15
Academy Award Nominatio
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Sat. & Sun. 2:25
DOCTOR ZHIVAGO
Matinee Showing
Sat. & Sun. 2:00
Eve. 8:00
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-578B
DOCTOR
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Matinee Showing
Sat. & Sun. 2:00
Eve. 8:00
Granada
THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-5788
The story of Zhivago —
his love for his wife and tender Lara...told
against the flaming background of revolution
DOCTOR
ZHIVAGO
Matinee Showing
Sat. & Sun. 2:00
Eve. 8:00
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
"'Therese and Isabelle'
will be the most
talked-about movie
around."
Matinee—2:30 Daily
Evening—7:15-9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
"Therese
AND
Isabelle"
A Love Story
PERSONS
UNDER 18
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ADMITTED
100
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Evening—7:15-9:15
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... A Love Story
Varsity
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PERSONS UNION IN CAN NOT BE ADMITTED
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Sports briefs
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'Greaseball' charge made
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Houston manager Harry Walker
accused Cincinnati pitcher Jim
Maloney of throwing a
"greaseball" to accomplish his
10-0 no-hitter over the Astros
Wednesday night.
"It was that greaseball," said Walker after the game. "If he throws that thing as well as he did tonight, he'll throw another no-hitter before the season is out."
KSU center to Phoenix
PHOENIX (UPI) - The Phoenix Suns of the National Basketball Association have signed Gene Williams of Kansas State in the hope he can provide rebound power.
Williams, the Suns' second draft choice, played center for K-State but will be used at forward. Contract terms for the 6-6. 226-pounder were not disclosed.
The Suns outbid Louisville of the American Basketball League for Williams' services.
Shoemaker out of Derby
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) — Bill Shoemaker's future as a jockey appears in doubt after his second major injury in less than 16 months knocked him out of Saturday's Kentucky Derby.
The 37-year-old famed rider, who returned to racing in February after a 13-month layoff because of a broken leg, suffered a fractured pelvis and injuries to his bladder Wednesday in a freak paddock accident at Hollywood Park.
Shoemaker will be sidelined at least six months, according to track physician Dr. T. H. Haller, and there was speculation that the 20-year veteran had ridden his last race.
Bingo with San Diego
TULSA (UPI) — Basketball ace Bobby 'Bingo' Smith has signed a contract with the San Diego Rockets and will leave the University of Tulsa June 1 to join the team.
May 2
1969 KANSAN 7
Johnny Bench 'shook' during Maloney's gem
CINCINNATI (UPI)—Johnny Bench's fingers were shaking so much Jim Maloney had trouble picking up the sign.
"I just figured Johnny was nervous," Maloney said. "So I didn't bother to call time to ask him what was the matter."
"Look at Maloney," said Reds' pitching coach Harvey Haddix. "He probably was the most relaxed player out there on the field."
No-hitters are getting to be old hat for the 28-year-old righthander. He pitched the second one of his career Wednesday night by blanking the Houston Astros, 10-0, at Crosley Field.
Mob scene
It looked like the beginning of a wild free-for-all as teammates mobbed Maloney after he struck out Astro third baseman Doug Rader for the final out of the game.
"I ducked when I saw Bench was going to jump right into my arms," Maloney said. "There was no way I was going to catch him, not with all that catcher's equipment on him."
"You should have seen Maloney's wife sitting there behind the backstop," said the Reds' Fred Whitfield. "Fron the seventh inning on, you would have thought Carolyn was riding a horse, the way she was rocking back and forth in her seat."
Since the Reds had just returned from San Francisco it was 3:30 Wednesday morning before Maloney got to bed.
"I'm not superstitious though," said Maloney. "You can bet I won't go to bed at 3 o'clock in the morning before I make my next start."
Painful finish
Maloney had experienced pain in his groin area with every pitch in the ninth inning.
"He pulled a muscle scoring from second after he doubled in the ninth," explained Red trainer Bill Cooper.
Third base coach Vern Benson had given Maloney the "holdup" sign. "I didn't want him sliding into the catch and getting hurt," he said.
"I saw Benson's signal," Maloney said, "but I just threw it into overdrive and kept running. That's when I felt something grab me."
Catcher John Edwards' looping fly to left field, which rookie shortstop Darrel Chaney plucked out of the air, was the closest the Astros came to a base hit. Chaney grabbed the fly in a spectacular, somersaulting, catch.
"It was the first no hitter I've ever seen," said a still-trembling Chaney after the game.
"Maloney was a complete pitcher tonight," said Haddix.
Coach's praise
We Have The HERO
We Have The HERO
The Hole in the Wall Delicatessen is here—serving the Fabulous HERO, reubens, and roast beef, salami, turkey and ham sandwiches. Salads and desserts, too!
Coming: Pickles in a Barrel.
DELIVERIES
6-12 p.m. daily
VI 3-7685
THE HOLE IN THE WALL
9th & Illinois Jayhawk Food Mart
"He mixed his pitches well and that sidearm stuff he dealt them really was effective."
JOHNNY BENCH
Cincinnati Catcher
THE HOLE IN THE WALL IN THE
Only two fly balls were hit to the outfield as Maloney notched his third straight victory, striking out 13 and walking five.
The Reds backed up his no-hit pitching with a nine-hit attack paced by Bob Tolan, whose triple and two singles drove home four runs.
C
Tolan's triple came with the bases loaded during a seven-run fourth inning. Chaney delivered the other big blow—a two-run bases-loaded single.
??GETTING MARRIED??
If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To
MEADOWBROOK
15th and Crestline
Phone VI 2-4200
PRE-MED SENIORS!
Seiler Instrument-Company
St. Louis introduces the
1969 Swift Binocular Microscope
- meets med-school requirements
- a quality buy around $450
Also available: Zeiss and Lietz
Contact Barry Wood, Campus Representative VI 3-3677
DO YOU
HAVE A
QUESTION
ABOUT
CLOTHES
STORAGE-
?
ASK US ABOUT STORING YOUR WINTER CLOTHES.
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
Phone 1029
VI 3-3711 New Hamp.
9TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS
WeaverS Inc.
Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857
WeaverS Inc.
SUNGLASS EXTRAVAGANZA!
Saturday, May 3rd, Attend Our SUNGLASS SPECIAL SHOWING
by Mr. Al Kohlman, Representative of one of America's Foremost Sunglass Representatives
- Imported from France & Italy
- Metal Frames
- Color Tinted Lenses
- Aviator Styles
- Tortoise Frames
- Big Round Shapes
- Big Square Shapes
- Flip-Out Changeable Lenses
E
Match your mood-or create a new one. Choose several pair. Every style is exciting . . . expressive . . . and fashion-right. Have an expert help you Saturday in your selection!
Notions----1st Floor
$3.00 to $5.00
11 2
Remembering the plays
Al Jakobcic, light jersey, tackles Lynn Dickey, Kansas State quarterback, during KU-K-State football game.
KU football tackle boasts unique family background
By LINDA BROWNING
Kansan Staff Writer
Besides remembering football plays while going to school, Al Jakobiec, Upland, Calif., junior, right defensive tackle for the KU football team, has the added task of remembering the full names of his eight-member family.
That doesn't sound bad until you consider that three Korean sisters and two Irish brothers don't have names that are easy to remember. Try his 12-year-old sister Suk He Rhee, or 10-year-old Mrong Ok Choi or 16-year-old Song Me Sooh for a real mouthful!
Interest aroused
A visit to the Jakobecic home reveals a joyful, close-knit family. Brothers and sisters, children and parents have closed the artificial boundaries of geography.
After, her first son, Al, was born Mrs. Jakobcic could have no more children. Stories in the newspapers aroused her interest in adopting a Korean youngster. Harry Holt, the Oregon businessman who spent the later years of his life helping to relocate Korean orphans, also excited their interest although their first adoption was made through the National Catholic Welfare Conference, the California State Department of Social Welfare and the State Department.
Mrs. Jakobicb stressed it was not difficult to adopt two oriental children, but when it came to the third girl, trouble began. It seemed adoption authorities prefer only two youngsters go to one family. Since the Jakobics already had three boys, they expressed desire that their family might be equally balanced as to girls and boys. The authorities acceded to their request.
An aircraft mechanic in the small California city, Rudolph
May 2
1969
8 KANSAN
Alexander's
★ flowers
★ bridal registry
bridal registry
★ weekend specials
★ www.irishfriends.com
very unique & selec gift items, French,
Early American,
Mediterranean,
& oriental gifts
Jakobic says he loves all the children equally. The boys get along nicely with the girls, who incidentally, are not related.
The oldest Korean can easily converse in her native tongue, whereas the two younger girls speak only English. The younger duo handles the language like natives. The older girl is learning the language.
V12-1320
826 Iowa
Patti, who is 12, was the first of the Korean youngsters to arrive. She was.almost two when the Jakobiccs welcomed her to the family. Her presence created such a feeling of family joy that they then adopted Lin, now 7. It took an act of Congress before Judy, now 16 could be secured into the family.
★ 10% discount on cash & carry
VL2 1320 826 Iowa
The brothers and sisters in the family act like most brothers and sisters, according to testimony by Al. The boys like to treat their sisters as younger sisters should be treated. On the other hand, they are willing to protect the girls against any threats from the outside.
Normal family
The nationality variety doesn't start with the adopted children because Mrs. Jakobcic is part Irish and part Cherokee Indian.
The young ladies have developed different hobbies and tastes. Patti enjoys music, especially singing, and takes ballet lessons. Lin, oddly enough, likes to climb poles. And Judy plays piano and sews.
Would the Jakobies like to undo it all? In no manner of
Nationality variety
thinking. Actually, they have applied for an additional Korean boy, John Han, and expect his arrival before the end of the year.
Certainly the Jakobcics are not an ordinary family. There is a unit conceived of unselfishness, the love for the less fortunate and the realization that all men, not only are created equal and free, but that they need love, kindiness and affection as well.
Anyway, they should be looked at in a manner of speaking. The Jakobcics are something special.
For
Complete
Automobile
Insurance
Gene Doane
Agency
824 Mass. St.
VI 3-3012
1234567890
Jakobcics: a unique family
P RZ3 2
$ \textcircled{2} $VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, IND.
Volkswagen brings you an exciting old idea.
We don't expect a standing ovation.
But we do think our belated automatic transmission* deserves at least a smattering of applause.
After all, it does let you drive without shifting and still get up to 25 miles per gal. (You know what ravenous appetites other automatics have.)
It does have the fewest moving parts of any 3-speed automatic. (You know how depressing transmission repair bills can be.)
It does offer you the lightest, most compact 3-speed automatic transmission you can buy. (You know how an automatic can take the oomph out of a car.)
And where can you find our latest triumph?
In the Volkswagen Squareback Sedan and the Volkswagen Fetchback Sedan.
Now do you feel
like applauding?
Thank you,
thank you very much.
sel
*Optional
JERRY ALLEN MOTORS, Inc.
SALES—SERVICE—PARTS
2522 Iowa
W
VI 3-2200
AUTHORIZED DEALER
THE CHOICE
FREESHIP
STUDENT TREAT
-a crispy, saucy fish sandwich and crunchy French fries that pleases every student.
9th & Iowa St
The IN HAIR from
Burger Chef!
BURGER
CHEF
HAMBURGERS
Leather is profitable
By RICHARD MURPHY Kansan Staff Writer
MARK HARRISON
Primarily Leather is a place where you can purchase JC shoes, $25 leather vests, and leather belts, and leather watchbands, and even leather coasters.
Photo by Mike Rieke
And while you're browsing you can listen to Bob Dylan or just watch skilled hands make their unique product.
Primarily Leather, 812 Massachusetts, is the only store of its kind between Chicago and Denver. Stop by and you'll discover that a pair of quality sandals takes two hours to make, but you'll probably have to wait two weeks for delivery.
Mark Shelton, Prairie Village senior and owner of Primarily Leather estimated he's had orders for 500 pairs of sandals since January.
Successful cobbler
Shelton said in the last two months he's spent 12 hours a day in the shop because of the rush. "I guess you could say business is good," he said.
Developing an interest in leather products is something that happened spontaneously, Shelton said. "I met a guy out in California a few years ago who showed me what to do and tools to buy and from that day on I've been making sandals."
Mark Shelton, Prairie Village senior, hammers on sandal straps.
Shelton added he received so many requests for sandals from friends that he decided it could be profitable. "The store has been real successful," he said.
Kent Flury, Overland Park sophomore and Kent Benjamin, Wichita and former KU student both work with Shelton and agree the hours are long, but the pay is good. "I work 60 to 70 hours a week," Benjamin said, "but I enjoy the work because it's skillful and I'm working with people I like."
May 2
1969 KANSAN 9
The sandal-making process starts when the customer wanders in and requests a certain
style, Shelton explained. "We immediately draw an outline of both feet on paper and make sure the base of the sandal covers the foot perfectly."
the base is a heavy latigo cowhide. The rest of the sandal
is a softer type of leather which is fastened to the base according to the style the customer selected. "All the work is done by hand," Shelton said, "except for the initial cutting of the base, which is a machine cut."
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES
at
College Hill Manor
1741 West 19th
VI 3-8220
THE
UNIVERSITY
OF KANSAS THEATRE
AND
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
present
A. MIDSUMMER
NIGHT'S DREAM
AN OPERA
BY BENJAMIN BRITTEN
APRIL 25, 26
MAY 2, 3
2 p.m. to Midnight — north on Mass. — at junction of 24-40 & 50
Open Daily
TGIF
Noon 12 - 6 p.m.
75c a pitcher
Sat. afternoon blast
band—no cover
Curtain 8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall Main Stage
Murphy Hall Box Office Hours 10-12,1-5 Telephone UN 4-3982
TEE PEE
SAT. AFTERNOON
BLAST
Drink and dance to the
hard rock sound of
THE TIDE
2-4 p.m.
SAT. NIGHT features a 6 piece
soul and blues group
THE SINCERES
8 p.m. - midnight
Don't miss out on the "in" place—the TEE PEE
MARQUIS
1. Wow! What is it?
MOTOR
Python LTD. Fully equipped.
2. What happened to your Viper Mark IV?
A person holding a computer mouse while another person is seated behind them.
I just couldn't identify with that car.
VWJT
NKK
3. That's what you said about the Sidewinder Eight.
When you see a great buy coming your way, you have to grab it.
1. Don't you think you ought to hold onto a car more than a month, Chet?
But a Python is something else. Four-on-the floor, six-barrel carb, console tach...and what a steal!
SANDAH
5. That's what I did yesterday—signed up for Living Insurance from Equitable. At my age the cost is low, and I get solid protection now that will continue to cover my family later when I get married. Plus a nice nest egg when I retire.
With the right set of wheels, you'll go a long way.
For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment.
THE EQUITABLE
The Equitable Life Insurance Society of the United States 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019
An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F $\textcircled{1}$ Equitable 1698
A title on the door means rainwater on the floor
By RICHARD MURPHY
Kansan Staff Writer
Assistant instructors in practically every academic field are starving for departmental space to prepare for classes, counsel students and work for their own seminars.
Lindley Annex is the departmental office for 105 assistant instructors of English. The annex is approximately 100 by 70 feet. There is no air conditioning, only two phones and the floor is covered with an inch of water every time it rains.
Roy Gridley, associate professor of English, said only full professors are entitled to their own office but added that
some departments still can't provide individual offices for them.
Gridley mentioned that Wescoe Hall, the mythical 25-story building to be built across Jayhawk Boulevard from Strong Hall would probably be able to take care of the office shortage, "but, as you can see, not much progress thus far."
One assistant instructor commented that he never goes near Lindley Annex except to contact another instructor. "I really have no complaints," he said, "because I just don't know what it's like to have my own office."
English is not the only department starving for office
space. Assistant instructors of political science are crammed together on the fourth floor of Blake Hall-four or five in an office originally meant for one-making a private student-teacher discussion impossible.
Student-teacher discussions are also difficult in Carruth-O'Leary Hall which houses instructors and professors of English, Spanish, French, and German.
For assistant instructors of classical languages, Gridley said, there is no office space available. "Assistant instructors in the area," he said, "usually end up using another professor's office while he is teaching a class."
THOMAS L. MORGAN
Private offices
Photo by Halina Pawl
Office spaces, such as the ones in Lindley Hall Annex for English assistant instructors which are shown above, are the bases of appeals made by many KU instructors.
Police' testimony is favorable for Harrison trial's defendants
WICHITA (UPI) Two prosecution rebuttal witnesses surprised a Sedgwick County district court yesterday by offering character witness testimony for several of nine Negroes charged with robbery and extortion.
10 KANSAN May 2 1969
Testimony in the model cities trial was in its 27th day.
Both witnesses, Lawrence Gray and Robert Watson, are Kansas City police officers attached to the Police Community Relations Division.
County Atty. Keith Sanborn had called the officers to Wichita in hopes of proving a link between one of the defendants, Fred Johnson, and racial
disturbance in Kansas City, Kan., last summer.
But, according to testimony today by both officers, Johnson was instrumental in averting potential riot situations on several occasions. Gray further testified that Johnson is well-known and respected in the Kansas City area for his efforts to bring black and white communities together.
Cary Audrey
Grant Hepburn
are partners
in danger
and delight...
when they play
Charade
A STANLEY DONEN Production
co starring
Walter Matthau
James Coburn
Music - HENRY MANGINI
Screenplay by PETER STONE Produced and Directed by STANLEY DONEN
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE - TECHNICOLOR*
are partners in danger and delight... when they play
Charade
A STANLEY DONEN Production
OF
ONE OF THE
ENTERTAINMENT
ALL-TIME GREATS
THIS WEEKEND
MOVIE
SUA POP FILM
Fri, Sat, Sun----7 & 9:30 DYCHE AUDITORIUM
Admission
50c
March & Rally For The PRESIDIO "27"
in Kansas City — Sat., May 3
For Rides or Information
Call VI 2-7372
SERFS
---
THE SERFS
JEAN LOUIS BURNS
Get the Serfs New Album on Capitol, Available at Kieff's in the Malls.
Featuring MIKE FINNIGAN FRI. & SAT. — MAY 2-3 RED DOG INN Coming
May 16 - The Fabulous Flippers May 21 - The Ike & Tina Turner Review Advanced Ticket Sales at the Red Dog Office 9-5
STATE
BASS SUNJUNS
Rugged man-tailored sandals in a sunburst of styles.
From the makers of Bass Weejsm®
Bass
Bass
$10.95
$12.95
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
Bass
$10.95
$12.95
Arensberg's
=Shoes
819 Mass. VI 3-3470
Arensberg's
=Shoes
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
international Daily Kannan are offered to
all students and are colored to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
SALE
Revised, comprehensive third Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduft's Campus Madhouse.
1241 Oread. 5-14
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts
many styles of leather watchbands
just for your wrist and watch. Starting
at $3.812 Mass-5.
For Sale: SANDALS—This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
'65 Corvette, After 5 p.m. Call VI 5-2183.
5-6
New Apartment size refrigerators—white or copper only $99.00 at Ray Stoneback's (open Mon. & Thurs. Nites). Ideal for study rooms & dens.
G.E. Hair Dryers Reduced! 3 Heat plus cool in carrying case reduced to $10.99—plus you get a free rain wear outfit from G.E.—See Ray Stoneback's. Down town—open Mon. & Thurs.
Eves. 5-7
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE. TGIF with 75c pitchers. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
Hofner Beatle Bass with hard shell case. Both in good condition, $200 or will trade for a small cycle. Call John, 842-9940. 5-2
1964 Corvair Monza, 4-speed sport coupe. Positraction with cruise control and new tires. If interested call Berg Keshian. V2-1-2000. 5-2
Rare 1962 Mini-Cooper Woody Station Wagon, $485; also 1964 Mini-Cooper prepared for gymkhana, $595; also 1965 Mini-Cooper 's', $895; V3-2-2740.
Honda 50 1966. Excellent condition.
Honda 50 1967. Excellent condition.
e. $125. Call 844-6502. S-5
e. $125. Call 844-6502. S-5
1959 Chevrolet Belair. Radio, power
adapter. Good aesthetic. White whites-
5. Call 842-302-900
1964 Rambler Station Wagon, 6 cyl-
inder stick, New w/w Tires, Radio,
Heater, Snow Tires, $550.00. Call
Norm, VI 2-4308. 5-5
100% human hair fall -extra long -
100% human hair fall -soft -
Contact Susan at VI 7-7445. S-5
'64 Ford station wagon, V-8, clean,
mechanically perfect. Vinyl seats,
stick shift. Very economical to run.
Sale price drive to appreciate,
$650, VI.3-7706
46 Mona convertible, 4-speed Per-
formant, out 33,000 actual milei
Call 843-5180
Dark blond frosted human hair wiglet. Worn very few times. In excellent condition. Cost $70 new. Will sell for much less. VI 3-8399. 5-5
1963 VW Bug—new engine, tires, and
other. Low mileage. One owner. Exterior
and interior perfect. Call Bail
V 4-3561-4561~2 p.m. VI 2-8968
For Sale: Super-Takumar F/ 4, 200
MM Lens. Virtually New and Unused.
Complete with Box, Case and Strap.
Call VI 2-6481. Evenings. 5-6
1965 Volks—some body damage—needs minor engine repair. Must sell fast. $300 or take best offer. Dave Owen, VI 2-2160. 5-6
Honda 90. Inexpensive transportation
tenure. Call Alison T.
NTI 3-7600. S-6-
Artificial flowers for every occasion.
Paper, Straw, Antique. Bouquets de-
paper, Straw, Antiqued. Bouquets de-
paper. JAN'S FLOWER 'N GIFT
SHO—a division of Hillebrand's
5-7
For Sale: Must sell 1960 MGA. In good mechanical condition with much re-
work done on it. Call Rick. VI 3-7337 5 wkdays. 1. Sat. & All. Sun.
2013
Minnie Pearls
"COUNTRY-FIED"
CHICKEN
1730 West 23rd VI 3-8200
FREE Delivery over $5.00
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street
Shoe Repair For Your Repairs,
Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
Shoe Shines, One color .50
8:00-5:00
105 E. 8th
Closed Saturday at Noon
Two color.75
Just arrived—Factory fresh
TC 120 to Jamie Chambrer
Nichols Suzuki
"The Motorcycle Men"
Lowland Park Highlands
300 W. 6th 842-0504
SUZUKI
For Sale: 1965 Honda 90, 4,000 mi.
Mike Mires: 843-204-9777
Call Mike: 843-204-9777
5-7
Stereo AM-FM cartridge for auto tape
Bargain BASEmage
$25. VI 2-7843
1961 Cadillac Sed De Ville, 66,000 actual miles and less, electric win-
tle window, seat belt, seal excellent condition, inside and out $895.00. Call VI 3-0638 or UN I 3-5454.
SALE: Tables, Dinette Set, Walnut Chairs, 5-Drawer Dresser, Oak Desks, Stereo Equipment, Miscellaneous. Be-
tween 1. After 5 P.M. 4-Premier Tennessee, Apt. A. 5-7
1980 Triumph motorcycle. T-120 Bom-
bear, recently rebuilt.
GVI I_2-0004. 5-5
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. B, Bar-B-Q--outdoor pit, rib slab to go $;3.25; Rib order,
$1.55; Rib sandwich, 90c; chicken;
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $.75; Hours.
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tt
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Delicatessen in Jayne a. Brennan and in both 8 a.m. to midnight daily, too to midnight Sundays. Delivery service daily 6 p.m. to midnight.
PRIMARILY LEATHER - Vests, bags,
handmade at 812 Mass. 5-15
handmade at 812 Mass. 5-15
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest,
machine, or on a computer. Erasor,
sharper copies; faster service.
Unsurpassed results for theses, papers,
and typesetter. Typewriter, 70-
Mass. VI 3-3644. 78
SCRATCH AND DENT SALE, we have several 1969 stereos that have slightly blemished cabinets and are greatly used. We offer a 40%. Prices start at $99.95. Easy formamegm arranged in our store. WHITE SEWING CENTER, 916 Mass.
Art Sale: Indian Tie-Dies & Batiks
Mon., Tues, Wed., April 28, 29, 30
Fri, Sat, May 2. 3, 1242 Louisiana
1-5 p.m. 5-2
The TEE PEE has been remodeled:
Bands on weekends, TGIF with 75c pitches each Friday from noon to 6 p.m.
5-14
RAY AUDIO
your new AR-DYNACO DEALER
offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory audits and repairs for AR, RABOX, SHERWOOD and FISHER. (3-month service warranty). G44 for prompt service Hillcrest Shopping Center (Afternoon or Evening). 5-9
PILOTS—Blue sky, wind calm, economy flying in Optocap Club's 3 planes. Only four resalable shares left at $35. Phone 842-1124 after six.
LAWRENCE OPTOCAP, INC.
Box 382, Lawrence, Kans. 5-5
For
Plywood, Moulding Plaster,
Shelving Material
Come to
LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER
VI 3-0931
1011 N. 3rd
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. If you really believe that you can find a better job this summer, call Dave Wright, V 2-7888 between 6:00 and 9:00 with other Jayhawkers and 5,000 men for the South-Western Company. Last summer's average profit per day = $32.11. We'll interview you and you
offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox, Shopood and (3) Samsung i.e. warranty). Call VI 1-2944 for prompt service. Hillcrest Shopping Center (Afternoon & Evening). 5-9
RAY AUDIO
your new AR-DYNACO DEALER
Notice: Wisconsin girls camp needs:
water ski, water ballet, gymnastics,
and diving instructors—experience
necessary. Call VI 2-1340. Rm. 629. 5-15
—$32.11. We'll interview you and you can interview us.
5-7
This weekend Bend Scalet sings "Back
Drums and Things." Mike doing
"Drums and Things."
The Pawn Shop
Starting 8:00
Fri. and Sat. Night
75 per person
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
CARRIER after 5 p.m. VI 2-1409, 5-14
Carrier after 5 p.m. VI 2-1409, 5-14
TYPING
Peaceful demonstration in K.C. for
matters of sexual harassment.
math, or ride; call VI 7-3722 5-2
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 edit4 by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall VI. vii 2873.
Theses, themes, papers in English,
French, transliterated Russian—typed
on MEM. Seletric by experienced
literary typist. Call Ms. Harwell, 842-
5298.
TYPING: EXPERIENCED in typing thesis, term papers, all kinds of written material. Type Fast, efficient service. Phone VI 3-9554. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist will give fast, acc.
experience in typing and researching.
Thesis: VI C1 3-02885 5-8
Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type reports, term papers. VI 3-7207. Mrs. Mattila.
Typing: Theses and Term Papers.
Electric Typewriter
Mary A. Wolken
1712 Alabama
University
Now renting for summer, University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates, air-conditioning, carpetting, and pool. Call for appointment, 842-1296 for University Terrace and 843-1433 for Old Mill. 5-2
FOR RENT
GRAVITT'S NATIONAL
AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY
we'll do it for you
Bring it in, we'll do it for you
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
926 Mass.
VI 3-0501
- Reweavina
For the best in:
Complete lines of cosmetics toiletries
New York Cleaners
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
- Oils and Acrylics
- Decoupage Materials
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
3 locations to serve your every need
- Stretcher Frames
Raney Drug Stores
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
THE CONCORD SHOP
Charge Account and Bankmark Services
844 E.13th
McConnell Lumber
VI 3-3877
L
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
GALERIE
Now renting for summer, small studio
measures nicely furnished, utilities paid,
private parking 1½ blocks from Uni-
ces, available immediately. Phone
V3-855-3420.
Nice 2 bedroom house, $120.00, for rent near KU, shopping and schools. Also room for girl graduate student. VI 2-3229. 5-5
PETITE
Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS, 1741 West 19th. Contact Glen or Kaye Drake at apartment B-5, VI 3-8220. 5-2
Furnished summer place, available for 2 or 1 person. Call VV 28228 after 5:00. 5-5
Earl's
WANTED
LOW SUMMER RATES
The KU student at the TEE PEE.
Free pitcher's given away nightly 5-14
Free pitchers given away nightly 5-14
Renting for summer and fall semesters. Rooms & apts. ½ block from Union from $25 to $150. Special summer rates. Call VTI 3-7271 for 4-5
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Presidio march peaceful; reenactment draws many
(Continued from page 1) demonstrators stream from around a building.
Waving the peace sign as they filed past the Military Science Building, the demonstrators reached their destination at Wescoe Hole where the campus "mutiny" was staged.
After the "mutiny," Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and student body president, commended the committee on its action.
"KU students are no longer interested in parties only, but also in presidential campaigns. They are no longer interested in going out and drinking, but in going into ghettos and programs like the New Jersey Project," Awbrey said.
Awbrey urged all those present to recommit themselves by showing up at the 1:30 p.m. Saturday march.
The march will begin at the
Federal Building in Kansas City, Mo., and will be joined by student groups from other area colleges and universities, said Ted Steiner. St. Louis junior and coordinator of the Committee for the 27.
Steiner said the group is demonstrating to inform people about the alleged unjust treatment of the Presidio 27; and to demand congressional action in three areas:
AAUP polls KU students
(Continued from page 5)
(Continued from page 5) survey will be," said Howard Baumgartel, professor of psychology and committee member. "We can look to the famous Webb survey on living conditions in early industrial England which brought unknown conditions to light.
"We can only speculate about the results and what, if any, effects they will have on University policy. But we must credit student opinion and try to make some necessary improvements or changes in the future."
Student opinions on the survey ranged from ideas on student government to general student satisfaction with classes, extracurricular activities and professors at KU. Some asked about student satisfaction with political and social climates on campus; others were concerned with student evaluation of the classroom atmosphere.
12 KANSAN May 2 1969
Both Baumgartel and Skidmore emphasized the purpose of last night's "interim report." Skidmore, said the committee wanted students and faculty to be aware of test results and any implications from them that might arise. But he added that the committee would not attempt to evaluate the results, or to make value judgments and correlations until much later.
"There are many difficulties with preparing and evaluating such a survey," Skidmore said. "There are such theoretical obstacles as the differences between expressed and real attitudes. What is an attitude? How is it measured? These are questions which must be answered to make the survey relevant.
- Drop the charges, reverse the convictions and grant administrative discharges for the men.
- Investigation into the death of Pvt. Bunch, of the Presidio stockade and of all military prisons.
"We must further be sure that the subject is allowed to answer the questions without bias from outside sources. We must maintain anonimity, we must insure non-coercion," he said.
- Reforms of military judicial processes.
"If demonstrations are necessary," said William Balfour, dean of student affairs, "I think this is the kind we should have."
Weather
The U.S. Weather Bureau today predicts clear to partly cloudy skies today and tonight. Southerly winds 10 to 20 mph today. High lower 80s. Low tonight mid 50s. Tomorrow partly cloudy to cloudy and mild. Precipitation probability. Today 10 per cent. Tonight and tomorrow 20 per cent.
ISP confusion
(Continued from page 1)
name-calling. The meeting broke up, elections were rescheduled for a later date and diZerega and George both described the atmosphere of the meeting as "disgusting."
Late Wednesday night, Bill Hansen, Kansas City first year law student, resigned from ISP. Hansen had been elected to Senex that night. When asked why he had resigned, he said, "no comment."
By the time of yesterday's ISP reorganizational meeting, ISP's future was uncertain.
The meeting began with a statement by George as acting president, saying he was opposed to the thoroughly pragmatic politics which seemed to be influencing ISP through the last week. He ended by asking that next year's ISP be more open to influences from its members.
George opened the floor to a discussion of idealism versus pragmatism and a flurry of discussion followed.
Scott Nunley, Ashland, Ky., graduate student and ISP worker, said he thought idealism was valuable as a source of energy, ideology as a set of goals and pragmatism as the method to achieve the goals.
Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior and student body vice-president, said the ISP
campaign had been run by idealism and against pragmatism. She said she thought any confusion was ridiculous.
After arguments endeea,
Awbrey arose to restate his
affiliation with ISP and to
thereby deny any fears
concerning dissassociation.
Nominations were then opened for chairman of the party. Although in a state of division, members agreed that a president who could act as mediator had to be elected.
John Berthrong, Norman, Okla., senior, was nominated and elected by acclamation. Berthrong said election by acclamation demonstrated support. He immediately asked to adjourn the meeting to allow for a cooling-off period before other ISP elections.
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Fortas says no bribe
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Arab leaders talk
CAIRO — Jordan's King Hussein today met with Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser to discuss the coordination of efforts against the Israelis. The Egyptian defense budget for the coming year was reported to be the highest ever.
Israeli military spokesmen said their aircraft hit an Arab guerrilla base yesterday between Elath and the Dead Sea near the Jordanian-Israeli border and reported that all planes involved in the raid returned safely.
Call for leftist unity
PARIS — Feuding leftists today called for party unity in next month's presidential election to seek a successor to Charles de Gaulle or face sure defeat and a possible first-ballot victory for Georges Pompidou.
"The only force that can beat Georges Pompidou is a rallying of all leftist forces," said Francois Mitterrand, a leading leftist who almost beat De Gaulle for the presidency in 1965.
Illness strikes 12 on jet
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A woman tourist died and 12 other Americans were stricken with food poisoning yesterday while aboard a trans-Pacific jet returning from a "Cherry Blossom Tour" of the Orient.
The Northwest Orient flight from Tokyo was scheduled to land in Seattle.
(Continued to page 12)
'Life' says he took $20,000
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Fortas issued a highly unusual statement in response to a claim by Life Magazine that he accepted, then later returned, a check for $20,000 from the Wolfson Family foundation in 1966. Wolfson is now serving a one-year federal prison sentence for stock manipulation after the Supreme Court refused to hear his appeal with Fortas abstaining.
Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas acknowledged yesterday he was offered a fee by a family foundation involving imprisoned financier Louis Wolfson but declared he returned it without rendering services of any kind.
The Supreme Court justice made no specific mention of the $20,000 check but he said that since joining the Court, "I have not accepted any fee or emolument from Mr. Wolfson or the Wolfson Family Foundation or any related person or group."
The Life Magazine article said nearly a year elapsed between the time the $20,000 Wolfson
Foundation check was drawn from a Jacksonville, Fla., bank and the date a check to that amount was returned.
Justice Department aware
The Justice Department said it "is aware of the contents of the article . . . and currently has the matter under consideration." There was no official amplification of this.
Fortas said that before joining
the Court he had discussed with Wolfson the work of the Foundation in developing harmonious racial and religious relations "an area in which I have had a continuous interest apart from my official judicial or legal functions."
The statement then recounted this sequel: "In 1966, in the hope that I would find the time and could undertake, consistent with my court obligations, research functions, studies and writings connected with the work of the foundations, the Wolson family foundation tendered a fee to me.
"Concluding that I could not undertake the assignment, I returned the fee with my thanks. At no time did I have any reason to believe, nor do I now believe, that the tender of the fee was motivated by or involved any hope or expectation that it would induce me to intervene or make representations on Mr. Wolfson's behalf."
Disqualified himself
Fortas declined to meet personally with newsmen and a court spokesman said no comment outside the statement would be forthcoming. The associate justice whose promotion to be chief justice was blocked by the Senate last year came to his chambers in the Supreme Court Building to write out the statement.
"In accordance with general judicial practice, I disqualify myself in cases which come to my attention concerning former clients or associates," he concluded.
One of the things the Justice Department would have to consider (Continued to page 12)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.124
Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, May 5, 1969
N.J. project finished
By RICHARD LOUV
Kansan Staff Writer
A blonde college girl swung a black child in a slow arc and the child laughed. The child's tired father sat on the edge of a rejuvenated porch and smiled. It had been a long two days, but his house had a new face, and that, of course, was a good thing.
What is important about any social project like the New Jersey Street Project, is not so much the material end, but the reaction from people of a neighborhood. And the reaction to the college students that have spent the last five weekends painting and building on New Jersey Street was a good reaction. The people of that street think of
the students not as do-gooders, but as saints.
Residents helped
Like the man who had a new porch, most of the residents worked alongside the students. Some were not able to help.
"This one old woman watched Frank Zilm dig a driveway for her," one of the workers remembered, "and she was out there after Frank left till 5:30. She couldn't believe she had a driveway. She just stood there looking at it."
"I couldn't believe I dug it," Zilm said, wiping his face, forgetting that he had paint on his hand.
An old man and his wife were sitting on lawn chairs across the street. They sat in front of a stainless concrete box-house, built
for economy, and watched the students work.
The old man looked up and laughed. "Never seen anything like it. We're having fun just watching it," he said. His wife smiled and pointed across the street. "Yes ...," she said, and then dropped her hand back in her lap and remained silent.
Born out of an "advocacy planning" class; Architecture 98, The New Jersey Street project developed in cooperation with the Ballard Center in Lawrence.
Advocacy planning
"Advocacy planning is when you ask the residents what they need and want, then you attack the problems from that angle," Zilm said.
Leonard Harrison, Ballard (Continued to page 7)
Madison riots erupt again
The latest outbreak of rioting followed eight hours of police attempts to clear streets where defiant young people tried again to hold an illegal street dance.
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) — Rock throwing youths clashed for the second night yesterday along the edge of the University of Wisconsin campus with riot-helded police, who responded with clouds of tear gas.
During the daylight hours yesterday there was jeering and 40 arrests but no serious clashes. But at sundown, a group of youths overturned a car and police unleashed tear gas to clear the area around it.
The defiant youths responded with showers of bricks and rocks. Police replied with more tear gas barrages, sending the street dancers fleeing and gasing a number of passing motorists.
Aldermen arrested yesterday
Among those arrested yesterday were two Madison alderman, including the only Negro on the City Council. The white alderman also was arrested Saturday night.
Saturday's violence began when police attempted to quiet a block party staged without a permit. It spread through an eight-block area adjoining the campus and continued for four hours.
During Saturday night's confrontation, there were at least
25 arrests. At least 29 persons, including 10 policemen, were treated at hospitals for injuries. Three newsmen were hit by rocks.
Police declined to estimate the number of university students among ths=700.
Charged against those arrested ranged from disorderly conduct and use of obscene language to resisting arrest. One person, James F. Richardson, 22, Perth Amboy, N.J., was charged with battery to an officer, a felony. Among those arrested was Paul Soglin, a university law student and Madison alderman.
Police asked quiet
The skirmish began after police (Continued to page 12)
PARKER BAY HOMES
Student involvement
A KU student helps repair a porch during the New Jersey Street clean-up project. The project, jointly sponsored by the School of Architecture and Urban Design and the Ballard Community Center, ended yesterday.
'Pregnancy', 'nerves' are possible
Shacking brings serious problems
(Editor's Note: This is the last of a series of four articles dealing with the problems of shacking up at KU.)
By SUSAN FOHRMAN Kansan Staff Writer
Unwanted pregnancies, abortions, and emotional problems are some of the side-effects of living together, KU doctors say.
Pregnancy is one of the primary problems of shacking-up. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, said as many as six to eight pregnant, unwed women in a single week have come to the hospital seeking help.
He said the hospital tries to make some kind of social arrangement for these individuals. Some are planning to get married,Schwegler said,and for these women the hospital can give prenatal care up to the time of delivery.
The babies are usually adopted by persons connected with the University, such as professors and their families. The woman's identity is kept confidential, he said, and the bills are usually paid by the adopting family, Schwegler said.
For those women who aren't getting married, he said, the hospital will try to find an obstetrician in a distant city and, when the baby is born, will help with adoption procedures.
Mental problems
There are a considerable number of abortions, he said, but added that no one knows how many. He said hospital officials try with limited success to dissuade women from criminal abortions because of the high risk involved.
This is the least desirable way to solve the problem, he said, because it is illegal and can cause serious mental and physical disturbances. Sterility and, in some case, death are possible results of illegal abortions, Schwegler explained.
Schwegler said the request for birth control pills are few, and added that unmarried women should go to the public health department to get them.
He said the hospital does not willingly administer the pills to unmarried women but will give them to women just prior to marriage. Many women, he said, probably lie to receive them but added that they cannot receive refills unless they are married.
He explained that the public health department will issue birth control pills to a woman, with no questions. All she need do is apply.
Board notifies KU protesters
Donald Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior, William Berkowitz, New York senior, and Richard Atkinson, Belleville, senior have been sent notices to appear before the University Discipline Board (UDB), announced Russell N. Bradt, professor of mathematics and faculty member of the UDB.
During that demonstration a fire extinguisher was used on the second floor of Strong to spray students and election workers in the rotunda.
The students will appear to answer charges arising out of the April 23 campus demonstration in Strong Hall, the Military Science Building, and the Kansas Union.
2 KANSAN May 5 1969
But, he said, there is more than simply an individual's
physical health involved in coed living-many students also find they are emotionally disturbed as a result of it.
Psychiatric counseling
Sydney Schroeder, director of mental health at Watkins Hospital, said the hospital sees not more then half a dozen cases a year in which a pregnant, unmarried woman gets so upset that she need psychiatric counseling.
He explained that pregnant women usually work their problems out with the doctor or agency who is helping them through their pregnancy.
More common, he said, are cases in which individuals discard their old standards and begin living together. He said many soon discover they haven't lost their old system of values as completely as they had thought and, as a result, feel intensely guilty.
Schroeder said if one partner becomes shaken, he tends to disturb the other. He added that these people do not necessarily go to the hospital for help, but may talk to someone they trust, such as a minister, counselor or close friend.
He said that when students come to the hospital the staff tries to help them resolve their problems and the students are then allowed to go ahead and do as they please.
Pattern varies
He added that many discontinue living together but pointed out that the pattern varies from couple to couple.
The Rev. Donald Conrad,
lecturer in the school of religion,
said he did not see that living together before marriage contributed anything to a couple's relationship.
Mr. Conrad acknowledged the fact that two consenting individuals "can do anything under the sun," but added that there are "some things a person can value more highly when the time comes."
The Rev. Ronald L. Sundbye, pastor of the First United Methodist Church, echoed Mr. Conrad's statements.
Rev, Sundbye called himself a traditionalist. He explained that he believes the commitment of marriage causes love and sex to be more fully expressed and beautifully experienced.
Religious views
He added that the depth of meaning which can come from such a relationship is much greater in a fulfilling marriage.
A priest at St. John's Catholic Church also felt that a couple must have some kind of
commitment to live up to. He said that if a couple is just living together there is no commitment.
He added that this type of a relationship could lead to a complete breakdown of morals and in the obligations of marriage.
The physical, mental and moral problems in coed living are many, and those who live together should realize the possible consequences, the experts seem to say.
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Volunteers needed for clinic
A 100 per cent increase in patient load this year has brought an increased need for receptionists, social workers and nurses, at the Lawrence Planned Parenthood Association clinic Mrs. Aldon Bell, association member, said yesterday.
Students and faculty who will volunteer to work at the clinic should attend a training workshop beginning at 9:30 a.m. June 14, Mrs.Bell said.
Danny Cox to appear in concert
Student Union Activities (SUA) will sponsor a concert featuring Danny Cox, a folksinger who commonly appears at the Vanguard Coffee House in Kansas City, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Concert tickets are $1 and may be purchased at the door or at the SUA office in the Kansas Union, said Bob Johnson, Prairie Village sophomore and chairman of the Danny Cox committee.
Cox has recorded one album entitled "Sunny," Johnson said.
Sculpture seminar set
KU will hold its fourth annual "KU-in-Colorado Visual Arts Program" Aug. 4 to 16 at Elk Mountain Lodge in Crested Butte, Colo., the art department announced recently.
The sculpture seminar, to be headed by Elden C. Tefft, professor of design at KU, will be limited to 20. Enrollments must be sent to E. S. Avison of University Extension.
Cancer drive to begin
The kick-off breakfast of the Douglas County Cancer Crusade will be at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Eldridge Hotel in Lawrence, said Kelvin Hoover, Douglas County unit president.
"We want everyone of the organization members to attend this breakfast for instructions and to obtain materials that he will need to use in the drive," Hoover said.
Converted missionary to speak
Arthur Katz, plains states director for the American Board of Missions to the Jews, will speak on "Christianity-Cure-all or Cop-out" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Forum Room. In addition, he is the Interactive Christian Fellowship.
Katz's talk is sponsored by the Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship.
KU to honor poet's anniversary
The KU departments of English and Libraries will celebrate the 150th anniversary of the poet Walt Whitman, May 8, with three authorities on the poet taking part.
Charles E. Feinberg, Detroit, Mich., will present the Kenneth Spencer Library with an original proof set of one of Whitman's poems, "Out of the Cradle
May 5
1969 KANSAN 3
Endlessly Rocking."
Robert Duncan, a visiting KU professor from San Francisco and authority on Whitman, will give a reading of Whitman's poems at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Both men will then join Edward F. Grier, professor of English, for a program of lectures and reading at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Forum Room.
The entire gamut of contemporary musical forms will be represented in a lecture-recital on contemporary music for the voice at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Special displays in Watson and Spencer libraries will feature Whitman and his works.
Martha Bert, Newton graduate student, the recitalist, said styles would range "from the traditional to the electronic."
The concert is divided into two parts, "For Singer and Piano" and "For Singer and Tape Recorder."
Part one begins with "Five English Songs," by Vittorio Rieti, composed in 1949. The piece consists of poems by Shakespeare, Herrick and Sidney set to "traditional" music, Mrs. Bert said.
6:30 Thursday, May 8
Modern musical forms to be featured in concert
Centennial Room—Kansas Union
The third work, "Music for Singer," is chance music, freely improvised, with a text
"The Dying of the Light" is a Dylan Thomas poem set to music by Wallingford Riegger that makes free use of the twelve-tone row.
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determined by the letters in the recitalist's name, she said.
The second part of the concert begins with "In Memoriam," music by Emerson Myers to a poem by Wilfred Owen. Singing on-stage is accompanied by off-stage, tane-recorded speaking voices.
"Alleluia," by David Ahlstrom Mrs. Bert describes as "hippie-influenced music for meditation." During that composition, the
theater is blacked out, the singer sings off-stage right, an organist plays off-stage left, and a tape recorder plays from the back of the hall.
"Vision and Prayer," by Milton Babbitt, another setting of the poetry of Dylan Thomas, is the final work.
"This is serialized music from the Mark IV Synthesizer," she said.
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This way the new Norelco gets close enough to shave you as close or closer than a blade. As found
And you get a comfortable shave because the Norelca floating heads curve with your chin, bend with your neck, and even straighten out for
The new Norcelico has a hidden trimmer that pops out for sideburns, and a push button for easy flip-top cleaning. It also comes in a rechargeable model that gives almost twice as many shaves per charge as any other rechargeable.
your cheeks. Automatically. And without a nick, pull or scrape.
We can't see you changing the shape of your face.
But we can see you changing to Norelco.
Norelco you can't get any closer
©1969 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017
KANSAN Comment
Poor Kansas
This year's "fickle finger of fate" award goes to the voters of Kansas. These suckers—er, voters, were idealistic enough to think that a Republican legislature and a Democratic governor would be mature enough to cast aside partisanship for responsibility after the November election.
Having lost too many Democratic seats in the legislature the Democratic governor has no veto power and the Republican legislature, eager to remind him of this fact, proceeded to overrule every veto the governor tried to exercise during the 1968-69 session.
The people of Kansas voted the governor in by a sizeable plurality. He was elected on the basis of a fiscal platform
calling for a complete reform in the tax structure of the state. Lowering taxes is the only way a Democratic candidate can make it in Kansas. A Republican legislature was elected to vote "yes" on these reforms yet the whole session turned out to be nothing but a ping-pong game of partisanship on both sides.
The art of compromise apparently died in this session of the legislature. What this state needs most is a lobbyist for the people. He won't be found in Topeka.
The 1968-69 session of the Kansas legislature hath ended. Thus endeth one of the greatest political exercises in futility of the twentieth century-at the expense of the people of Kansas. (JKD)
Commemorate guns
The United States is bedecked with monuments-from one shining shore to the other, its citizens can hardly walk a straight line without tripping over a marker, museum or roadside sign.
However, our country lacks a commemorative placque to one of our greatest national heroes (a God, you might call it)—the Gun.
Our nation was founded on the firearm—at least, that's what the National Rifle Association would have us believe.
Ever since "the shot heard round the world" was fired, the United States has bowed down before the Gun as the protector, the aggressor and the virile symbol, and each generation has so taught its children.
So certainly it's disgraceful not to show outward public homage to something so dear to our hearts, traditions and our national way of life.
Perhaps a monument could be erected in Austin at the University of Dallas where Charles Whitman played executioner for a few hours atop a high tower and slayed 14 people.
Or perhaps to mark the spot of the slaying in Chicago of eight nurses, by Richard Speck, a shy social misfit who possibly saw the gun as a symbol of manhood—a symbol of belonging.
Of course, the monument could be placed almost anywhere in the cities of our
nation. Since Kansas City has lately been making its way into the big time of yearly murder ratios with a total of 108 murdered last year, most of these committed with firearms, the city might be a good candidate. The city's murder rate hasn't slackened with the new year and the chilling gunning down of an 18-year-old youth last week reaffirms Kansas City's right to a marker.
The unmentionable—deaths by guns in hunting accidents—could also vie for the honor of a monument. After all any man, woman, child, or presumably infant, in the United States has the right to shoot a gun at an animal (sometimes this includes the breed of homo sapiens). Whether he is unskilled, uncareful or unable, he has the inalienable right.
But perhaps it's unnecessary to erect a monument; our daily life with its constant reminders of the Gun cult might be sufficient. Our policemen-even those on the college campus-carry guns. Television is profuse in its adoration of the gun on western and spy stories. Our three-year-old children receive toy rifles for Christmas complete with instructions on how to kill victims.
And our legislature only gingerly passes gun-control laws, continuing to carefully avoid any criticism or complaint about the nationwide idolatry for the Great God Gun. (AMS)
Readers' write
To the Editor:
The Nixon administration's initial proposal for an anti-ballistic missile system precipitated widespread reappraisal of appropriations for the military. Many members of Congress, who recall past programs which resulted in vast wastes of money, now object to this program for it may result in the same thing. Their reservations about the expenditure, efficacy, and general desirability of the program have been successful in causing the administration to relinquish its original plan of an immense ABM shield for both people and missiles, and to replace it with a modified system for protection of missiles only, the Safeguard proposal. In addition, scientists have recently indicated that only research and development is advisable at this time; and this further opposition has brought forth the possibility that the Safeguard system may be again modified (though perhaps in name only).
Testimony of experts has asserted that the ABM system will not function as planned and that it will lead to a significant magnification of the arms race. Deployment of the Safeguard system will also result in the siphoning of billions of dollars away from essential and pressing domestic needs that we can ill afford to ignore.
Nothing can impress these facts on our legislators as effectively as strong petitions from respected academic institutions. We therefore urge you to editorialize to this end and to start a petition to be sent to your Senators and Representatives, as we already have done at William and Mary.
Our faculty and student peitions requesting that the Safeguard system not be deployed have received favorable, even enthusiastic, support here at William and Mary. In fact, interest in this issue has been so strong that we have recently expanded our efforts and are currently planning a public forum in which representatives of both sides will present their views. We are also planning a news release detailing the results of our petitions.
We hope that you will give serious consideration to our example and our suggestions. We will be pleased to assist you in any efforts you may make in presenting the ABM issue to your faculty and students, and we request that you contact us if you feel that we may be of any help.
J. Barry Cammarata
Douglas N. Chard Co-Chairmen, Ad Hoc Committee Department of Physics College of William and Mary Williamsburg, Virginia 23185
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mall subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Can. 60044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment are free. Membership required; creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Editor-in-Chief Executive Stain
Ron Yates
Business Manager Palm Flat
Edition Editors Steve Haynes, Robert Entriken Jr., Don
Westherman, Marla Babcock, Sandra Zahradek
News Editor Joanna Wiebe
Assistant News Editor Tom Weinberg
District Editors Judith K. Diebolt, Alison Steimel, Bob Kearney
Sports Editor Jey Thomas
Assistant Sports Editor Marilyn Petterson
Feature and Society Editor Susan Brimacombe
Photo and Graphics Editor Linda Greene
Arts and Reviews Editor Bob Butler
Copy Chiefs Ruth Rademacher, Judy Dague, Linda Loyd,
Donna Shrake, John Grabbe
Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Assistant Business Manager Gary O'Neal
National Advertising John Neale
Promotional Advertising Jerry Bottenfield
Classified Advertising Patty Murphy
Circulation Todd Smith
1. Which character is depicted in the image?
I KNOW EXACTLY WHAT ILL LOOK LIKE FORTY YEARS FROM NOW.
I'LL LOOK LIKE THIS.
AND ILL HAVE PAINS IN MY BACK AND SHORTNESS OF BREATH.
AND I'LL SMOKE TOO MUCH AND HAVE A DRINKING PROBLEM.
AND ILL HAVE A SON-
WHO'LL GROW UP TO LOOK JUST LIKE ME-
WHO I WONT BE ABLE TO GET THROUGH TO-
AND WHOLL ALWAYS SIDE WITH HIS MOTHER AGAINST ME.
AND ILL SECRETLY WISH HED NEVER BEEN BORN.
WHATS THE MATTER SON?
I WAS PLAYING "LIFE" AND SCARED MYSELF.
A老人
I will guess the text is a child's drawing of a character with a large head and small body, wearing glasses. The character is looking upward with a curious expression.
D. D. D.
Dr. Publishers Hall Studio 1999
A cartoon character wearing glasses and a turtleneck is walking forward.
Praying
10
I WAS PLAYING
"LIFE" AND SCARED
MYSELF.
Peace signs prominent in KC march
Hundreds in march for 27
RICHARD LOUV
Kansan Staff Writer
It was a field day for the patriots. They called themselves patriots, singing "America the
of windows and waved at the marchers who were chanting, "Free the 27." They passed a billboard advertisement for America, "the promised land."
Then they began to sing "We Shall Overcome." An old man
FREE
the
27
MY B
MILITARY
"JUSTICE SUCKS"
THIS
MILITARY
JUSTICE
?
not
mutiny
Photo by Mike Frederick
Iowa farm boy and dog
Brian Bauerle, Harlan, Iowa, junior (center), his dog, and students from KU and other area colleges approach the Liberty Memorial in Kansas City during a march in support of the "Presidio 27." The march began at the Federal Building.
stepped out of a bar. "Looks like a red-neck," someone said. But the old man raised his fingers high in a peace sign, and then turned and yelled inside the door, "Come on out Earl. There's people marching."
Another man shook his head and mimicked the words of the song, then frowned and went back inside the bar.
People rolled down their car windows to take leaflets telling about the Presidio 27. A crippled man in a motorized wheelchair watched from the other side of a bridge, stared at his hands for a moment, then accelerated the machine and followed the parade.
The marchers passed the Kansas City Star building and chanted, "Free the 27; take notes Star."
Up the long hill to Liberty Memorial. A television cameraman appeared on a high wall. "If my father sees me on television I don't get any more money," someone said, and the people laughed.
The bell tolled
As they trudged around a long curve in the sun, a bell tolled somewhere. The marchers silenced themselves and someone smiled and said, "The Liberty Bell, it's the Liberty Bell." The group was quiet for a few moments, and then they hit the stretch of grass in front of the memorial, and some took off their shoes and walked in the grass. They began to laugh again.
★★★★★
"Three years ago in this town we would have been yelled at the whole distance. Cars would have honked at us all the way up the hill." Barrish said, "but things are changing. This country is turning around."
Photo by Mike Frederick
'We are the real Americans'
The demonstrators carried an American flag with them on their march through downtown Kansas City. This view was taken from behind the flag toward the leaders of the group.
The protesters settled themselves on the stairs around the memorial as two of the marchers carefully folded the American flag they had carried. The man in the electric wheelchair stopped on the outskirts of the group and listened.
Then it was over. The people began to separate, leaving in cars, or walking back down the long hill to where the march began, many blocks away. The man in the wheelchair was dodging the cars, making his way down the street, away from the Liberty Memorial.
Beautiful," and the saddest song of all. "We Shall Overcome."
They sang and marched and sweat their way up the Kansas City street Saturday afternoon toward Liberty Memorial. There they would protest the sentencing of 27 prisoners of the Presidio Stockade who were tried for mutiny after the prisoners staged a sitdown strike. The strike had followed the killing of a prisoner.
Mostly students and teachers from KU and St. Mary College in Leavenworth, the group totaled only about three hundred persons, far short of the thousand that leaders had estimated.
At the beginning of the march the crowd was uneasy. It had only been a few months since a few of the group had marched in Leavenworth, where at least four of the Presidio 27 are now imprisoned. In that march, the people lining the streets had barrassed the protesters.
March on the street
"No. March on the street. Stay away from the pedestrians," he said. The uneasiness remained as the marchers began their long walk along 13th Street, below the tallest city hall in the world, from which they had obtained a parade permit.
Someone asked Jay Barrish, Lawrence graduate student, if the marchers could walk on the sidewalk instead of the street, since there were so few present.
People in passing cars smiled and waved peace signs at the marchers, and after a while the marchers themselves began to have a good time.
They found the reaction to be different from what they expected.
No one was there to line the streets, but spectators hung out
May 5 KANSAN 5
1969
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Jessie puts on show in spring scrimmage
Ron Jessie hung up his spikes Saturday afternoon — his track spikes that is—and put on his football cleats to run brilliantly for 163 yards forcing many a Jayhawk football fan to let his memory wander back to relive the twisting, lightening - quick scoring plays of the great Gale Sayers.
In his first performance on the gridiron as a member of Pepper Rodgers' Big Blue, the 175-pound hurdler-long jump
KANSAN Sports
scored one touchdown, carried 17 times for nearly 10 yards a jaunt, and clearly led the offense to a one-sided performance over the defense in KU's spring football scrimmage.
Under Pepper Rodgers' system for scoring the offense topped the defense 52-30, although only three touchdowns were scored. For each time the offense moved the ball 15 yards they earned a point. The defense scored for such things as recovering fumbles, intercepting passes, and stopping the offense.
The game was divided into three 25-minute sessions. In the first period the offense jumped ahead 18-7, maintained their lead with a come-from-behind 20-12 win, in the second and sparked by the running strength of Jessie and John Riggins mounted a 14-11 victory in the final stanza.
Although Jessie was spectacular in his first showing as a Jayhawk, Big John blasted away at the opposing line with his usual authority. Riggins, who has been moonlighting on the baseball diamond for Floyd Temple's nine, ground out 92 yards in 16 carries to show that the powerhouse from Centralia would be bringing back the punch from the fullback position that gained him national recognition as a sophomore.
6 KANSAN May 5 1969
The quarterback spot, drained by the absence of Bobby Douglass, was filled by senior Jimmy Ettinger who fashioned a combination of poise and sound passing to calm some of the threats of inadequacy which have come up concerning the field general's spot.
Ettinger hit 9 of 18 passes for 192 yards, including a scoring
play to Willie Amison good for 70 yards.
Behind Ettinger was the familiar jersey No. 10 that Douglass made famous only this time the big southpaw calling the signals was Phil Basler, sophomore-to-be from Truman high in Independence, Mo. Basler attempted only four passes, but directed the running game with great success, and showed power himself crunching out 26 yards on the ground.
The game's defensive hero was safety George McGowan. Switching back from last year's post at split end the backfield star intercepted the game's only pass, recovered one of the two fumbles, and helped out on 12 of the day's tackles. Others having good days for the defensive unit were linebackers Emery Hicks, Kenny Page, and Steve Roach, end Larry Brown, and safety Skip James.
Standings
American League
National League
East
W L Pct. GB
Baltimore 20 8 714
Washington 16 11 593 $3_{1/2}$
Boston 14 11 583 4
Detroit 11 14 458 7
New York 11 15 423 8
Cleveland 11 15 143 13$^{1/2}$
| | W | L | Pct. | Gb |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Minnesota | 16 | 7 | 696 | — |
| Oakland | 14 | 10 | 583 | 2¹/₄ |
| Kansas City | 14 | 11 | 542 | 3⁵/₆ |
| Chicago | 8 | 11 | 421 | 1 |
| California | 8 | 13 | 381 | 7 |
| Seattle | 8 | 15 | 348 | 8 |
Sunday's Results
| East W | W | L | Pct. | GB |
|---|
| Chicago | 19 | 9 | 1 | .667 | |
| Pittsburgh | 15 | 10 | .600 | 2 | 1 |
| Philadelphia | 11 | 11 | .500 | 4 | 1 |
| Arkansas | 11 | 11 | .440 | 6 | 1 |
| St. Louis | 10 | 15 | .400 | 7 | 1 |
| Montreal | 9 | 15 | .375 | 71 | 1 |
Sunday's Results
Boston 4 Detroit 2, 11 innings
Belmont 5 New York 3-2
Washington 4 Clemson 2-3
Minnesota 4 Chicago 3
Kansas City 15 California 4
Seattle 6-Oakland 4-1
West W L Pct. GB
Atlanta 17 8 680
San Francisco 15 10 .600 2
Los Angeles 15 10 .600 2
Houston 12 15 .429 615
Houston 12 8 286 1015
Sunday's Results
**Sunday's Results**
New York Chicago 2-2
Cincinnati 1 1-2 2-0
Montreal 6 Pittsburgh 4
Atlanta 4 Los Angeles 1
Philadelphia 5 St. Louis 0
Houston 3 San Francisco 1
Our Bride of the Week:
1976
Miss Janet Renko
Miss Janet Renko's marriage to Mr. Mike Rasmussen takes place June 14. Miss Renko has chosen "English Renaissance" china by Royal Doulton, "Richmond" crystal by Fostoria and "Madrigal" silver by Lunt.
Yes, it's quite correct to list your preferences in our popular Bridal Registry. Wedding guests appreciate the suggestions we can give, the assurance that it is something you truly want, and there's no worry about duplications.
If you've said "yes," come in and select your sterling, china and crystal. We're glad to help you coordinate your complete table trousseau. Then be sure pattern names are listed at least six weeks before the wedding. Thoughtful brides are in our Bridal Registry!
China Sterling Silver Crystal
Castleton Royal-
Doulton Heirloom Lenox Rosenthal
Lenox Wallace Orrefors Josair
Rosenthal Oxford-
Bone International Corcoran Pasco
Pasco Flintridge Lunt Fostoria Tiffin
Ray Christian
809 Mass. JEWELERS VI 3-5432
Ray Christian
Kansas record spree sparks track victory
Kansas tuned up for the Big Eight Outdoor Championships later this month by running Southern Illinois off their own track 101-40 Saturday in Carbondale.
The defending outdoor champions set four McAndrew Stadium records on their way to 13 firsts in the 17 events.
Weightmen Karl Salb and Doug Knop set the record pace. Salb put the shot 67"½" for one mark while Knop hurled the discus 186" 3/4" for another.
In his longest race in over a year, Jim Ryun clocked the 3-mile in 13:29.3 for another Saluki track record.
KU's 440-yard relay team of George Byers, Mickey Matthews, Stan Whitley, and Julio Meade closed out the record assault by churning the quarter in 40 seconds flat.
Whitley was the meet's only double winner as he took the long jump with a leisurely 23'11" leap and the 220-yard dash with a 21.5 second time.
Hawks salvage one in diamond series
Kansas and Missouri split a doubleheader Friday but the Tigers came back to take Saturday's single game finale in a weekend baseball series in Columbia.
Dave Robisch pushed his season's record to 3 and 2 with a five-hit, 6-3 win in the nightcap of the twin-bill. Paul Womble's two-run triple highlighted a four-run KU third inning which provided the winning margin.
In the first game, MU jumped on Kansas starter Rich Slicker for six runs (four unearned) in the first two innings as Missouri powered its way to a 9-3 triumph. It was Slicker's second loss against four victories.
Saturday the Tigers bombed Corky Ullom and Roger Jackson for nine runs in the opening two frames, got one more in the fourth, and coasted to an easy 10-3 shellacking.
Kansas, now 5-8 in Big Eight conference play, returns home this Friday for a weekend series against defending champion and league-leading Oklahoma State. The Cowboys completed a three-game sweep of Nebraska with a 6-2 win in Stillwater Saturday and now stand 12-3 in league play, one game ahead of runner-up Oklahoma at 11-4.
---
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ALBUFEZ ALMIRAN CITY
New Jersey project finished
(Continued from page 1)
Center director, coordinated neighborhood opinion. Through the Ballard Center, the houses owned by outsiders, called "slum lords" by Zilm, were weeded out.
For the last five weekends the majority of volunteers have been recruited from outside the architecture class. One weekend 120 persons worked. This weekend there were less, with fifty persons working on the last weekend of the project. The advocacy planning class will expand into other projects over the summer and next year, Zilm said.
Reaction varies
There were people staring out of the windows of most of the houses. Some were sitting on porches, and one little girl with hair to her waist, one of the white members of the neighborhood, stared shyly from in back of a post on a cluttered porch.
Another child, a black girl, stood on the sidewalk with a broom.
"Gonna help. Gonna broom," she said. Then she staggered down the sidewalk with the cumbersome broom and tripped over it. A young woman came out of an untouched house and showed a one-dollar Japanese camera to a student.
"Do you know how to put film in this?"
"Yes," he said, and proceeded to ruin her film trying to load it. She sighed and looked up the street at the students. "They can't work on my house because I got an outside landlord. He might raise my rent if the house got fixed up."
"I ruined your film," he said. "Oh my, that's all right, I'll get new film. Not much of a house to take pictures of anyway." She went back into the leaning house.
Kool-aid for kindly
An old woman, who lived farther down New Jersey Street, opened her screen door and motioned with her hand.
"Come on in and have some cookies and Kool-aid."
Not listening, she laughed and pulled a young man into her house and pointed at a table. "Take all you want. I like students." Her husband walked out of a back room and smiled, staring into space. "He's blind," she said.
"I haven't been able to see in five years," said her husband, "She's filling me in on what's happening with all the kids working on the houses. They painted our house." He felt for a chair and sat down.
"When I could see, I never saw anything like this." He laughed to himself. "Never was anything like this. When I went to college it was a great thing if
Czechs remove eleven foreigners
PRAGUE (UPI) Three Americans and eight other foreigners have been expelled from Czechoslovakia in the past few days, the news agency CTK announced yesterday.
At least six of them were newsmen.
The 11 were identified as: Martin Bell, William Bagling and Erick Thieren, described as "British journalists and cameramen" working for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
George M. White, Christopher Ottenweller and Walter James Kelly, identified as U.S. citizens. No details on them were given.
Hennk Hovinga, Jaap van der Zwan and Piet Ter Laag, all Dutch television newsmen.
you mowed a lawn for someone. But to paint a house . . ." He shook his head. "To paint a whole house is really something."
May 5
1969 KANSAN 7
"They painted our house," the old woman said, "because we couldn't do it ourselves. They're going to leave us paint so I can paint the trim on the inside."
This has been the kind of reaction that most of the residents of New Jersey Street have had. They have helped when they could, like the tired man with the new porch. One weekend the women fixed a dinner for 120 students.
the corner of the house with a ladder. Zilm put his hand over his eyes, forgetting again about the paint.
As Pam Mathey, St Louis junior, said, just because sixteen houses have been redone doesn't mean the neighborhood has been improved. What is important is the interaction of the people, and their reaction to the project.
Interaction important
Someone was wiping the paint off Frank Zilm's face. The volunteers, many of them from the architecture class that originally planned the project, were loading a truck with unused construction materials. The day was over, and with it ended the New Jersey Street Project.
"There's still a girl on the roof, Lou," he said loudly.
Lou Fisher, Kansas City, Kansas senior, walked around
✩ ✩ ✩ ✩
"Well. I needed a ladder."
So he did, and the girl got down. After they finished loading the truck, the "saints" went marching home.
"Put the ladder back, Lou."
Danny Cox
Wed., May 7th
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Admission $1.00
Tickets available
at the
SUA office and
at the door.
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Slightly wet coed
Dozens of KU coeds gathered at Potter lake Friday for the annual Sigma Chi Derby Grab, which kicked off a weekend of "Derby Day" events. Some, like the one above, got a little wet during the traditional festivities.
Who's Whose
Pinnings
Susie Leckband, Salina junior majoring in secondary education, Alpha Delta Pi, to Ken Guest, Coffeyville junior majoring in chemistry, Sigma Nu.
Gamma Delta.
Linda Fairman, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore majoring in elementary education, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Randy Smith, Wichita sophomore, majoring in liberal arts and sciences, Phi
Maureen Meyers, Quincy, Ill., freshman majoring in business at Gem City College, to Jim Flesner, Quincy, Ill., sophomore majoring in fine arts.
Meredity Vincent, Kansas City, Mo., junior majoring in elementary education, Alpha Chi Omega, to Edward Stevenson, Shawnee Mission senior majoring in business, Lambda Chi.
Engagements
Kathy Richy, Erie junior majoring in elementary education, Alph Chi Omega, to Sp-4 Dusty Walker, Parsons, stationed in Bremerhaven, Germany.
Dianne Leone, Washington, D.C., junior majoring in education, to Darrel Corson, Paola senior majoring in
pharmacy.
Susan Taylor, Overland Park sophomore majoring in journalism, to Chip Rouse, Leawood senior majoring in journalism, Delta Chi.
8 KANSAN May 5 1969
Marilyn Sue Ross, Horton sophomore majoring in mathematics, Miller Scholarship Hall, to Arlen W. Harbaugh, Topeka sophomore majoring in physics, Pearson Scholarship Hall.
APPLICATIONS
for the
of 1969-1970
COLLEGE BOWL COMMITTEE
are now being accepted in the College Office, 206 Strong.
APPLICATION DEADLINE
5:00 p.m., Wed., May 7
For further information Call Darrel Reed, VI 3-8454
Mom laments criminal son
LAKE CHARLES, La. (UPI)
LAKE CHARLES, La. (UPI) — "He wasn't a bad criminal," said the mother of Robert Samuel Dent, 22, who was cut down by a Texas sheriff's buckshot blast after a 200-mile chase across South Texas. "He was an ex-convict but he was not a bad boy."
Mrs. Rose Dent attended her son's Roman Catholic funeral services yesterday along with Dent's wife, Ila Faye, 21, who
was with her husband at the time of his death.
The Dent couple took a highway patrolman, Kenneth Crone, as hostage in Port Arthur, Tex., and vowed they would not be taken alive. Authorities wanted Dent for a traffic violation.
"I'm leaving all of this up to God," Rose Dent said. "If my son were alive I would have gotten the truth about all of
this, but now, I don't know."
Ila Faye, who will be held in Beaumont, Tex., on armed robbery charges, attended the funeral under guard of Texas deputies. About 60 other persons also attended.
The Dents held Crone at gunpoint for six hours while a convoy of law officers, including a department of Public Service helicopter, sped after them
Would you pay a little something to get through your next language exam?
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Berlitz®
Practical language lessons
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the university shop announces its FIRST ANNUAL KU APPRECIATION WEEK
We have two major sales a year-one in February and one in June. Since most of our student and faculty customers are gone in June we are beginning an annual tradition of a KU APPRECIATION WEEK in May-before you leave for the summer.
This will be our way of saying "thanks" to KU people for giving us your support throughout the year. We appreciate YOU!
Check these SAVINGS on "In Season" items:
DRESS SHIRTS - short or long sleeve . . . 20% OFF
KNIT SHIRTS - one large group ... 20% OFF
✓ BERMUDAS - entire stock . . . . . . 20% OFF
SHOES - dress or sport - entire stock . . . 20% OFF
UNLINED JACKETS - entire stock . . . 20% OFF
√ PERMANENT PRESS PANTS-large group 20% OFF
PERMANENT PRESS PANTS-large group 20% OFF SPORTCOATS
✓ SPORTCOATS – one large group 20% OFF
✓ DRESS SLACKS – one large group . . . . . 20% OFF
DRESS SLACKS – one large group . . . 20% OFF SWIMYEAR
SWIMWEAR - entire stock . . . . . 20% OFF
✓ BELTS – dress or sport . 20% OFF
✓ RAINCOATS - newest short styles . . . . 20% OFF
ONE WEEK ONLY — SALE ENDS SATURDAY
the
university shop
MEN'S APPAREL
ON THE HILL
ACROSS FROM LINDLEY
UDK World News
By United Press International
--and seemingly innocent business offices and residences used by agents.
Defector reveals spy network
BONN, Germany — Reports of a Communist spy network involving agents in the United States swept West Germany yesterday. Government authorities announced that some arrests have been made but said the situation had been "grossly exaggerated."
The Hamburg newspaper Welt am Sonntag (Sunday World) identified a Soviet intelligence officer who defected to the West last month as Rupert Sigl, 44, and said he betrayed 250 "Soviet KGB officers, agents, sub-agents and cover addresses in West and East."
"Cover addresses" is spy parlance for post office boxes
Welt am Sonntag said Sigl, born in Austria, delivered "a trunkful of notebooks and secret documents" which led to the arrest of 25 persons. It said some arrests were made "among the chief agents in the United States," two of whom made "full confessions."
Partially confirmed
A spokesman for the West German prosecutor's office in Karlsruhe said a Soviet KGB officer named Rupert Sigl had defected to American intelligence agents in West Berlin in mid-April.
Sigl's revelations led to "less than 10 investigations of possible Soviet agents and fewer than that number have been arrested," The Karlruhe spokesman said. He said the bulk of the Welt am Sonntag story was "grossly exaggerated."
U. S. officials in West Berlin declined comment on the case and on the unmasking of two alleged Communist agents in the divided city, one of them a government official.
Communist coup
Meanwhile, the Communists had a coup of their own to crow about.
West German Army Maj. Hans-Joachim Kruse, a 44-year-old tactics instructor at the Hamburg officers academy, surfaced on East German television Saturday night more than a month after he disappeared.
Kruse, who had access to military secrets, said he had defected to East Germany because of the "growing influence" of the National Democratic Party in West Germany's armed forces. The party has been described as neo-Nazi by its critics.
USSR ready to stop China
LONDON Communist diplomats said yesterday the Soviet Union is preparing a combination of diplomatic and military moves in the Far East to contain Red China.
They said the Soviets are deeply disturbed about Peking's hostility toward Russia and "obsessed" with the alleged Chinese threat.
youngsters of the so-called cultural revolution movement?" the diplomats asked.
The Russians are now seeking some diplomatic arrangement whereby the issue may be settled.
PRE-MED SENIORS!
This anxiety, they indicated, lies behind the efforts of the Soviet Union to get talks started with Peking on the recent explosive frontier incidents on the Ussuri River.
- meets med-school requirements
This week Moscow made the third appeal to Peking for talks. The first two appeals remained unheeded. Peking merely told Moscow if it wants talks it must make formal diplomatic approaches and proposals to the regime of Mao Tse-tung.
May 5
1969 KANSAN 9
- a quality buy around $450
Also available Zeiss and Lietz
Military threat
The diplomats said Russia is, at least for the time being, far less concerned with any military threat from China, which in nuclear development still lags far behind the Soviet Union.
"Imagine, half a million or a
Wnat Moscow fears, they said, is the sheer weight of numbers of the Chinese side, and the potential pressure from unarmed masses against the Soviet borders.
1969 Swift Binocular Microscope
Blow Yourself To POSTER SIZE 2 ft. x 3 ft.
St. Louis introduces the
Harvey's
FASHION SHOES
A $25 value for $3.50
3 x 4 Ft. Bloo Up $7.50
Add $65 for 3 aids. ALL A珠. HE C.O.M.
Add local Sales Tax
Send Check or Money Order to:
PHOTO POSTER, lsc.
12 201 E.d. St., Dept. M-47
New York, N. Y. 10010
Douglas Inquiries Invited.
Contact Barry Wood, Campus Representative VI 3-3677
enany any Black and White or Color Photo.
from 2" x 4" to 10" x 10. We will send you a
2 ft. 4' BLO UP . . . Perfect POP-ART POSTER.
3 POSTER.
Seiler Instrument Company
Harvey's
TISHTY SHOES
Where You Always Save
802 W. 23rd Lawrence
20% Coed Discount on Frostings and Permanents CHANEL HAIR FASHIONS 10 E.9th VI 2-7900 No Appointment Necessary
million or more unarmed Chinese massing on a stretch of the Soviet border and crossing it, possibly to settle as squatters. What could Russia do? Could she shoot at unarmed people, or
rise
REGULAR
Bill says advertising only benefits big companies.
But who started aerosol shave cream? A small outfit,who backed a good idea with advertising.
Back in the '50's, a modest-sized company named Carter Products came up with something new: an aerosol push-button lather called RISE.
They didn't have much money for advertising-barely one-tenth of what the leading brushless shave cream was spending.
But that was enough. RISE was a hit.
Naturally, the big companies came back with their own aerosol brands. But the hotter competition got, the more people tried RISE. Today, RISE sells over 15 times what it did in its first year—thanks largely to all this advertising.
Maybe you, like Bill, think advertising favors big companies, raises prices, keeps unwanted products on the market. But ac
tual cases prove just the opposite. Advertising helps lower prices (look at color TV). Promotes new ideas (like RISE). Gives us a choice. Helps imaginative smaller companies compete (Volkswagen, for instance).
Interested? Write us. We'll gladly send you more facts about advertising. You'll find they speak for themselves.
In the meantime,keep an open mind.
ASSOCIATION OF INDUSTRIAL ADVERTISERS, 41 EAST 42nd STREET, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017.
AIA
NOTICE SALE!
Abral
Andi
CASINO DAYS
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
S
Rules of the House
1 select an armful of our merchandise and seek out a dealer (salesman)
2 have your items written up but not totaled
3 spin our Casino wheel to determine the discount you will receive, ranging from 10 to 50 percent
4 our entire stock is included, no aces are held up our sleeve, at least 10 percent off on our regular quality stock
5 refreshments and loud music also available
MISTER
MISTER GUY TRADITIONAL CLOTHERS
GUY
TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
920 MASSACHUSETTS
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
university Daily Kansas Journal offered
to students who want to regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread. 5-14
NOW ON SALE
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts
many styles of leather watchbands
just for your wrist and watch. Start-
ing at $3.812 Mass. 5-15
For Sale: SANDALS- This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
'65 Corvette, After 5 p.m. Call VI 3-
2183.
5-6
New Apartment size refrigerators—white or copper only $99.00 at Ray Stonebank's (open Mon., & TTh Nites); Ideal for study rooms and d-5
--offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox. Sherwood and Fisher -mon servo warranty CV. VI 914-8050 prompt service. Hillcrest Shopping Center (Afternoon & Evening). 5-9
G.E. Hair Dryers Reduced! 3 Heat plus cool in carrying case reduced to $10.99—plus you get a free rain wear out from G.F.E.—See Ray Stoneback's. Down town—open Mon. & Thurs.
Eves. 5-7
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE. TGIF with 75c pitchers. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
1959 Chevrolet Belair, Radio, power
charger. Good design. Good
call 842-3020. 5-5
Honda 50. 1966. Excellent condition.
Honda 50. 1968. Excellent condition.
$125. Call 443-6502. i-5-5
Call 443-6502. i-5-5
1964 Rambler Station Wagon, 6 cylinder stick, New w, w Tires, Radio Heater, Snow Tires, $550.00, Call Norm, VI F-2 4308. 5-5
100% human hair fall—extra long,
thin hair
Contact Susan at VI 7-2445. 5-5
'64 Ford station wagon, V-8, clean,
mechanically perfect. Vinyl seats,
must drive. No economical
Must see and drive to appreciate.
$650. VI 3-706. 5-5
64 Monza convertible, 4-speed Per-
formance, out 33,000 actual mph
Call 843-5180
Dark blond frosted human hair wiglet. Worn very few times. In excellent condition. Cost $70 new. Will sell for much less. VI 3-8399. 5-5
1963 VW Bug—engine, tires, and
other. Low mileage. One owner. Ex-
porior interior perfect. Call Di-
vine, VI 4-5861 after 5 p.m.
VI 2-9868. 5-5
For Sale: Super-Takumar F/ 4, 200 MM Lens. Virtually New and Unused. Complete with Box, Case and Strap. Call VI 2-6481. Evenings. 5-6
1965 Volks—some body damage—needs minor engine repair. Must sell fast. $300 or will take best offer. Dave Owen, VI 2-2160. 5-6
For Sale: Must sell 1960 MGA. In good mechanical condition with much recent work done on it. Call Riek, V. service 5 wkdys, 1. Sat. & day Sun. 5-46
Honda 90. Iexpensive transportation
to Cairns. Call Alison Matty
n, TY 3-7600.
SALE: Tables, Dinette Set, Walnut Chairs, 5-Drawer Dresser, Oak Desks, Dresser, Miscellaneous fore 1 A KR, after 5 P M. B14 Tennessee, Apt. A. M. 5-7
Artificial flowers for every occasion.
Feather, Burcap, Sisal, Waxed Tissue Paper, Straw, Antiqued, Bouquets delivered. JAN'S FLOWER 'N GIFT SHOP—a division of Hillecrest Billiards. 5-7
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa V1 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Minnie Pearls
"COUNTRY-FIED"
CHICKEN
SANTA
1730 West 23rd VI 1-8200
FREE Delivery over $5.00
GRAVITT'S
AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY
AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY Bring it in,
we'll do it for you
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
SUZUKI
Just arrived—Factory fresh
TC 120 "Cat" Moto-X Scramble
Nichols Suzuki
"The Thief's bicycle Men"
Lowest Prices—Highest Trades
300 W. 6th 842-0504
For Sale: 1965 Honda 90, 4,000 mL
Gail Mike; 843-204-2. 5-7
Stereo AM-FM cartridge for auto tape recorder. Bargain Basement $12.95 VI 7-2843
1961 Cadillac Sedan De Ville. 66,000 actual miles. PS and PB Electric win-
dows. Excellent condition, inside and out.
$895.00. Call VI 3-0638 or UN 4-3545.
1960 Triumph motorcycle. T-120 Bong
engine, recently rebuilt engine.
VI 2-0004
For Sale: Guitars for sale - Gibson "Les Paul Special." W. Hardshell case, $100. Fender "Mustang" 3/4 size, $250. Fender "Regal Classic" OK guitar w. new strings and case, $60. Call Steve Dexter, VI 3-7404 after 7 p.m. 5-7
Summer dresses, sizes 5, 14, and 15.
Sweater, size 45, long, 15-20.
Sweater, size 3-268. 5-7
In excellent condition, Van Dyke mobile home, 50 x 10, new wall-to-wall, Camberer's Trailer Pitcher south, supplies, on Louisiana. Call 5-30, 5-12 3-2699. **5-9**
For Sale--Four 14 "Mickey Thompson
mock-off-100 $100 Call at VI 3-8135
5-9
For Sale: WOLLENSAK tape recorder,
$20. Also, AIWA tape recorder, $70.
Also, good condition, good price.
Call Dave after 5:30 p.m. at 333 McCollium. I 2-6600. 5-9
Stereo component set, 40 watt, AM/ FM, solid state radio, professional speaker cabinet, walnut speaker cabinets, $169.85, Wiley Sewing Cabinet, 916 Mass. 5-9
'60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide
wheel. Good interior. Front wheels rebuilt. Tape deck out
optional, but not Included in $650 or
over. Good condition of care if Jeff
Meyers. VI 3-8185. - 0-14
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-R-Q -outdoor pit, rib slab to go; $3.25; Rib order;
$1.55; Rib sandwich, 90e; ¹³ chicken;
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $.75; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tt
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Delicatessen in Jayville, NJ 216-390-4800, 8 a.m. to midnight daily, noon to midnight Sundays. Delivery service daily 6 p.m. to midnight. ff
PRIMARILY LEATHER - Vests, bags,
handmade at 812 Mass. baskets, 5-15
handmade at 812 Mass.
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest.
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest.
Sharper copies; faster service. Unsurpassed results for theses, papers,
typesetter, Typewriter, Tape Mass. VI 3-3444. Tft
The TEE PEE has been remodeled! Bands on weekends, TGIF with 75c pitchers each Friday from noon to 6 p.m. 5-14
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grantland Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
Plywood, Moulding Plaster,
Shelving Material
Come to
Self Service SHOES
Pay-Less
1401 WEST 6th STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER
1011 N. 3rd VI 13-0931
For
HAROLD'S SERVICE 66
PILOTS - Blue sky, wind calm, economy flying in Optapoc Flybud Club's 3 planes. Only four resalable shares left at $35. Phone 842-1124 after six.
RAY AUDIO your new
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES: If you really believe that you can find a better job this summer, call Dave Krause at (312) 548-7000 or 6:30 p.m. about working with other Jayhawkers and 5,000 other college men for the South-Western Company. Last summer's average profit per day is $19,800. Interview you and can interview us. 5-9
LWRENCE OPTOCAP. INC.
Box 382, Lawrence, Kans. 5-5
Notice: Married Couple–Prefer 2nd or 3rd year students. Modern Home in town for help or with chores. Available in June. Rock Lodge Holstein Farm, 843-4839. 5-9
10% off on all Mother's Day gifts at the HODGE PODGE, 17 West 9th street. Hand-crafted pottery, glassware, sculpture, and sculpture at $15.00. 5-7
Notice: Wiseo.sin girls camp needs:
water ski, water ballet, gymnastics,
and diving instructors—experience
necessary. Call VI 2-1340. CMI 629. 5-5
TYPING
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
PAPER after 5 p.m. VI 2-1409, 5-14
*Currier after 5 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, cell 842-6516. TF
FREE DRINK ON DELIVERY
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873.
Theses, themes, papers in English,
French, transliterated Russian—typed
Melton. *Electronic* by experience
literate typist. Call Mrs. Harwell, 842-
5298.
your new AR-DYNACO DEALER
Typing: Theses and Term Papers.
Electric Typewriter
Mary A. Olken
1712 Alabama
VI 3-1522
5-
TYPING: EXPERIENCED in typing thesis, term papers, all kinds of written material in a variety of write-
written media type. Fast, efficient service. Phone III 9-3545. Mrs. Wright.
FOR RENT
Experienced typist will give fast, acco-
perated reports, papers, theses. Call VI 3-0288. 5-8
Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type reports, term papers. VI 3-7207. Mrs. Mattila. 5-5
Male students only. 1 4-room + bath
1 3-room + bath. Electricity extra.
Approximately 1 block from campus.
Call VI 3-1211 daytime.
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR RENT
all VI 3-1211 daytime,
or VI 2-2787 after 5.
Cars Painted $27.50
792 N. 2nd—N. Lawrence
Open 7 Evenings A Week
729 Mass, St., Lawrence, Kam
Martin's Auto Painting
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
7 Day Special
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street
WE
---
Shoe Repair For Your Repairs,
Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
Two color .75
Closed Saturday at Noon
Shoe Shines, One color .50
Two colors. 75
WE DELIVER
105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00
Two color .75
Earl's
AMERICAN'S NO. ONE PIZZA
Pizza Palace
917-822-4170
PIZZA4170
THE
Mon.-Thurs. 4:00-12:00
Private Party Room available
Open Fri. & Sat.
1:00-12:00
Pitchers 95c
Phone VI 3-0753
1344 Tennesse
Available June 1st to University faculty or staff member. (single man or couple) new spacious 2 bedroom apartment with two bedrooms fully carpeted, A/C, utilities paid. No students. Be automatically equipped kitchens, phone VI 3-8534.
Sleeping rooms with and without kitehen privileges for males; fur-theren privileges apartments; Borders campus and near downtown
Phone VI 3-5767 5-14
Live close to campus, air-conditioned
2-bedroom apartments, furnished or
unfurnished, $105-$130. One available
now, only six left for you. Also,
two rooms. Call VI 31-2476 for
appointment. Sanette Apts., 1122 Louisiana. tf
Furnished summer place, available
for 2 or 2 people. Call V5-
2828 after 5-90.
Wanted—married couple—to live in
Oklahoma. Call 312-549-2080.
want male student to work mornings,
some weekends and nights. No chil-
dren present. Phone VI 3-11226
appointment. 5-6
Renting for summer and fall semesters. Rooms & apts. ½ block from Union from $25 to $150. Special summer rates. Call VI T-3-7271 for 4-5
SUMMER SUBLET- 3 bedroom, furnished duplex, air-conditioned, dishwasher, dispose of, close to campus; call after 4 p.m., 843-7363. 5-6 call after 4 p.m., 843-7363. 5-6
Nice 2 bedroom house, $120.00, for rent near KU, shopping and schools.
Also room for girl graduate student.
VI 2-3229. 5-5
Attention summer students: College Inn, 912 Alabama at foot Mt. Oread. Enroll now to a furnished, Great family meals within your budget. College approved. Call 3880 now for reservation and deposit. Also take fall term reservations. 5-14
Now renting for summer, small studio apartments; 1 & 2 bedroom apartments nicely furnished, utilities paid, private parking $1^2$ blocks from Union. One available immediately. Phone VI 3-8534. 5-8
WANTED
Apartments for rent: June Graduate
Moving To Kansas City. Live Merrie
Cottage or unfurnished. Apartments starting at $142.00, four swimming pools, sauna
baths, hot tub, electric kitchens, carpeted, 12 minutes from downtown K.C., 18th St.
Expressway at Roeland Park, 1100 Council Road, Kansas City, Kansas CO 2-1166
Stouffer apartment for rent for the
season completely furnished. Cheap.
Call VI 2-3399
SUMMER SUBLET-Stouffer Place
Apt Nice. I $70.) or 2 ($80.)
bedroom, laundry room,
curtains, bookcase, etc. Close to campus.
Married couple. Call VI 2-3359.
For Rent: Furnished apartment
at furniture 14, quiet-
6 pts. Call after 8:45,
843-450-101
The KU student at the TEE PEE.
Free pilchers given away nightly 5-14
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
Beginning June, Pleasant room and kitchen privileges in private home in exchange for some evening babysitting. Call after 5 p.m. VI 3-4098 5-9
Studio
LA
PETITE
GALERIE
3 locations to serve your every need
Raney Drug Stores
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
---
空中客车A320
LET
HELP WANTED
Two or three hours of morning help
are needed. Good pay, call VI 41-6096.
Reserve.
MAUPINTOUR SERVICE TRAVEL
Make Your
Summer Reservations Now.
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
DO THE KIDS HAVE YOU TIED DOWN? Let me do the babysitting job. Dependable marrried wants summer work. Call 3-59-0223 after 6 p.m.
Wanted - one male roommate to share
amount this summer.
Rent $80. Call VI 272-5361.
Help Wanted: Full-time or part-time Apply in person, Sandy's Drive in 5-5
Female student wanted to share home during summer school Phone V1 2,3,4
SUMMER CAMP EMPLOYEES
NEEDER
Unit leader, Hall assistants
for resident camp
Camp Fire Girls
1014 Armstrong Avenue
Kansas City, Kansas
MA 1-103
Male or female Inhalation theapy technician, experienced or medically oriented. Part time positions now available in face concealment September. Challenging opportunity and salary. Contact Miss Allison, Lawrence Memorial Hospital. VI 3-3680
WANTED: SINGLE MALE STUDENT for summer and fall—to work some extra hours in the classroom change for furnished apts and pay Phone VI 3-1122 for appointment. 5-6
Needed: 2 female roommates to share a summer apartment $ _{2} $ block from campus. Low rent. Call Margaret. Rm: 413 at V13 - 1-1340. 5-7
5-7
Counselors wanted for boys' camp in the Bear Mountain area of New York state. See New York City on your phone to arrange travel allowances, salary and travel allowances contact Bill Ford at 1914 Emerald Drive or Phone VI 3-5265. 5-9
LOST
HELP! Lost my wallet—but I also need a house or apartment for fall. Money for return of wallet or info, or apartment Ron Chanutin.
2947 5-5
Large gold ring with green stone,
large gold ring and Art Museum Cameo
Stamp, UN 4-4444.
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
Students Summer Employment. Pinkerton, Inc., is now taking applications for students who desire summer work as security guards in the greater Kansas City area. To qualify, you must be at least 21 years of age, '8' or over, and have completed 40 hours of exposures (excluded). Apply Mon. thru Fri. 9-4, Sat. 9-12, Room 700 Bryant Building, 1102 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Missouri. 5-15
6th & Mo.
VI 3-2139
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
For Top Quality Head for Henry's
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
- Novelties
- Badges
- Lovoliers
- Lavaliers
- Sportswear
Paddle
- Guards
- Favors
- Rings
- Rings
- Muos
Cups
- Trophies
- Trophies
- Trophies
- Awards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
UDK News Roundup
(Continued from page 1)
Blacks ask recognition
CHARLESTON, S.C. - Nearly 2,000 persons marched yesterday in support of striking hospital workers and Rev. Ralph Abernathy vowed to issue a "national call" for reinforcements unless the state recognizes their union.
The Negro orderlies, nurses' aides and kitchen employees are demanding representation by Local 1199B of the Drug and Hospital Workers Union.
USSR move Stalinist
WASHINGTON - Sen. Henry M. Jackson, a strong supporter of President Nixon's proposed Safeguard ABM system, said yesterday, the Soviet Union was drifting back towards Stalinism under leaders who "are not exactly competent."
The Washington Democrat, Nixon's first choice as defense secretary and long a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the Kremlin was following "a belligerent course" charted in part by political commissars of the Soviet armed forces.
May Day tests Czech will
PRAGUE — Communist Party Chief Gustav Husak yesterday reviewed Czechoslovakia's May Day observances as successful "tests of the correctness" of the nation's return to Soviet-style Communism.
"The nearly two million people who took part in the May Day processions and meetings confirmed confidence in the leadership of Party and state," Husak told a plenary session of the Slovak Communist Party in Bratislava.
HUD launches program
WASHINGTON Secretary George W. Romney announced yesterday the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) will initiate this week a program known as Project Breakthrough to spur the housing industry to more effectiveness.
Romney said HUD would sponsor conferences of governors, mayors, builders and labor leaders to work on the problem.
(Continued from page 1)
would be whether any law was inviolated and, if so, whether any action could be taken.
'Life' says he took $20,000
Continued from page 1)
Article II of the Constitution states that "the President, vice president, and all civil officers of the United States shall be removed from office on impeachment for and conviction of treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors."
Power to impeach
The Senate has the sole power to try cases of impeachment which only the House can bring. Only one member of the Court, associate justice Samuel Chase, was ever tried. He won acquittal March 1, 1805.
Fortas acknowledged in his letter to Life that he had made the visit and was present at a meeting of the foundation "during which some of those present described some of its programs and, as I recall, discussed some of the pending scholarship applications."
Paul Porter, a former Fortas law partner, was quoted by Life as saying the $20,000 was paid after Wolfson asked the justice to help trustees of the foundation decide on future charitable and scholarship programs.
The Fortas letter to Life declining an interview observed that his former law firm had been retained by a Wolfson company before he became a Supreme Court justice.
In August, 1966, a federal grand jury began taking testimony on Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charges against Wolfson and several of his associates. Indictments were returned in New York City in September and October of that year.
On Dec. 22, 1966, Life reported,
Fortas drew a check for $20,000 from his personal account payable to the foundation, "thus paying back the money he had received from the Wolfson Foundation more than 11 months earlier."
Life wrote that Porter said Fortas returned the $20,000 because, "the
business of the court took so much of his time he couldn't do the work of the foundation."
No 'fix'
Life said that there is no evidence that Wolfson sought to get Fortas to "fix" the proceedings against him but indicated that Fortas' association may have been used for "name dropping" purposes during his criminal trials.
Wolfson lost his Supreme Court appeal on April 1 and on April 25 surrendered himself to authorities at the federal prison camp at Elgin Air Force Base in Florida to begin serving his term.
The financier said three days earlier in an interview with the Wall Street Journal that he could have received a pardon and had been assured this by "somebody who is close as anybody could be to Mr. Johnson."
The Senate's refusal to confirm Fortas to be chief justice last year was one of former President Johnson's most resounding congressional defeats.
The fight began in June when Johnson announced that he would nominate Fortas to succeed Chief Justice Earl Warren and a former Texas congressman, Homer
Fire burns room of Kappa Sigmas
Bob Kaufman, Clavendon Hills, Ill., sophomore, was shooting "carp, not craps," last night while his room was on fire.
Upon returning to the Kappa Sigma house after his outing he also discovered the fire had been extinguished before his arrival.
The alarm was turned in shortly after 12 a.m., and the Lawrence Fire Department arrived shortly thereafter. The fire apparently started in a lounge chair in the room, Kaufman said. It then spread to the draperies and ceiling. Kaufman said he owned the chair.
Several witnesses said they thought it was an electrical fire, but Kaufman believed a cigarette was the cause.
Thornberry, to be an associate justice.
Republicans immediately raised the cry of "cronyism" on grounds Fortas had been a close adviser to Johnson before the President named him to the court in 1965 and Thornberry, a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judge, had been a protege of Johnson's.
On Oct. 1, the Senate all but killed chances of Fortas' confirmation by refusing to curb the filibuster and a day later, Johnson withdrew the nomination at the associate justice's request.
Madison riot
(Continued from page 1)
appeared at a street dance to tell several young people to lower the volume of the record player. The dance was staged by a group of students despite an earlier rejection of their request for a block party permit.
Police said a large crowd began to gather when the police appeared. Rocks, bricks and other missiles were thrown at the officers, who retaliated with tear gas.
"This is stupid," one youth said later. "If they'd have let us have the damned block none of this would have happened."
Bands of police invaded several homes to apprehend some youths while others fled.
A barricade of scrap wood, garbage cans and other refuse was piled in one street. A nearby construction site served as a supply of rocks.
Tear gas and flight
At one point a squad car rammed the barricade, spraying tear gas as it crashed through into a crowd of youths. The young people retreated into adjacent homes, many of which house students.
Police with gas masks and clubs rushed through the barricade behind the speeding car. The barricade was removed by police but was put back by the youths as soon as the officers rushed to another trouble spot.
Teacher remembered at Danforth Chapel
In the serenity of Danforth Chapel, close friends of the late Miss Elise Neuenschwander gathered yesterday in a memorial service offered in remembrance of her and her nearly 70 years of dedication to KU.
The chapel was dimly lit by the altar light. The campanile chimed respectfully in the distant background as the Rev. Harold M. Mallett of the First Presbyterian Church conducted the service.
Seated in the mahogany pews were aged friends with salt-and-pepper gray or white heads and lined faces indicating the years gone by and reflecting the memories of a forceful character, sparkling eyes and a saving humor, vigorous and dedicated.
There were other faces, some of foreign descent, who seemed to understand the words of the German and French hymns sung
12 KANSAN May 5 1969
by Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice.
The younger faces were colleagues or one-time students of hers as was J. Eldon Fields, professor of political science who reminisced about Miss Neuenschwander, the person and the teacher, and J. Neale Carman, professor of French, who recalled the life story of Miss Neuenschwander.
After becoming an American citizen in 1892, Miss Neuenschwander entered KU in 1895 and was graduated in 1898. She studied further in Paris and at Yale, completing her doctorate in philosophy at Yale in 1913.
Miss Neuenschwander returned to KU as a professor in the romance languages and later acted as associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Her love of profession and unending desire to help others is exemplified in the continuing loan fund and two scholarships she established.
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES
at
College Hill Manor
1741 West 19th
VI 3-8220
Not that you'd want to. Sometimes it just happens...like after a picnic, or when you bring home a couple of cold 6-paks and forget to put 'em in the refrigerator. Does rechilling goof up the taste or flatten the flavor?
Does it hurt to chill beer twice?
Relax. You don't have to worry.
A really good beer like Budweiser is just
Yes?
as good when you chill it
as good when you chill it twice. We're mighty glad about that. We'd hate to think of all our effort going down the drain
Budweiser
MILLED IN THE USA BY
MANUFACTURER R. M. TURNER
DISTRIBUTED BY
J. TURNER P. TURNER
just because the temperature has its ups and downs.
You can understand why when you consider all the extra trouble and extra expense that go into brewing Bud $ ^{\circ} $ . For instance, Budweiser is the only beer in America that's Beech-
wood Aged.
So...it's absolutely okay to chill beer twice.
No? Enough said. (Of course, we have a lot more to say
about Budweiser. But we'll keep it on ice for now.)
Budweiser. is the King of Beers.
(But you know that.)
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON • COLUMBUS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Wichita oilman rescues Relays
By MARTHA MANGELSDORF Kansan Staff Writer
WICHITA — Wichita oilman James W. Hershberger, former University of Kansas spinner who referred to track as the "greatest un-fun sport there is" has donated $125,000 toward the purchase and installation of an all-weather Tartan track at KU
Hershberger made his announcement this morning at a press conference in his Wichita office.
It was like a dream come true for head track coach Bob Timmons and athletic director Wade Stinson, who were both on hand in Hershberger's office.
"It couldn't have come at a better time," said Timmons, who had been crusading for a new track at Memorial Stadium ever since coming to KU four years ago. The athletic department, woefully in debt to the sum of $1 million, had been unable to finance the needed improvements.
Ready by September
Work will begin on the new facility after commencement exercises next month, and Stinson said the project should be completed by Sept. 1.
Timmons said he was thrilled, and added "I still can't believe it, and the fellows probably won't believe it when we get back home. It's just tremendous."
The KU coach emphasized that the arrival of the new track would come in a year when Kansas hosts not only the annual Kansas Relays, but also the Big Eight outdoor meet for the first time in eight years. Reisen 'good calemer'
Stinson 'good salesman'
Hershberger joked that "Wade Stinson is a better salesman than I am," in explaining his generous contribution. In a more serious tone the Wichita businessman said that he was prompted by his loyalty to his alma mater.
Hershberger has been actively involved in KU athletics since the early 1950's when he ran the 220 and 440 on Jayhawk track squads. He anchored KU's victorious mile relay unit in the 1951 Big Seven indoor, and Hershberger has been a physical fitness enthusiast ever since.
Timmons, who has conferred with engineers from the 3-M Company, said that preliminary estimates called for $2.50 per square foot for the Tartan
KANSAS RELAYS
KANSAS RELAYS
(Continued to page 12)
79th Year, No.125
So long, soggy cinders Photo by Ron Bishop
All the problems and headaches of directing the Kansas Relays under the threat of April rains are in the past for KU track coach Bob Timmons. The Memorial Stadium cinder track will be replaced by a new Tartan track this summer.
Tuesday, May 6, 1969
--demands of total amnesty, the administration might disagree and nullify the Senate's decision. This veto of Senate power would thus render the power of next year's Senate impotent. The core of the new Senate Code would thus be meaningless since it centers about an increased student voice in University government.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Voting laws challenged
The issue will be the subject of oral arguments before the court next fall or winter.
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court announced yesterday it will rule next term on state voter residency requirements which barred an estimated five million Americans from voting for President in 1968.
Battleship returns
LONG BEACH, Calif. — With bands playing and wives and children waving from the shore, the USS New Jersey came home again from he wars yesterday-perhaps for the final time the world will see a battleship in action.
The salty skipper of the 56,000-ton dreadnought, Capt. J. Edward Snyder, Jr., was quick to jump on the notion that the New Jersey was hanging up its 16-inch guns. Snyder said "only an idiot" would decide not to send the battlewagon back to Vietnam.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
MIAMI - A National Airlines jet carrying 75 persons from New York to Miami was hijacked to Cuba yesterday without a word to ground controllers.
National flight 91, a Boeing 727 headed from LaGuardia Airport in New York to Miami landed in Havana at 6:18 p.m. CDT, the Federal Aviation Administration reported.
Miami-bound jet hijacked
Barry's son sworn in
WASHINGTON - Barry M. Goldwater Jr., who says his name was a "two-edged sword" in California, was sworn in yesterday as a member of the House to complete the second father-son team in the 91st Congress.
Senate gets first test
By MICHAEL NAGEL Kansan Staff Writer
The ISP dream of responsible student government will be tested in an emergency meeting of the student Senate at 8:00 p.m. tomorrow, in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
The meeting has been called to decide on disciplinary action to be taken against Rick Atkinson, Belleville senior, Bill Berkowitz, New York senior, and Don Jenkins, Kansas City junior.
On April 23 the Three Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) members allegedly destroyed a ballot box and interrupted voting procedures in Strong Hall.
ISP has involved itself by requesting that disciplinary action be decided by the Senate. Prior to this request the University Discipline Board was responsible for the decision.
During an ISP meeting yesterday in the Kansas Union, John Berthrong, Norman, Okla. senior and ISP chairman, commented on the implications of the upcoming Senate meeting.
"We have to get into this and decide where the lines are to be drawn," he said.
Berthrong said the meeting would decide whether students were going to act like people or continue to allow themselves to be "pushed around by the paternalistic University."
The ISP chairman explained that the Senate Executive Committee (Senex), composed of half students and half faculty, had agreed to postpone their recommendations until after Wednesday's Senate meeting.
Discussion with ISP members yesterday included the following points.
In effect, this agreement allows the KU student government to grasp the meaning of the new Senate Code. Furthermore, ISP's hopes for responsible student government can materialize.
There are other implications of this shift in focus of government power. If the Senate decides to grant the three SDS members their
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON (UPI)—No disciplinary action will be taken against members of the crew of the U.S.S. Pueblo or anyone else involved in the ship's seizure by North Korea, said Secretary of the Navy John H. Chaffee today.
Another implication of any modification of a Senate decision would be the absence of ISP strength in future years. Since ISP is the ruling party of this year's Senate, any mistake would immediately be blamed on ISP.
Radical reaction to this situation also was considered. If SDS does not receive its demands of total amnesty, it and other radical (Continued to page 12)
Congressional members ask Fortas resignation
WASHINGTON (UPI) Members of Congress called on Abe Fortas yesterday to resign his Supreme Court seat or answer questions raised by his acceptance of a research fee from the family foundation of an imprisoned financier.
Rep. H. R. Gross, R-Iowa, demanded the initiation of impeachment proceedings against Fortas if he does not resign, but there was no indication the House would act on his proposal. Only one Supreme Court justice has ever been impeached, and the Senate failed to convict him.
Sen. Jack Miller, R-Iowa, also called for Fortas' resignation. Sen. Carl T. Curtis, R-Neb., said it was "shocking news" that Fortas
accepted a "fee of $20,000 three months after he went on the bench." He proposed a code of ethics for the Supreme Court similar to one adopted by the Senate.
From Fortas, who took his regular post when the Supreme Court handed down decisions yesterday, there was no further word beyond the mimeographed statement he issued Sunday saying he returned the fee from the foundation headed by Louis Wolfson, now serving a one year prison term for stock market manipulation.
Fortas said the payment was for "research functions, studies and writings" and was returned when he found no time to "undertake the assignment."
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Rules of the House
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2 have your items written up but not totaled
3 spin our Casino wheel to determine the discount you will receive, ranging from 10 to 50 percent
4 our entire stock is included, no aces are held up our sleeve at least 10 percent off on our regular quality stock
5 refreshments and loud music also available
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1
Campus briefs
Pershing Rifles to sponsor meet
The University Tri-Service drill meet, sponsored by Pershing Rifles, company E-7, and its affiliate the E-Co Berets, will be 6-10 p.m. Wednesday at the National Guard Armory. The public is invited.
Kelly Stein, Topeka junior and E-Co beret public relations officer, said the competition is between Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC groups. She went on to say a roving trophy is presented every year to the ROTC unit with the greatest number of team points
The Angel Flight and E-Co Beer drill teams will also perform.
Microbiology students get grants
A $67,702 grant by the U.S. Public Health Service for training of advanced degree students was announced yesterday by the department of microbiology.
The renewal grant is for the eighth year. The grant is used for assistantships for doctoral candidates and for supplies and equipment needed for their research.
Palestinian Commando here
A representative of the Palestinian Commandos, Saadat Hasan, will discuss "Why A War of Liberation?" at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
The speech is sponsored by SUA.
Marines to recruit law students
A representative of the Marine Corps Judge Advocate General's Office will speak to all interested law students on opportunities as a Marine Legal Officer.
He will be at KU 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Court Room in Green Hall.
Research awards available now
Awards for undergraduates at the University wanting to do research this summer and next academic year will be available if applications are made by deadlines of May 10 and September 15, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences announced this week.
Delbert Shankel, assistant dean of the College, said the College had been asked to coordinate these awards from the University Research Committee.
Ten to twelve summer awards of $500 each for eight weeks participation and 10-12 academic year awards of $250 each for eight months will be presented.
Shankel explained that applications should include a brief description of the project to be undertaken, and the time period for which it is planned. Applications should also include the name of a faculty member who has agreed to supervise the candidate's project.
GAX members attend Ad Day
Members of Gamma Alph Chi (GAX), a national advertising sorority, recently attended Ad Day in Kansas City. The group went at the invitation of Mrs. Cecil Long, the sorority's national president, said Jack Hurley, president of Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising fraternity.
The group attended a luncheon at the Advertising and Sales Executive Club in Kansas City and then toured an advertising agency and the KCMO-TV station, Hurley said.
KU recently had its own Ad Day in coordination with GAX, said Hurley. He said it consisted of a series of lectures including the producing of a commercial and marketing research.
Student wins broadcasting award
Philip R. Higdon, Prairie Village senior, won second place in the 1969 Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters scholarship competition. The
The top three winners receive trophies and tuition checks totaling $1,000.
Entrants in the annual competition submit a 1500-word-essay on why they chose radio as a lifetime career. The competition is open to any student enrolled in a four-year Kansas college or university.
NSF grants $15,000 for computer
Gerry Kelly, assistant professor of electrical engineering, has been awarded $15,000 by the National Science Foundation for the purchase of a POP-9 digital computer.
The computer will eventually be housed in the space technology building now under construction and will be used primarily for graduate students, Kelly said.
He added it will be used for digital control, statistical processing by pattern recognition techniques, real-time optimization of electrical networks and studies concerning man-machine interactions.
Ohio State professor to speak
Barry Lentnek, a professor at Ohio State University, will speak on "Wetbacks and Whatnot" at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Parlor A.
The lecture is sponsored by the center of Latin American Studies and the department of geography.
May 6
1969 KANSAN 3
Program for Progress begins Lawrence drive
A three week, city-wide campaign for the $18.6 million University of Kansas Program for Progress drive began yesterday.
The initial phase of the program was launched at a meeting of 16 campaign workers making Lawrence the first community to conduct a city-wide campaign. The Program for Progress has been underway since September, 1966, and close to $15 million has been raised.
So far approximately $550,000 has been pledged or given to the program by Lawrence residents said Dolph C. Simons Jr., Lawrence drive chairman.
Specific campaigns in the business division of the community, the professional fields and a city-wide residential
program will begin next week.
The Program for Progress has five specific areas for giving:
Student Aid with a goal of $4,100,000; Faculty Development, $5,892,000;
Supporting Resources for the Lawrence campus, $6,225,000;
Supporting Resources for the Kansas City Medical School campus, $1,400,000, and unrestricted gifts, $1,000,000
Gifts from Lawrence residents have included one for $78,000,
one for $57,000, one for $50,000 and a bequest in a will
for approximately $100,000.
City, made the largest single gift in the nation-wide campaign when she gave $2,125,000 to build the recently completed Spencer Library.
The First National Bank pledged $35,000 and the Lawrence and Douglas County National Banks each gave $25,000. The Kansas Public Service Co. pledged $15,000, as did the KC Corp.
Mrs. Helen Spencer, Kansas
Weather
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts cloudy skies with occasional showers and thunderstorms today, tonight and tomorrow. Little temperature change with southerly winds 10-20 m.p.h. today. Colder tonight and tomorrow. Highs today 72-80 degrees, lows tonight 55-60. Fifty per cent chance of precipitation today, 80 tonight.
AIESEC offers overseas work
AIESEC is no summer job clearinghouse. Rather, it is an organization set up to provide European-based training specifically in phases of business and economics.
Bud Zackary, Wichita senior translated AIESEC—the Association Internationale des Estudiantes en Sciences, Economiques et Commerciales—as an international association of economics and business students.
The program includes 48 countries and covers all the continents, Zackary said. The object is to provide international business education.
Completely student run, AIESEC has been operating throughout Europe for 20 years and in the United States for 10 years.
This is the first year the program has been operating in Kansas, Zackary added.
Greg Jackson, Lawrence junior, explained the program is not necessarily summer employment. A job secured through AIESEC may last from 8 weeks to 18 months.
Each participating business fills out a form, and an exchange takes place in Paris by a computer which matches the company and the student interests.
Both Zackary and Jackson
Official Bulletin
Today
MUSIC THERAPY CLUB. 7 p.m.
Murphy Hall lounge. Election of officers, discussion by aides and interns.
MT. OREAD GILBERT &
SULLIVAN CO. INTERVIEWS. 7-10 p.m. For fall production staff of "Iolanthe." 305A, Kansas Union. Applications available in SUA Office.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION. 7:30 p.m. Weekly Testimony Meeting. Danforth Chapel.
PHYSICS FILM. 7:30 p.m.
"Probability & Uncertainty." 124
Malott.
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP. 7:30 p.m.
"Christianity: Cure or Cop-Out?"
Arthur Katz, Kansas City, Mo.
Forum Room, Kansas Union.
CLUB. 7:30 JAYHAWK RODEO CLUB. 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union.
EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE.
8:20 p.m. One-Act Plays.
TENNIS. 2:30 p.m. Washburn University, here. Allen Field House Courts.
Tomorrow
POETRY READING. 4 p.m.
Robert Duncan, Forum Room,
Kansas Union.
CARILLON RECITAL. 7 . m.
Albert Gerken.
CLASSICAL FILM. 7 & 9 p.m.
"Ya Yn." Dyche Auditorium.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION EXAM REVIEW. 7:15 p.m. Strong Hall Auditorium.
ONE-ACT PLAYS. 8:20 p.m.
Experimental theatre.
SUA CONCERT. 8 p.m. Danny Cox. Kansas Union Ballroom.
will be leaving for Australia this summer.
Zackary will be working for a general and life insurance company in Melbourne doing economic or investment research for five months.
Jackson will be in Edenborough working with the financing of computer printouts for a paper manufacturer.
"The companies pay less than they would pay someone else, and the student must provide his
own transportation. But there are no taxes," Zackary said. "The experience will be the most valuable part of the program."
This year the local division of AIESEC contracted with three companies to accept students from overseas-Hallmark Cards in Lawrence, Barry Tractor and Equipment in Wichita, and Union Carbide in New York—so that three students from Kansas may be sent in exchange.
Speedy press devices displayed
Cathode ray scanners, mini-computers and machine spitting out 1,200 words per minute are all part of a demonstration at the University of Kansas soon.
These instruments are equipment a modern newspaper may be using in the next few years. The demonstration and exhibit from the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. is for a journalism convocation at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Wayne Trimble of the
Southwestern Bell Company in Topeka will show the probable teletypewriter which a reporter can use to transmit copy quickly to his home office.
Also demonstrated will be a cathode ray tube on which a desk man may scan and edit copy for immediate delivery to the composing room. An Interdata mini-computer and the Teletype Inktronics printer capable of printing 1,200 words of copy per minute are also featured. The latter machine will soon be used by the Associated Press.
STUDENT- WRITTEN ONE- ACTS up-tight night:theatre now
John-
John DOUG WASSON
young
goodman
brown
STEPHEN BIDDLE
THE
DAY THE
FISH GOT
AWAY
LANNIE FELLERS
EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE
APRIL 2,9.30. MAY 1,4-10
8:20 PM. CURTAIN
CALL UN4-3982
KANSAN Comment
Ideals in action
In a crazy, tumbling angry world, the New Jersey project was sweet balm.
Sixteen houses had been refurbished when the five-weekend project was completed April 30. But its value is in more than new paint and restored front porches.
The project, started by the "advocacy planning" class, Architecture 98, and the Ballard Center of Lawrence, united two groups of people, a group of supposedly affluent students with less affluent people of New Jersey Street, united them for a definite goal.
Student idealism, so often attacked on the grounds that it is flowery and unrealistic, was put into action. Students not only talked about helping the poorer people of the world and Lawrence, they actually helped them.
And in a world fraught with idealism that comes across too often in talk instead of work, the painting and repairing of 16 houses was a small milestone.
Hopefully only one milestone in a university whose students must look outside its boundaries to keep the precepts of learning from turning stale.
There are a lot more streets in Lawrence and lots of other problems that could be helped by constructive student attention. And lots more students who could transform their idealism into social response and action. (AMS)
"The child was diseased at birth, stricken with a hereditary ill that only the most vital men are able to shake off. I mean poverty—the most deadly and prevalent of all diseases."
Eugene O'Neill, Fog
Mary Ann Curtis
Seeing the Grand Old Flag in a new light?
Letters to editor
Compromise needed on Left and Right
To the Editor:
It often seems a curious phenomenon to me, that while members of the New Left are stating demands of the firmly entrenched establishment, no one ever voices demands of the firmly entrenched New Left.
A demand to relinquish credit for ROTC courses is certainly a strong demand to make. It is even strong if offered in the form of a suggestion. Perhaps it is justified. But let's be realistic.
As high as one may hold ideals and principles, one does not get
something for nothing, and in most cases, progress is made most rapidly through understanding and compromise. As correct as one may believe himself to be, a blatantly self-righteous attitude has never accomplished much other than
closing the minds of the opposition to arguments.
WE THEY
23 11/15 45 NUCLEAR 28 14G 11/
LAIRD'S
NUCLEAR
NUMBERS
GAME
SARGER
THE MIWALKER JOURNAL
'So, by 1970, the Russians might be able to destroy the planet 3.11 times, while we could only destroy it 2.8 times.'
If the members of the New Left really want to make human attempts to understand those with whom they disagree, they must expect to give up something, just as anyone must expect to give a little in any human relationship in order to attain anything meaningful.
suggestion, when need not even be taken seriously. It is only proposed with the hope of initiating some degree of self-introspection in order to reach for understanding.
I generally detest cliches, but I believe that it is in giving that one receives. I would propose a final question to both ROTC and the New Left. How much are you willing to give in order to understand and be understood?
If you are really convinced that what you believe is for a better world, why not try to realistically attain it?
A possible offer which the "radical" members of this campus could propose might be to forfeit the credit now given for New Left courses offered by the university, specifically the series of LAS 48 courses presently being conducted.
I do not propose this as a demand, but more as a
Dan Schleske
Valley Stream, N.Y.
sophomore
Quotes
ITHACA, N.Y. James Perkins, president of Cornell University, where armed students occupied a campus building:
"It is time to stop the taking over of university buildings by force."
BERKELEY, Calif. — Internationally known engineer
T. Y. Lin, urging that an intercontinental bridge be built across the Bering Strait from Alaska to the Soviet Union:
"It has been called a dream, but I think it is not so much a dream as a vision—and also a mission. People will find we can do constructive things as well as ABMs and ICBMs."
KANSAN
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates are per year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 68044. Accommodation services and employment advertised offered to all students without color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Ron Yates
Business Manager
Pam Flatton
Editorial Editors Judith K. Diebolt, Alison Steimel, John Marshall
Sports Editor Bob Balmier, Jeff Ramsay
Assistant Sports Editor Jay Thomas
Feature and Editor Marilyn Petterson
Assistant Feature and Society Editor Susan Brinamcobre
Photo and Graphics Editor Linda McCormack
Arts and Reviews Editor Bob Butler
Copy Chiefs Ruth Rademacher, Judy Dague, Linda Loyd,
Donna Shadder, Caleb
Pulitzer Prizes awarded
NEW YORK (UPI) — The Los Angeles Times yesterday won two of the 1969 Pulitzer Prizes, the nation's most coveted awards in the fields of journalism, letters and music, for public service to its home community and distinguished reporting on the international scene.
1
The awards, announced at Columbia University, brought Pulitzer laurels to Norman Mailer, 46, who won first fame 21 years ago with the war novel "The Naked and the Dead." He was honored for a nonfiction work, "The Armies of the Night," an account of antiwar
demonstrations at the Pentagon in 1967.
Howard Sackler won the drama prize of his current hit, "The Great White Hope," about prizefighter Jack Johnson, which already has won the Antoinette Perry Award as Broadway's best play.
An American Indian, N. Scott Momaday, associate professor of English at the University of California in Santa Barbara, won the coveted fiction prize for his first novel, "House of Dawn," about an Indian serviceman who finds he cannot adjust to life on the reservation after World War II. Momaday is a Kiowa Indian born in Lawton, Okla.
The public service prize went to the Los Angeles Times for a team report on Los Angeles commissions that uncovered wrongdoing that may lead to eventual city charter reform. It covered the planning and zoning, harbor, recreation and parks commissions and resulted in convictions of bribery and conflict of interest, cancellation of a $12 million city contract, and several resignations of commissioners.
William Tuohy brought another award to the Los Angeles Times for his reporting from Vietnam where he has been stationed for more than four years. He was the fourthb
correspondent to gain a Pulitzer by reporting the Vietnamese conflict.
Albert L. Delugach and Denny Walsh of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat were honored for a series exposing fraud and abusive power in local 562 of the St. Louis Steamfitters Union. They won the award for special local reporting.
Other Pulitzers announced by acting Columbia University President Andrew W. Cordier on behalf of the trustees of Columbia University were:
Apollo countdown rehearsal finished
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) The last major testing hurdle before the May 18 launch of three Apollo 10 astronauts was passed yesterday when their rocket wound up a long countdown rehearsal with a make-believe blastoff.
The 363-foot Saturn 5 rocket was fully fueled for the exercise. The test included virtually everything but the ignition of the booster's five massive engines.
For safety reasons, astronauts Thomas P. Stafford, John W. Young and Eugene A. Cernan did not participate in the countdown. They planned to take part in an abbreviated dry run today.
Apollo 10 is scheduled to swing into orbit around the moon May 21 and circle it for $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $days to pave the way for a lunar landing attempt by the Apollo 11 crew in July.
The week-long countdown test was completed three days behind the original schedule, but project officials still had several days' leeway in the schedule of preparations before the real countdown begins next week.
Most of the testing delay was caused by the accidental draining of thousands of gallons of kerosene fuel from the Saturn's first stage April 27. Inspectors examined the booster for three days to make certain the sudden fuel loss caused no damage.
None was found, but launch director Rocco A. Petrone scheduled a final pressure proof test of the rocket's fuel tank for tomorrow.
The last hours of the countdown yesterday were interrupted twice by minor problems. The simulated blastoff
occurred at 9:18 a.m. CDT.
Apollo 10 will have a four hour and 16 minute launch period May 18.
FULTON, Mo. (UPI) — A prayer book inscribed by the Queen Mother of England will be used tomorrow in ceremonies at the Church of St. Mary of Aldermanbury, restored on the campus of Westminister College.
College receives Churchill memorial
The sixteenth-century church, bombed the Nazis during World War II, has been rebuilt as a memorial to Sir Winston Churchill, who delivered his famous "Iron Curtain" speech at Fulton in 1946. The ceremonies tomorrow will be a rededication of the church and a dedication of the Churchill memorial and library.
In Washington the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill yesterday to authorize commemorative medals for the dedication. It passed by voice vote without objection and was sent to the Senate.
The bill authorizes one gold medal to be struck by the U.S. Mint for presentation to the widow of the late British Prime Minister. It also calls for 100,000 silver and bronze duplicates to be struck for the public.
The prayer book, the
National reporting: Robert Cahn of the Christian Science Monitor, Boston, for an article on national parks focusing on ways to preserve them.
Winston Churchill
Episcopal Book of Common Prayer, was received by Dr. Robert L. D. Davison, president of the college. It was delivered through the British Embassy in Washington and the British consul-general's office in St. Louis.
Sir Winston Churchill
The inscription reads: "Presented to the church of St. Mary, Aldermanbury, moved from London in 1966 and restored on the Westminster campus in Fulton as a memorial to Sir Winston Churchill. From Elizabeth R. Queen Mother, May 1969."
Spot news photography:
Edward T. Adams of the Associated Press for his photo of a summary execution in Saigon during last year's Tet offensive
Local reporting of a general nature: John Fetterman of the Louisville Times and Courier-Journal for his article on an American soldier whose body was returned from Vietnam for burial in his home town.
Editorial writing: Paul Greenberg of the Pine Bluff (Ark.) Commercial for the general body of his editorials.
Feature Photography: Moneta Fleet Jr. of Ebony magazine for his photo of Mrs. Martin Luther King and one of her children taken at King's funeral.
Fiction: N. Scott Monaday for "House of Dawn."
Pultizers were given to all categories of letters and music for the second time in the past five years. They were:
Cartoons: John Fischetti of the Chicago Daily News for his general output.
Nonfiction: Norman Mailer for "The Armies of the Night," an account of antiwar demonstrations at the Pentagon in October, 1967, and Rene Jules Dubos for "So Human an Animal."
History: Leonard W. Levy's "Origins of the Fifth Amendment."
Drama: Howard Sackler's "Great White Hope," a current Broadway hit which stars James Earl Jones.
Biography: B. L. Reid's "The Man From New York," the life of John Quinn, patron of artists and writers in the early 20th century.
Poetry: George Oppen for "Of Being Numerous."
Music: Karel Husa, Cornell University professor and director of the Cornell Symphony, for his "String Quartet No. 3."
Many categories set for Emmy nominees
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences announced its nominations yesterday for Emmy awards for telecasting excellence in more than 30 categories for the 1968-69 season.
One category, best cultural documentary, had 41 nominees.
Nominated for best comedy series were "Bewitched," "Family Affair," "Get Smart," "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" and "Judia."
But the highly rated, weekly series were nominated in more manageable numbers.
Best dramatic series: "The FBI," "Ironside," "Judd for the Defense," "The Name of the Game," "NET Playhouse," and "Mission: Impossible."
Best variety or musical series:
"The Carol Burnett Show,"
"The Dean Martin Show."
"Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In."
"The Smothers Brothers
May 6
1969 KANSAN 5
Several of the nominated series, including the controversial "Smothers Brothers," were cancelled during the year and two were moved to another network.
Series stars nominated for acting Emmys in a drama were: Carl Betz (Judd for the Defense); Raymond Burr (Ironside); Peter Graves and Martin Landau (Mission: Impossible); and Ross Martin (The Wild, Wild West).
Comedy Hour" and "That's Life."
Best comedian in a series: Don Adams (Get Smart); Brian Keith (Family Affair); Edward Mulhore (The Ghost and Mrs. Muir) and Lloyd Nolan (Julia)
Best actresses in a dramatic series: Barbara Bain (Mission: Impossible); Joan Blondell (Here Come the Brides); Peggy Lipton (The Mod Squad).
Best comedienne in a series:
Diahann Carroll (Julia); Barbara
Feldon (Get Smart); Hope Lang
(The Ghost and Mrs. Muir); and
Elizabeth Montgomery
(Bewitched).
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Students cheer while Hayakawa does dance step
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - S. I. Hayakawa, the gritty acting president of San Francisco State College, was cheered by his students yesterday when he appeared before them at a program in the gymnasium.
Hayakawa performed an impromptu dance with a coed to a pre-rock jazz tune by Duke Ellington's band.
Hayakawa, a dedicated fan of jazz music, had invited Ellington to give the concert and had paid for it from private funds.
A group of campus militants had tried in vain to get the concert called off, but there were no disruptions during the program. When Hayakawa appeared and danced before the crowd of 1,000 students, a few boos were heard, but it was mostly cheering.
A group of religious leaders at the campus ecumenical house had tried to get the concert called off. They appealed to Ellington not to participate because he was being used "as a political pawn" by Hayakawa.
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Sachem selects 27
Robert Ellsworth designated
Twenty-seven men, including Robert Ellsworth, U.S. ambassador-designate to NATO, have been selected for membership in the Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa (ODK), national senior men's leadership honor society, said Clyde W. Toland, Iola senior and president of Sachem.
Ellsworth and Jan Roskam,
associate professor of aerospace
engineering, were selected "honoris causa" members. Toland said. The other 25 initiates all are juniors.
The purpose of ODK, Toland said, is to recognize outstanding leadership in all phases of college life. Members are chosen on the basis of character and superior leadership.
The new members will be initiated May 11. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be the guest
The new Sachem members are: William Birney, Hill City; Steve Bredehoeft, Overland Park; Robert W. Butler, Kansas City; John M. Clark, Bartlesville, Okla., J. Michael Doyle, Bartlesville, Okla.; Ted M. Gardiner, Garden City; Warren D. Harral, Larned; David S. Jeans, Independence.
speaker at a banquet following the initiation.
Small World, organized to help foreign students adjust to the KU campus, will hold a family picnic 1 p.m. Sunday in Centennial Park at 9th and Iowa Streets, announced Mrs. Alvin Fishburn, Route 5, and Mrs. Musa Ali Hagggiagi, a Zuara, Tripoli, Libya, graduate student, today.
All participating and non-participating members as
Small World plans picnic
well as those who have made contributions to Small World are invited to attend.
Mrs. Fishburn has requested each family bring one meat or main dish and one other dish such as a vegetable, salad, or dessert that will serve six people.
In case of rain the dinner will be held in the Fellowship Hall at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 West 23rd.
Roger G. Kathol, Wichita; Russel C. Leffel, Prairie Village; Orlyn Lockard Jr., Raytown, Mo.; Kent J. Longenecker, Shawnee Mission; John D. Mauk Jr., Conway Springs; Robert W. McCulloh, Shawnee Mission; Willie R. McDaniel, Haines City, Fla.; Fredick A. Meier, Affton, Mo; John B. Nelson, St. Joseph, Mo.; James A. Reaves, Prairie Village; Darrel E. Reed, Leawood.
Stephen L. Reed, Wichita;
Mark C. Scott, Topeka; Donald
E. Sloan, Topeka; Robert H.
Stoddard, Shawnee Mission;
Walter R. Stromquist,
Charleston, Ill., and Frank Zilm,
St. Louis, Mo.
Multiple Sclerosis drive desperately needs funds
The annual drive for the National Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Society is now in progress said Ruth Quinlan, treasurer for the drive.
Miss Quinlan, an MS victim herself, said funds are desperately needed for research programs and patient services.
A progress report of the current state and future hopes of Multiple Sclerosis research described MS as a "chronic, usually progressive neurological disorder that generally appears first in those who are between the ages of 20 and 40. . . Over the years the patient may suffer progressive disabilities, including weakness, incoordination, instability of gait, spasticity and, ultimately, paralysis. . ."
Miss Quinlan said last year Douglas County collected a record $3,000 in its annual MS drive. She added that $1,400 has already been collected in this year's drive but said endless amounts are needed. Sixty per cent of the funds collected go to medical and research programs, Miss Quinlan said.
Fraternities, sororites and residence halls are helping in the
drive, she added. They have divided Lawrence into sections to get complete area coverage.
She said, however, some people are still missed and they can contribute by sending their contribution to Edgar Wolfe, associate professor of English and a member of the board of trustees for the society.
Lawrence begins cancer drive
The Lawrence Cancer Drive began this morning with an instructional coffee for the workers at 9:30 in the Eldridge Hotel.
Jim Schubert, 2429 Ohio, Lawrence chairman of the drive which is to last through Tuesday, May 13, said the University drive will be directed by Charles Baer, professor of mechanical engineering.
Schubert said Art Booth of radio station KLWN is the business and professional chairman of the Lawrence drive.
Honors are given at Kansan dinner
Forty-three students were honored at the annual Kansan Board dinner Saturday night for outstanding work on the University Daily Kansan and for meritorious achievement in the William Allen White School of Journalism.
Receiving citations for outstanding work on the Daily Kansan were: Richard A. Pendergrass, Crossett, Ark., sophomore, news writing; Stephen C. Haynes, Emporia junior, news writing; Frederick W. Parris, Manhattan junior, feature writing; Richard H. Louv, Wichita sophomore, feature writing; Alan T. Jones, East Aurora, N.Y., senior, editorial writing and a $50 award for editorial writing from the William Allen White Foundation.
Robert T. Kearney, Olathe junior, sports writing; Ron Bishop, Lawrence freshman, photography; Michael H. Gunther, Kansas City, Mo., senior, photography; John Hill, Prairie Village senior, column writing.
Paul Dinovitz, Kansas City,
Mo., senior, promotional
advertising; Pam Parrish,
Indianapolis, Ind., senior,
promotional advertising; William
F. Hunter, Kansas City senior,
promotional advertising; Robert
L. Hammond, Wichita senior,
promotional advertising;
Roxanne Lennard, Ottawa
senior, institutional advertising;
Jack L. Hurley, Lawrence senior,
institutional advertising; Mary
Fothergill, Kansas City senior,
institutional advertising.
For excellence in executive staff and management positions: Ronald Yates, Shawnee senior, fall semester sports editor and editor-in-chief of the spring semester Kansan; Joanna Wiebe, Hillsboro senior, staff leadership; Robert Butler, Prairie Village junior, for establishing and following through on the arts and reviews section; Alan T. Jones, East Aurora, N.Y., senior, for work as edition editor, fall semester.
Robert K. Entriken Jr., San Francisco, Calif., senior, special award for dedication and "clutch performance;" Alen Winchester, Hutchinson senior, news page make-up; Stephen C. Haynes Emporia junior, news page make-up; Pamela Flaton.
St. Louis, Mo., senior, as business manager; Gary O'Neal, Prairie Village senior, as assistant business manager.
John E. Rheinfrank, Overland Park senior, as national advertising manager; Kathryn Sanders, Lawrence senior, as retail advertising manager; Patricia Murphy, Shawnee Mission senior, as classified advertising manager; and Jerry Bottenfield, Pittsburg junior, as promotional advertising manager.
6 KANSAN May 6 1969
Honored as outstanding graduate seniors by the School of Journalism were: Everold Hosein, California, Trinidad, West Indies; Marsha Cromwell, Wichita; John Scruby, Indianapolis, Ind.; John Mosier, Wichita; Alison Steimel, Wright; Sandra Zahradnik, Kansas City; Monte Mace, Garnett; John T. Marshall, Lincoln; Carol Stevenson, Leawood; Kyle Craig, Joplin, Mo.; Stephen R. Morgan, Shawnee Mission; James C. Mullen, Leavenworth; O'Neal, Winchester and Miss Lennard.
Prizes and scholarships were awarded to: John Marshall, Lincoln senior and Jean Hershey, Holton junior: the Ella Beth Memorial prize for the outstanding students in Law of Communications; Robert G. Newton, Tulsa, Okla., junior; Michael Banks, Topea junior, and Michael J. Shearer, Topea junior: the Henry Schott Memorial prize to the outstanding junior men.
Linda McCrerey, Honolulu, Hawaii, junior: the Gannett Newspapers Scholarship; Bottenfield: the Minneapolis Tribune Scholarship; Yates: the Angelo C. Scott Memorial prize for outstanding reporting and newspaper work on the University Daily Kansan, and Kearney: the Don Pierce Memorial prize to the best sports writer.
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Engineering and Science at IBM
"The interdisciplinary environment keeps you technologically hot."
"Working in data processing today pretty much means you work in a broad spectrum of technologies," says Nick Donofrio.
An Associate Engineer at IBM, Nick is a 1967 graduate in Electrical Engineering. He's using his technical background to design circuits for computer memory systems.
"Circuit design used to be a narrow job," he says. "Today it can take you into the front yard of half a dozen different fields. In my job, for example, I work with systems design engineers, chemists, physicists, metallurgists, and programmers."
Nick describes a hypothetical case history: "A memory systems man comes to me with memory circuit requirements. Before I can start designing the circuit, I go to see a physicist. He helps me select an appropriate technology for the monolithic circuit.
"As the design develops, I work with a test group and also check back with the systems and semiconductor people to make sure I'm on the right track."
Keeping up
The interdisciplinary environment at IBM helps you keep up to date technologically. As Nick puts it, "You're constantly exposed to what's happening in other fields."
IBM needs technical graduates to work in research, design and development, manufacturing, product test, field engineering, and space and defense projects. We also need technical people in programming and marketing.
Check with your placement office If you're interested in engineering and science at IBM,ask your placement office for more information.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
IBM
du
Only one splash left
Photo by Ron Bishou
Only splashing you'll see at future Kansas Relays will be at the water jump for the 3,000-meter steeplechase. KU's puddle-plagued cinder track will be replaced by a new eight-lane Tartan surface, to be installed this summer. A $125,000 contribution by Wichita oilman Jim Hershberger, announced this morning, will help make possible the modern track facility.
Ageless Celtics champs
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) — Larry Siegfried hit two free throws with 24 seconds left and John Havlicek made one with 15 seconds to go as the remarkable Boston Celtics edged the Los Angeles Lakers, 108-106 last night to capture their 11th National Basketball Association championship in 13 years.
The remarkable Celtics, fourth place finishers in the NBA's Eastern Division in the regular season race and down 0-2 in the finals, took possession of their title with a 108-106 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers.
"This has to be one of my greatest thrills," player-coach Bill Russell said after his club took the best-of-seven playoff series, 4-3. "It's always tough to come back but we did."
The Celtics actually won it with a third-quarter blitz. They reeled off 11 straight points to turn a 60-60 tie into a 71-60 advantage.
A Forum record basketball crowd of 17,568 watched the 35-year-old Russell help the Celtics become the first team in the NBA's 23-year history come back to win after losing the first two games in the finals.
KU netters 4-0 winners
KU's tennis squad came home to defeat Nebraska, 4-0, yesterday in a dual cut short by a rainstorm. The triumph followed a disappointing road trip for the Jayhawks.
Over the weekend, Kansas was edged by Kansas State, 4-3; blanked by Oklahoma, 9-0; and defeated by Oklahoma City, 5-1. Saturday's match with OCU was also halted by rain, forcing cancellation of the doubles matches between the two schools for the second time.
Yesterday's win boosted KU's overall record to 11-8-2 uwwith a 2-3 mark in Big Eight play. The last league match before the conference meet will be Saturday at Missouri.
The Wichita State dual, postponed from April 15, will be played this afternoon at 2:30 on the courts west of Allen Field House. The Jayhawks will face Washburn University tomorrow, also at 2:30, in the season's last home match.
8 KANSAN May 6 1969
Brainy boss of Orioles feels Lopez shock waves
NEW YORK (UPI) — De Gaulle hangs 'em up and Kosygin feels it, which makes it pretty much the same way it is in baseball where Al Lopez quits and Earl Weaver is one of those hit by the shock waves.
Earl Weaver bosses the Baltimore Orioles. Right now, they're going good in first place.
KANSAN Sports
But that doesn't mean there is no link between him and Lopez, a man who left a fourth-place club because of nervous stomach trouble.
"Sympathy isn't exactly the right word because in this business one manager can't really feel sorry for another" says Weaver, a brainy little fellow with 22 years in baseball.
Managing ulcers
"But I certainly can understand how managing could affect anybody's health. No, I don't have ulcers. I holler and let it out."
Lopez didn't. He kept it all inside him and all his fellow managers knew it. They also knew Al wasn't lacking for money and the White Sox front office had to persuade him to return as manager last summer after he had "retired" once before.
Weaver took over the Orioles after the All-Star break last season and brought them home in second place. Now he has 'em up there on top and thinks they have a good chance of finishing there.
"Maybe it sounds funny, one manager saying this about another, but Al Lopez is one of my favorites." Weaver said.
Orioles 20-8
Managing even a first-place club has its moments which tie a manager's belly up in knots, though. Last Wednesday produced one of those moments.
Southpaw Dave McNally, a 22-game winner last year and the ace of Baltimore's staff, started against Detroit that night with a spotless 3-0 record and also had a 3-10 lead when he walked the leadoff man in the eighth inning and gave up a single to Al Kaline.
"Willie Horton was up next, and he has hit eight homers off McNally in two years. I knew I had to take McNally out but I hated to do it with a 3-0 lead," Weaver said.
"He understood. He said he should've never walked the first man up in the inning."
"What did McNally say to you when you went out to get him?" the Orioles' manager was asked
So Weaver brought in righthander Eddie Watt from the bullpen, Watt threw one ptich, and Horton hit a perfect double play ball to always-reliable Brooks Robinson at third. Always-reliable Brooks Robinson let that perfect double play ball skip right through his legs, however, and that gave the Tigers one run.
Jumpy stomach
Weaver's stomach churned a bit, and it did some more when Bill Freehan blooped a pitch in on his fists over second baseman Dave Johnson's head to make it 3-2 before Pete Richert relieved Watt and struck out Norm Cash, finishing off the Tigers for good.
It wasn't that much different Sunday when McNally ran his record to 5-0 in a 5-3 win over the Yankees in the opener of a doubleheader that Baltimore swept.
Again McNally wasn't around at the end; again Watt helped him out, and again Richert sealed off the final threat.
Naturally, there was that knot in Earl Weaver's stomach again.
Oliver red-hot
Royals playing best before TV cameras
KANSAS CITY (UPI) Television obviously is an inspiration to the Kansas City Royals.
The Royals have made four appearances on television and scored big victories each time. Sunday's 15-1 bombardment of the California Angels was the biggest triumph.
Bob Oliver was the hero of the TV drama, surprising himself and all who witnessed the debacle. Gaining only one hit in his first 25 times at bat this season, Oliver tied a Major League record Sunday with six blows, including a 2-run homer.
It elevated the rookie outfielder to the record book, becoming the 37th man in baseball ever to get six hits in a nine-inning game. Oliver's production was four singles, a double, and the homerun.
"I had some good pitches thrown at me and I took advantage of them," the 26-year-old Oliver said. "I began hitting when I started to relax at the plate."
He also got a single in his final time at bat Saturday night, which gave him seven straight hits.
Joe Foy and Lou Piniella also got two-run homers in Kansas City's 19-hit attack.
The Royals set numerous club records, including three homers in one game, highest score, and
most hits as every man in the starting lineup hit safely and scored at least once.
Golf stars in Wichita
TOPEKA (UPI) - Gov. Robert B. Docking has declared Wednesday as "Institute of Logopedics Day" in Kansas, honoring four famous athletes who will stage a benefit golf match that day in Wichita.
"All Kansans are proud to welcome Arnold Palmer, Mickey Mantle, Lee Trevino, and Don Meredith to our state," Docking said in making the announcement. "We are deeply appreciative of their efforts in behalf of the Institute of Logopedics."
Palmer, golf's all-time leading money winner, and Mantle, the ex-New York Yankee star, will team against 1968 U.S. Open champ Trevino and pro football star Meredith of the Dallas Cowbirds.
All proceeds of the match at the Wichita Country Club will be donated to the Institute. The match is sponsored by the Business and Professional Foundation of the Institute.
Major League Scoreboard
AMERICAN LEAGUE
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Baltimore | 20 | 8 | .714 | — |
| Washington | 16 | 11 | .593 | 3½ |
| Boston | 14 | 11 | .553 | — |
| Detroit | 14 | 11 | .558 | 7 |
| New York | 11 | 15 | .423 | 8 |
| Cleveland | 11 | 18 | .143 | 13½ |
Monday's Results No games scheduled
WEST
Minnesota 10 17 7 .696
Oakland 14 10 .583 $^{2/2}$
Kansas City 13 11 .542 $^{3/2}$
Chicago 8 11 .421 6
California 8 13 .381 7
Seattle 8 15 .348 8
Monday's Results
Today's Games
Washington (Hannan 2-1) at Oakland. Huron (12) night.
land (Hunter 12) ;jngt
work (Peterson 3-3) at Cali-
ifornia MLB
Boston (Cupid 4-1) at Seattle (Beil 2-1), night.
Boston (Bullet 1-1) at Detroit
fornia (May 1-1), night.
Boston (Culp 1-4) at Seattle (Bell
1-2), night.
Kansas City (Butler 1-1) at Detroit
(McLain 4-3), night. Minnesota (Hall 2-1) at Cleveland
(McDowell 1-3), night.
Chicago (Horlen 2-2) at Baltimore
Chicago (Horlen 2-2) at Baltimore (Palmer 3-1) night.
Wednesday's Games
Washington, night
New York at California, night
Boston at Seattle, night
Kansas City at Detroit, night
Minnesota at Cleveland, night
Chicago at Baltimore, night.
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST
W 18 W L Pct. GB
Chicago 19 9 667
Pittsburgh 15 10 600 4½
Pittsburgh 11 11 500 4
New York 11 11 400 6
St. Louis 10 15 400 7
Montreal 9 15 375 7½
Atlanta 17 8 .680
San Francisco 15 10 .600 2
Los Angeles 15 10 .600 2
Cincinnati 11 14 .440 6
San Diego 12 16 .429 $ \frac{6}{1} $
Houston 8 20 .286 $ \frac{10}{1} $
Monday's Results
Monday's Results No games scheduled
phila (Fryman 1-3), night.
San Diego (Kelley 1-2) at Pitts-
town.
Cincinnati (Maloney 3-0) at New York (Cardwell 0-4). night.
Yofk (Cardwell 0-4), night.
Houston (Wilson 2-3) at Philadel-
lem.
San Diego (Kelley 1-2) at Pittsburgh (Blass 2-1), 1-8.
San Francisco (Sadecki 2-2) at St.
Louis (Gibson 2-2), night.
Louis (Gibson 2-2), night.
Montreal (Stoneman 2-3) at Atlanta (Reed 3-0), night.
Los Angeles (Sutton 3-2) at Chi
Los Angeles (Sutton 3-2) at Chicago (Holtzman 3-1).
Wednesday's Games
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati, night
Houston at Philadelphia, night
San Diego at Pittsburgh, night
San Francisco at St. Louis, night
Montreal at Atlanta, night
Los Angeles at Chicago
Danny Cox
Wed., May 7th
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Admission $1.00
Tickets available
at the
SUA office and
at the door.
UDK World News
By United Press International
'USA! USA!'
PILSEN, Czechoslovakia Riot police used water hoses and clubs last night to disperse some 5,000 demonstrators protesting the government's lack-luster observance of the 24th anniversary of Pilsen's World War II liberation by the U.S. Army.
Czechs protest small observance of WWII liberation
"U.S.A.! U.S.A.!" chanted students.
The demonstrations began quietly with citizens of all ages carrying tiny, paper American flags.
A nighttime demonstration swelled into a general protest. Police tried to disperse jeering crowds, but they kept surging back.
Police then gave the hooting, whistling mob of mostly young people a dousing with water hoses. There was some scuffling
with police, and clubs were swung.
Students dispersed but continued to mill about singing protest songs and cheering a car with a West German license plate.
Several persons were taken away in a police car, including a young worker who unfurled a large American flag.
The force of riot police, about 100 men wearing steel helmets, advanced into the crowd with two water cannon trucks.
For two hours a crowd of several thousand people had placed tiny American paper flags and spring flowers on a grassy square where a partly finished monument to U.S. soldiers was torn down by the Stalinist Communist regime in the 1950s.
The police ripped out the American flags but left
Czechoslovak banners, flowers and pictures of Tomas Masaryk and Eduard Benes, the founders of pre-Com munist Czechoslovakia.
Authorities were seeking to play down the American role in the liberation in the official anniversary ceremonies.
For the second consecutive year, city officials placed wreaths at flagposts of all four allies, including the the Soviet Union, at a marble monument built in 1967. But only the Czechoslovak national anthem was played.
The worker displaying the American flag stood defiantly at the head of 700 persons watching the wreath-placing ceremony.
After the ceremony, the worker, a tractor driver, was arrested, hustled into a police
van and the flag was tossed in after him.
A crowd of several thousand then formed at the destroyed monument to the American liberators. Each time a citizen placed one of the tiny American flags on the flowers growing at the grassy place, the crowd, held back by police, applauded.
Residents reminisced about the day the American tanks
rolled into their city in 1945 to cheers and applause.
"Tell the American people we did this," one student said, pointing to the heap of flags and flowers.
One Pilsener, Mrs. Olga Cimkova, said, "the newspapers said the Russians liberated all of our country, but for 20 years we knew it was not true. We always remembered the Americans."
Iraelis warn Arabs
Mrs. Meir's warning was sounded in a speech before the Knesset (parliament) in Jerusalem while Jordan's King Hussein conferred with Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser in Cairo on the deteriorating situation in the Mideast.
MIDEAST — Arab and Israeli forces yesterday fought another series of gun duels across the Suez Canal and Jordan River cease-fire lines. At the same time, Israeli Premier Golda Meir warned Egypt and Jordan to put an end to "aggressive" actions and Arab guerrilla raids.
Mrs. Meir warned Hussein to halt the Arab guerrilla raids across the border or face reprisals. She also told Nasser Israel would continue to fortify
the 1967 cease-fire line on the Suez Canal as the "best guarantees" against Arab aggression.
U.S. ambassador says Czech fight not over
The Israeli premier spoke to the Knesset shortly after an official report disclosed that 13 Israelis, including 10 soldiers and three civilians, were killed and another 25 wounded in border battles with Arab guerrillas last week. It was the highest one-week casualty toll suffered by the Israelis this year.
WASHINGTON - The new U.S. ambassador to Czechoslovakia said yesterday recent developments there, including ouster of Premier Alexander Dubcek, "do not harbor well" for the country's liberalization program.
that characterization were an accurate one.
"I'm not sure what it means," Toon replied. "If it means a person with a neandertal attitude toward U.S. relations with Moscow, who believes we are on a collision course leading to inevitable military confrontation, then I am not a hard-liner."
But he added, "It is my own view that we should wait and see what happens after the situation is clarified, rather then simply assume the struggle is all over."
Committee Chairman J. William Fulbright said Toon had been characterized in some newspapers as a "hard-liner" on East-West relations, and asked if
Career foreign service officer Malcolm Toon, Northboro Mass., testified in Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings on his confirmation.
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tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
He said he feels "a certain sanity exists among the policy-makers of the Kremlin and that we can solve our problems in the long run without war."
Toon said he believes the United States is following a correct policy in seeking areas of agreement while remaining firm and strong, and he added:
"If a hard-liner is a term
Indian president buried
NEW DELHI President Zakir Husain was buried yesterday in a special tomb at the university he founded, and more than one million persons turned out to pay final respects to the educator who became India's first Moslem chief of state.
Police used clubs to beat back crowds surrounding the presidential palace, forcibly opening a path through which Husain's body was borne from the palace and placed upon a horse-drawn caisson for the seven-mile procession to Mamia Milia University.
May 6
1969 KANSAN 9
Husain, 72, died of a heart attack early Saturday after almost two years as president of this predominantly Hindu nation. A 13-day period of mourning began Saturday.
George Romney, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, headed the U.S. delegation to the funeral. He was accompanied by his wife, Lenore, the ambassador-designate to India, Kenneth B. Keating, and others.
NEED TUTORING FOR WESTERN CIV?
A 31-gun salute sounded as the procession got under way, passing along a three-mile route guarded by 4,000 army troops. Visiting dignitaries, including Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, rode behind the caisson in the slow procession.
4 Sessions
$2\frac{1}{2}$ Hrs. a Session
1 Dollar An Hour
Call VI 2-5206 for
Information After 5:00
George Waterman,
Instructor
Martin's Auto Painting 792 N. 2nd—N. Lawrence
applied to a person who feels the Soviet Union does not really wish us well, then I am one."
7 Day Special
Cars Painted
$27.50
It's ICE CREAM Time!
IN GOD WE TRUST LIBERTY 1964
5
Sundaes, Shakes, Cones 5c with one at regular price
Time to save! Buy a delicious sundae, cone or milk shake and get the second one for just a nickel.
1404 W.23rd Just south of Allen Field House (offer expires May 18)
TASTY
SMAKS
19
HAMBURGERS
TOWN
MOST POPULAR DRIVE-INS IN TOWN
1234567890
Photo by Ron Bishon
Simplicity is the look
Flowing veil and lace trim on borders give an elegant look to any wedding.
New trends are evident this year for brides not only in selecting their own gown but also in choosing their bridesmaid dresses and bouquets.
Weddings can be unique
The season for weddings is here. And if you're looking for a husband or already have one in tow you'd better be prepared.
The wedding gown itself can be found in many styles from the simple gown with straight lines to the little girl look with ruffles and lace. Old fashioned puffed sleeves seem to be very popular this year. And the empire waist with A-line skirt persists.
Let's start at the top. Floor length veils, as always, are popular but with a little variety. How about a floor length mantilla? Head pieces are simple and elegant.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Now that the minor flurry over the Oscar awards is over and forgotten, the vital and truly prestigious awards come into focus—the Patsys.
As always the back of the wedding gown is most important. Tiny buttons or old fashioned lace trim add the finishing touches to any wedding ceremony. Trains are draped from the shoulder or waist or the veil can substitute for a train. Many gowns have
Canines steal the show
Knowledgeable television and motion picture buffs realize that the Emmys and Oscars fade into insignificance when the Patsy awards are announced.
The week the nominations were made public.
No hanky-panky
It is a sheltered citizen indeed who is unaware that Patsy spells the initials for Picture Animal Top Star of the Year and/or Performing Animal Television Star of the Year.
Sponsored by the American Humane Association, the Patsys are run objectively. No hanky-panky here. None of the animals mount campaigns, buy advertising in the trade papers, nor lure friends to vote for them.
The Patsys have never been investigated.
They have never become involved with the Hollywood foreign press.
The 19th annual awards program will take place in mid-June. Meanwhile, the ballots are out and the voting is in progress.
Nominees this year include 11 dogs, two chimpanzees, two bears, two horses, a toucan, pig, lion and a crow.
As you can see our feathered friends represent a minority as do those of hoof and fang. This year cats have been eliminated from the ballot altogether.
Dogs, as usual, hog the nomination. Although, precisely 23,963 animals had roles in movies and television last year, as with human actors, few were stars
Run in herds
Embarrassingly enough 18,234 of our four-footed friends were run by the camera in herds in the form of cattle drives and nameless horses. They are the equivalent of human extras and bit players.
10 KANSAN May 6 1969
Pay-Less
Self-Service SHOES
1300 W.23rd Lawrence
Only animal stars are nominated.
In the running for the best movie animals actor are three dogs, Lord Nelson: "With Six You get Eggroll," Spike: "Angel in My Pocket" and Baron: "Live a Little;" two horses, Albarado: "The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit" and Old Fooler: "The Scalp Hunter."
Breaking the dog-horse monopoly is big beaked Amigo, a toucan American tropical bird who nosed his way into "What's So Bad about Feeling Good."
Best television performance nominees are four dogs: Tiger
and Chester: "Wonderful World of Color;" Scuffy: "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir;" Lord Nelson again: "Doris Day Show," Shaggy: "Blondie," and Chipper: "Land of the Giants."
They will be contesting with Arnold the pig: "Green Acres," Judy the chimp and Clarence the lion in "Daktari" and a dumb bear named Ben who plays the title role in "Gentle Ben."
Another category for best single appearance on a television show pits the dogs Tiger, Chester, Bearheart and Rote against Timmy the chimp and Mile, the crow, and another dumb bear named Bill.
Coed submits stories to national magazine
By SARAH DALE Kansan Staff Writer
Campus activities, movements or revolutionary activities can prove to be profitable experiences.
Sherry Love, Topeka sophomore and a member of the Mademoiselle College Board, has found that she can gain experience in publishing news of campus activities and still pursue her own field of study.
Miss Love is one of the winners of Mademoiselle's nationwide competition which enables her to submit articles on KU activities.
"Mademoiselle sends me six questionnaires a year," Miss Love said. "Very little deals with fashion, the questionnaires are mainly for news articles and we submit the article we want.
"We're not paid for filling out the questionnaires. If we have an article published we're paid for that."
Miss Love said she is presently working on an article concerning the AWS survey on the Status of Women and the Women's Liberation Front.
In order to be selected for the board the applicant must submit an entry in one of the following areas: art, writing, editing, photography, layout, fashion design, merchandising, retail promotion or advertising.
Miss Love designed floor plans and discussed the contents of a dress shop which she titled the "Hexagon Shop" for her entry.
"I applied because I like to follow fashions and fads. College movements also fascinate me. It gives me the opportunity to study more about KU." Miss Love explained, "This was a chance for me to pursue a hobby I couldn't pursue in college."
LA PETITE GALERIE
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
Miss Love said women on the College Board have a good opportunity for a future job with Mademoiselle. "Probably 500 of the women on the Board are journalism majors," she said.
Twenty College Board members are chosen to become guest editors by submitting two entries. If they win this position they spend the month of June in New York as salaried employees of Mademoiselle.
Jim's Texaco welcomes spring and KU Students
Free Lube with every all change and filter change.
Also, $.02 off every gallo. of Texaco Fire Chief & new improved Sky Chief gasoline. Just show your ID.
Offer good until May 31
West 6th & Crestline Dr
detachable trains to alleviate handling at the wedding reception.
Bridesmaids dresses are getting away from the traditional "bridesmaid look." Two-piece dresses are becoming very popular and contrasting colors
don't take our word for it—see
for yourself.
KANSAN
are often used. We're seeing more and more color coordination and progressive colors in bridesmaid's dresses.
Bouquets for bride and bridesmaids are really leaving tradition behind. Single flower bouquets are becoming more common and they're inexpensive. Drops of flowers from the main bouquet are also very popular. And how about using flowers and greenery for the bridesmaid's head pieces?
A. J. E. H.
We feel that upcoming brides are very lucky to have such variety to choose from. But
Photo by Ron Bishop Wear a smile The little girl look
JENNIFER HANNAE
Detail adds beauty
A single rose contrasts simplicity with fine trim detail.
Photo by Ron Bishop
THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES,
BUT IN SANDALS CAN
YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE?
Village Brown
Eighteen dollars
Bernardo's golden color coin-of-the-realm
straps to handsome leather thongs. The "Centurion" in small,
medium, or large.
BERNARDO
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES,
BUT IN SANDALS CAN
YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE?
Village Brown
Eighteen dollars
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas are offered to students regardless of 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 Iread. 5-14
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts many styles of leather watchbands just for your wrist and watch. Starting at $3.812 Mass. 5-15.
For Sale: SANDALS--This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
'65 Corvette, After 5 p.m. Call VI 3-
2183. 5-6
New Apartment size refrigerators-white or copper only $99.00 at Ray Stoneback's (open Mon. & Thurs.
Nites). Ideal for study rooms & dens.
G.E. Hair Dryers Reduced! 3 Heat
sets + 10.99 - plus you get a free rain wear
outfit from G.E..=See Ray Stoneback's.
you own t-oen-own Mon .& Thurs.
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE, TIGF with 75 cup pitchers. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
'64 Monza convertible, 4-speed. Per-
formance at 30,300 actual mph.
Catalyst 841-5380
1965 Volks—some body damage—needs minor engine repair. Must sell fast. $300 or will take best offer. Dave Owen, VI 2-2160. 5-6
For Sale: Super-Takumar F/4, 200 MM Lens. Virtually New and Unused. Complete with Box, Case and Strap. Call VI 2-6481. Evenings. 5-6
Honda 90. Inexpensive transportation terms. Call Alison Mynon, T1-7600, tl-7600.
For Sale: Must sell 1960 MGA. In good mechanical condition with much recent work done on it. Call Rlek, Vestia. Req. 5 wkdays. 1. Sat. & 4. Sun. 1-56
Artificial flowers for every occasion.
Artificial flowers issue
Paper. Straw. Antiqued. Bouquets.
livered. JAN'S FLOWER N GIFT
a division of Hillcrest Bards. 5-7
SALE: Tables, Dinette Set, Walnut
Chairs, 5-Drawer Dresser, Oak Desk,
Stor. Alarm, Miscellaneous.
11 Apt. 3, Apt. After P. 5-M. 1514
Tennessee, Apt. A.
SUZUKI
Just arrive Factory fresh
TC 120 "Cat" Motor K Scramble
Nichols Suzuki
"The Motorcycle Men"
Lowest Prices—Highest Trades
300 W. 6th 842-0504
For Sale: 1965 Honda 90, 4,000 ml.
Call Mike: 843-2043. 5-7
Stereo AM-FM cartridge for auto tape
Bargain Basket. S-7
$25, VI 2-7843. S-7
1961 Cadillac Sedan De Ville. 66,000
actual miles, PS and PB. Electric windows
and doors. Factor 4. Condition inslush.
out $895.00. Call VI 3-6383 or UN 4-3545.
For Sale: Guitars for sale - Gibson "Les Paul Special," W. Hardshell case, $100. Fender "Mustang" 3/4 size, $250. Yamaha "Regal Classic" Folk guitar w. new strings and case. $60. Call Steve Dexter, VI 3-7404 after 7 p.m. 5-7
Summer dresses, sizes 5. 14, and 15.
Some shirt size, 41.5, long and short
shirts.
In excellent condition. Van Dyke mobile home, 50 x 10, new wall-to- carpet, Drersch's Trailer Park, south, Missoula, Louisiana. Call 5- 30. VI 2-32699.
For Sale ... Four 14' Mickey Thompson
knock-offs, $100, $160
at VI 2-8153
S-9
For Sale: WOLLENKTA tape recorder,
$90. Also, AIWA tape recorder, $70.
Also, good cond. pail, good com-
Call Dave after 5:30 p.m. at 333 McCollium. I 2-6600. 5-9
Stereo component set, 40 watt, AM/ FM solid state radio, professional microwave walnut speaker cabinets, $169.85, Wide Sewing Chair, 916 Mace, 5-9
'60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide front wheels. Reupholstered front wheels rebuilt. Tape deck optional, but not included in $650 or $750. Interior care of Jeep Mr. Jeff Messers VI 3-8153 5-14
FOR SALE: BAND EQUIPMENT—Gretch guitar, Fender Amplifier and cabinet used 10 months in one of midwest's top bands. Guitar is 2 years old; amp/cabinet is one year old. Excellent condition. Call VI T-6894. 5-12
For Sale: HAM GEAR. Moving—selling complete rig, SB-301, SB-401, ment, and many other items and parts. WBVECI. V 3-6057 U 4-UN 3-4099. 5-12
'64 Ford Galaxy 500, 289 engine, std.
'84 Toyota Camry $895 Quality Pompei
1040 Vermont. P 5-12
'68 Falcon—economy car—air-cond-
automatic trans. radio—power steer-
ing—power brakes. Quality Pontiac,
104 Vermont. 5-12
'65 Rambler convt.-automatic-V-8
eng. -power steering-power brakes-
radio. Quality Pontiac, 1040 Vermont.
5.12
'64 Chev. convt - automatic trans-
283 engine - power steering - radio -
clean. $1,025. Quality Pontiac. 1040
Vermont. 5-12
NOTICE
The TEE PEE has been remodeled! Bands on weekends, TGIF with 75c pitches each Friday from noon to 6 p.m. 5-14
515 Michigan St. St. B-R-Q--outdoor pit, rib slab to go; $3.25; Rib order;
$1.55; Rib sandwich, 90c; $1.5 chicken;
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $.75; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tt
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Dellcatessen in Jayhawk Food Mart, 8th and Illinois. Delivery day noon to night Sundays. Delivery service daily 6 p.m. to midnight.
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, most advanced 3600 III copier, Crisper, sharper copies; faster service. Unsurpassed results for theses, papers, bulletins. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf
PRIMARILY LEATHER - Vests, bags,
handmade at 812 Michaels, 5-15
handmade at 812 Michaels, 5-15
offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox, wood and Fiber Interfaces. Service warranties. Call VI-2 1-944-2650 prompt service. Hillcrest Shopping Center (Afternoon & Evening). 5-9
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES: If you really believe that you can find a better job in summer, call Dave Wetzel at 516-237-8800 or 6:30 p.m. about working with other Jayhawkers and 5,000 other college men for the South-Western Company. For an average profit per day—$22.11, We'll interview you and can interview us. 5-9
RAY AUDIO your new R-DYNACO DEALER
TYPING
Notice: Married Couple–Prefer 2nd or 3rd year students. Modern Home in charge for exchange for help in homes. Availability: Rock Lodge, Holstein Farm, 843-4839. 5-9
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
Carrier after 5 p. m.; Y2 1-409; 5-14
Carrier after 5 p. m.; Y2 1-409; 5-14
10% off on all Mother's Day gifts at the HODGE PODGE, 17 West 9th street. Feature hand-crafted pottery, glassware, sculpture, and stonework at $15.00. 5-7
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 elec. Located near Oliver Lake VI. S-2873.
Theses, themes, papers in English,
French, transliterated Russian—typed on
IBM Selectric by experience
the typist. Call Mrs. Harwell, 844
5298.
TYPING: EXPERIENCED in typing thesis, term papers, all kinds of written material. Phone type. Fast, efficient service. Phone VI 3-9554. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist will give fast, accurate copies of papers, reporting these to Case VI 3-02888
Typing; Theses and Term Papers.
Electric Typewriter
Mary A. Wolken
1712 Alabama
Wilton, NY 10297
5-6
FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR DENT
Male students only. 4-room + bath
1 3-round + bath. Electricity extra.
Approximately 1 block from campus.
Call VI 3-1211 daytime.
SUMMER SUBLET—3 bedroom, furnished duplex, air-conditioned, dishwasher, disposal, WC close to campus, laundry facility, 14 wk call after call a for p. p.m., 843-7363. 5-6
For Rent: Furnished apartment.
mine; and 1 quiet pet.
pets. Call after 8:00, 643-8410. 5-6
Sleeping rooms with and without kitchen privileges for males; fur-thered conditioned apartments Borders campus and neat downtown. Phone VI 3-5767. 5-14
bridal registry
★ very unique & selec gift items, French, Early American, Mediterranean, & oriental gifts
★ weekend specials
★ 10% discount on cash
Raney Drug Stores
VI 2-1320 826 Iowa
flowers
V12-1320
Alexander's
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
PHONE V13-4278
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Antiques THE GRINSTEADS
PRIMITIVE AND
GENERAL LINE, LAWRENCE, K6444
746 HID DISTREET
McConnell Lumber
$ \mathcal{L}_{\mathrm{s}}^{s+e s} $
Beginning June, Pleasant room and kitchen privileges in private home in exchange for some evening baby care. $5-$9 Live close to campus, air-conditioned rooms. Unfurnished. $105-$130. One available now, only six left for June. Also, room. Call VI 3-2116 for appointment. Santee Apts. 1125 Lovell岛. lt
Available June 1st to University faculty or staff member, (single man or woman) two spacious 2 bedroom apartment, new office room, fully carpeted A/C, utilities paid. No students. Beautifully equipped kitchens, phone VI 3-8534.
Now renting for summer, small studio
ments nicely furnished, utilities paid,
private parking 1½ blocks from Uni-
ment available immediately. Phoni
3-8543
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Charge Account and Bankmark Services
- Stretcher Frames
Stouffer apartment for rent for the summer completely furnished Chess room. 240 sq ft.
806 MASS.
V1 3-1171
- Decoupage Materials
- Oils and Acrylics
THE CONCORD SHOP
PORTRAITS
SUMMER SUBLET-Stouffer Place
Apt Nice. $70 or 2 ($80) on
curtains, bookcase, etc. Close to
campus. Married couple. Call VI 2-3559.
PHOTOFINISHING
APPLICATION PICTURES
Apartments for rent: rent. Graduate Moving To Kansas City, Live Merrie or unfurnished. Apartments starting at $142.00, four swimming pools, sauna and a kitchen, electric kitchens, carpeted, 12 minutes from downtown K.C., 18th St. Pressway at Roeland Park, 110 Counterspace, Kansas City, Kansas. CO 2-1166.
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
❶ PASSPORT PICTURES
Attention summer students: College Inn, 912 Alabama at foot Mt. Oread. Attend winter classes furnished. Great family meals within your budget. College approved. Call 8980 now for reservation and deposit. Also take fall term reservations. 5-14
with gasoline purchases
FREE CAR
For:
Two bedroom apartment available
June 1 for summer. It is for two persons.
Reasonable rent. Vall VI 3-2619
after 5.00 p.m. 5-12
WASHES
Robo-Phillips 66
1764 W.23rd
WANTED
Use our gas Budget card—costs no more
Sublette for summer--3 bed,
2 bath, 140 sq ft. titles.
Phone 842-5457 or UN 4-4962.
Must rent one bedroom apt. by June 1st. New air-conditioning, two blocks from campus. Will rent furnished or unfurnished. Call Vi I 2-7147. 5-12
If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To
MEADOWBROOK
15th and Crestline
Phone VI 2-4200
??GETTING
MARRIED??
---
- Components
- Records
- Tapes
SOUNG
The KU student at the TEE PEE.
Free pitchers given away nightly, May 24
Wanted—married couple—to live in
want a male student to work mornings,
some weekends and nights. No chil-
dren at risk. Phone VI 3-1122
appointment. 5-6
HILLCREST CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
New York Cleaners
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
For the best in:
SUMMER CAMP EMPLOYEES
HELP WANTED
NEEDED
Unit leaders, Dining Hall assistants
for resident camp.
Camp Pre-Gram!
1014 Armstrong Avenue
Kansas City, Kansas
MA 1-1302 5-6
926 Mass.
DO THE KIDS HAVE, YOU TIED DOWN? Let me do the babybassing Dependable marries coed warm summer work. Call 8-59-0232 after 6 p.m.
VI 3-0501
Wanted: one male roommate to share
this summer.
Rent $80. Call VI 2-6045
Female graduate student needs female roommate to share 2 bdm. apt. Would have private rm. Reasonable. VI 2-0250 after 4:00 p.m. 5-12
WANTED: SINGLE MALE STUDENT for summer and fall—to work some job and find a place to change and be furnished apt. and pay. Phone VI. 3-112 for appointment. 5-6
Male or female Inhalation therapy technician, experienced or medically oriented. Part time positions now available in October and September. Challenging opportunity and salary. Contact Miss Allison, Lawrence Memorial Hospital. MI 3-9680.
Counselors wanted for boys' camp in the Bear Mountain area of New York state. See New York City on your phone and travel allowances contact Bill Ford at 1941 Emerald Drive or Phone VI 3-5265. 5-9
Female student wanted to share home during summer school. Phone V1 5-7
Needed: 2 female roommates to share a summer apartment $ _{3} /_{2}$ block from campus. Low rent. Call Margaret, Rm. 413 at VI 2-1340. 5-7
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
Students Summer Employment. Pinkerton, Inc., is now taking applications for the entire summer work as security guards in the great cities as City area. To qualify, you must be have clean police record (traffic violations excluded). Apply Mon, thru Fri. Room 700. Building, 1102 Grand Ave, Kansas City, Missouri. 1102 Grand Ave, Kansas City, Missouri. 5-15
PERSONAL
French tutoring; technical translations, French-English and Engl i sh h-French. Bilingual native, experienced.
Call VI 2-6348 at 6 p.m. 5-7
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
8 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-292
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
HAPPINESS IS A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Contact: Patti Murphy
University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
Classified Rates
1 time — 25 words or less—$1.00—Add. words $.01 each
3 times — 25 words or less—$1.50—Add. words $.02 each
5 times — 25 words or less—$1.75—Add. words $.03 each
Rev. Rehorn resigns position to resume University studies
The Rev. Thomas Rehorn Jr., director of the Methodist Wesley Foundation, has announced his resignation and will continue his studies at KU where he plans to work on his Ph.D. in American Studies.
Mr. Rehorn, who has instigated many campus and community activities, became director of the Foundation June 1966. He announced his resignation April 22 at an executive staff meeting.
"I felt it was time to step back and take a look at what has happened in the last three years," Mr. Rehorn explained. "Now I need to do serious study. I'm not a researcher but somehow we've got to blend in one man the ability to do responsible homework. Some people generate too much effort in one direction.
"I've been involved in a lot of action. Now I need to think. I'm a churchman and really excited about the University. I want to find a way to act out that concern in the context of the . University situation."
Mr. Rehorn said he was basically pleased bout the last three years. "We've set a style of action,
oriented and controversial. This is the way it ought to be." he said.
For the last three years the Wesley Foundation has been involved in a great deal of action.
[Image of a man]
Photo by Ron Bishop
Photo by Ron Bishop
The Rev. Tom Rehorn
Mr. Rehorn said he helped organize the Lawrence Peace Center and the institutional racism courses on campus. He was involved in Vietnam summer in 1966, the
Vietnam peace vigil, the Holiday Inn demonstration and the demonstration against General Walt.
The three church springboards, Rehorn explained, are worship, study and service. He said the stress for him is study and service.
"There are always people coming in to talk about problems. There is a mutual involvement in struggling through the issues and trying to find out what needs to be done."
Counseling is basically in three areas, Rehorn continued. "I talk to students about sex, parents and the draft. As far as the draft is concerned, many people come in to find out what they are in relationship to the draft."
Institutional racism courses have excited Mr. Rehorn the most this year. "This is the first time churches have enrolled that many people in these courses. It showed a real campus interest in racism problems and had a real bearing on campus curriculum."
Mr. Rehorn said the University Christian Movement had made an impact on this campus. "People can no longer make claims that we aren't involved," he said.
Newsweek editor talks on Vietnam alternatives
The Vietnam war will ultimately be forced to stop far short of the United States' original goals, Robert Christopher, senior editor of Newsweek, said last night in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Testimony finished in Harrison trial
Leonard Harrison, director of the Ballard Community Center in Lawrence is one of the defendants.
WICHTA (UPI) — Testimony was completed yesterday in the marathon trial of nine Negro men charged with assaulting two Model Cities officials.
The state rested after presenting two more rebuttal witnesses and the trial was recessed until Thursday. When it resumes, the judge will instruct the jury and prosecution and defense attorneys will present closing arguments.
This was the 29th day of testimony in the trial, marked by bitterness between opposing attorneys and by contempt of court citations against both sides.
Speaking on "U.S. Foreign Policy after Vietnam," Christopher stated the United States has only two alternatives in Vietnam: to escalate at a savage pace or to make major compromises and face defeat.
"We have a unique problem for the American people to face," Christopher said, "and that is we are facing defeat in a conflict which has become quite large.
"The U.S. public just is not accustomed to defeat," he continued, "and I'm also wondering how defeat in Vietnam will affect our foreign policy. Will our attitude become exceedingly passive and will this passive feeling be prevalent in the public opinion?"
Christopher discussed the possibility that our obligations towards all countries in the future would be "narrowly interpreted and some ignored" if the Vietnam conflict ends in disaster for the United States.
Senate
Christopher said he agrees with Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., who insists the United States has made "too many commitments to too many countries without considering what is really the vital interest of the United States."
(Continued from page 1)
organizations will be dissatisfied. If the administration is dissatisfied with the Senate decision, it will modify the decision, demonstrate student government impotency, and thus also anger the liberal and radical oriented.
"If they want a revolution at this campus they're going to have it," said Berthrong.
Atkinson, present at the meeting, asked whether or not Berthrong and ISP wanted the responsibility they were invoking. The ISP chairman replied with an emphatic "yes" although he said he felt his head was "on a block." Berthrong said the campus leftists would feel he was selling out while the campus conservatives would feel the radicals were running the University.
Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and ISP student body president, said he realized the importance of the Senate meeting and was going to make sure the Senate takes an immediate stand. Awbrey said responsible student government was at stake and he was tempted to lock the doors of the meeting until the Senate took some action, thus assuming student power.
Relays
(Continued from page 1)
surface, and 40 cents a square foot for the asphalt base. All costs include labor, Timmons added. The KU coach also noted that the track, which will be expanded to eight lanes, will be moved 22 feet to the south and will necessitate moving the score board and eliminating the tennis area at that end of the stadium.
Stinson, in prefacing the announcement, said the track would be named after Hershberger upon its completion.
Future at stake
"It is with a great deal of pride and a great sense of gratitude that we thank him," Stinson said. "Its effect on our athletic program is immeasurable."
Timmons also had predicted that the entire KU track program would suffer measureably in the next few years if some provision for new facilities did not come.
The much needed, all-weather track at KU has been a major source of concern, yet merited little action for the past three years. The future of the Kansas Relays has been at stake along with prospects for continuing to draw outstanding athletes to the event.
Hershberger's donation will finance the majority of improvements which annually plague Coach Timmons. These would include an additional two lanes, a new drainage system, covering, permanent markings and curbing for the Tartan track.
Costs will drop
Countless other problems inherent in the present cinder track will be erased. The costly plight of shipping cinders from New Mexico can be deleted from the budget in addition to the expenses of keeping the track surveyed, graded, dragged, watered, brushed, rolled and marked-a several thousand-dollar process which must be repeated every time the frequent spring rains ruin hours of work in 30 minutes.
The disc plow, rakes, steam rollers and the butane-burning flame thrower pulled by a tractor—all necessary to rehabilitate the muck caused by the torrent that seems to be scheduled with each annual Relays—can now be dispensed with.
Rain always a worry
By far, the biggest headache has been the possibility of rain on Relays Saturday which would totally saturate the present track and completely cancel the biggest KU track event of the season.
With this no longer a worry, Timmons can look forward to an increase in the number of university teams entering the Relays, and the KU meet can hope to hold its own successfully against the stiff competition from other meets.
Only three years ago 26 university teams ran in the Kansas Relays. Last year the number dropped to nearly half that with 14 teams entering. Timmons noted that because of the facility, which he has termed "the worst track of all I have seen in my four years at KU," the Relays has lost two of the finest track schools in the country—Southern University and Texas Southern.
Boston jumped, then left
Last year Ralph Boston, the former world record holder in the long jump, had to schedule his KU appearance for Friday because of a commitment to the Tennessee track carnival.
With the advantages of the new Tartan track—surer footing and fewer injuries, equal performance potential in each lane, a quick-drying surface and uniform smoothness—the KU track program and the Kansas Relays should witness an upswing in name athletes and annual profit. Additionally, KU will be able to attract more prestigious opponents for dual and triangular meets and, with the additional two lanes, will be eligible to host the NCAA outdoor championships.
Frizzell says 3.2 beer is legal on state college campuses
Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell has issued an opinion that 3.2 beer can legally be consumed on the campuses of the state's six colleges and universities.
Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and student body president, said he will meet with Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, Thursday, to discuss beer dispensing facilities in the Kansas Union.
KU students passed a referendum question in last month's general student election saying they would like to have 3.2 beer sold on the campus.
Frizzell said, "Provisions of the statutes which make it illegal to drink or consume alcoholic liquor upon property owned by the state do not apply to cereal malt beverages."
He said the statutory
12 KANSAN May 6 1969
The decision came from Frizzell following a request by the Board of Regents for a ruling.
definition of alcoholic liquor does not include 3.2 beer. He said since there is no statutory prohibition, consumption of the beer would be legal on state campuses.
Awbrey called for a clarification from Frizzell on the ruling.
"At this point we don't really know what he means. We don't know if the ruling states that beer will be just in the Kansas Union, or also in residence halls," Awbrey said.
Mark Retonde, Kansas City senior and Interfraternity Council president, said the IFC would probably pass a resolution sometime next year to allow beer in the houses, if Frizzell's ruling includes living groups. The IFC is presently involved in a suit with the state concerning
fraternity taxing. In order not to affect the court decision, Retonde said the IFC would probably wait until September, when the Kansas Supreme Court would make its ruling.
Awbrey said there is a proposal being made to the Student Senate to allow living groups to decide their own social rules, including the beer issue.
Students a. Wichita State University have also voted in favor of beer on campus in recent elections, but students at Fort Hays State College defeated the issue.
The regents, who administer the state's higher education system, have made no policy decision about the matter but have requested reports from the heads of the six institutions. The subject is expected to be considered at the regents' next meeting May 15.
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To test Student Senate power
UDB may set pattern
By GLORIA VOBEJDA
Kansan Staff Writer
Three KU students will appear before the University Disciplinary Board (UDB) tomorrow to answer charges arising out of a campus demonstration April 23.
The students called to answer charges are: Bill Berkowitz, New York graduate student; Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student, and Donald Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
Expected charges will include disruption of a seminar for Kansas law enforcement officers, damage to three tables in the Kansas Union and interference with student elections.
The UDB will meet tomorrow despite pleadings from Senex, the executive committee of the Council of the Senate, and the Student Senate, to postpone the meeting until May 15.
The postponement had been requested to "give the Student Senate an opportunity to take what position it deems fit with regard to those charges," said a release from Charles Oldfather, Senex member and professor of law.
The Student Senate still plans to hold an emergency meeting tonight to deliberate recommendations to be sent to the UDB in time for tomorrow's meeting.
The Senate meeting will be at 8 p.m. in 303
(A letter from Russell N. Bradt, Chairman UDR)
May 6,1969
Ambrose Saricks, Chairman May 6,1969 Executive Committee, Council of the Senate of
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Deer Dean Saricks.
The University Disciplinary Board met this afternoon to consider the request of the Executive Committee of the Council of the Senate (SenEx) that the Board's hearing scheduled for May 8, concerning certain occurrences on April 23, 1969, be postponed to May 15. SenEx stated that it requested the postponement "to give the Student Senate an opportunity to take what position it deems fit with regard to [the] charges."
Prof. Charles H. Oldfather, SenEx member, and David S. Awbrey, Student Body President, were invited to and did appear and present their views to the Board.
The Board determined that, after SenEx decided to request a postponement, Mr. Awbrey called a special meeting of the Student Senate for the evening of Wednesday, May 7. The Board understands that that meeting is called for the purpose of and will be devoted to a consideration of the questions of proper student conduct raised by the incidents of April 23, and that the meeting is intended to provide a full opportunity for expression of views by members of the Student Senate concerning these matters. The Board therefore concluded that, since the reasons suggested for a postponement no longer obtain, the postponement is not necessary.
Sincerely yours,
Russell N. Bradt, Chairman University Disciplinary Board
Bailey Hall, and only the case of Berkowitz, Atkinson and Jenkins will be discussed, said Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and student body president.
Referring to the UDB meeting, Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, said, "The hearing is closed and is for students who have been invited to be present and the members of the board."
Alderson refused to say whether the outcome of the hearing would be made public. But, he said he would relate what had been done in the past.
"It has been closed (the meeting) and the hearing has involved the members of the board and the persons appearing and no other—no one else."
If information is released to the press about future hearings, he said, it would be a change in policy.
Authority not yet defined
What appears is a power struggle between the University Disciplinary Board and the Student Senate. In the transition period from the previous form of student government to KU's new expanded Student Senate, outlines of disciplinary authority have not yet been defined.
Student body president Dave Awbrey Hutchinson junior, admitted the Student Senate does "not have the power to judge the case, just to recommend action to be taken by the disciplinary board."
The action would be a test of the Student Senate and student responsibility concerning matters of great importance, he said. "I think matters of this type, directly affecting these students, should be channeled through student government."
(Continued to page 20)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.126
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, May 7, 1969
Ohio authorities deny impaneling grand jury in Abe Fortas affair
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) — U.S. authorities denied last night that a federal grand jury has been impaneled here to reopen a two-year-old case involving Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas's law firm.
"We're not in a position to impanel a jury because we have no U.S. attorney here," said Federal Judge Frank Kloeb. "We have a very crowded docket. We have enough to do, let alone adding something like this.
"It just could not be done right now."
U. S. Atty, Harry Pickering of Cleveland, who is handling federal cases in Toledo while the city is without a U.S. attorney of its own, echoed Kloeb's denial.
"We don't have a grand jury impaneled at Toledo," he said.
Pickering added that he would be notified of any plan to call a grand jury here. He conceded, however, that the Justice Department might have ordered an investigation of the case without letting him know.
The New York Times reported in a Washington dispatch today that the Justice Department had begun a grand jury investigation into an action taken in 1967 by Fortas' firm. The Times dispatch said the action "delayed the production of documents sought by federal antiracketeering attorneys from one of the firm's clients."
"We never know what they're investigating," he said. "We don't ask. They don't tell us. We prefer it that way."
John Mattimore, the former U.S. attorney in Toledo who resigned when President Lyndon B. Johnson's term expired in January, said the Fortas firm, Arnold and Porter, represented one of several steel companies involved in a price-fixing case he prosecuted in 1967.
The newspaper said the investigation had been under consideration for months.
Four steel executives were indicted, but only Irwin Fruchtman of the Fruitman Steel Co. was convicted. Arnold and Porter represented the Donovan Steel and Wire Co.
Reports of a grand jury reinvestigation of the 1967 case circulated yesterday in Washington, where some Republicans were demanding that Fortas resign because he received—but later returned—a $200,000 fee from the family of financier Louis Wolfson, now jailed for stock manipulation.
Police fight student rebels
Two hundred riot-equipped state police early today broke down a door and evicted some 60 students from a Dartmouth College building they had held for 12 hours.
By United Press International
An additional 800 students camped outside the building moved aside at the prodding of New Hampshire and Vermont troopers. The sitters-in were
then dragged or led to buses and driven to an armory near the Hanover, N.H., campus.
The protesters had earlier ignored a court order to leave the building.
Protesters at predominantly Negro Howard University in the nation's capital also ignored a court order to abandon a seized building and instead sealed off the entire campus early today.
Purdue University students today continued their third sit in 24 hours. The first ended early Tuesday with the arrest of 229 students and the second was called off when state police began photographing protesters.
The disturbances marred Purdue's centennial celebration
New York's Queens College was to reopen today after a two-day hiatus after vandalism and a campus battle.
UDK News Roundup
V.P. says Fortas unwise
By United Press International
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said yesterday Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas was "unwise" for accepting a fee from the foundation of financier Louis Wolfson.
"The bench has a peculiar and very high sensitivity," Agnew told newsmen. "I think it was unwise of Mr. Fortas or anyone else to accept a fee of this type while on the highest bench in this country."
Nixon backs farm unions
WASHINGTON - The Nixon Administration yesterday backed the right of farm workers to organize unions, but opposed bringing them under the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).
Instead, Labor Secretary George P. Shultz proposed a special farm labor relations board to handle agriculture union-management problems.
Talks near bargaining
PARIS - A tacit agreement among the Vietnam peace negotiators in Paris to stop threatening each other gave impetus yesterday to reports the conference is inching toward real bargaining.
Leftist link to Al Fatah?
WASHINGTON - The Justice Department said yesterday it had asked the FBI to determine if elements in this country, including New Left campus groups, were violating federal laws through links with Al Fatah, the Arab terrorist organization.
Dollars for KU research expanding
(Editor's Note: The Kansan reporter spent several weeks looking at the wide-flung research projects being conducted at KU and on other campuses. The following look at KU's interdisciplinary researchers is the first in a series of articles on the subject.)
By MARTHA
MANGELSDORF
Kunsan Staff Writer
Nearly $81/2 million earmarked for research projects flows into the University each year.
The bulk of the donations comes from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Public Health Institution. Measurable sums also come from the U.S. Department of Defense.
Few persons are aware of the types of research done on campus or of University policy governing research, although all records are public. Even fewer appear to know what happens to the $8 1/2 million earmarked for research.
The University clearing board receives only brief reports, often technical, on progress and results of approved projects, and many faculty professors have expressed little concern as to how their research results are applied.
Classified research out
W. J. Argersinger, Jr., associate dean of faculties and overseer for the KU research program, explained that the primary objective is to maximize resources and, through the educational process, explore externally and internally the various scientific and interdisciplinary aspects of any project.
Argersinger emphasized that no classified research ever was accepted in ordinary times at KU, although it is frequently offered. Classified research produces results which cannot be made public, Argersinger explained—an ideal completely alien to the existence of a free university. The pursuit of knowledge and the information won in university research, Argersinger added, is of little value if it must be concealed and protected, and not freely accessible to whomever might want it.
Argersinger said out of the ordinary times, which would be the only justification for classified research, would be
2 KANSAN May 7 1969
during declared states of national emergency. He added that during World War II, faculty members who engaged in classified research went elsewhere to work on their projects. But, during the Korean War two classified projects were in full swing at KU.
Argersinger admitted, though, that often the flat policy of no classified research becomes sticky. State agencies do approach the University asking for the services of professors for such research. Being a state university, and dependent upon state financing, state research organizations argue that a reciprocal aid and service agreement is only reasonable.
Profs rights respected
Profs rights respected Still, it is not the University's province to accept secret research, but neither is it University jurisdiction to infringe upon the rights of the professors as independent individuals to pursue their own areas of interest.
Thus the compromise policy-faculty members may accept contracts to act as consultants only, in a strictly overtime professional capacity for any project. They may not use University facilities, labs, computers, graduate assistants, or civil service staffs for these efforts. Faculty members may, as private citizens, engage in projects consistent with their professional abilities even though he University would not accept the project.
The only requirement is that annual reports of any consulting arrangements must be turned in to Argersinger's office. Argersinger said there was no other supervision of these consulting relationships. There have been no abuses of KU facilities, to Argersinger's knowledge, thus there is no suspicion of working agreements the faculty enters into. Argersinger expressed no desire to make any further checks than the annual reports the faculty are on their honor to turn in.
Attitudes inconsistent
Though there is this freedom for professors, and there must be by the nature and structure of the free university, the attitude of some faculty members toward classified or applied research
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Some professors have expressed nonchalance about the potential or even obvious application of their research, even defense-supported projects. One explained that the Defense Department would easily find someone to do their projects so it might as well be himself as another professor.
seems hardly consistent with University concepts.
Many times a professor can obtain a research grant and work on private interests as well as do the research required by the grant.
The professor said in many cases it was better to engage in defense research of a secret application nature than to leave it for the "military-industrial complex" to do. Often it is better to have the objective, unbiased civilian figure in the decision-making process, hoping to avoid complete autonomy of the military, the professor concluded.
Of the some $8 1/2 million in research assistance, nearly 90 per cent comes from the federal government, especially agencies as the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA), the U.S. Army and the U.S. Navy.
Increased offset cuts
increased offset cuts Every year, including last year, there has been an overall increase in research funds ranging from 3 to 60 per cent. However, Argersinger speculated a comparatively large federal decrease in research grants for the upcoming year.
Many federal agency funds have been curtailed or their aid not renewed. In some areas there has been what Argersinger termed a "severe cutback" or shift in earmarked expenditures. The AEC has suffered drastic cutbacks under the present administration and NASA's budget has been almost depleted in university grants.
Argersinger said, however, that KU had fared comparatively well through the cuts.
KU is listed 59 on the list of the top 100 universities receiving research funds. It ranks in the upper half of the Big Eight in dollar volume, behind Iowa State University and the University of Nebraska with their agricultureal and engineering research centers and behind the University of Missouri, which counts all four campuses in dollar volume received.
Tomorrow: Big Eight and other universities . . . What the facts show is going on behind the scenes in research.
Visiting professor to speak Monday
J. T. Shaw, professor and chairman of Slavic languages at the University of Wisconsin, will speak at 8 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union Pine Room, the department of slavic languages announced.
Shaw, who received his Ph.D. in slavic languages from Harvard in 1950, will lecture on "The Prose of Puskin."
He has published a three-volume "Letters of Alexander Pushkin" and a booklet entitled "The Translation of Modern Russian for English Language Publications."
Danny Cox
Wed., May 7th
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Admission $1.00
Tickets available
at the
SUA office and
at the door.
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Campus briefs
Corbin Council elections to be Friday
Elections for two major offices for the newly formed Corbin College Council will be Friday in the south lobby of Corbin College, said Mary Sue Hanks, chairman of Corbin College Advisory Board.
A new set of by-laws has been initiated by Corbin College, calling for replacement of the advisory board by the council next year. The election will decide the chairmanship of the council and the corresponding secretary.
The election is being run by the advisory board under the new laws, said Miss Hanks, and is being decided this spring so that plans for the new council will be definite. Elections for other council offices will be next fall.
The polling place will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday and any member of Corbin College is invited to cast his ballot.
Candidates for council chairmanship are Jewel Scott, Ottawa freshman, and Marilyn Solsky, Prairie Village freshman.
freshman, and Mary McCain. Candidates for corresponding secretary of the council are Barbara Gale, Overland Park freshman; Kathy Powell, Topeka freshman, and Karen McCain, Kansas City, Mo., freshman.
KU prof gets European study grant
Norris Lacy, assistant professor of French and Italian, will leave June 8 for summer studies in Europe. Lacy is the recipie... of two grants for his scholarship. One is from KU's Watkins Faculty Summer Fellowship, and the other from the American Philosophical Society.
He will study 12th century French romance literature and present a paper on that topic at the International Arthurian n Congress in Cardiff, Wales.
SUA presents Robert Duncan
The Student Union Activities (SUA) will feature the poetry of Robert Duncan at 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
This is Duncan's third visit to KU, and he will be on campus until May 16 to teach in poetry writing classes, said Roy Gridley, associate professor of English.
Duncan also will read and participate in an observance of the 150th anniversary of Walt Whitman's birth at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
At this time Charles Feinberg, who possesses an extensive collection of Whitman's work, will read and present to Watson Library part of his collection "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking," Gridley said. Edward Grier, professor of English, also will read some of Whitman's work at this time, Gridley said.
Duncan, a native of San Francisco, was a member of the writing movement centered at Black Mountain College in the 1950's. He has published 14 volumes of his poetry, the most recent being "Bending the Bow."
Law school council to show riot film
The law students' Civil Rights Research Council will present a film on the riots at the Democratic Convention at 8
p. m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room, said Ray Lancaster, Lawrence first year law student.
May 7
1969 KANSAN 3
The film is an American Civil Liberties Union film, and admission is free.
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More than $2\frac{1}{4}$ centuries of service to Kansas are the contributions of eight KU faculty members who will retire to emeritus status June 30. Pictured here before the annual University Retirement dinner at which they were honored are: (front) James D. Stranathan, physics, 38 years; Charles L. Shepard, entomology, 12 years; (rear) Mrs. Virginia Maddox, Extension Library, 22 years; Reinhold Schmidt, voice, 20 years; George W. Bradshaw, civil engineering, 47 years; and Verner F. Smith, architecture, 41 years. Not present were Miss
WILLIAM M. SMITH
PATRICK W. HOPKINS
JOHN A. HUTCHER
MICHAEL E. HOFFMAN
Wichita wants medals
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The nation is on the way toward commemorating the centennial of Wichita, Kan. The House passed and sent the Senate Monday a bill authorizing minting of medals for the celebration.
Retiring faculty members Lottie Lesh, Independent Study Bureau, 27 years; and Miss
Eleanor Loeb, social work, 14 years.
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KANSAN Comment
Only skin deep?
Eight black singers made a hit record entitled "Beauty is only skin deep."
And nothing so aptly describes the New Jersey Street rehabilitation project.
Many KU students spent last Saturday restoring areas which didn't quite meet the white standard. They repaired houses to a point where they could drive down New Jersey street and not feel guilty about their affluence. While some residents of the slum area pitched in to help, some physically capable residents sat on their front porches and watched.
Chances are highly likely that a year from now New Jersey street will be the same shambles it was before the project started.
You can repair peoples' homes, paint their fences, and mow their lawns, but you cannot instill a sense of personal pride and responsibility in them.
Many of those residents cared about having their homes repaired, but many did not. These things hold a very low place on their list of priorities.
A mother with eleven children has little time to spend worrying about the conditions of the guttering on her house and she cares little. Instead she wonders how she is going to feed those children.
If we want to impose our white sense of values on these people the first question we must ask ourselves is "do they want them?"
Theoretically, the idea of New Jersey street rehabilitation is a good one. However, when you try to apply it practically—it just doesn't come off.
New Jersey street residents don't need or want 200 well-intentioned amateur contractors.
They need students willing to give up Saturdays to tutor their children who come from academically and culturally deprived homes. You cannot hope to appreciate what you've never had. You cannot learn something that you never knew existed.
Urban renewal is wonderful but before it can be successful minds and goals must undergo the same rehabilitation process. (JKD)
Readers' write
To the Editor:
With reference to the "Poor Kansas" article by JKD appearing in May 5th's UDK, let me say this:
I am unclear as regards the point of this article, for JKD begins by sneering at the voters of Kansas for electing a Republican legislature and a Democratic governor and ends by blaming the latter for "futility . . . at the expense of the people of Kansas."
Notwithstanding the forenamed article, the 1968-69 session of the Kansas legislature did end with substantially significant results, for example: 1) adoption of the new criminal code including liberalized abortion law; 2) approval of submission of proposed liquor-by-the-drink constitutional amendment to the vote of the people in 1970; 3) truth-in-lending law conforming with the Federal law of truth-in-lending; 4) 27 million dollar additional state aid to elementary and high school; and 5) 2 cents gas tax increase.
The latter two were passed over Governor Docking's veto. The Governor vetored these bills essentially because of the following: 1) the 27 million dollar additional state aid to school bill was without any provision to pay for it; and 2) additional roads can be paid by bonds and tolls, and additional gas tax coming in from the increase in the sale of gas which would result with the increased number of people using roads in Kansas as a result of the additional roads built, rather than being paid for by a gas tax increase; also included in this bill was the increase in diesel fuel of only 1 cent, unfair to the general public.
The utmost invalid and unsound statement made by JKD was: "Lowering taxes is the only way a Democratic candidate can make it in Kansas." Governor Docking did not campaign for lowering taxes, but against raising taxes through tax reform, this issue being paramount, partially as follows:
Exemptions on sales taxes given to some businesses shifts the burden unjustly on the rank-and-file citizen, and,
therefore, must be eliminated. Also the load should be shifted from ad valorem taxes to income taxes to be more equitable.
Joe Mikesic Kansas City sophomore
Joe Mikesic
To the Editor:
A word of solace is in order to those who despairingly believe that the "new left" has accomplished a major victory at K.U. by the election of Dave Awbrey to student body president. At first impression, this seems to be the case, but closer examination shows that: 1) the preponderance of interested K.U. students clearly demonstrated their objections to the political philosophy of Awbrey, and 2) even those students who voted in favor of Awbrey may have done so through motivations which were hostile to his political ideas.
The first of these propositions can be empirically demonstrated by merely looking at the vote tallied. Of the three candidates running for office, only two distinct political philosophies were offered. Those of Leffel and von Ende clearly fit into the moderate category to which the vast majority of college students adhere. Only Awbrey advocated a political position which could be termed clearly left of center. With these two choices in mind, almost twice as many votes were cast for the moderate political stance than were cast for Awbrey and his cohorts.
Support for the second of these propositions comes, supprisingly, from the U.D.K. Prior to the election, the U.D.K. editorial writer suggested that although the policies of Awbrey were idealistic and objectionable to many, his party should be supported in an effort to get some type of active student representation on the University Senate. This position apparently stemmed from the belief that $15\%$ representation on the Senate would render any moderately-oriented student representation impotent. Considering in-coming Chancellor Chalmer's remarks at a Sachem dinner that faculty members will almost inevitably follow the suggestions of students, and examining the
results of student demands at other universities, it is evident that the degree of influence which the students will exercise in the University Senate will be far greater than their proportional representation. Being unaware of this fact, and it is surprising that a U.D.K. editorial writer would be, a number of students voted for Awbrey's activist techniques is not his policies. Many students are going to be surprised if, instead of just keeping the faculty in the University Senate "on their toes", Awbrey succeeds in passing some of his new left policies.
A final word of caution to Mr. Awbrey. Before he dwells too much on his election victory as a clear mandate in support of his views, perhaps he should pause and reflect on the overwhelming number of students which voted to oppose his policies and the number of students who voted for him, but perhaps now wish they had not.
Respectfully submitted, Bob Ward Graduate, Law School
KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year examination periods. Mail subscription period: 10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods services and student support for students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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Entertrien Jr., Don Westzhaus,
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Station 10
By JOHN MARSHALL
There were about 40 of them in station 10. Station 10 is a section of the Armed Forces Building in Kansas City where you stand around in your underpants waiting to see whether you are physically ready for Uncle Sam.
You don't say much in Station 10. You think.
You think about what the doctor at the end of the line will say when he looks at what the other doctors and examiners have stamped and written on your papers.
Like the dental examination: "Smile," the fat man who weighs about 400 pounds says. You smile. Fat stamps your paper "OK." You move on.
"OK YOUSE GUYS PUT THE SHIRTS BACK ON,
TAKE THE FOLDERS MOVE IT MOVE IT INTO THE
NEXT ROOM AND P--- IN THE BOTTLE."
"Gimmy that finger there boy. Come on boy, don't look at me that way, this lil' old test ain't gonna hurt much . . . I'll just stick you like this . . . why, who knows, you might bleed a lot more than that a year from now..."
"All right move on you guvs . . . "
Look into the eyepieces read the numbers . . . one thirty six; eighty four; ninety three;
"OK, now the letters."
rpqsntux.
"Man, you got great eyes."
Then on into the other rooms where you sit in the gray cubicles and try to figure out what a box with designs on the side of it would look like if you cut it up and folded it out. Or where a screw would fit if you took an engine apart and then tried to put it together. "... MOTHER IS TO DAUGHTER AS ---- IS TO SON . . ." English comprehension for the other half hour and you finish 30 minutes ahead of time and watch a boy who is a Canadian citizen figure the answers backwards to pass the time.
You stand there in Station 10, that sickly green room with all the guys in skivvies standing in line waiting. It is silent.
"You pass?"
You look at the blank spaces for the doctors' stamps. It says you have bad legs. "Guess not."
"Oh."
Everybody is thinking in the room that is bare except for the guys standing around and the army doctors at the end of the line in back of the tables. Last stop. This is where they say "QUALIFIED" or "NOT QUALIFIED."
The young men are standing holding their folders that tell what kind of physical and mental persons they are. The folders mean a lot to the young men standing around in Station 10.
The people holding the folders are thinking. The college men are cordoned off into another line and they are the saddest. They do not want to go. They would tell you that they have spent four years, sure, in college, but for what. Most of them are bitter and think about what their girls will say when they find out they have passed, or why they have been sectioned like cattle through the lines.
Most of all they are thinking about what the other fat man said before the mental test. "See that line up in the right hand corner?" he had said. "You men put the name of the next of kin there—that means who you want your body sent to if you die overseas or somewhere."
Somewhere, the men think. They do not even have a name for it any more. By the time you get to Station 10 you cannot even laugh about it.
You look at how long the line is before you get to the major. Not far. Better look and see that you are not fooling yourself. Yes it says here that they do not want me. You should feel good about it but you can't, really.
You can't really feel good about flunking the Army physical because so many of your friends and fellow human beings will pass, and you feel a little like you are deserting them. You feel a little sad because you know you will not have to wait for the letter asking you to come.
It is all thinking in Station 10. Many of the thinkers will graduate and then go. They do not know where they will go, really. Many places. They are thinking about it. They are thinking about college and graduation and how graduation this year is not something to look forward to.
It won't be for a long time.
---
NANGAN
Readers write pro ROTC
To the Editor:
Many of the recently published articles and letters dealing with ROTC at KU have been attempts to justify or attack the existence and/or accreditation of collegiate military training. Generally the issues considered have been moral, academic or theoretical rather than practical. Only rarely can we completely deny or even temporally ignore reality, however unpleasant, to pursue our utopia.
Let me pose some questions about military training and higher education after making certain initial postulates: 1. This country will maintain a military force with a significant manpower requirement into the forseable future whether some of us like it or not. 2. By nature and design this force will require a hierarchy of administrators presently called officers. 3. It is and will be desirable that these officers possess greater knowledge (and hopefully greater intelligence) than the men they command. (I consider these statements of reality as far as present planning goes.
Someday, hopefully, it may be otherwise.)
One must ask what kind of men do we want as officers and how should they be educated? As a matter of occupational necessity an officer must possess the knowledge requisite to perform his narrow military function. In these days of cold war, limited war, pacification and technological advancement, however, that function is becoming increasingly less narrow. A knowledge of close order drill and infantry squad tactics that might have been
May 7
1969 KANSAN 5
sufficient during WW II is scant preparation for directing a community development team which uses non-combative methods in achieving a largely political goal among foreign and partially hostile people. The ability and inclination to use brute force as a disciplinary means is not sufficient guidance in containing but not inflaming a riot. In other words the more and the more diverse knowledge an officer has the more able he will be to give his men some appropriate order besides "open fire."
If we do indeed want officers who can do more than kill the most the fastest and the cheapest, what is the best way to educate them?
U. S. military officers have been trained by 1. intra-service officer training programs 2. military academies 3. ROTC prgrams. I do not believe the service officer training programs (e.g. Army OCS) make more than a token effort toward training officers beyond the minimal military rudiments of their intended task. They cannot, really, working within their requirements of budget, time, rapid turnover and training staff. The military academies do much better at liberal education but they produce relatively few officers and the academy graduate, moreover, tends to be more of a professional career militarist which many of us seem wary of.
The college graduate who has attended ROTC is generally, I believe, the most liberally educated, the best rounded, the least dogmatic and the least militaristic officer we have presently. Do we really want to remove these college educated people from our officer corps merely because the principles of the military are largely incompatible with the ideals of a
university? That is no way to make the military more humane and reasonable. Is it wise to deny the ROTC student credit for his courses so long as they make some contribution to his knowledge and some demand on his time? I don't think most men take ROTC because they consider it a pud course(s). If ROTC is made strictly extracurricular I suspect the enrollment will drop significantly. Result: fewer well educated officers. (We will soon be able to observe the results at those schools where credit has been removed.)
The military will obtain officers somehow. If ROTC is removed as an avenue the slack will probably be made up via OCS-OTS. I think those who object most and loudest about ROTC would be those least pleased with the educational and motivational flavor of the resultant officer corps.
Ellis V. Couch Prairie Village graduate student—chemistry
To the editor:
In the past twelve months the University has witnessed a seriously contested campaign between those advocates for the Reserve Officers Training Program and those who are opposed to such a course of study. Mike Shearer, Robert Cherry, Mike Gravitt and others have vigorously participated in the campaign, yet I feel that somehow we have let the real essence of this controversy slip away unnoticed, as we frantically reach for new type, more paper and better verbage. Somehow every new endeavor contains the words Vietnam, kill or peace, and it is because of these words that every opinion becomes completely unsuitable for intelligent debate. Especially I have found those articles
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written by anti-ROTC essayists as having the peculiar characteristic of attempting to equate the war in Vietnam with the ROTC establishment, and thereby, making innocent cadets and cadres the scapegoat for a Southeast Asia conflict. Now isn't that a farce?
In my years as a cadet I have been taught map reading,
I am a junior, and have been a ROTC cadet for three school years, and I know the program well. In those three years I have not been taught how to more efficiently kill, why we must fight, why the military is good or any of the other evil practices non-ROTC men claim. From this I can only conclude that a prerequisite to knowing about the ROTC program is not to be a part of it.
religion, economics, history, geography, military structure, the names of weapons, leadership and pedagogy. Even if I crammed for weeks, stayed up all night, and drank the Union's terrible coffee twenty times a day to stay awake, I don't really think I could become a more proficient killer from the subjects I've learned in ROTC, because ROTC purpose is not to teach killing or foreign policy but to produce able leaders for the armed service. Whether we support or disapprove of the program let us now become issue oriented and not ornament oriented. Thank you.
ACROSS FROM LINDLEY
ON THE HILL
Sincerely,
Sincerely,
Charles Edward Falk
Junior, Keansburg, New Jersey.
THE Commonwealth
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COMPANY - JIMI HENDRIX - COUNTRY JOE AND
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ELVIS PRESLEY
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Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Mat. Daily 2:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Computers vexed
Babe's 715th homerun refelects rules changes
NEW YORK (UPI) — It's probably just as well a committee in charge of almost lousing up baseball history now says Babe Ruth officially hit 714 lifetime homeruns and not 715.
Heck, maybe Ruth didn't hit even 714 by modern standards.
For awhile there, the lads were all for giving the Bambino credit for No. 715 by applying modern scoring rules to a game played back in 1918, but that sort of thinking could lead to all sorts of trouble.
Until 1931, late into Ruth's career, there was a provision for certain local ground rules permitting a homerun on a fair ball that bounced into the stands. In 1931, that officially became a two-base hit.
How many did Ruth bounce in en route to his 714?
One researcher swears every one of the Babe's record 60 in 1927 was an authentic blast over a fence or into the seats on the ly.
It's entirely possible Ruth hit all 714 the "regular" way, but hitters were getting bounced-in homers for many years. It's conceivable the mighty Yankee might have been among them.
The 715 "homer" was discovered in a report of a game played on July 8, 1918 when Ruth still was playing for the Boston Red Sox.
Babe hit one into the seats with a man on base in the last of the 10th inning, but under the scoring rules of the day he was credited with only a triple. When the original baserunner crossed the plate with the winning run, the game ended officially. Ruth was credited with three bases, not a homer.
A special committee considered making it homer No. 715, and that would have been a monument to the diligence of researchers compiling an encyclopedia to be published later in professional baseball's current centennial year.
But that sort of thinking—applying modern rules to old achievements—would disrupt so many statistical categories of the so-called good old days that relief computers would have to be called in from the bullpen to get the job done.
Cooler heads prevailed just in time and it's again officially 714.
"That sort of thinking was complete nonsense in the first
ALL
AMERICANS
Babe Ruth
place," says Seymour Siwoff, a renowned statistician. "And a lot more than homerun totals would be affected by applying modern rules to old records.
KANSAN Sports
The sacrifice fly rule—charging no time at-bat for a hitter who knocked in a run with a fly ball that was caught—was in effect from 1908 until 1931. And in 1926, for that year only, it was allowed for a fly ball that advanced any base runner whether he scored or not.
On books in '54
The rule was reinstated in 1939 for one year only and then knocked off the books for 14 years until it came back, presumably to stay, in 1954.
For the record, Ted Williams was the last man to achieve a .400 batting average with a .406 in 1941 - without benefit of the sacrifice fly rule.
In fact, no batter in this century hit 400 or better in any year that rule was not in effect.
Anyway, the status quo has prevailed and it's probably just as well.
Applying modern methods to old-time records could be a lot more trouble than it's worth.
Major League Scoreboard
Game by Game results
**Game by Game results**
St. Marys, L, 2-1 at San Antonio
Tri-City, L, 9-0 at Edinburgh
Pan American, W, 1-9 at Edinburgh
St. Edwards, W, 8-7 at Austin
Garden City, W, 6-5 at Indianapolis
Oklahoma, W, 3-0 at Norman
Oklaahoma, L, 5-0 at Norman
Oklaahoma, L, 5-0 at Norman
Kansas St., L, 10-0 at Manhattan
Kansas St., W, 12-2 at Manhattan
Nebraska, L, 3-1 at Lawrence
Nebraska, L, 3-1 at Lawrence
Colorado, L, 6-5 at Lawrence
Colorado, L, 10-8 at Lawrence
Colorado, W, 2-1 at Lawrence
Missouri, L, 9-3 at Columbia
Missouri, L, 10-3 at Columbia
Missouri, L, 10-3 at Columbia
Major League Standings By United Press International National League
| | W. | L. | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 19 | 9 | .679 | -- |
| Pittsburgh | 15 | 11 | .577 | 3 |
| Pittsburgh | 19 | 11 | .572 | 3 |
| New York | 12 | 14 | .562 | 6 |
| St. Louis | 11 | 15 | .423 | 7 |
| Montreal | 10 | 15 | .400 | 7 |
W. L. Pct. GB
Atlanta 17 9 654
San Francisco 15 11 577 2
Los Angeles 15 11 577 2
Chicago 13 16 448 6½
Cincinnati 11 15 423 6
Houston 18 21 276 10½
**Tuesday's Results**
Chicago 7, Los Angeles 1
Boston 4, Washington 1, night
Phila. 5, Houston 4
San Diego 4, Pitts. 2, night
St. Louis 3, San Fran. 0, night
Montreal 4, Atlanta 3, night
6 KANSAN May 7 1969
Today's Probable Pitchers
KC shocks Detroit in 9th with Taylor's 3-run blast
DETROIT (UPI) Pinch-hitter Bob Taylor's three-run homer off reliever Dick Radatz with two out in the ninth inning climaxed a five-run rally and lifted the Kansas City Royals to a 7-6 triumph over the Detroit Tigers last night.
1-75 p.m.
San Diego (Kirby 2) at Pittsburgh
(Vaale 2-3) 8-05 n.m.
Los Angeles (Osteen 4-1) at Chicago (Jenkins 4-1) 2:30 p.m.
at New York (Gentry 2-1) 8:05 p.m.
Houston (Dierker 2-1) at Philadelph.
American League
Montreal (Wegener 1-1) at Atlanta
(Niekro 4-1) 8:08 p.m.
Houston (Dierker 3-3) at Philadelphia (J. Johnson 2-2) 7.35 p.m.
Cincinnati (Merritt 1-2) at New York (Gentry 2-1) 8:05 p.m.
| | W. | L. | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Baltimore | 20 | 9 | .690 | — |
| Boston | 15 | 10 | .600 | 3 |
| Bostonton | 18 | 12 | .571 | 1¾ |
| New York | 12 | 15 | .444 | 7 |
| Detroit | 11 | 14 | .440 | 7 |
| Cleveland | 4 | 14 | .182 | 12¾ |
Taylor, the first batter faced by Radatz, delivered his gamewinning blow after the Royals had scored two runs and knocked out Denny McLain, the 31-game winner of 1968 trying for his fifth victory of this season.
Thursday's Games Only game scheduled
Jerry Adair's forceout and Chuck Harrison's fourth hit of the game drove in the first two runs of the inning after the Royals had filled the bases on a double by Ed Kirkpatrick, a walk and a single.
(Veale 2-3) 8:05 p.m.
(San Francisco (Perry 4-3) at St.
San Francisco (Perry 4-3) at St.
Louis (Briles 1-2) 9 p.m.
W. 1. L. Pct. GB
Minnesota 16 8 .667
Oakland 15 10 .600 11%
Kansas City 14 10 .560 12%
Chicago 9 11 .450 5
California 8 14 .450 5
Seattle 8 14 .333 8
Cleve, 1. Minn, 0. night
Coleman, 2. Minnesota, 0.
Kan, City 7. Detroit, 6. night
Naklarka, New York, 5. night
Wolf, Park 2. Calif, 2. night
Boston 12. Seattle, 2. night
Today's Probable Pitchers
All Times, FEB
(Cuellar 3-2) 8 p.m.
Minnesota (Perry 3-1) at Cleveland
Chicago (Peters 1-4) at Baltimore (Cuellar 3-2) 8 p.m.
Minnesota (Perry 3-1) at Cleveland (Ellsworth 0-1) 7:45 p.m.
Kansas City (Brooker 0-0) at Detroit (Wilson 1-3) or Lolich 2-1), 9-1
Boston (Sleibert 1-3) at Seattle (Barber 1-1) 11 p.m.
New York (Bahnaen 0-5) at California (Messmesser -2) 11 p.m.
inning and drove in another run with a sacrifice fly in the fourth.
Washington (Moore 2-1) at Oakland (Nash 3-1) 10:30 p.m.
McLain was tagged for a run in the second inning on singles by Joe Foy and Harrison, with Foy stealing second and scoring from there on Harrison's disputed hit as Freehan held the ball at first base.
kayoed Bill Butler with three runs in the fifth inning. Al Kaline's double drove in the first run, Jim Northrup singled in another, and reliever Dave Wickersham wild-pitched in the third.
The Tigers built the lead to 6-2 in the sixth on Don Wert's homer. Jim Price also homered for the Tigers in the second
Lou Piniella homered in the seventh inning for the Royals' second run.
Cincy withdraws
UC Athletic Director George Smith cited economic problems and extreme geographic differences as the main reasons for the school's departure from the conference.
CINCINNATI (UPI) — The University of Cincinnati has announced it is pulling out of the Missouri Valley Conference at the close of the 1969-70 academic year.
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Temple's crew set for year-end rally
Spring has struck the University, and with only one and a half weeks of classes left many have started coasting up to the finish line, but in the next two weeks the KU baseball team will be far from coasting as they start pedaling in the race for their first division finish since 1964.
This weekend the Jayhawks will host league-leading Oklahoma State in their next-to-last series of the season with a doubleheader Friday and a single game Saturday.
Kansas now stands 5-8 in the Big Eight and 10-10 overall. If they should win at least half of their remaining six games, KU will stand a strong chance of a first division finish.
"The chances are pretty slim," says coach Floyd Temple o the team's race for the first division, "but we've beaten each of the contenders once and we could have a first division team."
Holding a one game lead over second place Oklahoma, the Cowboys-12-3 in league play—loom as a major obstacle in KU's rallying finish. Fresh from a 6-2 victory over Nebraska in Stillwater last weekend, OSU in their bid to repeat as conference champs will be primed for drowning all hopes of the Javhawk's late season charge.
Roger Jackson (1-1), who fired a four hitter in 6 2/3 inning of relief against Missouri last weekend will start the first game of the doubleheader. Hurling the second game will be Dave Robisch who is 3-2 on the year.
| Player and Position | G | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | AVE. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Paul Womble, 3b | 20 | 69 | 11 | 22 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 16 | .319 |
| John Regigls, 1b | 16 | 46 | 7 | 13 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | .281 |
| Jeff Baird, 1f | 20 | 78 | 12 | 22 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 9 | .282 |
| Keith Lleppman, ss | 20 | 71 | 13 | 19 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 9 | .268 |
| George Temple, cf | 20 | 72 | 4 | 19 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6 | .266 |
| Lynn Snelgrove, 2b | 20 | 71 | 9 | 18 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 10 | .254 |
| Dick Jackson, r | 20 | 80 | 7 | 20 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 | .250 |
| Clark Ulilson, p | 6 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | .250 |
| Randy Stroup, p | 10 | 12 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .250 |
| Dave Robisch, p | 20 | 9 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .250 |
| Dave Robisch, c | 10 | 6 | 4 | 13 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 7 | .194 |
| Richard Slucker, p | 11 | 24 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | .166 |
| Roger Jackson, p | 6 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
| Bob Wolf, inf, p | 4 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
| Don Higgins, c | 2 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
| Mark Strimple, inf, p | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
| Bob Kaufman, p | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
| Bob Kaufman, c | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
| KU TOTALS | 20 | 638 | 81 | 160 | 19 | 3 | 6 | 68 | .251 |
| OPPONENTS | 20 | 581 | 81 | 139 | 19 | 7 | 10 | 68 | .239 |
Player GP GS CG Inn. H R R ER BB SO WP W-L ERA
Roger Jackson 6 0 17 20 17 20 R 4R 5B 4O WP 1-1 2.12
Richard Slicker 7 7 2 38½¹⁰ 40 19 10 15 26 36 4 4-2 2.35
Dave Robisch 9 5 3 42½¹⁰ 40 19 10 15 32 46 4 3-2 2.74
Randy Stroup 10 6 1 36½¹⁴ 47 27 12 6 16 0 1-3 2.95
Clark Ullom 5 2 1 34½¹⁴ 17 14 12 6 14 0 3-5 5.14
Ku Kaimin 10 0 1 2 4 2 4 6 2 1 0-0 0
KU TOTALS 20 20 6 154 139 86 81 75 79 95 7 10-10 3.33
OPONENTS 20 20 10 157½¹⁶ 180 57 53 161 70 10-10 3.03
--became the limit permitted to tee off in the first two rounds.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Tennis. 2:30 p.m. Washburn University, here. Allen Field House Campus
Poetry Reading. 4 p.m. Robert Duncan. Forum Room. Kansas
Carillon Recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gerken.
Classical Film. 7 & 9 p.m. "Yo Yo." Dyche Auditorium.
Western Civilization Exam Review.
7:15 p.m. Strong Hall Auditorium.
SUA Concert. 8 p.m. Danny Cox.
Kansas Union Ballroom.
May 7
1969 KANSAN 7
One-Act Plays. 8:20 p.m.
Experimental Theatre
TOMORROW
Personnel Officers Seminar, All Day, Kansas Union.
End of Fiscal Year Workshop. 1:30 p.m. Dvche Auditorium.
Review for Western Civilization Exam. 7:15 p.m. Strong Hall Auditorium.
The Infinite Way. 7:30 p.m. Meditation and Bible Study. Kansas Union 101. Faculty and Students invited.
Lecture. 8 p.m. Professor Byron Tsangadas, History. "Some Aspects of Imperial Byzantine Art from Karive Cami." 112 Blake.
630 kuok Hit Parade 630
One-Act Plays. 8:20 p.m.
Experimental Theatre.
FOR THE WEEK ENDING MAY 9,1969
TW LW
1. THE BOXER SIMON AND GARFUNKEL 4
2. GET BACK / DON'T LET ME DOWN BEATLES 7
3. PINBALL WIZARD WHO 3
4. IT'S YOUR THING ISLEY BROTHERS 1
5. GIMME GIMME GOOD LOVIN' CRAZY ELEPHANT 2
6. SWEET CHERRY WINE T. JAMES AND THE SHONDELLS 9
7. THESE EYES GUESS WHO ? 12
8. MORE TODAY THAN YESTERDAY SPIRAL STARECASE 19
9. GITARZAN RAY STEVENS 10
10. LOVE (CAN MAKE YOU HAPPY) MERCY 3
11. TIME IS TIGHT BOOKER T. AND THE MYG '1
12. PLAYGirl THEE PROPHETS 1
13. BADGE CREAM 1
14. CHAOKIN' KIND JOE HEWELL 1
15. AQUARIUS -LET THE SUN SHINE IN 5TH DIMENSION 2
16. THE BAD BAD OLD DAYS FOUNDATIONS 2
17. MORNING GIRL NEON PHILHARMONIC 3
18. THE BAD BAD OLD DAYS G. PUCKETTY AND THE SHONDELLS 4
19. GRAZING IN THE GRASS FRIENDS OF DISTINCTION 2
20. YOU'VE MADE ME SO VERY HAPPY BLOOD, SWEAT AND TEARS 1
21. THE COMPOSER DIANA ROSS AND THE SUPREMES 1
22. BROTHER LOVE'S TRAVELING SALIVATION SHOW Neil Diamond 1
23. STAND I WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHER Sly and the Family Stone 3
24. I'LL TRY SOMETHING NEW TEMPTATIONS AND SUPREMES 1
25. TOO BUSY THINKING ABOUT MY BABY MARY HOPKIN 2
26. GOOD THING MARY HOPKIN 2
27. HEATHER HONEY TOMMY VION 3
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EVERYDAY WITH YOUR GIRL CLASSICS IV
EARTH ANGEL VOGUES
NEW YORK (UPI) — One bad shot somewhere along the progolf trail in the last 12 months meant the difference for Arnold Palmer.
Arnie ends one shot away from free pass to Open
It might have been a missed putt, a bad drive or a missed green but if he had played it perfectly it probably would have been worth an extra $292 in prize money and a pass into the U.S. Open championship at Houston June 12-15.
Arnie, the millionaire, wound up just $292 short of the prize earnings he needed during a 12 month period ending May 1 to earn a pass to Houston. Now he'll have to play a 36-hole qualifying test for the first time since 1959 and finish among the leaders to make it to the open.
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"Some people believe Palmer should have an exemption on his record," says Joe Dey, new czar of pro golf. "But one of the first things I learned since coming into closer contact with the professionals is their great respect for the rules.
"They might not like certain rules but they respect them as long as they're on the books."
According to the rules, Palmer has exhausted his qualifying exemptions for the open and now must play his way in like most of the others in the record entry list of 3,400. Only 33 players, led by defending champion Lee Trevino, are totally exempt from the qualifying tests.
Current ability kev
"Sentiment is on the side of Palmer and other former champions," said Dey. "However, the open should be a test of current ability. When I was with the U.S. Golf Association we found in recent years that 150 is the absolute maximum number of players who can get around a golf course in one day. Restrictions on exemptions had to be made."
"Only once, as I recall, was a special exemption made," Dey recalled. "Three years ago, Ben Hogan was invited for the open at San Francisco's Olympic Club. That's where, in 1955, he had the tournament all but won before being tied by Jack Fleck and then lost the playoff the next day."
The pace of play has slowed tremendously. Dev admitted.
As late as 1958, the starting field was 162. But 12 were lopped off a year later and 150
"In one of the amateur championships of the Bobby Jones era a field of 168 played a qualifying round in late September and finished well before dark," he said. "We couldn't do that now in the middle of the summer."
In an effort to conserve
daylight hours on the regular pro tour--but not in the U.S. Open—the PGA several years ago advised a "split field" plan under which half the players start on the first tee and the other half began at the 10th for the first two rounds.
They cross over in the middle and play the remaining nine in regular sequence.
"That means both nines are in use most of the day," said Dey. "It gives some leeway in the event of weather delays. Also now for the first two rounds on the tour we're sending them out in pairs instead of threesomes.
"Pairs require a longer elapsed time to get them all around but it cuts 48 minutes off the time each player must be out on the course."
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ABM a danger?
Decision on ABM proposal is firmly split
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Two reports-one by a group of industrialists, former military men and scientists, the other by lawyers, editors, professors and scientists-reached firm but opposite conclusions yesterday about whether America would be safer or in more danger if the ABM is built.
Supporting President Nixon's
Safeguard Antiballistic Missile (ABM) proposal was a 60-page report by the Chicago-based American Security Council, which said the Russians may not want war but "are preparing for every contingency, including nuclear war, and however it may come they intend to get in the first blow according to their own doctrine."
Against the Safeguard ABM was a group empanelled by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., which argued, in a one-pound report, that the weapon probably would not work, could be foiled by an enemy's deceptive tactics and would jeopardize an arms control agreement.
Participating in the American Security Council's study were William F. Libby, a Nobel prize winning chemist; William J. Thaler, the physicist who developed "over the horizon" radar; and Gen. Nathan F. Twining, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Congressional decision due on cigarette smoking issue
provost of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a former presidential science adviser; Bill D. Moyers, special assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson and now publisher of Newsday; Nobel prizewinning physicist Bernard Feld; Carl Kaysen, director of Princeton University's Institute for Advanced Studies, and Theodore C. Sorensen, adviser to the late President John F. Kennedy.
WASHINGTON (UPI) Congress is getting closer to the deadline for decisions on health and cigarette smoking--but is understanding the problem less.
They argued that the ABM would force an enemy "to greatly multiply his arsenal with greatly sophisticated missiles before he could dare to attack. This enormously complicates his offensive problem and adds immeasurably to the deterrent effectiveness of our own offensive missiles."
Pickle, after hearing one medical witness testify there is no "scientific" evidence that smoking harms health, even proposed "investigating the investigators."
exasperated congressman, Rep.
J. J. Pickle, D-Tex., asked "Who are we going to believe?"
Among those participating in the anti-ABM study prepared for Kennedy were Jerome Weisner,
A summation of the situation in the wake of a new round of hearings before the House Commerce Committee is that Congress has about the same information it had five years ago.
June 30 is the expiration date of a 1965 law under which Congress has, for the specific period, preempted the control of cigarette advertising.
But there is little time left to follow Pickle's idea of a congressional inquiry into all the various investigations in the field of smoking and its possible effect on health.
The same law provided for the
In 1964 the surgeon general issued his much debated report that statistics show a correlation between smoking and cancer deaths. Tobacco industry experts challenged the findings.
Today the surgeon general says much the same thing, the tobacco industry experts still challenge the statement, and one
statement that now appears on every cigarette pack: "Caution: Cigarette Smoking May be Hazardous to your Health."
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If Congress fails to extend its own controls over tobacco advertising the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission would be free to impose such restrictions of their own.
In deciding whether to restrict or protect cigarette advertising Congress also must consider economic consequences.
Gov. Hugh Scott of North Carolina, the nation's biggest tobacco producing state, told the subcommittee that hunger and joblessness might result from too much repression.
With a complex set of issues before them many congressmen seemingly are unable to make up their own minds about the original proposition that smoking endangers one's health.
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Borman's new post with the space station task group will also be a management job. He will remain at the manned spacecraft center in Houston, sources said.
Borman said when he became Slayton's deputy that he wanted to get experience in management.
During the flight of Apollo 8 Borman, James A. Lovell and William A. Anders held the
May 7
1969
Borman resigns astronaut corps
Figure 25.1. A seated human figure with a head, body, and hands in a relaxed position.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo 8 astronaut Frank Borman who commanded mankind's first trip around the moon, has resigned from the astronaut corps, it was learned yesterday.
Borman will accept a post in the space agency's program to develop orbiting space stations.
Borman, who joined the spaceman corps in 1962, will become field director for a special space agency task group working on advanced space station design, sources said.
Informed sources said yesterday was Borman's last day as an astronaut. They said his new job would be officially announced today by the space agency.
His resignation leaves the space agency with 50 astronauts.
8 KANSAN
After the Jan. 9 flight, the space agency announced Borman had been promoted to second in command of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) astronauts. He became deputy to astronaut chief Donald K. "Deke" Slayton.
Borman, a 40-year-old Air Force colonel and a veteran of the two-week Gemini 7 flight which set a world record for duration in orbit, said at the time he would never fly in space again.
world spellbound with their 10 orbits around the moon last Christmas Eve, man's first venture to his nearest neighbor in space.
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THE REALITY OF EMOTIONAL EXPLANATION
'Slow Dance' promises bitter humor
From left to right, Ed Daub, assistant professor of history; Caryl Edwards, Monett, Mo., junior and Bob Brown, Topeka freshman, rehearse a scene "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground."
Director says play has 'brittle humor'
By JUDY JARRELL Kansan Staff Writer
It is a play about caring, not caring, alienation, the whole of love in the world.
"Slow Dance on the Killing Ground" will be presented by the United Campus Christian Fellowship (UCCF) Theatre Workshop at 8:20 p.m. Friday and Saturday and possibly May 16 and 17 in the UCCF Center, 12th and Oread.
Bill Meikle, Lawrence graduate student and director of the play, described the characters and action of the play.
Caryl Edwards, Monett, Mo., junior, plays Rosy—the young girl who is lost. She wanders into a variety store while she is searching the town to obtain an abortion.
Bob Brown, Topeka freshman, is Randall, who earlier has entered the store. Fleeing from an unspeakable crime, he is searching for a haven.
Ed Daub, assistant professor of history, portrays Mr. Glas, the store owner. Mr. Glas is a recluse who has a shadow of guilt over
May 7
1969 KANSAN 9
his head since he deserted his wife and children in the concentration camps during the war.
"They try to help each other as they dance metaphorically in rituals of touching and not touching, moving and not moving. All the time they are revealing themselves," Meikle said.
The trick is that the person who seems to hate the most is the most successful in helping the others, the director explained.
"In the end, all three are helped," he continued. "They are not helped overtly, but because they contact a beam of a kind of love, they touch each other and change each other."
What Meikle described as a "humor of humaness" is abundant throughout the play.
abandoned throughout the play.
"It is a brittle, hard humor-like New York wisecracks," he said.
At the end of the play a candle is lighted. The director said the candle is meant to relate to each individual.
"We don't need to tell what the symbol is about. We simply light the candle and go away," he said.
Meike expressed the desire that the audience would stay
after the play and talk, since the play is designed to "lead the audience towards thinking not beating their hands."
JOHN WILLIAMS
Brown said of the play, "The more I rehearse, the more I find it relates to the day. It is about today, and yet it has always existed."
Written by William Hanley,
"Slow Dance on the Killing Ground" is the second production by the UCCF Theatre Workshop this year.
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KU's German magazine soon to be distributed
"Versuch," an undergraduate literary magazine published annually by KU's German department and reported to be the oldest of its kind in the nation, is scheduled to be distributed this week.
1730 West 23rd V1 3-8200
FREE Delivery over $5.00
Thomas Simpson, Orrington Maine, junior and co-editor, said the magazine originated in 1962 when a few undergraduate students majoring in German felt the need to provide students of Germany an opportunity to use their German in an original and creative way.
Their material, Simpson said, is original poetry, short stories and translations, coming mainly from undergraduates in German.
"We also are able to award book prizes for the best contribution," Simpson said. He
added that "Versuch" gets books and contributions from West Germany by corresponding through the German consulate in St. Louis, a representative agency of the West German government.
A spokesman from the German department said that "Versuch" was produced within the German department including the bookbinding.
Janet Fink, Kansas City, Mo. senior, is co-editor of the magazine with Simpson.
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UDK World News
By United Press International
Worst accident of the war
'Copter crash kills 34 Allied troops
SAIGON - A twin-turbojet Army helicopter crashed yesterday northeast of Saigon, killing 34 Allied troops and injuring 35 others in the worst accident of the war involving a single chopper.
U. S. military spokesmen, who reported the accident today blamed the crash on mechanical failure. They said an investigation has begun.
The CH47 "Chinook" transport helicopter was ferrying troops when it crashed near
Phuoc Binh, 75 miles northeast of Saigon.
Of the dead, 32 were South Vietnamese troops and two were Americans. There were 34 South Vietnamese and one American injured.
American artillerymen shelled North Vietnamese troops at two points in the Demilitarized Zone DMZ yesterday killing at least 11 communists and destroying 10 bunkers.
U. S. military spokesmen said the two bombardments raised to 100 the number of retaliatory strikes against Communists in
the DMZ since the United States stopped bombing North Vietnam last November.
The U.S. command reported eight Communist shellings overnight yesterday, two against U.S. outposts and the others against government bases and civilian towns. The government reported eight civilians killed and three wounded in an attack on the Mo Bia hamlet 114 miles southwest of the capital.
American B52 bombers flew six raids, three of them against suspected Communist base camps on the northern coast
near Quang Ngai. The others were directed at bunker complexes 45 miles northeast of Saigon.
Allied troops turned up three arms and food caches yesterday the biggest containing 10 tons of rice and located 200 miles northeast of Saigon. American troops operating 18 miles west of Saigon reported killing nine Viet Cong and suffering no casualties in a brief fire fight.
U. S. officers said at least 141 Communists were killed and 29 were captured in a furious assault by a regiment of North Vietnamese on a U.S. outpost near Cambodia. They predicted even heavier fighting in the frontier area northwest of Saigon.
"We're anticipating something big here," said one officer at Camp Carolyn, a U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division outpost, 63 miles northwest of Saigon, that was the target of the massive attack.
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Armed Arab guerrillas battled Lebanese army troops yesterday in the streets of a town in southern Lebanon, only seven miles from the border with Israel. In Beirut, the Lebanese army high command met in urgent session to discuss measures to cope with increasing guerrilla violence.
UPI correspondent Gerry Loughran reported from Beirut that there were no immediate reports of the number of guerrillas and troops involved in
the fighting in Hasbayeh or of casualties.
But reports from southern Lebanon told of almost daily skirmishing between regular army units and guerrillas of the Syrian-inspired organization known as the Am-Saigah Thunderbolt Group. The guerrillas were reported angered because the troops tried to block raids into Israel which Lebanon fears would bring reprisals.
support for the Arab guerrilla organizations. Scores of persons were killed and wounded in clashes between Palestinian Arab refugees and security forces which resulted in the downfall of the government of Premier Karami Rashad two weeks ago.
Lebanon already is in the grip of a political crisis over the question of more aggressive
Army authorities banned newsmen from the area but military sources said the fighting had escalated from isolated incidents into direct confrontations between the army and the guerrillas. They said the Arab guerrillas were firing from rooftops in Hasbayeh on the Lebanese army units.
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Irish premier grants amnesty to prisoners
BELFAST, Northern Ireland Premier James Chichester-Clark yesterday released all jailed Protestant extremist leaders and civil rights demonstrators in a general amnesty he said was aimed at restoring peace to Northern Ireland.
Within an hour of the new premier's general amnesty announcement, militant Protestant leaders Rev. Ian Paisley and Maj. Ronald Bunting were released from Belfast poison. The pair, serving three
10 KANSAN May 7 1969
month sentences for disrupting a civil rights demonstration last year, were not due for release until July 20.
As a result of the amnesty, a total of some 133 charges against Roman Catholic civil rights demonstrators and Paisleyite counter-demonstrators arrested since the outbreak of civil disturbances last Oct. 5 will be dropped. The amnesty applies to all offenses except those involving the recent sabotage of power lines and water works in Northern Ireland.
Among civil rights leaders who faced charges were Bernadette Devlin, 22, Northern Ireland's first woman to be elected to the British parliament.
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Arab-Israel 'battle' at KU
By RICK PENDERGRASS Kansan Staff Writer
A violent verbal confrontation between Arabs and Israelis was narrowly avoided last night as bitter argument and name-calling
"They base their presence in Palestine from the fact that they were there for a while 2,000 years ago.
Occupied by everyone
Occupied by everyone "If everyone who has been there thinks they are entitled to call Palestine their home, why
"The state of Israel has been utilized to insure the colonial designs of Britain and France," he said.
"It is because of this that Israel is a ghetto in an Arab sea!" Hasan exclaimed. During his speech, the audience was
peaceful coexistence, as long as they could have their land back.
Shouts and name-calling
ARAB PEACE
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The rest of the meeting proceeded with intervals of shouting and name-calling between the Jewish and Arab students. At one point, a student carrying a sign with the peace symbol superimposed over the star of David shouted a derogatory remark pertaining to Hasan's intellect.
HRAB PEACE
AL
FOR LIBERA
AL
FOR LIBERA
resulted from a speech given by a Palestinian commando.
Photos by Joanna Wiebe
Saadat Hasan, director of the Palestinian freedom movement in the United States, spoke before more than 100 persons last night in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
Palestinian commando faces friends and foes in confrontation
At the door of the room, members of KU Hillel, supporting Israel in the Middle East war, carried signs showing their support, and distributed flyers charging Palestinians with atrocities.
Groups picket meeting
Hasan's topic, "Why a War of Liberation" dealt with the Israeli occupation of Palestine sine 1946.
At the same time, Arab students carried signs and distributed literature in support of the Palestinian movement.
In his speech, Hasan charged Israel with racism, colonialism military occupation and atrocities.
Explaining Arab guerrilla attacks on Israeli settlements, Hasan said, "We want only to liberate our homeland from the menace of alien occupation.
"The Zionists have only one goal in mind, to disposess, uproot and demoralize the people of Palestine," he said.
Hasan maintains the Jews have no right to be in Palestine.
David starts Hill climb
WASHINGTON (UPI) — David Eisenhower's job on Capitol Hill this summer will probably earn him $80 to $100 a week, according to the office of Sen. Roman L. Hruska, R-Neb.
President Nixon's son-in-law will probably be assigned to the staff of the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which Hruska is the ranking Republican member, the office said.
May 7 1969 KANSAN 11
NEED TUTORING FOR WESTERN CIV?
4 Sessions
21/2 Hrs. a Session
1 Dollar An Hour
Call VI 2-5206 for Information After 5:00
George Waterman, Instructor
He said the land now occupied by Israel is 94 per cent owned by Palestinian refugees. At that point, an unidentified man in the audience jumped from his seat and shouted, "That's a lie!"
aren't the Russians, the Turks,
even the British occupying
Palestine since they have all been
there at one time or another?"
he asked.
He described the present day Jew as a European who accepts Judaism as a faith rather than a Europeanized Hebrew.
Speaking in general of the Arab-Israeli conflict, Hasan said the problem of the people of Palestine is a separate problem in itself which comes before the problem of the Arab conflict with Israel.
Hasan continually stressed his wish for peaceful coexistence in a non-racial society, "It is not an Arab-Jewish conflict, it was not, and I hope it never will be."
Hasan argued that the state of Israel was installed by European powers to divide and separate the Arab world.
Several of the Arab students shouted back at him to sit down and shut up and wait until he was called upon.
Ghetto in an Arab sea
He added that the conflict is not a religious issue. "Our opposition would be the same to the Moslem Turks or Christians from the states of Kansas and Missouri," he said.
silent and attentive, but when a question-answer period followed the speech, tempers flared among the Arab and Jewish students in the room.
Asked what he thought the situation would be in the next 10 years, Hasan said, "Though I come from the land of the prophets, I do not happen to be a prophet."
One student asked Hasan what would happen to the Israelis in Palestine if his forces succeeded in regaining the country, Hasan replied that the Palestinians would be willing to live in
S
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A general commotion prevailed until Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, chairman of the Minority Opinions Forum, called for order.
At 9:30 p.m., Barrish interrupted the questioning to announce the end of the session. As the crowd was leaving, one Arab student announced the question and answer period would be continued at the Wesley Foundation.
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Block seating letters for'69 football games to go to living groups
Letters concerning student football seating will be sent out this week to organizations and organized living groups, announced Dave Miller, Eudora sophomore and president of the student seating board.
"If a student didn't purchase a ticket during spring enrollment he is unable to be in a block and will be considered a new student," Miller explained.
"Every group must have a name like Oliver fifth floor sophomores to be eligible. No more than 25 students will be in a block unless it is an exceptionally large block.
Letters will be sent to everyone who bought a ticket, Miller said. Both letters will include a form to be filled out and sent to athletic office by May 20.
"There is no seating advantage to sitting in a block," Miller explained. "All seats are chosen at random, the only advantage is that you can sit with your friends."
"Anyone who didn't get the first letter still can form a block even if he aren't in an organized living group.
"Any off-campus student who wishes to sit in an organized living group block may do so with the permission of that group," Miller said.
Parenthood ass'n. plans community project campaign
A campaign to make persons realize that a population problem exists in the world has been started by Samuel Worth, a concerned citizen in New York.
He has suggested that posters, buttons and bumper stickers saying "Two-for-Two, Stop the Population Explosion," be distributed throughout the community.
He said the slogan means two adults should have only two children. Doing this, Worth said, would stabilize the population and give persons time to plan for the future.
Mrs. Aldon Bell, head of the Lawrence chapter of the National Planned Parenthood Association, said she felt the campaign would be a good idea, explaining that it would, at least, make persons realize a population problem exists.
She added that the national organization for Planned Parenthood, though not affiliated with this specific campaign, is interested in organizing a conference at KU to involve students in discussions and to get their opinions on the population explosion.
She said that if college students were made aware of the problem, they would be able to educate others. She said a need exists to change the present attitude toward family size.
Mrs. Bell said the Planned Parenthood Clinic in Lawrence offers interested persons an opportunity to learn about birth control and better family planning in four educational sessions held each month.
Guatemala speech set
Dennis Casey, Arcadia, Calif. graduate student, will speak on "Indigenismo: The Promise for Social Progress in Guatemala," at 4 p.m. May 15 in the Kansas Union Pine Room.
The speech, sponsored by the Center for Latin American Studies, is opened to the public.
12 KANSAN May 7 1969
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37.45
29.96
14.98
26.22
44.92
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31.45
25.16
12.58
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37.72
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32.95
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TEMPO-ON THE MALLS
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MISTER
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KANU apologizes for transmitter
KANU crackled on the air. "We are sorry about occasional bad sounds, but we will try to make do with the antique we presently have.
"If you have any friends who are affluent and if you think they might like to go down in history as great benefactors,
please have them buy us a new $30,000 transmitter."
KANU, KU's FM radio station, is having difficulties with its 25-year-old transmitter. Due to the transmitter's age, the quality of broadcasting fluctuates, although it is usually quite good, said R. Edwin
Browne, assistant professor of journalism and KANU director.
The Western Electric transmitter was given to KU's William Allen White School of Journalism by the Harris Publishers Co. in memory of Fred Harris, he said.
The problem faced by KANU is maintenance, Browne said.
The transmitter is obsolete and parts are hard to get.
"Two years ago," Browne said, "we were in need of parts, so I wrote to several stations which have Western Electric transmitters. We received two out-of-service transmitters and cannibalized them for their parts."
Broadcasting recently has not always been up to par, he admitted.
Anticipating complaints from listeners, Browne taped a session for broadcast which relates present difficulties and makes a half-joking plea for a new transmitter.
Vince Bilotta resigns as yell-leader adviser
Vincent Bilotta, athletic director and adviser to the pom-pon and yell-leaders, has resigned as adviser to the pom-pon squad.
"The pom-pon girls have been placed under the advisership of the dean of women's office," Bilotta said. "Adviser re-evaluation was made during tryouts for black pom-pon girls. I don't know if a concrete decision has been made as to whether the yell-leaders will be placed under the direction of the dean of men's office."
Bilotta explained that at the time this decision was being made he had decided to withdraw as pom-pon adviser.
"In 1963 I became adviser to the men and women cheerleading squad. At that time we tried to reorganize it by breaking into two separate groups. I've found the job to be very time-consuming; I did it strictly as an extra-curricular activity and I did it because it was a hobby."
Bilotta said he didn't know if an adviser had been chosen for the pom-pon girls through the dean of women's office.
Music concerts to be presented
The 11th annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music will be Sunday through Tuesday featuring Vincent Persichetti, as guest composer. He heads the composition department at New York's Juliillard School of Music.
The symposium, which will alternate between Hoch
German dept. chairman named
Maurer, formerly a professor German at Indiana University in Bloomington, came to KU in September 1968.
Warren R. Maurer, associate professor of German, has been selected to succeed Eugene Norwood as chairman of KU's German department, the department announced.
When Norwood announced his resignation as chairman in February to accept the position of associate dean of the graduate school at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, a steering committee from KU's graduate school began interviewing applicants for the position.
Maurer, whose appointment will be effective June 30, said he hopes to bring the department to quality status with a quality faculty.
Chemistry professor given research grant
Richard L. Schowen, associate professor of chemistry, has been granted $16,164 for continuing research on reaction mechanisms in solution by the U.S. Public Health Service.
The grant, which also has been authorized for an additional three years, will support his work on the nucleophilic reactivity toward the silicon atom, particularly the primary kinetic isotope effect.
Also currently under study are molecular switches in the central nervous system.
14 KANSAN May 7 1969
Auditorium and Murphy Hall, is open to the public, and all concerts are free, announced the School of Fine Arts.
The first concert is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Sunday and will be directed by James Ralston, teaching associate of choral music. Two of Persichelli's compositions will be played.
A second recital at 8 p.m. will feature works by four KU faculty members of music theory.
A recital of student compositions is planned for 2:30 p.m. May 12 in Swarthout Recital Hall. Featured student works are by: James Barnes, Tulsa, Okla., senior; Antonia Molina, Manila, Philippines senior; William Davis, Natchitoches, La., sophomore, and Michael Seyfrit, Wheaton, Ill., junior.
For
Plywood, Moulding Plaster,
Shelving Material
Come to
LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER
1011 N. 3rd VI 3-0931
A concert at 8 p.m. will include works by Persichetti, John Pozdro, professor of music theory, and Barnes.
Our Photographer Herb
1967
Hair Style Selection
1
MISS LAWRENCE—KU CHARITY PAGEANT—MURPHY HALL May 8, 7:30 p.m.—May 9, 8:00 p.m.
Herb's STUDIO
The Malls on 23rd VI 2-8822 Herb Williams, Photographer
Suggested Student Treat
— 100% Pure Beef —
9th & Iowa St.
Big Shef . . . two open flame cooked beef patties, melted Kraft cheese, special sauce and fresh lettuce, served on toasted bun
"If you eat as many Big Shefs as I do, you might become good-looking too."
BURGER
"If you eat as many Big Shefs as I do, you might become good-looking too."
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
Senate to rule on disciplinary action
By MIKE NAGEL
Kansan Staff Writer
Creating new channels of student communication and strengthening student government were among the topics discussed in an interview yesterday with Dave Awbrey,
1970
Photo by Halina Pawl
Dave Awbrey
student body president, and Marilyn Bowman, vice president.
Awbrey, a Hutchinson junior, and Miss Bowman, a Merriam junior, were among the slate of Independent Student Party (ISP) candidates who recently were elected to office. The ISP campaign was run with the planks of increasing student participation in University government and other liberal-radical issues.
The president described his adjustment to office as the realization that nobody is prepared for the office before he enters it. He said his preliminary understanding of what the position entailed was inadequate.
Awbrey also emphasized that the new Senate Code partially modified the office of president and consequently his actions and interpretations of these modifications would determine the role of future presidents.
The new Senate Code is the first target of the Awbrey administration. Awbrey said that
he could not be expected to accomplish anything spectacular during his tenure for implementation of the code would utilize most of the years energy. He explained that defining, interpreting and establishing were the major problems.
Awbrey said the first major confrontation of the new code would be the emergency meeting of the Senate tonight. The meeting has been called to decide upon disciplinary action to be taken against three KU SDS members. A decision by the Senate will thus officially demonstrate the new power delegated it by the code.
Awbrey stressed that he would force the Senate to make a decision by refusing to adjourn the meeting until a resolution had been passed.
Speaking of the Senate members, Awbrey said, "They were elected as responsible officials and they are expected by the University to make a decision."
The president refrained from commenting on what he hoped the meeting would resolve because he said he felt it would
1014725
Photo by Halina Pawl
Marilyn Bowman
Alumni to receive service citations
Five KU alumni will receive citations for distinguished service, awarded jointly by the University and its Alumni Association, said Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and William W. Keeler, alumni president.
Robinson and Miss Martha Peterson, president of Barnard College in New York City and former KU dean of women whose citation was voted a year ago, will be honored June 1 in the Commencement exercises for post-baccalaureate degree candidates.
The five to be honored are: Ray R. Evans, president of the Traders National Bank in Kansas City, Mo., and former member of the Kansas Board of Regents; Raymond F. Nichols, KU vice chancellor for finance; Miss Irene Nunemaker, businesswoman and philanthropist, New York, N.Y.; David W. Robinson, Kansas City physician and member of the KU medical faculty, and August L. Selig, consulting geologist and oil developer in the Gulf coast area, Houston, Tex.
May 7 1969 KANSAN 15
Evans, Nichols, Miss Nunemaker and Selig will receive their citations June 2 during the exercises for undergraduates.
Evans, a native of Kansas City, starred in football and basketball in the early 1940s and after World War II. He was a member of Sachem Honor society for senior men, president of the Class of 1948 and was designated Honor Man of the class.
Nichols, a native of Larned, was designated the Honor Man of the Class of 1926 and was editor of both the University Daily Kansan and the Jayhawk.
Miss Nunemaker grew up on farms in Colorado and after graduation from KU in 1922 went into advertising work. She recently donated $350,000 to KU for the first physical facility for a College-within-the-College.
Robinson graduated from KU in 1935 and received his medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1938. Since 1947 he has been chairman of the plastic surgery section of the KU School of Medicine. Robinson's father, Prof. David H. Robinson was a member of KU's first faculty.
be injurious to the Senate's objectivity. On the other hand Miss Bowman said she agreed with the demands of the radicals and hoped for total amnesty.
Selig, a native of Lawrence, attended KU before and after World War I and received the B.A. degree in 1920. He is a trustee of St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital.
When asked how the interest of the average student could be roused, Miss Bowman said by the establishment of new communication channels.
Miss Bowman said she hopes her position will enable her to establish new channels of communication between the student body and the University administration.
Describing the new channels as her primary objective, Miss Bowman agreed with Awbrey's
suggestion of amending the Senate Code to allow a student referendum to be called if and when a student had presented to the Senate a petition signed by 500 persons.
Miss Bowman said she also appreciated the idea of action projects which would enhance the Lawrence-University relationship. She said it might be possible to establish a committee within the Senate which would coordinate interested persons and the projects.
Awbrey said the issues were essential.
"Controversy creates involvement," said the president.
But Awbrey cautioned the unwary who might feel this was an affirmation of violence and destruction.
1964
Bandolino
Italian all the way—your favorite model included. The "Padova" pattern shown is one of many styles priced from twelve dollars in sizes four to eleven.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
---
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---
'Defender of the masses
(Editor's Note. Democratic Governor Robert B. Docking says he may try for a third term. Standing against many of his recommendations during the 1969 Legislature was Republican Sen. Glee Smith Jr., president pro-tem of the Senate. Both Smith and Docking met with Kansan reporters Judy Jarrrell and Martha Mangelsdorf recently to candidly discuss issues and opinions on Kansas government.)
Some observers in Topeka feel that Governor Robert Docking came out of the 1969 legislative session so strong that he now is a likely candidate for a third term in 1970.
Such talk, of course,
overlooks one major hurdle. No
governor, Republican or
Democrat, ever has won a third
round in the office. Even the
late George Docking, father of
the present governor, failed in
such bid.
Gov. Robert Docking
P. J.
This could make it just the kind of challenge Robert
Docking would relish. He is not without fault for what happened in the 1969 session, but G.O.P. actions put him in the role of defender of the masses against the special interests.
In a 40-minute interview with the Governor, Docking commented on many of the highlights of the session and aired some personal feelings on major legislative issues.
"People were ignored"
Sparing few kind words for the Republican legislature, the Democratic Governor emphasized that "many major goals of the people were ignored."
He called the Kansas Senate "irresponsible" for appropriating over $29 million with no effort to finance the appropriations. Special sessions were mandatory, the Governor said, "because we can't operate the state in this manner."
Docking suggested that the Republican legislators were trying to strengthen the role of the state government. Of 20 electoral reform measures, he said, almost none of them were included in the final legislation.
"This all destroys the authority of the Governor to protect the people's right to vote," he added.
As the subject changed to educational issues, the Governor stressed that the past session had been hit hard with such legislation.
In the last three years Kansas has increased expenditures on higher education by 35 per cent. The present administration has, likewise, been strongly oriented toward higher education, Docking said.
Education-oriented
He maintained that the legislation had concentrated on people—that is, faculty salaries and institutional funds—and that
revenue bonds were usually used for physical facilities.
16 KANSAN May 7 1969
Voicing his opinion about the increase of student unrest, Docking said he is in favor of as much flexibility as possible, rather than more stringent methods of control. Kansas has left the handling of disturbances to the University chancellor in hopes that grievance procedures will be set up to allow fluent dialogue between the University officials and the students, he said.
"Each has an area of responsibility—the chancellor, the faculty and the students. The state is responsible for seeing that each student gets the best education he can, but it is not the state's function to run the administration," he said.
Liquor-by-the-drink
Commenting on the liquor-by-the-drink legislation of the past session, Docking said he had advocated the people be given the right to vote on it.
"After all, one half of the voting population has become eligible since 1948," he remarked.
The Governor's intercom buzzed, and his secretary reminded him that he still had more appointments to keep that day. But the Governor said he wanted a little more time, and went on to discuss issues of national importance.
Docking declined a prediction of the Democratic presidential candidate in 1972, but he did say, "if Ted Kennedy runs, I do want to support him."
The subject changed to the question of a voluntary army, and Docking presented strong arguments against any changes in the draft laws.
"Our country was built on the concept of the citizen soldier. I am strongly against the building of a permanent military system, which would lead to a professional army, which would be one of the most dangerous things that could happen," he said.
Poverty-pocket army?
"No responsible leader in the government today would advocate such a plan." he added.
The Governor further suggested that if the army were made voluntary, it would be primarily a black army with volunteers coming mainly from the poverty areas.
The Docking administration has not, however, been without its shortcomings during the legislative session.
Although the party platform is an election campaign document, which means it is drafted with an eye to attracting as many and alienating as few supporters as possible, it also is an agenda for the Governor. This means that it anticipates, but not fully outlines, the shape of the program the party's candidate for governor will present to the next legislature if he is elected.
One quick glance at Docking's agenda shows numerous unchecked items on his checklist.
Backs 4-year term
The Democratic platform recommended that the term of the office of Governor be extended from two to four years with eligibility for reelection. These changes would tend to
give the Governor power commensurate with his responsibilities, promote coherence and make efficiency possible, he said. But the change has not become a reality, and Gov. Doorking now must fight for coherence and efficiency amongst the Republican legislators.
It was further proposed that under the suffrage article of the Kansas constitution, the vote should be lowered from 21 to 18 years. But the best that could be done was to call for a 1970 referendum.
FREE CAR WASHES with gasoline purchases
Aid to schools
In the area of education, the
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Use our gas Budget card-costs no more
Democratic platform urged additional state aid to secondary and elementary education but the debate in favor of educational aid fell to the Republican supporters, leaving the Democrats short of appropriated funds.
And on the university scene, the platform mandate recognized that "because the stability of our society depends upon a continuing agreement in support of the ground rules which govern our political decision-making process, it is
imperative the youth be given the opportunity to voice their needs and aspirations. Accordingly, we urge all office holders, administrators, boards and commissions to be directly accessible to our youth."
But in the midst of holocausts at Kansas State University and sit-ins at Wichita State University, the administration became compelled to support a Republican-supported concurrent resolution recognizing the university authorities as supreme decision-makers in any contested situation where dialogue had broken down.
grand opening!
formerly the library
2500 W. 6th
now ...
noah's ark
ALL DRAWS
20¢
FOR 1 WK.
We've got something on Mary Beth
The Alley Shop
at Campbell's
843 Mass.
STUDIO LABORATORY
... meets GOP stronghold
Until mid-January when the 1969 Kansas Legislature convened, Sen. Glee Smith Jr., R-Larned, president pro tem of
Glee S. Smith
the Senate, was considered a possible Republican candidate for governor in 1970.
He had been mentioned early in 1968 before he decided to seek re-election as senator rather than run for governor. But, many have criticized the Republican legislative leadership during the 1969 session—particularly in the Senate—and Smith has been taking much of the blame, deservedly or not.
Those who oppose him say he vacillated in his leadership of the Senate, trying too much to play for political advantage in 1970.
Smith, of course, disputes such statements saying, "I was somewhat discouraged about the way the early part of the Senate
May 7 1969 KANSAN 17
Dwight Boring* says...
A. J. H.
"You get so much more for your insurance dollars from College Life's famous policy, THE BENEFACTOR, because College Life insures only college men and college men are preferred risks. Let me tell you more."
In an interview, Smith spoke casually but in generalities about the predominant trends and attitudes during the past legislative session.
session went, but in the final analysis I think we came out with what was good for all Kansans."
Legislative trends
*Dwight Boring
Serving his fourth term in the Senate, Smith said he had observed a traditional tendency to act conservatively. But, he added that this year the legislature has tended to be more liberal.
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The organization of the legislature, he commented, has been improving every year as legislators have succeeded in instituting methods of speeding up the processes of the legislature.
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"We have moved faster than in the years past, therefore some have understood the legislators to be more liberal this year than they really are," he added.
More specifically, Smith revealed his feelings towards legislation related to colleges and universities -an area in which his concern has been notable.
Higher salaries
He said the percentage growth in salaries for Kansas colleges and universities has been higher than the national average in the past few years, even though the range may be lower.
"I want to see Kansas maintain a good position relative to schools in all other states, but our main concern should be to provide service to the students," he said.
The president pro tem named two major characteristics of the 1969 session: 1) a growing awareness and social concern and 2) a shift of emphasis from rural to urban due to the new reapportionment.
Smith predicted greater improvements in education and greater concern for welfare in future sessions of the legislature.
"Education is the most important subject we deal with, and welfare is fast becoming one of our greatest responsibilities," he said.
In the 1968 party platform under which Smith ran for office, the Republicans openly condemned the present Democratic Governor of Kansas.
Condemns Docking
The platform continued, "We condemn his failure to provide a balanced budget, his stifling the highway program, and his complete lack of concern for education . . . We deplore his replacement of practical state achievements with political self-seeking."
Yet the Republican-dominated Senate and House spent more time in the 1969 session locking horns with the Democratic Governor than passing the proposed mandates.
For example, the Republican party proposed solutions to the problems of education and the
burdens on the property tax payers. They acknowledged a responsibility to improve the educational opportunities of the youth of the state and a responsibility to aid in the education of the young people.
Accordingly, the Republican legislature passed measures which did greatly aid education. But they passed 29 million dollars worth of legislation for which they could not back the appropriation.
Smith himself admitted that the legislature needed to "study where and how they could raise more revenue."
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
AUTO
WRECKING
NEW and USED PARTS
Metal Sculpture
Supplies
Tires and Batteries
Credit Cards Accepted 1F Over 21.
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
1976
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
Live With More than a Touch of Excitement.
LANZ
SLACK SUIT
Modeled
By
Carolyn Fienhage
Religion 'cop-out' to ex-atheist
By SUSAN FOHRMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Arthur Katz, once a Jew, an atheist, a member of the New Left and a member of a Communist front organization last night testified how he became a Christian.
Previous to finding God, Katz said he had considered religion a concoction designed to substitute for courage. He said it was a "cop-out" for those too weak to face the world.
He said the problem of religion is based on reality versus appearances. Katz described his life as a Jewish young man as a struggle to see where reality stood against the background of false appearances in the world.
Dropping out of high school at 16, Katz called school a training ground designed to fit man into the "conspiracy of life."
Terrible travesty
"It seemed a terrible travesty that so many were content to spend their whole lives making a living-satisfying their own vanity ... I wanted a socially consequential occupation."
Katz said he then became a member of the New Left because the world desperately needed a revolution to change corrupt values and disparities in life.
The draft was Katz's next problem when he was called for duty in the Korean War, a war he termed "the first of the 20th century's absurd wars."
Katz was sent to Germany, something he said was ironic since he was a Jew.
He said he imagined the Germans to be brutes but found they were similar to him. He said Germans had gone "berserk trying to repudiate the system." The Germans, he said, were the
first to realize failures of civilization and were idealistic men seeking a new order that would be an improvement.
Visited camp
On Yom Kippur, one of the Jewish high holidays, Katz said he went to a concentration camp instead of a synagogue.
There he was "treated to a revelation... What does it take to shatter and pierce our shallow understanding?" Katz asked.
It took first hand proximity at the concentration camp to have the horror permeate his soul, he said.
Man fails to grasp God, "because we're utterly shallow and don't understand what God is really like . . . The fact that God is obscured from our sight is our fault."
Later he realized that given the proper circumstances it could have been him shoving bodies during Hitler's regime.
Katz said nothing can alter the condition of the human heart, and explained that an individual be willing to rid himself of vanity and humble himself to find God.
World changer
Katz said he wanted to be a world changer dealing with the "uncorrupted" younger generation.
After serving in the armed forces he went to the University of California and became a history teacher. He discovered the students weren't as innocent and uncorrupted as he had thought.
They, too, were ruled by vanity and greed.
He described the classroom as "a miniature universe." There was no answer in the classroom and, as a result, no answer for the outside world.
He took leave of teaching, still
an atheist, and began a 14-month European trip seeking an answer. He said his pride had been broken, and he was now in a position to hear the "still small voice of God."
God always takes the initiative to seek man, Katz said, adding that God found him. He said he learned from his European travels that the world needs "to have men wash one another's feet."
God found him
By this spirit of humility, the world could be changed.
806 MASS.
V1 3-1171
For:
● PORTRAITS
● APPLICATION PICTURES
● PASSPORT PICTURES
● PHOTOFINISHING
But Katz said he still tried to avoid accepting religion. While in Jerusalem he met a group of Hebrew Christians who showed him the Old and New Testaments could be reconciled and also showed him the power of God.
Katz said he was still unconvinced because, although he knew it in his mind, he didn't know it in his heart. But he said he was able to receive God when
he knew him to be true and faced him.
As a result Katz said he was able to "cast out the spirit of anxiety and despair through love of God."
He concluded saying men need "courage to die so that they might live."
The speech, held in the Kansas Union Forum Room, was sponsored by Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
SUMMER STUDY IN RIO
BRAZIL
AMMER STUDY IN RIO
EIGHT WEEKS JULY-AUGUST 1969
UNIVERSITY COURSES: Brazilian History, Govt., Literature, Anthrop, Econ. Devel., Portuguese, etc.
EXCURSIONS: Bahio, Brasilia, Sao Paulo, etc.
— FACULTY: Harvard, Columbia, M.I.T., N.Y.U.
WORKSHOPS: Cinema, Architecture, Music, Art
ENROLLMENT FEE includes: Air Passage, lodgings, Tuition, Excursions, Workshops=$1220
editions, workshops — $1220
WRITE INTERAMERICAN SUMMER STUDY ASSOC.
1234567890
APPLICATION CLOSING DATE: MAY 15, 1969
KANSAS CITY ART INSTITUTE Announces Its 6 Week Summer Session
From June 9 through July 18.
Credit and non-credit courses offered. College level day and evening courses available. For information write:
Kansas City Art Institute
Kansas City Art Institute
c/o Admissions
4415 Warwick Blvd.
Kansas City, Mo. 6411
or Call LO 1-4852
Chancellor reviews ROTC Friday
The annual review of ROTC cadets and midshipmen by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be at 3:45 p.m. Friday in Memorial Stadium.
During the ceremony outstanding military students
18 KANSAN May 7 1969
will be presented awards for their achievements.
Pay-Le$ Self Service SHOES 1300 W.23rd Lawrence
"look what Sandy's has for you"
Have a Scotsman (a HiLo [double cheeseburger] French fries and a milk shake) at Sandy's and putt-putt at the Putt-Putt Golf Course for half price.
Believe it! Buy a Scotsman (a delicious combination) and Sandy's will give you a coupon that cuts your putting costs in half (sorry, but we can't cut scores).
THRIFT 'N SWIFT' DRIVE-IN
The Quality Hamburger
Sandy's
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very hip dipsters,
bright as neon,
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Bikini—$17
Matching Pants
(as shown)—$20
Model—Connie Griffin
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● 835 MASS. ● VI3-4833
Jay SHOPPE
509471824046
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kansan is referred to
at all events; is expected to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduiff's Campus Madhouse. 1241 Iren. 5-14
For Sale: SANDALS--This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts
many styles of leather watchbands
just for your wrist and watch. Start-
ing at $3. 812 Mass. 5-15
New Apartment size refrigerators—white or copper only $99.00 at Ray Stoneback's (open Mon. & Thurs.
Nites). Ideal for study rooms & dens.
Artificial flowers for every occasion.
Feather, Burcap, Sisal, Waxed Tissue Paper, Straw, Antiqued, Bouquets delivered. JAN'S FLOWER 'N GIFT SHOP—a division of Hickcrest Billiards. 5-7
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE. TIG with 75 cup pitches. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
G.E. Hair Dryers Reduced! 3 Heat plus cool in carrying case reduced to $10.99—plus you get a free rain wear outfit from G.E.—See Ray Stoneback's. Downtown—open Mon. & Thurs.
Eves. 5-7
SALE: Tables, Dinette Set, Walnut
Chairs, 5-Drawer Dresser, Oak Desks,
Stereo Equipment Miscellaneous.
Telephone After A 5 P.M. P-1514
Tennessee, Apt. A.
SUZUKI
Just arrived at Fory fresh
TC 120 "Cat" Mur X-Serambler
Nichols Suzuki
"The Motorcycle Men"
Lowest Prices - Highest Trades
300 W. 6th 842-0504
SUZUKI
For Sale: 1965 Honda 90, 4,000 ml,
$100. I need the money desperately
Call Mike, 843-2043. 5-7
---
Stereo AM-FM cartridge for auto tape
Bargain Basket $25 ⅝ F-1 7843 5-7
1961 Cadillac Sedan De Ville. 66,000 actual miles. PS and PB. Electric windows and doors. Factor in condition, soil and out $895.00. Call VI 3-0638 or U 4-3545.
For Sale: Guitars for sale — Gibson “Les Paul Special.” W Hardshell case, $100 Fender “Mustang” 3/4 size. Fender “Regal Classic” Folk guitar w new strings and case, $60 Call Steve Dexter, VI 3-7404, after a fpm. 5-7
Summer dresses, sizes 5, 14, and 15.
Socked sweatshirts. Size 8, 10,
sweatshirt. VZ-28088. S-7
In excellent condition. Van Dyke mobile home, 50 x 10, new wall-to-wall carpet. Doctor's Trailer Plans for Louisiana. Louisiana. Calls 5-9 5:30, VI 2-3269.
For Sale ... Four 14' Mickey Thompson
knock-offs, $106. @Ic
at VI 3-8153
5-9
For Sale: WOLLENSAK tape recorder,
$90. Also, AIWA tape recorder, $70.
Available at 5:30 p.m. good condition.
Cellular after 5:30 p.m. at 333 McCollum. IV 2-6600 5-9
Stereo component set, 40 watt. AM/ FM, solid state radio, professional microwave, matching walnut specimen cabinets, $185.95. Wine Sewing Machine, 916 Masc. 5-9
'60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide ovals, pipes, mufflers, waterpump, front wheels rebuilt. Tape deck optional, but not included in $650 or best offer. Well taken care of! Contact Jeff Meyers, VI 3-8153. 5-14
FOR SALE; BAND EQUIPMENT—Gretch guitar, Fender Amplifier and cabinet used 10 months in one of midwest's top bands. Guitar is 2 years old; amp/cabinet is one year old. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-6894. 5-12
For Sale: HAM GEAR. Moving-selling complete rig. SB-301. SB-401. equipment, and many other items and parts. WBVCI. VI 3-6057 or U 4-3099. 5-12
64 Ford Galaxie 500. 288 engine, std.
340 Mercury $895. Quality Pontiac
1040 Vermont. 5-12
'68 Falcon—economy car—alr-cond. automatic trans. radio—power steering—power brakes. Quality Pontiac, 104 Vermont. 5-12
'65 Rambler convt -automatic-V-8
eng. power steering-power brakes-
radio. Quality Pontiac, 1040 Vermont.
5-12
'64 Chev. convt- automatic trans-
283 engine -power steering -radio -
clean. $1.025. Quality Pontiac. 1040
Vermont. 5-12
Honda 305 Superhawk. Electric starter, scrubber pipes. Excellent condition. $350 or best offer. Call VI 2-974.
5-13
GIANT BOOK SALE: Sat. 10th, from
9-6 and Sun. from 2-6. 808 Tenn.
Thermophiles, and more. Old and New
dren's books, and more. Old and New
BENEFIT BALLARD LIBRARY. 5-9
1966 Honda S-90 for trail, woods, or street use. Full lighting. High pipe, low gearing, oversize tires, etc., $125 or best offer. VI 2-3360 after 5:30. 5
CYCLE HELMETS - Daytona 300
(Men's) with tinted face shield—also a chick's helmet-$25 for the pair. Call VI 3-9106.
5-13
Baldwin electric 12 string, triple pickup, hardshell case, very good condition. $325. Also Fender Bandmaster, good condition. $225. Torn VI-7 2494.
Volkwagen Bug (1963), excellent condition. Must selt-leaving town. Call Bill Davie, UN 4-3561-or after 5 p.m. call VI 2-8968. 5-8
NOTICE
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UDB may set pattern
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 17)
Alderson suggested the Kansan ask Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe for the administration's policy on campus demonstrations.
Wescoe's reply: "With the kind of government we have in the University, the responsibility for student discipline rests with the students and faculty. No peremptory decisions were made."
Wescoe said that when government or University officials talk about a "get tough" policy, they are talking about violence, not the right of people to dissent peacefully. He added that as far as he knew, there had been no violence on this campus.
Asked to comment on past policy, Alderson said, "I think the University's posture of late has been to recognize that students must have different ways of expressing themselves and that there will be dissent.
"But it has been assumed that it would be a responsible presentation. The University has always been concerned with vandalism, damage to property. And I'm sure you will find many people concerned with disruption."
Few infractions encountered
"As far as my turning to a page of the student handbook and saying here's the policy or here's a statement on disruption I can't."
"I would not be surprised though, that one would be written so that it would be better understood what the University's posture is on this."
Alderson then pointed out that the Kansan ought to let its readers know what the students' feelings were on campus disruptions.
He said that very few infractions came to the attention of the disciplinary board, and that only infrequently does he hear about infractions handled in the judicial councils of residence halls or in classrooms.
Alderson said, "The disciplinary board has hearings about twice a month and only the more serious cases reach the disciplinary board in the form of appeals by students or a request for the board to decide what ought to be done.
Faculty member added
Membership of the disciplinary board has changed
20 KANSAN May 7
1969
since 1949 when the All-Student Council (ASC) Bill No.8 was passed, said Russell N. Bradt, associate professor of mathematics and board member.
"The basic difference is that a third faculty member has been added and the academic dean of the student concerned no longer is a voting member." Bradt said.
The 11 voting members are: Donald K. Alderson, dean of men; Emily Taylor, dean of women; Russell N. Bradt, associate professor of mathematics; Martin Dickinson, assistant professor of law; Gordon Wiseman, professor of physics.
J. Dennis Biggs, Lyons junior; Kathleen Crownhart, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Michael B. Hall, Oak Park, Ill., sophomore; John W. Lungstrum, Salina second year law; Thomas W. McLaughlin, Manhattan senior, and Kathryn A. Prewitt, Wichita senior.
Three students come on the board each semester, Alderson said, so that there is not a completely new group each time.
Explains student appeals
The most common example that members of the discipline board gave is that of a student appealing a grade of F in an examination or in a course. If the student feels he has been treated unfairly or capriciously then he would have an opportunity to appeal to the University Disciplinary Board, Alderson said.
Alderson said that other questions, such as those concerning the smoking of marijuana or drinking in the residence halls, for instance, were difficult to respond to.
Students do not get an automatic suspension if they are caught smoking marijuana, he said.
"It would be a case where we would have to deal with the individual and the problem as it affects him. Previous contacts with our office would very likely influence what would be done," Alderson said.
Both the dean of women and the dean of men repeatedly referred the reporter to the student handbook for information.
Yet, the student handbook, while it spells out disciplinary procedures, is inaccurate, vague and lacking in much information.
Mrs. Donna L. Shavlik, assistant dean of women, explained that the reason they
referred persons to the student handbook for their information is that every word in it was very carefully formulated. She also said they preferred students to see the dean of women's office personally for information.
But when asked if a student were warned and still continued to smoke marijuana, Alderson replied, "For you to ask me what would happen a third time this is a question that is difficult to respond to. We do not wish to act capriciously, we want to act as if we are responsive to the needs of students. And therefore we have to make some decisions as to what will be done, if anything is done, after the thing occurs and we talk to the student. I would think you would believe that's the best way to approach the problem.
'Judgments are made'
"Or if I handed you a book and said, 'Here's a rule book and this will tell you exactly what is going to happen,' you're sure this will take some of the personal involvement out of this, I guess you wouldn't need a dean. And in the case of a court I guess you wouldn't need a judge. Judgments are made. I'm not saying that I'm making judgments like a judge in the courts but there are extenuating circumstances."
Alderson said in some cases the student's health had to be considered and referrals are made to the health service, the Guidance Bureau, or to someone on the campus who might be able to offer the student some assistance.
Smoking marijuana is a violation against the law and having alcohol on the premises is against University policy, he said.
"If we know someone has it or is using it, he will not go unchallenged," he added.
Not many hearings
Alderson said the number of UDB hearings have gone down in recent times. Penalties also seem to have been softened.
In the clip files of the Kansan in 1926, two women were penalized credit hours for violation of University library rules. One was given failing grades in two five-hour courses, and the other was failed five hours and required to present an additional five hours for graduation. They have not used the correct names in checking out books.
Alderson said that such penalties had not been given for
at least a decade but Charles Oldfather, professor of law laughed when reminded of the old penalty and thought it was a much longer time.
Four types of disciplinary action can now be imposed on the student. Mrs. Shavlik said.
The student can (1) be fined for theft or destruction of property. (2) be put on disciplinary probation (3) be failed in an exam or a course and (4) be suspended for a semester or an indefinite length of time.
Mrs. Shavlik said that a student was never expelled from KU. He could always return if he wished to after suspension, she added.
Although the Student Handbook says on page 104 that the judgement of the BDA is final, the same page also states that the University Disciplinary Board is the highest judicial group in the University. A bewildered student reader would be at a loss to know which judiciary board actually has the final authority in disciplinary cases.
Board of appeals
The Disciplinary Board of Appeals was established in November, 1967, by revision of the University Senate Code. When the DBA board was established there were five members: the associate dean of the Law School; another Law School representative (appointed by the dean of the school); the chief justice of the Student Court; the student body president, and the chairman of the Senate Council Committee on Student Affairs.
The new Senate Code only
lists three members: a member of the faculty of the School of Law, appointed by the dean of that school as chairman; a member of the faculty of the Law School appointed by the Committee of the School of Law (representatives to the Senate from the Law School), and the Chief Justice of the Student Court.
Neither the dean of the Law School, Lawrence E. Blades, nor the chief justice, Joe E. Henderson, third year law student from Wichita, knew who the members of the Disciplinary Board of Appeals were.
Oldfather said the Board of Disciplinary Appeals (BDA) is a limited review appellate court. It does not retry a case.
BDA never invoked
It also states that the BDA shall have original jurisdiction over UDB cases when a quorum of the Disciplinary Board cannot be assembled for a disciplinary hearing within a reasonable time after the occasion for a hearing shall have arisen.
The new Senate Code states: The judgment of the Disciplinary Board of Appeals shall be limited to the consideration of whether the Disciplinary Board (1) acted within its powers, (2) afforded the student concerned a fair hearing, and (3) made findings and reached a decision which have adequate support in the record of its hearing.
Oldfather said that the jurisdiction of the Board of Disciplinary Appeals has never been invoked in the $1\frac{1}{2}$ years of its existence.
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DANCE
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RISING SUNS
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Friday, May 9th – The Rising Suns
RED DOG INN
Saturday, May 10
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Wed., May 21 — The Ike & Tina Turner Review
Friday, May 9th – The Rising Suns
RED DOG INN
Saturday, May 10
Two resolutions passed
Senate affirms UDB power
Amidst applause and muttering from the gallery, the Student Senate last night passed two resolutions which in effect affirmed the power of the existing University judiciary authorities.
The emergency meeting had been called to recommend a course of action to be taken by the University Disciplinary Board (UDB) against three students in connection with an April 23 disturbance of a university function.
The students called to answer charges today before the UDB are: Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student; Bill Berkowitz, New York graduate student; and Donald Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
The Senate meeting was called to order by David Awbrey, student body president and Hutchinson junior. John Lungstrom, Salina second year law student and UDB member, reported on the progress of UDB action concerning the disciplinary case.
UDB meeting today
The UDB meeting scheduled for 2:30 p.m. today in Dyche Auditorium probably will be open to members of the Student
Senate, Faculty Senate Council and accredited members of the press, Lungstrom said. He explained the meeting would be closed if any of the three students charged in the case wanted it that way.
"We've had some contact which I'm not sure is verified or not with three of the principals in the case," Lungstrom said, "who have given us a tentative 'no' that they are not willing to have the meeting open to the Student Senate or the other parties.
"The disciplinary board will keep the door open until the last minute and if the three participants are willing to have the meeting open, we will have it open."
After the Student Senate meeting, Atkinson, told the Kansan, "The meeting will be open or we will open it."
Charges by Senex
Student Senate members were told that the specific charges against Atkinson, Berkowitz, and Jenkins were "disruption of a University function in the student union on April 23." The Senate was also informed by Dean of Student Affairs William Balfour that the source of the
charges was the Executive Committee of the Senate (Senex) as well as "other means."
In spite of repeated questioning, neither Lungstrom or Balfour would reveal why these three students had been picked to appear before the UDB, when the number of demonstrators involved in the incident April 23 was much larger.
The- first resolution was presented to the Senate by Dennis Embry, Great Bend sophomore and Oliver College senator.
The resolution stated that since a judicial code has not yet been created by the new Senate and procedures used to exist under the ASC code, it would be resolved that the student body president request the UDB to
open hearings and render a decision.
UDB power affirmed
The resolution which passed after much debate meant that the Senate acknowledged its own existence only as an legislative body. Furthermore it acknowledged the UDB and its power.
After the vote on the first resolution a second resolution was presented by Bill Hansen, Kansas City, Mo., first year law student.
The resolution asked that the Senate resolve that students who commit acts of civil disobedience accept punishment for their crime under the "due process of law." The resolution further asked of the KU student body that action taken against those who commit civil disobedience be relegated to the
"constituted authorities." The resolution stated that if it were passed, the Student Senate would recognize "its dedication to a legal system which guarantees every citizen 'due process of law.'"
The resolution was also passed after debate.
Legal system supported
The passing of this resolution which supported the legal system thus also recognized the relevance of the existing form of government. It could also be interpreted as denying the amnesty which the three charged students had demanded.
Senator Richard W. Averill, Topeka freshman, rose to present a resolution which stated that charges should be brought to the UDB against James Seaver, director of the Western
(Continued to page 5)
79th Year, No. 127
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, May 8, 1969
Radicals might appear at the ROTC review
Leaflets passed out by campus radicals yesterday urged students to demonstrate against ROTC on campus at the annual review of ROTC cadets and midshipmen by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe at 3:45 p.m. Friday in Memorial Stadium.
Col. John P, Lanigan, professor of Naval ROTC, had no comments to give about the expected demonstration except: "We have a review scheduled, and we plan to hold it."
On the back of the fliers it is stated classes have been officially cancelled. This is not true.
The leaflet stated, "It's time we saw ROTC as an extension, necessary to the continuation of an elitist officer corps structure in an army designed to act as an agent of oppression and exploitation."
William Balfour, dean of student affairs, said the only persons excused from classes Friday afternoon are those enrolled in ROTC.
When asked about possible disciplinary action for demonstrators, Balfour said, "There are no statements which say 'This will happen, if such and such happens.'" He suggested that a basis for action, if necessary, may be determined from decisions for disciplinary measures concerning the campus disturbance of April 23.
Today Provost James R. Surface announced that the administration has accepted the guidelines for the Review formulated and recommended by the University Senate and Executive Committee.
The guidelines are as follows:
Recognizing that the Chancellor's review of the Reserve Officer Training Corps programs is a university function, and
Considering it inappropriate to use outside law enforcement officials except upon the violation of a state law or a local ordinance, but considering it proper to use campus security officers at
Recognizing that all groups on campus must be assured the right of freedom of peaceable assembly, and
any time to identify violators of the proposed guidelines, which follow.
The University Senate Executive Committee establishes the following guidelines for the review ceremony of May 9, 1969, subject to the approval of the Chancellor:
1. No one other than designated participants (member of any of the ROTC programs, officials, and ushers) in the Chancellors review of the ROTC program shall be admitted to or be permitted to be upon the track or field of the Kansas University Memorial Stadium on the afternoon of the ceremony.
2. An appropriate number of students and faculty members shall be appointed to act as ushers controlling entrance to the track and field.
3. Any person attempting to go upon the track or field shall be asked to desist. Should he refuse, charges shall be preferred against him by the Senate Executive Committee for presentation to the Disciplinary Board.
The Senate Executive Committee recommends that these guidelines be approved by the Chancellor, released to the news media by the Provost's office, and announced over the loudspeaker prior to the ceremony.
MISSOURI ST.
Photo by Ron Bishop
A local motorist fords the flood at 19th and Missouri Streets. The flooding resulted from water draining from
Missouri flood
“O” Zone parking lot after yesterday afternoon's thunderstorm.
8
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Pentagon to ship gas
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon plans to ship huge quantities of deadly nerve gase cross country by railroad beginning next week. An official of one town along the route called the idea "too grisly to think about."
Truman celebrates 85th
The Pentagon revealed its tentative plan Wednesday after Rep. Richard McCarthy, D-N.Y. disclosed it to newsmen. The purpose of the shipping operation, is to bring the gas to Earle, N.J. for eventual disposal.
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — Harry S Truman is quietly observing his 85th birthday today, while about 250 lifetime friends gathered at a traditional luncheon honoring the former president.
For the third consecutive year, Truman did not attend the luncheon. Although his health is reasonably good for a man his age, he no longer mingles with crowds.
It was the 16th session since the expanded negotiations began Feb. 5.
Campus unrest continues
PARIS — U.S. delegation sources said it was up to the Communists to come up with a new offer toward progress in today's session of the Vietnam peace talks. North Vietnam again demanded that U.S. troops get out of South Vietnam.
Paris talks resume
City College of New York reopens today with police guards to prevent a repetition of yesterday's fights between white students and black and Puerto Rican students.
In Washington, D.C., Howard University students remained in control of six campus buildings. The administration of the mostly Negro school gave them a 24-hour ultimatum—ending at midafternoon today—to allow the barricaded campus to reopen.
Bucher assigned to shore
WASHINGTON - Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, who expressed a desire to captain another ship during investigation of the seizure of his USS Pueblo, yesterday was assigned to hore duty.
He will take a graduate course in management, the Pentagon announced.
I am a lawyer. I am a businessman. I am a man of integrity. I am a man of courage. I am a man of wisdom. I am a man of faith. I am a man of integrity. I am a man of courage. I am a man of wisdom. I am a man of faith.
Kickapoo Logan Photo by Rick Pendergrass
Photo by Rick Pendergrass
Ex-frosh football coach now works as oil painter
Athletics and art appear to be one in the same to Kickapoo Logan, former freshman football coach and now a Palm Springs, Calif., oil painter.
Logan is a 1930 KU graduate with a major in physical education and education. For three of his undergraduate years he was a 169-pound guard under Coach Bill Hargiss. For three years after graduation he was the freshman football coach and trainer.
"Hargiss taught me football and for the last nine years I've been teaching him art." he said.
Logan's art works are presently on display at the Lost Gallery and Herb's photography studio at the Mall shopping center. His work will be on display May 17 and 18 when there will be an art show featuring the works of 100 to 120 artists, said Herb Williams, owner of Herb's Studio.
Landscapes, seascapes, flowers and Midwestern farm scenes characterize Logan's oil paintings.
Colorful scenes
"I paint colorful scenes as I have an affinity for color," Logan explained. "I don't think or paint in the modern abstract way. I feature abstract art as a pictorial picture of human frustrations."
"I walked through the KU art
2 KANSAN May 8
1969
department and walked right out. I've taught at five universities and you can't teach abstract art, you can't teach someone to put their mental frustrations on canvas."
The American Institute of Fine Arts recently awarded him a medal not only as an artist but as a singer as well.
"Hargiss' wife was my voice instructor while I was in school, I still do a lot of singing," Logan said.
After a lifetime as an athletic trainer and manufacturer of training equipment, Logan sold his training equipment last year to his son and son-in-law and now devotes six to eight hours a day to his paintings. He has both an indoor and outdoor studio in Palm Springs, and his other paintings are on display in galleries in Los Angeles, Hawaii, New Mexico, Pasadena, Calif., and Arizona.
Interest began 50 years ago
"I became interested in art 50 years ago when I found a painting in a deserted home near Hiawatha," he said. "I appreciated its values, composition and color and the painting meant something."
"Athletics is an art," Logan continued. "There is nothing more beautiful than the human form in action."
In much of his work he said he tries to capture color, mostly paintings of Indians as he believes they are more colorful.
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Darkness falls on play
The adage of "the show must go on" did not hold true in Saturday's performance of the University Theatre's opera, Midsummer Night's Dream. At 10:30 p.m. Murphy Hall was engulfed in darkness due to a power failure which could not be repaired until 1 p.m. Sunday.
Because power cables under the new Haworth Hall had been removed by contractors, a splice in a power cable broke causing the black-out, said Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of buildings and grounds.
"The Kansas Union, Memorial Stadium, Allen Field House, and part of the power but not the lights in Malott Hall were temporarily affected by the power failure," Buchholz explained.
The new cable was installed Friday night and early Saturday morning.
"In the six years I've been in the drama department this has
never happened before," said Charles Lown, professor of speech and drama and University Theatre's technical director.
After it was apparent the lights would not come back on, Tom Rea, director of Midsummer Night's Dream.
announced to the audience the show couldn't go on.
"A man in the audience brought a camper flashlight from his car," Lown said, "and by shining it on the ceiling, it provided enough light for the audience to leave."
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Campus briefs
Jones named UDK editor-in-chief
Alan T. Jones, East Aurora, N. Y., senior, has been named University Daily Kansan editor-in-chief for the fall, 1969, semester.
In addition, he has worked for the Buffalo, N.Y., Evening News, and for United Press International.
Jones, chosen in a Kansan Board meeting 4:30 p.m. yesterday in Flint Hall, was edition editor of the Kansan for two semesters and was editorial editor this semester.
History prof to speak at lecture
Theodore H. von Laue, professor of history at Washington University, St. Louis, will be the guest speaker at a public lecture sponsored by the history department, said Oswald Backus, KU history professor.
Von Laue's lecture, "Freedom and Alienation in the Age of the Global Conflict," will be at 7 p.m. tonight in Dyche Auditorium.
Electronic music talk to be given
A lecture-demonstration of electronic music will be given, by Merrill Ellis, 2:30 today in Swarthout Hall.
Ellis describes electronic music as that "formed by electronic equipment modified in infinite ways in pitch, timbre and strength."
The demonstration is one of a series Ellis has scheduled throughout the country.
Seymour Menton will give paper
Seymour Menton, professor of Spanish Literature at the University of California, will present a paper entitled "Nationalism and the Novel" 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 203 Bailey Hall.
SUA to sponsor New York flight
Student Union Activities (SUA) is sponsoring a roundtrip New York City flight for $82, Peter Sirkin, Hicksville, N.Y. junior and a member of the SUA travel board, said.
The purpose of the flight is to take students to New York for
May 8
1969 KANSAN 3
the summer on May 28th and bring them back for the fall on September 8th. Students must make reservations by May 15th at the Kansas Union SUA office, Sirkin said.
Students in the School of Fine Arts will receive full credit for participation in the ROTC program and will be able to take courses on the credit/no credit option.
School of Fine Arts to give credit for ROTC courses
Gorton said the ROTC resolution passed unanimously indicating "enthusiastic support for the program. It is important to have university persons as military officers," he said, "or the armed services would have a cadre of military school officers."
These resolutions both passed at a meeting of the Fine Arts School faculty yesterday, said Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts.
Students must buy round-trip tickets. If they wish to travel only one way they must have someone take their seat on the way back, he said.
Gorton said he thought few Fine Arts students actually participate in the ROTC program, because "in a professional school such as this one, the curriculum is rather tight, so I doubt if many students can fit ROTC courses in
Eight foundation trustees named
Two Kansas senators, two broadcast executives and four newspapermen have accepted invitations to serve as trustees on the William Allen White Foundation at KU.
Senators James Pearson and Robert Dole and CBS News correspondent Walter Cronkite are among the new trustees. Cronkite, the recipient of the foundation's 1969 National Citation for Journalistic Merit, spoke at KU in March.
Other new trustees are W. W. Baker, Kansas City Star; Kenneth Bruce, Hillboro Star-Journal; F. W. Boyd Jr., Jewell County Record in Mankato; Merle W. Miller, Belleville Telescope; and Grover Cobb, KVGB radio, Great Bend.
their schedules," he added.
The following is the text of the resolution:
"Resolved: That present policies of the School of Fine Arts shall continue with respect to ROTC, so that Fine Arts
students shall continue to have the opportunity for full participation in the ROTC program, and shall continue to receive full credit for courses offered by the Department of Military Science."
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KANSAN Comment
VIP decision
The implications of today's University Disciplinary Board will affect much more than the fate of three students.
The Board, composed of five faculty members and six students, will decide whether or not the University should bring disciplinary action against three students involved in a anti-ROTC demonstration May 23. The charges are expected to include disruption of a seminar for Kansas law enforcement officers, damage to three tables in the Kansas Union and interference with student elections.
While campuses across the nation have been torn with dissent and violence, KU has remained relatively quiet. The demonstrations have been non-violent.
Suspension for a semester or an indefinite amount of time is the most serious punishment the Board can hand out, but its decision will determine in a large degree, the course of KU's action towards student demonstrators.
Comparatively speaking, the April 23 demonstration, even with the breaking of ballot boxes and Union tables, was only faintly troubling to the University calm.
The KU student handbook hasn't any regulations concerning student disruptions or procedures to follow in the event of one. The University Disciplinary Board hasn't even been busy in recent years.
But now the Board must decide whether to give the three students involved in the hearings total amnesty or to dole out some sort of punishment.
No matter which course is taken, the student reaction will probably be vocal and possibly widespread.
The Board's decision of either a hard-line approach of punishment or a soft-line of amnesty could plot the course of student action and reaction at KU. More than the fate of three demonstrators but the future of student dissent at KU is on trial today. (AMS)
Letters to the editor
Credit given to others
To the Editor:
I found your article on the New Jersey Street project failing in one major area. As a member of the Advocacy Planning class, which organized and coordinated the work on New Jersey, I was embarrassed to see my name appear throughout the article—when in fact I played a very small role in the work.
Please give credit where credit is due. The entire group deserves recognition for the success of the project. These students worked very hard. They are: Linda Boone, Ward Colemeen, Peter Davis, Louis Fisher, Nick Gerren, Iras Humpreys, Mike Jackson, Tim Jacobs, Ralph Johnson, Cynthia Kriyazias, Joe Mattei, Danny McDonagh, Mark Seferovich, Craig Shaw, Sutipah Smithipong, Harriette Stallworth, Bill Tankersley, Rick Zingher, Connie Poff, Randy Hodges, Jake Mumford, Mylene Rucker, Prof. Miles Stevens.
Credit is also due to the many
volunteers who gave much time and effort to the project.
Sincerely,
Frank Zilm
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
Re letter to the editor from Kathy Hall in last Wednesday's UDK.
It appears as if Miss Hall feels that stories about the social phenomena occurring on our college campuses should not be reported on. Perhaps she feels newspapers should report only on the goodie, goodie aspects of college life. Like the KU Christian club and the Jewish Community Center met last night and sang Rumanian folk songs for the inmates of the county home for the deaf.
If she is so inclined, perhaps she should get a job (she did say she was a journalism major, didn't she?) writing church bulletins for a church in Greaseneck, Montana. She
obviously doesn't want to offend anybody.
I say "good for the UDK." And although I don't have the siglest idea of what an ACP All American rating is, I'll be willing to bet Miss Hall that the UDK will win hundreds more if it continues to show that it has enough guts to report the news and the world "the way it really is."
I never used to read the paper because it was always filled with nothing news. It was an extension of high school journalism and said nothing. This year, I have seen more stories of relevance in the UDK than I have seen in all the years of reading my hometown paper.
I say, "keep it up" despite the criticism from the "shocked, old maid types."
J. Kelly Cherokee, Okla graduate student
Lunar folly
By MIKE SHEARER
America may well be ready to land man on the moon one day, but there is little reason to hope man will be ready by the time scientists are ready to send him.
Next to the war in Vietnam, no other American mania has milked unquestioning American taxpayers of as much money during the past eight years as has the exploration of space, more specifically—the invasion of the moon. And all in the name of progress.
Progress, alias American superiority over the Soviet Union and alias an overturned priority list, has cost America $24 billion since eight years ago when President Kennedy launched America on its drunken pilgrimage to the moon.
Kennedy gave as the reason for the desperate pursuit of the moon. "Because it is there."
There are two reasons why America should end its lunar orgy:
Firstly, the moon will undoubtedly remain conveniently adjacent to the earth for some time to come. In the meantime, America has more pressing needs: poverty, racism, education, overpopulation and crime.
Twenty-four billion applied to studying criminal psychology, applied to replacing out-dated education facilities and techniques or applied to finding new methods of feeding the world would be worth much more than the base value of the money. $24 billion applied to a project which could wait in light of pressing human needs is worth much less than one cent which is applied to the relief of any human anguish.
Secondly, America is not ready to fund a manned lunar landing because of the widespread distortion of investigative purposes. Undoubtedly, most Americans and American publications support the space program because we want to beat the Russians! One simply does not spend $24 billion during a sociologically starved era merely to beat the Russians.
When will America be ready for the manned lunar landing?
When it has taken care of its hungry, its oppressed and its ignorant: when it has begun to make a contribution to the problems of other nations, not through militarism but through distribution of material wealth in an atmosphere of equality between nations; when it has agreed to work with other nations in the examination of what is unknown to man with the goal of increased knowledge and not the goal of increased national stature; when America can find a better reason for going to the moon than "because it is there"—America will then be ready to go to the moon.
President Nixon has called the space program "both indispensible and of major importance to our country," when, in fact, the space program, at the present, is most dispensible and quite unimportant.
While Egypt starved, her government built the pyramids with the help of the starving themselves.
In an age of sociological starvation, America is trying to build a new pyramid, one to reach the moon, thus reenacting Egypt's historic folly.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom UN 4-3464 Business Office UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mall subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment duties not covered to color, creed or institutional opinion. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Editor-in-Chief Executive Stan Ron Yates Business Manager Pam Flaton
I MARRIED GEORGE SO I COULD BE FREE OF MY MOTHER.
I HAD CHILDREN SO I COULD BE FREE OF GEORGE.
I TOOK A JOB SO I COULD BE FREE OF THE CHILDREN.
I RAN OFF WITH THE PRESIDENT OF THE FIRM SO I COULD BE FREE OF RESPONSIBILITY.
I WENT BACK TO GEORGE SO I COULD BE FREE OF SUILT.
I DIVORCED GEORGE AND GAVE HIM CUSTODY SO I COULD GET A FRESH START.
THEYLL NEVER GET ME ALIVE.
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Monterey Pop
By BOB BUTLER Kansan Arts and Reviews Editor
Critics of cinema verite are quick to point out the form is not an art any more than news photography is an art. Cinema verite is merely the recording of an actual event on film. There are no judgments made, no interpretations given, no explanations presented. Therefore, say the critics, it is not art.
Maybe they are right. But what I experienced in D. A. Pennebaker and Richard Leacock's "Monterey Pop" thrilled me like good art, gave me the same goosebumps as good art. And it wasn't just the solid music put out by the dozens of fine musicians which gathered for the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, of which this is a chronicle, which turned me on. It was the qualities of the film itself: the editing, the use of lenses, the way the camera quietly pokes its way into the enraptured audience and studies a young girl's face until she realizes she's being filmed and blushes.
The whole film has an overwhelming feeling of (dare I say it?) love and peace and good will. Perhaps the filmmakers were not responsible for creating this good feeling, but in any case they captured it remarkably well. It's everywhere, from the quiet stillness of morning when sleepy-eyed couples crawl out of sleeping bags to Jimi Hendrix's joyous rape of his amplifier and the flaming sacrifice of his phallic guitar. It's beautiful.
Beautiful also is the photography. Sure, it's jerky and wobbly, but who cares? The photographers knew what they were looking for: faces. Bearded, dimpled, sleepy, happy, stoned. From the clenched-teeth grimace of Peter Townshend as he demolishes his guitar to the rapturous smiles of couples stretched out in the grass, it's all there.
The sound system the filmmakers employed allowed them to reproduce the concert in stereo, making for some very strange effects. Unfortunately, the balance among the instruments is off with the result that vocalists are often drowned by the drummer's beat or lead guitarists play second-fiddle to rhythm men.
As for the concert itself—well, what else can you expect from a line-up with Otis Redding, Hendrix, the Who, Canned Heat, Big Brother, the Airplane and Country Joe and the Fish but an exciting time? I wish that the filmmakers had chosen better numbers which would have been more representative of some of these groups, but in any case it's rather amusing to see just how much hair some people can grow in two years.
The performers themselves are great. Special standouts are Janis Joplin singing "Ball and Chain" and Ravi Shankar's 16-minute finale. When these numbers were over the crowd on the screen jumped to its feet and roared approval. The same happened in the movie theatre, so great was the involvement these performers generated.
Here's Country Joe MacDonald looking all of 18 years with flowers painted on his cheeks and a baseball cap on his head. Or how about the clean-cut Canned Heat, looking like a soul band from Lawrence Kansas but playing like Delta Spades? There's Ravi Shankar's magic fingers, moving so fast you lose track of them, and of course Janis Joplin, who has to be the world's sexiest ugly chick.
I don't suppose I've done anything here to resolve the debate over cinema verite as to whether it is just shoddy workmanship or the new documentary form. I do hope I've given an honest picture of what I found to be a most enjoyable and invigorating film. Some people are going to say that it's nothing more than the festival all over again. Well, I didn't make it first time around and I'm very grateful that someone had the thoughtfulness to bring it to me.
Civilization program, who allegedly struck a demonstrator during the April 23 disturbance.
Student Senate meeting
(Continued from page 1)
Applause and shouts of
The Executive Committee of the University Senate wishes publicly to commend the students of the University of Kansas for their concern with protecting the rights of freedom of speech and of assembly.
In particular, it wishes to commend two groups for behavior aimed at preserving the peace and at avoiding violence, two prerequisites to the exercise of those rights: we refer to the ROTC Cadets who last Tuesday, April 29, 1969 did not react to provocation during the review held in front of the Allen Field House, and we refer as well to those students, some in black armbands, who at the same review stood along the side lines in peaceful protest against ROTC and against other protesters who sought to provoke the Cadets.
We believe that such behavior as that of those two groups is essential to the preservation of the opportunity for the rational discussion of conflicting opinions and for the rational resolution of problems-a major purpose of a university.
The University Senate Executive Committee University of Kansas
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Foreign Students: The Office of Dean of Foreign Students still has applications for the 1969 Summer Crossroads program in Colorado next month.
The 44th Annual Institute of World Affairs in Twin Lakes, Conn., is now accepting applications for the 1969 summer program. Scholarships are available. Visit 226 Hall
Personnel Officers Seminar. All Day. Kansas Union.
End of Fiscal Year Workshop.
1:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium.
Review for Western Civilization Exam. 7:15 p.m. Strong Hall Auditorium.
The Infinite Way. 7:30 p.m.
Meditation and Bible Study, Kansas
Union 101. Faculty and Students
invited.
One-Act Plays. 8:20 p.m.
Experimental Theatre.
TOMORROW
Foreign Students: If you did not receive the May International Campus Newsletter come by 226 Strong for a copy. Turn in the requested information pages.
Personnel Officers Seminar, All Day. Kansas Union.
KU Moslem Society. 12 noon.
Student Union.
Chancellor's Review of ROTC. 3:45 p.m. MROT field.
Pageant begins today finals are Saturday
Twenty women will compete in the preliminaries of the Miss Lawrence-KU Scholarship Pageant which will begin at 7:30 p.m. today in Murphy Hall.
The contestants, from which ten will be chosen to compete Friday night, will be judged in three categories-talent, formal attire and swimsuits. They will be judged in the same categories Friday night.
May 8
1969 KANSAN 5
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approval sprang from the gallery, which included several of the charged students, and sympathizers. The resolution was tabled until the next Senate meeting.
Hillcrest
After the Senate meeting, Averill handed the request to Balfour, who said it will be given to the faculty committee which corresponds to the UDB.
* *
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After the emergency Senate session had been adjourned, Awbrey commented on the meeting, saying he thought the Senate had realized that it was only a legislative body. Thus, he said the meeting which he had anticipated to last "indefinitely" was relatively trouble-free.
committee, said Ambrose Saricks, assistant dean of the Graduate School.
The new University Council will meet today at 3:30 p.m. to elect the Senate Executive
In subsequent days and weeks this committee (Senex) will proceed to organize the new University Senate under the provisions of the Senate Code, he said.
"The student members of the University Council today will elect three members who will serve on Senex," he said. "The executive committee of this part of the Student Senate will also be completed, since it consists of seven members, the president and vice president of the student body, as ex-officio members, the three student members of Senex, and two other members elected by the Student Senate."
These two additional members have already been elected, he said.
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UDK World News
By United Press International
Israelis shell Port Said
Israeli artillery shelled Port Said yesterday for the first time since the 1967 war, and an Egyptian military spokesman said a spotter plane directing the bombardment was shot down.
In addition to battling daylong across the Suez Canal, Arab and Israeli forces also fought across the Jordan River ceasefire line.
In Lebanon, Arab soldiers and Lebanese army troops opened a major offensive yesterday against Syrian-backed Arab guerrilla forces who have defied an ultimatum from the high command in Beirut to get out of the sensitive border area.
Israeli military spokesmen said their jet planes attacked an Arab commando base inside Jordan and their ground forces exchanged artillery and small arms fire with Egyptian and Jordanian troops across the eastern and western fronts.
The Egyptian spokesman said Israeli shelling of Port Said at
6 KANSAN May 8 1969
the northern end of the canal caused no damage. He said anti-aircraft fire brought down an Israeli spotter plane east of Port Fuad.
Pope denounces all toy weapons
VATICAN CITY — Pope Paul VI stepped into a long simmering dispute yesterday by saying toy weapons are bad for children.
His audience did not seem too appreciative. He was addressing participants in a European toy manufacturers' congress, some of whom expressed conflicting views in speeches Tuesday.
"We feel it is our duty to remind you, toys have a great educational importance," the Pope told the manufacturers from 10 nations in a French-language speech.
"Luxury toys root certain habits in the minds, weapons develop aggressiveness, other toys incite cruelty towards animals and still others invite dangerous attitudes.
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As Bonn acted to cool the situation, the dollar, pound and franc in Frankfurt fell to the lowest level permitted under the International Monetary Fund rules. A Frankfurt banker called it "the worst day yet."
LONDON — A new wave of money jitters swept through European currency markets yesterday. Speculators rushed to buy the West German mark in hopes it will soon go up in value.
Dollar weakens
In London's money market, the rush to buy marks drove the pound to $2.3831¼, down from yesterday's closing of $2.3837½. The Bank of England was forced to spend more of its reserve treasure to prop up the currency. The pound is officially worth $2.40.
Jim's Texaco welcomes spring and KU Students
Complete
Free Lube with every oil change and filter change.
In Frankfurt, the West German central bank—Bundesbank—bought up about $300 million to quiet the market. For
The new flurry of pressure on currencies began when Gen. Charles de Gaulle resigned 10 days ago. This sparked speculation on a French franc devaluation.
the first time in its history it also refused to exchange dollars with commercial banks which offered it marks.
Gene Doane
Agency
Motorcycle
Also. $.02 off every gallon of Texaco Fire Chief & new improved Sky Chief gasoline. Just show your ID.
Insurance
Offer good until May 31 West 6th & Crestline Dr.
For
824 Mass. St.
VI 3-3012
SPECIAL NOTICE
SPECIAL NOTICE
The Kansas Union Bookstore
is pleased to announce the sale of a Special College Sampler Pac of Toiletries at a fraction of its retail value! The manufacturers and the Bookstore
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Other Special Toiletry items and additional Money Saving Offers are in each Pac.
Hurry! Supply limited to about one for every five students! ONLY ONE PAC PER STUDENT! Get your Pac today.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
---
Western Civ history long
By PHYLLIS JONES Kansan Staff Writer
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the first of two articles concerning the history of the western civilization program, and the problems and criticisms surrounding the course.)
KU students are now frantically studying for the western civilization comprehensive examination to be Saturday. His mind gets blown from too much Plato, the worried student wonders why he must endure this self-inflicted torture. Why was this course created? What good is it?
The western civilization program was set up in 1945 as a five-year experimental course. In an article in the University Daily Kansan, Walter E. Sandelius, then director of the program, said that the course was designed to "give students a cross section of the social sciences."
At that time, the article said, the University felt the requirements were not giving students a well-rounded picture of social sciences.
Objectives
Thus, the western civilization was set up with these objectives in mind, to enable students to: 1. Understand the basic meaning of western culture and how it is characteristic of the American way of life.
2. Study the beginning of doctrines with emphasis on democratic and Christian ideals.
3. Observe the western world's struggle against ignorance, greed, and intolerance and to learn to protect and continue what has already been achieved.
To acquaint students
4. Strengthen habits of independence and self-reliance in the students.
These goals have hardly changed today. As stated in the instructor's manual, the purpose of the program is to "acquaint those students who take the program with the ideas and ideals which have shaped our civilization, especially those which have been vital during the past 500 years."
To achieve this goal, students are assigned books each week by such ancient writers as Socrates and Aristotle, and the more contemporary works of Bertrand Russell and John Stuart Mill.
May 8
1969 KANSAN 7
The discussion groups are intended to aid the student in his progress, but, according to the instructor's manual, are "not organized to take the place of the student's self-study."
The principle behind this policy is that the student who understands the material through his own efforts rather than his instructor's will have learned better and will retain the information longer.
The western civilization course is the only course specifically designated as a requirement for graduation from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The two most important reasons as listed in the instructor's manual are (1) The materials used in the readings are from several areas of the Social Sciences and the Humanities including Political Science, Economics, History, Sociology, Psychology, and Philosophy; and (2) The method of instruction—self-study supplemented by discussion groups—is considered to be a valuable intellectual experience for all students who plan to graduate from the College.
Other schools too
In 1960, the passing of the comprehensive examination was made a graduation requirement for students planning to receive bachelor's degrees in Education, Journalism, and Chemical Engineering.
The reading list for the course is divided into 24 parts, each of which is discussed during a one-hour weekly session. The discussion meetings are divided equally into section I and II, and held for a semester. Students receive two credit hours for each section, and an additional two credit hours for passing the four-hour comprehensive examination which covers both sections.
In preparing the reading list, the student manual said the faculty committee took the reading speed of an average student as a guide. On this basis, the amount of time required is considered moderate.
Two hours weekly
But, the average student asked said he spent at least two to three hours a week reading the books because of the difficulty of the material.
The difficulty of the material and the amount of time needed to cover it thoroughly are two of the chief student complaints against western civilization.
Tomorrow: student and instructors' complaints. and suggested changes.
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KU netters win rain-delayed bill
"We had tied Wichita in a previous meet this season and felt we could do better in our rematch," said Jim Burns, KU tennis coach. "I was real happy with our meet this time. We shifted some players around and played some boys that didn't play last time and it worked out pretty well."
The netters won three out of four singles matches and split the doubles competition, failing to contain Wichita State's South African player Mervyn Webster.
"Webster has got to be one of the two or three best we've played this year," said Burns. "There's quite a difference between Wichita's first man and the rest of their club."
Webster defeated KU's Bill DeBaun, Leawood senior, in the singles and then teamed up with Ken Wetzel to beat a game KU doubles team of Sid Kanter, Prairie Village senior, and Dan Oram, Shawnee Mission junior, 6-4 and 7-5.
DeBaun and Dudley Bush, Salina junior, teamed up in the other doubles match to beat Wichita State 6-4 and 6-4, while Kanter scored an impressive 6-0, 6-1 victory over Wichita's Don Spies.
KU finishes their regular and conference dual competition Saturday when they travel to Missouri.
"Nebraska beat Missouri earlier in the season, and we beat Nebraska 4-0 Monday, so I don't expect too much trouble from Missouri," Burns said. "Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa State are probably the weakest teams in the conference."
Results of the Wichita State meet are:
Mervyn Webster, WSU, defeated Bill DeBaun, 6-2, 6-0.
John Towner, KU, defeated Ken Wetzel, 6-3, 8-6
Sid Kanter, KU, defeated Don Spies, 6-0, 6-1
Dud Kandler, KU, defeated Don Spies, 6-0, 6-1.
Dudley Bush, KU, defeated Steve Jobsb, 6-2, 6-1
Results of the doubles competition are:
Webster and Wetzel, WSU, defeated Kanter and Oram, 6-4, 7-5.
&
DeBaun and Bush. KU. defeated Spies and Jobst. 6-4. 6-4.
Major League Scoreboard
West
National League East
West
W 18 L Pct. GB
Atlanta 9 9 .667
Los Angeles 16 11 .593 2
San Francisco 16 11 .593 2
Cairo 12 11 .454 6
San Diego 13 17 .433 6½
Houston 13 21 .300 6½
W L W L Pct. GB
Chicago 19 10 .655 ...
Pittsburgh 16 11 .593 ...
Philadelphia 12 11 .500 4½
New York 11 10 .444 ...
St. Louis 11 16 .407 ...
Montreal 11 16 .385 7½
Friday's Games
Wednesday's Results
Los Angeles 4 Chicago 2, 12 innings
Houston 6 Philadelphia 1, night
Cleveland 3 Nielsen 0, night
Pittsburgh 2 San Diego 0, night
Atlanta 5 Montreal 3, night
San Francisco 5 St. Louis 3, night
**Friday's Games**
Houston at New York, night
Attlethwaite at Montreal, night
Alphabetic at Philadelphia, night
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, night
San Francisco at Chicago
San Diego at St. Louis, night
8 KANSAN May 8
1969
Gray chooses Kansas over 100 other schools
American League
Sumner's Leonard top prep prospect basketball circles season, yesterday letter-of-intent to college ball at KU.
AVG
W 20 L Pct. GB
Baltimore 10 10 .667 ...
Boston 16 10 .615 ...
Washington 16 10 .552 2½
Dallas 10 14 .482 ...
New York 12 16 .429 ...
Cleveland 4 19 .174 7½
process, he averaged over 22 points and 14 rebounds per game and made the All-State and All-Metro Kansas City teams for the second straight year.
Coach Ted Owens made the announcement at a news conference at the Kansas City high school following the
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Minnesota | 17 | 8 | .680 | ... |
| Oakland | 16 | 10 | .615 | 1½¹ |
| Kansas City | 16 | 12 | .538 | 1¾² |
| California | 10 | 9 | .471 | 5 |
| Seattle | 9 | 14 | .391 | 7 |
| | 8 | 17 | .320 | 9 |
Gray, the in Kansas this past signed a play his
Gray also joined earlier signee 6-11 Randy Canfield on Scholastic Magazine's High School All-American team.
signing. The 6-7 $ \frac{1}{2} $ ,240 pounder chose Kansas from among more than 100 other schools (including UCLA, Harvard, and Kansas State) who were vying for his services.
Wednesday's Results
Oakland 5 Washington 4, night
California 4 New York 2, night
Texas 3 Houston 2, night
Detroit 6 Kansas City 2, night
Minnesota 10 Cleveland 3, night
Chicago 6 Baltimore 4, night
During the past season, Gray led Sumner to its first undefeated season in history and the State Class 4A title. In the
Fridav's Games
HEAD FOR HENRY'S SHAKES .09c*
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
Friday's Games New York at Oakland, night Boston at Boston Washington at Seattle, night Minnesota at Seattle, night Chicago at Cleveland, night Kansas City at Baltimore, night
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
SHAKES .09c★
✩ with the purchase of
one cheeseburger
or fish sandwich
May 6-9
6th & Missouri 6th & Missouri
H
the
KANSAN Sports
Free Beer!
THURSDAY
6:00 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE
"BUY A GLASS OR PITCHER OF BUDWEISER
AND GET ONE FREE" at
the
Lounge
Southwest Corner of Hillcrest
Bowl in Hillcrest Shopping Ctr.
9th & Iowa
Directly Behind Hillcrest Billards
1
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Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
Spring
Photo by Jonna Woodard
THE MAN IN THE MOON
Photo by Therett Lewis
Photo by Pres Doudna
AUTHORITY
Photo by Tom Jones
A
Photo by Ron Bishop
Doug Andrews
Freshman involved in air race
Aldon Bell resigns as assistant College dean
By SARAH DALE
Kansan Staff Writer
A KU freshman participated in Sunday's transatlantic Air Race from the top of the Empire State Building to the top of the General Post Office Tower in London.
Douglas Andrews, Kansas City, made the trip from New York to London in a short seven hours, 35 minutes, and 40 seconds with a friend, Bob Peterson, who attends Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"We started the race on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building," Andrews said. "We then took a car to the heliport and then a helicopter to Kennedy airport. A car took us from the general aviation terminal to the main terminal and we left on the TWA flight 702.
"There were seven entrants on the flight we were on. Before we reached London we drew lots to see who would get off first. Bob and I were the youngest, we ran the fastest and were the first to pass port control."
Andrews described his trip from the London airport to the Post Office Tower as harrowing.
"We left the London Airport at 9:30 p.m. We made it to the tower in 22 minutes, half of the way without brakes. We were racing other cars and were going up on the side of the freeway.
"A friend met us at the airport in a small Ford Cortina. It's 20 miles into London on a freeway. We were racing other cars and were going up on the side of the freeway.
"There isn't a police set-up in London like what we have here. They also knew the race was going on and were pretty lenient.
"When we reached London,
the roads were narrower and we had to make many rapid stops, consequently the brakes went out."
As a memento of the race Andrews received a travel bag. He said he wouldn't receive a prize because the next day another man who was unsponsored and flying commercial made the trip in six hours and 54 minutes.
"I found out about the contest through aviation magazines. Seven or eight months ago Bob and I made our preliminary decisions about the race."
Living in the Topeka Area This Summer? MAKE YOUR SUMMER COUNT!
Enroll in the Washburn Summer Sessions
- Graduate and Undergraduate Credit
- Choose from over 100 courses
Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and associate professor of history, resigned yesterday to accept a similar position at Washington University in Seattle.
- Day or Evening Classes
- Classes begin June 9
For details - write or call
Director of Continuing Education Washburn University of Topeka Phone CE5-5341, extension 333
Bell will be in charge of a new university unit called the Division of Liberal Studies.
A Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University in England from 1951 to 1954, Bell also studied at the University of California in Berkeley before he returned to Oxford to earn his Ph.D. degree in 1961. That same year he joined the KU faculty as a history instructor.
"My decision to leave KU has been a difficult one," Bell said. "College Dean George R. Waggoner is one of the most impressive academic statesmen in the nation."
BRIMAN'S
leading jewelers
10 KANSAN May 8 1969
ArtCurved wedding rings in 14K solid gold are available from $10 to over $150.
BRIMAN'S
leading jewelers
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In this age of disposable you-name it, it's nice to reflect on those things which remain permanent. Take wedding bands, for example. People want them to last a long time. That's why for more than a century, more brides have chosen ArtCarved wedding bands than any other. Won't you come see our collection?
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ArtCarved wedding rings in 14K solid gold are available from $10 to over $150.
BRIMAN'S
leading jewelers
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743 Mass. Ph. VI 3-4366
Nina, the happy ending shoe Spring 1969
OLY
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Nina's designers play with unusual shapes and great colors all day long—so you always get the liveliest shoe styles around.
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Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
Arensberg's =Shoes
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kansas are offered
at all locations. The courses 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. 5-14
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts many styles of leather watchbands just for your wrist and watch. Starting at $3.812 Mass. 5-15
For Sale: SANDALS—This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE. TGIF with 75c pitchers. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge.
In excellent condition, Van Dyke mobile home, 50 x 10, new wall-to-wall carpet, carter's Trailer south, south, carter, on Louisiana. Call after 5:30. VI 2-3269. 5-9
SUZUKI
Just arrived—Factory fresh
TC 120 W-trim Xo-Scramblem
Nichols Specials
"The Motorcycle Men"
Lowest Prices—Highest Trades
300 W. 6th 842-0504
For Sale - Four-14 *Mickey Thompson*
Stock knock-offs, $100. Call
at VI 3-8153.
5-9
SUZUKI
For Sale: WOLLENSTAK tape recorder,
$90. Also, AIWA tape recorder, $70.
Both work well, good cond. call
Call Dave after 5:30 p.m. at 333
Collium. I 2-6600. 5-9
Stereo component set, 40 watt, AM/ FM, solid state radio, professional microwave walnut speaker cabinets, $169.85, White Sewing Box, 916 Mass, 5-9
'60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide owls, pipes, mufflers, waterpump, front wheels rebuilt. Teape deck optional, but not included in $650 or best offer. Well taken care off! Contact Jeff Meyers, VI 3-8153. 5-14
FOR SAUCE; BAND EQUIPMENT—Gretch guitar, Fender amplifier and cabinet used 10 months in one of midwest's top bands. Guitar is 2 years old; amp / cabinet is one year old. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-6894. 5-1234.
64' Ford Galaxie 500, 289 engine, std.
64' Ford Edge $85, Quality Points
104' Vermont. 5-12
For Sale: HAM GEAR. Moving-
selling complete rig. SB-301, SB-401,
ment, and many other items and parts.
WECV. VI 3-605 or UN 4-3309. 5-12
'68 Falcon—economy car—air-cond. automatic trans. radio—power steering—power brakes. Quality Pontiac, 140 Vermont. 5-12
'65 Rambler convt. automatic-V-8
eng. power steering-power brakes-
radio Quality Pontiac, 1040 Vermont.
5-12
'64 Chev. convt.-automatic trans-
283 engine-power steering-radio-
clean. $1,025. Quality Pontiac. 1040
Vernort. 5-12
Honda 306 Superhawk, Electric start
carbon fiber roller tires; $350 best offer. Call I 2-974-81
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Stretcher Frames
- Oils and Acrylics
Charge Account and Bankmark Services
--starting service
McConnell Lumber
844 E.13th VI 3-3877
GIANT BOOK SALE Sat., 10th, from
9-6 and Sun, from 2-6, 808 Tenn.
Brown Bookstore, 808 Tenn.
dren's books and more. Old and New
BENEFIT BALLARD LIBRARY 5-9
1966 Honda S-90 for trail, woods, or street use. Full lighting. High pipe, low gearing, oversize tires, etc. $125 or best offer. VI 2-9360 after 5:30. 5-19
CYCLE HELMETS-Daytona 300
(Men's) with tinted face shield—also a chick's helmet-$25 for the pair.Call VI 3-9106. 5-13
Baldwin electric 12 string, triple pickup, hardshell case, very good master, $325. Also Fenstera master, good condition, $25. Tom I V-27494
Volkshagen Bug (1963), excellent condition. Must sell-leaving town. Call Bill Davie, UN 4-3561-or after 5 p.m. call VI 2-8968. 5-8
For Sale: New Baby—Must sell our
'63 CORVETTE, good condition, low
air, new tires,$1,500, phone (212)
2438 or see at 1536 Vermont (fear
apartment).
1963 TR-4, wire wheels, radio, new engine and transmission. Volkswagen Pick-Up, 62 frame, '67 engine, 6,000 miles. Call 842-7219. 5-12
Drafted, must sell second car 1857 Pontiac stationwagon, excellent condition. Make offer, 842-7279 after €
For Sale—Need money desperately,
'68 Yamaha Trail 100, with helmet,
4,000 miles. First offer over $175 takes.
Naismith, No 514 or VI 2-0290. 5-12
MED-STUDENTS! You will need the instructor's training in seating kit. Buy mine used, or get them new from the med-center for $19. Excellent condition. VI 2-7172. 5-12
Two Pirhannas with aquariums and accessories, albums, Corvette hub caps, door beads, miscellaneous. VI 2-6354. 5-12
Voit Scuba Wet Suit. "¼",zippers, 3-
819-242-2171 Call, Larry. 86-14-5
913-242-2171
NOTICE
PHONE V13-4278
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Delicatessen in Jaynesville, NC. 8 a.m. to midnight daily, noon to midnight Sundays. Delivery service daily 6 p.m. to midnight.
515 Michigan St. St. B-A-R--outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $3.25; Rib order,
$1.55; Rib sandwich, 90c; 1.25 chicken,
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tt
The TEE PEE has been remodeled! Bands on weekends, TGIF with 75c pitchers each Friday from noon to 6 p.m. 5-14
PRIMARILY LEATHER—Vests, bags,
sandals, moccasins, watchbands, all
handmade at 812 Mass. 5-15
LA PETITE GALERIE
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
PRIMITIVE BAND AND
GENERAL LINE, LAWRENCE, 66D44
746 OH STREET
BARNARD
Antiques
THE GRINSTEADS
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Be Prepared! tune-ups
LA I
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Tony's Service
1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
EVERYONE SAYS
Harvey's WISCONSIN SHOES
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
18 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-292
Lawrence
Cars Painted $27.50
Where You Always Save
802 W. 23rd Lawrence
7 Day Special
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest,
computer, the most powerful, sharper copies; faster service. UM-surpassed results for these, papers.
Computer Typewriter, Typewriter, 7d
Mass. VI i 3-364.
792 N. 2nd—N. Lawrence
Martin's Auto Painting
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox, bonded and rubberized ice warranty). Call VI 2-1944 for prompt service. Hillerest Shopping Center (Afternoon & Evening). 5-14
RAY AUDIO your new
Notice: Married Couple—Prefer 2nd or 3rd year students. Modern Home in robes. Rocker help with chores. Available in June, Rocky Holstein Farm, 843-4839. L5-9
Notice: KIDDIE KARNIVAL — Saturday, May 10, 10:00-6 P.M., South Park. Pony Rides, Fire Engine, Fish Pond, Shooting Gallery, Food. All tickets 10c. Lawrence Community Nursery. 5-9
FOR RENT
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street
Shoe Repair For Your Repairs,
Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
Shoe Shines, One color.50 Two colors.75
Male students only. 14-room + bath
13-room + bath. Electric extraity.
Approximate number of campus.
Call VI 3-121 daytime,
or VI 2-2787 after 5.
your new AR-DYNACO DEALER
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR RENT
105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00
Sleeping rooms with and without kitchen privileges for males; fur-fur air-conditioned apartments. Borders a town and near downtown. Phone VI 3-5767. 5-14
Closed Saturday of Noon
Available June 1st to University faculty or staff member, (single man or couple) new spacious 2 bedroom 2床室 over town, fully carpeted, A/C, utilities paid. No students. Beautifully equipped kitchens, phone VI 3-8534.
Now renting for summer, small studio apartments; 1 & 2 bedroom apartments nicely furnished, utilities paid, private parking $1/2 blocks from Union. One available immediately. Phone VI 3-8534. 5-8
Beginning June. Pleasant room and kitchen privileges in private home in the community. Call after 5 p.m. VI 3-4098 5-9 Live close to campus, air-conditioned rooms. Call for unfurnished, $105-$130. One available now, only six left for June. Also, attend rooms. Call VI 3-2146 for appointment. Santee Apts, 1125 Lov islanda.
Stouffer apartment for rent for the
furnishedly furnished kitchen.
Cavil VI 2-3359
5-9
SUMMER SUBLET-Stouffer Place
Apt. Nice. ($70) or 2. $80) bed-
room, curtain, curtains, curtains,
bookcase, etc. Close to campus.
Married couple. Call VI 2-3559
The Malls Festival of the Arts May 17, 18
Artists
Applications at the Lost Gallery Deadline May 10
tf
Two bedroom apartment available
June 1 for summer. It is for two persons.
Reasonable rent. Vall VI 3-2619
after 5:00 p.m.
3 locations to serve your every need
Raney Drug Stores
---
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service
ments and fountain service.
Sublette for summer~small 3. bedroom house, $145 per month plus utilities. Phone 842-5457 or UN 4-4492.
5-12
Must rent one bedroom apt. by June 1st. New air-conditioning, two blocks from campus. Will rent furnished or unfurnished. Call VI 2-7147. 5-12
Attention summer students: College
Ann, 912 Alabama at foot Mt. Oread.
Bob, 912 Alabama at foot Mt. Oread.
Furnished your furniture. Great family meals within
your budget. College approved. Call
1-2860 now for reservation and depa-
sition. Also take fall term resepa-
tions. 5-14
For Rent: Need someone to take over lease for June and July. One block from campus, two bedroom. $130 Furn. air-cond. VI 2-2620. 5-9
TYPING
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
Fast, accurate KU Graduate. Call Mrs.
Currier after 5 p.m. VI 2-1409. 5-14
For those who wish
to give
the unique for
House or 2 apartments for rent. *Fur-*
*baths*, 2 baths, *campus*. V1 2-6488. 5-13
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
the unusual,
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873.
Theses, themes, papers in English,
French, transliterated Russian—typed
on IBM Selectric by experience
typeist. Call Mrs. Harwell, 842-
tfite 989.
Mother's Day. Gifts
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Community of scholars, a 'myth'
KU's profs do military research
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the second of a series of three articles on research at KU and other universities.)
By MARTHA
MANGELSDORF
Kansan Staff Writer
Inside America's universities are atomic stockpiles, lethal gases, mine seeders, H-bombs and other educational tools.
"The idea that the university is a community of scholars is a myth," said James Ridgeway, associate editor of the New Republic, after he had thoroughly studied the universities' involvement with industrial activity.
At KU and across the country, the same question is being asked: Should university professors research classified projects, many of which are designed to improve warfare methods?
"Strictly no classified research projects," is the KU policy, said W. J. Argersinger, Jr., director of KU research. Yet, professors may and do act as consultants for these projects during their off hours, he said.
Policy stands invalid
American universities generally seem to disavow any affiliation with secret projects, but the validity of their policy stands is questionable.
The federal contracts manager at the University of Michigan said, "There is no classified research on this campus." Yet at the same time the University's Willow Run laboratory was working on a classified counterinsurgency project in Thailand.
Grayson Kirk, past president of Columbia, said he was against classified research, then described the secret antisubmarine warfare research performed in the university's Hudson Labs.
Defense money expands
In the spring of 1967, the House Appropriations Committee asked John S.
12 KANSAN May 8 1969
Foster, Jr., director of research and engineering for the Pentagon, whether the universities had tired of their national responsibility and were leaving the defense business.
Foster said as far as he knew only Harvard had a policy against classified work, although the University of Pennsylvania was reducing its involvement because of student protests against a government gas contract.
A year later the assistant secretary of Defense announced the inception of Project Themis, a program to extend university bases for defense research.
Themis objectives were: to develop centers of excellence to solve important defense problems and a wider geographical distribution of Defense Research funds.
KU receives defense money
A defense department bulletin shows KU received a grant under Project Themis. The money came directly through the Advanced Research Project Agency of the Defense Department which one KU professor said was the financier of current applied defense projects.
The project's title came under detection, surveillance, navigation and control as a "Remote Sensing Instrumentation" study.
The universities' war machinery is specialized. MIT and Johns Hopkins run centers which design missiles; Cornell designs more effective bombs for Vietnam; Princeton breaks codes and runs conventions for the CIA. Michigan is first in photo reconnaissance and helps out with counterinsurgency. Pennsylvania and fifty other universities have recently been involved in chemical germ and biological warfare research.
Big Eight universities have contributed to he work done by these meccas of research and technological developments.
KSU and OU involved
Researchers in the chemistry department of Kansas State University have been engaged in an Army-financed project involving the scientific analysis of lethal nerve gases.
The University of Oklahoma has conducted biological warfare systems research aimed at the potential use of biological agents in "remote area conflicts" in situations like Vietnam.
Counterinsurgency studies are another major liaison between the universities and the government.
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KU received another sum for fiscal year 1968, again from the Advanced Research Projects Agency under Project Themis to study Modernization: Social, Political and Economic Development. One professor said the project's results would be applied and useful in certain underdeveloped countries' internal crisis.
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Another phase of military assistance involves the CIA. A recent publication cites numerous instances of professors carrying out programs for the CIA, aimed at influencing governments.
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For example, George Washington and American Universities in Washington, D.C., run two of the Army's centers which deal in different aspects of psychological warfare, and George Washington's Human Resources Research Office is concerned with teaching combat soldiers how to kill more efficiently.
Independence a myth
Tonights lecture on Byzantine art by Byron Tsangadas, professor of history, has been cancelled. Tsangadas, to have spoken at 8 p.m. in 112 Blake.
can be requisitioned, on demand, to serve the interests of the entrenched military.
Cancellation
to be little real interest in the universities in altering their relations with the Defense department. Those who run the universities know, however, that they need to preserve, at all costs, the myth of their independence from government.
Even if the war research for the Pentagon and CIA were not especially important in results, these endeavors demonstrate how comfortable it is for a university and professors to work through a closed system of government. There too, appears
The ideological argument, as one professor put it, is that a government needs to be served by the dispassionate knowledge which only a few experts are capable of dispensing.
But a KU professor on the inside of a Themis project said there seems to be no such thing as dispassionate knowledge that
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Incidents disrupt hearing
A
Photo by Ron Bishop
No you don't
Don Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior, points an accusing finger at Gordon Wiseman, professor of physics and University Disciplinary Board member, as Wiseman
attempted to leave yesterday's second meeting of the UDB. Several persons were jostled as students tried to keep board members from leaving the room.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.128
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
By GLORIA VOBEJDA Kansan Staff Writer
Only a few of the 75 persons in Dyche Auditorium left their seats and stood in the lobby when Russell N. Bradt, UDB chairman and associate professor of mathematics, announced it was a closed meeting and asked everyone except the board members and students involved to leave.
When the observers arrived at 210 Strong, they found two guards posted at the door, Fred McElhenie, associate of men, and William L. Robinson, assistant dean of men.
Despite a one-hour postponement and a change of venue, the University Disciplinary Board (UDB) hearing for the three students facing charges for a campus disturbance never got started.
The three defendants are: Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student; Bill Berkowitz, New York City graduate student, and Donald Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
Since no one left after he repeated the request a few minutes later, Bradt announced that the hearing had been postponed to 3:30 p.m. in 210 Strong Hall, and only "witnesses" would be admitted. No one seemed to know what witnesses meant.
Made up mostly of students, the growing crowds milled in the aisles, reading newspapers, chatting in small groups or burning small sticks of incense.
Pushed back
The disciplinary board and the defendants seemed to arrive almost simultaneously. As they went through the door, some of the observers tried to get in at the same time but were pushed back by the guards.
When Robinson tried to keep a girl out, a male student held his arm. After some jostling and shouting invectives, observers were allowed to squeeze in as faculty members tried to prevent some of them from getting to the back of the room.
After a few moments, the atmosphere cooled a little.
Jenkins spoke first, noting that there were no blacks on the UDB and therefore not representative of him.
He read his own list of charges to the UDB blaming the white man for oppression of black people.
(Continued to page 20)
Friday, May 9, 1969
Provost Surface quits
Provost James R. Surface today announced he has accepted appointment as Professor of Management at Vanderbilt University effective September 1, 1969. He will be a member of the faculty of the Graduate School of Management, a new school being established at Vanderbilt next fall.
"My family and I deeply regret leaving this community and the University of Kansas. This is my alma mater and our eleven years here in an administrative role have been most pleasant. Certainly the association with colleagues at the University has been, from my point of view, a wonderful experience. I
Commenting on his move Dr. Surface said;
PETER WELCHER
James R. Surface
particularly regret missing the opportunity of working with Chancellor-elect Chalmers. The two Chancellors whom I have served, Dr. Franklin Murphy and Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe have been outstanding leaders in the field of higher education and I feel confident that Dr. Chalmers will provide similar leadership for the University.
"At the same time the opportunity at Vanderbilt is an exciting one which I find irresistible. The chance to participate in the design and construction of a new graduate program in management is extremely appealing. We know that we will surely miss our friends at KU, but depart confident that the University will continue to grow and flourish."
SDS members fail to decide tactics
By MICHAEL NAGEL Kansan Staff Writer
The SDS meeting last night was filled with hangups. On the eve before their show of force at the Chancellor's Review of ROTC, SDS was unsure of tactics, strength, reaction to cops and themselves.
"What we want, probably, is a confrontation," said a SDS spokesman in a statement typifying the air of the meeting.
The decision evolving from the meeting was that SDS and sympathizers would meet at 2:30 p.m. today at Strong Hall to decide what would be done.
The first question asked to explain the vagueness was whether the demonstration would be handled in the guerrilla theater fashion of fake guns and props. Another spokesman replied saying there would be no guerilla theater or games because he wanted the demonstration to be serious.
"We want to make it apparent to
After some questions after strength and confronting athletes, Larry Greene, who is from
the University administration that there are persons on campus who are seriously against ROTC; that we want it off campus, and now!" explained another spokesman.
Lawrence and not a student, said confronting athletes, cops and arrest was unimportant. He said either one would go or one would not, that is was that simple, and there should not be any discussion.
Another speaker then rose to speak of the demonstration of
...
BULLETIN
The Council of the University Senate resolves that protection of the rights of freedom of speech and of peaceable assembly constitutes a major necessity for the functioning of a university. Insufficient attention to such rights or opposition to their exercise can undermine and even destroy the possibility of preserving, disseminating, and increasing knowledge. In a word, such rights are basic to the preservation of academic freedom and of educational opportunity; and the
usc of violence constitutes a threat to them.
The protection of the rights of freedom of speech and of peaceable assembly implies the defense, in their exercise, of those with whom one disagrees, however radical or reactionary the views of such persons may seem to be. We earnestly urge that faculty and students alike keep concern for these freedoms in the forefront of their thinking, and that their reactions to important issues on our campus be conditioned by such a concern.
1.
Then another speaker arose to announce to the meeting that he was going to present the administration a petition signed by persons declaring common guilt with the three radicals charged by the UDB. The presentation he explained would be made at 11:30 a.m. today in Strong Hall.
strength which SDS had at yesterday's meeting of the University Disciplinary Board (UDB). Specifically, there were approximately 50 uninvited spectators at yesterday's meeting.
Ted Steiner, unidentified, then announced there would be a war memorial in the stadium beginning at 12:30 p.m., during which the participants would read aloud the names of the 34,000 American soldiers killed in Vietnam. He estimated it would last about 18 hours.
Steiner suggested that if the SDS desired strength of numbers, it should join the war memorial demonstration.
Campus briefs
Sartre's 'No Exit' to be shown
A film based on a play by Jean Paul Sartre will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Dyche Auditorium. The film, "No Exit," is a U.S.-Argentine production with English dialogue.
Viveca Lindfors and Rita Gam won "best actress" awards for their performances in the film. The plot involves three people who are compelled to live together in a hotel room—an egotistic journalist, a lesbian and a narcissistic society wife.
The film is part of the Latin American Film Series sponsored by the Center of Latin American Studies. There is no admission charge.
Opening the symposium will be a concert by the University Choruses, Wind Ensemble and Symphony Orchestra, 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. Works by Persichetti and Hal Tamblyn will be featured.
At 8 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall, a chamber music recital will feature compositions by Tamblyn, George Crumb, Charles K. Hoag, Ned Rorem, John Cage and Persicetti.
The German department will have its annual awards banquet at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Centennial Room, Warren R. Maurer, associate professor of German, announced Tuesday.
The 11th annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music begins this weekend with Vincent Persichetti acting as guest composer.
German department to give awards
Swarthout, Persichetti will speak on "The Materials of the American Composer."
The convocation, at which forty-seven students are scheduled to receive scholarships and awards, will feature a program of 'Lieder', student performances of parables by Bertolt Brecht and folk singing.
There will be a recital of KU student compositions at 2:30 p.m. Monday in Swarthout. At 8 p.m. in Swarthout and
Annual symposium of music begins with concert Sunday
Charles Oldfather, Athletic Board Chairman, has submitted letters to all KU faculty and staff members informing them that football and basketball season ticket orders are now being accepted.
The Symposium will close with a carillon recital by Albert Gerken, University Carilloneur, which will include a composition entitled "Lawrence Nocturne," by Johan Franco.
Faculty and staff season tickets are sold at one-half the public rate for regular seating, which is on the west side of the stadium outside the 20-yard lines, or at three-fourths the public rate for preferred seating, which is on the west side between the 30-yard lines and the east side between the 42 and 48-yard lines.
Law students elect new officers
The following students have been elected to serve in office for the Student Bar Association (SBA), the official student governing body for KU law students, during the 1969-70 school year:
Rick Katzenbach, Topeka second year law student, president; Neil Roach, Leawood junior, vice president; Michael McNally, Perry second year law student, secretary-treasurer; and Michael Farley, Leawood second year law student, Law Student Division Representative.
Officers for the second year class (1971) are:
John Slaymaker, Wichita first year law student, president; Losson Pike, Ashland first year law student, vice-president; and Gary Hale, Atwood first year law student, secretary.
Officers for the third year class (1970) are
Oldfather, a law professor, said the priority deadline for faculty ticket ordering is June 1, and those tickets will be ready for mailing or pick-up Sept. 8.
University Theatre, there will be a concert by the Chamber Choir and the Wind Ensemble, featuring works by John Pozdro, James Barnes and Persichetti. Persichetti will conduct one of his compositions, "Symphony for Band."
Season ticket orders accepted from faculty
John Jorgensen, Mound Hope second year law student, president; Terry Post, Wichita second year law student, vice-president; and Tom Richardson, Clinton, Conn., second year law student, secretary.
At 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in
Vrabac receives broadcasting award
Tom Vrabac, Kansas City junior, won third place in the 1969 Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters scholarship competition.
The top three winners receive trophies and tuition checks totaling $1,000. Vrabac said his check amount to $200.
Entrants in the annual competition submit a 1500 word essay on why they chose radio as a lifetime career. The competition is open to any student enrolled in a four-year Kansas college or university.
---
Today
FOREIGN STUDENTS: If you did not receive the May International Campus Newsletter, come by 226 Strong for a copy. Turn in the requested information pages.
FOREIGN STUDENTS: The Office of the Dean of Foreign Students still has applications for the 1969 Summer Crossroads program in Colorado next month.
THE 44th ANNUAL INSTITUTE OF WORLD AFFAIRS in Twin Lakes, Conn., is now accepting applications for the 1969 summer program. Scholarships are available. Visit 226 High Hall.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB
ELECTION OF OFFICERS. 7:30
p.m. Pay members are eligible to
vote. Kansas Union.
PERSONNEL OFFICERS
SEMINAR A DAY KUNG UNION
KU MOSLEM SOCIETY. 12 noon.
Kansas Union
CHANCELLOR'S REVIEW OF ROTC. 3:48 p. m. ROTC Field.
BASEBALL. 1:30 p.m. Oklahoma State. Quigley Field.
VARSITY BAND CONCERT.
6:30 p.m. mall. Field House.
POPULAR FILM. 7 & 9:30 p.m.
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Official Bulletin
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP. 7 p.m. 829
Mississippi Street.
Delbert Shankel, assistant dean of the college, said papers could be written only by KU undergraduates and that papers should be typed and written as if they were being submitted to a professional journal related to the paper's topic.
May 15 deadline set for 'Search'
"Search", a magazine of undergraduate research reports published annually by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has a May 15 deadline for contributing manuscripts.
2 KANSAN
May 9
1969
Mail or bring papers to Shanket at 206 Strong Hall.
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For those of you who are returning next fall Remember The Campus Beauty Shoppe is located in the 9th St. Shopping Center.Phone VJ3-3034.
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POPULAR FILM. 7 & 9:30 p.m.
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11th ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM OF CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MUSIC. 3:30 p.m. University Choruses, Symphony Orchestra, Wind Ensemble, Hoch Auditorium.
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JAYHAWK SPORTS CAR CLUB
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KU CRICKET CLUB. 11 a.m.
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FOLK DANCE CLUB. 7:30 p.m.
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ONE-ACT PLAYS. 8:20 p.m.
Experimental Theater.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION
EXAMINATION. 1 p.m.
BASEBALL. 1 p.m. Oklahoma State. Quigley Field.
POPULAR FILM. 7 & 9:30 p.m.
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HINDU SOCIETY MEETING. 5 p.m. Methodist Student Center. Prayer and discussion.
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Campus briefs
Foreign student orientation set
The oldest continuously operated foreign student Orientation Center in the United States will open at the University of Kansas for six weeks through Sept. 3, financed by a $35,670 grant from the U.S. Department of State. This will be the 19th season.
J. A. "Toni" Burzle, German professor and associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, is founder of the Center and will again direct the program.
Between 55 and 62 foreign students will be at KU for an introduction to American society and culture and preparation for the academic and administrative procedures in U.S. colleges. There also will be intensive practice in English language and opportunities to adjust to the American social environment.
The Orientation Center staff will include:
Eldon Fields, political science professor, who will guide social science orientation; Gerhard Zuther, associate professor of English, who will be in charge of English instruction; and Hester Williams and Marv Halloran, graduate students, all of KU.
Robert Kahle, Baker University professor; Ron Harwege, and Erik Beukenkamp, Indiana University; and Emerson Tijart, Harvard University.
Police-city relations to be discussed
Police-community relations will be discussed at the Lawrence Human Relations Commission at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, in the City Commission Room at the City Hall.
The Commission secretary said interested Lawrence residents would have the chance to comment on this subject. She also said an evaluation would be made of the need for a study of the local administration of justice, as requested in a petition circulated by a group from the First Presbyterian Church.
Dorms' air conditioning turned on
Cool spring days are now being accompanied by colder blasts of air from air conditioning which was turned on early this morning at KU residence halls.
"Air conditioning has to be turned on when it gets warm and before final exams," Ernest Pulliman, assistant director of housing, said.
The air conditioning will remain on until the first part of September, Pulliman said.
May 9
1969 KANSAN 3
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Docking may call session
TOPEKA (UPI) — Gov.
Robert B. Docking said
yesterday that calling of a
special session of the legislature
probably would be futile unless
the GOP majority was willing to
accomplish something.
But, the governor said no decision has yet been made on whether to call a special session.
In his first news conference since adjournment of the 1969 legislature, the Democratic governor said he is still considering a special session or cutbacks in state agency appropriations to avoid "a financial crisis" brought about by passage over his veto of the $27 million dollar boost in school aid.
"Unless they would do something, I think it would be futile," the governor said of the special session.
Conferences planned
Docking said he plans contacts with legislative leaders, however, on the idea of a special session, and he had not ruled it out completely. He admitted GOP leaders shortly after adjournment April 26 felt a special session would be a waste of time.
The chief executive said John Ivan, his administrative assistant, is currently meeting with state agency heads to determine what cutbacks in fiscal 1970 programs could be made either by statutory order or voluntarily.
State budget director James Bibb will have final figures available in three weeks on the state's current fiscal condition.
Docking restated his objections to the legislature's passage of the $27 million bill without specific funding, forcing the state to use its reserves.
"In my opinion we have a crisis coming, but whether we can get by until the 1970 session is what I am trying to determine," he said.
"Regret" on highways
Docking also issued a prepared statement expressing "regret" over the state Highway Commission's announcement Wednesday that it has
withdrawn its previously announced five-year road program because of the highway measure enacted by the legislature over Docking's veto. The commission said the state's road program would have to be reviewed.
"Although there is no other alternative open to the highway commissioners, the decision will deprive many areas in Kansas of good highways.
"The fact that the fuel tax and freeway legislation passed by the 1969 legislature took funds away from the highway commission and earmarked those amounts for freeway construction was one of the reasons I vetoed the bill," he said.
Docking said the law was "unfair and unnecessary," and a result of special interest lobbying. He indicated the Kansas Contractors Association was one of the major lobbies.
The highway bill passed by the 1969 session sets out nine freeway corridors for construction, and commits 50 per cent of the state highway fund to the freeway construction. It also increases the gasoline tax from five to seven cents per gallon and the diesel fuel tax from seven to eight cents, effective July 1.
The governor also released a letter he mailed today to Sen. Frank S. Hodge, R-Hutchinson, chairman of the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee, and chairman of the joint legislative tax study committee. He asked for a meeting with the veteran lawmaker to discuss a possible property tax lid proposal for the 1970 session.
Docking said in the letter that the 1969 session approved about 50 bills which will either authorize increased expenditures or increased tax levies, for local units of government. "This could not have happened if a lid on property taxes had been imposed until the legislature completed meaningful tax reforms," he said.
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KANSAN Comment
Editor in Chief, Ron Yates
Business Manager, Flatton
Editorial Editor Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor Don Westerhaus
News Editor Joanna Wiebe
Sports Editor Bob Keany
Ad Manager Kathy Sanders
You stop the buck
The Student Senate yesterday issued a statement praising the cooperation displayed by ROTC cadets and peaceful protesters during a recent ROTC review.
The statement was issued by a University student senate that is governing a calm University in a nation of riot-ridden campuses.
Each action of the "old-but-new left" becomes progressively more daring—yet none have been violent. How much longer will it be before discontent is manifested by violence, instead of street theaters?
One question remains-is this the calm before the storm?
Campus radicals seem to fall into two categories.
There are those who sincerely want to open lines of communication with the KU administration for a better and more
effective University. They are working within the structure and working hard. To these people the University owes a great debt. These people are looking out for you as you sit complacently.
The second category is that of the campus militant. The militant of this campus tries hard, but he can't quite make it hasn't made it as a disruptive factor until now. He can only be disruptive if you the student body allow it.
There are people on this campus ready and waiting to raise hell and raze buildings. It can happen. The mob-psychology theory will never be outdated.
The storm is brewing. If the phrase—cliche "keep your cool" ever applied, it applies now, at KU.
Think about it. The buck stops with you.
UDB flunks test
The University Disciplinary Board (UDB), yesterday, revealed its insensitivity to the atmosphere of dissent and unrest in which this University has been placed.
KU has been blindly lead to its first moment of confrontation.
Acting as safeguard against criticism was the UDB's decision to let the three radicals, charged with disrupting a University function, decide whether or not the meeting should have been semi-open to the public.
The UDB failed to realize that a meeting open to only three categories of persons would be considered discriminatory by the radicals.
Thus, what the UDB planned as a shifting of responsibility, only added fire to the radical cause.
The spectators, warned that the meeting was closed left the meeting after it was postponed to meet an hour later.
But the radicals left with the intention of foraging the University to recruit sympathizers to disrupt the Strong Hall meeting.
Other students warned members of the UDB of radicals' new intentions concerning Strong Hall. But the UDB remained content to allow dissent to swell although it still had the power to declare the meeting open.
A small militia of angry radicals later invaded the Strong Hall meeting at which the UDB, firm in its commitment and fearful of disruption decided not to have its meeting.
The UDB should have sensed the uniqueness of its pending case. From the start, it should have forsaken its tradition of closed meetings. The disruption which it hoped to prevent has been increased.
The radicals should accept their punishment in the tradition of true "civil disobedience."
"UDB nonchalance and close-minded "radicals" are unnecessary and unrealistic.
KU needs responsibility in its student body and administration.
Michael L. Nagel
Kansan Staff Writer
Readers' write
We, the undersigned students of the University of Kansas, wish to state publicly that we not only deplore but are "fed up" with the actions of a minute segment of this student body. Actions which interfere with the rights of others are not to be condoned but severely condemned.
Our basic stance, and what we believe to be the stance of the student body as a whole, is one of moderation, a moderation which protects the rights of all, be they ROTC or SDS members. All individuals and groups have the right to act in a peaceful manner and that small element which attempts to violate these rights should not be countenanced in the least. We are not always in agreement with certain individuals and elements on this campus, but that in no way diminishes their right to assemble peacefully, and that includes ROTC reviews.
As this spring has progressed, we moderates, in conjunction with the silent majority of the student body, have seen our school enveloped in increasing turmoil because of these flagrant violations of the rights of others. Like most moderates, we have only observed and remained silent. We, however, are no longer content to hold our peace. Instead, we have become radical moderates who are sick and tired of seeing the name of our University blackened by the irresponsible actions of a small segment of the student population. These irresponsible few have consistently demonstrated their contempt for the rights of others, and by their reprehensible actions, have served no worthy cause except the possible gratification of their own egotistical desires.
They do not speak for us. In view of the insignificance of their campus following, they do do not speak for the majority of the student population. They speak only for an element which is incompatible with any democratic society. We protest their contempt for, and trespass of, the rights of their fellow students.
Clyde Toland President, Sachem Circle 1968-69
Kyle Vann
Editor, Kansas Engineer
1968-69
Mark Retonde, President Inter-Fraternity Council 1969-70
Chris Saricks
Editor, University Review
1968-69
Kay Harris President, Associated Women Students 1968-69
Mary Ann Boyle President, Inter-Residence Council 1968-69
Butch Lockard President, Association of University Residence Halls 1968-69
Elaine Greenock President, Mortar Board 1968-69
Chuck Loveland Chairman, All Student Council Elections Commission 1968-69
Pete Woodsmall President, Inter-
Fraternity Council, 1968-69
Barb Blee President, Panhellenic Association 1969-70
Clif Conrad President, Student Body 1968-69
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year excuses days and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Revents.
I DRANK
BOOZE
TO
SOLVE
MY
PROB-
LEMS
AND THAT
DIDN'T
WORK.
I DRANK BOOZE TO SOLVE MY PROBLEMS.
AND THAT DIDN'T WORK.
SO I SMOKED GRASS TO SOLVE MY PROBLEMS.
AND THAT DIDN'T WORK.
SO I TOOK SPEED TO SOLVE MY PROBLEMS.
AND THAT DIDN'T WORK.
SO I BECAME A REVOLUTIONARY TO SOLVE MY PROBLEMS.
AND THAT DOESN'T WORK.
BESIDES-
I HAVE A WHOLE NEW SET OF PROBLEMS.
SO I BECAME A REVOLUTIONARY TO SOLVE MY PROBLEMS
AND THAT DOESN'T WORK.
SO I SMOKED GRASS TO SOLVE MY PROBLEMS
AND THAT DIDN'T WORK.
SO I TOOK SPEED TO SOLVE MY PROBLEMS
AND THAT DIDN'T WORK.
BESIDES-
A NEW
MS.
KNWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Bitter Candy
By BOB BUTLER Kansan Arts and Reviews Editor
I don't suppose anything I can say here will keep people from wasting their money on "Candy." The word is out that this is a funny movie.* I have a sneaking suspicion that the people who say "Candy" is funny are trying to cover up the fact that they've been taken.
About 20 minutes of this film is entertaining. The rest of the two hours is filled with a hodgepodge of corny puns, slapstick visual comedy and boredom. There's not even enough skin to hold the thing together.
"Candy" has a lot of big name stars: Richard Burton, Ringo Starr, James Coburn, Walter Mathau, Marlon Brando and others, all of whom should have known better. Candy herself is embodied in the form of Ewa Aulin, who looks like Bambi and persorms like a lost puppy.
A film which had been true to the book would have been a really funny satire of sex. The "Candy" we have been sent by director Christian Marquand is merely a high-budget peep show trying to imitate comedy. Only in one or two instances does it succeed, such as with Burton's performance as a wind-blown Welsh poet who carries his own breeze around with him.
In short, "Candy" is a waste of time. You'll be more entertained studying for finals.
BOOKS: Cottonwood
By MIKE SHEARER
"Half in, half out/ of reality, I paint/frescoes for your blindness," says one of the poems included in the new Cottonwood.
The issue sparkles anew with the addition of some intriguing art work and some good poetry. It does indeed paint frescoes for our blindness.
There are reasons to read the new issue with caution however, because some very bad poetry is sewn into the fabric of good material. The bad poetry is placed in such close proximity with some good but complex poems that the reader might take pure superciliousness to be profundity. Why, for instance, the editors chose to place a small (in two ways) poem on autumn in a spring edition is unknown.
An interview with William Gass is quite successful. Gass talks abut, among other things, the merits of his own works. His honest appraisal would be beneficial reading for neophyte writers.
The disasters in the issue are quite noticeable. In the second short story, an excess of adjectives and some unbelievable imagery hamper a basically good story. ("Chuckling hoarsely, the farmer grimaced as he twisted his finger in his right ear." Even if the farmer weren't driving while he performs this contortion, it would still be impossible. I tried it. Later in the story, the farmer hums a phrase, something else I don't believe can be done.)
As an entity, the Cottonwood is nourishing and is a "frescoe" which would be an asset to any library of literature.
RECORDS:
By WILL HARDESTY
"Johnny Winter" by Johnny Winter on COLUMBIA (CS-9826, stereo) is this cat's first album. It is excellent. Winter is a 27-year-old blues shouter who has had all the breaks—all the bad breaks. He is an albino in an age when everyone wants to look alike. He was born dirt poor. His folks moved from place to place in the South when he was trying to go to school. He was a bluesman when the fans wanted rock. He gave up playing what the masses wanted to hear to play what he liked. Finally, he was "discovered" and now is starting to obtain the recognition he is worthy of. He has had the background to know what the blues are all about—both when he writes them and when he plays them.
"Tartaglian Theorum" by John Andrews Tartaglia on CAPITAL (ST-166, stereo) is an orchestra-with-Moog-synthesizer arrangement of nine popular songs and one new one. This album is not one which the average listener positively cannot live without, but if you like the Beatles, Supremes, Glen Campbell and Doors, but also like quiet music, this will prove to be an enjoyable album.
May 9
1969 KANSAN 5
Fri., Sat., Sun.
"PRIVILEGE"
Dyche
50c
SUA Pop Film
NROTC takes overall meet honors
Navy ROTC won overall honors at the University Tri-Service meet last night, said Kelly Stein, Topeka junior.
first; Air Force, Larry Giles,
second, and Air Force, Chip
Layman, third.
Miss Stein said the meet competition was between Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTC groups, and included standard platoon, standard squad, and individual drill-down competition.
The Navy won both standard platoon and squad competitions, with Army placing second in both, and Air Force third in both.
The individual drill performances were divided into three categories: freshman, sophomore, and advanced.
The results in the freshman competition were: Navy, Mike Barnett, San Francisco, Calif.
Menninger to talk at joint meeting
Results in the sophomore drilldown were: Army, Maurice St. Germain, Sauguoit, N.Y., first; Air Force, Norman Peterson, McPherson, second, and Army, Doug Sheffner, Topeka, third.
Karl Menninger, director of the world-famous Menninger Foundation, Topeka, will speak to a joint meeting of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi at 6:30 p.m. May 15 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The dean of the Menninger School of Psychiatry will speak on "Crimes Against Criminals," George Byers, president of Phi Beta Kappa and professor of entomology, announced yesterday.
Reservations for the dinner must be made by Saturday in 515 Snow Hall, 426 Fraser Hall, 143 Malott Hall, 217 Strong Hall, 102 Nuclear Reactor Center, and 124 Lindley Hall,
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—New Yorker Magazine
V
In the advanced division, Air Force, Robert Benda, Oberlin junior, won first. He was followed by Army, Robert Clancy, Falls Church, Va., junior, and Navy, James Zimmer, Riverside, Calif., sophomore.
From the makers of "DEAR JOHN:
a different kind of love story.
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Starring LaKulie, Rita Anderson and Per Osamson
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The meet was held in the National Guard Armory and was sponsored by Pershing Rifles, Company E-7, and its affiliate, the E-Co Berets.
The scholarship and scientific societies will sponsor the man whose book, "The Human Mind," 1930, opened the field of psychiatry to the layman.
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Gov't funds KU research
By MARTHA
MANGELSDORF
Kansan Staff Writer
(This is the last of a three part series on University research.)
At the University of Kansas, some $8 1/2 million in research grants are dispersed across the campus to various interdisciplinary centers of research.
By far the bulk of donations comes from the federal government, primarily the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Public Health Agency.
But, a significant proportion of the research projects at KU are funded by the Department of Defense or a subsidiary branch. A Department of Defense bulletin listing 500 contractors according to the net value of "prime contract awards for development, test and evaluation work," ranked KU as no.261 for fiscal year 1968.
A breakdown of grant sources compiled from the University of Kansas Financial Report for fiscal year 1968 shows nearly $3,832,600 of the $8½ million total funds coming from the Defense Department or the military.
The Atomic Energy Commission has granted about $312,000, $148,620 has come from the U.S. Air Force, $52,150 was donated by the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, the U.S. Army financed $35,500 worth of research and the U.S. Navy has channeled in about $27,250.
Complete details on the various research projects
6 KANSAN May 9
1969
financed are unknown, although some statement of hypothesis and results on each project is generally unclassified. Limitations in determining the existence of some defense-funded contracts or partially classified contracts are prevalent.
Most universities, despite no classified policy fronts, will disguise the presence of these contracts on their campuses to avoid unfavorable publicity. Often, too, actual projects are packaged as straight-forward scientific or medical investigations.
W. J. Argersinger Jr., director of research at KU, said in reference to research that black and white rules were impossible where reasonable men guided by the rule of reason worked.
In discussing defense research and the ethics of backing the entrenched military, many professors expressed vehement concerns.
In many cases, the research is described in purely scientific terms that can be deceiving to any but trained specialists in the particular field involved. And the new trend by the Pentagon seems to be to farm out different aspects of a particular defense project to various agencies or campuses as seemingly unrelated tasks.
Within the shades of gray described by Argersinger, professors voiced doubt as to the reasonableness of some of their colleagues.
"What the Defense Department does with our work is their business, we just go ahead and develop more technology," was one repeated opinion.
But an anthropology professor countered this stand saying this was the typical frame of mind of
the atomic scientist 20 years ago.
"This school of thought is dangerous and terribly antiquated," he said. "The Atomic scientists didn't care and didn't know how their highly technical research was being applied, and then too late, they realized they should have cared," he added.
Another KU professor, rationalizing his involvement with defense-supported research, said there were only two alternatives in pursuing applicable defense research: to work outside the military or from the inside.
"You have to look at it this way," he said. "The military-industrial complex is perpetrated by research and advanced technological developments resulting from research and they're going to get this work done whether I choose to do it or not. So it might well be me as someone else."
"Besides," he added, "it is better for a military superior to hear from the objective, unbiased outsider than the internal military and to have the civilian involved in the decision-making process."
But, the anthropology professor, who had been granted money from the defense department, begun work and then quit because of the military controls and dictates, said these idealists were kidding themselves.
"You can do their work, then sit back like a Pontius Pilate and wash your hands of the whole thing, but you can bet the military will be utilizing and applying your results for whatever means they have in mind, regardless of your suggestions.
"Most of the military research has political underlyings and you
can't hope to alter their course."
can't hope to alter their course. Obviously, as the figures indicate, not all research is military or defense oriented. Two facilities at KU which provide a major center for research, military and other, are the Space Research Building and the Center for Research and Engineering Science (CRES). The Space Research Building to the east of main campus is not completed, but the various elements of the space research effort now widely dispersed over the campus, will soon move under one roof.
The proposal submitted to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) for the Space Research Building stated that the University of Kansas is strongly committed to interdisciplinary space research and thus wishes to continue to strengthen that commitment by bringing together, within a single facility, the various campus programs. Most of the projects are funded by NASA.
The proposed building would adequately house all the elements of the research program and would also cause a productive interaction among them that would tentatively benefit both the University and the national space effort directed by NASA.
The need that exists for the building has resulted from the rapid growth of space research at KU. Since 1961, supported space research at KU has increased to almost 20 times it original—from $50,000 in 1961 to nearly $1 million this year.
Artists
The Malls Festival
of the Arts
May 17, 18
Applications at the Last Gallery
Deadline May 10
The need and desirability of a Space Research Building was lately due to the massive interdisciplinary effort of the Remote Sensing Laboratory, which is by far the largest program of space research on campus. The investigations of this laboratory have produced design recommendations for spacecraft radars to be used in the Advanced Apollo program for the mapping of planetary environments.
At the present time, NASA is supporting space research and education at KU at an average level of $850,000 a year.
CRES is the research organization of the School of Engineering and Architecture. The center was incorporated to promote scientific and educational development at KU by encouraging and supporting the conduct of basic and applied research.
Consistent with heir mission of developing and disseminating fundamental knowledge, the University and CRES usually, not always, receive the right to publish all worthwhile results.
The valuation of facilities available to CRES researchers throughout the University is estimated at $10 million.
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Rehabilitation program started by Lansing penitentiary inmates
(Editor's note: These two Kansan reporters visited the Kansas State Penitentiary at Lansing last night to hear a talk which is presented once each week by the inmates of the
prison to explain conditions at the institution and the rehabilitation process which is conducted. The following are their individual impressions of what they saw.)
--an alcoholic, but you know how it is when you've had a little too much to drink. Sometimes you just go wild."
By RICK PENDERGRASS
Kansan Staff Writer
The fat man coughed like a steam engine, the bald man stared at his fingernails and the college man told the story of his 17 years in prison.
"When I was a youngster, I got into a little trouble up in Nebraska," he said. "That was when I dropped out of high school.
"When I got out of the Nebraska pen, I went back to school, but that didn't last long. I was living in Missouri when the drinking problem began. I'm not
He sighed and looked to the fat man for help. He was ashamed for being there and for a moment, I was ashamed for being a "square man," a free man, so I said I knew how it was to throw a wild drunk too.
He smiled and went on "I was in the Missouri pen for eight years. The worst part about prison is when you get out. I didn't recognize my own sister. Hell, I didn't even remember the front gate.
Visitor glimpses the 'closed world'
By PHYLLIS JONES Kansan Staff Writer
The heavy brick building faintly reminiscent of an old English castle reeked of somberness and stillness. The armed guard high in the tower looked stern and almighty.
As I walked nearer to the Kansas State Penitentiary, the building looked more foreboding, Or, perhaps, the foreboding increased inside me as I realized that once inside those doors I would lose my freedom.
While I waited in the visitor's lounge for the other guests to arrive, inmates who were outside trustees marched through the door. Not wanting to stare, but driven by an unexplainable fascination, I gazed into the eyes of old and young men, tall and short men, with one thing in common—they all looked helpless and tired.
These men were assembling for the vocational placement program held every Thursday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. for inmates.
Several more guests arrived—Father Ericson and four students from the Savior of the World Seminary and five men in conservative business suits. We were marked on the right hand with a colorless liquid which glowed under ultra-violet light. I checked my purse in with the guard and started the seemingly endless trip through the barred doors. When the doors noiselessly slid shut behind me, I fought down a rising feeling of panic.
As we approached the combination gymnasium and auditorium where the program was held, we were met by a line of inmates who smiled and shook our hands. My attention was drawn immediately to the one black inmate on the greeting line who smiled and said his name was Richard. He looked familiar. In vain I probed my mind for some sign of recognition.
We entered the auditorium where almost 300 inmates were already seated and walked down to the basketball court where seats for the guests had been set up. The speaker's rostrum was in the center with chairs for the vocational placement panel
May 9 1969 KANSAN 7
members on the left. Behind the improvised stage was a banner with the words "challenge" written in huge, red letters.
The inmates sat fidgeting quietly or languidly smoking cigarettes. Occasionally someone laughed softly or hastily smothered a cough. A churchlike atmosphere filled the auditorium.
Because only 12 of the 40 expected guests had arrived, the program was delayed. A man from the "outside" who everyone seemed to know gave an impromptu speech to "kill time." His not-so-funny jokes were met with loud laughter and the men grew visibly more comfortable. Finally, eight persons from Kansas City, six women and two men, arrived and the program started.
When the master of ceremonies, who identified himself as a "lifer," introduced us, the inmates clapped vigorously. As I stood self-consciously, I wondered why we rated applause. Were people from the "outside"—by the very fact that they were free—so special?
The first inmate to speak criticized the state for spending money for incarceration rather than rehabilitation. He asked how many inmates had seen a guidance counselor and two prisoners raised their hands.
The speaker, who said many prisoners never saw a parole board, suggested a merit system whereby the prisoners would be judged on how they acted, their progress in prison, and their general attitude. This system, he said, would cut down on violence in the prison, serve as incentive to the inmates, and reduce the number of prisoners who return to jail.
"I don't know who mine is," someone yelled from the back of the room.
The next speaker, one of the well-dressed businessmen urged the prisoners to "strive for the best that is in you." He too spoke with an all-knowing air, as if lecturing to a group of kindergarten students. As the inmates clapped politely at the end of his speech, I felt sorry for
After his speech, a 17-year-old student from the Savior of the World Seminary talked about love. The inmates listened indifferently as the naive youngster concluded that love was the answer to all their problems.
(Continued to page 13)
"That was in 1957 when all the cars and the big tail lights. Remember? I thought they were colored headlights," he said.
We laughed, the fat man going into a violent fit of coughing.
I asked the college man if he always said he would never go back when he got out. "No," he
(Continued to page 13)
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May 16-Friday
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Hershberger's muddy reminder helps clear KU's track picture
By MARTHA
MANGELSDORF
Kansan Sports Special
Jim Hershberger remembers one of the all too many soggy chapters to the Kansas Relays.
Ankle deep in mud, KU's mile relay squad huddled under umbrellas while posing for a picture. That was in the early '50s, and today, KU athletic officials are especially glad Hershberger didn't disappear in the muddy cinders.
The 5-foot-6, bow-legged Jayhawk spinner flashed his spikes at many opponents in those days. Tuesday, Hershberger flashed a $125,000 check in the direction of his alma mater.
New life was breathed into the Kansas Relays. The donation meant a new all-weather Tartan track for KU, replacing the six-lane cinder eyesore that has fallen victim to mid-April rains throughout the 44-year history of the track classic.
"Why did I make the contribution?" Hershberger asked himself in reply to a newsman's query. "You might say Wade Stinson happens to be a better salesman than I am."
Actually, the 37-year-on Wichita oilexecutive said his loyalty to KU and his interest in upholding the tradition of the Relays prompted his generosity. Hershberger will tally more in income tax deductions from his family of seven children than from his huge donation.
Deep loyalty
Just the same, Jim Hershberger will not have to go begging on Wichita street corners. Hershberger Explorations Inc. has put him in a plush estate on Tara Road, and to keep up with the times, a sleek Lear jet.
But the lap of luxury has not dulled his obsession for physical fitness. In 1958, Hershberger endured 180 holes of golf and completed the marathon in 12 hours and 56 minutes.
"My knee was bummed up after 90 holes," recalls Hershberger, who jogged more than 60 miles between shots. "We froze it, and a doctor kept it on ice for the last 90."
Hershberger played those first five rounds in just under five hours. The bothersome knee had troubled him in 1952, just about as much as his diminutive stature.
Short stride
"You think I'm a runt now. Heck, I was three inches shorter in those days," said Hershberger. "On top of that, I was bow-legged and I hated to run on a muddy track when everyone else took a longer stride."
Hershberger's best events with the KU track teams of 1950-51-52 were the 220 and 440, and his anchor carry on the
Jayhawk mile relay helped KU to a Big Seven Indoor victory in 1951. His finest achievement followed his 1953 graduation, running a :20.9 in the 220 at an All-Comers meet in Colorado Springs in 1954.
8 KANSAN May 9 1969
KU track Coack Bob Timmons might have beaten Hersberger's 220 clocking in his
KANSAN Sports
dash to the bank teller's window Tuesday. Not that the check would bounce-Timmons was just beside himself.
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"I still can't believe it," bubbled Timmons, "and the fellows probably won't believe it when we get back home. It's just tremendous."
Timmons, in explaining a cost analysis made by 3-M Company engineers, estimated a $3-per-square-foot price tag on the red Tartan track. Of that amount, $2.50 would pay for the all-weather surface with just over 40 cents per-square-foot for the asphalt base.
Tuesday's press conference was strictly coat-and-tie, what with television cameramen squeezed into his eighth-floor office in Wichita's First National Bank Building.
But Hershberger said the tie
with spiked heels in order to penetrate the Tartan surface and prevent falls on a slippery track.
Now Timmons' troubles with the KU Relays have been reduced to finding quarter-inch spikes for his athletes, and shoes
Diamond toe
Hershberger never ran in shoes like that, nor anything like his eye-catching tie tack—a replica of a track shoe with a diamond-studded toe. The jewel didn't match his 14-carat gold cuff links—miniature oil wells—but the connection was clear.
His oil industry adventures began in 1960 with his first drilling, an Illinois well that has
since yielded $950,000 profit. Hershberger has sold that well, but in the process of 300 to 400 other drillings, a fortune has been realized.
Not bad for a fellow who started with a Wichita truck line, boasting a 14-cent bank account and several thousand dollars in debt.
was too much. Casual is Hershberger's byword, especially when the running buff goes through his rigorous daily workouts.
$ \mathcal{C}_{s}^{2} f^{cs} $
Now his tidy bankroll puts him in bronze silk pants, complementary bronze and gold silk ties, and contrasting amber and tattersall-plaid sports jackets.
806 MASS.
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Makes you wonder why Jim Hershberger uses the elevator on his way to the office.
- PORTRAINS
* APPLICATION PICTURES
* PASSPORT PICTURES
* PHOTOFINISHING
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--land, Dobson 2-3, 9:30 p.m.
Boston, Bajar 1-1 or Nagy 1-0, at
Sports briefs
Phillies win
PHILADELPHIA Jesus Alou beat out a roller to shortstop with two out and the bases loaded in the ninth inning to tie the game and Johnny Edwards singled in two runs as the Houston Astros rallied to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies 9.7 last night.
After Richie Allen had driven in five runs with his fourth career grand slam homer and a seventh inning single to give Philadelphia a 7-3 lead, the Astros knocked out starter Rick Wise with three runs in the eighth and jumped on reliever Gary Wagner for the three decisive runs in the ninth.
Owners fail again
NEW YORK - Pro football's club owners met for eleven hours yesterday but again failed to solve the thorny problem of realignment for the National and American Football Leagues when their merger goes into effect in 1970.
The owners adjourned their meeting at 8 p.m. and decided to resume their talks at 9 a.m. today.
Williams favored
PHILADELPHIA Jerry Williams comes to Philadelphia this weekend as "top candidate" for new coach of the Philadelphia Eagles football team General Manager Pete Retzlaff said yesterday.
Williams, former Eagles player and assistant coach for six seasons and highly successful in the Canadian League, resigned Wednesday night as coach of the Calgary Stampeders.
He told a news conference in Calgary he exercised his contractural rights when he resigned after signing a new four year contract last February.
Major League Scores
American League
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Baltimore | 20 | 10 | 667 | |
| Boston | 16 | 10 | 615 | 2 |
| Washington | 16 | 10 | 552 | 3¹ |
| D.C. | 12 | 14 | 462 | 6 |
| New York | 12 | 16 | 429 | 7 |
| Cleveland | 14 | 19 | 174 | 1² |
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Minnesota | 17 | 8 | 680 | 1 |
| Oakland | 16 | 10 | 615 | 1¹ |
| Oakland City | 14 | 12 | 538 | 1² |
| Chicago | 14 | 11 | 471 | 5 |
| California | 9 | 14 | 391 | 7 |
| Seattle | 8 | 17 | 320 | 9 |
Today's Probable Pitchers
New York, Stattemeyer 5-1, at Oakland,
Douglas.
Boston, Jarvis, 10-1, 9-7, Nagy, 1-0,
Cleveland, Lindsay, 8-2, Washington, Coleman 2-1, at Seattle
11-5.
Minnesota, Chance 2-0, at Detroit,
Wilson, 1.3, 8 o.m.
Chicago, John 2-0, at Cleveland.
Ellsworth 0-1, 6-45 p.m.
Wilson 1-3. 8 p.m.
Chicago, John 2-0, at Cleveland.
Kansas City, Drago 1-0, at Baltimore,
Phoebe b3-0, 7 p.m.
National League
W 19 L Pct. GB
Chicago 19 10 655
Pittsburgh 16 11 593 2
Philadelphia 12 11 486 5
New York 12 11 444 6
St. Louis 11 16 407 7
Montreal 10 16 385 7
Hawks try to cool torrid Cowboys
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Atlanta | 18 | 9 | 667 | |
| Los Angeles | 16 | 11 | 593 | 2 |
| San Diego | 16 | 11 | 593 | 2 |
| Cincinnati | 12 | 15 | 444 | 6 |
| San Diego | 13 | 17 | 433 | 6 |
| Houston | 10 | 21 | 323 | 10 |
Cineinnali, Culver 1-3, at Montreal Grant 1-2, 7:05 p.m.
Houston, Lemaster 9-4, at New York
Seaver 3-2, 7. 05 p.m.
Grant 1-2, 7.05 p.m.
Los Angeles, Singer 4-2, at Pitts
The Jayhawks will be facing three of the top pitchers in the Big Eight in the series-Bill Dobbs, Bill Maxwell and Bob Richardson.
at Pittsburgh, Ellis 2-2, 7.05 m.
Alliana, Apiaza 1-2, lc at Philadelphia.
Atlanta, Javis 1-2 at Philadelphia
Jackson 3-2, 6.35 pm
Dave Robisch will start the second game for KU and either Rich Slicker or Randy Stroup will pitch tomorrow's game.
San Francisco, Marichel 4-2 at Chicago.
Hands 3-3; 1-2 n.m.
League-leading Oklahoma State, seeking a fourth straight Big Eight baseball title, invades KU this afternoon for a three game series and will be welcomed by a revamped Jav Hawk lineup.
When the Jayhawks take the field for a doubleheader at 1:30 p.m. today they will have their regular team but a new lineup,
San Diego, Santorini 1-2 at St Louis, Washburn 2-3, 8-pm
cago, Handa 3-3, 1-36 p.m.
Santori, Santoni 1-2, at St
John Riggins will be back at first base after missing last week's series at Missouri to play in the KU spring football game.
Riggins, second on the team in hitting, will move into the number one spot in the batting order. Tommy Anderson, the former leadoff man, will move to the third spot and Lynn Snelgrove will move from the eighth to the second spot in the order.
pitcher this spring. His team leading ERA has earned him his first start.
May 9
1969 KANSAN 9
Kansas coach Floyd Temple has named Roger Jackson as the starter in the first game. Jackson has compiled a 2.12 earned run average working as a relief
Dobbs leads the league in strikeouts and is tied with Maxwell for second in the league in ERA at 1.46. Richardson ranks sixth with a 1.98 ERA.
The Cowboys also have Mike Tate, who leads the league in RBI's. As a team OSU is second in the league with a .271 batting average. The Jayhawks rank sixth with a .226 average.
In other Big Eight games this weekend Oklahoma—trailing the Cowboys by one game-plays seventh place Colorado at home, Iowa State plays at Nebraska and Missouri at Kansas State.
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Off-campus housing in Lawrence
(This is the first in a series of stories on off-campus student housing in Lawrence.)
The image shows a damaged wood-fired stove with visible holes and cracks in the metal frame. There are also exposed pipes running above the stove, likely part of the heating system. The floor is covered with debris, including broken pieces of wood and metal.
By JOE BULLARD
Kansan Staff Writer
Lax building inspectors, laws which are not enforced, an off-campus housing office that has no way of knowing what type of housing is being recommended to students and University professors who own a large percentage of problem housing-all add up to a growing off-campus housing problem which is appalling.
Four KU students pay $125 a month for a furnished apartment which comes complete with a limited amount of broken-down furniture, no dresser, a caved-in couch and bugs.
Inside one student's apartment, the floor is bowed, due possibly to the 1½ feet of water in the basement—an aftermath of Christmas vacation when the water pipes broke.
10 KANSAN May 9
1969
These two examples come from a part of Lawrence which for five years has been recognized as a problem area.
For at least 20 years, off-campus housing has been a touchy topic at KU. As early as 1951 the University Daily Kansan reported cases of student dissatisfaction with off-campus housing.
In 1964, a comprehensive study on Lawrence was made for the City Planning Commission. The study suggested that an area "east and south of the business district along the east side of the University campus" be an area of "intensive enforcement of housing and building codes with continued and improved maintenance so that more drastic public action will not be necessary for many years, if at all."
Out of the general problem area,
HISTORY
1920-1940
building inspectors from the Lawrence and the State Fc Lodging Board picked out specific area of especially bad The area extends from the 110 to the 1300 block of Tennes Ohio streets.
Since 1964 this area has no one of intensive enfo pertaining to housing codes there been continued and in maintenance of the buildings action is needed.
J. J. Wilson, director of a estimated that 50 per cent o 8,000 students live off-campus 50 per cent, Wilson said approx 10 per cent live in subs housing.
KU students choose to sub-standard housing for reasons. Most important in the of the students is low co proximity to campus.
Clark Coan, dean of students, said most foreign a cannot live in the resident hall different diets.
Coan said the foreign student forced to find an apartment cooking privileges, but the ce must be low due to limited and the apartment or roming must be close to campus because foreign students own cars.
Students do not want their used in conjunction with this a fear of reprisal by their landl the form of poor service; in rents or even eviction.
One student said, "Durin winter when the wind blew, we stuff towels under our door the cold out. We asked our l three times to fix the door, never did anything."
A foreign student said, "The is old and the rent is too high building. If the conditions we
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nce causes concern for students
inspectors from the city of and the State Food and Board picked out a more area of especially bad housing. extends from the 1100 block 800 block of Tennessee and its.
1964 this area has not been intensive enforcement to housing codes nor has it continued and improved face of the buildings. Public needed.
Wilson, director of housing,
that 50 per cent or about
dents live off-campus. Of this
it, Wilson said approximately
cent live in sub-standard
students choose to live in ird housing for several lost important in the minds students is low cost and to campus.
Coan, dean of foreign said most foreign students lie in the resident halls due to diets.
said the foreign student is find an apartment with privileges, but the cost also owed due to limited budgets apartment or roming house lose to campus because few dents own cars.
s do not want their names injunction with this article in prisal by their landlords in of poor service; increased en eviction.
student said, "During the
en the wind blew, we had to
als under our door to keep
out. We asked our landlord
es to fix the door, but he
anything."
gn student said, "The house the rent is too high for this if the conditions were good
we wouldn't care. We have things wrong with our rooms and we have complained to our landlord. He didn't listen to us and we have trouble finding him, so we don't bother to try to get anything fixed."
The student said he didn't turn a complaint into the University for the same reason . . . he didn't think any action would be taken.
William Balfour, dean of student affairs, cites three reasons for students not wishing to file complaints. "First, students may not be aware that housing codes are being broken and therefore feel that nothing can be done to force the landlord to repair the building. In other cases, the resident may be afraid that if the house is fixed up, the landlord will raise the rent, which is legal . . . and third, perhaps students have better
things to do and do not really care."
Many administration officials believe that education of students in regard to housing codes and informing students of what type of housing is available should be one of the goals of anyone working to solve the off-campus housing problem.
Coan believes that educating students about housing codes and trying to get students to file complaints is not the way to solve the problem. Coan said if the student complains and the city puts pressure on the landlord to clean up the building, "the owner would rather close up a house than pay the money to have it fixed. It is an owners' market due to the monopoly that some landlords have. The student is then out of a place to live, and a larger problem is created."
Photos by Halina Pawl
MORNING CALENDAR
A
May 9
1969 KANSAN 11
When you want to—
SELL YOUR BOOKS!
Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE
May 20 through 30
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 and 44-Valid through December'69
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Western Civ program gets groans, complaints
(This is the second of a two part series on the Western Civilization program at KU.)
By PHYLLIS JONES
When the western civilization program was first established, most students liked it.
Kansan Staff Writer
In a March 1949, University Daily Kansan article, students commented that they found the required readings, "stimulating, interesting, informative and thought-provoking." They also appreciated the method of the program which throws the student on his own.
Comments were: "I'm glad we are being treated as adults. I like to read and think for myself with a minimum of outside help. I appreciate the training in analysis and integration of ideals which the readings require."
But, these words of praise have turned to groans and bitter complaints.
"It's a worthwhile course, but it has lost its value under the present setup," said Frances Robinson, Kansas City sophomore.
The most common complaint is that the course is too time-consuming.
"I spend too much time reading books that I don't care about anyway," one student said.
Other students pointed out that the majority of the discussion groups are unstimulating.
"We just sit and stare at each other," a disgruntled student said. "If the instructor asks a question, he usually has to answer it himself."
The relevance of the reading material is also questioned.
'No longer applies'
"It doesn't apply to us today," one student complained. "Who cares about Plato's Utopia anyway? We are more concerned with student rebellion and civil rights."
The major cause of complaint is the comprehensive examination.
Of the almost 3,000 students enrolled in the western civilization course, 1,000 have signed up for the exam, said James Seaver, history professor and western civilization director.
"We expect at least 600 to chicken out," Seaver said. "Usually 66 2/3 per cent of those who sign up actually take the exam."
Students explained that: "I didn't have enough time to study," "I just didn't feel like taking the test," or "I'm putting it off as long as I can."
Criticizing the exam, Brenda Marzette, Boley, Okla., sophomore, said, "The discussion part could be beneficial, but the comprehensive is not necessary. It's just plain ridiculous."
Another student complained about the length of the examination.
"An examination which lasts for four hous is not a true test of a student's knowledge," said Gayle McGee, Oklahoma City sophomore.
Scheduling criticized
"The comprehensive is near final week and I can use the time studying for other subjects," said Phyllis Stevens, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore.
Since passing the comprehensive is mandatory for graduation from the University, tension and anxiety surround the exam.
Jack Horner, graduate instructor for the course, agreed that the atmosphere surrounding the comprehensive should be eliminated, but is not sure how it can be avoided.
"The exam should be a learning experience, not an educational trauma," Horner said. "In that sense, something is wrong with it."
The instructor does believe, however, that the examination, "though brutal," is necessary
"It is difficult to get students to read the assigned readings without some coercion or encouragement," he said. "If you believe that the material ought to be read, there must be a means to get students to read it. If the comprehensive was removed, fewer students would read the material than presently do."
The registrar's office reported it has no official figures on how many students flunk the exam, but one instructor estimated "less than 3 per cent."
Published notes
A majority of students questioned said they resorted to published notes when studying for the comprehensive, rather than reading the books over again.
12 KANSAN May 9
1969
This method of studying is condemned by Horner. "This course is an attempt to get students to read the primary material analytically and critically," he said. "This is a fundamental skill which can be applied to any profession. But, reading the notes does not allow a student to think for himself."
One black student complained that the western civilization program totally ignores the works of any black man and the African civilization.
Questioned about his disregard for black authors, Seaver said, "We may bring in books by black authors, but, I don't think it will happen next year. We examined several books, one by Malcolm X, but we weren't totally satisfied."
With so much obvious dissatisfaction with the course by both students and instructors, what changes, if any, are being proposed?
"We don't want to destroy the western civilization program, just revise it," Horner said. He said a group of instructors had specific changes in mind.
'Should be interpretative'
Secondly, Horner believes that the course is too fragmented. "The students do not have the context in which to understand what the author is saying," he stated. "Personally, I propose looking at western culture in its totality at one time rather than in parts. That is, for one period of time, read about philosophy, history, sociology and so forth."
First, the nature of the comprehensive should be altered. "It should move away from its present conception of a data to an interpretative test," Horner said. "Students should be required to think, not regurgitate facts."
Student suggestions ranged from the absolute abolishment of the course to a revision of its structure.
"I think the books need to be updated so that they would apply to now," one student said. "I would like to read books by Martin Luther King and John F. Kennedy."
Another suggested that a lecture class should be added to the weekly discussion. In addition, more emphasis should be placed on the details of the readings in preparation for the comprehensive.
Lecture class
"This would prepare us more for the comprehensive," said Mary Ish, Rockford, Ill., sophomore.
"In this way, some of the pressure would be eliminated, and the exams would be shorter," reasoned Phyllis Evans, Columbus, Ga., sophomore.
Since the western civilization program is divided into two sections covering both semesters, a student suggested that an exam be given at the end of each semester rather than one exam at the end of the year.
Seaver explained that this was done because the department felt students weren't "getting enough depth in the books and not the full flavor of the author."
Some changes in the program are presently occurring, Seaver said. "We have changed some of the readings for next year. The student will read fewer authors, but more works by each one. For example, he will read more books by Plato, but none by Aristotle."
A readings committee composed of the graduate instructors instigated changes in the reading material with the final decision by a faculty committee.
Several experiments are being considered for the program, Seaver said. A radio program with a discussion and debate of each week's readings is in the planning stages.
'Not enough depth'
Next year, in answer to student requests, an experimental program is being conducted in North College. A lecture course with two discussion periods each week will be held for a limited number of students.
"If these students do better than the other students enrolled in the regular weekly discussion, we may make more changes," Seaver said.
Even with these few changes, disapproval of the program is widespread.
The only favorable comments were: "I got one thing out of the course. It has given me a chance to think and to communicate with other people." "At least when I hear the name Plato or Machiavelli after graduation, I'll know who he is. I'll have a certain amount of self-satisfaction knowing I read something by that author—even if I don't remember any of it."
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LAWRENCE KANSAS
Prisoners prepare for 'outside'
(Continued from page 7)
said, "I always blamed the whole world for putting me in, and when I got out, I always tried to get back at the world for it. That's why I'm in again.
"This time I decided I'm the only one to blame, and when I leave in August, I'll never see the inside of a penitentiary again." With a flourish of the hand, he was through. He had told his life story in a nutshell.
The fat man, the bald man and the college man were three of the inmates in the Kansas
State Penitentiary at Lansing who started a program of job placement and inmate betterment more than 28 months ago. They had decided all was not lost and inmates don't have to stagnate while serving time. Their primary goal is to prepare prisoners for the outside world so they won't have to come back.
The fat man and the bald man are in for life with no chance of parole.
The bald man explained the
biggest problem a convict has. "They say you're in here for rehabilitation. Least that's what the warden said—and he means it. The warden's a good man. It's the people under him that don't give a damn. All they want is their weekly check.
"When I first came in, I was a carpenter, so when they asked me where I wanted to go, I told them the carpentry shop, cause that's all I know to do.
"Well, they put me in the plumbing shop for two years.
That's just the way these people are around here." He ground his cigarette butt into the floor.
I asked him why the warden didn't do something about the situation.
"The warden is too busy with other things," the college man spoke again. "He has pressures from the outside that keep him tied up. It's all a big game of politics. You know, public opinion dictates how a penitentiary is run."
"That is the biggest problem—communication. That seems to be the problem on the college campuses, the Paris peace talks, the racial problem.
"If the public could see that we are not all a bunch of bloodthirsty animals, that we want to go back to society and work for our keep-if they would just believe this and give us a chance, maybe prisons
would rehabilitate men, not isolate them from society."
I asked the bald man what he cared about the outside world since he would never be free.
He said, "I don't want to stagnate in here. As far as I'm concerned, I've served my time as a convict. Now, I'm working for these men who are leaving here. When one of them goes out into the free world and makes it, I'm right there with him. When he fails, I come back inside these walls.
Trip to a 'closed world'
So the fat man, the bald man and the college man are working for a program of rehabilitation and job placement, started by inmates, run by inmates and for inmates.
(Continued from page 7)
the educated, well-meaning businessman who didn't realize that he had insulted 300 men.
The last speaker, a black inmate, blamed the riots and student demonstrations on "a lack of communication and understanding." When he thanked the guests for coming, I was ashamed for I knew that I had done nothing.
At the conclusion of the program, an award was presented to Virgil Keeler, an adviser to the program. The inmates talked eagerly to us and smiled warmly as if we reminded them of something or someone special back home.
Each week, they invite square men to listen to their program in hopes of communicating with the world.
of the inmates calmly remarked that he was "in" for life.
When the inmates were ushered back to their cells, we went downstairs and ate dinner with the panel members and prison officials. As we went through the serving line, laughing and talking, I forgot we were in a penitentiary. But, I was sharply reminded when one
The men answered our questions honestly and straight-forwardly, but with a rehearsed tone, as if they had been through this many times before.
After the meal was over and we said goodbye to the men, a look of sadness and longing came over their faces. We had glimpsed for a moment at their closed world, but were now returning to the "land of the free."
May 9
1969 KANSAN 13
As I walked out of the door.
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Share the world with your fellow man.
TALKING TO THE BIKES
A Honda parks in spaces cars can't use. Runs around all week on a gallon of gas. Slashes your insurance tab. Costs less to keep up. And can cost less initially than a car down-payment. With so many things it's little about, isn't it ironical that a Honda can make you such a charitable B.M.O.C.?
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Fortas refuses comment on controversy over fee
BOSTON (UPI) — In his first public appearance since Life Magazine disclosed he received and later returned a $20,000 fee, Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas last night adamantly and repeatedly refused to talk about the controversy surrounding him.
"No, no, no, no, no." Fortas mumbled, shaking his head, as he ran to a waiting limousine flanked by guards and surrounded by dozens of newsmen after a speech at Northeastern University.
The justice got a laugh from the packed auditorium, however, when he glanced down at the 25 reporters seated at tables below him and quipped, "I'm surprised all these cameramen came here to take my picture at an ordinary lecture. I can't imagine why all this interest."
In his speech—in which he put in a good word for the establishment and urged both generations to perfect the current "great social revolution"the justice did not mention the fee.
Fortas became a target for congressional and press criticism
14 KANSAN May 9 1969
after Life magazine charged last Sunday he had received and returned a $20,000 fee from the family foundation of financier Louis E. Wolfson, now imprisoned for stock manipulation.
Fortas said in his address the "square" generation had begun the current revolution and young people should be given a chance to participate in it.
Fortas said a visit to a college is now regarded as a "safari to a land inhabited by long-haired,
long-fanged, unkempt beasts who are ready to attack anybody wearing a blue suit and necktie."
He said it is "too bad—and it's dangerous" that many older people lump together all campus malcontents and oppose selective reforms. But he said it is equally bad that many younger people "have such a distorted impression of what it is fashionable to call the 'establishment.'"
KU students' hearing set, must answer drug charges
Six KU students who were arrested on drug charges April 17 and 18 are scheduled to have a preliminary hearing Monday, U.S. Commissioner Milton P. Allen said yesterday.
The six and two other Lawrence youths will appear for a hearing and arraignment at 2:30 p.m. in Municipal Court. Thomas Joyce, U.S. Attorney from Kansas City acting as prosecutor in the case, said all but one of the youths had been charged with felony.
sale of LSD are: Daniel K. Walker, 19, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Connie Jo Hale, 18, Atwood freshman; Constance Campbell, 19, Paola freshman; Mark H. Auld III, 18, former KU student from Overland Park, and Gary S. Taylor, 20, Wichita freshman.
Those facing felony charges of
Two other KU students facing felony charges are Donald A. Lawrence, Wichita freshman, possession of LSD and David W. Bouska, Overland Park freshman, possession of amphetamines.
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Have a Scotsman (a HiLo [double cheeseburger] French fries and a milk shake) at Sandy's and putt-putt at the Putt-Putt Golf Course for half price.
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Believe it! Buy a Scotsman (a delicious combination) and Sandy's will give you a coupon that cuts your putting costs in half (sorry, but we can't cut scores).
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Campuses in turmoil
By United Press International
Police clashed in tumultuous melees with hundreds of radical students at City College of New York (CCNY) yesterday and angered Howard University students went on a rock-throwing spree on the Washington, D.C., campus.
A fire of "definitely suspicious" origin caused heavy damage to the Finley Student Center on the CCNY campus. Fifty police, assigned to guard the reopening of the troubled school, wielded nightsticks on the rebels who went on hit-and-run rampages of vandalism in an effort to shut the college down.
At least 10 students were arrested and an undetermined number injured in the melees that rolled back and forth across the CCNY grounds.
Disorder broke out on the Howard University campus within two hours after school officials asked a federal court for contempt citations against dissident Negro students who held six campus buildings for a second day.
The students defied university orders and a court injunction that they abandon the occupation. Protesters began pelting cars and buses with rocks near the main gate of the campus. A fire broke out in a building near the school and firemen who responded to the alarm were struck with rocks. A Negro student warned newsmen and spectators to leave, saying the rebels' anger was going to explode "indiscriminately."
In the pattern of the anti-war demonstrations that shook Chicago during the Democratic National Convention last
May 9
1969 KANSAN 15
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August, radical students sent white-coated medical aides onto the CCNY campus to tend to their own injured.
The demonstrators, roving in small bands, smashed windows of campus buildings, ripped fire extinguishers from walls and turned on fire hoses in several buildings.
Fist fights broke out between the demonstrators and students who demanded that the school be kent open for classes.
In Washington, Howard President James M. Nabrit Jr. indicated to newsmen he would not hesitate to ask the police to forcibly remove the rebels who held the university buildings if they did not leave peacefully.
University officials asked for the contempt citation when a 7 p.m. university-imposed deadline passed with the students still in the buildings.
U. S. District Court Judge Gerhardt Gessel said he was "in agreement" with Howard's
request but the contempt orders were not expected to be drafted and serve $ ^{4} $ until this morning.
Two parents of Negro students broke up a news conference called by Negro militants earlier yesterday and said supporters of the strike were "in the minority."
Elsewhere in campus turmoil:
New Jersey-About 30 Negro students occupied the main classroom building at Paterson State College in Wayne for about six hours. They demanded more Negro enrollments and more black instructors.
Lise where in campus curtain.
Iowa-University of Iowa officials said a handful of young persons broke into the office of university President Howard R. Bowen, threw typewriters and files to the floor and pulled books off shelves.
New York—Police went onto the Queensborough Community College campus for the second time in as many days to oust students barricaded on the
fourth floor of the administration building. The students—some 40 members of the "Coalition to End Political Suppression"—streamed out of the building when police arrived. They scuffled outside the building with members of a crowd of 500 students who objected to heir tactics in evicting administrators and faculty members.
Queens College, torn by vandalism last week, was tense but open under police guard. At Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, several hundred faculty members were on strike in protest against the school president's policy that demonstrators will be arrested.
Ohio—Shouting groups of students at Ohio State University in Columbus clashed over the school's Reserve Officers Training Corps program. Several fights broke out and a miniature American flag was burned.
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For guys who work night shifts a pill for the day shift.
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Author creates fantasy for children
By LINDA BROWNING
Kansan Staff Writer
KU students of upper-level English courses are well acquainted with Paul Kendall, a visiting professor from Ohio State University at Athens. But his wife, Carol who creates dream worlds for children is just as accomplished in fabricating fantasy villages such as "Slipper-on-the-Water," and "Water Gap" as he is in making French and English kings come alive in his biographies.
Mrs. Kendall's first children's book, "Gammage Cup" won runner-up in the Newberry Award given by the American
Library Association. Its sequel, the "Whisper of Glocken," tells children how people get to be heroes even though they are cowardly in nature. The period is later in her second book, but she retains her five main characters. Her latest project is another fantasy exemplifying superstitions.
Writing ambition
Mrs. Kendall can remember saying in the fourth grade that she would one day write. She wrote a column in her high school paper and a little in college, but she graduated with majors in English and psychology and minors in French and philosophy.
WEBSTER'S
NEW WORLD
DICHIOM
ALMANAC
Author at work Photo by Ron Bishop Mrs. Paul Kendall looks over manuscript.
Who's Whose
Pinnings
Diane Allen, Hutchinson sophomore majoring in elementary education, to Robert Costello, Overland Park junior, majoring in radio-television-film, Beta Sigma Psi.
Judith Bowker, Bonner Springs senior, majoring in secondary education, to Richard Jones, Northbrook, Ill., junior majoring in architecture, Alpha KappaLambda.
Pam Fankhauser, Lyons senior majoring in secondary education, Alpha Gamma Delta, to Clif Conrad, Bismark, N.D., senior majoring in history.
Engagements
Katie Keene, Springfield, Mo., senior majoring in chemistry, to Gary Tenner, Storrs, Conn., first year medical student at Vanderbilt University.
Linda Jones, Muldane freshman majoring in liberal arts to Terry Laws, Shawnee Mission junior majoring in microbiology.
Karia Koinis, Hobbs, N.M., junior majoring in physical therapy, Alpha Delta Pi, to Michael Martin, Wichita law student, Theta Chi. Diana Blew, Hutchinson sophomore majoring in elementary education, to Jack Kranz, Haven junior majoring in industrial arts at Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia.
She didn't think she had anything to say that hadn't been said before by a million other writers. When she took a close look at her first two novels, both mystery novels for adults, and realized that the main characters in both were 12-year old boys, she decided she could not only write best about children, but for children as well.
Of all the forms of writing she tried, she found fantasy to best suit her style.
KANSAN Features
She argues that fantasy is not just for kids, but many adults rely on this form to grasp a clearer understanding of several social issues.
"You can concentrate on simple folks, talk about basic things, and discuss people's meanness without having to flower over your basic premise," she said.
Conformity
Later she read David Riesman's "The Lonely Crowd" and found a theme she thought she could successfully handle through fantasy—conformity.
"Everyone seems to be shaping everyone else to fit into a pattern—everything for the group, in our schools, homes, everywhere," she said. "Schools seems to frown on the idea of cornering yourself away from the mass activity and trying to outdo Einstein, and this seems wrong to me," she added.
Because giants were hard to deal with from her point of view, she decided to use the little, "smallish" people in her children's books. "Naturally," she said, "these dwarfs have to be hidden, so in her first book "Gammage Cup" she was living near Bryce Canyon and heard that no one had ever penetrated it, and decided that was where her little people belonged.
Imaginary people
Her imaginary people, the minipins had to be hidden to isolate the fact that they were going no place too fast. Her social comment camouflaged by her humor gives her a chance to be actually realistic and logical. This is why her writing seems to appeal to adults.
Mrs. Kendall doesn't profess to have a hobby—"unless it be languages," she said. She has learned French and German on her own and Swahili from her married daughter, Carol, working for the Peace Corps in Kenya, Africa. She says she belabors a foreign language for lengthly periods because it is "relaxing."
Housework, writing and reading keep her more than busy, but she does manage to improvise cages for the miriads
of animals her younger daughter. Jill, captures and raises. Two guinea pigs, a parakeet, two turtles, and a wounded pigeon would keep a cagebuilder busy indeed.
Likes Kansas
Even before she moved to Kansas at the beginning of this semester, she had a hint how friendly Kansans were. "I received more fan mail from Kansas than any other state when I lived in Ohio," she recalled.
She and 13-year-old Jill are enamored over the Kansan
Alexander's
Mrs. Kendall called Lawrence the most "civilized" and friendliest community she has ever lived in. "I was surprised to find my mail delivered in a cute little three-wheeled van, to have my trash collected twice a week is great, and to grocery shop on wall-to-wall carpeting is luxury too good to be true," she said. "Jill has already informed us she will be sorry to leave Lawrence in June," Mrs. Kendall said, "and I will miss its cosmopolitan atmosphere myself."
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UDK World News
By United Press International
Tanks used in battle
SAIGON - American troops using tanks staged a four-hour attack on a bunker complex 17 miles from Saigon and killed 29 communist soldiers, military spokesmen said today.
The engagement was one of four involving U.S. troops yesterday in South Vietnam and reported in American communiques. The Americans reported killing 64 communist soldiers while losing seven dead and 17 wounded.
In Saigon last night, the South Vietnamese and its Allies announced they would observe a 24-hour truce to mark the birth of Buddha May 30. There was no immediate word from communist forces on whether they would observe the truce.
It would be the first truce in the war since the Tet lunar new year holiday in February.
Announcement of the truce came despite a wave of terrorist incidents in Saigon which killed
five persons and wounded 43 others. Hanoi radio said today terrorist attacks carried out in the capital Wednesday commemorated the 15th anniversary of the end of the battle of Dien Bien Phu. The surrender of the French army to communist forces May 7, 1954, led to an end of the French Indochinese war.
The communiques also reported three communist shelling attacks in South Vietnam overnight, with light American casualties and no fatalities.
American B52 bombers carried out seven missions over South Vietnam last night and early today, spokesmen said. They dropped at least 630 tons of bombs on communist troop concentrations, base camps, and bunker complexes.
"We were consulted and we will observe the 24-hour standdown," a spokesman for
the U.S. mission said soon after the South Vietnamese announcement." The other allies will observe the standdown also."
The truce, if observed by the Communists, will be the first in the Vietnam war since the Tet new year holiday period in mid-February.
Announcement of the brief cease-fire followed a rash of terrorist explosions in Saigon which killed five persons and wounded 43 others. The worst blast occurred early yesterday when a bomb blast killed four persons and wounded 19 in the capital's central post office.
Three other overnight explosions in Saigon killed one civilian and wounded 24 others.
The weekly allied casualty report, issued yesterday showed that American battlefield losses rose sharply last week while the number of government troops
The army newspaper said that in at least two cases generals died "in tragic circumstances while performing their duties."
Death of Soviet generals may be result of air crash
The generals were mostly in their fifties, with a few in their early sixties. Several held posts in air defense and missile commands.
The death of the 10th Russian general was announced yesterday in Red Star, newspaper of the Soviet armed forces.
LONDON - Ten Soviet generals, who died within the last three weeks, may have been killed in an air crash or rocket test explosion, diplomatic reports said yesterday.
Red Star announced yesterday the death of Lt. Gen. Yevgeny I. Smornov, 51, deputy chief of the central department of the Ministry of Defense. The Soviet military newspaper said he died "after a short but grave illness."
THE Studio
announcement of Gen. Valentin Penkovsky, former commander-in-chief of the Far Eastern area and a deputy foreign minister.
None of the death announcements has given details, nor were any details available elsewhere.
May 9
1969 KANSAN 17
Diplomatic reports reaching here said some generals may have died naturally, since "after all even generals die some time, especially when they get older."
Red Star then reported the "sudden death" of Lt. Gen. Alexander Dmitriyev, 58, who headed the political section in the Caucasus military area.
killed or wounded decreased at about the same rate.
Last week Red Star announced the death of Gen. Anatoly Kadmotsev, who "died tragically while performing his duties." He was 49 and commander of the aviation section of Russia's air defenses.
But the reference in some instances to "tragic circumstances while performing their duties" suggested a major accident, either an air crash or more likely an explosion during a rocket test, diplomatic informants said.
On Wednesday the death of Maj. Gen. Igor Antonov, 59, was announced. He was senior political officer in the air defense forces which administers Russia's missile armory.
The string of death notices began in Red Star just over two weeks ago when the paper reported the death "in tragic circumstances" of Gen. Marikyan Popov, former chief of the infantry general staff.
Next came the death
Officials reported that 205 Americans were killed and 1,288 wounded in the week ending May 3, compared with 163 dead and 1,235 wounded in the previous seven days.
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Canadian newspaper says Israel has atomic bombs
MONTREAL - The Montreal Gazette reported yesterday that Israel has built five 20-kiloton atomic bombs and has almost finished work on a sixth.
The Gazette bannered the report over four columns and credited it to its Montreal-based special correspondent, Peter Lust, who has a number of foreign contacts, including many in West Germany.
Lust's report that Israel had become the world's sixth nuclear power said the bombs' existence were uncovered by a group of West German journalists. The West German story will appear in Der Spiegel at the end of this week. Lust wrote.
Lust said the Israeli bombs were similar to those dropped by the United States on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II.
Lust said Israel had not
conducted any test explosions to date.
Israel denied a National Broadcasting Company (NBC) report in January that a nuclear bomb was "almost ready."
Lust said the NBC report "missed the exact date by only 18 days. The bombs were completed during early February," Lust said.
The story said Israel could presently deliver a nuclear weapon with its A8 Skyhawk jets and, later with F4 Phantom jets that will soon be operational.
Lust's account said the bombs were assembled at Israel's nuclear test station in the Negev Desert, near the settlement of Dimona, and were later rushed "to an unknown destination, whose location is Israel's best kept secret."
He said the test station near Dimona had been one of the country's best kept military secrets, although it was reportedly discovered nine years ago when American U2 observation planes photographed it.
He said one Israeli plane was shot down by rockets and the pilot killed on June 6, 1967, when it accidentally strayed over the Dimona site after being hit by Egyptian ground fire.
Lust said Egypt had been aware of the bombs' completion in Israel since February, when it was discovered by the Arab country's intelligence service. He said the Egyptian government had asked the Soviet Union for nuclear arms for possible retaliation, but the request was turned down.
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Disorders on campus discussed by Agnew
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) Campus disorders and their effect on the nation's moral fiber were discussed yesterday by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew during a visit to Utah.
Agnew told 10,000 students at Brigham Young University (BYU) at Provo, that universities should not be sanctuaries for "political activists" or for "psychologically maladjusted" students.
Agnew told BYU students, "not in every case, but in too
many cases, we have young adults hell-bent on 'non-negotiable' destruction.
"We have college administrators confused and capitulating. We have sophisticated faculties distraught and divided over issues as basic as the criminality of breaking and entering, theft, vandalism and assault and battery."
May 9
1969
18 KANSAN
He noted "the vast, faceless majority" of Americans are in quiet fury over campus troubles. BYU students applauded the Vice President. There never has been a major student disorder on the Provo campus.
When in Southern California visit Universal City Studios
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PAUL JONES · JEAN SHRIMPTON
WITH WILLIAM JOB · MARK LONDON · JEREMY CHILD · MAX BACON
with WILLIAM JOB · MARK LONDON · JEREMY CHILD · MAX BACON
Screenplay by NORMAN BOGNER · From an original story by JOHNNY SPEIGHT
Directed by PETER WATKINS · Associate Producer TIMOTHY BURRILL · Produced by JOHN HEYMAN
A WORLDFILM SERVICES LTD / MEMORIAL ENTERPRISES LTD PRODUCTION
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE
THIS WEEK'S POP FILM
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I select an armful of our merchandise and seek out a dealer (salesman)
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
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Rules of the House
3 spin our Casino wheel to determine the discount you will receive, ranging from 10 to 50 percent
2 have your items written up but not totaled
4 our entire stock is included, no aces are held up our sleeve. at least 10 percent off on our regular quality stock
5 refreshments and loud music also available
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TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered in the library. Students are accorded 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 Iorel. 5-14
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts many styles of leather watchbands just for your wrist and watch. Starting at $3. 812 Mass. 5-15
For Sale: SANDALS—This spring why
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Mass. 5-15
As much beer needed to quench thirst at the TEE PEE. TIGF with 75c pitches. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
For Sale: WOLLENKA tape recorder,
$80. Also, AIWA tape recorder, $70.
Available for 5:30 p.m., good condition.
Call Dave after 5:30 p.m. at 333 McCollum. I-2 6-6000. 5-9
In excellent condition. Van Dyke mobile home, 50 x 10, new wall-to-ground. Teacher's Trailer Park south, 2 miles, on Louisiana. Call after 5:30, 9:12-3269. Call after 5-9
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Lowest Prices — Highest Trades
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For Sale- 14" Mickey Thompson
Stock knock-offs, $106. $115
at VI 3-8158
5-9
Stereo component set, 40 watt. AM/ FM, solid state radio, professional speaker, specimen spectacles cabinets, $169.85, White Sewing Center, 916 Mass.
SUZUKI
'60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide front wheels rebuilt. Tape deck optional, but not included in $650 or more. Care of密封 Jeff Meyers, VI 3-8153. 5-14
FOR SALE: BAND EQUIPMENT—Gretch guitar, Fender Amplifier and cabinet used 10 months in one of midwest's top bands. Guitar is 2 years old; amp/cabinet is one year old. Excellent condition. Call VI T-6894-16
For Sale: HAM GEAR. Moving—selling complete rig, SB-301, SB-401, SB-601, and parts of the management, and many other parts and parts.
W8ECV VI 3-6057 or UN 4-3309. 5-12
'65 Rambler convt. automatic-V-8 eng. power steering-power brakes radio. Quality Pontiac, 1040 Vermont. 5-12
'64 Ford Galaxie 500, 288 engine, std.
'64 Ford Galaxie $895 Quality Pond
1040 Vermont.
'68 Falcon—economy car—air-cond—automatic trans. radio—power steering—power brakes. Quality Pontiac.
1040 Vermont. 5-12
'64 Chev. convt--automatic trans-
283 engine-power steering-radio
-clean $1,025. Quality Pontiac, 1040
Vermont. 5-12
Honda 305 Superhawk. Electric starter, scrambler pipes. Excellent condition. $350 or best offer. Call VI 2-2974
5-13
CYCLE HELMETS--Day to n a 300
(Men's) with tinted face shield—also
a chick's helmet-$25 for the pair. Call
VT 3-9106. 5-13
GIANT BOOK SALE : Sat. 10th, from
9-6 and Sun. from 2-6. 808 Tenn.
and Hunter. from 3-4. drom's books, and more. Old and New.
BENEFIT BALLARD LIBRARY. 5-9
1966 Honda S-90 for trail, woods, or street use. Full lighting. High pipe, low gearing, oversize tires, etc. $125 or best offer. VI 2-3936 after 5:30. 5-9
Baldwin electric 12 string, triple pickup, hardshell case, very good condition, $325. Also Foam mattress, good condition, $225. Tom V 2-7949. 5-13
Deliciously Different
Casa De Taco
Mexican Food
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
EVERYONE SAYS
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
18 Conn. Low, Pet Ph. VI 3-29;
1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Tony's 66 Service
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Be Prepared! tune-ups
Lawrence Kansas 6044
Pay-Less
1300 W. 23rd. Lawrence
Self Service SHOES
For Sale: New Baby—Must sell our
'63 CORVETTE, good condition, low
price. Firees $1,500, phone 2438 or see at 1526 Vermont (fear
apartment).
1963 TR-4, wire wheels, radio, new engine and transmission. Volkwagen Pick-up, 62 frame, '67 engine, 6.000 miles. Call 842-7219. 5-12
Drafted, must sell second car 1857
of the lot. Makes offers 842-7297 after 6
oilation. Make offer, 842-7297 after 6
oilation.
MED-STUDENTS! You will need hemocytometer outfit and large dissecting kit. Buy mine used, or get them new from the med-center for $10-15 more. Excellent condition. Call VI 2-7172. 5-12
For Sale—Need money desperately.
'88 Yamaha Trail 100, with helmet,
4,000 miles. First offer over $175 takes.
Naismith, No. 514 or VI 2-0290. 5-12
Volt Sebuta Wet Sult. "4",zippers 3-
8, Volt Sebuta Wet Callry. Call Rary. 8-14
913-242-2171
Two Pirhannas with aquariums and accessories, albums, Corvette hub caps, door beads, miscellaneous. VI 2-6354. 5-12
1963 Chevy Impala V-8, automatic,
perfect engine, new battery, radio;
Zenith portable stereo, 5 speakers;
IBM computer, color monitor,
writer, portable, good condition. Also,
miscellaneous household items. Call
843-2197. 5-14
10 speed Raleigh Record bike—one
now $60
Steve, Rm. 610 JRP
5-13
For Sale: 3 cure female Stimanee kit-
ten with a 50mm 1811 or 2416 JAUS Drive. 5-13
1966 Corvette convertible, trophy blue. VI 3-7102. 5-14
1960 Bugeye Sprite, mint condition,
excellent mechanically, wood steering
wheel and dash, wires, new yellow
paint, top, $1.050, VI 2-8039. 5-14
For Sale: Gibson Hummingbird guitar, acoustic, hardshell case, perfect condition, new $387. Call Jim. Rm. 548. VI 2-600. evenings. 5-13
For Sale: Have 411 pos-tacr. rear end
For Sale: Have 391 salc or traction.
Call Bob at VI 2-89333. 5-14
AUDIO SALE 20% off
AR and Cynaco products
HVAC components
at lowest possible cost.
Ask about our student special.
Sale end May 31.
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
Afternoons or Evenings 5-14
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St.B-B-Q -outdoor pit, rib slab to go $;3.25; Bib order, $1.55; Rib sandwich, 90c; $_1/2 chicken, $1.15; Brisket sandwich, $75; Hours, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. tf
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Delicatessen in Jayna. 8 a.m. to midnight day, noon to midnight Sundays. Delivery service daily 6 p.m. to midnight.
The TEE PEE has been remodeled! Bands on weekends, TGIF with 75c pitches each Friday from noon to 6 p.m. 5-14
PRIMARILY LEATHER - Vests, bags,
handbands, handmade at 813 Mass. 5-19
bandmade at 813 Mass.
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, most advanced 3600 III copier Crispener, sharper copies; faster service. Unsurpassed results for theses, papers. bulletins. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf
GRAVITT'S
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY
Bring it in,
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Minnie Pearl's
"COUNTRY-FIED"
CHICKEN
Plywood, Moulding Plaster Shelving Material
we'll do it for you
LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER
For
Come to
1730 West 23rd
RAY AUDIO your new
FREE Delivery over $5.00
VI 3-8200
VI 3-0931
offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox, bonded and foam speaker warranty). Call VI 2-1944 for prompt service. Hillierest Shopping Center (Afternoon & Evening). 5-14
Notice: Married Couple—Prefer 2nd or 3rd year students. Modern Home in town to rent. Help with chores. Available in June. Holein Stein Farm, 843-4839. 5-9
Notice: KIDDIE KARNIVAL - Sat.
Notice: 9:00 PM, South
Park, Pony Rides, Floor,
Pond, Shooting Gallery, Food. All
10c. Lawrence Nursery
FOR RENT
THE PAWN SHOP
Bring your friends and enjoy free coffee plus dinner.
Also sandwiches, soft drinks and special teas.
This weekend hear
Dave Failey and Philip Bayles
Doors open 8:00 Fri & Sat
AR-DYNACO DEALER
THE PAWN SHOP
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS
FOB.PENT
Sleeping rooms with and without kitchen privileges for males; fur-rien-coultioned apartments. Borders close and near downtown. Phone VI 3-5767. 5-14
Male students only. 1 4-room + bath
1 3-room + bath. Electricity extra.
Approximately 20 campus.
Call VI 3-121 daytime,
or VI 2-7287 after 5.
Beginning June. Pleasant room and kitchen privileges in private home in exchange for some evening babysitting. Call after 5 p.m. VI 3-4098, 5-9
Doors open 8:00 Fri. & Sat.
75c cover
5-6
Live close to campus, air-conditioned
2-bedroom apartments, furnished or
unfurnished, $105-$130. One available
also, like a room also, sleeping rooms. Call VI 3-2116
appointment. Sante Apts., 1123 Louis-
ff
SUMMER SUBLET—Stouffer Place
summerset. 100 ft.² to o.m. Completely furnished—tugs,
curtains, bookcase, etc. Close to campus.
Married couple. Call VI 2-3359
Two bedroom apartment available June 1 for summer. It is for two persons. Reasonable rent. Vall VI 3-2619 after 5.00 p.m. 5-12
New York Cleaners
Attention summer students: College Inn, 912 Alabama at foot to Mt. Oread. Have your meals furnished. Great family meals within your budget. College approved. Call 9890 now for reservation and deposit. Also take fall term reservations. 5-14
Sublette for ammer--small 3 bedroom house, $145 per month plus utilities. Phone 842-5457 or UN 4-4492. 6-12
Must rent one bedroom apt by dune 1st. New air-conditioning, two blocks from campus. Will rent furnished or unfurnished. Call Vi 2-7147. 5-12
For the best in:
Apartment for rent: 4 furnished one-
bedroom apartments to subrent for
the summer. $90 a month. 1510 Kitu-
kety. Call VI 2-3712. 5-14
House or 2 apartments for rent. Furnished, 2 rooms, 2 baths, close to the beach, VI 2-10738.
For Rent: To graduate woman. Large clean sleeping room with kitchen for the summer. Available June 1. Utilities paid. VI 3-1585. 5-14
2 bedroom, unfurnished (has stove &
refrigerator) apartment. A.C. dissi-
sions facilities in same burea-
l. 2 blocks. campus. Available
June 1st. 842-5421. 5-13
Apartment for rent: 2 BDRM. Apt.
Furn. Unfurn. for summer sublease
on campus. Walking distance to campus.
Air-cond, laundry facilities. 842-792-518.
- Dry Cleaning
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
926 Mass.
---
- Reweaving
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
VI 3-0501
- Alterations
ments and fountain service.
Complete prescription deport-
Now renting for summer, University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates, air-conditioning, carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment. 842-1296 for University Terrace and 843-1433 for Old Mill. 5-14
1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments, located in small quiet complex at south edge of KU campus. Unfurnishable in large apartment, organic style. Danish walnut furnishing. All rooms have wall-to-wall carpeting, paneled living area. Very large rooms, enclosed closets and locked storage. Central room and air paint. Reasonable rent and
Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS, 1741 West 19th. Contact Glen or Drake Drak at apartment 5-B, VI 3-8220. 5-14
LOW SUMMER RATES
TRAVEL TIME
TYPING
PAPERS, THESSES, DISSERTATIONS.
Currier after 5 p. m. VI 2-1409, 5-14
Currier after 5 p. m. VI 2-1409, 5-14
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, applications, term papers, theses, or dissertations typed in German, Romanized Japanese, Spanish, English French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by KU graduate in English-Speech Education. SCM elect. Located near Oliver Hall. VI 5-2873.
TYPING: EXPERIENCED in typing thesis, term papers, all kinds of writings; copywriting; writing for writer, pica type. Fast, efficient service. Phone VI 3-9545. Wright
Theses, themes, papers in English,
French, transliterated Russian—typed
IBM Sectric by experience
literate literate. Call Mrs. Harwell, 842-
5298.
TYPING: Theses, Dissertations, Manuscripts, typed accurately by experienced typist on IBM electric machine. Call Ms. Phyllis Nelson VI 2-2142
Theses, Term Papers and Miscellaneous. Electric Typewriter.
1712 Alabama
VI 3-1522 5-14
Typing. quick, accurate and reasonable.
Call V1 2-2561 after 5. 5-14
Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type reports, term papers. Pica electric VI 3-7207. Mrs. Mattila. 5-14
WANTED
The KU student at the TEE PEE.
Five pitchers given away nightly 5-14
Five pitchers given away nightly 5-14
DO THE KIDS HAVE YOU TIED DOWN? Let me do the babysitting. Dependable marmalade. Dependent wives. Call 849-3232 after 6 p.m.
Female graduate student needs female roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt. Would have private rm. Reasonable. VI 2-0250 after 4:00 p.m. 5-12
Wanted: two roommates for summer months. $33 a head to share bottom floor of house. Come by 1000 Rhode Island before 4 or after 10 p.m. 5-14
Wanted—Females to rent two bedroom, furnished house for summer. Cooking utensils included. $110 per month. Phone VI 2-3197 anytime. 5-14
Wanted, girl to share apartment next fall. Your place or mine. V 1-2044-30
Prospective graduate student wishes
bedroom model in good condition.
Send details, description and price to
191° N. St. Alchurch,
Kansas 66002
Wanted: Swimming Inst. for summer months. Private, heated pool Call VI 2-7989 after 4:30 p.m. weekends. 5-13
HELP WANTED
Help wanted: Must have experience packing and moving of Household goods, summer work. Call VI 3-0380 for appointment. 5-13
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
Shoe Shines. One color .50
105 E. 8th
8:00-5:00
Two color .75
Closed Saturday at Noon
LET
-
MAUPINTOUR SERVICE TRAVEL
Counselors wanted for boys' camp in the Bear Mountain area of New York state. See New York City on your calendar. Call the salary and travel allowances contact Bill Ford at 1941 Emerald Drive or Phone VI 3-5265. 5-9
Summer Reservations Now.
Make Your
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
Help wanted! Waitresses, cooks, bell-
ringers, and other flexible. See 5-12
Wong for interviews.
ENTERTAINMENT ROAD MANAGER for the summer. Extensive travel, wages plus transportation and lodging plus for interview by phone between 8:30 a.m. and 4:15 p.m. needed. MID CONTINENT ENTERTAINMENT. Call 843-0100. 5-14
ATTENTION
international company now has sums of $189 million in assets who live in the Kansas City or
INCENTIVE:
1) Extensive training program
2) College scholarships
3) New care
4) European trips
5) Weekly salary $127.50
In Kansas City call Miss James, 816-421-5883.
In Wichita call Mr. Stark, 316-363-0165.
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES: If you really believe that you can find a job, a job, a summer, call Dave Writter, I. 2-788-3100 at 6:30 p.m. about working with other Jayhawkers and 5,000 other college men for the South-Western Company. Please havearge profit per day—$32.11. We'll interview us. 5-14
Students Summer Employment. Pinkerton, Inc., is now taking applications for students who desire summer work as security guards in the greater Kansas City area. To qualify, you must be at least 21 years of age, '8' or over, and pass a criminal background violations excluded). Apply Mon, Fri-4, Sat-9, 12. Room 700. Bryant Building, 1102 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Missouri. 5-15
LOST
Lost—white gold class ring with blue stone and pharmacy emblem (Rx).
Initials LFB on inside. Call Lee, VI 2-8047.
5-14
Lost: Keys lost Saturday, vlenity of tennis courts south of the stadium. Would appreciate return. Please contact UW Athletic Department, UN 4-51-1 or VI 3-4533, VI 2-2055.
Car keys in a black leather case Lost
Please call VI 2-2866
5-14
Production Management testbook in Hawklet of Summerfield. Reward offered. Please call VI 2-7091. 5-12
Lost: Man's glasses with black frames and black glass case. Lost between JRP and Snow. Reward. Call VI 2-0506. 5-14
PERSONAL
MATH TUTORING, by math grad student, six years college teaching experience, individuals or will set up group sessions, KI 2-2582 after 6 p.m.
6th & Mo.
VI 3-2139
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
For Top Quality Head for Henry's
Exclusive Representative
of
L. G. Balfour Co.
- Badges
- Novelties
- Fcvors
Guards
- Lavaliers
- Services
- Diner
- Rings
- Sportswear - Mugs
- Paddles
- Trophies
Cups Awards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Incidents disrupt hearing
(Continued from page 1)
"As a member of the oppressed people of the world, I feel that I have no more obligation to respect any of the rights of the oppressors. Your attempt to censure I find a laughable, despicable insult to justice," Jenkins said.
When Jenkins finished his speech, Berkowitz began to read his presentation.
Berkowitz had barely begun when Gordon Wiseman, UDB member and professor of physics, started to interrupt and was shouted down.
Wiseman then attempted to leave, but witnesses say he pushed Anne Lynne Cobb, Independence, Kan., senior, out of his way.
The defendants and their supporters became incensed.
decried his violence, and demanded to know his name.
Miss Cobb later said she would press charges against the professor.
After this incident, Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, stood up and the other members of the UDB started to leave.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, said she was physically restrained repeatedly when leaving the room. She also said that she would press charges.
About half the people in the room left, but Alderson and an assistant who were apparently barred returned to their seats.
While walking to his seat, Alderson asked Atkinson if he had a presentation he wanted to give. Atkinson nodded.
and he began by denouncing the University as a "slum lord and napalm factory."
Atkinson's speech was short
"Our goal as revolutionaries," he said, "is to expose to the people of this country the existing and potential reality of oppression and exploitation in America."
The Disciplinary Board adjourned to the Regent's room in the Chancellor's office suite for further discussion in a closed meeting.
After the meeting which lasted about an hour, the members refused to give the press any information, saying that they decided that only the chairman of the UDB would be the source of information.
The chairman, Bradt, had hurriedly left the UDB meeting to go to a closed meeting of the
new University Council in Blake Hall.
Bradt has been unavailable for comment.
Four student opinion referendums may face delay of immediate action
Immediate action may not be forthcoming on the four student opinion referendums provided on the April 23-24 general election ballot.
All four of the proposals passed by large majorities, said Chuck Loveland, Riley senior and former All-Student Council elections chairman.
The referendum calling for more student representation on University Senate committees received 3,737 pro votes and 1,210 con. Another proposal, which would change the student calendar, moving finals to
20 KANSAN May 9
1969
precede a lengthened Christmas vacation, received 3,753 yes votes and 1,194 no votes.
A referendum proposing both academic and residence representation received 3,386 favorable votes and 1,347 negative votes.
Probably the most controversial of the referendums, the proposal to allow 3.2 beer to be sold in the Kansas Union, passed with 3,128 yes votes and 1,978 negative votes.
State Atty, General Kent Frizzell said early this week that it would not be against the law to serve 3.2 beer on campuses of state universities. At the
AIRPORT
moment the future of beer on campus awaits the decision of the Board of Regents.
David Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and student body president, met with Frank Burge, Kansas Union director. As Burge put it, they "discussed the referendum in a constructive sense. If the students want beer in the Union, we will explore the ways of providing it for them."
Awbrey said Student Senate leaders will be working over the summer to decide how best to increase student representation in the University government, and on the changeover to representation both academically and residence based.
Photo by Ron Bishop
Everybody and his dog . . .
Even the proverbial dog at a big gathering made it into yesterday's second attempt to convene the University Disciplinary Board hearing of the three students charged with disrupting a University seminar.
Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS
Forget Mother And Dine With Us"
Sunday Dining Hours
11:30-8:00
OPEN DAILY
11:30-9:30
Tavern and Sandwich
Area Open
Until Midnight
Baked Ham $2.25
Roast Tom Turkey, Giblet Gravy $1.85
Baked Chicken $1.85
Prime Rib $3.25 Try our luncheon specials Monday thru Friday, 11:30 to 3:00. Each day a specialty of the house will be offered complete with beverage and dessert.
For Good Food And Warm Hospitality Call VI 2-9248 For Reservations
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No. 129
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, May 12, 1969
未來
Student Body VP Marilyn Bowman at the ROTC demonstration
Drive begun for ouster of VP Bowman
See page 14
Inside Today
Docking on protests page 8
The Chancellor's statement page 9
Student Court handles tickets page 12
UDK News Roundup page 16
UDK World News page 16
SenEx Statement page 9
1900
Photos by Halina Pawl
Students unwilling to file complaints against landlords
See page 10
Radicals disrupt KU military review
ENJOY THE RACE.
Photo by Joe Bullard
SDS demonstrators disrupt the Chancellor's Review - see page 8
Coed seeks percussion perfection
A.
Photo by Ron Bishop
Sally Swetnam, KU's girl percussionist
Sally Swetnam, Prairie Village freshman, spends more time on her hobby and first love at KU than she does on her major—occupational therapy. She doesn't mind rehearsing 13 hours a week on the tympani, the trap and snare drums, chimes, xylophone and cymbals because music has become an area that she can't resist—whether it fits in her schedule or not.
and the xylophone in "Oliver." She was selected for the Shawnee Mission District Orchestra and the Kansas City Youth Symphony also during her high school years.
Sally said it doesn't pay to be clumsy in the percussion section. Dropping a cymbal in the still of a pianissimo section of a symphony could wreck the mood of the passage.
She says a drummer needs a musical ear, and perfect pitch is a useful asset.
"What's more, you have to be able to isolate the sound of your tympani's slight hum while the rest of the orchestra might be raging in a triumphant finale part. This is to change pitch during the middle of a selection" she added.
Hectic schedule
Her rehearsal schedule is rigorous and leaves little time for leisure.
"A lot of people get the idea that I take music for recreation or relaxation from my other courses. But some Sundays I rehearse from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 3:30 to 5 p.m., and then again from 9:30 to 11 p.m." she said.
"I can't sluff off toward the end of the semester to catch up on other neglected courses,
either" she continued, "because the music concert schedule is especially hectic at the end of the semester, due to final concerts, and this year the Symposium for American Contemporary Music takes a lot of extra time."
For example, Sally plays four concerts this week on four consecutive nights.
Glory only reward
Money is no object with this occupation. She doesn't expect any or get any. This year the only paid performance will be for the commencement ceremony where she will receive $25.
She was willing to perform at the Starlight Theater in Kansas City for Tab Hunter's production of "Here's Love" regardless of any monetary reward. Marching for the Kansas City Chief's football opener appealed to her also.
By LINDA BROWNING Kansan Staff Writer
Since she's been at KU, Sally has toured Kansas during semester break with the Wind Ensemble, the Brass Choir and the Percussion Ensemble. The band and orchestra spent three days in Kansas City right after spring vacation, and she participated in the Brass Choir's presentations in Parsons for the KU Alumni Association.
Sally Swetnam, Prairie Village freshman and occupational Therapy major doesn't carry around three pairs of tympani sticks, a pair of snare drum drum sticks and xylophone mallets to beat her patients over the head when they don't progress.
She simply loves music and can't resist the KU music organizations-she belongs to every one possible. She spends thirteen hours a week in rehearsal for orchestra, symphonic band, Brass Choir, percussion ensemble and the wind ensemble.
There is no doubt that Sally can wield the tympani sticks to a mean forte section of an overture; otherwise she would have been replaced by a hefty male long ago.
Ever since Sally knew what drums were, she wanted to play them. Her first endeavors with music and rhythm were in the fifth grade when she took tap dancing.
She quit her dancing to concentrate on the drums and percussion of all types. She was proficient enough in the sixth grade to warrant private instruction.
By high school Sally knew when and where in lengthy scores to play the chimes, cymbals, tambourine, tympani, snare drums or xylophone.
Won gold medals
Sally won several gold medals with her percussion trio in high school. She also played in three high school musicals—drum set in "Camelot" and "Funny Girl"
2 KANSAN May 12
1969
GRAVITT'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY Bring it in,
we'll do it for you 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
Deliciously Different
Casa De Taco
Mexican Food
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
SAVE-Car expenses driving to and from campus Time it takes to drive to campus You don't need a car to live in JAYHAWKER TOWERS with the convenient location and Bus service
NOW RENTING - SEMESTER OR TERM LEASES NEW RENT SCHEDULE OFFERS WIDE SELECTION
Two-Bedroom Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments
Elevators
- Air-conditioned
- Off-street parking
- Laundry Rooms - each building
- Bus Service
- Swimming Pool - Club Rooms
INSPECTION INVITED
- Many other extras
1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993
Campus briefs
Bright elected BSU president
Daryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., junior, has been elected president of the Black Students Union for the 1969-70 school year.
Bright, also a member of the Student Senate, stressed that he would work for black students from the "inside."
John Spearman and Jake Mumford, both Lawrence freshmen, were chosen vice-presidents.
Coed named Miss Lawrence-KU
Susan Wassenberg, Topeka junior, was crowned Miss Lawrence-KU in Murphy Hall Friday night.
Miss Wassenberg, 1968 Homecoming Queen, did a jazz interpretation dance for the talent portion of the contest.
Carolyn Weber, Topeka freshman, was first runnerup and Janell Symkel, Arkansas city sophomore, was second runnerup.
Corbin College chairman named
Marilyn Solsky, Prairie Village freshman, was elected chairman of the newly-formed Corbin College Council, Merry Sue Hancks, chairman of the Corbin College Advisory Board, said yesterday.
Kathy Powell, Topeka freshman, was elected corresponding secretary of the council which will replace the Corbin College Advisory Board next year.
P to P committee members chosen
Eleven students, including two foreign students and a former Peace Corp volunteer, were chosen recently as People-to-People committee members.
Those chosen were: Dave Hann, Shawnee junior, chairman; Clair Asklund, Topeka sophomore, vice-chairman; Will Schubert, Great Bend junior, treasurer; Clancy Maloney, Kansas City freshman, secretary; Karen Landers, Fort Lee, N.J. sophomore, publicity.
Bill Nsubuga, Uganda graduate student, discussion; Tommye Collier, Lawrence junior, hospitality; Debby Mitchell, Liberty, Mo., sophomore, special projects; George Thomas, India freshman, liaison; Roger McCoy, former peace corp volunteer, tutoring program; and Judy Hankammer, Leawood freshman, homestays.
Prof to present physics lecture
William Silvert, professor of physics at Case Western Reserve University, will speak on "Superconductivity at Boundaries and Surfaces" at 4:30 tomorrow in 238 Malott, said David B. Beard, professor of physics.
KU graduate to present poetry
Ken Irby, a poet from the University of California, will present a poetry reading 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Irby, a 1968 KU graduate, has had his poetry published in a variety of magazines, most notable of these, Poet.y, said Roy Gridley, associate professor of English.
He has two published books, "Movement/Sequences" and "Kansas-New Mexico".
Chemistry professor gets grant
The U.S. Public Health Service has granted Richard L. Schowen, associate professor of chemistry, $16,164 for continuing research on reaction mechanisms in solutions, announced the chemistry department today.
The grant, which also has been authorized for an additional three years, supports his work on the nucleophilic reactivity toward the silicon atom, particularly the primary kinetic isotope effect.
Also currently under study are molecular switches in the central nervous system. He is studying the similarities between a computer which has small switches indicating when it is off and on, and the brain. He believes it is possible certain small molecules in the brain act as switches to turn the brain on and off, depending on electrical impulses.
Mortar Board officers elected
Mortar Board, the senior women's honor organization, has elected its new officers, Grace Dexter, Topeka junior and the group's editor-historian elect, said.
president; Joyce Goering, Moundridge junior, vice-president; Lynne Birney, Miami, Fla., junior, secretary; Mary Lippitt, Wichita junior, treasurer; and Grace Dexter, Topeka junior, editor-historian.
The new officers are:
Patricia Scott, Topeka junior.
iowa physics prof to lecture today
Louis A. Frank, professor of physics at the University of Iowa, will speak at two graduate physics colloquia at 4:30 p.m.
and 7:30 p.m. today in 238
Malott, said David B. Beard, chairman of the department of physics.
Weather
You don't have to be on campus this summer to take advantage of the University's college curriculum. Through the University's Extramural Independent Study Center you can be miles away and still take course work for credit.
Independent Study Center offers updated curriculum
At 4:30 the subject will be "Trapped Radiation in the Geomagnetic Field," and at 7:30, "Techniques and Goals for Solving the Mysteries of Aurora and Magnetic Storms."
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts sunny today becoming partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Gradual warming trend through Tuesday. Light southeast winds today becoming southerly 10 to 20 mph tonight High today 70s. Low tonight near 50.
May 12 1969 KANSAN 3
KU students may take as many as 30 hours of college credit while attending the
All courses are developed under the supervision of campus academic departments which also approve college instructors at the Center. In most instances the courses are written by senior professors on campus and are instructed by members of the KU faculty.
The Center, under the direction of Alex Lazzarino, has moved from the traditional study of lessons by mail into the use of television, audio tapes and records, films, film strips and telephone lectures to supplement study guides and lesson mail exchanges, Mrs. Eklund said.
This forward-looking attitude, she states, has prompted a $60,600 grant under the Federal Education Professions Development Act for the development of courses for on-campus use of independent study, combined with videotaped lectures and student-instructor tutorials.
level courses, Mrs. Eklund continued.
University through the Center's program of independent study. Enrollment is anytime during the calendar year, said Mrs. Elaine Eklund, a counselor for the center.
She went on to say that students have a year from enrollment to complete a course.
Students may enroll weekdays from 8 a.m. to noon,1 to 5 p.m. and Saturdays from 8 a.m. to noon, at the Center in the University Extension Building, just north of the Union.
Official Bulletin
FOREIGN STUDENTS: If you did not receive the May International Campus Newsletter, come by 226 Strong for a copy. Turn in the requested information pages.
A Student Services program under the direction of Mrs. Vivian McCoy is available for academic advisement. Inquiries may also be made by phoning UN 4-4178, or by writing the Extramural Independent Study Center, University Extension, the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, Mrs. Eklund said.
S Y M P O S I U M O F
CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN
SIG. 2:30 p.m. Student
Conclusions Recital. Swarthout
Recital Hall.
Today
Once known as the Bureau of Correspondence Study, the program has undergone extensive updating and now offers more than 150 college
LECTURE. 4 p.m. Dr. Richard M. Eakin, University of California at Berkeley. "Evolution of the Photoreceptors." Dyche Auditorium. POETRY READING. 4 p.m. Ken Irby, University of California at Berkeley. Forum Room, Kansas Union.
GRAD U ATE PHYSICS
COLLOQUIUM. Louis A. Franks,
University of Iowa. "Trapped
in the geometrical the magnetic Field."
4:30 p.m., 238 Melott.
ALL MATERIALS FOR
CANDIDATES seeking June degrees
must be in the Graduate School
Office. 5 p.m.
PHYSICS FILM. 7:30 p.m.
"Seeking New Laws." 124 Malott.
S Y M P O S I U M OF CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MUSIC. 8 p.m. Chamber Choir and Wind Ensemble. Swarthout Recital Hall and University Theatre.
LECTURE. 8 p.m. Professor J. T. Shaw, "The Prose of Pushkin." Pine Room, Kansas Union.
Tomorrow
S Y M P O S I U M O F
CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN
MUSIC. 2:30 p.m. Lecture. Vincent
Persicchiett. "The Materials of the
American Composer." Swarthout
Ricall Hall.
GRADUATE PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM. 4:30 p.m. Dr. William Silvert, Case Western Reserve University. "Superconductivity at Boundaries and Surface." 238 Malott.
O
we will be closed all day tomorrow to reduce our entire stock...for our annual Summer Closing Sale.
SORRY,
25% OFF
33% OFF
50% OFF
Everything at least 10% OFF
SALE STARTS SAT.
C
COACH HOUSE
12th & Oread
A man lying on the floor works on a pipe under a sink. A woman stands behind him, watching.
1. Pipe broken?
No, I'm trying to find where I stashed some dough.
2. That's where you keep your money?
A man and woman looking at a plant.
Sometimes I put it in the flower pot.
A man is tickling a woman.
3. What's wrong with the bank?
I'd only take it right out again.
TWO MEN
4. But that's what you're doing now.
Not quite. The beauty of my system is that I usually can't find where I put it.
Kawaii
5. I think you'd be a lot better off putting some of your dough into Living Insurance from Equitable. It not only gives you and the family you're going to have a lifetime of protection, it also builds cash values you can use for emergencies, opportunities, or even retirement.
I wonder if it could be with the french fries?
For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment.
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KANSAN Comment
---
New politics
Not that it makes any difference to anyone in Kansas, but two of America's most prominent authors are running for two top political positions in New York City.
Norman Mailer is running for mayor, and Jimmy Breslin is running for president of the city council.
The two writers are running on a platform which advocates the secession of New York City from the State into the Union, as the 51st state.
Now, to people in Kansas, this sounds pretty anarchistic. But it is not. Not at all.
It is not all that wierd, because Mailer and Breslin also have said that if New York City "secedes" under their program, they would call for democratic rule by districts that have already been established in the city. Home rule, indeed. Queens, for instance—where Breslin grew up—would become a separate ruling body within the new state.
And this is not such a bad idea—since, in this writer's opinion, the city is choking itself to death anyway. Many districts that currently are under city government financial, societal and political "supervision" have been socially autonomous for many years. Now, say Breslin and Mailer, it is time to give these districts their own governing power, within their own state.
And so would the Bronx, and Manhattan, and Harlem and other areas in the city which for so many years have evolved as their own autonomous districts within the city. These districts, according to the Mailer-Breslin ticket, would govern themselves under the new state of "New York City."
The city is now strangling itself under an archaic tax structure-the more wealthy districts financially dictating educational tax policies of the less wealthy districts.
The city is tying its own hands by delegating the same political and societal rules to the Village as it does to Queens—a rather inadequate way of dealing with two entirely different financial, societal, and politically different sections of the city, Breslin and Mailer say.
As the two political candidates say, and admit, they do not have any clear-cut answers to the problems of the city in which they both have lived most of their lives. But what they think they have done, is attack some of the roots of these problems.
Breslin and Mailer believe they are questioning the basic social structures of the city—which both the candidates think need serious revision, if the city is to keep from killing itself.
The Mailer-Breslin approach to big city politics seems at first glance to be a new one-artists offering their ideas for social improvement to the city. Initially, their approach to urban problems seems simplistic and rather idealistic.
But it is the idealism of this minority which may eventually influence the policy of the majority.
State governments should carefully examine the effects that the Mailer-Breslin candidacy will have on the next city administration in New York.
For it seems that many state governments—especially Kansas'—are so involved with partisan politics that they do not take a humanistic approach to government. In their legislative bickering they apparently forget that they "represent" human beings.
Human beings who pay taxes and get hungry and need to feel that they really do have some kind of influence in their government.
Their advocating a return to individual local government instead of a city-wide central machine has drawn support for the Mailer-Breslin ticket from both liberals and conservatives.
It is this coalescence of both partisanships that makes the Breslin-Mailer approach so attractive to "future politics." It ignores prejudice, and political puffery for a more let's-get-down-to-business program of government.
Perhaps Kansas politicians should look more closely at these two candidates-perhaps the first two-who really care. (JTM)
Significance of Sirhan
By MIKE SHEARER
Back in 1948, President Harry Truman expressed the core of humanism which has backed the plight of the Jews in Israel. He said, "Do the Arabs have any votes in the American presidential elections?"
Indeed, politicians ever since have been vastly concerned with the Jewish vote and financial support. This, along with the comradeship of Jew to Jew, has tended to distort drastically the events leading up to the Israeli-Arab war, that six-day war which started in June of 1967 and continues today.
In a pamphlet published by the Organization of Arab Students at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Sirhan's very traumatic history in Palestine and his testimony concerning his studies into the Israeli-Arab dispute have been told. If nothing else is learned from the Robert Kennedy-Sirhan B. Sirhan tragedy, it should now be understood that the Arabs have not been entirely at fault and the Israelis have been far from blameless.
Sadly, the bit of wisdom which might have benefited the American populace concerning the Sirhan B. Sirhan trial never made the big newspapers. The fact that Sirhan feverishly blasphemed his victim Robert Kennedy along with other U.S. figures simply made better news copy than the testimony he offered to explain the history of the Zionist suppression of Palestinian Arabs.
Sirhan saw grotesque horrors as a child, horrors perpetrated against
his Palestinian Arab family. He saw streets full of bloody bodies after a Zionist terrorist attack on Arabs. He saw his own brother killed. His people were imprisoned by the Jews who had come to Israel to reclaim "their land."
So when Americans seemed incensed against the aggression of the Arab nations against Israel, Sirhan could be nothing but bitterly confused, having seen the bloody aggression of the Israelis some 20 years ago. When American Jews sent $370,000,000 in cash to their Jewish brothers in Israel, once again Sirhan did not understand. When American politicians began to step up military aid to Israel at the insistence of American Jews, Sirhan once again was perplexed.
Israel, technically, has been the home of both Arabs and Jews for at least the past century. Historically, there is reason for both groups to claim the territory. Historically, both sides have aggreed against the other. Neither has been magnanimous.
The sense that should come, for Americans, from the situation is that the Israeli-Arab war is not a simple matter of right against wrong. The energetic forces in this country calling for a step up of military aid to Israel should be ignored, even at the cost of votes, at least until Israel shows that it is interested in peace and not vengeance, and for peace, military aid will be unnecessary.
This American war fever backing Israel has brought about tensions, such as that tension which finally determined for Sirhan that beautiful, young Kennedy had to die.
Sirhan said, in the testimony not published widely, "Through my life in this country and back there I always felt that I had no country, that I had no place I could call really my own and I was sick and tired of being a foreigner."
He was sick and tired of being a foreigner because he saw the American allegiance, partly founded on greed for votes, to Israel, and he was tired of being a foreigner because of the Americanism which that doll of the 30's and 40's (and orgate of the 50's and 60's) Kat Smith has so adquately summed up:
"We have been infiltrated so heavily in the last 30 years by Communists, by adverse types of people from other countries. They have been able to get to a lot of young people . . . who are weak or who are not as happy as they should be. The rioting and dissension every place is all Communicistically inspired."
Not all "foreigners" are Communists, let Kate say what she will. All foreigners are people, with virtues and with weaknesses. Americans should view both Israelis and Arabs as the complex individuals they are, not as Communists, not as the good guys in a foreign war, not as the bad guys in that war.
Anyone interested in reading about Sirhan's past, his views on the Mid-East crisis and on American responses to the Israeli-Arab war will be interested in:
"The Lost Significance of Sirhan's Case" (pamphlet), Organization of Arab students, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Calif.
Kennedy and Sirhan ... Why?
(book), N.Y. New World Press.
($1.95).
FORD
Sam, who REALLY is the minority these days?
Readers' write
To the Editor:
The Sunday issue of the Kansas City Star carried on its front page a story about the Annual Meeting of the American Association of University Professors at Minneapolis on 2 and 3 May, which stated that the meeting had passed a resolution calling for the United States to withdraw from South Viet Nam. We attended the meeting, and sat through the entire session which considered the report of the appointed Committee on Resolutions, and we know that the assertion is incorrect. No such call for withdrawal was made by the meeting.
The story in the Star was the result of a reporter's confusion about a substitute motion offered in place of a resolution coming from the Committee on Resolutions. The fourth paragraph of that substitute motion, offered by 55 members, was: "The Fifty-fifth Annual Meeting of the AAUP wishes to support this week's statements by former Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford and by Republican Senator George Aiken urging rapid U.S. withdrawal from South
Vietnam." But the AAUP delegates and members did not accept that paragraph for inclusion in the resolution on "National Priorities" which it approved. What the Annual Meeting did approve in this regard was two sentences from the original recommendation of the Committee:
"The Fifty-fifth Annual Meeting of the American Association of University Professors asserts the absolute nesessity of examining and re-establishing priorities in the nation's social policy. The Annual Meeting recognized that the war in Viet Nam has
been a major factor in the dislocation of those priorities, and it therefore welcomes any effort to bring the war to an end.
As you will see, there is very little similarity between the proposed substitute and the sentences actually adopted by the Annual Meeting. Its primary concern was the financial stringencies now being suffered, and foreseen as due to increase, by institutions of education in America.
Clifford Griffin (Vice-president and President-elect of AAUP at KU) W. D. Paden (Member, the Executive Committee of AAUP at KU)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mall subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 68044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment policies students are welcome regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expresses no majority those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Edition Editors
Ron Yates
Pam Flatton
Steve Haynes, Robert Entriken Jr., Don
Westerhaus, Marla Babcock, Sandy Zahrdnik
KWSAN REVIEWS
Films: The Committee
BY BOB BUTLER
Kansan Arts and Reviews Editor
Placing "The Committee" under the heading "FILMS" is somewhat misleading. "The Committee" is actually more like a television show, both in form and production.
"The Committee" is a group of young satirists based in L.A. who have taken it upon themselves to expose America's foibles in comic revues. They have appeared most recently on the Smothers Brothers show where their unidentified faces have become common fixtures. Now they have brought their entire revue to the screen.
It's not a likely subject for cinematic treatment, but once the viewer gets used to the films technical problems (the show looks like it was taken off a TV screen) he can settle back for some of the most biting (and sometimes painful) satire to be found today. The six men and two women who comprise "The Committee" here present 19 shits, all of them hysterical.
This is satire at its best. A special standout routine is "Black Like Me" in which a white reporter turns himself black for an "inside" story and asks a Negro friend to coach him on acting black. Through the laughter you realize that as the two assume the part of the opposite race some of our deep-seated racial misunderstandings are brought painfully to the surface. You'll laugh, but more than one person will say "Ouch!"
Aside from the excellent material, the best thing about "The Committee" is the troupe itself. These people are fantastic actors. They can slip in and out of character with ease and their timing, perhaps the greatest single factor in comedy, is perfect.
"The Committee" will upset some people, probably those who wrote nasty letters to CBS knocking the Smothers Brothers. The rest of us pinkos can sit back and have a great time.
Records: Hits
By WILL HARDESTY
The Sons of Champlin are one of the oldest bunches of San Francisco musicians still around. They now live together, along with their women, children, pets, cars, and dreams in the San Geronimo Valley near San Francisco. There they are free to do their own thing in a way which is only possible in seclusion. They do arts and crafts and meditate and appreciate nature. They say they have really gotten themselves together and are into a giant, peaceful oneness thing.
And just about the time they had thoroughly sorted themselves out of the chaos of the modern commercial world, that world decided it needed them.
So, an agent of Capitol Records convinced them to come into the City for negotiations. They came, and it is reported, promptly blew the minds of the Capitol lawyers by rejecting the contract because they couldn't understand it. After the contract was re-written into English from legalese, The Sons cut their two-record album which is now out. It is called "Loosen Up Naturally" (SWBB-200, stereo).
This is a psychadelifan's album—good for both the mind and body. The lyrics are quite representative of The Sons' philosophy, advocating, generally, a retreat from the unreality of the "real world," living naturally, i.e., peacefully and responsively to and with the natural impluses of being a human person, with emphasis on developing the mind through natural and artificial highs. For your body, they provide a nice collection of sounds. There are six of them and they play "big-band" blues-rock. Again, their music is a reflection of natural life—basically solid with a strong beat, punctuated with frequent improvisations and occasional freakouts.
"Jools & Brian" by Julie Driscoll with Brian Auger & The Trinity on CAPITOL (DT-136, stereo) is one of their best albums. It's not hard to see why Jools was picked as Top Girl Singer of the Year or The Trinity called Best New Group of the Year in their native England. The music is jazzy, but not so jazzy it loses a solid melodic line. Julie's voice is excellent, and she uses it well. The Trinity works well together. The whole performance seems to fit together just right to produce a fine album.
The group will soon release a two-record set called "Streetnoise" on ATCO (SD2-701, stereo). The advance one-half of it has some good material on it, but . . . The detriment comes from some singing in which Julie and Auger are just yelling some musical spots which are just noise. The first half of the album doesn't sound as good as "Jools & Brian." The whole album could be pretty good, but the other half of the album will have to make it such.
Linda Ronstadt has gone solo and has her own album out—"Hand Sown ... Home Grown" on CAPITOL (ST-208 stereo).
Her album is very C-W and very good. The back-up is great and she does stuff by Dylan, Randy Newman and John D. Loudermilk. There's an old standard—"Break My Mind"—an old hit—"Silver Threads and Golden Needles"—a might-be-soon classic—"I'll Be Your Baby Tonight"—and some new songs—for example, "We Need a Lot More of Jesus (And a Lot Less Rock and Roll)."
While the Stone Poneys were not a bad group, Linda seemed to be so much stronger than they that they acted like a weight to hold her back and bring her down. Alone she is tremendous.
"El Camino Real" by Lee Dresser on AMOS (AAS-7003, stereo) is a very good album—but not for rock fans. Dresser has a great voice and this album, recorded live, shows his forte—night club entertaining. He has the right amount of drive to captivate a slightly-high audience. His music is modern, but re-arranged enough to be popular with the over-30, under-40 crowd.
May 12 1969 KANSAN 5
Books:
THE PENGUIN BOOK OF ITALIAN SHORT STORIES, edited by Guido Waldman (Penguin, $1.45)—An anthology ranging from the middle ages to the present. Most Italian literature is not generally known to the university student, but such familiar names as Boccaccio, d'Annunzio, Pirandello and Moravia are represented, among many others.
A CITIZEN'S DISSENT, by Mark Lane (Crest, 95 cents)—A continuation of the dialogue that began only a few days after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy almost six years ago. Perhaps the most vigorous of the critics of the Warren Report has been Mark Lane, whose story has been told before and who now replies to those who replied to him. We may expect replies from those whom he has blasted in this book. And as long as conspiracy theories exist in the wrold, and as long as the data surrounding the assassination are suppressed, the Mark Lanes will thrive.
EUROPEAN FASCISM, edited by S. J. Woolf (Vintage, $2.45)—A series of essays on a political phenomenon that by no means perished when war ended in Europe in 1945. A number of learned gentlemen discuss fascism in its historical context and its place in contemporary Europe. Bibliographies and chronological tables are included. It is important to note that the discussion is not necessarily concentrated on those nations of Europe where fascism was most prominent in World War II but that other nations are considered as well.
CRITICS OF SOCIETY: RADICAL THOUGHT IN NORTH AMERICA, by T. B. Bottomore (Vintage, $1.45)In this time of campus ferment almost any book about radicalism in American history will find readers, especially as some historians reinterpret the past in radical terms. Bottomore seeks to find relationships between present movements and those of the past. It is a comparatively slight essay but a thoughtful one.
DEATH IN LIFE: SURVIVORS OF HIROSHIMA, by Robert Jay Lifton (Vintage, $2.95)—A book of considerable significance, Lifton having interviewed 75 persons affected by the atomic bomb explosion of August 1945 and then interpreting and analyzing the findings. The approach is not ideological but is psychological and scientific. Such works, however, inevitably have ideological impact comparable to that occasioned by John Hersey's brilliant "Hiroshima" of more than 20 years ago.
THE LEVITTOWNERS, by Herbert J. Gans (Vintage, $2.95)—A sociological examination of suburban life, far more detailed and scholarly than the pop works of a dozen years ago by Packard and others. It also is different from some examinations in that Gans does not suggest that the whole of suburban life is barren; he finds much meritorious and socially-culturally constructive in our new way of living.
THE AMERICAN NOVEL SINCE WORLD WAR II, edited by Marcus Klein (Premier, $1.25)—This is a paperback original that has writings of great interest and importance. The editor has assembled essays by some authoritative people: Philip Rahv on naturalism; John Aldridge on the search for values; Saul Bellow on recent types of fiction; Lawrence Lipton and Paul Goodman on underground writings; Iving Howe on mass society; Ihab Hassan on the novel of outrage; Burton Feldman on black humor; Leslie Fiedler on "the higher sentimentality," and John Barth on the "literature of exhaustion."
THE BALLOON MAN, by Charlotte Armstrong (Crest, 75 cents); HUNTER'S GREEN, by Phyllis A. Whitney (Crest, 75 cents)—Though the genres are different these two may be treated together, for in different ways both writers deal with damsels in distress. Charlotte Armstrong writes novels of horror, set in contemporary settings, involved and exciting. Such is "The Balloon Man." Phyllis Whitney is one of the best with treatments of the Gothic tale. Old mansions, an atmosphere of terror, mysterious heroes (can she really trust her husband?). Both worth a few hours.
CONFESSIONS OF A DISLOYAL EUROPEAN, by Jan Myrdal (Vintage, $1.65)—Autobiographical vignettes by a writer concerned with man and his relation to other men and to life. Revolution and rebellion are the themes. Myrdal is a Swede who knows both English and Swedish, and has traveled in and written books about Asia, radio plays, and a book called "Report from a Chinese Village" that brought hisim special attention.
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Kansan Arts Calendar
Todav
2:30 p.m.-Symposium of Contemporary American Music-Student Compositions Recital-Swarthout Recital Hall 4 p.m.-Poetry Reading-Ken Irby, U. of California at Berkeley-Forum Room, Union 8 p.m.-Symposium of Cont. Am. Music-Chamber Choir and Wind Ensemble-Swarthout Recital Hall and University Theatre
8 p.m.-Lecture-Prof. J. T.
Shaw—'The Prose of
Pushkin''-Pine Room, Union
Tuesday
2:30 p.m.-Symposium of Cont. Am. Music-Lecture, Vincent Persichetti-"The Materials of the American Composer"-Swarthout Recital Hall
7:30 p.m.-Latin American Film Series—"No Exit"-Dyche Auditorium
8 p.m.-Symposium of Cont. Am. Music-University Symphony-University Theatre
Wednesday
7 & 9 p.m.—Classical Films“Don Juan” and “Adventures of Don Juan”—Dyche Auditorium
8 p.m. — Percussion Ensemble—Swarthout Recital Hall
Granada
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74 43 45
En route to a rout
Photo by Rick Pendergrass
Members of the KU rubgy team (dark jerseys) fight for the ball against the University of Missouri KU smashed MU 20-0 to wind up the spring season with a 4-1 mark and a first place league finish.
Rugby club anxious
20-0 victory ends season as team looks to next year
With a 20-0 smashing over the University of Missouri Saturday afternoon, the KU Rugby team finished a highly successful spring season, and with nothing left between now and the '69 fall campaign but a long hot summer, team members have begun to sit back and start thinking of next year—and what a year it might be.
For the most part next season's returning squad will be made up of the same talent that put together this year's speedy
scoring machine which carried Kansans to a 4-1 record over the spring—the only loss a 12-9 heartbreaker at the hands of MU earlier in the season.
KANSAN Sports
Saturday the KU blue tallied five tri's, one conversion, and one field goal to avenge in a big way their earlier loss to the Tigers.
Scoring tri's-equivalent to a touchdown in football-were Ralph Johnson, Brent Bagget, Gary Patzkowsky, and Jim Thurmord. Converting once was Bob Marquis, and veteran Pat Wrap booted the field goal.
A total of 11 contests have been slated for the '69-'70 fall and spring seasons. Team captain Gary Patzkowsky, Kiowa junior, along with other Rugby club members have scheduled matches for next fall with St. Louis University, Notre Dame, University of Missouri, and the Kansas City Blues Rugby Club. Seven games have already been slated for next year's spring
Besides lengthening the team's winning streak to three games, the victory gave KU first place in the Heart of America league. Next year the squad hopes to get out of the five-team conference and move onto bigger and better things.
season including matches with the University of Iowa, Iowa State University, and possibly University of Colorado.
6 KANSAN May 12
1969
Patzkowsky explained that the eleven dates are a good start, but are not the entire schedule. He said there are still several open dates which can be filled with matches between KU and other Midwestern teams.
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"The next step is to go to the athletic department and ask for finances. The fencing, volleyball, and soccer teams are all financed by the Physical Education department and the Rugby team involves more people than any of those organizations," Patzkowsky added.
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He also said that there are tournaments such as the nationalists-held this year in Chicago-which the KU squad would be able to compete in if they had some means of financing their expenses other than digging into the pockets of the team members.
KU, which had a combined record of 11-2 from this year's overall mark and last spring's campaign, has a respectable national ranking and a solid young team with the coordinated experience it takes to become a Midwestern power.
Big 8 Standings
So the team looks to next year with their hopes high and their fingers corses. A little financial flavoring just might be the thing the Ruby players need to put together one of those years to remember.
Team Hitting
H AVG.
Kansas State 95 287
Oklahoma State 127 271
Colorado 103 249
Oklahoma 103 228
Missouri 99 228
Kansas 84 226
Iowa State 90 225
Nebraska 60 211
League-leading Oklahoma State came to town for a three game series with KU, who is fighting for their winingest season in years, and exploded for 23 runs to sweep the series, and send the Jayhawks conference record whirling down to 5-11.
Team Position PO E AVEG.
Nebraska 203 13 965.
Okahoma 351 16 962.
Okahanna State 362 19 962.
Missouri 339 19 954.
Iowa State 302 26 947.
Kansas State 240 26 927.
Kansas 273 31 925.
Colorado 311 36 923.
Team Fielding
Jayhawks drop three to first place OSU
Pitching
FIELDING W L ERA
Ron Hall, Okla. 2 1 1.17
Bill Dake, Okla. St. 3 0 1.46
Bill Maxwell, Okla. St. 5 0 1.46
Ailur, Nebury. 2 1 1.73
Dick Brown, Okla. 3 0 1.73
Dick Silesch, Okla. 3 0 1.73
Dick Slesch, Kans. 2 2 2.30
Bob Lingle, Iowa St. 1 3 2.35
Bob Sheetz, Moo. 3 1 2.43
Bob Weiss, Iowa St. 1 3 2.43
Dehnli, Ranzau, Okla. 4 0 2.56
Dave Robisch, Kans. 2 2 2.93
The Cowboys tripped up KU on both ends of a twinbill Friday, 7-2 and 8-3, then on Saturday rallied for four runs in the seventh to cap off the three game sweep with a 8-3 win.
KU bounced back in the bottom of the third with two runs as Tommy Anderson doubled and scored on Kieth Lieppman's home run. From then on the 'Hawk bats were held scoreless as OSU picked up another tally for the 7-2 victory.
The first game of the triomatched KU's Roger Jackson against the Cowboy's Bob Richardson. All the action for both teams came in the third frame when Oklahoma State opened the inning with a triple by Steve Houck. He was singled home by Roger Manaugh then Bob Tate and Fred Dumler hit back-to-back homers to give the Cowpokes a 6-0 lead.
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Through the first six innings of the second game the contest shaped up to be a pitchers dual between Bill Dobbs of OSU and Dave Robisch. Scorless until the seventh both teams picked up two runs in that inning, but in the eighth the Cowboys erupted for six runs on five hits to walk away two wins richer.
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The Jayhawks got their only other run on a 380-foot blast off the bat of Paul Womble as KU dropped the contest, 8-3.
seventh OSU staged a rally that saw the Cowboys get seven runs for the 8-3 win.
KU got two of their runs in the first on a two-run shot by Kieth Lieppman. Also scoring on four-bagger was second baseman Lynn Snelgrove who had opened the game with a single.
In Saturday's single game KU tried to revenge Friday's double loss as they battled the Cowboys through six innings, and only one run back going into the
As KU was down 3-2 going into the seventh, OSU came up with five singles—the biggest blow Joe Sorenson's bases-loaded safety—to score seven runs before reliever Corky Ullom bailed starter Richard Slicker out of the inning.
With the sweep of the series OSU retained their slender hold on first place in the hot Big Eight baseball race. Their record now stands at 15-3 in conference play, and 18-7 overall. KU's loop mark rests at 5-11, and is 10-13 for the year.
The other score came on a solo balst by Biff Temple in the last of the seventh.
...
Game Results
OSU ... 021 310 00-7 10 0
KU ... 020 000 20-8 2 8
Bob Richardson and Fred Dumier;
Rock Jackson, Clark Ullom (6) and
Coole Stinson, HR-Bob Tate, OSU;
Fred Dumier, OSU; Kieth Lippmann,
KU.
* * * *
OSU... 000 000 26-8 10 0
KU... 000 000 21-3 7 1
Bull Dobbs, Mike Camp (7), and
Fed Dumier, Dave Robisch, Randy
Stroup M., David Stimson, Hugh
Paul Womble, KU; Lynn Sneltgrove,
KU.
★★★★
OSU ... 000 111 401-18 3 12
KU ... 200 100 100-3 5 1
Ku Maxwell, Richard Schmidt (8),
and Fred Friesen. HR-II Struggle,
Clark Ullom (7), Randy Struggle,
and Dan Harkins. HR-Kieth Lieppman,
KU; Biff Temple, KU.
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Jerry West interrogated by New York news writers
NEW YORK (UPI) — Jerry West never flinched.
He could've squirmed, begged off or simply said he'd rather not answer but he never did.
The flat-nosed, but still good-looking 30-year-old Los Angeles Lakers' superstar had made a trip here to accept a new emerald green automobile awarded him by Sport Magazine as the outstanding performer in the NBA playoffs and he knew there'd be questions, but this was nearly as rough as going up against the Boston Celtics again.
West was handed the keys to the car Thursday and then ushered inside a restaurant where he sat down in one of the red upholstered booths and in no time at all found himself surrounded by a horde of interrogators.
Questions begin
He tried the low key, logical approach at first, reminding that actions speak more eloquently than words.
"Too much importance these days is placed on athletes' comments," he said. "Not enough on their performance."
That wasn't what anybody had come to hear though.
What about some of the comments made by the Celtics, some of whom said they had never seen anyone play a better game of basketball than Jerry West did in Monday's finale, which the Lakers lost, 108-106. How did such talk make him feel?
"A player knows when he has played well," West said, without sounding prigish about it.
Yes, persisted a persister, but how did he REALLY feel about being the recipient of such praise.
"I realize," West said
haltingly, "respect from other players doesn't come easily."
Did it strike him somewhat funny being designated MVP even though he was on the losing side?
"It seems almost insignificant," West replied. "I'll probably be recognized more for this than for anything else in my career. I've had better playoffs though. This wasn't my best."
What about Chamberlain
So much for the sparring. Now everybody was primed for the haymaker. They wanted to know what Jerry West thought about Wilt Chamberlain. More than that, they wanted to know what he thought about Chamberlain being quoted as saying the Lakers lacked "direction" in the final moments of Monday's contest with the Celtics, and about Chamberlain's statement that the Lakers worked the ball to "one man" too much.
That's where Jerry West didn't flinch. He took a moment before answering but didn't duck the issue.
"I don't think Wilt made himself available to get the ball all the time," West said evenly. "He had five fouls on him. I can't go along with what he says there."
Now, West was asked what he thought about those who keep referring to Chamberlain as a loser or a quitter.
"A lotta people wanna call him that, but that's unfair," said West. "He contributed as much as any player to our team, maybe more. People don't realize we won more games with Wilt Chamberlain than we did without him."
It was suggested to West he was beginning to sound like Chamberlain's defender.
Missouri falls to netters to end dual meet season
Heading into the Big Eight Conference tennis championships May 16 and 17 at Iowa State University, the KU tennis squad put the lid on their dual meet competition Saturday by defeating Missouri 6-1 at Columbia.
Chamberlain twisted his knee going up for a rebound Monday night and had to sit out the last five minutes, and now West was beiging asked whether he thought Wilt's return to the floor possibly would've helped the Lakers.
The Jayhawks closed out the dual meet season with a 13-8-2 overall record and a 3-3 conference mark.
"The meet went as I expected," said Jim Lurns, KU tennis coach. "We played pretty good. Their first man was the only one to beat us, and he has only lost to two or three conference players."
Burns said that Oklahoma should win the conference title easily, with KU, Kansas State and Oklahoma State battling for second place. He said the KU doubles teams should place high and that two or three men in the singles competition should do well.
"I'm not trying to defend him," he said. "I'm only trying to tell you what is so."
"Sid Kanter has played real well in the number four spot this season," Burns said, "so I expect him to vie for the conference title. Also Dudley Bush or Jim Ballinger have done well at the number five spot, so whichever one makes the trip has a good chance.
"Our number two doubles team has a very good chance to win, probably the best," he added. "That will be Bill DeBaun and Ballinger or Bush. The number one doubles team of Kanter and Dan Oram should place high, but they will have to
Invariably the conversation centered around Chamberlain, not because West had anything to do with it, but he still answered all the questions as best he could.
May 12
1969 KANSAN 7
face OU's undefeated number one doubles team."
Burns said that in the past, the dual meets played during the season between conference teams have counted towards the conference meet. But this year, the championship tournament will decide the final conference standings and no points will be added for dual meet victories.
"I think that loss bothered him more than any loss he has had to accept." West said.
we will be closed all day tomorrow to reduce our entire stock...for our annual Summer Closing Sale.
"Hell, I've lost as muchas he's lost. Elgin Baylor has lost as much also. But when you get paid as much as he's paid I guess people figure you're never supposed to lose. People think he's superhuman. He's not superhuman."
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West surprised some of his listeners with his answer to the question of which player he would choose over all others right now
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"I've watched him play and he can do things no other center can do."
C
Even though Alcindor has never played a single game in the NBA?
"That's right," West said.
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And who would he pick for one game?
12th & Oread
"Bill Russell," replied West. "I think Wilt Chamberlain is a better basketball player than Russell, but for one game, I'd pick Russell."
Whv?
"You'd have to be an athlete to know why," West said.
Beman hits 20-foot putt to take $20,000 in Texas
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) — Deane Beman, getting into a sudden death playoff when Jack McGowan missed an 18-inch putt on the 18th green, dropped a 20-foot putt on the first playoff hole Sunday to win the $100,000 Texas Open—his first PGA tour title.
Beman, a former national amateur winner, fired a course record-tying six-under-par 65 on the second two rounds Sunday, but he still appeared to be a shot short of victory.
McGowan, winless in $4\frac{1}{2}$ years on the tournament trail, needed only a par on the final hole to climax two fine final rounds with a victory. He put his approach shot on the 18th hole to the right of the green, but chipped to within 18 inches of the cup.
The pressure was too much.
however, and the poker-faced McGowan missed the hole to the left.
McGowan made his par on the par-4 15th, the first hole in the sudden death affair, but Beman calmly rammed his putt home to grab the $20,000 first prize.
They had finished the regulation 72 holes at 10-under-par 274, a full three strokes in front of Tommy Aaron, Dave Hill and late-charging Lee Trevino.
The field was forced to play two rounds Sunday because of a rainout in Thursday's opening round, and Beman made the most of it.
He shot a one-under-par 70 during the morning and then rushed back with a 65 in the afternoon that tied the course record set five years ago by former host pro Miller Barber.
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The 3rd edition of the JAYHAWKER will be distributed May 23 and 24 in Strong Rotunda. HOWEVER, IT WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE TO DISTRIBUTE THE 4TH EDITION BEFORE VACATION. If you purchased a yearbook and will not be in Summer School and do not live in Lawrence, you may have the 4th edition mailed to you.
It is suggested that those students returning to KU next fall pick up their 4th issue anytime during enrollment at the Jayhawker Office (115 Union Bldg.). For students who will be in Lawrence sometime this summer, the 4th issue will be available after June 30 in the News Bureau (32 Strong).
YOU WILL NEED YOUR ORANGE IBM RECEIPT CARD to pick up your 3rd issue. DO NOT request to have your 4th issue mailed until you have picked up your 3rd issue. You may sign to have your 4th issue mailed when you pick up your 3rd issue.
Bring the following information to Strong Rotunda on May 23 or 24,or mail it to the Jayhawker Yearbook:
a. Name and address where issue is to be sent (No issue will be sent without ZIP CODE)
b. Orange Jayhawker Receipt Card
Those who want the 3rd AND 4th issues mailed should send the Jayhawker Office the above information on a $3" x $5" card and $1.00. If you would like the entire book mailed, send your name, student number, address, and $1.75.
Name, Student Number
Mailing Address
City, State
Zip Code (Required)
'Peace' demonstration
Demonstrators disrupt Review
SDS and war memorial demonstrators defied the administration and succeeded in cancelling the ROTC review Friday.
Asked not to enter the Memorial Stadium field, the crowd of about 200 students leaped over the stadium fences yelling "Join us. Join us."
At noon, a crowd of approximately 100 students met at the Memorial Campanile to march to the stadium where they intended to read the names of all of the 34,000 American soldiers killed in Vietnam.
behind locked gates who told the crowd the stadium would not be opened until 3 p.m.
The demonstrators milled around the fences and then decided to return to Strong Hall. At Strong they sat on the lawn and front steps and proceeded to name the war dead.
At 2:30 p.m. SDS members met at Strong as had been planned at the previous nights meeting. After a brief rally the students walked through the rotunda of Strong and proceeded to the stadium en masse.
Marching pass the Campanile the demonstrators sung the "Battle Hymn of the Republic"
and "America." As they approached the locked stadium gates, they began to sing "We Shall Overcome."
Denied admittance at the south gate of the stadium, the crowd turned its attention to the west gate. Arriving at the ramp the restless crowd was pacified by the reading of more war dead, while it waited for the 3 p.m. opening of the gates.
Suddenly the crowd surged up the ramp until it was pressing against the gate on the third level. Impatient SDS members at the front succeeded in breaking the gate and the crowd rushed into the stands with spectators
(Continued to page 20)
I
Memorial Stadium press conference
Photo by Joe Bullard
A sullen Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe discusses with the press and students his "near crisis." The conference was held in the Memorial Stadium stands after the demonstrators had forced the cancellation of the Chancellor's review by refusing to leave the field.
Governor's reaction
By RICK PENDERGRASS
Kansan Staff Writer
W. Clark Wescoe, Chancellor of the University of Kansas, yesterday issued a statement containing his official stand on the disruption of the Chancellor's Review of the University ROTC cadets Friday, May 9.
Wescoe said he prepared the statement after receiving more than 2,000 letters, signatures on petitions and personal calls from people concerned about Friday's demonstration.
In his statement, Wescoe stresses the independence of the University Disciplinary Board (UDB) from other University bodies.
Early yesterday morning, Robert Docking, Governor of Kansas, was asked by the Kansan to clarify rumors that the state would intervene if further demonstrations took place on the KU campus.
He also stressed the point that he intends the University to continue to function peacefully at all costs.
"Let me first say that the state cannot and will not take any action until our intervention is specifically requested by the Chancellor." Docking explained.
8 KANSAN May 12 1969
Asked whether he had been consulted about what action to take if the Chancellor's Review were disrupted, he said, "I can only say, and I stress this, it was not on my recommendation that the review was cancelled Friday.
"I think the SDS has pushed things as far as they could push and still be tolerated. Last Friday, they went just beyond the point of toleration.
"As far as a confrontation of any kind is concerned, assuming the Chancellor does request assistance from the state, I will say that contrary to rumors, the University will not be closed.
"If you remember my stand on the hospital strike, you can see what I mean by this. The University is an essential state institution that must continue to function at all costs, and I will do all in my power to see it."
"Again, at the request of the Chancellor, there are adequate forces at hand to cope with any situation that may arise, and I wouldn't hesitate to use them in order to assure peaceful functioning of the University," Docking said.
Wescoe was asked what action he would take in the event of further disruptions, and whether state intervention would be necessary in the event of violent demonstrations. He said, "The last thing I want to do is use force. As far as state intervention is concerned, that
will only come on my request. "I am not the type of man to make threats," he explained, "I am responsible for this campus, and I intend for it to continue to
(Continued to page 20)
[Image of two silhouetted figures walking near a large, wavy metal gate]
Photo by Halina Pawl
First obstacle overpowered
Spectators leave the stadium via the broken gate on the third level of the west ramp. Earlier ROTC and Vietnam protesters had stormed the gate feying a guard's warning that the stadium would not be opened until later. After breaking the gate the demonstrators streamed into the stands and then onto the field.
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Wescoe's stand
Over the past several days I have been addressed by more than two thousand members of the University community, in person, by individual letter, and by petition, in reference to their concern that the orderly life of the University not be disrupted. I believe that those who addressed me, and all others, are entitled to a response.
As Chancellor of the University, I am charged with the responsibility for its operation, internal administration, and discipline, as well as for the safety of all who are a part of it. Like former Chancellors, I have relied upon our broad-based faculty-student governance to carry out those responsibilities. The University, through its orderly operation and its consequent educational accomplishments, has earned the confidence of its constituency and the state. That confidence was most recently reaffirmed by the Board of Regents when the Board approved a system of University governance composed of a Faculty Senate, a Student Senate and a University Senate.
Last week the Executive Committee of the University Senate established guidelines for the conduct of a regularly scheduled University event and asked my approval of them, which approval was promptly given. As a part of those guidelines, the Executive Committee stated that charges for presentation to the University Disciplinary Board would be preferred against those who violated the guidelines.
Those guidelines were violated by a number of persons and that University event was disrupted to the point that cancellation was necessary. It was my responsibility to order that cancellation, and I ordered it in the best interests of the University as I saw them.
Now the University is faced with a test as to whether or not it can govern itself through its established procedures and retain, thereby, the confidence of those who support and respect it.
The University disciplinary system is not a centralized authority imposed by edict of the Chancellor. Rather it is decentralized, organized under the Code of the University. Its concept of fairness is entirely consonant with the concept of due process as defined by the courts. It has worked well because it has been fair, not arbitrary or capricious, and because it has had the support of faculty, students and administrators alike. It must continue to work well.
It is essential that the University Disciplinary Board function peaceably and without disruption. The University, if it is to continue to be viable, cannot allow liberty to be replaced by license, orderly procedures to be replaced by chaos.
As Chancellor I am both responsible and accountable. I intend to assure that this campus be maintained as a place where students and faculty can go unmolested in the pursuit of their scholarly activities and in the fulfillment of their responsibilities under the Senate Code. I assure the University community that I will fulfill my obligations to the fullest extent, in accord with the regulations of the University and the laws which apply to all of us.
In carrying out my obligations to you and to the state in whatever manner necessary, I appeal to all of you for your continuing support of our system of University governance. I ask your support to assure that the University will not be a place where threats of force or counter-force, intimidation or terrorism will prevail.
W. Clarke Wescoe Chancellor
SenEx will act
The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) yesterday issued a statement which said it plans to take action against those who participated in Friday's demonstration action against the Chancellor's ROTC Review in Memorial Stadium.
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., senior, and member of SenEx, described the statement as the committee's guidelines for its position on dissent. He said the University intends to show that the guidelines presented prior to the review were meaningful and that the University is able to, and will handle this situation.
George said that everyone involved in the demonstration, no matter what his motives, is responsible, and must face the consequences of his civil disobedience.
The text of the statement follows:
The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) believes it important to make the following statement:
When grave issues confront the University and demand firm but prompt responses, when the future of this institution depends upon decisions made almost in the hour, it is right and necessary that the basis and method of those responses and decisions be made clear by those who
May 12
1969 KANSAN 9
The University has unique values, essential to society. These values derive from the fundamental rights of all its members responsibly to learn and to teach without fear of coercion or reprisals, and this collective right is that of the University. To impair, abridge or deny that collective right is to cripple if not destroy the University. And society has no replacement for the University.
The rights of peaceful dissent by individual memburs and of peaceable assembly by groups are absolutely essential cornerstones to the structure of freedom in the University. We come together to learn and to teach with the explicit understanding that we must respect and protect these rights of all our members.
formulate them. The University Senate Executive Committee accepts the responsibility.
An institution may be conceived where the exercise of a delimited set of privileges is insured for a prescribed group of persons by the presence of a mobilized force. This is order without liberty; this is negation of our basic principles and a guarantee of violence; and this is not a University. An institution—rather a condition—may be conceived where no community discipline exists at all, where each person interprets for himself the nature and limits of his own rights and those of his fellows. This is license without order; this manifold oppression; and this is not a University.
The University Senate Executive Committee believes neither of these alternatives is acceptable. The University itself must recognize and sustain, and its members mutually respect, the rights of all individuals and groups, whether of the majority
(Continued to page 20)
لقاء الترجمة من الجامعة لسنة 1980
Photo by Joe Bullard
Wescoe walks on
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe strides by demonstrators while three accompanying military officials take note of the protesters who were to later cause the cancellation of the Chancellor's Review last Friday.
The demonstrators, protesting the Vietnam war and ROTC on campus, had refused to leave the field after several announcements. As ROTC cadets entered the field the demonstrators joined hands and again refused to leave thus causing the cancellation.
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Scared students,code vio
(Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles on inadequate student housing in Lawrence.)
By JOE BULLARD
Kansan Staff Writer
The area between the 1100 and the 1300 blocks of Tennessee and Ohio Streets are described by city and state building inspectors as containing especially bad housing. KU students living there realize that minimal housing codes are being violated. The students, however, are afraid to file complaints with city and University officials for fear of reprisals by landlords in the form of poor service, higher rents and even eviction.
Robert Haggart, Douglas County building inspector for the State Food and Lodging Board, said at least two landlords who own state licensed property are violating state regulations for housing.
Haggart said the two landlords are Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics, and Glen M. McGonigle, assistant instructor of physics. Haggart said he had inspected and licensed buildings owned by Ling and McGonigle, but that a second inspection had revealed violations of state housing codes.
Ling said he was unwilling to comment on his own operations. McGonigle said he worked with the inspectors and tried to keep his buildings in good repair.
One student, who lives in the area, but didn't want his name used or any pictures taken, said his rent went from $60 a month to about $125 a month after he had paid for half of the materials and had done all of the work on fixing his apartment.
Students said they were unwilling to file written complaints but they were willing to verbalize their problems with the understanding that neither their names nor their addresses would be used.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said he thought that many of the persons who verbalize their complaints and will not sign a written complaint really do not have a valid reason for complaining.
One girl said, "We don't have enough hot water and we have bugs in our apartment. We rented a furnished apartment and we pay $125 a month but we don't have any desks or a dresser."
The students thought otherwise.
Another student said, "When we moved into the house it was dirty. There was trash all over the back porch and we asked the landlord to move it. He removed some of the trash but not all. The ceiling is cracked and broken. The floor in our shower is rusted. The window in the bathroom fell out and it took three weeks for us to get the landlord to fix it. I am afraid to go into the basement because it's in such a mess."
A foreign student said, "The house is old and the rent is too high for this building. If the conditions were good we wouldn't care. We talked to the landlord but he didn't listen to us so we don't try to get anything fixed anymore."
This reporter and two members of the ASC Off-Campus Housing Committee, Halina Pawl, Topeka junior, and Frank Hummer, Topeka senior, accompanied
10
Photo by Halina Pawl
A student's window to the world - the only one
Robert Haggart, building inspector the State Food and Lodging Board, inspected and licensed a rooming house at 1316 Ohio St. owned by Glen M. McGonigle, assistant
10 KANSAN May 12 1969
instructor of physics. Haggart inspected the building a second time and found violations which included this apartment where the window was the only direct exit to the outside. Haggart said the window would be almost impossible to get out of in case of fire.
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Five foot entrance to the basement apartments at 1316 Ohio St.
This is the entrance to the basement apartments at 1316 Ohio St., a rooming house owned by Glen M. McGonigle, assistant instructor of physics. The Douglas County building inspector for the State Food and Lodging Board found violations of state housing regulations in this house which included: broken windows, an inescapable fire exit in an apartment and a rug on a flight of stairs which was loose.
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iolators plague housing
Photo by Halina Pawl
Haggart on a tour of apartments and rooming houses on Ohio street between the 1100 block and the 1300 block. Four buildings were visited, two owned by Ling and two owned by McGonigle.
Haggart said the purpose of the trip was to inspect a building at 1224 Ohio St. which Ling had purchased last August and had failed to report the sale to the state. Haggart said it was illegal to purchase a licensed building and not report the sale to the State Food and Lodging Board.
Haggart said he found six violations of state requirements at 1224 Ohio St. Haggart said the violations included broken windows, screens blocking the fire escape and only one fire extinguisher. Haggart said state regulations required that a fire extinguisher be placed on each floor of a rental building.
At 1309 Ohio St., a rooming house owned by Ling, Haggart said violations of the housing codes were: only one fire extinguisher, front steps leading to the porch in disrepair and rubbish around the house which needed to be cleaned up.
A house at 1316 Ohio St. is owned by McGonigle. Haggart said he found broken windows and no fire escape in one basement apartment. He said the rug on the stairs would have to be either removed or tacked down.
At 1247 Ohio St., also owned by McGonigle, Haggard said the building was in good repair and "neat". He said, however, that the ceiling would have to be repaired and that an old fire extinguisher would have to be replaced.
Haggart said when he inspected 1224 Ohio St., it was for the first time this year. He said he had inspected 1247 Ohio St., 1309 Ohio St. and 1316 Ohio St. earlier this year and had issued licenses for the buildings, however he found violations at all buildings after inspecting them again.
Storage room poses possible fire hazard
Haggart said in such a case landlords would be contacted by his office which would explain that the violations he found would have to be corrected within 30 days or legal action would be taken.
Both the state and the city have the authority and the
This storage room on the second floor of 1224 Ohio St. was found in a house owned by Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics. The window has no glass and is covered with polyethelene and the wall is partially covered with insulation. Robert Haggart, building inspector for the State Food and Lodging Board, said the room was a possible fire hazard.
Jorgenson said the city works within the framework of the Minimal Housing Code. He said the city did no routine inspection of old buildings due to the small staff (two men) that the city office has. Jorgenson said it was all his staff could do to inspect the new buildings in Lawrence.
Jorgenson, building inspector for Lawrence, Clarence Hammer, director of the State Food and Lodging Board, and Haggart, said they are shackled by inadequate laws and a shortage of manpower in their offices.
methods to inspect buildings. The State Food and Lodging Board has certain requirements which must be met before a building can obtin a licence. The city has a Minimal Housing Code which points out both conditions which must and must not exist in buildings which are being rented as apartments and rooming houses.
Jorgenson said other inspections were made on a
complaint basis and that all complaints received were checked out by his office. Jorgenson emphasized that he had received few complaints.
Haggart said when he enters an apartment house, he is restricted to inspecting only in the hallways. He may not enter anyone's apartment without their permission. He said in a rooming house, he could and should inspect individual rooms. But, Haggart said he usually only inspected the hallways in rooming houses for "a man's home is his castle and I feel that his applies to everything."
The three inspectors whom the Kansan interviewed, Ken
Haggart inspected the building and licensed it for this year, then inspected the building again and found violations which included screens blocking the fire escape and only one fire extinguisher for the entire house. The house is owned by Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics.
Photo by Halina Pawl
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May 12 KANSAN 11
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Student Court listens to violators
[T]here were 10 people in the courtroom. From left to right, the judges were B. J. Anderson and R. C. Brown, the prosecutor was P. M. Martinez, the defense attorney was T. H. Smith, the defense counsel was G. E. Harris, the plaintiff was T. S. Williams, the defendant was D. A. King, the plaintiff's lawyer was N. W. Gilliam, the defendant's lawyer was J. F. Banks, the plaintiff's attorney was T. S. Williams
Photo by Ron Bishop
Student pleads his case
This semester's last meeting of the Student Court finds a student pleading his case before a full court of seven justices—the court en banc. It is a rare occasion to find the court meeting en banc because most appeals are settled in the lower court, consisting of three associate justices.
Any student who feels his traffic tickets were unjustified may take his appeal through the (1) lower court, (2) the court en banc, (3) the University Disciplinary Board and (4) the Board of Disciplinary Appeals.
By GLORIA VOBEJDA
Kansan Staff Writer
Don't throw those traffic tickets away. If you can come up with a good reason for parking in a restricted zone or wrong zone the Student Court will probably grant your appeal.
Take the case of the young lady who parked in a wrong zone because "some guy in a black bikini jumped out of the bushes one night and scared her to death."
She told the court her attendance was required at a laboratory course. Both times she received tickets her assigned parking lot was full. She was afraid to walk on campus after dark.
The court ruled that her fear was valid and granted her appeal.
was valid and granted her appeal. The Student Court was established in March 1936. The very first case heard by the court involved the throwing of a tear gas bomb by a student at a peace mobilization meeting April 22, 1936.
A student said he had seen August Anneberg "stooping over the candle" with his hand on it.
Anneberg denied lighting the bomb as the student had testified and produced an affidavit signed by Harold Brown, a former student, saying that Brown had set off the bomb. The conflicting testimony resulted in a second trial.
The first case tried by the student court was probably the most spectacular. Since then, most of the cases have been for traffic violations.
But finally, Annesberg was absolved of all blame because of insufficient evidence.
An old clipping revealed there was a backlog of 75 to 100 traffic cases to be tried after the Anneberg case.
During the 40's there was a rash of cases for smoking violations.
In 1942 Charles B. Clement, freshman, was tried by the student court for violating the smoking regulations in University buildings. His name was turned in by C. M. Baker, director of libraries, who said he saw Clement smoking in Watson Library.
12 KANSAN May 12 1969
Expulsion was the maximum sentence for violating the Smoking Bill which was passed in 1940 but it was never inflicted. Clement received a 30-day suspension, but his sentence was immediately suspended with the stipulation
that it would automatically go into effect on a second conviction.
The minimum sentence used to be a fine for a smoking violation.
In the early days of the court, penalties for conviction included taking away hours from the student, taking away grade
points or expulsion from the University. No one seems to know just when these practices were stopped.
Joe Henderson, Wichita law student and chief justice, said most of the cases involved granting or denying appeals of traffic fines.
He said there were six
associate justices, 12 attorneys, two bailiffs and a clerk of court. They all serve alternate weeks except the clerk who works every week and is the only paid employe.
If a student wishes to appeal his ticket, said E. P. Moomau, chief of traffic and security, he has to come to our office in Hoch and fill out a petition within 10 days of the violation
If a student wishes to appeal his ticket, said E. P. Moomau, chief of traffice and security, he has to come to our office in Hoch and fill out a petition within 10 days of the violation.
The petition is left in Hoch and picked up by the court clerk, Kathy Brandes, Cheney junior, Mooaua said.
He said there were six associate justices, 12 attorneys, two bailiffs and a clerk of court. They all serve alternate weeks except the clerk who works every week and is the only paid employee.
The petition is left in Hoch and picked up by the court clerk, Kathy Brandes, Cheney junior, Moomau said.
Miss Brandes does all of the court's busy work, Henderson said. But, she also keeps a record of the disposition of all the cases and records the testimony each time the court meets.
Henderson said that Miss Brandes deserved the credit for the increased efficiency of the court. He said the time from student appeal to court decision had been shortened from two or three months to two or three weeks.
After the clerk picks up the petitions in Hoch, she sends a postcard to each petitioner telling him which Tuesday he is to appear in court, Henderson continued.
"Before he appears he must sign a docket which is kept in the Law School office. The docket is usually put up at 8 a.m. Thursday and is taken own at noon Monday, the day before the trial."
A student must sign the docket if he wishes to appear in court, but if he does not appear the second or final time he is notified, he forfeits his appeal right.
If the student loses his first appeal before the lower court of three associate justices, he may appeal to a higher court, the full court of seven justices—the court en banc.
If the student is not satisfied with the full court's decision, he may appeal his case to the University Disciplinary Board and then finally to the Board of Disciplinary Appeals, whose decision is final.
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Seniors of'69 say 'good-by'; end a decade
In the last days of spring 1969, many seniors have spent quiet moments reflecting upon what have probably been the four most influential years of their lives.
The class of 1969, their academics and activities, attitudes and abstractions, have known years of big changes.
Not only do this year's seniors bring a decade to a close, but they also end an era at KU.
One senior girl recounted her freshman year with 10:30 p.m. closing—the first year for senior women to have no closing. Now, next year's freshmen may have no closing hours, if they so desire.
The college-within-a-college system came after the days of the class of '69 -some proudly proclaim, "I made it on my own among the multitudes."
Bigger changes have come in the patterns of thought and the subtle necessity for deep awareness.
Although inherently traditional, the class of '69 has searched for new perspectives.
Instead of the ordinary portrait or statue, the senior gift this year is a donation to Watkins Hospital. Also, when paying the cap and gown fees the senior class had the opportunity to donate to a fund providing a scholarship for an underprivileged student.
Concern dominated the senior's thoughts, rather than the ordinary desire to out-do the class before.
But the average cut-a-class-a-day senior is not looking back, not yet. He islooking to the future.
Some never want to go to another class again, but some anxiously await the life of a "real" student in graduate
May 12 1969 KANSAN 13
school. Doctors, lawyers, psychologists, anthropologists, researchers and even librarians will emerge from the class of '69 in the following years.
Templin meeting protests SDS
An idea which began as a "witch-hunt for SDS" turned into a peaceful meeting of interested students in the Templin Hall Cafeteria last night.
Kim Thomas, Shawnee junior and president of Templin residence hall, said he called the meeting to organize interested supporters of student government in order to show support for the Student Senate in tonight's meeting.
"We are not after SDS," Thomas said. "We do, however, take issue with actions performed by members of certain groups on this campus, their methods and tactics."
Clyde Toland, Iola senior, addressed the meeting urging the members to appear at the UDB hearing Wednesday and the Student Senate special meeting tonight to show support for student government and support for action against people charged with disruption of University functions.
Toland asked for debate from the more than 100 members attending about actions to be taken.
Cliff Conrad, Bismark, N.D., senior and past president of the KU student body, speaking from the floor said the issue was a question of right of assembly.
Conrad drew up the formal statement which was then signed by those present, copies of which were taken to the various living groups to be signed then submitted to the UDB and the Student Senate.
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Bowman's impeachment sought
41 42
Bowman proclaims victory
Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior and vice president of the Student Senate protests the Vietnam war along with other demonstrators who staged an anti-Vietnam protest Friday afternoon in Memorial Stadium. The protesters succeeded in disrupting the annual Chancellor's ROTC review which was cancelled after they refused to leave the field.
A resolution will be submitted tonight in a special meeting of the Student Senate asking that proceedings be initiated for the impeachment of Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior and vice-president of the student body.
The resolution, submitted to the Student Senate office yesterday morning by Mark
Retonde, Kansas City, Mo., senior and president of the Interfraternity Council, charges Miss Bowman with "actions that contradicted the policy of the Senate and University by disrupting the Chancellor's review of the ROTC units."
At the same time, Retonde said he will submit a resolution entitled, "Rules of procedure for
removal from office from the Student Senate."
The resolution states, "There are no rules for the procedure of removal from office stated or inferred, within the Senate Code of the University of Kansas."
The resolution lists rules for removal from office as conviction for failure to comply with the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution and laws of the State of Kansas, the rules and regulations of the University of Kansas and the Senate Code of the University of Kansas.
The resolution calling for the ouster of Miss Bowman includes charges that she violated the guidelines issued by the Senate Executive Committee (SenEx), and by doing so, she violated her oath of office.
Retonde submitted his original resolution for Miss Bowman's impeachment Friday night. But he later revised that resolution and added the second resolution which he finished early yesterday morning.
In a special meeting Saturday night called by Retonde and attended by Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and student body president, Gus deZerega, Wichita senior, Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y. senior, John Berthrong, Norman, Okla., senior and Bill Hansen, Kansas City, Mo., first-year law student, Retonde explained his resolutions.
During that meeting Awbrey decided to call tonight's special Senate meeting after debate about Retonde's impeachment resolution.
Hansen and Awbrey were opposed to the resolution.
Hansen said he would argue for a general amnesty for all senators and officers involved in Friday's demonstration.
DiZerega said impeachment was too strong, and Retonde should ask only for censureship
Retonde replied, "The Senate cannot expect to legislate to others until it can discipline itself, its own members. Marilyn's actions, like those of the other senators require the maximum penalty.
"This is just the beginning of a legislative struggle that is really going to mean something," he said.
Discussion shifted to the topic of right of peaceful assembly by any group and disruption by another group.
Referring to the disruption of the Chancellor's Review, Retonde said, "This has got to stop! If student government is to function effectively, the leaders must take a responsible stand to respect the laws and regulations of this University."
Two students in the Senate supporting the resolutions are Larry Scott, Emporia sophomore and president of Delta Upsilon fraternity, and Carol Leek, Fort Scott junior and senator for the School of Education.
"I will back the resolution 100 per cent," Scott said. "I didn't see her (Miss Bowman) but I personally will vote for impeachment of any individual elected by the students of KU to represent them in the Student Senate, if he took part in the demonstration on the stadium field Friday."
The possibility of impeachment proceedings against KU student body vice president, Marilyn Bowman, came up last Friday when she was seen on the Memorial Stadium field with anti-war demonstrators in violation of a University ruling.
Marilyn Bowman discusses recall
She said she thought the demonstration was important because it expressed the demonstrators feelings toward the war and the kind of military investments that are carried on in this country.
"I think to ask the vice president of the student body not to follow her personal convictions is to ask her not to be an honest person," Miss Bowman said.
Some of the people in the demonstration were joking about her impeachment, Miss Bowman said, but nobody was taking them seriously.
She said she didn't think her official position was in jeopardy and that she had no idea who would initiate such action.
Miss Bowman explained her actions this way:
"The way I understood it, the stadium was open. I could not make the 12:30 p.m. war memorial service in front of Strong Hall so I joined the group to take part in the second part of the demonstration."
14 KANSAN May 12 1969
Asked about the ramp gate that had been broken down to let demonstrators in, she said she didn't realize what they were doing at the time because she was too far back in the crowd.
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Student's film has story to tell
1950
Photo by Halina Pawl
'Keep talking,' says Richard Geary Photo by Halina Pawl
Richard Geary, Wichita graduate student, does some in-camera editing as he films an episode in his movie, "Your Country Calls," the story of a young man who is trying to avoid induction. The film, written and edited by Geary, will be shown at the Pawnshop Wednesday and Thursday nights.
By TERRY KOCH
Kansan Staff Writer
Richard Geary, Wichita graduate student, is a film-lover with a story to tell.
That story is the basis of his film, "Your Country Calls," to be shown at the Pawnshop, a coffee house at 15 East 8th St., Wednesday and Thursday at 7:30 and 9:00 p.m.
Geary describes the film as "autobiographical; it's the story of one young man's attempt to avoid the draft. At the end nothing is certain," he said.
He wrote the film script in the summer of 1968, he said, and in the fall he decided to produce it.
"I was taking a special problems course in broadcasting, and began the film to fulfill a requirement for that course," he said.
"We've worked on it every Sunday since September 28, 1968," he said, "and we just finished it two weeks ago."
The "we" Geary speaks of are numerous student and faculty members who cooperated by acting in the film and helping to produce it.
"The film's total cost was about $810, most of which was supplied by my father," he said.
The radio-television-film department of the KU School of Journalism supplied the cameras
and equipment, he said, and Peter Dart, associate professor of speech and drama, acted in it and assisted with the production.
Halina Pawl, Topeka junior and University Daily Kansan photographer, operated the boom, shot the stills and played a bit part, he said.
"I was his right hand, I guess," said Miss Pawl.
"My bit part is a minute-and-a-half soliloquy about soy sauce," she said.
"The solloquey," said Geary, "is based on a story I heard about a guy who went to his induction physical after drinking a bottle of soy sauce. It supposedly sent his blood pressure way up."
The main characters are KU students, he said. Mark Tauber, Winnetka, Ill., sophomore, plays the young man facing the draft, and Janet Pugh, Salina junior, plays his girl.
The soundtrack, he said, was composed and played on the piano, by Philip Bayles, Houston, Tex., senior.
"His music saves the movie in a few places," Geary said.
He recalled some of the problems inevitable when making a film. "At one point," he said, "we went into McCollum Hall to do some filming. They were about to throw us out until we told them
we were making a documentary about student life.
"One tiny scene required a shot of a bus pulling out of a station. We set up all of our equipment at the exit, only to watch the bus pull out the back way," Geary said.
About the technique of the film, Geary said. "It's a little episodic. It involves a series of separate confrontations, but they follow chronologically and they all connect."
Most of the editing, he said was done "on the set, in the camera, largely for financial reasons."
Geary told why he chose KU over a west coast university to study filmmaking.
He said there was no similarity between his film and "Greetings," described on marquees as "an overground sex-protest."
"Out there," he said, "eight people direct a film simultaneously, to prepare film students for commercial work. An idea has to be voted on by all eight before it's accepted. The editing room must be utter chaos."
"My film isn't funny, and not so audacious," he said.
"Also," he said, "there's no sex or nudity in it."
Young selected to head J-school for coming year
Lee F. Young, assistant professor of journalism, has been appointed as acting Dean of the School of Journalism for the coming year on unanimous recommendation of the William Allen White School of Journalism's Central Committee and Warren K. Agee, outgoing dean of the School of Journalism. He is to carry on the school's activities on more than a caretaker basis, Agee said.
Young said his intentions are to direct the School through the same channels of progress instigated by Agee and to keep a high caliber of instruction within the School.
Young is known for his direction of the Midwestern Journalism Camp and will have to turn over his directorship to Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, July 1.
Young graduated with an A.B. in American Studies from Syracuse University in 1950 and obtained his masters degree in journalism from KU in 1967. While attending Syracuse, he edited the school yearbook for two years.
Before beginning his teaching career in 1960, Young had had fifteen years' professional experience with publishing firms and advertising agencies. He was production manager for a publishing house, an engraving company and an advertising agency, besides being general manager for a veterinary medicine publishing company in Bonner Springs.
Young was named "Hillteacher" by the KU Jayhawker in 1967 as one of the outstanding teachers on campus.
May 12 1969 KANSAN 15
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News Roundup
Apollo enters final day
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By United Press International
More information on Fortas
NEW YORK - President Nixon sent Atty. Gen. John Mitchell to see the chief justice secretly last week to get his aid in convincing Justice Abe Fortas to resign, Newsweek Magazine reports in its current edition.
Mitchell was instructed to tell Chief Justice Earl Warren that the Justice Department has "far more serious" information about Fortas than what was revealed in a Life Magazine article last week and "the facts were bound to come out eventually."
Cong fail to kill commander
SAIGON — Viet Cong exploded bombs and grenades throughout Saigon yesterday and today, killing seven persons, wounding 22 and failing in an attempt to kill the U.S. Navy Vietnam commander. Police drove one commando squad from a schoolhouse near the presidential palace.
Other Viet Cong units, under orders to paralyze major towns with a wave of terror, killed or wounded an estimated 130 civilians in other South Vietnamese towns.
Black militants given funds
CHICAGO — A foundation financed by 10 major church organizations has donated thousands of dollars to black militant groups throughout the nation, including a New Jersey group linked to the Black Panther Party, the Chicago Tribune reported yesterday.
In a story by Ronald Doziol in the today's editions, the Tribune said a report on the activities of the Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization, based in New York, would be delivered today to the International Security Conference, which opens a three-day seminar in Chicago.
Missouri sit-in continues
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A sit-in went into the third day at Missouri's Lincoln University yesterday and hunger strikes were underway at Stanford University, New Jersey's St. Peter's College and Ohio's Marietta College.
A 48-hour anti-Vietnam War hunger strike ended yesterday at Wisconsin's Lawrence University.
Four of the eight trustees of Indiana University met yesterday with student leaders and administrators at the Bloomington campus, where black students "locked-in" a faculty meeting last Thursday. At the conclusion of the $3\frac{1}{2}$ hour session, the trustees agreed only that the university should provide quality education and make it available to more people.
ABM opposition develops
WASHINGTON - Unprecedented opposition is developing in the House to President Nixon's Safeguard Antiballistic Missile (ABM) but both supporters and opponents agreed that its approval is certain.
The House Armed Services Committee, like its Senate counterpart, is currently considering the $800 million administration request to start buying Safeguard components and to continue research.
Abernathy leads march
CHARLESTON, S.C. - The Rev. Ralph Abernathy linked arms with labor leader Walter Reuther and led 10,000 persons on a winding procession through Charleston yesterday in "phase two" of the Poor People's Campaign in support of striking Negro hospital workers.
The marchers, including a brass band that interspersed Soul music with freedom songs, left the Charleston County Auditorium shortly before 7 p.m., almost three hours behind schedule.
Berlin ceremonies planned
BERLIN Allied officials yesterday planned low-key ceremonies to avoid provoking possible anti-Western demonstrations by leftists during today's celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Berlin Airlift.
West Berlin Mayor Klaus Schuetz invited a host of dignitaries for the commemoration, including retired Gen. Lucius D. Clay, the post-war American military governor of Germany.
Clay declined the invitation, claiming other engagements.
Informed sources, however, said Clay refused because he feared leftist students may use his presence as an excuse for trying to disrupt the ceremonies.
Pilots set speed record
LONDON — Two Royal Navy pilots in a Phantom jet set a new transatlantic speed record yesterday, streaking across the ocean from New York in four hours and 46 minutes.
Lt. Cmdr. Brian Davies piloted the plane to Wisley, just south of London. His copilot was Lt. Cmdr. Peter Goddard, who went on by helicopter to London's Post Office Tower to finish the race as required by the newspaper Daily Mail, sponsors of the contest.
The total time from the start at the Empire State Building in New York to the Post Office Tower was five hours and 11 minutes.
Saigon ready to bargain
PARIS - Saigon's chief negotiator to the Vietnam peace conference said yesterday he has orders to open "serious discussions" with the Communists if they indicate they are ready to get down to serious bargaining.
Ambassador Pham Dang Lam, back from two weeks of consultations in Saigon, said "private or secret conversations" still offered the best hope, in Saigon's view, of getting the Communists to put their cards on the table.
"I have general instructions to engage in serious discussions with the other side if they want them," he told newsmen at Orly Airport.
"But to be able to explore even more deeply the possibilities of agreement," he said, "it seems to me that the very flexible formula of President Thieu's proposals of private or secret conversations is the most appropriate way to permit the other side to make more precise things they cannot be precise about" at the formal weekly negotiating sessions in Paris.
Lam reaffirmed Saigon's willingness to discuss with North Vietnam and the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front (NLF) the questions of exchange of prisoners of war, reestablishment of the demilitarized zone separating North and South Vietnam and the neutrality of Laotian territory.
16 KANSAN May 12 1969
These issues were included in the Viet Cong's 10 point "Global Peace Plan" for Vietnam unveiled at the 16th plenary session of the talks last week.
They are among the points which both the United States and South Vietnam consider worthy of "further exploration" while rejecting simultaneous Communist demands for unilateral U.S. troop withdrawal and setting up of coalition governments in Saigon.
Lam said the Communist position now is to "sweep away the present regime in Saigon, impose a provisional coalition government, followed by a definitive coalition, even before elections and without knowing the results in advance. Finally, even before these elections, they want to impose a policy of neutrality."
The Communist peace package also demanded South Vietnam follow a "coexistence" policy of neutrality, including diplomatic relations with the United States.
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But it left unclear whether such a policy would continue in effect after final peace and eventual reunification of North and South Vietnam.
Lam was expected to probe this and other questions with Chief U.S. negotiator Henry Cabot Lodge in the next few days to align their positions for the next session of the talks, scheduled for Friday.
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U.N. observers flee
TEL AVIV — U.N. truce observers moved their headquarters deep into Israeli-held territory from the Suez Canal yesterday to escape Egyptian shellfire. Artillery flashed along the Canal as they retreated and Israeli shells hit Port Said for the first time in two years.
A U.N. spokesman in Tel Aviv said the east Canal bank headquarters had been moved from Qantara to Rabah, 30 miles inside Israeli-occupied Sinai and well out of the range of Egyptian guns. The nine
observer posts that report to the headquarters remain at the canal bank, however, they said.
Israeli sources in Tel Aviv said the Egyptians had opened fire on U.N. headquarters personnel even as they loaded trucks for the move. This was not confirmed by the U.N. Command, but Secretary General Thant has complained bitterly in reports to the world body that both sides had been firing at U.N. posts on the opposite canal banks.
Egyptian officials in Cairo reported that Israeli shells had crashed into Port Said, the
Mediterranean terminus of the canal where the Soviet fleet often anchors. They said one civilian was killed and nine wounded in the barrage.
Artillery duel
The firing at Port Said was apparently part of an eight-hour artillery duel along the Canal that was also reported by officials in Tel Aviv. The Israeli report of new Suez Canal fighting, however, did not mention any activity in the Port Said region.
The Egyptian report indicated that some of the casualties
occurred in a house that was demolished by shells. The Israelis reportedly fired at Port Said twice last week, but their shells fell short of town on those occasions.
It was not known whether any ships of the Soviet Mediterranean Fleet were anchored or tied up at Port Said when the attack occurred. Israeli spokesmen have said in the past they,have avoided being drawn into artillery duels in the Port Said region precisely because of the Soviet presence.
The Egyptian communique said its Suez sector artillery traded shots with Israeli batteries for six hours yesterday from Qantara to Port Said. This fighting followed a ten-hour battle along the Canal Saturday.
period. It said no Israeli casualties were taken.
In Tel Aviv, UPI correspondent Eliav Simon reported that military sources there had predicted Israel would intensify its commando raids into Arab territory. The stepped-up raids could include strikes against Egyptian army bases across the Suez, the sources told Simon.
Chinese battle casualties greatly outnumber Soviets
The purpose of such forays would be to convince the Egyptian government and high command that Egyptian attacks on Israeli forces lining the east bank of the canal can be costly. Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser has ordered his troops to destroy Israel's Suez army.
MOSCOW — Communist Chinese losses are believed to have outnumbered Soviet casualties by more than 12 to one in the March 15 battle of Damansky Island, Eastern sources said yesterday.
The Israeli version of yesterday's fighting said Egyptian troops fired mortars and small arms at Israelis sporadically for an eight-hour
In the battle on the frozen Ussuri River, fought by both sides in regimental strength, the Chinese lost 800 men while Soviet casualties totaled only about 60, according to accounts now reaching Moscow from the Far Eastern Soviet maritime province.
Soviet authorities yesterday confirmed neither the Damansky figures nor other unofficial reports of "serious border incidents" at the western end of
In Beirut, political sources reported no progress yesterday in attempts to solve the crisis stemming from demands by Arab guerrillas for the right to use Lebanese soil as the staging ground for raids into Israel.
the 5,000-mile Sino-Soviet border during the past week.
Travelers from the Far Eastern cities of Vladivostok, Iman and Khabarovsk, close to the Ussuri River, said reports circulating there credited Soviet troops with a major victory in the second battle of Damansky Island.
Soviet victory
According to these reports, when the Chinese attacked Damansky, the small body of Soviet troops on the island fell back across the ice to the mainland. The Chinese then launched a "human wave" attack which piled up on the scrubby, half-mile by mile and one-half islet.
Soviet artillery and armor on a five mile front then opened up from their bank of the river, "all but wiping the island off the map," one source said.
The ice in the Ussuri has since melted. Soviet vessels have started spring navigation on the river, the Soviet Press has reported. No troops of either side are believed to be on the battered island, which all but disappears annually in spring floodwaters.
The Soviets followed up the barrage with a two-pronged armored attack across the ice, while the Chinese retreated, taking most of their dead and wounded with them. However, some prisoners were taken, according to these word-of-mouth reports.
Father Robert Flavin, Roman Catholic priest at St. Michael's Church in Sneem, set up a makeshift altar with a cross to celebrate Mass in the small lounge at the hotel where visitors normally gather in the evening to drink.
"The general said that this was just what he had wished for," Flavin said after the Mass."He
De Gaulle, who resigned as president of France less than two weeks ago, arrived unexpectedly at this picturesque village Saturday for several weeks of fishing and shooting while his countrymen elect his successor.
May 12
1969 KANSAN 17
MGIM at LUM'S
Other police, special branch agents and plainclothesmen, prowled the woods on Gorse Hill, kept cars on the roadway moving, or bobbed in a police launch in front of the Heron Cove Hotel.
Big 16-oz. Ballantine draw-25c 8-oz. Ballantine draw-15c
De Gaulle seeks quiet in southwest Ireland
PARKNASILLA, Ireland Gen. Charles de Gaulle and his wife observed Mass yesterday in the lounge of a $4.80-a-night honeymoon hotel in southwest Ireland, their privacy ensured by the largest Irish security net since the 1963 visit of President John F. Kennedy.
After Mass, the visiting de Gaulles strolled among the tropical plants in the garden of their quaint hotel while more than 100 Irish policemen stood at 40-yard intervals around the estate.
9-11 P.M. TONIGHT
SONNET . . . FROM $100
thanked me profusely for coming and giving him Mass without having to go through the bustle of the crowd."
DIAMONDRINGS
Mark's Jewelers
817 Mass. V13-4266
Del Eisele
Member American Gem Society
Orange Blossom
Mark's Jewelers
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
The priest said the 78-year-old former president looked well.
"He was in very good spirits and was very relaxed as well," Flavin said.
BEEEEEEEEEER!
Time to Take Care of Your
European Reservations
Arrange:
★ Eurailpasses
★ British Rail Passes
★ Rent or Lease a Car
★ Purchase a Car
★ Airline or Steamship Reservations
★ Student Tours
★ All Other Travel Information
MAUPINTOUR
711 W.23rd (The Malls)
VI 3-1211
(These should be arranged as far in advance as possible.)
P. S. For those taking SUA flights, contact us for any of the services listed above.
TIRED OF BLUE BOOKS, MULTIPLE CHOICES, DEWEY DECIMALS AND CREEPING INTELLECTUALISM?
TAKE ONE NIGHT OFF FROM ALL THIS NONSENSE!
COME TO the VILLAGE SET 9th & MASS. FOR
Moonlight Maduess!
YES, THE WHOLE STORE IS MAD! TOMORROW NIGHT, MAY 13 ONLY! 7:30 TIL MIDNIGHT! CHEAP REFRESHMENTS (FREE!) LOUD MUSIC (YOU'LL LOVE IT!)
SALE PRICES ON NEW SPRING CLOTHES! 1/3-1/2 OFF SWIM SUITS - 1/2 OFF COVERUPS - 1/2 OFF
ALL THIS PLUS A FEW BIZARRE & INSANE SURPRISES! the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kansan is offered
to students. A regard to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
NOW ON SALE
Revised, comprehensive ed. Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Cardui's Campus Madhouse, 1241, Greendale. 934x6
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts many styles of leather watchbands just for your wrist and watch. Starting at $3, 812 Mass. 5-15
For Sale: SANDALS- This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE, TGIF with 75c pitchers. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
SUZUKI
Just arrived—Factory fresh
TC 120 "Cat's KX Scrambler"
Nichols Suzuki
"The Motorcycle Men"
Lowest Prices—Highst Trades
300 W. 6th 842-0504
60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide ovals, pipes, mufflers, waterpump, wrench, and tool accessories;IONAL, but not included in $650 or best offer. Well taken care off Contact Jeff Mayers, VI 3-8153. 5-14 SALE, EQUIPMENE Gretchel, Fender Amplifier and cabinet used 10 months in one of midwest's top bands. Guitar is 2 years old; amp cabinets incl. Ex-Ex. Gibson GAIII VI 3-6994. For Sale. HAM GEAR. Moving-silling complete rig, SB-301, SB-401, SB-620, HA-14, antennas, test equipment and other items and parts. WECAR VI 3-6995. For Sale. **64 Ford Galaxie 500, 289 engine, st. trans, radio—$895. Quality Pontiac, 1040 Vermont.** 5-12
u8 Falcon—economy car—air-cond-
automatic trans. radio—power steer-
ing—power brakes. Quality Pontiac.
1040 Vermont. 5-12
65 Rambler convt -automatic V-8
radio. Quality Pontiac, 1404 Vermont
64 Chev. convt.-automatic trans-
283 engine-power steering–radio
—clean. $1,025. Quality Pontiac. 1040
Vermont. 5-12
Honda 305 Superhawk. Electric start
$350 or call Offer. Call 811-264-8900.
CYCLE HELMETS—Daytona 300
(Men's) with tinted face shield—and a chick's helmet-$25 for the pair. Call VI 3-9106. 5-13
For Sale: New Baby—must sell our '63 CORVETTE, good condition, low mileage, new tires. $1,550, phone VI 2-2438 at 1526 Vermont (电话) or 800-763-2438.
Baldwin electric 12 string, triple pickup, hardshell case, very good condition, $325. Also Fender Bass master, good condition, $225. Tom 5-13 V 2-7449
1963 TR-4, wire wheels, radio, new engine and transmission. Volkswagen Pick-Up, 62 frame, '67 engine, 6,000 miles. Call 842-7219, 5-12
Drafted. Must sell second car 1957
dollion. Make offer 842-7279 after 6
MED-STUDENTS! You will need hemoctometer outh and large dissection kit. We will then new from the med-center for $10-15 more. Excellent condition. Call 360-295-7843.
For Sale—Need money desperately.
'68 Yamaha Trail 100, with helmet,
4.000 miles. First offer over $175 takes.
Naishtm. $ 5.14 or VIY -0290 5-
39, Helmet Set Suit '7. 8jippers
3-piece. small Call Larry, 8zippers
913-434-2171
Two Pirinhaus with aquariums and accessories, albums, Corvette hub caps, door beads, miscellaneous. VI 2-6354. 5-12
10 speed Ralleg Record bike—one
nine $4, now $60
Steve, Rm 610 JRP
5-13
For Sale: 3 cute female Simiane kit-
ten girls at 2416 Jaime Drive
1811 or at 2416 Jaime Drive
5-13
HAROLD'S SERVICE
66
66
1401 WEST 61st STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
1963 Chevy Impala V-8, automatic perfect engine, new battery, radio. Zenith portable stereo. 5 speakers. Writer, portable good condition. Writer, portable, good condition. Also, miscellaneous household items. Call 843-2197. 5-14
1966 Corvette convertible, troop car. Call 3-7102. 5-14
1960 Buggy Sprite, mint condition, excellent mechanical, wood steering wheel and dash, wires, new yellow paint top, $1.050 I.V. 2-8039. 5-14
1960 Hardshell Guard buyout acoustic, hardshell case, perfect condition, new $387 Call Jim, Rm $48, II 2-6000. evenings. 5-13
For Sale: Have 411 pos-trac rear end with or for sale or rent. Call Rob at I.V. 2-8433. 5-14
AUDIO SALE
AR and Cynaco products
High quality components
at lowest possible prices.
Ask about our outlet special.
Sale ends May 24.
RAY AUDIO
HILLCREST TOWNSHIP CENTER
VI 2-1949
Afternoons or Evenings 5-14
Ford Econoline Van, 1965. In excellent cond. Suitable for camper or delivery van. Call 845-240-3144. Ford 845-240-3000, or载件 wrecked van. Contact Ed at 1416 Tenn. or call IX 3-3038. 5-12 Aircraft for sale. AERONCA TAC. recover cover, 250 hours since HOH. at auction. For sale, in May. new license in May. John's 66 Service. Eudora, phone IX 2-K241. 5-14 For Sale: 1965 PONTIAC GTO, red interior. For sale: 1965 HIGHWAY 400 condition 40,000 miles. Will sacrifice. Call VI 3-0482 or UN 4-3259.
NOTICE
1963 Austin Healey 3000. New paint,
tires and tires $1300. Bill: E. J.
M-6435
1963 Corvallis Monza Convertible 4-9
Corvallis Monza Convertible. Must sell M-12
2-7-4757
Cars Painted $27.50
7 Day Special
PRIMARILY LEATHER- Vests, bags.
handmade at 812 Mass. 5-15
handmade at 812 Mass.
515 Michigan St. St.-B-4--coutdoor pit, rib slab to go $:3.25; Rib order,
$:1.55; Rib sandwich, 90c; chicken,
$:1.75; Rib sandwich, $:75 Hour,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Tuesday, Phone VI 2-9510
tf
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Delicatessen in Jayhawk Food Mart, 9th and Illinois.
Hole noon to midnight Sundays, Delivery service daily
6 p.m. to midnight.
the TEE PEE has been remodeled! Bands on weekends, TGIF with 75c pitchers each Friday from noon to 6
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest,
Xerox 3546. Attach shaper, sharper copies; faster service. Unsurpassed results for theses, papers.
Unsurpassed Typewriter, 70th
Mass. VI 3-3546
KU Student Film
"Your Country Calls"
Wed. and Thurs., May 14 & 15
PAWNSHOP
15 East Hill
Admission 50c
Marvey's
PARKING
SHOES
Where You Always Save
5-14
802 W. 23rd
Lawrence
792 N. 2nd—N. Lawrence
HILLCREST CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
Martin's Auto Painting 792 N. 2nd—N. Lawrence
- Components
- Records
- Tapes
RAY AUDIO
FOR RENT
offers professional service for your component audio gear Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox, Sherwood and Fisher (9-month service for all components). Prompt service. Hillerest Shopping Center (Afternoon & Evening). 5-14
Male stuts nidts only. 1-4-room + bath
1-3-room + bath. Electricity extra.
Approximate 1 block from campus.
Canvas 1 block daytime,
or CV I 2-2781.
Attention summer students: College Inn, 912 Alabama at foot Mt. Oread. Bring lunch for dinner or furnished. Great family meals within your budget. College approved. Call 8-3880 now for reservation and deposit. Also take fall term reservations.
Sleeping rooms with and without kitchen privileges for males; furnished air-conditioned apartments, parking and near downtown Phone VI 3-7674
Two bedroom apartment available
June 1 for summer. It is for two persons.
Reasonable rent. Vall VI 3-2619
after 5.00 p.m.
Live close to campus, air-conditioned
2-bedroom apartments, furnished or
unfurnished. $105-$130. One available
six bedrooms, six left for June. Also,
sleeping rooms. Santee Apts., 1123 Los
island.
Sublute to summer~small 3 bed.
Sublute to winter~large 4 bed.
Phone 842-5457 or UR 4-4942.
SOUND
LOW SUMMER RATES
Must rent one bedroom apt. by June 1st. New air-conditioning, two blocks from campus. Will rent furnished or unfurnished. Call VI 2-7174. 5-12
Houses or 2 apartments for rent. Fur. housings, 2 baths, close to campus. VI 2-6898. 5-14
Apartment for rent: 4 furnished one-bedroom apartments to subrent for this summer. $30 a month. 1510 Kenwood, 2 rear. 1-2/2. 5-14
Apartment for rent: 2 BDRM. Furn. Unfurn. for summer sublease or longer if desired. Within easy walking distance to campus. Air-cond. laundry facilities. 842-7928-5-14
Air-cond. laundry facilities (refrigerator) apartment. A.C. disposal, laundry facilities in same building. 2 blocks to campus. Available. 842-7928-5-13
For Rent: to graduate woman. Laundry cleaning room with kitchen for the summer. Available 1 June. Utilities paid. VI 3-1585. 5-14
1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments, south edge of KU campus. Unfurnisher, or furnished with elegant old-style Danish walnut furniture. All rooms paneled living area. Very large rooms, big electric kitchen. 5 closets and locked storage. Central heat and air
V1 3-0501
LA
Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS, 1741 West 19th. Contact Glen or Kaye Drake at apartmnt 5-B, I-38220. 5-14
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR RENT
THE
or the best in:
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
AR-DYNACO DEALER
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
LA PETITE
GALERIE
Newest Place
For
Now Fashions
910 Kentucky
Lower Level
New York Cleaners
Shoe Shines, One color .50
Two color .75
EVERYONE SAYS
926 Mass.
Personal service
Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At
Closed Saturday at Moon
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Raney Drug Stores
105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00
For the best in
Two color .75
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
3 locations to serve your every need
Downtown, 921 Mass.
--starting service
PHONE V13-4278
Antiques THE GRINSTEADS
PRIMITIVE AND
GENERAL LINE, LAWRENCE K. 60444
TYPING
Now renting for summer, University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reserving and calling. Call for appointment and pool. Call for appointment University Terrace 843-1433 for Old Mill 5-14
TYPING: These, Dissertations, Manuscripts, typed accurately by experienced caller on IBM electric machine. Call my. Phyllis Nelson, VI. 2-1214.
One or two bedroom apt. now sub-
lease to TEE APARTMENTS. June through
August. Only two blks. from campus.
All rooms in apt. or apt
complex. Winter rate is $140 per
summer rate is $125 month for June,
July, and August. 5-14
Theses, themes, papers in English,
French, transliterated Russian—typed
IBM Selectric by experienced
literate literate. Call Mrs. Harwell, 84.
5298
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
Fast, accurate, KU Graduate. Call Mrs.
Currier after 5 p.m. VI 2-1409. 5-14
Multilingual Secretarial Service: To have manuscripts, bibliographies, app-
portions, term papers, theses, or dissertations;
dissertation in Japanese, Spanish, English
French, or Swahili, by 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 2873
TYPING: EXPERIENCED in typing thesis, term papers, all kinds of writ- er materials, including writer, piit type. Fast, efficient service. Phone VI 3-9554. Mrs. Wright.
WANTED
Thess. Term Papers and Miscellaneous.
Electric Typewriter.
(Mrs.) Mary Wolken
1712 Alabama
V17.5-12 5.14
Ttyping, quick, accurate and reason-
Former Harvard and University of
Minnesota secretary will type reports,
Mrs. Pica electric VI 31 5-14
Mrs. Mattila
Wanted: two roommates for summer months. $33 a head to share bottom deck. Roommate must be island before 4 or after 10 p.m. 5-14 Wanted girl to share apartment with boyfriend.
Prospective graduate student wishes
bedroom model in good condition.
S-and details, description and price to
19th, 1912' N. St., Alchia,
Kansas 66002
5-13
Wanted: Swimming Inst. for summer months. Private, heated pool. Call VI 2-7988 after 4:30 p.m. weekends. 59
The KU student at the TEE PEE.
Open daily from 2 p.m. to midnight.
Free pitchers given away nightly, 5-14
Female graduate student needs female
roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt. Would
be appropriate. Reasonable.
0250 after 4:00 p.m. V-12
Wanted: Transfer student needs female roommates for apt. during summer; 5-13
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Tony's 66 Service
- Stretcher Frames
- THE CONCORD SHOP
- Oils and Acrylics
- Decoupage Materials
Charge Account and Bankmark Services
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
McConnell Lumber
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
DELIVERY SERVICE
VI 3-7685
Food for Final Week
THE HOLE IN THE WALL
Sandwiches, Salads
9th & Illusions Jayhawk Food Mart
飞
LET
MAUPINTOUR
Make Your
SERVICE
TRAVEL
Wanted-Females to rent two bedroom, furnished house for summer. Cooking utensils included. $110 per month. Phone VI 2-3197 anytime. 5-14
Summer Reservations Now.
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
HELP WANTED
Help wanted: Must have experience packing and moving of Household goods, summer work. Call VI 3-0380 for appointment. 5-13
Hewl help wanted! Waitresses, cooks, bellmen wanted. Hours flexible. See Mrs. M., 352-467-1000.
ATTENTION:
ENTERTAINMENT ROAD MANAGER for the summer. Extensive travel, wages plus transportation and lodging. between 3 & 5 p.m. No experience need-d. MID CONIINENT ENTERTAINMENT. Call 843-0100. 5-14
INCENTIVE
International company now has sum-
tents students who live in the Kansas City or
Tampa Bay area.
1) Extensive training program
2) College scholarships
3) New cards
4) European trips
5) weekly salary $127.50
6) In Kansas City call Miss James, 816-421-5833
7) In Wichita call Mr. Stark, 316-363-0165.
Students Summer Employment. Pinkerton, Inc., is now taking applications for students who desire summer work in the Sarasota City area. To qualify, you must be at least 21 years of age, $8' or over, and have a police officer license. The lakes are accepted. Apply Mon. thru Fri. 9-4; Sat. 9-12; Room 700 Bryant Building, 1102 Grand Ave. Kansas City, MO 64115. EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES: If you really believe that you can find a better job this summer, call Dave White at (212) 352-8200 or 6:30 p.m. about working with other Jayhawkers and 5,000 other college men for the South-Western Company. Last summer's average profit per day was $450. Interview you and can interview us. 5-14
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
Lost: Keys lost Saturday, vienna of tennis courts south of the stadium. Keys appreciate team. Please contact us for equipment. UN 4-501 or VI 3-4453, VU 2-2055.
LOST
or VI 3-1445, VI 2-2055. 5-13
Lost—white gold class ring with blue stone and pharmacy emblem (Rx 12) LFB on inside. Call Lee, RV 2-8047.
Lost: Man's glasses with black frames and black glass case. Lost between JRP and Snow. Reward. Call VI 2-0506. 5-14
Car keys in a black leather case. Lost
car key on campus. If found, report
pli-ase call VI 1-2885 5-14
PERSONAL
Production Management testbook in Harvard University Awarded 12,500 Please email iI_7-2091
MATH TUTORING, by math grad student, six years college teaching experience, individuals or will set up group sessions, K1 2-2582 after 6 p.m.
Pay-Less
Self Service . SHOES
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
L. G. Balfour Co.
Exclusive Representative
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Guards
- Novelties
Favors Rings
- Lavaliers
- Rings
Sportswear Mugs
Sportswear Mags
Baddies Trophies
- Paddles
- Trophies
- Awards
Al Lauter
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
6th & Mo.
VI 3-2139
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
For Top Quality Head for Henry's
WAR MEMORIAL
Protestors remember American dead
Photo by Joc Bullard
War protesters gather in front of the Strong Hall rotunda while Jay Barrish, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, reads the names of American soldiers killed in the Vietnam war. Most of the demonstrators later joined with ROTC protesters and then proceeded to Memorial Stadium where they forced the cancellation of the Chancellor's Review.
Demonstrators disrupt Review
(Continued from page 8)
hesitantly following.
Below on the cinder track stood nearly 100 student and faculty ushers wearing blue armbands. The ushers were to keep persons not participating in the review off the field.
"We're going to have our memorial service on he field," a demonstrator shouted. "Let's go."
The demonstrators rushed down toward the bottom of the stands and hopped over the fences. The blue-banded ushers offered no resistance while the crowd crossed the reviewing stand into the field.
While the 150 protesters sat on the field, Ambrose Saricks, associate dean of the graduate school and chairman of the Senate Executive Committee, reminded the students of the previously published guidelines of behavior which forbade the entering onto the field by non-participants in the review
Meanwhile the demonstrators were asking the stands for a show of support. Of the 200 that stood up, only a handful went onto the field encouraged by more shouts of "join us."
20 KANSAN May 12 1969
Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student, then took the megaphone and said, "We will be defensively violent. If they come to arrest us do not sit down and let them take you away. Run like hell all over the place. This thing is not going to be held here today."
After Atkinson's speech, Rick von Ende, Abilene graduate student and vice chairman of the Senate Executive Committee read over the stadium loudspeaker a resolution adopted by the Council of the University Senate. The resolution recognized the right
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe then arrived at the field accompanied by ROTC commanders. The men entered the reviewing stand while the cadets began to march onto the field.
of peaceful assembly for ROTC freedom of speech and reiterated the guidelines.
The demonstrators then rose, joining hands, and spread into a circle which encompassed two-thirds of the field.
At this point Wescoe signaled to Saricks who was in the press box and the announcement was made that the review was cancelled.
Docking reacts
(Continued from page 8)
function in a normal and peaceful manner.
"But we will not be intimidated further. We do have ways of dealing with those who insist on violating our rules and regulations." he added.
Commenting on rumors that vigilant groups of students opposed to SDS and the demonstration Friday were "out to get the freaks," Wescoe said, "I think this is a natural reaction, but I cannot emphasize
too strongly that students cannot take the law into their own hands. I realize that emotions are running high, but anyone involved in vigilante type activities is as much at fault as those who originally violated the law."
A suit will be filed this week accusing the University and the students of violating the federal civil rights law, said Topeka Chief of Police Dana Hummer, president of the Kansas Association of Chiefs of Police.
Townsend, in his letter to Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, said about 50 students claiming to be members of SDS marched across campus and into the police meeting.
a seminar, threw the notes of the speaker on the floor and otherwise disrupted the meeting."
It may be the first such suit in the nation.
During the disturbance, Townsend said, the officers sat quietly and did not attempt to interfere with the demonstrating students.
IT'S A
SPRING THING
7:30 To Midnight
TUESDAY AT
MISTER
GUY
920 MASSACHUSETTS
Russel Bradt, associate professor of math and chairman of the Universery Disciplinary Board (UDB), announced last night a tentatively open meeting of the UDB scheduled for Wednesday
A formal protest against the action of students involved in the disruption of a police seminar April 23 on campus has been filed by the Kansas Peace Officers Association President, Laverne Townsend, chief of police at Great Bend.
★ ★ ★ ★
The statement read: "On Wednesday, May 14 at 1:30 p.m., the University Disciplinary Board will hold a hearing on the charges arising from the April 23 occurrences in the Kansas Union.
"The meeting will be held at Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, and will be open to the public unless the charged students inform the Board that they do not consent to the admission of the public."
He said the group "by mob force entered the classroom where 30 officers were attending
(Continued from page 9)
His protest, calling for an investigation of activities of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) on the campus was sent to the U.S. attorney general and the FBI.
SenEx will act
(Continued from page 9)
or a minority, in all its proper activities and functions. The University through its legally constituted executive, the Chancellor, and broadly representative legislative body, the University Senate, for which the Executive Committee acts, has the responsibility to define and interpret these rights, to establish guidelines for their implementation, and to provide effective mechanisms for dealing promptly, lawfully and fairly with their violation. As the University claims the authority to define, interpret and implement these rights, so also must it accept and indeed insist on the responsibility within itself to enforce and protect their uniform and unrestricted exercise. If the University does not fulfill this responsibility, then clearly one or the other of the unacceptable alternatives will come into being, sooner rather han later, and the University will die.
Peace officers file suit against University and SDS
carefully devised in light of these concepts. They were established by the Executive Committee, approved by the Chancellor, released to the news media and publicly announced on the site prior to the scheduled ceremony. The Guidelines were observed by the authorized participants and by the great majority of University members who were spectators for the event.
Guidlines for the Chancellor's ROTC Review scheduled for Friday, May 9, 1969, were deliberately and
Yet a small number of persons did violate the Guidelines established for the protection of the rights and welfare of all, by refusing to comply with lawful requests to leave the field so that the scheduled review could take place. The University will not delay in affording those identified and accused as villators of the Guidelines prompt and fair hearings by the constituted University authority under the University Senate Code. Thus will the University satisfy its accepted obligations in this matter, demonstrate its integrity and prove that it is able to govern itself as a responsible institution in society.
The University Senate
Executive Committee
KELLY
Enter the welcome to RIDE THROUGH
BUGGY WASH
6th & COLORADO LAWRENCE, KANSAS (913) 843-3001
COUPON SPECIAL
STUDENT SPECIAL GOOD TUES.-WED.-THURS.
MAY 13,14,15 ONLY
Come in and fill up (minimum 5 gallon purchase) and get your car washed and waxed for just 50c more. But remember-this offer is good for just a short time. Come in now and save.
CLIP HERE
STUDENT SPECIAL
Coupon good for a wash and wax with a fill-up (minimum 5 gallon purchase) and just 50c. Good Tues.- Wed.- Thurs., May 13, 14, 15 only. You must bring this coupon with you to take advantage of this special offer for KU students.
Impeachment proceedings fail
By GLORIA VOBEJDA Kansan Staff Writer
Proceedings to impeach Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior and student body vice president, failed last night when the resolution for impeachment was tabled by a substantial vote of the Student Senate.
But Senate members opposing Miss Bowman vowed to go ahead with their petition for recall. They hope to secure the necessary 4,000 to 4,500 signatures to present to the Student Senate tomorrow night.
Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and student body president, said the next meeting of the Student Senate will be at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Last night's meeting developed into "a battle between the conservatives wanting to impeach Miss Bowman and the liberals wanting to save her," a Senate member remarked.
But after objections to the way the resolution was worded by several Senate members, the
resolution, submitted by Mark Retonde, Kansas City, Mo., junior and Interfraternity Council representative, was tabled.
Retonde did not hide his disappointment.
"I think the Senate was very irresponsible tonight," he declared. "I thought it would be a more responsible body. Instead it got tangled up in parliamentary procedure."
He said, "The precedent of bringing her (Miss Bowman) up before the Student Senate would have established procedure.
"Everybody says I represent the right," Retonde said, "but I feel the same way as the left on many things. I'm against the war and the relevance of ROTC credits. But going over the fence in violation of a University ruling is another matter.
"How can you legislate to others if you can't discipline yourself?" he asked.
A petition for recall requires the signature of one-fourth the student body, now numbering about 16,000 persons.
(Continued to page 20)
M. F. C. BALDWIN
IRELAND
Sigh of relief
Photos by Ron Bishop
Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior and student body vice-president shows different emotions as she waits for a vote on a resolution to provide for impeachment procedure (left) and when the resolution is tabled (right).
Inside...
Landlords reply to housing charges Page 7
Apollo 10 is almost ready Page 12
Special section: depth reports Pages 15-18
Big Eight golf preview Page 11
UDK World News Page 13
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.130 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, May 13, 1969
Three resolutions pass
Photo by Ron Bishop Floor debate
Bill Hansen, Kansas City, Mo., law student, argues against a resolution to establish a procedure for removal from office for the Senate. The resolution was tabled after discussion and hand vote.
By RICK PENDERGRASS
Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate last night tabled a resolution establishing procedures for removal of office from the senate.
In a special senate meeting called by Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and student body president, five resolutions were brought before the Senate for approval.
Mark Retonde, Kansas City, Mo., senior, introduced the resolution for the impeachment of Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior and
student body vice-president. The resolution for impeachment was not introduced, however, because the resolution establishing procedure for removal of office was not in effect.
The next Senate meeting is scheduled for tomorrow night when Retonde said he will bring up the issue of a recall vote.
In addition to Retonde's resolution which was tabled, four other resolutions were introduced. Three passed. The fourth was withdrawn.
The first resolution, introduced by Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., senior, called for non-involvement by outside bodies in student affairs,
saying, "Attempts by non-student bodies to usurp these newly-opened channels of student responsibility would be detrimental to the progressive atmosphere of the University."
Text of George resolution, text and vote on diZerega resolution—page 5. Other photos—pages 2, 5 and 9.
Arguing for the resolution, George said, "We have the right and
the power of deciding for ourselves how to handle our own problems."
Fortas himself was silent on his future but the Memphis Press-Scimitar quoted a source in his Washington office as saying "Justice Fortas has no intention of resigning at this time."
Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell acknowledged that he met secretly last week with Chief Justice Earl Warren to present "certain information known by me which might be of aid to him."
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Paul J. Fannin, R-Ariz., said Monday he had "very reliable" information that Abe Fortas will give up his seat this week on the Supreme Court.
Fortas to leave bench says Arizona senator
Two area television stations later reported in reference to the (Continued to page 20)
BULLETIN
The Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) will submit 48 names to William Balfour, dean of students, this afternoon, said James Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor.
Balfour will submit the names to the University Disciplinary Board, Gunn said. SenEx believes the students violated University regulations "in the form of the guidelines established by the committee (SenEx) and approved by the chancellor for last Friday's ROTC review."
The committee realizes more than 48 students violated University regulations and that efforts will continue to identify the others, Gunn said.
Fannin refused to say who told him that Fortas was preparing to quit the court but said, "I consider the person very reliable." The senator said he expected the resignation to come before the week is out.
Mitchell's terse statement appeared to confirm reports that the Justice Department had gathered information about Fortas' financial affairs even more damaging than his acknowledged acceptance for a time of a fee from the foundation headed by Louis E. Wolfson, imprisoned last month for illegal stock manipulations.
By United Press International
UDK News Roundup
ABM passage expected
WASHINGTON President Nixon's Safeguard ABM system is expected to breeze through the House, with leaders of both parties giving it their full support in marked contrast to the opposition mounted against it by key Democrats in the senate.
There are, to be sure, many ABM critics in the House. But they acknowledge privately the controversial antiballistic missile program cannot be defeated in the House as long as both Republican and Democratic leaders stand firmly behind it.
Job Corps is target
WASHINGTON - The Senate opened a Democrats vs. Republicans joust today over President Nixon's order to close 59 Job Corps centers.
At issue is a "sense of the Senate" resolution criticizing the closing which asks the President to delay his order pending congressional action. Democrats on the Labor and Public Welfare Committee rammed the resolution out onto the Senate floor with a partyline vote.
Bandits get large haul
NEW YORK - Four bandits escaped with $350,000 in cash yesterday after staging a perfectly executed holdup in Brooklyn's largest department store while thousands shopped unaware.
Police said the three holdup men and a driver made their getaway in a gray or blue Volkswagen about 9:30 a.m. CDT after seizing a bag containing the weekly payroll for the Abraham & Strauss department store.
Nixon library is planned
WASHINGTON - The White House announced yesterday creation of a nonprofit foundation to construct a Richard Nixon library and museum to house papers and articles of the President.
---
MICHAEL L. COOPER
Deans huddle
Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, and William Balfour, dean of students, confer about a resolution under debate in the Student Senate. Emily Taylor, dean of women, listens to heated discussion from the floor.
Photo by Halina Pawl
Sophomore battles false advertising
A KU student's one-man battle against big business is bringing results.
John Mullen, Deerfield, III., sophomore, is waging a campaign against the Gooyear Tire and Rubber Company. Mullen states the Company is not standing behind its tire guarantee.
In order to warn the consumer about its "false advertising and shoddy material," Mullen said he is circulating handbills telling of his personal experience. Mullen bought a set of Goodyear tires from the Gregg Tire Company, a local independent tire dealer. After 6,000 miles of service, he returned to tires because they were worn out.
Gregg Company maintained he was not eligible for the guarantee because of a wheel misalignment that voids the guarantee.
The Goodyear Company wrote to Mullen upholding the decision of the tire firm, but, as stated in the letter, "with a sincere desire to be of help and to keep you as a Goodyear customer," offered a sales concession to Mullen.
Goodyear offered to replace "the two tires with the same size and type at a price of $20.06 plus $2.44 Federal Excise Tax each." This price, according to the company, is approximately one-half the price Mullen said he paid for the tires on the original purchase.
Even so, Mullen said he would reject the offer because the letter was "condescending and the tire adjustor who checked my tire alignment was insulting."
Mullen sent three demands to the company and said that would satisfy him.
"I want payment in full for the four tires, and they can have them back; an apology for the letter; and reimbursement for the printing cost of the circulars," Mullen said.
He said he had circulated about 2,000 handbills at a cost of about $20. The handbills were "pretty effective" he said, for "the Gregg Tire Company is now writing tips in the newspapers urging the customer to check his tires and stressing tire care."
Washington U. votes for ROTC on campus
ST. LOUIS (UPI) The faculty and students of Washington University voted to retain ROTC on campus, it was announced yesterday.
The students and teachers voted in a special election conducted by the University Community Council.
A total of 2,767 ballots were cast. About 274 were votes by faculty and 2,460 by students, with some persons not indicating on their ballots whether they were faculty or students.
The voting was conducted Thursday and Friday. The ballot contained four possibilities:
- ROTC with college credits
- ROTC without college credits.
● ROTC as an extracurricular activity.
2 KANSAN May 13
1969
About 30 per cent voted to ban ROTC. Of the 70 per cent voting for retention, about 36 per cent said it should carry credit. ROTC without credit or as an extracurricular activity was supported by about 17 per cent for each plan. The results will be forwarded with recommendations by a subcommittee of the council to Chancellor Thomas Eliot.
Washington University has a student enrollment of 12,000.
- No ROTC.
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
★
Shoe Shines, One color .50
105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 Closed Saturday at Noon
Two color.75
Friend
Kim Thomas, right, Shawnee Mission junior and president of Templin Hall, speaks as a "friend of the Senate" announcing a petition signed by more than 1400 students condemning the actions of demonstrators at the Chancellor's ROTC Review Friday.
1972
★
Photo by Ron Bishop
Mid Season Clearance
Due to the unusually warm rainy spring our inventories have grown in the men's suits to the point where we are having a sale in order to get the inventory down. Now while you can get many months wear out of the latest in men's wear-
$150 values $119.95
$110 values $ 88.95
$ 95 values $ 74.95
$ 75 values $ 59.95
Ober's
821 Mass. VI 3-1951 Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896
Campus briefs
THE MUSIC OF THE CELLOSIER
Music symposium ends today
Tacy Weidman, Lawrence junior, and Jay Finlayson, Omaha, Neb., junior, play the premiere performance of Antonio M. Molina's "The Ox and the Nightingale."
The three-part suite was part of a recital of student compositions presented yesterday in connection with the 11th annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music sponsored by the School of Fine Arts.
The Symposium continues today with an address by composer Vincent Persichetti on "Materials of the American Composer" at 2:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. At 7 p.m. University carilloneur Albert Gerken will play a carillon recital. An orchestra concert at 8 p.m. will complete the symposium. Persichetti will conduct his Seventh Symphony to end the concert.
Library accepts late books free
A library clemency period this week will allow students to return overdue books to Watson Library with no charge, said David Morgan, student library committee chairman.
The arrangement, made with David Heron, library director, begins at midnight tomorrow and ends at midnight Friday. Overdue books can be returned to the return box at the circulation desk, or the outdoor return box.
"The purpose of the clemency period," Morgan said, "is to get books back into circulation that have been missing a long time."
He estimated the number of overdue books to exceed 1,000 volumes.
---
Weather
Business students in the center groaned when the decision was made to close. A spokesman for the center assured the students, however, that notes would be sent to their professors to excuse incomplete assignments.
Computation Center closed by Moomau
Fifty seminarians yesterday seized the Andover-Newton Administration Building to protest refusal of the board of trustees to consider demands of black students.
The Computation Center of Summerfield Hall was closed last night at 10:45 because of rumors that a confrontation with student radicals was to be expected.
E. P. Moomau, chief of traffic and security, refused to make a comment about the clearing of the center and personally escorted a UDK reporter out of the hall about five minutes after he suggested the hall be closed to everyone except campus police and computation center employees.
Fifty Union Theological Seminary students occupied that school's Administration Building in support of black leader James Forman's demand for $500 million reparations for wrongs done Negroes.
Secular protesters continued activities at St. Peter's College in New Jersey, Stanford University in California, and the University of Rhode Island.
A court order yesterday brought a peaceful end to a sit-in at Missouri's Lincoln University, but nearly 100 of the students slept outside the Jefferson City school's Student Union Building in support of the 35 demands made by the original protesters.
William Balfour, dean of student affairs, said the campus police were acting only as a protective measure. He added he knew for some time about the confrontation rumor at the computation center but didn't know anything presently about the actions of Moomau.
At Andover-Newton Theological Seminary at Newton, Mass., students held the Administration Building. At Union Theological Seminary in New York City, seminarians remained in control of a chapel.
About half the 2,000 day students at St. Peter's in Jersey City boycotted classes yesterday demanding reinstatement of a professor and greater voice in school policy.
By United Press International Sit-ins by seminarians and a sleepout by students today marked a series of university protests across the nation.
The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts partly cloudy skies today with southerly winds 10 to 20 mph. Scattered rain and thundershowers late this afternoon and evening and continuing into the early morning. Otherwise partly cloudy and little temperature change. Highs today in the upper 70s, lows tonight near 60. Precipitation chances 30 per cent today, 60 per cent tonight, 30 per cent tomorrow.
Stanford students stayed away from classes and played "political games" in a protest organized by the militant April 3rd Movement. The group is protesting war-related research at the Stanford Research Institute.
Official Bulletin
LISLE FELLOWSHIP has just announced that it still has openings in three of its summer programs—in the U.S., Colombia, and Denmark. The U.S. program is in the San Francisco Bay Area in California. For information, see 226 Strong.
CARILON RECITAL. 7 p.m.
Albert Gerken.
May 13
1969 KANSAN 3
Today
S Y M P O S I U M O F CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MUSIC. 2:30 p.m. Lecture. Vincent Persichetti. "The Materials of the American Composer." Swarthout Recital Hall.
At the University of Rhode Island in Kingston, about 70 students picketed in support of demands for increased black enrollment, more black faculty members and institution of a black studies program.
LECTURE. 4:30 p.m. Walter T.
Pattison, University of Minnesota.
"Galdos and Naturalism." Jayhawk
Room, Union.
GRADUATE PHYSICS
COLLOQUIUM. 4:30 p.m. Dr.
William Silvert, Case Western Reserve
University. "Superconductivity at
Boundaries and Surface." 238
Malott.
LINGUISTICS COLLOQUIUM,
7:30 p.m. M, Dale Kineaid,
"Photo-Interior Salish-Ablaut." 108
Blake.
KU COLLEGIATE 4-H MEETING.
7 p.m. Miller Hall.
JAYHAWK RODEO CLUB. 7:30
p.m. Kansas Union.
LATIN AMERICAN FILM ORGANIZATION. 7:30 p.m. "No Exit." Dyche Auditorium.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
OBSERVATION. 7:30 p.m.
Dunford Church
S Y M P O S I U M OF
CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN
MUSIC. 8 p.m. University
Symphony. University Theatre.
PHYSICS FILM. 7:30 p.m.
"Seeking New Laws." 124 Malott.
CLASSICAL FILMS. "Don Juan" and "Adventures of Don Juan." 7 & 9 p.m. Dyche Auditorium.
Tomorrow
Students protest on both coasts
JAYHAWK SPORTS CAR CLUB MEETING. 7:30 p.m. Election of next year's officers, awards for past season. 1000 Mississippi.
By United Press International
PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE. 8 p.m.
Swarthorst Recital Hall.
Hey, Mac, now that's a helluva thing to say!
DETROIT (UPI) — Detroiters do give a damn—and a hell of a lot more.
They also give out with less printable expressions at work and at leisure, a Wayne State University psychologist found in a survey taken through strategically placed tape recorders.
Among Dr. Paul Cameron's printable findings was that two of the 30 most frequently used words are unprintable and that
Engagements
Karla Kolins, Hobbs, N.M., junior majoring in physical therapy, Alpha Delta Pi, to Michael Martin, Wichita law student, Theta Chi.
Diana Blew, Hutchinson sophomore majoring in elementary education, to Jack Kranz, Haven junior majoring in industrial arts at Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia.
Marion Hitchens, Webster Groves, Mo., senior majoring in chemistry, to Gary Trammel, Chanute senior majoring in chemistry.
Durinda Johnson, Moline, III., sophomore majoring in social studies education, to Mike Ashley, Chanute senior majoring in psychology, Sigma Nu.
"damn" is the fifth most frequently used word in the language during leisure time. Surveyed were 40,000 candid words used at 80 different types of jobs and at play.
The study indicated adult Detroiters were less foul-mouthed on the jobs than at play, with a 3.5 profanity percentage, compared with 10 per cent at leisure. The seventh and eighth most frequently used words at leisure have made it as far as Broadway and university campuses but are still generally unprintable.
Also, Cameron found women have reached equality in cussing.
Other findings included:
- Secretaries curse less than 1 per cent of the time, salesclerks 2 per cent, factory workers 20 per centt and pool players 30 per cent.
The 100 words most frequently used in the English language include damn, God, hell and Jesus used in a profane way.
People use profanity, Cameron said,"because in a way it is a protest." He plans to continue an offshoot of the two-year study to determine why children swear.
SUMMER JOBS
MALE OR FEMALE
COLLEGE
STUDENTS
---
We are hiring students who are interested in full time summer employment. Those hired will also have the opportunity to continue employment on a parttime basis next fall. All jobs will give you tremendous experience for your next school semester regardless of your field.
WE OFFER
Earnings in excess of $125 per week (guaranteed salary).
2. Opportunity to work for one of the largest companies in its fields.
3. Opportunity for advancement through the summer months.
---
A SUMMER CONTEST WHICH INCLUDES
1. $15,000 in cash schol
arships.
2. $30,000 in merchandise prizes.
3. 1969 Sports cars, boats & motors.
Round the World Trips
4. Twenty expense paid vacations in the Bahamas.
---
QUALIFICATIONS ARE
1. Neat appearance
2. Ability, to converse intelligently
3. Willingness to work hard
4. Ready for immediate employment
---
All Positions Are Most Desirable, Unique And Very Interesting
APPLY MR. WHITE
Mon. thru Fri., 9:00-1:00
Kansas City 842 1987
Topeka 357 4169
Omaha 341 4736
Lincoln 432 5205
Council Bluffs 322 6268
Minneapolis 336 8955
St. Paul 227 8367
Sioux City 277 1651
Sioux Falls 338 0811
Fargo 232 5542
St. Cloud 252 4280
Billings 259 3174
Seattle 623 7676
Great Falls 452 1053
Tacoma 272 3733
Portland 227 3691
Eugene 343-7747
Boise 344 6549
Idaho Falls 522 0592
APPLY ONLY AFTER COMPLETION OF FINAL EXAMS
KANSAN Comment
Editor in Chief, Ron Yates
Business Manager, Pam Flaton
Editorial Editor Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor Robert Entriken Jr.
News Editor Joanne Wee
Sports Editor Bob Kearney
Ad Manager Kathy Sanders
Charity at home
The Kansan respects student body vice-president Marilyn Bowman's views on the Vietnam war and the moral issues she believes are being violated by ROTC's presence on this campus.
The Kansan, however, hopes that Miss Bowman will see fit to direct her energies toward those she elected to represent as vigorously as she did Friday making peace signs in Memorial Stadium.
Contrary to a common belief, there are other things of concern to students besides ROTC. For instance there is sub-standard student housing. Marches and peace signs have their place in this nation of ours. After all, they are a legitimate form of dissent.
But the Kansan sincerely hopes that Miss Bowman will not see fit to greet every crisis with a march or a peace sign or a violation of University
guidelines. One sincerely hopes that Miss Bowman will use the legitimate channels of change which she was given when she was elected.
If Miss Bowman or any other elected officer representing the student body choses to violate laws and regulations set down by their constituents through due process, that person should be removed from office.
What Miss Bowman did last Friday in Memorial stadium did not violate a law or regulation of the University. She did, however, violate a set of guidelines which were drawn up to protect the rights of ROTC members to assemble.
If Miss Bowman continues to put her personal moral beliefs above the rights of the majority she was elected to uphold, then Miss Bowman should seriously question her own right to hold office.
Ron Yates
Kansan Editor-in-Chief
Elections revisited
KU students now are tasting the political medicine that apathy can brew.
Students themselves—especially the ten thousand who did not vote—will be direct recipients of what democracy gone awry can do to a democratic system of government.
It is not humorous to contemplate the true significance of apathy in connection with student government. For it is this apathy which has created the ironic, unfortunate twist to democratic procedure in the Student Senate.
A minority of students elected a minority party which now has the power of a majority.
It would be childish—indeed, ignorant—to castigate the actions of Miss Bowman. For she has violated no law; she has infringed upon no one's true guaranteed freedom.
And the irony of the minority power, now the majority, last night gave its endorsement of Miss Bowman, through due process.
It would be political suicide to argue the legality of this due process. Emotions have no part in legislative procedure.
One could argue that as an elected officer, Miss Bowman violated an unwritten oath of her office: to serve the best interests of the student body.
But there is where the true blame begins to fall, for, a mere one-third of the students even bothered to show at the polls. Perhaps this indicates that the students do not care what their best interests are, how they could be represented—or whether they should be "represented at all."
The blame for this controversy can not fall on the Senate, for legally supporting a party officer; nor can it fall on the officer herself, for doing something in which she believed.
The fault is the students'. For it is they who did not care through the polls.
And it is they who will live with the consequences of this power of the minority. (JTM)
In middle age I am not young enough to know everything. So I want to learn from my students. Especially do I want to hear new excuses.
As a professor new to KU this semester, I don't know whether the excuses heard at KU at final examination time are different from those I've heard elsewhere.
Excuses, excuses
Here is a list of excuses I have already heard and will not honor. If you think your grade should be raised, read the list. If your excuse is not on it, come see me. If it is, don't bother. This is the list:
1. There must be a mistake somewhere.
2. I got no warnings. Somebody should have told me to do better.
3. I was not well at the time of the exam.
4. I was not well the night before the exam, or the night before that, when I would ordinarily be studying. I was not able to study at all.
5. I know many members of my class whose work was not so good as mine but who got better grades. I was recognized among my classmates as a good student. Just ask any of them.
6. This grade has ruined my chance for graduation.
7. This grade has ruined my chance for a scholarship.
8. This grade made my father very unhappy.
9. This grade made my mother very unhappy.
10. This grade made me very unhappy.
11. This is the only course in which I've gotten a poor grade.
12. I think grades are wicked and I care nothing for grades. However, since I have to be the victim of this pernicious system, I am seeking a higher grade.
13. I have trouble finding a parking place and so I cannot get to class often.
14. I work on the school paper and so I cannot get to class at all.
15. I had to get married last weekend.
16. I got pregnant last weekend.
17. My house blew up.
19. Several students copied from my exam but got higher grades than I would have a higher grade, too.
18. My house burned down.
20. I studied this subject from a broad and philosophical point of view. I was unable, therefore, to answer questions demanding specific or precise knowledge.
21. I spent my days reviewing all the wrong things.
22. I broke my glasses.
23. I cannot sit for three hours.I have piles.
24. The instructions said the answers had to be typed and triple-spaced. I do not own a typewriter. Anyhow, it doesn't have triple spaces.
25. The exam did not cover everything in the whole course and I knew all the answers to all the questions that were not asked.
26. Since I have a job, I cannot be expected to know as much as others know.
27. I commute weekends to New York to edit a Chinese newspaper.
28. You were a great teacher and I really enjoyed your course and I let you beat me at golf and I piled you with beer at the school picnic and I cannot understand why you don't like me.
29. I don't want to go to Vietnam.
30. The coach told me you were an old jock
By John B. Bremner
Associate Professor of Journalism
Letters to the editor Readers' write
To the Editor:
For some reason or other, a good old English nursery rhyme has kept coming to my mind in recent days. Here it is, in a slightly altered version:
"Oh the grand old - Duke of York,
He had a—hundred men,
He marched them ...
marched them up to the stadium.
Then he marched them down again.
And when they were down, they were down!
And when they were up, they were up!
And when there were only half way up,
Professor
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
They were neither up nor down!
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 68044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment policies are subject to change. Order or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Member Associated Collegiate Press
BLACK EXTREMISM
STUDENTS FOR A FASCIST SOCIETY
DOCTRINAIRE LIBERAL FACULTIES
STUDENT GRIEVANCES
BARRY GO
'I wonder how far these guys will be stupid enough to carry us?'
Photo by Halina Pawl
For human rights
Gus diZerega, Wichita senior, presents a resolution to the Student Senate calling for recognition of human right of protest and dissent without infringing on the rights of others.
George's resolution
A resolution introduced by Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., senior, at last night's Student Senate meeting was easily passed on a hand vote. Later Gus diZerega, a co-author of the resolution denied allegations by two area television stations that it was a direct slap at Gov. Robert Docking.
The resolution is printed below.
The resolution is printed below.
RESOLUTION
WHEREAS, under the new Senate Code the Student Senate of the University of Kansas is empowered, within the law, "to formulate such rules and regulations as it shall deem wise and proper for the control and government of such affairs of the University as directly and primarily affect the students of the University and to take such steps as it shall deem necessary for their implementation and administration;" and
WHEREAS, the Student Senate recognizes that student control over student affairs can never become a reality until the Student Senate itself takes the initiative in confronting the responsibilities of its leadership; and,
WHEREAS, the Student Senate will not accept the principle of interference in traditionally autonomous affairs of the University Community by exterior pressures;
THEREFORE, be it resolved that the Student Senate direct the Committee on Student Rights, Privileges, and Responsibilities to prepare guidelines for the approval of the Student Senate on the issue of student dissent at the University of Kansas; and
Be It Further Resolved that the Student Senate recognizes that attempts by non-student bodies to usurp these newly-opened channels of student responsibility would be detrimental to the progressive atmosphere of the University and would constitute a crisis for student leadership at Kansas University.
Respectfully submitted,
Peter F. George
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
An eight-floor jump; ain't nothin' to it!
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The leaper was poised on an eighth-floor ledge of the hotel. A crowd began to gather below on busy Wilshire Boulevard. Then a fire truck happened to drive by
The men of Engine Co. 32 are used to dealing with persons attempting suicide. They immediately sized up the situation and radioed for a truck with a lifesaving net.
But their call went out too late. The man jumped and plunged in a swan dive 84 feet to the ground. Figuring there might still be a chance to save his life, the firemen summoned an ambulance.
If the story seems like it was right out of the movies, it was.
May 13 1969 KANSAN 5
The leaper was Leonard Terry, 28, a stuntman filming a scene Monday for a movie called "Run Shadow Run" for 20th Century-Fox.
The force of the impact jarned his knee into his jaw and he was knocked cold. Terry was revived by oxygen and was only slightly hurt.
DiZerega's resolution
In a roll call vote on a resolution introduced by Gus diZerega, Wichita senior, at last night's Student Senate meeting, one vote made the difference. The measure was passed, with 42 voting for and 41 voting against the resolution.
There were no abstentions. Thirteen members of the Senate were absent.
What follows is a transcript of the resolution and the roll call vote.
A RESOLUTION CONCERNING HUMAN RIGHTS WHEREAS the fact
AERELAS, the forced cancellation of the annual ROTC Review last Friday infringed upon the right of ROTC students to peaceful assembly; and,
WHEREAS, our government has, in the words of General of the Army Douglas MacArthur "kept us in a perpetual state of fear—kept us in a continuous stampede of patriotic fervor—with the cry of a grave national emergency. Always there has been some terrible evil at home or some monstrous foreign power that was going to gobble us up if we did not rally behind it by garnishing the exorbitant funds demanded. Yet, in retrospect, these disasters seem never to have happened, seem never to have been quite real."; and,
WHEREAS, those demonstrating stated that the demonstration took place solely in opposition to the various manifestations of this military system of which ROTC is an integral part as well as being its most visible symbol on American college campuses;
WHEREAS, this situation exists mainly because of the military-industrial complex, the one threat and the one issue warned of by President Eisenhower in his farewell address to the American people, which has, since that time, cruelly violated the most basic rights to life and liberty of the people of the Dominican Republic, Vietnam, and elsewhere; and,
THEREFORE, Be It Resolved that the Student Senate of the University of Kansas expresses its sorrow that the military powers in the United States are so entrenched and so unassailable through normal democratic processes that some students feel they must trample on the rights of others in order to make their opposition effective, and urges peaceful actions on the part of all students to oppose and greatly restrict the control and influence of the military. We urge further that in this continuing struggle to reaffirm the values of individual freedom and a non-coercive society, men and women of good will will not violate the same rights so cruelly abused by the forces they oppose, for a truly free society cannot be built on a base of slaughtered freedoms.
Respectfully submitted.
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
Roll call vote
Centennial College: Yes-Marsha Hildreth (ISP), Kathy Newcomer (Ind), Chuck Oldham (Ind), Carol Scheier (ISP), Gregg Thomas (ISP). No-none. Absent-none.
Corbin College: Yes—Kristie Avery (ISP), Mark Biddle (Ind), Bill Ebert (Ind), Jeff Lough (ISP). No—Karon Baucom (Ind). Absent—none.
North College: Yes—Tom Coleman (ISP). No—Andy Anderson (ISP). Suzanne Kelly (ISP). Absent—Linda Allen (ISP).
Oliver College: Yes—Dennis Embry (Oliver College Coalition-OCC), Joseph Miller Jr. (OCC), Brad Smoot (OCC). No-Marty Fankhauser (Ind), Mary McGovern (OCC). Absent-none
Pearson College: Yes—Kathy Hoefer (CC). No—Suzy Bocell (Pearson College Coalition—PCC), Gary Coslett (PCC), David Miller (PCC), Lesley Perrine (PCC). Absent—none.
School of Architecture and Urban Design: Yes-Robert Bruno (ISP). No-none. Absent-Jay Simon (ISP).
School of Business: Yes—none. No—David Myers (CC), Donald Trotter (Ind). Absent—none.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Yes—Dennis Bosley (ISP), Darryl Bright (ISP), Gus di Zerega (ISP), Edward Dolan (ISP), Mary Gervin (ISP), Peter George (ISP), Gery Gortenburg (ISP), Joseph Hewitt (ISP), Beth Lindquist (ISP), Steven O'Neal (ISP), Bob Stoddard (PSA), Brian Sulkis (ISP). No-Ted Gardiner (PSA), Terry Satterlee (PSA). Absent—none.
School of Education: Yes—Rodney Oelschlager (PSA). No—Mark Corder (PSA), Sharon Harr (PSA), Carol Leek (PSA), Barbara Nash (PSA), Pamela Poynter (PSA), Larry Scott (PSA), Nancy Shorb (PSA). Absent—Kenneth Wiley (PSA).
School of Engineering: Yes-Harvey Goldberg (Engineering Coalition—EC). No-Richard Barrows (Engineering Alliance—EA), John Plump Jr. (EC, Steven Salvay (EC), DAve Sindelar (EA), Ron Sutton (EC). Absent—none.
School of Fine Arts: Yes—Richard Averill (ISP), Diana Wheeler (ISP). No—Gary Bond (PSA). Absent—Collene Collins (Ind), Gloria Polleshultz (CC).
Graduate School: Yes—David Blahna (Graduate Alliance-GA), Larry Chao (GA), Robert Demeritt (GA), Carol Irwin (GA), Narendra Taly (GA). No—Willis Jacob (GA), Jon Suggs (GA), Edward Wallen (GA), Weston (GA), Kenneth Gale (GA). Absent—David Sutherland (GA), Philip Weiss Jr. (GA).
School of Journalism: Yes-Mike Shearer (ISP). No-none. Absent-Tom Gleason (ISP).
School of Law: Yes - none. No-Frank Bangs Jr. (Ind), Chris Morgan (Ind). Absent - none.
School of Pharmacy: Yes—none. No—Craig Cassidy (Ind), Carol Engler (Ind). Absent—none.
Appointed Council members: Yes—Bill Hansen, Rick von Ende, Barbara Blee. No—Dean William Balfour, Dean Emily Taylor, Dean Donald Alderson, Mark Retonde, Keith Jorgenson, Frank Zilm. Absent—Brian Biles, Mike Gerber, Beverly Hetlein, Max Jackson, Marsha McLain.
Welfare mothers may aid slums
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Nixon administration is considering using a militant organization of welfare mothers as the administration's broker is dealing with disadvantaged slum dwellers.
Under a plan now on the desk of Welfare Secretary Robert H. Finch, a grant of $100,000 a
year would be made to the National Welfare Rights Organization. The NWRO would use the money to guide persons with physical, emotional and other disabilities to state vocational rehabilitation and other agencies.
NWRO is made up almost entirely of mothers on relief. A
year ago the mothers staged a shouting match with Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., during his committee's consideration of a plan to restrict welfare payments. The mothers also staged a confrontation with police on Capitol Hill a year ago during the early days of the Poor People's Campaign.
James Meredith may be arrested
NEW YORK (UPI) — Bronx Criminal Court Judge Nicholas F. Delagi said yesterday civil rights leader James Meredith would be arrested if he answered to answer a summons for allegedly harassing tenants in the apartment house Meredith owns.
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Laos settlement possible in talks
PARIS (UPI) — The return to Vientiane of North Vietnam's ambassador may mean the Communists are willing to include Laos in a Vietnam peace settlement as U.S. negotiators have demanded, diplomatic observers said today.
Henry Cabot Lodge, chief U.S. negotiator, has been telling the Communists for weeks there can be no lasting settlement unless Laos is made truly neutral
and the Communists stop using Cambodia for troop stationing,
The first signs of Communist movement in the area were part of the Viet Cong plan of last week calling for "good neighborly relationships" with Cambodia and Laos by an eventual South Vietnamese coalition "peace cabinet."
Le Van Hein, North Vietnamese ambassador to Laos, is back in Vientiane with what
government sources said may be a plan to end the war in that country involving the Hanoi-backed Pathet Lao guerrillas.
Laotian officials said the Communist guerrilla operation has been stepped up in past weeks, perhaps in an effort to gain ground before the Laotian issue is discussed in Paris.
Le returned to Vientiane
Friday, Laotian government sources said.
Royal household sources confirmed that King Savang Vatthana had granted Le's request for an audience.
Because North Vietnam does not recognize Premier Souvana Phouma's government, Hanoi deals with Laos through the king and his council.
Grad student takes part elected KU-Y chairman
Graduate students in the University have always been thought of as a separate entity, but recently a change has been taking place.
Graduate students have been taking a more active part in University activities and organizations. Walter Mdoney, Wichita graduate student, is one such person.
Mooney and Betsy Menke, Webster Grove, Mo., sophomore, will be co-chairmen of the KU-Y for the 1969-70 school year.
Mooney, the first graduate student to become KU-Y chairman, said his concern for the campus and community came too late for his undergraduate years, adding that many graduate students find themselves in similar situations.
He said graduate students should realize that they're still needed in campus and community affairs. He cited tutor match, a program in which students tutor others in the University, as one of many ways graduate students can help.
Mooney said he did not feel that being a graduate student would affect his actions in the KU-Y, but added that next year's KU-Y would try to develop more campus-wide interest to involve more students.
He said he hoped this could be accomplished by improving old programs and developing new ones.
In previous years, he said emphasis has been put on service to KU and the community. Next year more emphasis will be put on the benefit the student derives from these services.
Mooney cited the valuable experience a student gets from going to an elementary school in Lawrence and seeing the problems the teachers must face everyday. He said this helps an individual become a better person and also gives one the satisfaction of helping.
One of the criticisms leveled against the KU-Y and its many community service projects is that they treat only the symptoms of the problems and not the causes. Mooney said that this is where help must start. "We feel a student should have a background from which to
Next year's KU-Y, Mooney said, will attempt to be a totally open organization. It will try to involve more black students, he said, explaining that in the little brother-sister youth friendship program and children's hour, at least one-third of the children involved are black.
6 KANSAN May 13
1969
He said that a survey of freshmen will also be made. It will ask what they, as freshmen, felt they missed in the KU-Y's programs and what they would like to see in its future programs. He said in this way KU-Y could find the interest of the present freshmen and would know which programs to emphasize.
operate before he can treat causes."
the Viet Cong plan was a "global" project and that North Vietnam and the Viet Cong would reject any attempt by the United States to negotiate some of the points separately.
He said that many students hear about community problems and they drive through the city and think they've seen the cause. Mooney said, "it's not until you get involved. You have to be educated to know what you are looking for. You have to know the more basic need."
One improvement which is hoped for in next year's KU-Y. Mooney said, is "more inter-communication in the Y's cabinet. In the past, board meetings were just a place to go for an hour a week and not accomplish anything. We're now
trying to get a feeling of inter-relationship."
Communist diplomatic sources said North Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegations at the Paris talks would insist the Allies discuss the Viet Cong's 10-point peace plan as a package, if at all.
In the past, Mooney said, each committee worked separately and went its own way. Next year total KU-Y programs are planned which will involve everyone, such as picnics and retreats, he said.
The Viet Cong's National Liberation Front appeared dismayed over South Vietnam's immediate rejection of several of the 10 points in the plan, specifically a proposal for a coalition government in Saigon, unconditional withdrawal of U.S. troops and neutrality for South Vietnam, Communist delegation sources said.
Many students wonder in what way the KU-Y is a Christian organization. Mooney said it is Christian in its effort to carry out the meaningfulness of one's life onto the campus. To provide the greatest learning experience, he said, and to contribute to the lives of others.
South Vietnamese negotiators said they were ready to open talks on some aspects of the program immediately but turned down other parts.
The Communist sources said
Sorenson to run?
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) — Former President Kennedy's special counsel Ted Sorensen, may be a candidate for the U.S. Senate from New York in 1970. Sorensen said he had been asked to run for the seat held by Robert F. Kennedy before his assassination. Kennedy's seat is now held by Republican Charles Goodell, who was appointed to the post last year by New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.
Air Force welcomes mob of 75 students
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A band of 75 high school students descended on Andrews Air Force Base in suburban Maryland during the weekend. The Air Force opened the gates to let them in.
They came to wash, not to protest. The students from Fort Hunt High School in Alexandria, Va., had volunteered to show support for the Navy by scrubbing down several Navy jet fighters based at Andrews.
They finished two hours later. The Navy gave them free lunch in the Andrews mess hall.
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Ling and McGonigle tell their side of housing story
This is the third in a series of articles dealing with inadequate, off-campus student housing.
By JOE BULLARD Kansan Staff Writer
Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics, and Glen M. McGonigle, assistant instructor of physics, own at least 25 houses, apartments and rooming houses, the majority of which they say are rented by KU students.
Robert Haggart, Douglas County building inspector for the State Food and Lodging Board, said Ling and McGonigle own state licensed property which is violating state building codes.
Ling and McGonigle recently met with the Off-Campus Housing Committee and other concerned persons. Halina Pawl, Topeka junior and member of the housing committee, said, "The purpose of the meeting was to enable us to become aware of problems landlords have in renting to students."
Ling: typical landlord
Ling refused to comment on his personal operations, however he said, "I am a typical landlord in the general area in which I own property. I run a very casual and relaxed operation in my dealing with students and in collecting rent."
Ling said he didn't know how many students he rented to, "but if I did I wouldn't tell you."
McGonigle said a definite problem existed at KU for, "there is a shortage of good, low cost housing for students."
No contracts
Neither Ling nor McGonigle use written contracts or written leases when renting to students.
Ling said, "I never felt a written contract was necessary. A written contract would give me some protection but I don't feel that I need the protection.
"Also I do not use written contracts for there is no leverage between the landlord and the tenant. I think that a student who doesn't want to stay in one of my buildings for the entire semester should not be tied to a written contract."
'Lease benefits no one'
McGonigle said, "I don't feel a written lease benefits either the landlord or the student. It wouldn't be any real benefit to me for we screen all of our tenants before we agree to rent to them. We don't discriminate against anyone. All we want is a group of just plain good students."
The student members of the Off-Campus Housing Committee have expressed hope that the University would hire a building inspector to work along with the Off-Campus Housing office.
Headaches
Ling said, "A building inspector would cause me headaches. I use the University listing service but I do not really benefit from it."
May 13
1969 KANSAN 7
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Ling said he saw a "natural hostility between landlords and tenants."
Ling said he had some conflicts with students."I have problems with the state of repair that some students keep their apartments."
McGonigle said most of his prospective tenants came to him from word of mouth from past renters.
"Most foreign students are
willing to learn how to clean and keep up their apartments, however, a landlord can rent out a nice place to a group of foreign students and in two weeks the place can look like hell, for they just don't know how to keep up the apartment."
McGonigle said there was not as much profit in renting old houses as one might think. He said there are taxes and license fees to pay plus the buildings needed occasional repair.
McGonigle said he didn't know what type of housing could be built or what could be done with existing housing to solve the housing shortage.
Ling said, "I don't know what type of housing is needed, however, I am a believer in capitalism and think that in time the problem will work itself out."
Tomorrow: an investigation of the Off-Campus Housing Office.
Court supports right to complain
The April issue of "Civil Liberties," monthly publication of the American Civil Liberties Union, pointed out a recent Supreme Court ruling in which the high court let stand a lower court ruling that declares it illegal for a landlord to evict a tenant in retaliation for reporting housing violations.
The court maintained tenant complaints are vital to curb housing deterioration. The paper said by actual or threatened eviction, rent increases and other forms of retaliation against their tenants, slum landlords have been able to suppress tenant complaints.
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The Lighter Side By DICK WEST
Bankruptcy race is a safer way
WASHINGTON (UPI) Everyone else seems to have a peace plan these days, so I thought I would devise one, too. I call mine "World Peace through Poverty."
It is based on the premise that if we can't achieve a disarmament agreement with the Russians by negotiation, maybe we can do it by bankruptcy.
My plan, I'll confess, is not entirely original. I got at least the germ of the idea from Richard M. Helms, director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
Helms is reported to have told a meeting of business leaders at Hot Springs, Va., that money-or rather, the lack of it-may end the arms race between the United States and Russia.
He was quoted as saying that
"the future costs of adequate defense may well prove impossible for both nations to bear."
It promptly occurred to me that the CIA may have been taking the wrong approach in seeking to determine what the Soviet Union's military capabilities are.
Our agents might better spend their time trying to determine the Soviets' financial capabilities.
Let us say, for example, that U.S. spy ships cruising off the Russian coast ascertain that the Soviets are capable of spending $180 billion on a new missile system.
The only way the Russians can penetrate a $181 billion antimissile system is by erecting a $182 billion missile system. But if they do that, they will be broke.
Last Corvair rolls off line, victim of losing sales battles
make the arms race so expensive that neither side can afford it.
DETROIT (UPI) The Chevrolet Corvair has come to the end of the road, a victim of its own unique design.
The mere act of switching from a military to a financial standoff would itself be a step toward peace.
The Corvair, the only U.S. production car with a rear engine and an air-cooled engine, was beaten in sales battles with other compact cars and with sporty-type cars.
$181 billion antimissile system the United States might itself go broke. But that need not preclude adoption of my peace plan.
Their only other option would be to sign an arms limitation treaty.
Then it stood alone, and auto safety critics singled it out as a favorite target in their verbal attacks on the auto industry.
The auto safety hearings began in Washington three years ago. Corvair sales plunged from 220,070 in the 1965 model year to 11,668 in 1966; 30,637 in 1967, and 14,811 in 1968.
The important thing is to
Chevrolet said sales of 1969 model Corvairs to date totaled 4,511, and ordered an end to production with 6,000 current year models.
When the last Corvair rolls off the assembly line tomorrow, it will bring total Corvair production to 1,710,018 cars since it was introduced 10 years ago as an answer to sagging big car sales. It was a contemporary of the Ford Falcon and Chrysler Valiant.
Chevrolet announced it would provide each owner of a new 1969 model Corvair with a non-transferable certificate for $150 redeemable on the purchase of any other 1969 through 1973 model Chevrolet new car. A spokesman said this was designed to compensate the Corvair owner for his inability to trade in on a new Corvair, and to encourage him to buy another Chevrolet nameplate.
It may be argued, of course,
that in the process of building a
The demise of the Corvair was announced in a four-paragraph statement from GeneralMotors' Chevrolet Division. Chevrolet said Corvair production facilities will be used to boost production of the Chevy II Nova, the top of the Chevy II line.
When it failed there, Chevrolet built the Camaro to oppose the Mustang, and the Corvair became a class by itself.
Auto safety critics, including Ralph Nader, alleged early models of the Corvair had an unsafe suspension system. A number of damage suits, most of
Safety hearings
$150 certificate
When Corvair failed to dominate the compact market, Chevrolet created the Chevy II to compete with the compacts, and groomed the Corvair as an adversary for the Ford Mustang.
them in California, were filed against GM by Corvair owners who became accident victims.
8 KANSAN May 13 1969
Photo by Ted Iliff
NO
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This couple, obviously taking part in what, in spring, a young man's fancy turns to, find the parking lot behind Carruth-O'Leary Hall a handy place to do just that. And being law-abiding types, they do their parking on the other side of the car.
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Full house
Photo by Halina Pawl
The Kansas Union Ballroom was the scene of last night's Student Senate after it was decided that the Union Forum Room would not be large enough to handle the crowd.
Society initiates 34 into honorary
The new initiates of Beta Gamma Sigma are: Jeffrey D. Arbuckle, Hutchinson junior; Thomas K. Jones, Topeka junior; Steven T. Joyce, Ulysses junior; Susan Harris Klaver, Halstead junior; J. Rowe McKinley, Lawrence junior.
Beta Gamma Sigma is the highest honorary recognition offered to juniors who rank in the upper 5 per cent of their class, seniors expected to graduate in the upper ten per cent of their class and to graduate students expected to graduate in the upper 20 per cent of their class.
The KU School of Business has announced the initiation of 34 students into Beta Gamma Sigma, business honorary society.
George R. Milleret, Lawrence junior; Roby D. Ogan, Great Bend junior; Thomas W. Poos, Salina junior; William M. Bashaw, Wichita senior; Michael W. Broders, Prairie Village senior; J. Mark Connolly, Salina senior; Robert K. Dalton, Wichita senior.
May 13 1969 KANSAN 9
John W. Huey, Wamego senior; Virginia S. Manley, Saddle River, N.J., senior; Betty L. Marshall, Ithaca, N.Y., senior; Janet S. Marshall, Atchison senior; Richard E. Martin, Topeka senior; Richard F. Mensch, Leawood senior; William A. Page, Wichita senior. James R. Prentice, Columbus, Neb., senior; Constance M. Tobin, Prairie Village senior; Elden E. Von Lehe, Linn senior; Ronald W. Barley, Colorado Springs, Colo., graduate student; William L. Bryant, Wichita graduate student; Wayne M. Cooper, Garden City graduate student.
Roger W. Goff, Lawrence graduate student; Stephen H. Klemp, Lawrence graduate student; Mason R. McIntire, Oregon, Mo., graduate student; R. Bruce Null, Grand Island, Neb., graduate student; Carlos A. Salaber, Argentina graduate student.
Ralph E. Smith, Wellington, Mo., graduate student; Janet D Sweet, College Station, Tex., graduate student; Michael G. Vineyard, Wymore, Neb., graduate student.
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OSU, Sooners favored again
Site: George F. Veeneker Memorial Course, Iowa State University, Par 71 (36-35); 18 holes Friday morning, 18 Friday afternoon, 18 Saturday morning.
Entrants: Each school may enter five men.
Scoring: Low individual score for the 54 holes decides individual championships, low medal score for four-man team decides team championships.
1968 Results: Colorado 857, Oklahoma State 861, Nebraska 881,
Oklahoma 902, Kansas 906, Kansas State 907, Iowa State 926,
Missouri 934.
1969 Top Ten Returnees: Bill Musselman (CU), second 212; Bill English (CU), third 216; Mike Holder (OSU), sixth 218; Jim Deaton (OSU) ninth 220; Bill Hessel (KU) ninth 220.
Course Notes: Record for 18 holes is 64 (by Pat Wilcox of Des Moines and Bob Leahy of Iowa City). Record for 54 holes is 207 (by Leahy).
1969 Outlook:
Kansas
Coming off one of their winningest dual seasons in history, Oklahoma figures to make quite a run for its first Big Eight golf title since 1957. The Sooners are 19-3 for the year, have beaten all in the Conference, with a split against Oklahoma State—the Sooners winning the last two meets—and return four from last year's fourth-place team. George Rives led Oklahoma at the meet last year with a 221, good for a tie for 11th. Skip Graham had a 229, Steve Johnson a 235, and Bill Tarwater a 240. The Sooners finished second to Oklahoma State in the Shawnee Invitational. Other Big Eight teams in the meet were well down the list. Possible entries: Rives (73), Graham (75), Jay Friedman (73), Tarwater (76), Johnson (77).
Could be one of strongest and deepest Kansas teams in some time with six lettermen returning. Would have been much stronger if Mike Krone, 1968 Kansas Amateur champion, had not been lost to injury. Bill Hess is a two-time letterman and was Jayhawk leader in last year's meet with 220, tying him for ninth. Also returning from last year's fifth-place team are Charles Peffer (229), and Dave Ross (234). Possible entries (with averages): Hess (77), Peffer (77), Jack Rogers (78), Roger Wells (82), David Ross (79), George Burgland (80), Howard Delongy (78).
Oklahoma State
Cowboys had string of 10 straight Conference championships snapped last year. Back on the track this year, the Pokes have lost only to Oklahoma in the Big Eight, splitting four matches against the Sooners. Three return from last year's second-place team-Mike Holder, who tied for sixth (218), Jim Deaton, who tied for ninth (220), and Jim Young. Sophomore Mark Hayes was Oklahoma amateur champion in 1967. Jim Andrews is a two-time state high school champion. Jim Shade was the Nebraska high school titlist in 1967 and runnerup in Nebraska state amateur last year. Doug Tewell won Oklahoma Junior Chamber title in 1966 and was state high school champ in 1967, qualifying for National Amateur in 1968. Possible entries: Doug Tewell (73), Mike Holder (74), Mark Hayes (74), Jim Shade (75), Jim Andrews (73), Jim Deaton (74), Jim Young (75).
Oklahoma
Colorado
Defending champion Buffs return three from last year's championship team, including Bill Musselman, second in individual standings (212), Jim English, third with 216, and Steve Parr (230). Doug Hebard is also a letterman. Musselman is past Colorado amateur match-play champion. English rates as one of Colorado's best and is former Colorado junior champion—his father has won Iowa, Kansas, and Colorado amateur titles. Possible entries: English (74), Parr (73), Musselman (73), Hebard (76), Murl Hendrickson (78)
Kansas State
Four are back from last year's sixth-place team. Doug Gray led the Wildcats with a 221, followed by Bob Leeper's 228, Pete Bell's 230, and Gary Johnson's 238. Gray's total tied him for 11th in individual standings. Bell and Johnson are two-year veterans. Bell is former Kansas Junior Chamber champion (he beat last year's league medalist, Grier Jones). Possible entries: Bell (73), Bob Leeper (75), Randy Gelwix (78), Tim Lowry (77), Johnson (78).
Missouri
Four return from last year's last-place team, but not all may see action in this year's meet as Coach Al Chandler battles to put together the right combination and move the Tigers out of the cellar. He's been experimenting all season with various combinations. Top returnee, and about the only one with a spot on the tournament team, is Ben Thomas, who shot a 227 last year. Phil Nunn was next at 236, Steve Lloyd followed with a 237 and Jim Miles a 247. Leading Missourians: Thomas (74), Scott Bess (75), Tom Miles (77), Lloyd (79), David May (80), Phil Nunn (79).
Nebraska
It is rebuilding time at Nebraska with the return of only three letterman. Only returnee who played in last year's meet for the third-place Huskers is Frank Rose, who shot a 224. Lettermen Larry Mason and Mike Ley add experience. Scott Brunzell is the top newcomer. Possible entries: Mason (76), Rose (76), Ley (77), Chuck Walter (79), Brunzell (76), Jim White (77).
Iowa State
The Cyclones return only John Benda and Tom Howell from last year's seventh-place team. Lost for the meet is Jim Lockwood, who had a 227 to lead Iowa State at last year's meet. He suffered a broken hand when hit by a flying bat while watching an intramural softball game. Iowa State had one of its best golfing years, carding a 14-2-1 record. With Lockwood out, possible entries: Benda (74), Tom Greedy (78), Jim Rieter (76), Rex Smith (79), and Howell (80).
May 13 1969 KANSAN 11
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Modell's 'yes' paves way for pro football merger
NEW YORK (UPI)
Somebody had to make the move, and in the end it turned out to be the one man nobody ever expected to—Art Modell,
the National Football League president and owner of the Cleveland Browns.
Modell didn't do it because he's a martyr, nor did he do it for the money as some already erroneously believe.
He did it for the cormiest reason in the world—"for the good of all"' and if there are those who take that to mean for his own good as well, Art Modell isn't going to bother arguing the point.
As happens whenever 25 millionaires get together in the same room, Modell, the 26th, was in Doctors Hospital with a bleeding ulcer. There was considerable difference of opinion over which NFL clubs should move into the much younger, less-established American Football League.
The prevailing sentiment was "let George do it" and for awhile NFL officials were looking exactly as foolish as the Major League baseball owners did when they were going around in the same unbroken circles trying to find themselves a suitable commissioner.
There are a lot of hard heads in football, too. And they're not all down there on the field.
But there are some good thinking men in football also, men who will put the game ahead of their own selfish interests, and did this past weekend.
Rozelle pushes hard
Pete Rozelle, the football commissioner, is one of those who worked hardest. When the 25 millionaires in his Park Avenue office, who sat there 35 hours and 45 minutes altogether, protested they were "too tired" from time to time, Rozelle
insisted they stay until they could hammer out an agreement.
So Rozelle deserves any extra fanfare he gets. So does Carroll Rosenbloom of the Baltimore Colts and Dan Rooney of the Pittsburgh Steelers, who agreed to go into the AFL along with the Brown's.
But one man possibly deserves more credit than all the rest, and Paul Brown picked him out.
Everybody knows Paul Brown, general manager and coach of the Cincinnati Bengals who throws around praise about as often as he does the boogaloo, which is to say not much. Brown's choice was Art Modell, whoho originally objected to moving his ball club to the AFL.
"I just feel that's all to his credit," Brown said of Modell when asked how he felt about the NFL president and Cleveland owner changing his mind.
"It was his decision that what is best for pro football is best for everyone."
Those who are now saying Modell, Rosenbloom and Rooney "sold out" for the money, an estimated $2-million apiece, couldn't be more wrong
None of the three asked for any money. The idea to give them some came from the 13 other NFL owners who felt the three new representatives in the American conference should be compensated for the natural loss in receipts they are bound to incur because the new ballparks in Cincinnati and Kansas City won't be ready for at least another year.
Besides, none of the three are hurting that much for money that they'd bolt the NFL for that reason alone. All three are well-fixed.
Why Modell?
The next logical question then is why would such a hide-bound NFL man like Modell consent to
go over to the rival circuit, and from his room at Doctors Hospital where he's still on a bland diet, he undertook to furnish the answer.
"A week ago this past Friday night (May 2) I had dinner with Pete Rozelle," Modell said. "I told him I have a surprise for you. If certain conditions are met, Cleveland is a possibility."
That was the first time Rozelle had any inkling Modell would ever consider moving his club to the other league, but Modell had a surprise in store for himself, or rather a shock, when he returned to his hotel room here for the alignment meetings.
"I made my decision this past Friday," he says, "but before I did I spoke with Wellington Mara of the New York Giants and Dan Rooney. I wanted to make sure the Rooneys knew my position and that the Giants wouldn't suffer."
The three of them talked in the hospital room, and Modell was satisfied his decision was not in conflict with either of his two friends.
"Originally, I was dedicated to a 16-10 status quo," says Modell about the alignment. "I wanted 16-10 for two years. The next best thing, I felt, was to deliver three teams now so as to preserve the rivalries and maintain competition.
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Apollo 10 moonshot ready
Engineers clamp ring in parachute system
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - The Space Agency said yesterday it has corrected a potentially serious problem on the Apollo 10 spacecraft which might have resulted in damage to the moonship's parachutes at the end of the mission.
A spokesman at the Manned Spacecraft Center said the problem was discovered on Apollo 9 after that craft was recovered from the Atlantic Ocean at the end of its flight in March.
The spokesman said the trouble was with a metal ring which serves as a base for explosive charges that blow off the craft's docking mechanism. After Apollo 9 was recovered, engineers discovered this ring had come partly loose from its moorings.
"It wasn't any problem for Apollo 9 and couldn't have been a problem," the spokesman said.
But he said engineers feared the ring might come all the way off during later flights, possibly flying up into the parachutes and damaging them during the descent to the ocean.
Engineers installed four spring retainers to keep the ring clamped in place on Apollo 10, set for launch Sunday on a moon orbit mission, the spokesman said. He said the modification was made on the launch pad and took less than one shift.
After Apollo 10, the spokesman said, all moonships will receive the same modification before they go out to the launch pad.
Apollo 10 crewmen contrast blend personalities into team
By United Press International
By United Press International They're a trio of contrasts, the crewmen of Apollo 10, yet they mesh their varied personalities
Moon explorers to be quarantined
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Quarantine procedures for the first U.S. moon explorers have been changed, but stringent precautions still will be taken to protect life on earth against possible contamination by moon organisms, space agency officials said yesterday.
The first U.S. moon landing is scheduled for July 20 with Apollo 11. Original plans called for the crew to remain sealed inside the spacecraft after splashdown until the vehicle was hoisted up on the deck of the recovery aircraft carrier.
Then the moonmen would have walked through a sealed plastic tunnel into a quarantine van, pulling the tunnel into the van with them. This was to keep them from coming into contact with humans or with earth's environment.
George Low, Apollo spacecraft manager, said tests showed trying to haul the spacecraft aboard a tossing aircraft carrier with the crew inside was too dangerous.
"The present plans are that the crew will get out of the spacecraft into a life raft, where they will don a special isolation garment," Low said.
into a brand of teamwork that goes beyond brotherhood in its closeness.
Thomas P. Stafford, 38, a baldish six-footer from Oklahoma, commands the team. In small but significant ways, the other two show the soft-spoken air force colonel is the undisputed boss—and they like it that way.
John W. Young, 38, shortest member of the crew and the man of fewest words, flies as navigator. But behind Young's outward reserve lies a dry wit and a love of fun that has occasionally gotten the boyish pilot with a shock of unruly brown hair in trouble with staid space agency officialdom.
All three men are veteranspace pilots. Their mission with Apollo 10: fly to moon orbit and practice every step of a lunar landing except the final touchdown itself, to clear the way for other Americans to walk the lunar surface on July 20.
Eugene A. Cernan, 35, a 'tait and suave young man from the sedate Chicago suburb Bellview, Ill., qualifies as the crew's poet and philosopher. He also serves as its systems engineer, charged with keeping watch, over the myriad pieces of equipment that make up Apollo 10.
"It requires a great deal of teamwork," said Cernan, who will hurtle to within 9.5 miles of the moon with Stafford in the lunar landing craft while Young orbits alone 69 miles above the surface.
Log of Apollo 10 mission
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Brief day-by-day log of key events planned during the moon orbit mission of Apollo 10, set for launch Sunday to clear the way for a July lunar landing.
Sunday, May 18-Launch, begin coast toward moon, television of earth.
Tuesday, May 20 -Midcourse correction, television of rapidly-approaching moon and tiny blue earth.
Monday, May 19- Two midecourse corrections, television of earth and moon, astronauts pass 120,000-mile halfway mark.
Wednesday, May 21-Final
Thursday, May 22-Television from moon, lunar landing craft drops down to scout Apollo 11 landing site from altitude of 9.5 miles, then performs rendezvous with command ship in orbit 69 miles high.
12 KANSAN May 13 1969
course adjustment, drop into lunar orbit, television of moon.
Friday, May 23-Navigation tests, two periods of television from moon.
Sunday, May 25-Astronauts pass halfway mark on way home, make course adjustment.
Saturday, May 24-Astronauts start home, television of earth and moon.
1
Monday, May 26-Television of earth, final course adjustment, re-entry, splashdown near Pago Pago in Pacific Ocean
UPI photo
Technicians begin Apollo countdown
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) Technicians began the countdown at midnight yesterday for Sunday's launch of three men on the Apollo 10 moon orbiting adventure.
The first items on the long 51/2-day countdown list were servicing the spaceship's water system and the installation of explosive devices in the towering space machine.
Astronauts Thomas P. Stafford, John W. Young and Eugene A. Cernan earlier yesterday practiced space flying on the ground in the final major rehearsal for their eight-day mission.
The astronauts undergo their last major head-to-toe medical checkup today and then hope to slow down the pace of training for the riskiest spaceflight yet undertaken in the moon program.
The three Apollo 9 astronauts caught colds three days before their scheduled launch time and had to wait an extra three days. Doctors said the pilots' resistance was probably lowered by their demanding training schedule.
"We're trying to end up with a rested crew this time," said a space agency spokesman.
At last report, Stafford, Young and Cernan were healthy. They had colds several weeks ago.
The astronauts spent most of yesterday in two spacecraft trainers rehearsing critical phases of their eight-day mission. Controllers in Houston monitored the exercise as if the pilots were in space.
The space agency said the session was the last big simulation planned for the Apollo 10 crew in the intricate, computer-controlled containers
which the pilots have relied on for months to get ready for flight.
The goal of the flight of Apollo 10 is to pave the way for a moon landing by two of the three Apollo 11 astronauts in July.
The astronauts will circle the moon for 2½ days to check out lunar landing machinery, to improve moon navigation techniques and to inspect the Apollo 11 landing site on the Sea of Tranquility.
Apollo 10 is scheduled to set out for the moon at 11:49 p.m. CDT Sunday and swing into lunar orbit 76 hours later.
Regular customer made his mark in pub
SPALDING, England (UPI) The owners of the Pigeon Inn are giving a five-gallon barrel of beer to 89-year-old Jack East, a customer so faithful that he has worn a hole in the floor by his favorite spot at the bar.
East downed his first beer in the pub when he was 19,and he has been a regular customer ever since.
"I started late, but I have been making up for it since," he said.
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The 3rd edition of the JAYHAWKER will be distributed May 23 and 24 in Strong Rotunda. HOWEVER, IT WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE TO DISTRIBUTE THE 4TH EDITION BEFORE VACATION. If you purchased a yearbook and will not be in Summer School and do not live in Lawrence, you may have the 4th edition mailed to you.
It is suggested that those students returning to KU next fall pick up their 4th issue anytime during enrollment at the Jayhawker Office (115 Union Bldg.). For students who will be in Lawrence sometime this summer, the 4th issue will be available after June 30 in the News Bureau (32 Strong).
YOU WILL NEED YOUR ORANGE IBM RECEIPT CARD to pick up your 3rd issue. DO NOT request to have your 4th issue mailed until you have picked up your 3rd issue. You may sign to have your 4th issue mailed when you pick up your 3rd issue.
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UDK World News
By United Press International
Rocky, Ordaz discuss trade
Rockefeller
MEXICO CITY - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York and 12 of his advisers met yesterday with members of the Mexican Council on Foreign Trade to hear their detailed demands for preferential trade treatment from the United States.
COLNAGHAN
The tone for the meeting was set Sunday by a comment from Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz who told Rockefeller, a special envoy from President Nixon, that Mexico "insisted" on special trade treatment.
importation of certain sizes of Mexican tomatoes served to heighten tension among Mexican officials over trade relations.
This was interpreted to mean nonreciprocal tariff preferences for Mexican raw materials, agricultural products and semi-manufactured and manufactured goods.
The ban in February by the U.S. Agriculture Department on
Nixon to report on war prospects
WASHINGTON — President Nixon conferred for the first time yesterday with his military chief in Vietnam and announced he would report to the nation tomorrow the prospects of ending the war.
White House officials said the President would not use the speech to announce a limited withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam.
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams flew into Washington unannounced Sunday afternoon for the White House conference, described as a general review of
the military situation. The new intensive wave of Viet Cong House spokesman Ronald Ziegler said.
While Nixon and Abrams were conferring, Secretary of State William P. Rogers took off on a 17-day round-the-world trip which will first take him to Saigon for four days of talks with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu, U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and others.
Gen. Abrams was scheduled to return to Saigon last night after a White House lunch in his honor.
Red Chinese accept talks with Russians
HONG KONG - Communist China yesterday said it has accepted a Soviet proposal to discuss navigation on their disputed Ussuri River border, where battles have cost both sides heavy casualties.
Peking Radio said Chinese delegates would attend the meeting of the joint Sino-Soviet River Commission Monday at Khabarovsk as proposed by the Soviet Union April 26.
There was no indication the border dispute would come up in the discussions. The Soviets also have proposed resuming border negotiations which broke off in 1964.
China's defense minister, Lin Piao, told the nation's eighth Communist party conference last month the leadership of Chairman Mao Tse-tung was "considering an answer" to the border talks proposal.
But the broadcast yesterday said only that Chinese delegates would attend the River Commission meeting, making no mention of the border dispute.
Since March 2, troops from both sides have clashed over Damansky Island, in he Ussuri. Reports from travelers returning from the scene Sunday said 800 Chinese troops and 60 Russian soldiers have died.
The announcement followed unofficial reports from Moscow of more fighting along the 5,000-mile Sino-Soviet border, part of it formed by the Ussuri and Amur rivers.
Both sides have claimed possession of the river island in far east Asia above North Korea. The dispute stems from an old Chinese claim on more than a million square miles of Russia.
Arab-Lebanon parley fails
MIDEAST - Talks between Arab guerrillas and Lebanese army officials collapsed yesterday when the government refused to remove all restrictions on guerrilla groups operating from Lebanon against Israel.
Israel and Jordan exchanged tank and heavy artillery fire three times across the cease-fire line in the area of the King Hussein Bridge, a Jordanian military spokesman said in Amman.
The Lebanese army officials and guerrilla leaders had been meeting in Beirut for the past five days to work out an agreement on guerrilla operating rights from Lebanese territory
Informed Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) sources said the talks were inconclusive and no agreement had been reached.
Betty Grable to lose 'Belle Star'
LONDON — "Belle Star," the musical in which Betty Grable made a comeback that showed her legs were as good as they used to be, is closing next Saturday. She tried to save it by hiring a comedy writer at her own expense.
"Some of the things I had to say in the show were absolutely embarrassing," she said. "Jokes were in bad taste. These things upset me a bit."
The show opened at the Palace Theater April 30. It drew large crowds at first but critics panned it although they remarked how little Miss Grable's figure had changed—particularly her famous legs—since she was the pin-up queen of servicemen in World War II.
The guerrillas have demanded complete relaxation of all restrictions on guerrilla groups in Lebanon. The Lebanese army, however, has remained determined to control guerrilla activity because of possible Israeli retaliation, such as the Israeli commando raid on Beirut Airport last December.
De Gaulle critic seeks election
PARIS — Acting President Alain Poher, a political unknown until the resignation of Charles de Gaulle, yesterdaybecame the fourth major candidate seeking the French presidency in the June 1 election.
The 60-year-old Center party member entered the race after public opinion polls indicated he had the best chance of beating former Premier Georges Pompidou, the Gaullist party favorite and the current frontrunner.
Poher's outspoken opposition to De Gaulle's constitutional reforms brought him into the political limelight, and some Gaullist politicians have blamed him for De Gaulle's downfall. As senate president he held a largely ceremonial post.
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North Viet rockets follow heaviest attacks
SAIGON — Communist forces fired rockets into Tan Son Nuh airbase near Saigon last night and exploded grenades inside the city in a followup to the heaviest wave of attacks in South Vietnam in 15 months. U.S. commanders said they expected the raids to intensify.
Two grenades exploded in Saigon, and authorities reported at least seven South Vietnamese wounded, including two children.
At least three 107 mm rockets crashed into Tan Son Nhut on the outskirts of Saigon, but early reports indicated no casualties or damage. The base houses both American and South Vietnamese military headquarters.
The U.S. command said North Vietnamese and Viet Cong gunners hit 159 allied bases and cities with rockets and mortar Sunday night and early yesterday. This was the heaviest wave since the night of Jan. 30-31, 1968, when the Communists launched their Tet offensive.
U. S. intelligence sources
Berlin celebrates airlift
Speaking on the 20th anniversary of the ending of the blockade of Berlin, retired Gen. Frank Howley told 1,000 applauding factory workers at the Eternit housing materials factory:
BERLIN — The American commander of Berlin during the city's blockade by the Russians 20 years ago yesterday told tearful residents who still remember the Berlin airlift that the allies will defend the city forever.
"Then, as today, the allied in West Berlin kept their promise.
May 13
1969 KANSAN 13
Some of the older workers, who remembered Howley as America's Berlin commandant during the trying 1948-49 Berlin airlift, shook hands with him with tears in their eyes.
If you ask me how long, I'll use the name of your firm. Eternit mcans eternity which is forever in English."
Howley, 66, now a vice president of New York University, was the guest of honor at ceremonies marking the end of the Soviet Union's 11-month siege of the city and of the massive allied airlift in which 2,323,067 tons of supplies were ferried in to keep the population alive. The blockade began June 19, 1948, and ended May 12, 1949.
described the surge of Communist raids as a "prelude" to a predicted summer offensive aimed at forcing allied concessions at the Paris talks on the war.
"We expect something a little bigger and a little better later in the month," a U.S. intelligence officer said. There was speculation the main push would be on Ho Chi Minh's birthday Monday.
North Vietnamese troops shelled at least nine U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division outposts in areas about 50 miles northwest of Saigon near the Cambodian border and followed the barrages with ground assaults on three of the bases that killed at least 19 Americans and wounded 110, U.S. spokesmen said. At least 134 Communists were reported slain.
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Education in Kansas
Ghetto breeds own dialect
By BARBARA LANCASTER
Kansas has some urban headaches, but nothing to rival the head-splitting migraines of states with huge urban populations. Everything may not be completely up-to-date in Kansas City, but the state compares well with others in coping with urban ills.
In the efforts to prepare for future needs as far as physical facilities are concerned, Kansas attempts to make up for needed funds by imaginative and economical planning. In the efforts toward development of its human resources, the same policy seems to be working. A speaker at the recent International Reading Association meeting in Kansas City said of the state's educational efforts, "I would estimate that Kansas ranks about 70 percentile—somewhere within the top 15 of the 50 states in quality of reading instruction and when you consider that many states spend a great deal more on education than Kansas does, this is pretty good."
Teaching quality high
Dr. Doris Gunderson, director of the Ford Foundation-funded Interdisciplinary Committee on Reading Problems, said at the meeting that Kansas also ranks high on the quality of instruction for disadvantaged students. She said that the Bureau of Child Research projects at Juniper Gardens Children's Project in Kansas City shows promise of worthwhile breakthroughs in the early education of culturally different children. Heading the remedial reading project is Montrose Wolf, associate professor of human development and director of the study of spontaneous speech of disadvantaged children is Todd Risley, research associate of child research, both at KU.
In her speech, Dr. Gunderson pointed out some specialized problems in teaching Head Start youngsters. "Language is the principal mediator of cognitive development," she said. "If linguistic performance largely determines educational success, and if lower class children do not use language
adequately as a cognitive tool, it will be reflected in increasing difficulties with reading as the children go through school. Divergent dialect differences currently are receiving much attention, with the complicating factors of differences in phonology and grammatical structure between the non-standard dialect and standard English."
Dialectic difference
Acceptance of the idea that the ghetto Negro child has a dialect which differs enough from standard English to cause serious problems for him did not come easily. The members of the linguistic profession who felt most threatened by the discovery that such a dialect did indeed exist were those dialect geographers who had for decades insisted that the speech of the Negro was the same as white Southern speech.
Another group which reacted with some hostility to the idea when it was originally presented was the segment of the Negro middle class who preferred to play down differences for fear of giving comfort to racists. There were also the usual liberals-gone-overboard who were more concerned about the feelings of adult Negroes who had managed to make it up the difficult path to acquisition of standard English than they were about the child of six trying to cope with school in what was, to him, a foreign language.
Research progressing
The research is nearing completion at the Center for Applied Linguistics in Washington, D.C. The charting of language was pioneered by William A. Stewart, and the first director of the Urban Language Study was Dr. J. L. Dillard. William Labov of Columbia University has for many years conducted research on the language spoken by Harlem Negroes and Puerto Ricans in New York City. Roger Shuy, current director of the Center's Sociolinguistic Program, worked with social dialects in Detroit before coming to Washington. Extensive research has shown that ghetto Negroes in large cities across the
State cuts school districts
By JEAN HERSHEY
nation speak a dialect of English which is similar enough to English to mask its basic difference, while being different enough to make serious problems for urban Negro school children.
"Kansas led the nation in reducing the number of local school districts during 1965 and 1966," says W. C. Kampschroeder, superintendent of public instruction in Kansas
Dangers apparent
One healthy aspect to the Black Consciousness movement is that the Negro is able to escape the feeling that anything which is different from the middle-class norm is necessarily inferior. Too often well-meaning teachers of English have reinforced the idea that because one language has gained a higher place in the "pecking order" of socio-linguistics, it is "better" than another.
Educators are planning now for the time when materials will be available. Teachers attending the NDEA Institutes over the past few summers have become aware of the insights which linguistics can offer, so the next step has been to make the teacher aware of the dangers of possible ethnocentrism by insisting that "there is only one correct way to speak English." He has learned that it is not only time-wasting, but impossible to make the child forsake his own perfectly serviceable (for him, in his environment) language. The teacher seeks to give him the tools to be bi-dialectal, or "bilingual." In that way, he could more comfortably cope with the role he may choose of being a "cultural straddler." A child can accept the idea that he has a language which is right for his block but not in formal situations. He has a tool now to participate in middle class American society if he chooses to do so.
'Ain't' ain't practical
The U.S. Office of Education in 1966 issued a statement saying "the nation is educating more and more children in fewer and fewer school districts." The statement cited Kansas for its achievement.
Linguist James Bostain puts it succinctly and in thoroughly pragmatic terms. "The 'aren't' people are in the saddle and they have decided that 'aint' ain't no good. What's wrong with 'aint't? It conveys your message with perfect clarity, but it conveys messages about your social and educational status you may not wish to convey. To sum it up, any guy who says 'I ain't got no money, ain't never likely to git much.'"
However, the road to unification in Kansas has been long, hard and rocky, filled with blind curves and dead ends.
"A thread of concern for modifying the existing school district structure has existed in Kansas throughout its history as a state," Kampschroeder said.
Kampschroeder said this effort did not last because consolidation meant the expense of building new school buildings.
The fact that the Negro child is assumed to speak standard English has been a frustrating experience both for him and his teacher. He has too often assumed that he is simply being "sloppy" or that he has a "lazy tongue." The child attempts to communicate his thoughts to the teacher in the only language he knows, and he is constantly corrected. He quickly learns that the only way to avoid branding himself as a thoroughly disreputable individual is to keep his mouth shut.
As early as 1861 the legislature passed a law allowing people in one-teacher districts to form a "union" or graded school district by popular vote or petition to the county superintendent. This act enabled two or more districts to form one district or allowed one district to expand its territory.
Delayed reorganization
Few consolidations
The 1901 law stated that consolidated districts could be formed by uniting several small pne-teacher school districts to form a district which maintained a graded school or a graded school and a high school. By 1914 there were 80 consolidated districts.
When the middle class child starts learning to read, he is faced with a comparatively simple decoding task. The graphic representation on paper is in a language he speaks. The ghetto Negro child must first translate the graphic symbols into individual words, and then try to make something meaningful out of words which go together in a pattern that is strange and even senseless to him.
May 13 1969 KANSAN 15
Kampschroeder said there were few consolidations under this law and the trend in education was to form additional small districts.
In 1893, 1895 and 1899 laws were passed which permitted school districts which had lost their populations to disorganize. Kampschroeder noted these laws were used infrequently.
"The first real attempt at reorganization was the consolidated school movement which began in 1901." Kampschroeder stated.
"Consolidation became a word which caused short tempers and high blood pressure and opposition to this permissive law was such that the most significant result of the entire consolidation movement was a delay of much needed reorganization for many years," Kampschroeder explained.
The trend in reorganization was simply to close the schools in one district and transport the students to a neighboring district. This practice had become widespread by the 1930's.
"It is interesting to note that very few pupils from these closed districts were sent to the neighboring one-teacher districts," Kampschroeder said.
Editor's Note: The articles on pages 15 through 18 were written as part of depth study assignments this semester in backgrounds of the news II. Each article represents but a portion of a larger comprehensive study.
This law stated the county commissioners in each county were to appoint a county school reorganization committee to disorganize all nonoperating districts, complete a countywide school survey and work out a reorganization plan which met the needs of the county.
By 1939, more than 1,000 school districts were not operating a school and by 1945 more than 2,500 districts had no schools.
This law met strong opposition and anyone connected with it was attacked by the angered population.
"Among those subject to harassment and abuse were legislators, county committees, county superintendents, and the state superintendent," Kampschroeder said. "Two state senators were sent letters threatening death unless they gave their support to changing the law."
In 1945 the legislature attempted to remedy some of the problems of the school districts by passing an act which required all elementary districts to be reorganized.
Grade school law
The law was slightly amended
in 1947 and was killed later in the year when the Kansas Supreme Court declared it was unconstitutional "because of the unrestricted discretion delegated to the county school reorganization committees."
3,700 reorganized
In spite of the bitter opposition to the act, in the two years it was in effect 3,700 school districts had been reorganized and this reorganization was made valid by acts passed in the 1947 legislature.
The general pattern of too many too-small districts remained prevalent, however, and the situation became more critical as the population continued to move from the rural to the urban areas," Kampschroeder noted.
In 1960 there were 255 high schools out of a total of 552 high schools in the state which had less than 75 students.
In 1961 another act was passed which attempted to reorganize the school districts, but this act was also declared unconstitutional by the Kansas Supreme Court.
In 1963 the legislature finally passed a school unification bill which could be upheld by the court.
"The law provided for incorporating all territory of the state into a school district that offered instruction from grades one through 12 with authority to operate a kindergarten, and under certain conditions, a junior college," Kampschroeder explained.
It is this act that has allowed Kansas to reduce the number of school districts from 1,848 to 330 in five years.
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Cities, suburbs conflict
By MICHAEL SPENCER
When one drives down Woodlawn Avenue in Wichita, he comes to another city, Eastborough. The speed limit before he reaches Eastborough is 35 miles per hour, but when he enters the six blocks of Eastborough on Woodlawn Avenue, he must reduce his speed to 30 miles per hour. This illustrates some of the problems existing between cities and suburbs.
In the early 1960's, Wichita launched a program of annexation which brought the area of the city to just over 79 square miles. The goal of this program was expressed in its title "The One Wichita."
These incorporated towns would help build the Wichita Metropolitan Area; they include Augusta, population 6,183; Derby, 5,321; Eastborough, 1,230; Haysville, 4,277; Kechi, 836; Mulvane, 2,814 and other cities with approximately 5,000 persons-a total of more than 25,000 persons. The town of
Although 20 square miles of land was added to the city, some needed area could not be annexed because incorporated towns wanting to maintain their identity fought against becoming a part of the city.
Incorporated towns
Eastborough serves as an excellent example of problems that can exist and how they are solved. In the late 1940's and early 1950's the city of Eastborough grew near the eastern limits of Wichita. One of the principal reasons for its growth was many of the wealthy families of Wichita wanted to escape the high level of taxation in the city.
Rapid growth
In the 1950's and 1960's, Wichita experienced rapid growth due to the expanding aircraft industry in the city. During the ten years between 1950 and 1960, the city grew at a rate of 51.4 per cent from 168,279 to 254,698. The city limits of Wichita grew very rapidly in all directions, but especially to the east where most of the large industry is located. Eventually the entire city of Eastborough was surrounded by the city of Wichita.
Although Wichita made many attempts at annexing Eastborough, it was unsuccessful. It should be emphasized that many wealthy Wichitans live in Eastborough—people such as Olive Beech, owner of Beech Aircraft, and former Kansas Governor, William Avery—who can swing a great deal of political leverage.
One of the largest conflicts between Wichita and Eastborough, other than the annexation, concerned the paving of Woodlawn Avenue. Woodlawn is a boundary between the two cities. In 1964 Woodlawn was a two-lane road which needed repaving and also enlarging. Neither city wanted to do the work. Wichita argued since Eastborough maintained and enforced speed regulations on the road, it should have the responsibility of working on the street. On the other hand, Eastborough argued since the street ran into Wichita at either end of the city, and a far greater number of Wichita cars and trucks used the street than did those from Eastborough, it should have responsibility. Finally an agreement was worked out by which each city would pay for one-half of the work.
City contracts
Other problems of services have been worked out between the two cities. Basically, the City of Eastborough provides its own streets and police protection. It lies within common school district No. 259 which provides school services.
Through a contract with Wichita, it obtains sewer and water service and fire
protection. These types of contracts between cities are very frequent and are often used for solving urban problems.
Intergovernmental co-operation is usually characterized by one of the following types of action: (1) joint enterprise, (2) furnishing services by one unit of government to others, (3) mutual aid or (4) parallel action.
Joint enterprise has often been quite successful in providing public services, such as health and sanitary functions. For this purpose, two or more units of government enter into an agreement to employ a qualified individual or create a department to perform the necessary duties involved.
Cooperation common
The rendering of services by one unit of government for other units is fairly common. An example is Eastborough.
Mutual aid which is based upon the principle of exchange of services has been used most frequently for providing reciprocal aid in fire fighting.
Parallel action is commonly undertaken as a result of informal understandings rather than formal agreements—by enacting uniform regulations pertaining to such matters as zoning, building construction, and subdivisions.
Atchison housing project upgrades community
By SANDRA SIAU
"The idea behind any public housing development is to provide a community's low-income citizens with the incentive to improve their situations and, in so doing, lead richer, fuller lives. Giving them safe, decent, sanitary housing at a cost which leaves them part of their income for things other than the bare necessities, helps to restore human dignity and turn despair into hope for the future," explained Robert Kocour.
The executive director of the Atchison Housing Authority since June 1967, Kocour, an energetic young man of 30, knows what he's talking about. For two years the Atchison native, a 1960 graduate of St. Benedict's College, has witnessed the overwhelming need for human renewal in the course of planning an ambitious public housing development for the northeast Kansas community of 13,000 residents.
Monev is from HUD
Scheduled to begin construction around June 1, the project is funded by a $2,940,000, 40-year loan awarded Atchison by the Fort Worth, Texas, district office of the federal Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Agency in March 1967. It calls for the erection of a 10-story high-rise complex containing 150 units for elderly persons (62 and over) in the downtown and 50, single-story units for low-income families on two separate sites.
Kocour's $800 a month budget, based on the number of units the Atchison Housing Authority will construct, is provided by HUD. Out of it, he must pay all the expenses of his one-man office located in the city hall. The Atchison Housing Authority board—Dr. F. A. Donavan, Joseph M. Carrigan, the former mayor, Hazen Shaeffer, present mayor, Floyd Denton and Mrs. James Rockwell—put in countless hours without pay.
"The high rise, which will be
16 KANSAN May 13 1969
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constructed on the present site of the five-story Atchison Hotel, should be completed in two years. We're shooting for 18 months on the family units, but since these are duplexes, they'll be made available as they're completed," Kocour stated.
Economy boon seen
"The development promises to be a boon to our economy as well as a chance for low-income citizens to lead more productive lives. In Atchison, where only 63.6 per cent of the estimated 6,250 dwelling units are considered sound (with all of the necessary plumbing facilities), we've had a running battle with sub-standard housing for some time.
"In 1960, the median income of our 5,121 families was $4,796 per year, with an estimated 24.2 per cent of the population earning less than $3,000 annually. In 1965, the welfare rolls listed 1,080 recipients. Few people here can afford to build new homes. During the past few years, the overflow of army families from Fort Leavenworth (with rent allotments of up to $250 per month), has forced up rental prices of better homes, creating a small panic among our lower middle-class citizens," Kocour continued.
Landlords are problems
"At the bottom of the critical housing situation are our slum landlords—a small corps of Atchison's respectable citizens—who prosper on the blood money they extract from low-income families forced to rent from them. Our strongest opponents, these landlords make a practice out of buying up shacks for from $700 to $1,000 and, without putting any equity into them, renting them for as much as $40 a month.
"Some of these shacks have
no electricity and no indoor plumbing. The squaler and filth is unbelievable. But, the welfare office continues to pay the rents and the building inspector is reluctant to condemn them unless they become vacant. We have no place but other shacks to move these tenants to," Kocour said in disgust.
"The slum landlords are by no means the only opponents of the housing development. We've been told by other members of the community that the elderly residents won't want to live in a high rise and will be afraid to ride the elevator. However, our consultants (Butler and Associates of Springfield, Mo.) Fort Worth's HUD officials, and trips to communities where this type of structure has proven to be successful in housing the elderly, have convinced us it's the right type for our purposes.
New building cheaper
"We've also been criticized for planning a new building instead of converting the dilapidated, 42-year-old Atchison Hotel into units for the elderly. It's hard to convince people that, in this case, it's cheaper and more practical to erect an attractive new building.
The hotel site, which borders the downtown mall at Seventh and Commercial Streets, was selected because it's within minutes of all of the services elderly people need to have close at hand-doctors, dentists, supermarkets, shops-Kocour explained. The complex, to be constructed of structural steel and cement blocks, will contain 90 single efficiency units (HUD estimates at least 70 per cent of the elderly live alone), 50 to 55 one-bedroom apartments and five, two-bedroom apartments.
In addition to the Atchison HA office and a lobby, the main
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floor will serve as a community center for residents and their guests. A central, 200-capacity community room, complete with demonstrator kitehen, will be available for large functions, such as the weekly meetings of the Over 60 Bridge Club. Smaller rooms will be used for conferences, seminars and activities like ceramics, drawing and painting. Each floor will contain its own social area and a laundry center.
Every unit will include a stove, refrigerator, window shades and paid utilities. Rent, to be based on the number of occupants per unit and amount of total income, will vary from $30 to $60 per month.
"According to HUD, there are 1,500 people in Atchison who are eligible for residency in the high rise," Kocour noted.
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"Low-income families are usually thought of as those whose total annual income is less than $3500, but to be eligible for the family units, the maximum income will vary, depending on the number of children in a family, debts, medical expenses, etc. Each applicant will be considered as a separate case by the Housing Authority. The rent will also
range from $30 to $60 per month, and the same extras given the elderly, will be included," Kocour stated.
The family duplexes, designed to be attractive as well as functional, will be painted different colors and feature brick facades. Both the northside complex, which will contain 38 units, and the 12-unit Highland Park complex (an area involved in the Southside urban renewal project), will be landscaped with play and parking areas provided.
Plans call for 10,
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Highland Park site.
"Now that we've cut through all of the government red tape involved in implementing a project like this and the planning stage is finished, the Housing Authority's anxious to begin actual construction. Rising building costs will probably force us to increase our budget before we're finished, but in the long run, it'll be worth it."
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Child got 'head start'
By REA WILSON
Jimmy is five years old. This fall he will enroll in kindergarten. For the past two years he has joined 24 other pre-school children at the Head-Start community day care center at the Plymouth Congregational Church in Lawrence.
Before starting in the Head-Start program Jimmy, like many of his school friends, was not toilet-trained; his vocabulary was limited and his attitudes about school were poor.
Now, after two years, Jimmy is eager to learn. Through the experiences at Head-Start, Jimmy is better prepared for school.
The program in Lawrence is headed by Mrs. Barbara Murphy. She is assist d by an assistant teacher, two teacher-aids and volunteer workers, most of whom are KU students.
Mrs. Murphy works on $42,000 a year in federal funds, feeding, providing medical care for an educating pre-school disadvantaged children.
Budget if $42.000
"I really need $60,000 or $70,000 to do what I'd like to with this center," Mrs. Murphy said. There are no provisions in the budget for sick leave or any health or insurance benefits.
"Besides those problems there is no assurance from year to year that there will be a job for us. The government could withdraw the funds," she said.
During the first hours of the day the children have what appears to be free play time. Still as Mrs. Murphy explained, these children are learning as they play.
"These kids come from homes where there are no books and few toys. We're trying to broaden their experience," she said.
Children gather in groups around a reading table, a puzzle table, the play kitchen, the building block area or the guinea pig cage. Appearing like any nursery school children, these children play, however, with slightly hidden deficiencies.
Children are unskilled
There is hesitation with the puzzles, inability to use scissors properly, impatience with story books
without pictures, a short concentration span and physical force in anger. They play side by side, not together.
When the children first come to Head-Start they demonstrate little discipline. They grab when they want a toy, they hit when they are angry, they threaten teachers when they do not get their own way.
"We have to be very firm and very strict. We let them know the rules at first and remain consistent about them. It's hard for them to understand discipline. In their homes discipline is inconsistent and misbehavior is punished by swearing or beatings," Mrs. Murphy explained.
Lessons after play
After the morning play period the children have lessons. Usually they have a subject to discuss such as firemen's duties or snow. On Friday the entire class goes on a trip to a park, library, post office or zoo.
Even with extended studies on subjects Mrs. Murphy wonders how much the children are retaining.
"We spent three weeks on winter. We made snowmen, paper snow flakes. The children felt the snow and played in it. At the end of the unit, we asked them what color snow was. They answered, 'red, green, black,'—every color but white."
She said she felt there was, however, some carry-over of knowledge. The children are proud of what they have learned even if it is just learning to wash their hands before eating.
Students aren't aware
"We're not trying to re-educate them," Mrs. Murphy said. "We're just trying to change their attitudes and make them more aware of their environment. When they first come here they think, for instance, that only a teacher can push a swing. They don't identify with a mother playing. We try to teach them that even if their mommy can't play with them, there are other mommies who play with their children."
The children who attend Head-Start classes are chosen according to need by an admissions
committee. Seventy-five per cent of the parents, mostly mothers, have to be employed to qualify the center for federal funds. Some mothers start to work just to have their children enrolled in Head-Start.
Home life unstable
The home life of these children is unstable. Only five of the 24 enrolled have fathers. The number of children in each family ranges from one to thirteen, the average being six.
In the mornings many of the children arrive without having had breakfast. The center feeds them breakfast if they need it, a mid-morning snack of fruit, a hot lunch and an afternoon snack.
"For some of them this is the only food they get. For others potato chips and cookies fill in for dinner," Mrs. Murphy said.
Besides being undernourished, the children often are in need of medical attention. The largest part of the operating budget is devoted to medical and dental care. If the child is on welfare or has a medical card, Douglas County pays for this expense. A medical card signifies the parents can afford to pay part of the bill.
Pays for surgery
Besides providing for at least two dental check-ups a year and any dental work necessary, the Head-Start funds also pay for major surgery and psychiatric care.
Although just five years old, Head-Start is helping these children prepare for school. They are given a chance to succeed at a young age which may provide adequate motivation for later school work.
One criticism of Head-Start is it creates expectations for the children which are not met in school. The school system lacks adequate funds and personnel to continue the same individual attention the children receive in Head-Start.
Last year a new program called Follow Through was tried in 10 cities. This program was designed to continue the work of Head-Start when the child entered grade school, however, there were not enough funds to expand the program this year.
With more money and community interest, Head-Start and its subsequent programs may help break the poverty chain by making up for experiences missed by the older generations of the disadvantaged.
Newsmen discuss black movement
By DIANE SAMMS
"As a general rule, the press has neglected the black community—especially locally—except in crisis situations," said Don McKee, Associated Press staff reporter and a member of AP's racial taskforce.
The veteran civil rights reporter traced the response of the press through the history of the civil rights movement, beginning with the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott in 1955-56. At that time, McKee said, there were two attitudes of the press toward the black movement. He called one "enlightened" and one "more typically racist."
There was a "fairly good working relationship" between the press and the black movement at that time, McKee said. He said the movement, then dominated by Martin Luther King Jr.'s Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), had several "friends" in reporters in the South who were "willing to be objective."
The newsman related how Carmichael gradually began refusing to talk to members of the white press, taking the position it was a waste of time to talk with the press, which he felt distorted the facts.
Black power causes reaction "With the advent of the black power slogan, there was considerable uneasiness in the reaction of many white people. And some of this carried over to the news media," McKee recalled.
May 13
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Mckee confessed to "many cases of seizing upon rhetoric" by the press and called it a problem of news judgment.
Of current relationships with persons in the black movements, McKee cited the good relationship he has experienced with the leaders of SCLC. He specifically mentioned a good working relationship with Dr. Ralph David Abernathy, SCLC president, and the Rev. Andrew Young, SCLC executive director.
The press needs to "routinely include the activities and newsworthy developments within the black community," McKee said. Working relationships should be established before "strained situations" occur, he said.
Middle-class black people are not hard to deal with, McKee said, but they seem a little suspicious of the press' motives.
"There is a need for getting, keeping and using black newsmen-exploiting them, in the best sense of the word," the wire service reporter said. He then confessed that there was currently no Negro on the AP Atlanta bureau staff. "Everybody's trying to get one (black reporter)," he sighed.
"Civil rights today is no longer any fun to report. Nobody wants to hear about it," said Andrew Jaffee of Newsweek magazine's Atlanta bureau.
Jaffe is a verteran civil rights reporter, having covered the violence in the Watts area of Los Angeles. He has been in Atlanta since 1966.
Newsweek has blacks
"Since Watts, journalism as an industry has involved black people in a more sophisticated way," Jaffe said, adding that Newsweek has "several" black reporters.
The magazine reporter lauded staff members of SCLC, calling them "tremendous people . . . I agonize with them . . . I admire them." He spoke of Hosea Williams, SCLC director of voter registration, in particular.
With few exceptions, Jaffe said, "SCLC (unlike the student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee) has resisted blaming all its troubles on the press."
The reporter had some criticisms of the SCLC's Poor People's Campaign last spring. "It was strictly manufactured for publicity purposes and it never failed to reach its greatness as a publicity venture.
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"With the Poor People's Campaign," Jaffe said, "we saw how the movement saw the press as an arm of the movement."
He criticized the leaders of the Campaign for their lack of organization. The leaders didn't speak for the poor, he said, "they weren't eloquent enough."
Jaffe also criticized the SCLC staff for staying in seclusion during the Washington Campaign, even to the point of changing hotels frequently to avoid the press and government officials.
Liberal Southern paper
Alex Coffin, staff reporter for The Atlanta Constitution, characterizes his paper as "much more liberal than our readers would want."
"We really care," Coffin said in a pronounced Southern drawl. He said staff meetings are frequently called to "talk about how we can help black and poor people."
"We know we won't sell more papers," Coffin said, emphasizing the seriousness with which the newspaper deals with the question of its coverage.
But, Coffin related in spite of the push of the newspaper for more objective and comprehensive coverage, "We haven't been responsive enough and supportive enough."
With the admission of shortcomings of the paper, Coffin said the Constitution was much more liberal than most Southern newspapers.
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Social sciences aid crime evaluation
Bv JOSE FONSECA
A former president of the United States once said that crime has become a malignant enemy in America's midst.
In fact, America is the most criminal nation in the world, in terms of statistical data. Americans commit twice as many assaults as Frenchmen, three times more rapes than Italians and five times more mufders than Englishmen.
What are the reasons for such a disproportional amount of criminality? From the FBI crime reports one can see the incidence of most crimes of violence, and also of non-violent crimes in a lesser degree, is correlated with the size of the city.
"The Challenge of Crime in a Free Society," edited in 1967 by the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, shows crime associated with poverty, racial antagonism, family breakdown or the restlessness of young people.
Crimes increase
In the period from 1964 to 1965 the Commission found that rates of offenses per 100,000 population had increased from 4.8 to 5.1 willful homicides, 10.7 to 11.6 forcible rapes, 58.4 to 61.4 robberies, 101.8 to 106.6 aggravated assaults, 580.4 to 605.3 burglaries, 368.2 to 393.3 larceny cases of $50 and over, 242.0 to 251.0 motor vehicle thefts, 175.7 to 184.7 total crimes against persons, and 1,190.6 to 1,249.6 total property crimes.
These statistics are offenses known to the police. A large number of offenses go undetected. The age group from 15 to 17 was proportionately the most heavily involved in this increase of crime—an indication of the seriousness of juvenile delinquency.
Obviously, a general breakdown of standards is underway. Family ties are more easily broken: Churches have lost their controlling effects on the behavior of their members. Middle class values no longer appeal to youth. The display of corruption enacted by the adult world on all levels, from official to social, attest to a confusion of ends and practice. A reassertion of ethical standards would seem to be inevitable, but in the meantime greater social unrest and violence is indicated.
Crime causes
A great number of sociologists argue that lower class culture creates an environment which generates delinquency and crime. (The term "culture" relates to the aggregation of persons.) In spite of all the numbers and "findings," however there is no single statement that tells us the effect of population density on the distribution of mental illness and crime.
On the other hand, a serious semantical disagreement seems to exist when one mentions crime and mental illness. Thomas S. Caszz, professor of psychiatry at the State University of New York in Syracuse, says that mental illness is a myth, although he does not reject any facts of human behavior.
He believes that myth does not imply denying facts but reallocating them. One could define mental illness as a disease of the brain whose predominant symptoms are abnormalities of behavior, or as a functional or psychological disorder.
Society determines law
However, the patterns of behavior are determined by society and when a specific act is defined as criminal the crime is being defined by the Criminal Law, which can vary from one to another society.
Therefore, it is not always wise to compare behavioral patterns between nations without
considering those differences. The still primitive methodology of social research and the great complexity of variables constrains the search for new knowledge.
Social scientist Kenneth Polk sees the failure to find a consistent and meaningful relationship between the economic status characteristics of areas, population density, delinquency and crime as responsible for a "curious and major disjunction of 'facts' and 'theory' in delinquency and crime research." To the variables presented by Polk, one could easily add "mental illness."
Data not true measure
The fact is that, as far as our present knowledge goes, it is not possible to measure delinquency, or crime, or mental illness in terms of statistical data. What would happen if half of the world population became color-blind? What then would be considered yellow or green? Would this change the very nature of the colors?
A similar thing is happening with attempts to study crime. There is no semantical agreement over the term, and no scientific conclusion stays unchallenged for a long period of time. However, few people engaged in the social sciences disagree that the knowledge of social problems involves psychobiological, socioeconomic and cultural factors.
Knowing individual
In other words, to deal with a "deviant" individual it is necessary to know the person, the family, the ethnic or religious group and the environment in which he moves. Czasz, who seems to be a rather skeptical psychiatrist, puts witchcraft with crime and mental illness, under the label of "socially threatening behavior." Witchcraft receives theological sanctions, crime is handled by means of judicial sanctions and mental illness receives psychiatric sanctions.
"I do not believe," he says, "that insanity should be an 'excusing condition' for crime. Law breakers, irrespective of their 'mental health,' ought to be treated as offenders."
Statements like this, regardless of their intrinsic values, are often subject to misinterpretation. Czasz does not deny that a mentally ill person should be treated properly, and receive psychiatric care. But for many people a law breaker should simply be punished.
The concept of crime and punishment seems to be oddly mixed with American social values. People hold rigid and often simplistic attitudes toward the problem. It is not possible any more to look at crime in a narrow, inaccurate and superficial way, if one wants a workable solution for it.
Firm attitudes held
This inaccuracy is not the same that is found in social research, but a product of a rather anti-scientific attitude. The diversity of crime and delinquency requires a more realistic and sophisticated understanding of what criminal and delinquent behavior represents.
Law enforcement by itself will not solve the problem. There are, of course, those who see law enforcement as the only solution. For them what is important is to keep the "law-abiding" citizens from the evil of crime by simply isolating from society the "criminal" citizens.
This is a kind of simplistic solution which might well create a bigger problem. The public may be excited over a particular issue such as the ABM defense system, but it ends to ignore the larger problems which gave rise to it. This theory goes as far
What can society do about it? It can attempt to reduce what are considered the underlying causes of crime—variously identified as slums, poverty, discrimination, and flawed family relationships. Society can also try to strengthen and reform law enforcement and the administration of justice, so more of those who might commit crimes are deterred, more of those who commit crimes are caught, and more of those who are caught are dealt with in such ways that they do not commit further crimes.
These two approaches are not either/or alternatives. But in any case, the action which the community or the society in general initiates will condition the responses and the reactions of those who are apprehended or dealt with.
Can crime be curbed?
Is it really possible to reduce crime rates? It all depends on the approach to the problem. Some experts say that the first step toward reducing crime rates is to want to reduce crime rates. In short they say: do something about it. But this is another simplistic statement, since it is necessary to ask the right questions at the right time and know what to do before hand.
The questions presented by the President of the United States to the National Crime Commission in 1967, for example, became known in many areas of social research as "wrong questions."
They were stated as follows: 1. Why is drug addiction increasing among young people? 2. Why does organized crime continue to expand? 3. Why do one-third of parolees revert to crime? 4. Why does one man break the law while another living in the same circumstances does not? 5. Why uses juvenile delinquency know no economic or educational boundaries?
Premises proved false
All five premises have been challenged and some of them have been proved wrong, as in the case of drug addiction, which is not increasing and does not cause crime, according to some social scientists. It is also believed that no man lives in the same circumstances when the entire environmental complex is considered. In the case of juvenile delinquency, it was shown that persistent delinquency is the case of the underprivileged, une educated segments of American society.
Question number three was challenged on the grounds of "good results any way" with the parolees. Most states now practice "parole prediction," using statistical tables to forecast a man's performance on parole rather accurately. In Kansas only 7 per cent of parolees with favorable prediction violated their trust, while more than three-fourths of those regarded as bad risks reverted to crime.
Solution possible
Whether there is agreement over the terminology used by the social sciences, however, it is possible to get closer to a solution. Deviant behavior is definitely a phenomenon which overlaps the boundaries of the individual and extends into the realm of society.
At the same time, since society regulates and defines deviant behavior, it is proper to look for some possible inadecquency in the penal system, in the criminal law and, most of all, to have an open-minded attitude about the social aspects of this deviant behavior.
A quiet, almost unreported revolution is already happening within the penal system of the United States. The limited, but good results are just a proof that the social sciences, with all their deficiencies, can benefit society.
U.S. may take all silver out of coins
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Treasury Department announced yesterday it will recommend taking all silver out of future U.S. coins—including a new proposed "silver" dollar that could bear the likeness of Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy said he will ask Congress to authorize the minting of both nonsilver dollars and half dollars along with the sale of $2.9 million in rare Carson City silver dollars as collectors items.
The only U.S. coin currently in production containing silver is the "Kennedy" half dollar, which includes 40 per cent silver.
Kennedy made his statement to a meeting of the U.S. Coinage Commission which advises the
18 KANSAN May 13 1969
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Eggers said, however, the commission took no action on the suggestion and no decision has been made on the final design of the new dollar coin.
Treasury General Counsel Paul W. Eggers said the commission also discussed a suggestion the new nonsilver dollar bear a likeness of former President Eisenhower instead of the traditional heat of Miss Liberty.
"The size would have to be
the same as the old silver dollars because we intend to use them as substitutes for vending machine use." Eggers said.
He explained the Treasury Department had been under increasing pressure to produce a dollar coin to head off the growing use of dollar tokens used by resort hotels in the West.
"We want coins that will be in circulation in commerce," Eggers said.
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cover letter of Washan are offered
to all students which origin to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
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Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition
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'60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide ovals, pipes, mufflers, waterpump, front wheels rebuilt. Tee deck option, but not included in $650 or best offer. Well taken care of! Contact Jeff Meyers, VI 3-8153. 5-14
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2438 or see at 1526 Vermont (rear
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CYCLE HELMETS—Daytona 300
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Drafted, must sell second car 1957
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1960 Bugeye Sprite, mint condition,
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Phone VI 2-9510. tt
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typed in German, Romanized
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Wanted: two roommates for summer months. $33 a head to share bottom floor of house. Com by 1000 Rhode Island before 4 or after 10 p.m. 5-14
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LOST
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Car keys in a black leather case. Lost
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(Continued from page 1)
If the required number of signatures are verified, a recall election can then be called with a two-thirds vote of the Senate needed for passage. If the vote passes, a new election for student body vice president would be held
Many petitions have been circulating on campus since the ROTC demonstration Friday when Miss Bowman was seen on the field at Memorial Stadium against a University ruling.
Kim Thomas, Shawnee junior and Templin Hall president, said last night that the 1,400 signatures he had collected could not be used for a recall petition because his petition dealt with violation of the right to assembly.
Thomas admitted his petition was a little harsh but said it was worded that way "to keep it in the hands of the students."
He said he did not want to see further polarization of the student body and would plead for harmony next year.
He added that he favored the plan some of Friday's protesters had to visit residence halls explaining why they were on the field in last Friday's demonstration.
One of the protest group's organizers, Margo Jean Smith, Topeka senior, said it was not an official group.
"Some of us thought it would be better to inform people why we were there, rather than having further demonstrations.
"It will be an individual thing," she said. "Each person will be speaking for himself—giving their opinion of why they were there."
She said the group planned to visit fraternities and sororities today and tomorrow and residence halls. Thursday.
20 KANSAN May 13 1969
Resolutions
(Continued from page 1)
resolution that the KU Student Senate had condemned Gov. Robert Docking.
Gus diZerega, Wichita senior, co-author of the resolution, denied that report in three parts;
- The resolution was designed to set up the beginnings of guidelines concerning dissent and what would be acceptable to the student body.
- "The resolution was, in a sense, a rebuke to people and groups who try to take away from the Student Senate its rightful powers and responsibilities," diZerega explained.
"I want to make it clear," he said, "the resolution is not aimed at any one person in any way, and any reports to the contrary are bull!"
The resolution passed by a clear majority with a show of hands.
- The resolution urges that the present situation should be handled through the Student Senate.
Another resolution, introduced by diZerega, called for condemnation of the military system as, "unassailable through normal democratic processes," and support for the right of peaceable assembly to dissent.
After heated and lengthy debate about the resolution, George called for a roll-call vote.
The results of the vote were 42 in favor of the resolution, and 41 against.
Kenneth Gale, Lawrence graduate student, introduced a resolution charging demonstrations and other acts of civil disobedience in the United States have become too frequent and urged all students "to place primary emphasis on efforts to remedy social ills through use of and improvement of existent governmental and private institutions."
An amendment was submitted and passed to strike the paragraph charging civil disobedience was becoming too frequent in this country. The amended resolution then passed by a clear majority.
Retonde introduced the next resolution calling for the Student Senate to address itself to the Chancellor and Board of Regents on matters concerning the conduct of Senate members. He immediately withdrew the resolution.
After the resolution to establish removal procedures from the Senate was tabled, the members voted to adjourn the meeting.
Retonde was then asked what his next course of action would be. He replied, "Petitions will be on the street tomorrow morning for a recall vote."
Miss Bowman said about the meeting, "I feel a great deal of relief that it's over. I think tabling the motion was a clear indication that they (Senate) don't want procedures brought.
"It is indeed strange that I should have impeachment procedure brought against me because I, as an individual, take a strong stand according to my moral dictates.
"If I am to be admonished, it is to be by the University Disciplinary Board. That the Senate ask me not to take a stand on pertinent issues is asking me to abrogate my responsibilities not only to myself, but to those who elected me."
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon is expected to ask Congress today for a revision in the Selective Service Act which would provide for the induction of 19-year-olds first.
House Republican leader Gerald Ford said the request would be contained in the President's message to Congress today. Ford said 19-year-old college students would still have the benefit of student deferments.
Few states like direct elections
WASHINGTON. (UPI) - If Congress decided to abolish the Electoral College and elect the president by direct vote, the legislatures of 38 states would have to give their approval. But a preliminary survey indicated today only 12 states, at most, now firmly favor the idea.
By contrast, it would take negative votes in only 13 states to veto such a proposed constitutional amendment. And the same survey indicates there are already 10 states where that would probably happen.
The outlook comes from interviews with legislative leaders made in all 50 states by United Press International. The composite picture is this:
- Only three states are solidly behind direct election and only nine more show a noticeable preference for the plan.
- Six states estimate the plan has no chance in their legislatures and sentiment in four others is running against direct election.
- In the remaining 28 states the issue is either too divided or underdeveloped to make a judgment.
The proposed amendment is still in the mills of Congress. The House Judiciary Committee has overwhelmingly approved the direct election amendment and the Senate is hearing committee hearings on it.
President Nixon, although he originally favored a compromise plan, has pledged to put the power of his office behind whatever amendment eventually does go to the states where, as prescribed by the Constitution, it must win approval from three-fourths of the legislatures.
Nixon's influence could make the difference in the states where sentiment is divided.
William Ratchford, speaker of the Connecticut House, said "The Electoral College has long outlived its usefulness. The time is right." That sentiment was reflected in nearly every state.
Although it is possible to read a detectable preference in only two of every five legislatures, there are these indications:
- States showing the greatest opposition to direct presidential election include Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Nebraska, Arizona and Utah. States where opposition is substantial but not as strong include Minnesota, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
- The plan is given the edge in Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, Kansas, Kentucky, Colorado, Hawaii, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Texas.
- While efforts have been made to make the issue nonpartisan, Republicans generally line up against and Democrats for.
When you want to—
SELL YOUR BOOKS!
Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE
May 20 through 30
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 and 44-Valid through December'69
kansas UNION BOOKSTORE
KANSAN
79th Year, No.131
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, May 14, 1969
Protest tension eased
By MICHAEL NAGEL Kansan Staff Writer
An expected confrontation between student radicals and other members of the student body failed at an SDS meeting last night. The meeting ended in what some observers called a meaningful dialogue.
The meeting had originally been scheduled by SDS to discuss its activity of last week and conclude the organization's activity of the year.
As the meeting was called to order by Lance Hill, Lawrence freshman, approximately 30 fraternity men and athletes entered the room carrying placards reading "Anarchy yes—SDS no" and "A government of law, not men."
After applause and jeers, Hill expressed doubt about whether the meeting could be conducted in an orderly manner. He continued to speak of a meeting of six SDS members with Kansas Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell last Saturday in Topeka.
Hill said Frizzell told them Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe had requested the presence of the state troopers who were stationed at the outskirts of Lawrence during Friday's demonstration. Hill also reported that the Chancellor had requested an injunction against the demonstrators.
The SDS'er added that Frizzell said the state would not prefer charges since no criminal act had been committed.
He suggested to the restless audience that the rest of the meeting be devoted to helping the "interested
I'll just use the letters in the image to represent them.
Photo by Ron Bishop
Hill opens SDS meetings
p. ..
Harrison convicted
Leonard Harrison, director of the Lawrence Ballard Community Center, has been convicted of robbery in Sedgwick County District Court.
Harrison, along with seven other men, was convicted of forcing Andrew Gutierrez, a Kansas City poverty official, to write checks totalling $622 as payment for "consultation" fees. All were acquitted on three counts of extortion.
The jury deliberated for 17 hours after a trial which lasted seven weeks.
Harrison, John Manning of Wichita, and Henry D. Davis, Noel D. Newsom and Richard L. Alexander, all of Kansas City, were convicted of first degree robbery.
Convicted of third degree robbery were Vernon Pierce, Kansas City and Samuel Hunt, Topeka.
A ninth man, Harold Cole, Wichita, was acquitted on all charges.
Maximum penalty for first degree robbery is 10 to 21 years in prison and one to five years for third degree robbery.
Judge Robert Stephan continued the bonds of $1,000 each and allowed the defense five days to request a new trial. A hearing on the request was set for May 23. If a new trial is denied, the defendants will be sentenced at that time.
spectators" understand the motives behind Friday's demonstration.
"Obviously half the people here don't understand why we were down there," he said.
Bill Berkowitz, New York City graduate student and radical leader, then rose to say, "We should make it clear that if any of the gorillas want to speak, they should raise their paws."
Jeers then followed which prompted a long-haired student to protest the violence which seemed to be in the atmosphere.
"If anybody comes for me, they better be prepared to do two things: to kill me, and to die," he said.
Jay Barrish, Kansas City graduate student, then rose to speak of SDS plans. He said any plans for demonstrations during the remainder of the school term would be "suicidal."
Randy Gould, Overland Park sophomore and SDS'er, then said if KU didn't change within the next few years, persons would return to bring revolution.
The meeting turned to how participants of last Friday's demonstration were talking with living group residents to explain the demonstrators' motives.
After many more students had spoken about the motives behind the disruption of the ROTC review.
I'll just use the text as it appears.
Photo by Ron Bishop
Gaughan makes his point
Nixon proposes lottery draft
Washington (AP)—President Nixon asked Congress yesterday to set up a random, lottery system for the military draft.
"It is my conviction," Nixon said in a message to Congress "that the disruptive impact of the military draft on individual lives should be minimized as much as possible, consistent with national security. For this reason I am today asking the Congress for authority to implement important draft reforms."
Nixon recommended that 19-year-olds be subject to the first call but that they remain vulnerable to the draft for only one year rather than the seven under the existing system.
The President repeated his stand that ideally there should be an all-volunteer armed force for the nation. He said he continued to believe this ideal could be reached under more stable world conditions.
"Under present conditions, however, some kind of draft will be needed for the immediate future," he added. "As long as that is the case, we must do everything we can to limit the disruption caused by the system and to make it as fair as possible."
The chief executive offered a 6-point recommendation, topped by a changing from an oldest-first to a youngest-first order of call so a young man would become less rather than more vulnerable to a selection as he grows older.
The random system-a lottery- would be applied to all those who are vulnerable during a given year rather than to those whose birthdays fall at certain times of the year or month.
A young man normally would enter the stage of (Continued to page 3)
Army ROTC cadet, David Jeans, Independence junior, spoke.
"I'm in ROTC and I'm damned proud of it. I'm not making the best of a situation, I'm proud of this country."
"You can't indict the military for these atrocities. If you dissent, you have to criticize the civilian leaders who make the decisions."
After applause, the topic was shifted to violence and non-violence.
Gould said Friday's demonstration was intended to be non-violent. He said if any violence had occurred on behalf of the Demonstrators, it would have been defensive violence.
Wisecracks and catcalls were then crossfired. A hippie accused the spectators of being at the demonstration with the purpose of violence.
Tom Gaughan, Chicago freshman, then said from the back of the room that there had never been any intention of vigilante action at the demonstration.
"Don't tell me you don't understand violence, when all you came here for was to hit somebody," yelled a hippie from the audience.
Gaughan went to the podium and the turning point of the meeting was precipitated.
"We're not against you. What's the difference between long hair and crew-cuts?"
"We don't want another San Francisco or Berkeley. We just don't want to see this campus thrown into turmoil," Gaughan said.
"We're all brothers at heart," said the athlete who was to be later nicknamed the "giant." Applause broke out from all sides of the room.
A hippie then followed and said, "I'm really ashamed to have been preceded by this guy who said a really beautiful thing." The applause continued as (Continued to page 24)
8
Mixed emotions
Photo by Ron Bishon
ISP to submit motions
The Independent Student Party (ISP) plans to introduce seven motions as new business in tonight's Student Senate meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
The Student Senate will meet to review the following business:
- Establishment of a student referendum.
- A black tutorial summer school in a KU fraternity house.
- Establishment of a committee to represent graduate school problems.
- A resolution calling for elimination of ROTC credit.
- Establishment of a student exchange bookstore.
- Planning for appropriation of Urban Advocacy funds.
- A resolution to provide for a separate presiding officer in the senate.
Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson junior and president of the Student Body, said he will announce appointments to the University Disciplinary Board, the Student's Rights Committee, the Privileges and
(Continued to page 24)
'Exclusiveness' pervades Leawood
By CAROL SUE STEVENSON
It's especially lovely in the spring. Large trees overhang the noiseless curved streets, flowers bloom in neatly tended lawns, children saunter home from school with sweaters over their shoulders and notebooks under their arms.
The homes, set back from the streets on larger than average lots, look more custom-built and comfortable than those in the cracker-box subdivisions. A small creek runs along the widest street in town—Lee Boulevard. The whole world seems peaceful on a weekday afternoon in the heart of Leawood, Kansas.
This second class city of 10,565 residents and 7,800 acres is a part of the maze of townships and cities which make up affluent Johnson County, the southwestern border of greater Kansas City. Developed by Kroh Brother Real Estate Agency from land acquired from the estate of Oscar Lee, a wealthy oilman, the city was begun on what now is its northern border, in 1936.
City incorporated
Today it extends from Somerset Drive southward past Interstate 435 and from State Line Road in the east to an irregular line about a mile west.
Twelve years after its founding, the officers of the Leawood Homes Association and other interested citizens decided that incorporation as a small city was the most satisfactory way to insure that the people of Leawood could have their own local government in the future. On November 30, 1948, Leawood was formally declared a city by the Johnson County commissioners and became the first incorporated area in Mission Township.
Although it became a city in a suburban setting, the dream of its creators was freedom from big city problems. Because of excessive restrictions enforced by the Homes' Associations, to which every property owner automatically belongs, there is no undesirable use of property in Leawood that destroys values in many neighborhoods.
'Exclusive' area
Until the 1954 Supreme Court decision there were no "undesirable neighbors" either. Stringently enforced restrictions barring Jews, Syrians and Negroes were in effect. Today, the aura of exclusiveness still persists, although there is one black family in Leawood.
Kroh Brothers' new development, The Cloisters, which is in the city limits, has this restriction on deed to the land: "No gift, lease, or resale of
Library to offer clemency period on overdue books
A library clemency period this week will allow students to return overdue books to Watson Library with no charge, said David Morgan, student library committee chairman.
The arrangement, made with David Heron, library director, begins at midnight today and ends midnight Friday. Overdue books can be returned to the return box at the circulation desk or the outdoor return box.
"The purpose of the clemency period," Morgan said, "is to get books back into circulation that have been missing a long time."
He estimated that the number of overdue books exceeds 1,000 volumes.
2 KANSAN May 14 1969
a home, except to offspring, until after offer of the property on identical terms to all other owners in The Cloisters. The right-of-first-refusal expires at the end of ten days."
As you drive through the city you see no "crowded areas of cheap houses that can eventually degenerate into slum-type districts with all the attendant social problems such a type of population creates." Such degeneration was one of the fears of the builders of Leawood.
Instead, scattered among the homes are nine churches and four elementary schools. On its perimeters are glass and steel secondary schools—two senior highs and three junior highs. Shopping centers, equipped with convenient parking and air-conditioned malls, border the city. You can reach downtown Kansas City in 25 minutes by car, and the Country Club Plaza is only 15 minutes from any part of Leawood.
'Affluent' society
Everyone can get downtown because everyone has a car in Leawood, a fact that is painfully evident when driving during rush hour. Commuters come home each night to homes serviced by the Kansas City Power and Light Company, the Gas Service Company, Southwestern Bell Telephone, and Public Water District Number One. Their Homes' Associations take care of trash and garbage collection, the mowing of parks and vacant lots, trimming and spraying of street trees, and enforcement of restrictions upon their land.
Citizens' lives and property are protected by a 12-man fire department and a 24-hour police department of the same size.
They are governed by a mayor and eight councilmen, who meet the first and third Mondays of every month to pass ordinances and discuss problems. These nine men, who serve without pay, are elected to two-year terms, half the membership being up for re-election every year.
Residents associate exclusively with each other at the Leawood Country Club, the Leawood South Country Club, the Leawood Women's Club, and the Leawood Garden Club. To welcome new citizens of this
ever-changing population, the Leawood Welcomers are on hand.
Resale still a bother
The population turnover still haunts this community. Kroh Brothers handle about 200 to 250 res-sales each year and supervise the building of approximately 100 new homes every year.
The people, whether they are long-time residents or just passing through on the way to a promotion, have characteristics in common. Most of the members of the country club are professionals or in managerial positions in business, occupations which indicate education. Ninety per cent of the members have children, the average number being two and a half. Leawood has attracted the kind of homeowners its creators dreamed of.
What is life like in this pastoral, upper-middle class ghetto? A Kroh Brothers pamphlet describes it this way. "Many a Leawood stalwart, weary from his day's toil, has commented, 'It's like being in a different world when I get home at night from the office.' Yes, a quick change to comfortable clothes, a tall iced drink of your favorite beverage and 'life really begins in Leawood.'"
"In some countries, the inhabitants seem unwilling to avail themselves of the political privileges which the law give them; it would seem that they set too high a value upon their time to spend it on the interests of the community . . . But if an American were condemned to confine his activities to his own affairs, he would be robbed of one half of his existence; he would feel an immense void in the life which he is accustomed to lead, and his wretchedness would be unbearable."
de Tocqueville A council meeting
de Tocqueville meeting
The tiny red brick building with white shutters and doors, a well kept lawn, and a tiny red brick fire station next door is the Leawood City Hall. I had been here to vote last November, to ask questions a few weeks before, but on that third Monday in April, I came to observe a Leawood City Council meeting. The room that had once contained voting machines and city employees was now
filled with a t-shaped table, waiting to be circled by the mayor and councilmen.
Officials began to arrive soon after I did, and I looked over the shoulder of a Leawood Sun-Scout reporter to catch their names. Dressed in a wide variety of suits and ties, the fortyish-looking men took their places around the table.
I noticed immediately that those who were not balding were letting their sideburns drop. Statistically these men are similar. All are professionals—two lawyers and one engineer—or in business positions ranging from president to division manager. They all belong to the Leawood Country Club, and they all have children, an average of 2.75 apiece.
All the guests were introduced; and I, being the only one of the handful of outsiders that Mayor Luxford did not recognize, had to introduce myself and explain why I was there.
Because this was the last meeting of the outgoing city council, many items of old business were acted upon. The house-cleaning ran smoothly. Compared to some of the meetings I sit through, much was accomplished. However, I really had no basis for comparison, because my previous contact with city government has been confined to newspaper articles.
A dog control ordinance was passed, a revised ordinance on the post of city administrator was passed, police clerk wages were discussed and made more uniform, a new policewoman was introduced, a gift of the Leawood Women's Club to the park was announced, a letter about sex education from Congressman Larry Winn was read, and permission was given for soliciting by a philanthropic organization.
Throughout the rash of legislations, three revelations about governing a city like Leawood struck me.
Complications of the city
While Wayne Bonebright talked about co-operating with Kansas City, Mo., and Prairie Village in order to get additional street lights along State Line, I realized the inefficiency that is inevitable in trying to govern a city of 10,000 in the middle of a
metropolis which is a maze of 13 city lines, four county lines, and two state lines.
The talk of working with Kansas City, Mo., in the zoning of 79th to 85th streets reinforced my belief. As Councilman James Cope pointed out, the builders who want to use this land have been waiting years for a decision.
Why then do these intelligent men spend their non-working hours at another sort of grind? I believe they are willing to spend hours each week in order to preserve Leawood as an incorporated entity. These nine men, and those who have served before them, are dedicated to the preservation of this way of life. While they have their hassles over roads, streets, park land, wages and finances, they have avoided the big city problems of poverty, unemployment and welfare.
Money for government is scarce, even in the upper-crust of suburbia. The chief of police talked about cutting corners, and the articles about the fight over payment for the widening of 95th Street is proof positive the public sector is not as affluent as the private.
Compensation unnecessary
Compensation unnecessary As Councilman David Whyte said when denouncing an ordinance to provide compensation for the mayor and councilmen, "We take this responsibility as a privilege for living in the kind of society we do. Money will not lead us to perform any better, nor will it attract any better individuals."
It is ironic, that in the middle of wealth, there are still problems of managing finances in government. The affluent, as well as the needy, require more services from their government than they are willing to be taxed for.
It was a friendly meeting. Whether it was the epitome of grass roots politics, I am unsure. I am sure, however, it comes closer to being participatory democracy than any big city government. Wathcing the government of the city at work offers unadulterated evidence there are problems in this leafy utopia. They deal more with property rights than human suffering, but they are evidence that all is not perfect in Leawood, Kansas.
1965
We've got something on Carol
Alley Shop
at Campbell's 843 Mass.
Nixon proposes lottery draft bill
(Continued from page 1)
maximum vulnerability during his 19th year and leave it during his 20th year.
Undergraduate students would continue to be deferred and their year of maximum vulnerability would begin with the expiration of the deferment.
Graduate students would be allowed to complete the full academic year in which they were ordered up for induction, rather than just one term.
The National Security council and the Selective Service director as being directed to review the whole policy of deferments and exemptions and give the President their findings and recommendations.
Nixon said the random draft would be established nationally and applied locally by each draft board to meet its quota.
The President said ultimately the draft should be abolished. Only in 1948, he said, did a peacetime draft become a relatively permanent fact of life for the nation, and now a full generation has grown up under a system of compulsory military service.
Nixon told Congress:
The President had gone over high points of his message with Republican congressional leaders earlier in the day. One of them, House Leader Gerald Ford of Michigan, said he thought the prospects of congressional approval were good.
"I believe these reforms are essential. I hope they can be implemented quickly."
"I am hopeful," he said, "that we can soon restore the principle of no draft in peacetime. But until we do, let us be sure that the operation of the Selective Service system is as equitable and as reasonable as we can make it."
Nixon set out the mechanics of his draft plan in considerable detail.
He said the government plans to designate a "prime age group" every year. This would provide a different pool of persons eligible for the draft for each consecutive 12-month period. This period would be called a Selective Service year, since it would not necessarily start January 1.
The prime age group for any Selective Service year would be made up of those who are 19 at the start of the year. Young men
Speech and drama awards received
Awards for excellence in the department of speech and drama were given last night at the 1969 Honors Banquet in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room.
General departmental awards and scholarships were awarded to four faculty members.
Awards in speech communication and human relations were given to one faculty member and five KU students for outstanding performance in debate.
Six graduate and undergraduate students received awards in the speech pathology and audiology division.
The radio, television, film sequence gave awards to two outstanding senior students and gave a special merit award.
Awards for acting, scene design, directing, lighting, costume design and service were given in the theater and drama division.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
May 14
1969 KANSAN 3
with deferments or exemptions would rejoin this group upon expiration of deferments or exemptions.
he would move down progressively to less vulnerable categories while an entirely new set of young men would be coming up into the new prime age group.
In the first year of operation, nobody would escape vulnerability to the draft merely because of a change from one system to another. This would be assured by a system under which all eligible men from 19 to 26 who are not deferred or exempt would go into the prime age group.
Each individual would have maximum vulnerability to the draft only in the year he is in the prime group. After that, normally during his 20th year,
Nixon said this would mean a young man would receive an earlier, more decisive answer to his question of where he stands with the draft and thus could plan his life accordingly.
Since more men are available for military service than are needed to fill draft calls, Nixon said, there must be some fair method of determining who will be called first, second or not at all.
He said it is his judgment that a fair system is one which makes random the order of selection. To assure that each person in a prime age group would have the same chance, Nixon recommended this procedure:
Three months after the proposed new draft law takes effect, the first Selective Service year would begin. Before the start of each such year, the dates of its 365 days would be placed in a sequence by a random method. Those spending the following year in the draft pool would go into the draft sequence in the same order that their
birthdays come up on what the President called "the scrambled calendar."
To illustrate, he said the scrambling might result in those born January 12 and then those born October 23.
Every year a new random order would be established for the following year's draft pool and those sharing the same birthday would be reshuffled further on the basis of the first letter of their last names. But so there would be no discriminating against those at the front of the alphabet, Nixon said, the alphabet also would be scrambled in a random manner.
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KANSAN Comment
Playing at Revolution
Today I'm going to let people say a few things on this page. You may notice that some of the views are slanted perhaps, even, the make-up of this page is slanted.
Too bad. But that is what this page is for.
Since this is one of the last papers, I thought it would be appropriate to let some students say a few things on more than the usual amount of space they are allowed.
Right under this introduction you should pay careful attention to what Prof. Day has to say. Perhaps the scope of his "poem" is general, but it points to a basic problem of America's quasi-revolutionary student protester.
It is easy to play at revolution in this affluent society. And what is more frightening seems to be that these protesters and their playmates have run to the end of their legitimacy and may well create a conservative backlash that we have never before dreamed of.
Let's hope not. For, as a former Kansan editor wrote: "Democracy gone awry is not fun to contemplate, much less watch." (JTM)
I know a joke.
Four dedicated, long
haired haters of
society's sham
Were on the Memorial
Stadium field at
3 p.m. Friday.
They were loading
beer and potato chips
into a Brand New Yellow GTO
at 8:30 p.m. Friday.
I laughed and laughed.
-J. Laurence Day Assistant Professor
The real hypocrites
By WILL HARDESTY
Rick Atkinson and Bill Berkowitz are no longer fit to be the recognized leaders of the Left at KU.
They are the two biggest hypocrites on the campus. Imagine how fast they would have gone to the Chancellor's office to protest and to DEMAND police protection if someone would let it be known the next SDS meeting would not happen, or, if it did, only after violence. They would scream the very loudest that their rights to have a meeting was being violated. Yet they led a group of 150-200 which denied the constitutional right of freedom of peaceful assembly to the ROTC cadets at KU.
Then there is the violence thing. I would suppose most of the males who demonstrated Friday are of draft age. I would imagine most of them would, if asked, say they would refuse to be inducted because they do not believe in killing other human beings or the use of violence. Yet there were a goodly number of those males-Atkinson included—who were carrying clubs and were ready to use them—a very peaceful and non-violence-loving bunch of hypocrites they were.
What Atkinson and his band perhaps did not realize was the fact there were enough police in or around Lawrence Friday to give every one of the demonstrators their very own club-swinging, Mace-spraying, gun-toting, handcuffing policeman. Perhaps the radical pack did know of the policemen. Perhaps they were interested in becoming martyrs.
However, they should be grateful to Chancellor Wescoe for living by the ideals the pack claims to hold dear. The pack might have found out, if Dr. Wescoe were not the gentle person he is, that the human body is a sturdy thing, capable of taking more than one club-blow, more than one bit of Mace mist in the eyes or more than one ring-studded fist driven forcibly into a peace-shouting mouth. Dr. Wescoe showed Friday who the real peace-loving person is on this campus.
But considering those who did show their true colors, one must not over-look Clarence Reynolds and his few cronies from the Black
Student Union who showed. Here is another of the real hypocrites of KU. Clarence Reynolds does not, almost without exception, like white persons.
His organization, while I don't believe they have ever stated so publicly, has the membership requirements worked out so there are no whites in the BSU. (Which in and of itself presents the interesting question, "Why does the University officially recognize an organization which blatantly rejects all of the civil rights laws in the state and nation and the University's own announced policy of helping foster total and real integration?")
Anyway, there was Clarence, flanked by his cronies, de facto segregated and segregating themselves from a group which claims it is not racial. There was Clarence carrying his club, ready to use and be used by the whites as long as they both had the same goal—violence.
While I have not agreed with them at times in the past, I would have to salute Adrian Clark, Darryl Bright, Phyllis Jones and the other members of the BSU who had the courage of their convictions not to go onto the field even though Reynolds, their leader was there and, I suppose it is fair to assume, had asked the BSU to be there, too.
While speaking of hypocrites at KU, one should really mention Marilyn Bowman, our newly elected Student Body Vice-President. She only-so-recently an oath to protect, abide by and promote the rules and laws of the University, state and nation. Friday afternoon she demonstrated her contempt for these rules and laws, her unwillingness to work within the system and the disdain she has for the oath she recently took. It is time for the Student Senate to show its maturity in the face of crisis by washing its own dirty linen in immediate impeachment proceedings of Bowman.
I also saw Don Jenkins there Friday but did not see him on the field. I have heard he is particularly turned on by honesty and sincerity in those he meets. Therefore, I will say to him that, while I have very much disagreed with his actions in the past, if he really did not go onto the field, I commend him for his restraint.
Atkinson and Berkowitz and their ilk did more in one afternoon to destroy the few feelings which
exist at KU of real sympathy towards the general goals of the Left than anything I can think of in my four years here.
Friday afternoon definitely showed there are two groups of left-wingers at KU-the radicals and the responsibles. The responsible group stayed in the stands ready to show their disagreement with ROTC and ROTC-on-campus in whatever way they peacefully could within the legal methods.
It is this responsible group which must now work to undo the harm done by the band of persons on the field Friday. No only at KU, but in the United States in general, the responsibles must work to undo the backlash reaction which is forming in response to the violent method of the radicals.
At KU, this is a time for new leadership in the Left. Two logical persons to take the leadership are Dave Awbrey and Bill Hansen.
It is time for these two, and other responsible leftist persons to step forward and show KU and the nation not all leftists are violent fanatics. It is time to demonstrate to KU and the nation that the great majority of leftists are dedicated to their ideals but conscious of reality, aware that changes are often made through compromise and that radical change does not usually come in one giant step just because a small vocal minority is noisy.
It is time for the responsible Left to assert itself, to show the campus and the nation there is no need for politics to be conducted in smoky rooms, no need for graft and corruption to exist in government, no need to spend half the national budget on the military, no need for war and killing, no need for hate and hunger and, finally, absolutely no ason why the campus, nation and the world cannot begin to heed the astrologers and enter into the age of love and peace—the Age of Acquarius.
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods, students must be enrolled in a tenure, 10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Employment goods, services and employment advertisements are students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expire unless necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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The Hill With It by john hill
The master of ceremonies stood at the podium and cleared his throat several times, hoping the vast dinner party would stop eating and pay attention. They didn't.
"I think we had better get started now," he said,lamely,his voice cracking. The hungry crowd just kept rapidly shoveling food into their heads.
"As you may or may not care, we are here to honor the conclusion of that University Daily Kansan column, 'The Hill With It' which has been written once a week for the last five semesters by John Hill, a modest, unassuming senior who will very soon be graduating. By the way, I want to thank Mr. Hill for the idea for this dinner, for sponsoring the entire event, for inviting all the guests, and for buying all the honors and awards which he will present himself later."
"So because the column now, finally, at long last, comes to an end —"
The M.C. paused here and tried
to ignore the scattered applause that rippled across the gathering, thankful that most were too busy eating.
"But before I introduce Mr. Hill, let me give you an interesting statistic. If all the words that have appeared in 'The Hill With It' were laid end to end across the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean,—"
"— they would have been a lot better off," said a voice from the back of the room.
The M.C. started to ask Berkowitz to keep his comments to himself, but he was already on his way out the door, hurrying to join his cronies in disrupting a Boy Scout meeting by holding hands in a circle, forming another veritable chain of missing links.
"And now," continued the M.C., "for the high point of a low evening, I present to you a man who has brought us a fresh new approach through his keen grasp of the obvious, rather than the trite over-use of insight so often found in newspaper columns, a man who
Two people clapped furiously while everyone else kept eating as the Walley Coxesque figure approached the podium.
as a columnist has all the depth of Hal Boyle and the light breezy style of William F. Buckley, Jr., a man who certainly needs an introduction, John Hill."
"Thanks Mom, Dad." He paused a moment, then said, "You're all probably wondering why I called this meeting. . ."
"I wanted to thank all the people who have read, cared about, or have allowed me to print my column during the last five semesters."
"I have a prepared speech," Hill said, reaching into his coat pocket, taking out some folded sheets of blank paper, and tearing them up, "but I would rather speak from the heart."
"All seriousness aside, I really do feel a great debt to both the people on the Kansan over the years who have either let or encouraged me to write my column, and to the readers, many of whom I didn't
know, who would favorably remark on some particular column. Two that people mentioned were about an enchanted toad and a gullible freshman girl, and another was satire on "The Ode to Billy Joe."
But the crowd just kept eating their frog legs and black-eyed peas,
"I have gained tremendous personal satisfaction from this column over the semesters, and it is my sincere hope that other columnists-to-be can get the same support that I did."
Hill then eyed the crowd defensively.
"Of course, you characters that used it to wrap fish with or throw the garbage out, and especially you graffiti smart alecks who kept writing 'the hill with it isn't well, just remember that I can take criticism, just as long as I never hear it. Well, thanks again."
Hill stepped down and then hurried over to the buffet table and grabbed a plate but the food was all gone, which he decided, might make a good column. . . .
Students in CWC surveyed
Students who have participated in the Colleges-Within-the-College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (CWC) program are this week answering questions concerning their experiences with the subcolleges.
They are being asked about advantages and disadvantages as part of a five-university survey-using a random sample of students-to determine the value of the program.
The survey is being conducted on the campuses of Michigan University, Florida University, the University of California at San Diego, the University of California at Santa Cruz and the University of Kansas—all members of the Frontiers of Academic Decentralization committee—which were among the first universities in the nation to create subcolleges.
Jerry Lewis, assistant dean of the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences and KU coordinator of survey research, this week explained that KU began research into the CWC program nearly three years ago under the direction of E. Jackson Baur, professor of sociology.
Lewis said research of this nature was started at Michigan University by Theodore Newcomb, professor of social psychology.
He added that Newcomb's research generated outside interest, particularly in those universities which were starting subcollege programs. The result of this interest was a small research grant from the Carnegie Corporation in New York to carry out subcollege surveys. He said that the Carnegie Corporation originally helped finance the start of KU's CWC program with Centennial college two years ago.
Lewis said the survey would be conducted in each university and the results sent to the central coordinator at Michigan University.
The purpose of the research, he said, is to provide insight into the benefits or disadvantages of the subcollege program.
All five participating universities will make use of the data, he added, and analyses will be made to determine whether subcolleges should be extended to include juniors and seniors, or whether any other adjustments should be made.
He said, however, that no decision would be made or discussed until a complete picture of the subcolleges was completed.
Lewis said the researchers hoped to follow the subcollege participants from their freshman to senior years.
"The longer we research and the more data we gather, the more complete our picture will be," he said.
Correction
Due to a printing error in yesterday's University Daily Kansan, a statement made by Glen M. McGonigle, assistant instructor of physics, was incorrectly attributed to Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics.
McGonigle said, "Most foreign students are willing to learn how to clean and keep up their apartments. However, a landlord can rent out a nice place to a group of foreign students and in two weeks the place can look like hell, for they just don't know how to keep up the apartment."
May 14
1969 KANSAN 5
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"YES, 'BELLE DE JOUR' IS SENSATIONAL, it does let's be honest about this- turn you on!" —Life Magazine
NOW!
7:15
9:15
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Belle de Jour
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
"YES, 'BELLE DE JOUR' IS SENSATIONAL, it does let's be honest about this turn you on!"
NOW!
7:15
9:15
—Life Magazine
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Belle de Jour
CLINT EASTWOOD IS BACK AND BURNING AT BOTH ENDS
Matinee Daily 1:30 — Evening —
"Fistful of Dollars" —7:00-11:00
"Few Dollars More" —8:40 only
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
"A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS"
"FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE"
TECHNICOLOR
BELLE
DE
JOUR
CLINT EASTWOOD
IS BACK
AND BURNING
AT BOTH ENDS
Motinee Daily 1:30
Evening
"Fistful of Dollars"—7:00-11:00
"Few Dollars More"—8:40 only
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
CLINT EASTWOOD
IS BACK
AND BURNING
AT BOTH ENDS
Matinee Daily 1:30
— Evening —
"Fistful of Dollars"—7:00-11:00
"Few Dollars More"—8:40 only
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
"A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS"
FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE
TECHNICOLOR
"A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS"
"FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE"
TECHNICOLOR M
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 | Current |
|---|
| We buy back | Patronage refund | Total you get back |
|---|
| For New Book | | | |
| $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.
What Are Old Books Worth?
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
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
Patronage Refund to Customers ... 6.80c
Reserve for Emergency & Expansion ... 1.20c
Total ... 100 cents
Net Profit ... 0.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Rooms to be repainted
A proposal which would allow individual students to have their residence hall rooms painted from a choice of eight colors has
May 14
1969 KANSAN 7
been unanimously approved by J. J. Wilson, director of housing, Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, said Steve Salvay, Shawnee Mission junior and chairman of the Association of University
N.Y.C.
The Finest of ArtCarved Diamond Wedding Rings symbolizing everlasting love are offered to you at...
Mark's Jewelers
NATIONAL NBS BRIDAL SERVICE
AUTHORIZED MEMBER
Del Eisele
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
AGS
AGS
Residence Halls (AURH) housing committee.
After selecting a room color, the resident would fill out a request indicating his name, hall, room number and color preference.
A room color coordination chart will be displayed in the office of the dean of men and dean of women this week for summer painting required.
This notification, along with a $25 fee, must be received at the housing office by July 15.
AIAA elects officers
The new officers are: Stephen Reynolds, Parsons junior,
president; Michael Proulx,
Lawrence, Mass., sophomore,
vice president; Richard Kovich,
Kansas City freshman,
secretary-treasurer; Gerald May,
Prairie Village junior,
speaker-film chairman, and
Robert Solle, Ellisville, Mo.,
freshman, publicity chairman.
Consul to give library
The student branch of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) at KU has elected officers for next year.
The Consul General of Belgium, Henri Perdieus, will be on the University of Kansas campus Wednesday to present the University a basic library of books, slides and photographs about the history of Flemish art, literature, music and drama.
FRIENDLY CLASS OF 1969 REUNION.
FRIENDLY CLASS OF 1969 RECONVIR.
WE HAVE A GIFT OF DIPLOMA-CY
TIE SURPLUS WRISTBAND BODY WARMER CHEVRIL WALLET BELT
10
More than one, as a matter of fact. For your favorite diploma-t on graduation day, we have impeccable suggestions — from small leather things and toiletries, to gift certificates for a whole wardrobe. All will stand him in good stead, outside the world of alma mater.
On the Hill VI 3-4633
University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr.
Campus WEST
1424 Crescent Road
END OF SCHOOL SALE!
Sportswear and Accessories
1/3 OFF
$150.00 OFF
COMPETITION SPORTS CARS
OFFERS
Graduation Congratulations
TOYOTA
In The Best Way We Know How!
$150.00 OFF ON THE
of your choice.
COME OUT AND CONGRATULATE YOURSELF.
CSC
1209
EAST 23rd STREET
Bouwon
Get your feet firmly planted in the air.
You should fly.
As a TWA hostess.
Because right now you probably feel you're getting your feet more firmly planted in the mud than in a career.
Which won't happen when you fly for us. Because the first thing that goes kaput is the 9 to 5 routine.
And after that goes the stick-around-in-one-place drag.
Since we fly all over the world, you'll have a chance to fly all over the world.
Stopping off long enough, of course, to become well acquainted with the fantastic things and people that are indigenous to the fantastic places we fly.
And to make sure you keep above it all the pay that goes along with all of the above is good pay.
So give your finger a little exercise today. Dial and the chances are pretty good your feet will follow
Because there's no job on earth like it.
Be a
Be a TWA Hostess It's like no job on earth
An equal opportunity employer
TWA Hostess
It's like no job on earth
Semesters are revised for next fall
Beginning with the 1970-71 school year, students will not have to contend with a vacation period between the end of classes and finals during the fall semester.
The fall semester will begin two weeks earlier than in the past and end before Christmas. After a 20-day Christmas recess, the spring semester will begin in mid-January. Commencement will be in mid-May. A 15-day interim will precede the 8-week summer school session which will start and end on the normal dates.
Thanksgiving recess will be shortened one day and the final examination periods each semester reduced from 12 to 9 days. The fall semester will be interrupted only by the Thanksgiving recess.
The student body, by a large majority, voted for a pre-Christmas fall semester completion in a referendum conducted in last month's student elections. The University calendar committee deemed it impractical to implement the change this year.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
May 14 1969 KANSAN 9
Meadowlark Hill
Apartments & Clubhouse
93rd & Foster in Johnson County, Kansas
ALL UTILITIES PAID
EVERYTHING FROM IDEAL NEWLYWED APARTMENTS TO ELEGANT TOWNHOUSES. RENTALS FROM $160.00
COMPLETE CLUBHOUSE FACILITIES
PLETE CLUBHOUSE FACILITIES Indoor & Outdoor Pools State Supervised Nurseries Sauna Baths Billiards Room PartyRooms—and more
(Be Where It's Happening)
A MAX OKUN PROJECT—(913) Nlagra 2-3700
Open Daily
2 p.m. to Midnight
— north on Mass. —
at junction of 24-40 & 59
TGIF
Noon 12-6 p.m.
75c a pitcher
SAT. AFTERNOON
BLAST
— no cover —
TEE PEE
OFFICIAL HEADQUARTERS
KU RUGBY
team
For your last
big pre-finals blast
we have brought back
THE SINCERES
the popular soul and rock band
from Kansas City, this
Saturday Night, May 17
8 p.m. to midnight
FREE PITCHERS GIVEN AWAY HOURLY
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company
An Equal Opportunity Employer
PERSONNEL RECORD
BEST BUILDING
NAME Lyle Peterson AGE 23 POSITION Unit Manager
RESPONSIBILITY Supervision of 37 people who handle telephone service
Southwestern Bell...where college graduates start in decision-making jobs
KU returns veteran team
OU seeks league tennis crown
Site: Iowa State University Varsity Courts—First two rounds of singles and first round of doubles on Friday. Finals in singles and doubles on Saturday.
Entrants: Each team enters up to six men, five will play singles
10 KANSAN May 14 1969
and two teams will play doubles. Championships are contested in all five singles and both doubles divisions.
Scoring: One point for each match won in the five singles divisions and two doubles divisions.
1969 Outlook:
Oklahoma The defending champions go
Make her happy
with flowers
today!
ANY DAY IS HER
DAY...FOR FLOWERS
...ALWAYS CORRECT
TRY IT AND SEE!
MINTH & INDIANA
V1.3-6111
FLOWER SHOP
VISIT OUR OMNIBUS SHOP Second Level
!FAST friendly bank service.
When you're rushed for time, you don't want to wait. That's why both our inside tellers and drive-in windows are geared for fast, courteous service. Bank at University State and see for yourself. .. it's the student's bank in Lawrence. Come in soon.
University
State
Bank
Your community
minded bank . .
955 Iowa Street.
Viking 3-4700. Member F.D.F.C.
US
into the meet with a 16-7 dual record, four defending champions, and another second-place winner. Hottest player right now is Scott Martin, who has won his last 10 matches in a row, playing mainly at No. 4. He has probably knocked one of the defending titlists, Jack Theimer, out of the running. Alternating between No. 1 and No. 2 have been Glenn Mullins and Gerry Perry. Perry is the defending champion at No. 2, while Mullins was second at No. 1. Sophomore Gayle Bradshaw has moved to No. 3, and Bruce Barrett, defending No. 3 singles champion to No. 5. Dick Theimer, freshman brother of Jack, has seen considerable action at No. 4. In doubles, Mullins and Barrett are undefeated and the defending No. 1 champions. At No. 2, Martin and Dick Theimer has seen the most action, but Perry could become involved—he teamed with departed Dick Gilkey to win No. 2 last year.
Iowa State
The Cyclones are enjoying their best tennis year in some time, carding a 7-1-1 record in dual competition. Leading individual for Conference honors is John Waltman, who has been playing in the No. 4 slot. He has lost but one match this season. In the No. 1 slot will probably be Rick Schultz, at No. 2 is Ted Hommema, Mark Ackley at No. 4, and Greg Peterschmidt is No. 5. In doubles, Waltman and Peterschmidt have been pairing at the top spot, with Hommema and Ackley No. 2.
Kansas
the most consistent pair has been Kanter and Oram. Probably together in the No. 2 spot will be Debaun and Bush.
It is basically a veteran team at Kansas, too, with the return of Bill Debaun, John Towner, Dan Oram, and Sid Kanter, the top four players. Oram finished second to Oklahoma's Bruce Barrett at No. 3 last year. Moving into the No. 5 spot this year has been Dudley Bush, who goes into the meet with the team's best record. In doubles,
Missouri
A newcomer has taken over the lead for Missouri this year and has been a consistent winner. Gene Fluri has
KANSAN Sports
Conference wins over Nebraska's Tom Wiese and Colorado's Art Thomson, while losing to Oklahoma State's Cliff Price and Kansas State's Dave Hoover. Generally at the second spot is veteran Brent DeMoss, with Robbie Briscoe playing at No. 3, Steve Tuttle No. 4, and Ron Cobb No. 5. In doubles, Coach Murray Strong has gone basically with Fluri and DeMoss at the top spot and Cobb and Briscoe at No. 2.
Nebraska
Depth is the key to Nebraska's effort to climb out of the Big Eight cellar this year. Four lettermen return and there is a top-flight freshman, Jim Rathe, who is playing in the No. 2 slot. Playing No. 1 is veteran Bill Roehrs, with sophomore Bill Brunell taking No. 3 and letterman Tom Wiese No. 4. John Hendry, a squad member last year, is No. 5. In doubles, Roehrs and Rathe make up the leading combination. At No. 2 will probably be Hendry and Wiese, who have Big Eight victories over Missouri's Ron Cobb and Rob Briscoe and Iowa State's Greg Peterschmidt and John Waltman.
Kansas State
It is a young team, but talented, at Kansas State and rates as one of the best since Karl Finney took over as coach 14 years ago. Sophomores Randy McGrath and Dave
Hoover have taken over at the top two individual spots. Another sophomore, Craig Price, plays in the No. 4 slot. Steve Snodgrass, playing No. 3, and Merle Duncan, at No. 5, are the veterans of the club. Best record going into the Conference meet belongs to McGrath, who has Big Eight wins over Bill Debaun and John Towner of Kansas, Steve Tuttle of Missouri, and Art Thomson of Colorado. A league loss was to Oklahoma State's Cliff Price, the defending No. 1 champion, in three sets.
Oklahoma State
Returning are its top four players from the second-place team of last year as the Cowboys shoot for their first title since 1963. Premiere player is stubby Cliff Price, who won the No. 1 singles title last year. No. 2 is Darrel Snyder, while freshman Rick Jones and veteran Mike Howard have been alternating at No. 3. Rick Biggert, who played at No. 4 last year, is No. 5 this time. In doubles, Darrel Snyder, a letterman senior, and Howard have been going at No. 1, while Price and Jones are No. 2. Last year Snyder and Price were runner-up at No. 1.
Colorado
All five performers from last year return at Colorado, led by Art Thomson and Carl Bodam. Bodam, who sports the best Buff record going into the meet, was runuper to Oklahoma's Gerry Perry at No. 2 last year. Earlier this year, Perry tipped Bodam. Thomson, at No. 1, was beaten by Oklahoma's Glen Mullins, second-place man last year. Playing third is Irv Schiller, who has the next best record on the team (he has a Conference loss to Oklahoma's Gayle Bradshaw, in three sets). Bodam and Thomson team in doubles (They were three-set losers to Oklahoma's undefeated duo of Mullins and Steve Barrett), while Schiller and Tom Weinstock are No. 2.
TO ALL STUDENTS
The 3rd edition of the JAYHAWKER will be distributed May 23 and 24 in Strong Rotunda. HOWEVER, IT WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE TO DISTRIBUTE THE 4TH EDITION BEFORE VACATION. If you purchased a yearbook and will not be in Summer School and do not live in Lawrence, you may have the 4th edition mailed to you.
It is suggested that those students returning to KU next fall pick up their 4th issue anytime during enrollment at the Jayhawker Office (115 Union Bidg.). For students who will be in Lawrence sometime this summer, the 4th issue will be available after June 30 in the News Bureau (32 Strong).
YOU WILL NEED YOUR ORANGE IBM RECEIPT CARD to pick up your 3rd issue. DO NOT request to have your 4th issue mailed until you have picked up your 3rd issue. You may sign to have your 4th issue mailed when you pick up your 3rd issue.
Bring the following information to Strong Rotunda on May 23 or 24,or mail it to the Jayhawker Yearbook:
a. Name and address where issue is to be sent (No issue will be sent without ZIP CODE)
b. Orange Jayhawker Receipt Card
Those who want the 3rd AND 4th issues mailed should send the Jayhawker Office the above information on a $3" x $ 1 " card and $1.00. If you would like the entire book mailed, send your name, student number, address, and $1.75.
Name, Student Number
Name, Student Number ...
Mailing Address ...
City, State ...
Zip Code (Required) ..
Special Summer Rates
College Hill Manor
Now leasing for summer and fall. Airconditioned, private pool.Shown 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays, by appointment.
Located across from Stouffer Place
Jarroy's
TINY SHOPS
at
Let's Shoes
Where You Always Save
802 W. 23rd Lawrence
VI3-8220
1741 West 19th
HAROLD'S SERVICE
1401 WEST 6TH STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
GRAVITT'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY Bring it in, we'll do it for you 913 N.H. VI 3-6844
ROLLS
Bandolino
VIA Italy—Today's newest look in sandals for every occasion. Pictured style is only one of many to choose from in a wide range of colors.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
Bandolino
Band
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
The Town Shop
WRITE YOUR OWN TICKET SALE!
20% off
Men's Wear
now thru Saturday
A
THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Uptown V13-5755
The Lawrence Jaycees
are sponsoring the
National Air Show
at the
Lawrence Municipal Airport
May 24th & 25th
May 24th
Antique Aircraft Displays and Demonstrations
- 2c a pound airplane rides
May 25th
— 2:00 p.m. Aerobatics Show
Sky Diving
Ground Displays
- 2c a pound airplane rides.
1.0m 2.0m
Special sale will last thru final exam weeks
MISTER End-of- CLEAR
knitshirts
Group of cotton stripes Variety of Banlon
4.00
7.00
bermudas
Large variety of 3.50 solids and patterns
wash pants
Jeans, patterns and 3.50 solid colors Variety of patterns 20-25%OFF and solids
- Refreshments
COLE-HA SHOE 20%OFFSF
slac
Many of our great patterns
spor CO
Large Group Values to $59.50
MISTER
GUT
TRADITIONAL CLOTH
920 MASSACHUSETT
GU
s is it! ER GUY'S of-school RANCE
LE-HAAN HOES FFSPECIAL
acks
y of our patterns
10. 00
ort coats
Group to $59.50
25. 00
Come in and relax after that tough test
ISTER
GUY
DITIONAL CLOTHIERS
MASSACHUSETTS
Large group with 39.50 values to $75.50 Others Reduced 20-30%OFF
suits
jackets
Poplin and Nylon of many styles-values to $17.00
10. 00
shirts
4.00
Patterns and solids Nearly all permanent press 4.00
- Alterations Extra
Official Bulletin
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Lisle Fellowship has just announced that it still has openings in three of its summer programs--in the U.S., Colombia, and Denmark. The U.S. program is in the Bay Area of California. For information, see 226 Strong.
Foreign students: Authorization has now been granted to the Dean of Foreign Students for providing permission for summer employment.
Peace Corps Examination this Saturday, 1:30 p.m., downtown post office. For people planning to enter the Peace Corps this summer, this exam is important. No prerelistation is necessary. For additional information, check with Peace Corps Liaison Officer, 226 Strong.
Classical Films. "Don Juan" and "Adventures of Don Juan." 7 & 9 p.m. Dyche Auditorium.
Jayhawk Sports Car Club Meeting.
7:30 p.m. Election of next year's
officers, awards for past season. 1000
Mississippi.
Percussion Ensemble. 8 p.m.
Swarthout, Recital Hall.
Campus Crusade for Christ, 9 p.m.
Rev. Ted Miesen, "Christians in
Communist Lands." AKL House.
TOMORROW
American Public Works Administration Conference. All Day.
Deadline: Submission of manuscripts for 1965 SEARCH, 5 BOOKS.
UWC Newcomers. 7:30 p.m.
Dessert Tasting Party. 1633
University Dr.
14 KANSAN May 14 1969
ArtCarved's sense of values hasn't changed.
Back in 1850, the ArtCarved name inside a wedding band stood for fine quality and very careful craftsmanship. They make their rings the very same way today. We can show you beautiful Florentine, sculptured, textured and facet designs in our new ArtCarved collection. No matter what you
preference is in rings or matching bands, ArtCarved values $till make sense.
ArtCarved
WEDDING RINGS
GALATIA SET
BRIMAN'S leading jewelers
Expert Jewelry & Watch Repair
743 Mass. Ph. VI 3-4366
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
THE CONVENIENT PLACE TO LIVE—
SAVE-Car expenses driving to and from campus
-Time it takes to drive to campus
You don't need a car to live in JAYHAWKER TOWERS
with the convenient location and Bus service
NOW RENTING-SEMESTER OR TERM LEASES NEW RENT SCHEDULE OFFERS WIDE SELECTION
Two-Bedroom Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments
- Elevators
- Air-conditioned
- Off-street parking
- Laundry Rooms - each building
- Bus Service
- Swimming Pool - Club Rooms
- Many other extras
INSPECTION
1603 W. 15th
INVITED
Tel. VI 3-4993
MEMO: TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF
The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you. With the newest most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m.'til midnight.
EXPERT TYPING
WAKE UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE
COPYING SERVICE
PRINTING SERVICE
√ TERM PAPERS TYPED
MIMEOGRAPHING
✔ RESUME'S
✓ BUSINESS LETTERS
ABS SECRETARIAL SERVICE
Formerly: Micki's Secretarial Service 901 KENTUCKY
A
842-0111
School's Out!
Where in the World Are you going!
Model-Carolyn Fienhage
LU
AIR
Model-Jill Huebner
Shop Now
For:
Touring,
Playing,
Studying,
Working,
or Just Loafing!
the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts
For Elegance in Wedding Gifts
Elring's
Gifts
924 Mass.
Gift Box
---
AMORE
MYSTIQUE
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
$345 $250
Let us show you the magnificent styling in Orange Blossom Bridal Sets and Wedding Bands.
Young adult accounts are especially invited.
Ruback's
JEWELERS
1232 Main Street Kansas City, Missouri
Free Parking Across the Street
---
ELEPHANT
DON'T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR TELEPHONE DISCONNECTED
CALL US NOW!
BILL SYSTEM
Just dial the telephone business office 8439900 and tell us the last day you want service. We'll do the rest.
Southwestern Bell
L.
Tanya grooves on your body.
The older folks have their own tanning products. Tanya is new.
It turns on a new breed of sun worshipers. That's you. You want a natural Hawaiian tan—deeper, faster. Only Tanya can give it to you.
Because Tanya has Hawaii's favorite tanning agents—coconut oil and cocoa butter. So Tanya boosts the sun's natural tanning rays. Make today happen...your way...get with Tanya.
A full line of suntan products for today's sun children—at your bookstore.
TANYA
COCONUT OIL AND COCOA BUTTER
IANYA
COCONUT OIL AND
COCOA BUTTER
KC arts show'avant-garde'
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) The Performing Arts Foundation has decided to try the
avant-garde this year at its annual festival. Scheduled for Friday, next
OPEN NOW
THE LOST GALLERY
(Objects de Art)
Oil Paintings, Graphics, (Lithographs, Woodcuts,
Etchings) All Originals
THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
711 West 23rd St.
Hours: Daily 10:30 to 9:00
Sundays 12:00 to 8:00
Don't let the Final blues get to you ome to The Pantry
for a refreshing
change of pace
Steaks
Waffles
Chicken
Pancakes
Home Made Pies
1528 W.23rd
7 a.m. - 8 p.m.
VI 3-7902
Closed Mondays
CITY OF CHEVROLET
First Choice
of the
Marriageables
ALPHA
LADY'S 35
MAN'S 39.75
ALOHA
LADY'S 30
MAN'S 39.75
ALPHA
LADY'S 35
MAN'S 39 75
ALOHA
LADY'S 50
MAN'S 39 75
For your double ring ceremony choose two perfectly matched rings by world-famous Keepsake. Your very personal Keepsake rings now await selection at our store.
TRADITIONAL Keepsake WEDDING RINGS
Ray Christian
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432
Sunday and Tuesday, the festival is entitled, "Long Hair?"
Wines enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Reg.
It will offer the comic opera, "La Cambiale di Matrimonio," by Rossini, sung in English with a contemporary setting; a ballet entitled "Love In," choreographed by Zachary Solov to a Handelian score with hard-rock music added; and a staged concert titled, "Divertimento," which will include members of the opera and ballet casts. It will be led by folk singer Odetta and opera star Teresa ZylisGara.
Minnie Pearls
"COUNTRY-FIED"
CHICKEN
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1730 West 23rd V1 3-8200
FREE Delivery over $5.00
For Plywood, Moulding Plaster,
Shelving Material
Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER
1011 N. 3rd VI 3-093
STOCK EXCHANGE
Philadelphia - Baltimore
Washington
Stock Exchange
MEMBER PACIFIC COAST STOCK EXCHANGE
Stocks - Mutual Funds - Bonds
JERRY W. JOHNSON Registered Representative
Westamerica Securities, Inc.
Residence;
1617 Massachusetts Street
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
842-0043
FLY TO NEW YORK
for the summer...
...and return for the fall semester
$82 roundtrip!
Flight Leaves May 28 Returns September 8
Reservations must be made by Tuesday, May 15.
For Information Call NOW! SUA Office-UN 4-3477
callKPL a day or two early to turn off your apartment service... it'll save you time and delay
ASTUDENT
We know how busy you get during and right after finals and the first thing you know you're ready to go home for the summer. To save time, give us a call a few days before you leave. We'd appreciate the notice and you'll appreciate not having to wait in line. Just call the KPL office at 843-6000 and ask for service representative.
KPL THE KANSAS POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY
630 kuok
PETER DUNN
Jenny
MARK ANDREWS
THE FOXEY LADY
PETER SCHWARTZ
DAVID W. GARDNER
Souvenir Year 1968-69 $ ^{630} $
PAT HURST
TREVOR W. BENNINGTON
BILL KISSEL
100
TOP 63 RECORDS OF 1968-69
TOM GLEASON
1. HEY JUDE THE BEATLES
2. REVOLUTION THE BEATLES
3. TOUCH ME DOORS
4. LOVE (CAN MAKE YOU HAPPY) MERCY
5. FIRE CRAZY WORLD OF ARTHUR BROWN
6. MAGIC CARPET RIDE STEPPENWOLF
7. EVERYDAY PEOPLE SLY & THE FAMILY STONE
8. I HEARD IT THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE MARVIN GAYE
9. IT'S YOUR THING ISLEY BROTHERS
10. YOU SHOWED ME TURTLELS
11. I GOT A LINE ON YOU SPIRIT
12. GIRL WATCHER O'KAYSIONS
13. TIME HAS COME TODAY CHAMBERS BROTHERS
14. AQUARIUS-LET THE SUN SHINE IN 5TH DIMENSION
15. YOU'VE MADE ME SO VERY HAPPY BLOOD, SWEAT AND TEARS
16. I'M GONNA MAKE YOU LOVE ME TEMPTATIONS AND SUPREMES
17. BABY, BABY DON'T CRY SMOKY AND THE MIRACLES
18. SWEET BLINDNESS 5TH DIMENSION
19. PINBALL WIZARD WHO
20. OVER YOU GARY PUCKETT & THE UNION GAP
21. THE BOXER SIMON AND GARFUNKEL
22. PIECE OF MY HEART BIG Brother & the Holding Co.
23. WICHITA LINEMAN GLEN CAMPBELL
24. PROUD MARY CREDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL
25. ALL ALONG THE WATCHTOWER JIMI HENDRIX
26. LOVE CHILD DIANA ROSS AND THE SUPREMES
27. RAMBLIN GAMBLIN MAN BOB SEGER
28. HAIR COWSILLS
29. DIZZY TOMMY ROE
30. CRIMSON & CLOVER T. JAMES AND THE SHONDELLS
31. ABRAHAM, MARTIN AND JOHN DION
32. BOTH SIDES NOW JUDY COLLINS
33. GET BACK BEATLES
34. ATLANTIS DONOVAN
35. I'M LIVIN' IN SHAME DIANA ROSS AND THE SUPREMES
36. STORMY CLASSICS IV
37. DON'T LET ME DOWN BEATLES
38. WORST THAT COULD HAPPEN BROOKLYN BRIDGE
39. THESE EYES GUESS WHO?
40. TRACES CLASSICS IV
41. PEOPLE GOTTA BE FREE RASCALS
42. CLOUD NINE TEMPTATIONS
43. THOSE WERE THE DAYS MARY HOPKIN
44. SING A SIMPLE SONG SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE
45. INDIAN RESERVATION DON FARDON
46. GITARZAN RAY STEVENS
47. MY SPECIAL ANGEL VOGUES
48. 1, 2, 3, RED LIGHT 1910 FRUITGUM COMPANY
49. THE SHAPES OF THINGS MAX FROST AND THE TROOPERS
50. BROWN EYED WOMAN BILL MEDLEY
51. GIMME GIMME GOOD LOVIN' CRAZY ELEPHANT
52. SUZIE Q CREDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL
53. GAMES PEOPLE PLAY JOE SOUTH
54. MORE TODAY THAN YESTERDAY SPIRAL STARECASE
55. GALVESTON GLEN CAMPBELL
56. HARPER VALLEY PTA JEANNIE C. RILEY
57. HOOKED ON A FEELING B. J. THOMAS
58. CROSSROADS CREAM
59. BUILD ME UP BUTTERCUP FOUNDATIONS
60. CINNAMON DEREK
61. I STARTED A JOKE BEE GEES
62. I SAY A LITTLE PRAYER ARETHA FRANKLIN
63. IN-A-GADDA-DA-VIDA IRON BUTTERFLY
KUOK TOP TEN ALBUMS OF THE YEAR
THE BEATLES THE BEATLES
HAIR ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST RECORDING
CHEAP THRILLS BIG BROTHER & THE HOLDING COMPANY
BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS
IN-A-GADDA-DA-VIDA IRON BUTTERFLY
THREE DOG NIGHT THREE DOG NIGHT
SUPER SESSION BLOOMFIELD, KOOPER, & STILLS
ARLO ARLO GUTHRIE
ELVIS ELVIS PRESLEY
GOQDBYE CREAM
Hiva Kimosabi!
This is the first time I ever "happened" on paper, but didn't a famous man once say it couldn't happen here. I think it was Frank Zappe. Well it has happened here and this page is the proof. This has been the heaviest in KUOK's short all rock history. It all started . one and one-half years ago today. . sound familiar? Just a short quote from one of our competitors. Many of the people responsible for this change in KUOK are pictured on this page. Some of them you might even know or have met in your classes. What I'm trying to say is that they're all students and each one has his or her thing. One thing they all have in common is radio, and that's where it's at. They all felt that you too should get a piece of the action and so the souvenir page came into being.
To all of you returning to KU, this page is your ticket for flight 630 ready for take-off in September.
To the graduating seniors, show it to Mrs. Robinson. I'm sure she'll dig it.
Whatever your case may be, I leave you with this parting thought. Do whatcha wanna do!
Dickie
Peace!!!
Dick Shannon
KIEF'S
FIG NEWTON
All of the Top Ten Albums Are Available at Kief's in the Malls Shopping Center
Fredrik Löw
C. FRANKLIN ROUSE
Narasimha Raja
RICK SHAFFER
P. S. SUNILA
Richard Victor Shannon, III
LARRY SHAYNE
UNCLE B.
W. Civ. test had errors
The Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination, which many students took Saturday, contained some errors which will be taken into account when the exam is graded, according to a release given the Kansan today by J. E. Seaver, chairman of the Western Civilization program.
The statement said:
"The administrative staff of the Western Civilization program wishes to call to the attention of students who took the examination the fact that three inadvertent errors crept into the final draft of the examination which we prepared. These included some vagueness regarding the instructions for the essays and the substitution of Carnegie for Carnap on two of the matching questions. We wish to apologize for any inconvenience these slips may have caused students and assure them that we will compensate for these discrepancies in grading the examination, and no one's grade will be adversely affected."
'Killing Ground' will be repeated
"Slow Dance on the Killing Ground," a presentation by the United Campus Christian Fellowship (UCCF) Theatre Workshop, will be on stage again at 8:20 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the UCCF Center, 12th and Oread.
Tickets for the play are $1 and may be purchased at the door or reserved by calling the UCCF Center.
May 14
1969 KANSAN 19
The Jay Shoppe wishes to thank you for your patronage
Seniors—Congratulations and may we express our sincerest wishes to you for an enjoyable and successful career.
Underclassmen—Have a wonderful summer and we're looking forward to seeing you in the fall.
Jay SHOPPE
FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 • 835 MASS. • VI3-4833
Jay
SHOPPE
VILLAGE SANDALS
by
DEXTER
$11.95
Trensberg's
=Shoes
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
DEXTER
Arensberg's =Shoes
SUMMER JOBS
MALE OR FEMALE
COLLEGE
STUDENTS
We are hiring students who are interested in full time summer employment.
Those hired will also have the opportunity to continue employment on a parttime basis next fall. All jobs will give you tremendous experience for your next school semester regardless of your field.
---
WE OFFER
Earnings in excess of $125 per week (guaranteed salary).
Opportunity to work for one of the largest companies in its fields.
3. Opportunity for advancement through the summer months.
---
A SUMMER CONTEST WHICH INCLUDES
1. $15,000 in cash scholarships.
2. $30,000 in merchandise prizes.
Round the World Trips
3. 1969 Sports cars, boats & motors.
4. Twenty expense paid vacations in the Bahamas.
---
QUALIFICATIONS ARE
1. Neat appearance
2. Ability to converse intelligently
3. Willingness to work hard
4. Ready for immediate employment
---
All Positions Are Most Desirable, Unique And Very Interesting
APPLY MR. WHITE
Mon. thru Fri., 9:00-1:00
Kansas City 842 1987
Topeka 357 4169
Omaha 341 4736
Lincoln 432 5205
Council Bluffs 322 6268
Minneapolis 336 8955
St. Paul 227 8367
Sioux City 277 1651
Sioux Falls 338 0811
Fargo 232 5542
St. Cloud 252 4280
Billings 259 3174
Seattle 623 7676
Great Falls 452 1053
Tacoma 272 3733
Portland 227 3691
Eugene 343-7747
Boise 344 6549
Idaho Falls 522 0592
APPLY ONLY AFTER COMPLETION OF FINAL EXAMS
THE HOLE IN THE WALL
Food for Final Week Sandwiches, Salads DELIVERY SERVICE VI 3-7685
THE HOLF IN THE WALL IN THE JAYHAWK FOOD Mart
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.
THE CONCORD SHOP
• Decoupage Materials
• Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
• Stretcher Frames
• Oils and Acrylics
Charge Account and Bankmark Services
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th V1 3-3877
PHONE V13-4278
Antiques THE GRINSTEADS
PRIMITIVES AND GENERAL LINE LAWRENCE, KANB 66044
EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Meaningful Summer Work?
Concerned About Social Problems?
Suggested Student Treat
— 100% Pure Beef —
9th & Iowa St.
Good Luck on Finals & have a good summer!
Community Now is a K.C. paper which is trying to implement understanding in the local area. The paper believes that any news outlet should take a concerned stand on social issues rather than avoiding controversy as does much of the status quo press. If you are a journalism student or a concerned student in any area, you can spend a meaningful summer helping create a better community. If you are looking for a money job, this isn't it. In fact, the paper at this early point is barely off the ground. What you make will depend upon the state of the paper which will depend upon your willingness. Help create a community of understanding:
for further information call 816-221-3050, K.C., Mo.
PHONE V13-4278
Antiques
THE GRINSTEADS
PRIMITIVES AND
GENERAL LINE
LAWRENCE, KANS. 86044
746 OHIO STREET
SANDWICH
Suggested Student Treat
– 100% Pure Beef –
9th & Iowa St.
Big Shef . . . two open flame cooked beef patties, melted Kraft cheese,
special sauce and fresh lettuce, served on toasted bun.
Good Luck on Finals &
have a good summer!
Good Luck on Finals &
have a good summer!
Student
Treat
– 100% Pure Beef –
9th & Iowa St.
BURGER
CHEF
HAMBURGERS
THIS SPRING DON'T STRUGGLE WITH PACKING YOUR WOOL CLOTHES AND CARRYING THEM HOME
PHONE ACME FOR
REFRIGERATED
INSURANCE FOR THE FIRST
$300.00 VALUATION
$3.95
BOX STORAGE!
2% EXTRA FOR ADDITIONAL VALUATION
FREE Box Storage
than the cleaning charge. Box storage is our facility for storing your winter garments for the summer. This Box is large and will hold any number of garments. All garments are cleaned before storing and will be freshly pressed when you are ready for them in the fall. Note: You don't have to pay for your cleaning until you pick it up in the Fall!
Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners
DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI3-5155
MALLS
23rd and La.
VI 3-0895
HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928
Senator says damaging Fortas evidence withheld
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. John J. Williams, one of Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas' most severe critics, said yesterday Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell had planted an "inference" that he had additional damaging information about Fortas' activities.
If so, he said, Mitchell should make it public so Fortas could reply.
He noted the inference that the Justice Department had additional evidence which might go beyond the question of impropriety on Fortas' part to the question of illegal activities—with which he has not been publicly charged in the furor surrounding him.
Williams took note of Mitchell's announcement that he had given "certain information" to Chief Justice Earl Warren in a secret meeting last week.
"In fairness to Justice Fortas this inference of additional charges should not be left hanging in abeyance," Williams told the Senate.
Fortas, who has refused comment beyond a brief statement confirming he accepted and returned the fee, abruptly cancelled a scheduled speech last night before the first
Pre-Med Day soon to occur
Students at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City have scheduled a Pre-Med Day from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday in the Student Union and Battenfeld Auditorium at the Medical Center.
Pre-Med Day, sponsored by the Student American Medical Association (SAMA), will include featured speaker Ed Martin, national president of SAMA.
Other highlights include tours of the Medical Center, a movie about the making of a doctor and small group meetings.
Charles Paxson, secretary of KU SAMA and chairman of the pre-med committee, said undergraduates, even those undecided upon a medical career, are welcome to attend Pre-Med Day.
May 14 1969 KANSAN 21
circuit judicial conference at New Castle, N.H. There was no immediate explanation for his last-minute move.
Sen. Joseph D. Tydings, D-Md., who was one of Fortas' staunchest supporters for Chief Justice, called a news conference and demanded that Fortas resign.
Tydings said if the Justice Department had evidence of "wrong doing" on the part of Fortas it should present it to a
"I believe the Fortas situation has deteriorated beyond recall," he said. "I have concluded that no explanation at this point can remedy the damage which has been done to the court and our entire judicial system."
grand jurv.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., a foe of Fortas in last year's debate, told the Senate that neither the President nor the Supreme Court have the right to seek Fortas' removal from the Supreme Court. Ervin is a former state supreme court justice and one of the Senate's constitutional experts.
Ervin pointedly reminded the Senate that the Constitution "confers no role on the President in matters of removal" and gives no role to the Supreme Court. It permits impeachment by the House and trial by the Senate for "treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors."
Condominium
Now under construction (completion soon)
For Information Call
Hird Construction Co.
VI 3-6153
R. A. L.
You'll play summer's leading lady in our crisp and bright summer stock. Treat yourself to our great selection of
Miss Pat, Denise and Ladybug clothing.
HOLIDAYS
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
V1 3-575
Uptown VI 13-5755
Free Beer!
THURSDAY
6:00 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
6:00 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
THE CHALKHAWK SAYS,
"Thanks For The Business Jayhawks, Hope To See You Next Year!"
THE CHALKHAWK SAYS,
BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE
"BUY A GLASS OR PITCHER OF BUDWEISER AND GET ONE FREE" at
the
Lounge
Southwest Corner of Hillcrest Bowl in Hillcrest Shopping Ctr. 9th & Iowa Directly Behind Hillcrest Billards
运输
LAWRENCE
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
DON'T BREAK YOUR BACK...
carrying all these suitcases, clothesracks, trunks, etc. And every year it's the same thing, rushing around, packing-unpacking. What does it all get you? Just a bunch of lost items and wrinkled clothes.
This year let us handle those worries.
We don't handle your winter clothes like we weren't going to see them for months. They are fresh and clean before entering their storage boxes due to our Sanitone process. We check every item, replacing missing buttons and making minor repairs.
Then we store them . . out of your way . . safe . . dust-free and . . mothproof.
Start enjoying a little extra closet space now. Bring your winter clothes in TODAY and have a good summer.
Pickup & Delivery
To All KU Living Groups
1029 New Hamp. Phone 843-3711
Summer Jobs
Summer Jobs
Male Students - Your Hometown or in Lawrence
Earn $1,200 in 13 Weeks Part-Time
Some Full-Time Available
Apply Thursday, May 15th, 3 p.m.
Room 304, Blake Hall, Mr. Ramsey
MALE & FEMALE STUDENTS WANTED
Summer jobs for college and university students. Up to $500.00 per month with scholarships available. Also: Part-time jobs available after returning to school. Must be able to start immediately after semester ends. For appointment call COMPANY STUDENT PLACEMENT MANAGER. MISS SHIPLEY, 531-8785 or 531-8786 from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Mid Season Clearance
Due to the unusually warm rainy spring our inventories have grown in the men's suits to the point where we are having a sale in order to get the inventory down. Now while you can get many months wear out of the latest in men's wear-
$150 values $119.95
$110 values $ 88.95
$ 95 values $ 74.95
$ 75 values $ 59.95
Ober's
Ober's 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896
Carriage Lamp
ON THE MALLS
Sunday Dining Hours
11:30-8:00
OPEN DAILY
11:30-9:30
Tavern and Sandwich
Area Open
Until Midnight
Call VI 2-9248 For Evening Reservations
Enjoy a Delicious Sandwich and Your Favorite Beverage at Carriage Lamp
REUBEN ... $1.20.
Served with potato salad, Kosher pickle,
lettuce & tomato
BAKED HAM ... $.85
ROAST BEEF ... $.95
CORN BEEF ... $.95
Try our luncheon specials Monday thru Friday, 11:30 to 3:00. Each day a specialty of the house will be offered complete with beverage and dessert.
52
Open All Summer For Your Dining Pleasure
TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
vacancy notice 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 Civilili-
and adulth Campus Madhouse,
1241 Orest.
PRIMARILY LEATHER handcrafts many styles of leather watchbands just for your wrist and watch. Start-
ning at $199. For Sale: SANDALS—This spring why not have the best. Custom-made sandals from Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 5-15
As much beer needed to quench your thirst at the TEE PEE. TGIF with 75c pitchers. Saturday afternoon bands with no cover charge. 5-14
Just arrived - Factory fresh
TC 120 Heater camber
Nichols Suzuki
"The Motorcycle Gate"
Lowe's Hardwoods
300 W. Bmh 842-0504
SUZUKI
'60 T-Bird, good condition. New wide doors, pipes, mats, water pump, waterpump, built by Jantzen International, but not included in $650 or best offer. Well taken care of Contact Jeff Meyers. 3-18535. 5-14 3-18513. CORVETTE, must sell. 3-18513. CORVETTE, good condition, low mileage, new tires. $1,550, phone VI 2-2438 or see at 1526 Vermont (rear apartment). 5-14 must sell second car. Pontiac station wagon, excellent comfort.
Drafted. must sell second car 1957 Pontiac. must sell second car 1957 Pontiac. Make offer on 822-729 con-
Volt Scuba Wet Suit. "4" zippers. 3
pcases. small. Call Larry. 864-4338
5 pcases. large. Call Larry. 864-4338
Call Larry, 864-421-2717
913-242-2171
1963 Chevy Impala V-8, automatic,
perfect engine, new battery, radio;
Zenith portable stereo, 5 speakers;
Wi-Fi speaker, good condition;
writer, portable, good condition. Also,
miscellaneous household items.
Call 843-2197
5-14
1964 Corvette, convertible, trophy hood
like a Camaro.
1960 Bugeye Sprite, mint condition,
excellent mechanically, wood steering
wheel and dash, wires, yellow paint,
top, paint, $1,050 VI-28039-
5-14
1960 Bugeye Sprite, mint post-tac, rear end
for 65-66 Olds 404 for sale, rear end
Call Bob at VI-28933-
5-14
AUDIO SALE
20% off
AR and Cynaco products
High quality components
ask about our student prices.
Ask about our student special.
Sale ends May 24
A UDY
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
VI 2-1944
Alumni Center
Aircraft for sale, AERONCA 7AC, recent cover, 250 hours since MOH, always hanged, new tires, metal prop, new license in MD, John's 66 Service, For Sale: 1965 PONTIAC GTO, red with b/w interior. 3-speed in excellent condition. 40,000 miles. Will sacrifice. Call VI 3-0482 or UN 4-3259.
'63 Corvette coupe, mtr. fully loaded and balanced; Air-conditioned, mags, semi-custom interior and body. See at 1045 East 23rd, Lot 17 after 5 p.m.
Ford Econoline Van, 1965. In excel-
celed delivery van, Call 842-8402. 5-14
1963 Austin Healy 3000. New paint,
increased fuel. $1300. Bill 5-14
3-6433.
Deliciously Different
1963 Corvallis Monza Convertible 4-
Years Old. Must be Certified. Must sell.
1975-79 9.7577
**FREE BEER** (large type) can under seat of **58 Chevy**, **62-cy** engine, automatic radio, good tires. Runs on $15 or offer. Call Mill City Arena I-3-2655.
88 VOLKWAGEN—Excellent condi-
guarantee 945 Ky. Call V-14
1076
V-5-14
Mexican Food
RAY AUDIO
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest,
monitors and analyzes the printer,
earmer, sharper copies; faster service.
Unsurpassed results for these, papers.
Typewriter, Typewriter 750.
Mass. VI 3-3644.
your new AR-DYNACO DEALER
NOTICE
MOBILE HOME—1964 Medallion. Located at Ridgeview trail Trailer Court. Two bedrooms, fenced in yard, carport. $27,000 - 7387. Barkersedge light gray gree 1960 model, 68,000 miles, excellent condition, $400. Phone UN 4-3058 or 843-8414 (evenings). 5-14
HELP! HELP! HELP! I must sell my 1965 Pontiac Bonn. convt., equipped with power steering, windows. Excellent condition. Will sacrifice for $1350.
Call VI 3-2713. 5-14
1960 Ford, Radio, heater and two snow
ladders or 825 best offer Call 842-1978
842-1979 B=14
New 30-30 Marlin rifle, lever action.
Must sell. Best offer. Hone, VI 3-2289.
Must sell. Best offer. Hone, VI 3-2289.
105 E. 8th
offers professional service for your component audio gear. Factory authorized warranty for AR, Revox, Sherwood and Fisher. Mountain serv- cent equipment. VI-VI 1944 prompt service. Hillcrest Shopping Center (Afternoon & Evening). 5-14
TIRED OF THAT SAGGY MORNING FEELING? Call Donna and Barb any- time after five for two twin beds. Rimba also for sale, two chests. Call VI 3-7655. 8-14
"We Care About What You Wear And If You Care"
For Sale: Searens Tower Com-
pany. $30 paperwriter, $30 Call VI 265-7411
after S. 30. 5-14
Notice: Gourmet Sandwiches and other delicious foods featured at the Hole in the Wall Delicatessen in Jayna Hole, 8th and 10th floors. 8 am to midnight daily room to night. Sundays. Delivery service daily 6 p.m. to midnight.
KU Student Film
"Your Country Calls"
Wed. and Thurs., May 14 & 15
At the
At the PAWNSHOP
15 East 8th
Admission 5
Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street
Shoe Repair For Your Repairs,
Shoe Dyeing and Shines.
Casa De Taco
Shoe Shines, One color .50
315 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q outdoor
1.15; Brisket sandwich, $75; Hours,
$1.55; Brib sandwich, 90c; 1½ chicken,
$
Two color .75
Closed Saturday at Noon
8:00-5:00
The TEE PEE has been remodeled! Bands on weekends, TGIP with 75c pitchers each Friday from noon to 6 p.m. 5-14
Need someone to take over lease for summer school!! Air-Cond., Two bedrooms, $130 furnished, one bedroom,公租房, Santee Apartment. Call I2-26200. 5-14
Pay-Less
Self Service SHOES
1300 W. 23rd Lawrence
$ \varphi^{s+1} = \varphi^{s} $
For:
806 MASS.
V1 3-1171
PHOTOFINISHING
PORTRAITS
Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level
● PASSPORT PICTURES
PRIMARLY LEATHER- Vests, bags,
handbags, backpacks, balaclavas,
backpacks at 812 Mason St. s-15
FOR RENT
- APPLICATION PICTURES
Attention summer students: College Inn, 912 Alabama at foot Mt. Oread. Enroll in one of our furnished, Great family meals within your budget. College approved. Call 7-8980 now for reservation and deposit. Also take fall term reservations.
Live close to campus, air-conditioned
2-bedroom apartments, furnished or
unfurnished, $105-$130. One available
now, only six left for June. Also,
renting rooms. Call VI 3-2116 for
appointment. Santee Apts. 1125 Louisiana
Sleeping rooms with and without kitchen privileges for males; furnished air-conditioned apartments. Border campuses and nearby downtown parks.
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR RENT
Male students only 1. 4-room + bath
1. 3-room + bath. Electriety extra. Approximately 1 block from campus.
Campus Center, daytime,
VI 2. 2787
Open 7 Evenings A Week
729 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kan.
Apartment for rent: 4 furnished one-
room apartments to subrent for the
summer. Dishwasher, 1510 K
tukey. Call VI 2-3712. 5-14
Apartment for rent: 2 BDRM. Apt.
Furn. /Unfurn. for summer sublease
for the summer. Easy walking distance to campus,
cond., laundry facilities 842-7928. 5-14
For Rent: To graduate woman. Large
clean sleeping room with kitchen for
the summer. Available June 1. U-
illness fee $15 per night. 1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments,
located in small quiet complex at
south edge of KU campus. Unfurni-
ished or finished with elegant old-
style Dishwasher. All rooms have wall-to-wall carpeting,
paneled living area. Very large rooms,
big electric kitchen, 5 closets and
a heat and air aird. Reasonable rent and
AMERICA'S NO ONE PIZZA
Pizza Palace
LOW SUMMER RATES
D
Beautifully furnished apartment to
beautifully furnished bedroom 2
SUMMER BEDROOM 5-14
ML. J.2-878,
Furn. walkout apt., 4 lrs, & bath, for 2 or 3 boys, shower, off st. prk, close room. will then complete, unitties paid, $105.00 available Summer Fall. VI 3-4349 5-14
For rent June 1, nearly new A/C2 bedroom apartments—2 blocks from Law school, private parking, also studio apartment 1, 2 or 3 room, utilities paid low amount. Men may work out all or part of rent. Call VI 3-8534. 5-14
Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. 1741 West Manor Apartment, Dyke Drift apartment 5-B, VI 3-8202. 5-14 now renting for summer, University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced ates, air-conditioning, carpet, windows. Four bedrooms. 842-1296 for University Terrace and 843-1433 for Old Mill. 5-14 One or two bedroom apt. now sub-lease to TEE APARTMENTS. June through August. Only two blks from campus. Air-conditioned. Top floor of apt. air-conditioner is $140/month. summary rate is $125/month for Juley. July, and August. 5-14 Furn. walkout apt. 4, rms. & bath for 2 or 3 boys, shower, off st. prkg, close
FREE DRINK ON
Earl's
WE DELIVER
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Phone VI 3-0753
Tonv's 66 Service
LA PETITE GALERIE
starting service
*very unique & select gift items, French, Early American, Mediterranean, Oriental gifts
Alexander's
flowers
★bridal registry
- weekend specials
★ 10% discount on cash
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
oriental gifts
DELIVERY
carry
VL2 1320
V12-1320
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Summer sublet two bedroom fourplex, air-conditioned, disposal, modern furniture and kitchen. $170. Behind Kroger' on 24th St, Call II 8-166.
15th and Crestline
Sublet for summer, a two-bedroom apt. It is on the second floor of a home, near campus. Married couple. 5-14
3-1396 after 6:00. Furnished apartment June 1 to September 1. Quit. no pets. Phone 843-4010 after 5 p.m. 5-14
TYPING
PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS.
Fast, accurate, KU Graduate. Call Mrs.
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Multilingual Secretarial Service: To
applications, term papers, theses, or
assertions typed in German, Romanized
Japanese, Spanish, English
French, or Swahili, call 842-6516. TF
Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed
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Located near Oliver Hall. VI 3-
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1712 Alabama
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Nicely warm. 3 rm. & bath walkout cool apt, shower, close to KU, off St. Louis, shelter, computer $105 available senior computer 5-14 June Graduate Moving To Kansas City. Live Merrile in "Ole English Village," furnished or unfurnished. Apartments starting at $142.00, four apartments upstairs, house, air-conditioned, all electric kitchens, carpeted, 12 minutes from downtown K.C., 18th St. Expressway at Roelow Park, 1100 County Line and Kansas City, Kansas, CO-1166
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WANTED
HILLCREST CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas
842-6331
The KU student at the TEE PEE.
Open daily from 2 p.m. to midnight.
Free pickups given away nightly, 5-14
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SECRETARY. Local firm seeks compet-
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Cars Painted $27.50
792 N. 2nd—N. Lawrence
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Open Fri. & Sat.
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Private Party Room available Open Fri. & Sat.
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Female roommate wanted for summer to share clean quiet 2nd floor furnishings. Call VI $50/month, utilities paid. Call VI 2143, Rm 124 or VI 3-3956 for 5 p.m.
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
HELP WANTED
International company now has summer positions available to college students who live in the Kansas City or Wichita areas.
European trips
(1) Washington $12.75
In Kansas City call Miss James, 816
ENTERTAINMENT ROAD MANAGER for the summer. Extensive travel, wages plus transportation and lodgement interview by phone between 3 & 6 busses needed. MID CONTINENT ENTERTAINMENT. Call 843-0100. 5-14
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Students Summer Employment. Pinkerton, Inc., is now taking applications for students who desire summer work as security guards in the greater Kansas City area. To qualify, you must be a least years of age, 8' or over, but have completed any security training excluded). Apply Mon. thru Fri. 9-4, Sat. 9-12, Room 700. Bryant Building, 1102 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Missouri. 5-15
Studio
Lost: Man's glasses with black frames and black glass case. Lost between JRP and Snow. Reward. Call VI 2-0506. 5-14
Car keys in a black leather case. Lost
car keys in campus. If you have
please call VT 1-2866 5-14
Lost—wash gold class ring with blue stone and pharmacy emblem (Rx). Initials LFB on inside. Call Lee, VI 2-8047. 5-14
Man's glasses with black frames and glass case. Lost in O zone across from tennis courts. Lost Thursday evening, May 8. Reward offered, call VI 2-3655.
Lost Sat., about five keys and key ring with wooden medallion. Desperately needed. Call Jerry, 729 Templin, VI 2-1200. Reward. 5-14
Tutoring—in Japanese language by
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after 6 p.m.
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---
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Protest tension eased
(Continued from page 1) the tension seemed to lessen
Dave Bailey, Lawrence resident and former SDS head, said he was pleased at the apparent new communication.
"I maintain that people have to get together. These dialogues have to continue." said Bailey
Another student asked Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student and SDS leader, what he thought was happening.
Atkinson conceded a first step had been taken, but he said he still thought violence was the only means for fundamental change.
"If you want to change anything fundamentally, then
"If this is all the fundamental change, then the country is lost."
you're going to have to use guns," Atkinson said.
Bailey replied that he
basically agreed with Atkinson. But he added that the violence should not be directed toward each other.
Bill Hansen, Kansas City, Mo., first year law student and
Awbrey said, "This meeting will be devoted to beginning to face the serious problems which face KU.
Gus diZerega, Wichita senior and senate member, said last night, "The meeting will be the first chance, because of previous procedural restrictions, to introduce and act on any constructive and positive legislation."
ISP to submit motions today
commented on the proceedings of the meeting, recommending that a meeting be scheduled before school closed to continue the "dialogue."
(Continued from page 1) Responsibilities Committee and to the Union Operating Board
Student Senate member, then said he appreciated what he had seen happen at the meeting.
"Up to this time, we have reacted to problems. Now is the time to begin to solve the questions which plague the University," he said.
Referring to the possibility of tonight's meeting being a continuation of Monday night's special meeting, Awbrey said, "Hopefully, this meeting will not discuss the problems of civil disobedience and demonstrations."
Hansen said he hoped the brotherhood which had been formed would not be forgotten
Gov. speaks of disorders
"There are those persons in our nation today who act only to serve the head of this nation in the name of finding a new peace for our national soul. But what will it prove to destroy the good along with the bad?" Docking asked.
HERNDON (UPI) — The danger in current student unrest is the tendency to "see answers to the complexities of our time in some deed of magic, some puff of smoke," Gov. Robert B. Docking said last night.
24 KANSAN May 14 1969
Applause and cheers seconded the motion and a meeting was tentatively scheduled for Monday.
"Perhaps the greatest danger of the emancipation of youth—or the impatience of the adults which seems to accompany it—is to seek answers to the complexities of our times in some deed of magic, some puff of smoke.
"Young people today can help make the necessary changes, but changes do not come overnight. It will come if you join in a fair and orderly protest offering responsible and legitimate suggestions for improvement," Docking said.
In a prepared speech the governor said changes in our society are necessary -but not to destroy the good along with the bad.
"When we leave this room, I hope that each of us realizes that there is nothing on the face of this earth more precious than a human life."
The governor said today's established institutions are being challenged for their treatment of the individual and their effectiveness. He said religious beliefs are being questioned for their value to modern life.
"This is a coalition. We've heard from people from both sides. We have a dialogue. We're a unit now.
Last edition tomorrow
"I think we can leave this meeting feeling we have accomplished quite a lot," said Hill, adjourning the meeting.
Many more students of both "sides" spoke to congratulate the SDS meeting for the new communication which had been achieved.
Tomorrow's Kansan, the last edition until next fall, will feature a special section on poverty in Lawrence, representing 2½ months of in-depth study.
Half an hour later, Hill
---
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Decisions made by UDB
The University Disciplinary Board in effect placed three students charged with disrupting a peace officers seminar April 23 in the Kansas Union on disciplinary probation in a decision reached this morning.
The board, which met yesterday for a hearing of the three in Swarthout Recital Hall, completed its deliberations about 1 a.m.
Only one of the defendants, Don Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., junior, appeared at the hearing. Rick Atkinson, Belleville graduate student, and Bill Berkowitz, New York graduate student did not appear to answer the charges.
Russel Bradt, chairman of the board, said the following actions will be taken against the defendants:
1. Richard C. Atkinson, William K. Berkowitz and Donald Jenkins Jr. are hereby suspended from the University from the end of the present semester until the end of spring semester, 1970.
2. Because this is the first case of its
nature in which charges have been brought before this board, the board suspends the action taken in paragraph one and places the three involved on disciplinary probation from this date until the end of spring semester. 1970.
3. Donald Jenkins Jr. shall pay the sum of $64.50 to the University of Kansas as restitution for damage to tables in the Kansas Union.
The charges were filed in a letter to the UDB from the University Senate Executive Committee which is composed of six faculty members and three students.
Five witnesses appeared to corroborate charges against the three defendants.
The witnesses appeared in this order: Karl Kappelman, KU extension representative for institutes and conferences; Maynard Brazeal, director of peace officer's training; Derwood McCabe, Kansas Union Building manager; Frank Burge, Union director.
and Kevin A. Remick, Union concessions manager.
A university function
Kappelman explained the seminar was a University function because the school was funded by state and federal grants. He said the fact that the demonstrators were in the room was disruptive and that he had rented it.
McCabe's testimony revealed that damages to nine tables and the sound system amounted to $72.30. In later testimony it was learned that defendant Jenkins may have tripped over the microphone cord which resulted in the damage to the mike.
From at least three of the witnesses it was learned that at no time did anyone ask the demonstrators to leave the room.
During his testimony, 22 signed petitions submitted by Burge were excluded as evidence because there was no way to prove the signers knew the defendants.
During the last witness' testimony, Jenkins was seen handing a note to Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, who had withdrawn himself as a voting member but stayed to act as clerk.
Jenkins appeared
Jenkins, at the last minute, decided to appear with an adviser, Bill Hansen, Kansas City, Mo., first-year law student.
Jenkins said he did not consider the board legitimate, and asked the board why he had not been given an answer as to the legality of the disciplinary board to judge him. Jenkins proposed the question at last Thursday's "hearing."
In defense of Jenkins, Hansen said, "I have certain reservations about the staggering line of incompetent witnesses that have appeared here."
Hansen questioned whether the Union could be considered a legitimate
(Continued to page 4)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
79th Year, No.132 The University of KansasLawrence, Kansas Thursday, May 15, 1969
Final edition today.
This is the final edition of the University Daily Kansan for the semester. The Summer Session Kansan will begin bi-weekly publication June 10.
--concerning housing conditions is one prerequisite to solving the off-campus housing problem.
Housing's solutions few
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the final article in a series on student off-campus housing in Lawrence.)
By JOE BULLARD Kansan Staff Writer
Solutions to the off-campus housing problem are few and far between.
This semester, three suggestions as possible solutions for the off-campus housing problem have come out through meetings of the off-campus housing committee and other concerned groups.
The three solutions are: 1) provide students with written contracts, 2) provide a building inspector to inspect buildings before they are placed on the off-campus housing list in McCollum Hall, and 3) educate students to the problems they face when moving off-campus.
Members of the off-campus housing committee said education of students
Bulletin
The Student Off-Campus Housing Committee has prepared a lease form which will be available to any student requesting a written lease to present to their landlords.
Ed Higgins, Shawnee Mission sophomore and member of the housing committee, said copies of the lease will be available by May 18 in the lobby of the Kansas Union, the People-To-People-Office and the Off-Campus Housing Office in McCollum Hall.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, said, "The University should do everything it can to make students aware of two things: 1) the different places
students have available to them and 2) conditions students do not have to put up with such as racial discrimination and standard housing."
Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, thinks education of the tenant could be harmful and create more problems than it
would solve. Coan said educating students about substandard housing conditions and getting them to file complaints against landlords could result in the student being moved out
Disagreement exists between administration and student members who serve on the
off-campus housing committee, as to the value of KU's off-campus housing office.
There is no "approved" housing at KU in the sense that someone goes out and inspects the building before the building is listed with the off-campus
(Continued to page 4)
President Nixon proposes peace plan
PARIS (UPI) - The Viet Cong today rejected President Nixon's call for a mutual withdrawal of U.S. And North Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam, calling it "unjust and unreasonable."
The statement did not mention other points in Nixon's eight-point peace proposal made on television last night.
Its highlights:
All U.S., Allied and non-South Vietnamese forces would start withdrawing as soon as
agreement is reached. Major units would pull out over a 12-month period in previously agreed-on stages. Remaining units would then move into designated base areas "and would not engage in combat operations."
North Vietnam would withdraw not only from the South but from Cambodia and Laos as possible communist bases for renewed fighting. The United States would not debate
Hanoi's insistence it has no troops in South Vietnam but would insist on "reliable assurances" that they aren't there.
An international supervisory body would verify withdrawals, help arrange supervised ceasefires and other tasks ordered by both sides. As soon as possible after it starts work, elections would be held under its supervision.
Senate meets, passes six of 15 resolutions
In a four-hour meeting of the Student Senate last night, six out of 15 resolutions and amendments were passed.
Establishment of a committee to conduct student opinion polls
Amidst a deluge of procedural entanglements, the Senate passed resolutions concerning: Appointment of a Graduate Student's Affairs committee to consider "matters of concern to graduate students."
Fortas quits
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas has submitted his resignation to President Nixon, it was announced today.
at student elections concerning general attitudes of students.
Endorsement of the creation of a summer tutoring camp for disadvantaged students. The program has been set up and is being sponsored by Black Student Union, the University Council for Urban Action, the Student Senate and the Corporation Board of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
Appointment of the Student Senate Executive Committee to formulate a program of a student exchange bookstore.
Denunciation the conditions ofmuch of the available off-campus housing, and establishing a rating system directed by a Housing Commission.
Removal of the voting privileges of the Dean of Students, Dean of Men and the
Dean of Women as "employees of the University."
Of the nine remaining amendments and resolutions, four were referred to committees for later consideration, three were tabled, one failed. The final amendment could not be taken up in last night's meeting because of a precedural restriction.
The nine were:
A resolution to remove graduation credit from ROTC courses. The resolution was referred to the Student Senate Executive Committee.
A resolution to establish a procedure through which amendments, statutes and resolutions are submitted to a reviewing committee before being introduced to the senate. The resolution was tabled.
(Continued to page 4)
Special section today
Today's Kansan features a special section on poverty in Lawrence. The articles within the section, all written by Kansan staff writers and executive reporters, represent 21/2 months of in-depth study of Lawrence's poverty problem.
[Pictured] A young woman in a dark coat is walking past a building. She appears to be focused on something in front of her. The background features other people and some construction materials.
---
Dear Faculty, Students
Kansas Union, the living room of the University of Kansas, was established and is operated as a non-profit corporation for the benefit and service of you, its valued customers. Since the University community contributes immeasurably to the Union's successful operation and progress with loyal patronage—and students with an added $17 fee per semester—we, the staff, take this opportunity to report directly to you at the year's end.
A record estimate of 3,300,000 individual transactions will have occurred by the end of this fiscal year June 30, about 1,185,000 of which represent persons attending 12,000 different reservation functions.
Altogether, Kansas Union departments have recorded approximately $2,996,000 in sales. In addition, student fees, office rentals, reservations, room use (except gratis use by student organizations) and miscellaneous items took in about $174,000 more for a total income of $3,170,000.
A large institutional accounting firm makes a detailed audit of Union operations each year.
The following tabulation shows the proportioned sources for each dollar of income:
FOOD SALES . . . . . . . . . $ .20
BOOKSTORE SALES . . . . . . . . . .62
JAYBOWL RECREATION INTAKE . . . . . . . . . 01
KU CONCESSIONS SALES . . . . . . . . . . .11
STUDENT FEES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 04
RESERVATIONS, ROOMS, ETC. INTAKE .02
$1.00
The food department includes the Union cafeteria, catering service, the Hawk's Nest, Prairie Room and Hawklet. Concessions include vending machines, athletic concessions, Strong Hall snacks, Fine Arts snacks and the Union information counter. The Union operates both the main bookstore and the one in Watson Library. Together with Jaybowl, these enterprises constitute the revenue producing departments of the Union. (A self-supporting division of the University, it receives no funds from the State budget.)
Total outgo since July 1, 1968 was about $3,157,000 for such expenditures as purchase of merchandise, supplies and equipment; replacing, repairing and modernizing equipment and building areas; paying employees.
Each dollar's expense was allotted as follows:
MERCHANDISE PURCHASES $ .60
SALARIES, WAGES, FRINGE BENEFITS .24
DEPRECIATION .03
PATRONAGE REFUNDS .03
NDEA STUDENT LOAN PROGRAM .01
PLANT MODIFICATION .01
OTHER EXPENSES .08
(including office & building supplies, equipment repairs, insurance, utilities, ad-
(including office & building supplies, equipment repairs, insurance, utilities, ad-
vertising, SUA programs, lease, rental & commissions paid to dormitory library
fund & KUAA, laundry, china, silver, interest, dues & fees)
$1.00
The Union spends some $750 thousand each year to obtain competent personnel to operate its vast program. Moreover, it spends at least another $500 thousand for goods and services in the Lawrence community and immediate area.
olordq Hist2
entribit — pintres
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A special supplement
Copyright, 1969
Poverty
Poverty is a muddy street no one cares about except at election time.
Poverty is standing in lines.
It's the endless questions of a social welfare worker.
Powdered milk, powdered eggs, corn meal and dried beans. Or wondering whether there'll even be, that tomorrow.
...
Poverty is a tattered coat that's too big. A child's tennis shoes with toes cut out for growin' room, with pieced together shoe laces, one brown the other grubby white.
Poverty is a set of springs for a bed and sleeping with two brothers and a baby sister.
Poverty is a baby drinking sugared water.
It's an abandoned house for a playground and a trash-strewn creek for a swimming pool.
Poverty is the other side of Lawrence, the side "respectable folks" will tell you doesn't exist.
But they're wrong.
The poor exist in Lawrence by the thousands. A team of Daily Kansan reporters discovered that in a two-month probe. They discovered that and more.
Steve Nafus, another staff correspondent, examines welfare programs, while Richard Louv, a prize-winning staff writer, records a visit with a poor family; Ken Peterson explores the embryo local anti-poverty effort and Viki Hysten takes up city services in North Lawrence, the city's most serious area of blight.
Fred Parris, the Kansan's prize-winning senior staff correspondent, writes on the roots of Lawrence poverty and examines unemployment, housing and neighborhood problems in addition to visiting with a man who owns much of housing in Lawrence's blighted neighborhoods.
They found, for example that Lawrence's "mini-slums" have many of the problems of big city ghettos. They also found a raft of conditions peculiar to Lawrence.
It's all here in this special eight-page supplement.
But read their findings yourself. Lift this special section out of our regular pages. We think you'll find it interesting. -The Editors
Staff photo
'I don't like to ask for anything'
By RICHARD LOUV Kansan Staff Writer
There was a dead tree in the front yard.
The branches overhung the recently painted house, and the clouds of an approaching storm were rolling in over the spotty slum of East Lawrence.
Dorothy Graves held the child Angela in her arms and laughed. She looked out the window and another child tugged at her skirt. "I did what I said I was going to do, and nobody, even the Welfare Board, believed I could do it," she said.
Her achievement was survival.
She turned from the window and limped over to the clean, ragged couch. One arm, wrapped around the child, was shriveled from polio. The tiny hand was twisted, and her arm was the size of a four-year-old's.
Mrs. Graves sat down and sighed. Five children ran through the room in the next few minutes, past the patched walls with their pictures of palm trees and beaches, sailboats and the Savior. The woman smiled and her face was pretty, only 35, and there were dark patches under her eyes.
Went without meals
"As long as I could work, I said I would. I don't like to ask anybody for anything." Her voice hardened and the smile left. "That's why I went without meals."
And that was why she worked seven days a week, five hours a day, for nine months as a maid for KU's Beta Theta Pi fraternity, receiving $25 a week.
That was why, when she worked at a better paying job at Naismith Hall, she would have to sit down on the stairs and hold her head to keep from falling.
That was why, when she knew she was getting sick from previous birth complications, she worked, at times dragging one leg behind her, until two weeks before she had Angela.
And that was why she worked for two years, until she could find enough money to return to Virginia and bring back her three children.
Stranded here
Divorced in 1959, she left Virginia Beach, Va., five years ago to marry a Lawrence man, planning to send later for the children left with her mother. When she stepped off the bus in Lawrence she was informed that her fiance had caused three pregnancies in Lawrence. She was stranded without enough money to get home.
"I decided I was going to stick it out. I wasn't going to run back to my mother, even when I made enough money to do it. I had an idea I could do it alone, and then I could go back and get my kids. I wanted to do it alone." she said.
When she arrived in Lawrence winter was approaching. She went for a month without a job, living in a room rented on credit. Finally in December she found a $15 a week babysitting job, and in the next few months she paid off every debt, going hungry to insure the debts were met.
No help
After she broke the engagement, her fiance offered to help until she got on her feet. But his mother and brother told him not to help her.
"And he didn't." she said.
In those days she would collect different prayers. She prayed in the morning, and at meals, and before she went to bed.
It was a cold winter in a cold town, and the people in Virginia had been friendlier. She said she encountered little bigotry anywhere she had been, including Lawrence, except for the white male cook at the Beta house.
"I was religious then, I suppose. I used religion as a source of the strength that people didn't give me." she said.
Mrs. Russell Myers, Beta Theta Pi housemother, remembers Mrs. Graves as "a very sweet person who never used her handicap to get out of work." Mrs. Russell said the salary for maids in 1967 was between $25 and $27 including two free meals a day and uniform service.
'Not underpaid'
"I don't think she was underpaid," Mrs. Russell said. "The boys helped her move anything that
Photo by Richard Louv
Mrs. Graves and children
They're waging a battle for survival and winning despite her determination to "go it alone."
was heavy. She wasn't strong enough to do very much."
Mrs. Graves presented a different picture of working for the fraternity.
"They took out 10 to 15 cents a day for one meal. I really only got $23 a week because of taxes," she said.
During the summer following her job at the fraternity, her luck again ran short. She damaged her thumb on her good hand while working for $9 a week, cleaning house for a woman. Paying $8.75 a week for rent, and somehow finding enough food to live on, she still refused to resort to welfare money. She continued to work with only four good fingers.
"Then I got really sick. Everyone told me to go to the welfare office, so I finally went, because I couldn't work any longer. I went in and sat down, and then they told me they couldn't help me since I hadn't lived there for five years. The woman said there was plenty of money available, but there were rules . . .."
Given $6 a week
The Welfare Department finally gave her $6 a week for food and paid two of her medical bills. Mrs. Graves paid for the rest of the medical expenses out of the food money.
During the next year she grew strong enough to go back to work. She took a job as a maid in Naismith Hall, receiving $50 a week. Finally she saved enough money to go back to Virginia and get her children. During her week vacation, she made the three-day bus trip, retrieved her children, and returned in time to start work again.
Now she was happy.
"I did what I said I was going to do. I rented a house and got my kids. All the people I knew said I couldn't do it. It was in my mind," she smiled, "it was in my mind."
Angela started crying and brought her mother back to the present.
"What is it baby?" she asked. Another child came in and asked her to pull up his zipper. A soap opera was going on inside the black and white television. There was a scene on the set in which a Cadillac appeared. Mrs. Graves smiled at it and hitched up the little boy's pants.
Caring for grandchildren
"This one isn't mine. I have four children of my own now, and I'm taking care of two grandchildren of my husband from a former marriage. My husband's daughter can't afford to keep them because she has a $400 dental bill," she said. "So I'm taking care of them."
Her doctor has told her that she can't work for a few months because of further complications from her last birth. Because of that, and because of the impossibility of taking care of six children on $50 a week, she now is dependent on welfare checks. She receives $334 a month.
She paused for a moment, and pursed her lips. Angela stared silently up into her face, and then Mrs. Graves clenched her twisted hand. "I don't ... I don't think my kids are as proud of what we have as I am. I had to so it by myself. I . . ." And then she stopped and changed the subject.
"It's enough, I think. All I wanted was a home, to be warm in winter and for the kids to have plenty to eat and warm clothes. They don't have enough warm clothes, though . . .."
The New Jersey Street project had touched her. She said, "They all worked like champs, and I got a kick out of just watching them. It's about the best thing I've seen happen in this part of town."
Students painted house
"The kids from the University came down and painted my house," she said, smiling.
The women in the neighborhood had all contributed food, and a church dinner had been given for the students. Mrs. Graves was proud of that.
She feels grateful for what she has, and she smiles in quiet dignity. But the pain that made her drag a weak leg behind her, while pushing mops, still haunts her. There is something terribly wrong with her insides, and the doctor has ordered her to undergo an operation.
I don't know where I could get the money," she says softly. "I try not to think about it. I keep putting it off."
Outside, the storm had finally broken, and the wind whipped the dead limbs and lashed rain against the window.
Inside, Angela began to cry again, and her mother turned on a transistor radio and give it to her baby to quiet her.
Angela listened closely.
1
It was Barbra Streisand in Central Park, singing,
"Happy Days Are Here Again."
POOL
EER
SANDWICHES
Sketches by Richard Mantz
Unemployment=poverty in Lawrence
By FRED PARRIS
Kansan Staff Correspondent
A Lawrence woman taking home less than $250 a month is afraid to talk about her low-wage problems for fear she will lose her job.
The manager of a Lawrence hotel is concerned more with profit and loss statements than employeewelfare.
About 425 persons in Douglas County are out of work. Hundreds more are working, but at pay which provides a bare subsistence.
Government officials are fond of citing reasons such as a lack of vocational training, a disadvantaged childhood, an influx of destitute "outsiders" and racial and class prejudice as causes of poverty.
But pragmatically it comes to this: the poor in Lawrence as in every American city, are the unemployed and the underemployed.
The Feb. 1969 Employment bureau newsletter lists the Douglas County unemployment rate as 1.9 per cent—about 425 persons.
Unemployment rates are easy to figure. On the underemployed-jobholders not earning enough to maintain a decent standard of living-little data is available.
- For employees of companies engaging in or producing goods for interstate commerce—$1.60 an hour.
- A frequently cited standard of a "ground floor" wage is the federal minimum wage law which currently lists two minimum wage categories:
- For all hospital, construction, school and laundry employees and employes of other businesses grossing $250,000 annually—$1.30 an hour.
Employees of all other businesses—those not specifically included in the Fair Labor Practices Act—are not covered by present minimum wage laws, says William Kuehn, regional operations officer in the Kansas City Labor department office. They can legally be paid whatever the employer feels like giving them, be it $3 or 80 cents an hour.
Typical of many local low-income workers is "Mrs. Smith" (she requested the withholding of her name for fear of losing her job.) A divorcee and the mother of two teenagers, she works full-time at a local manufacturing plant, where she earns $2.06 an hour.
In Lawrence, despite its apparently prosperous blend of commerce, industry, agriculture and education there is a sizable minority of residents who face the daily hardships of low wages.
Several nationally known companies have either built new plants or warehouses here or are planning to do so in the near future. A new Kresge warehouse employing 400 workers is slated for completion soon. B.F. Goodrich warehouse is expanding its local warehouse, with more employment resulting. The new Packer Plastics plant is expected to employ 120 persons up from its present 75 payroll employees in the next 24 months.
The upshot of all this, says Max Kepple, local labor union president at Stokely-Van Camp, is that not only will there be work for those now jobless, but employees currently working for what they consider substandard wages will have employment alternatives.
Established employers will have to make their wages competitive with what the newcomers pay or else, in the best "supply and demand" tradition, workers will shift from their present jobs to greener fields.
After taxes and deductions, she said her take-home pay is about $250 a month. From this, she pays $45 a month rent on a ramshackle house in East Lawrence. Utilities average $37 a month in the winter and groceries come to about $140 monthly for her family of three.
With the remaining money, less than $25, she must buy shoes and clothing, pay medical costs, upkeep on her 9-year-old car, and other expenses which come up.
"I don't know what's wrong with Lawrence," she said. "They'll charge you loads for groceries, rent and everything, but they don't pay no wages."
Compared to some residents, "Mrs. Smith" is well off. Some persons are attempting to support families on wages of less than $1.60 an hour, or about $250 a month before taxes. Many of them rapidly learn that they can't live on that income alone and take a second job, sometimes working 14 to 16 hours a day. In some cases, wives and children work to make ends meet.
Virtually all low-income employees contacted feel that the present minimum wage is too low. It is simply not adequate to meet the current cost of living, they say. Estimates of a more realistic minimum wage range from $2.00 to $3.00.
While workers bemoan the low wage-high-price trap, local employers voice different complaints. More than one employer said the minimum wage requirements, guaranteeing the meager sums they do, represented unwarranted government intervention in the affairs of business. It is nearly impossible to pay a genuinely "living" wage, keep prices competitive and still make a good profit, one retailer commented.
Typical of a number of local firms is the Eldridge Hotel. Bound by law to pay all employees at least $1.30 an hour, it is more concerned with staying out of legal trouble than with giving employees an adequate wage.
"The hotel is in business to make money," said Mrs. Ruth Van Vleet, hotel manager. "We don't subsidize people by giving them a higher rate of pay just because the government thinks that's what they ought to be getting."
Mrs. Van Vleet is pessimistic about proposals to raise the minimum to $2 hourly wage.
"If we paid everyone $2 an hour, there wouldn't be anything left," she said. "They'd run everyone out of business. There wouldn't be any jobs then."
Asked whether present Eldridge wages were sufficient to maintain a decent standard of living, Mrs. Van Vleet replied, "I don't worry about it. We pay the minimum and we pay what people are worth."
Many Lawrence merchants, however, are regulated only by their consciences and the laws of supply and demand. Among these are many shopkeepers and operators of restaurants and motels.
At the Virginia Inn Restaurant, manager Paul Sinclair said, the lowest starting wage for a non-tipped employee is $1.25, the salary for dishwashers. Waitresses are paid $1 an hour, plus
whatever they receive in tips. Cooks receive $1.85 and up.
Sinclair concedes that it is probably difficult for a person to live decently on $1.25 an hour. He notes, however, that the restaurant business has the highest rate of failures of almost any business in operation.
The situation in local motels is not much different. Those managers who would discuss their wages at all, said they paid maids from $1.25 to $1.40. As with laundry workers, maids haye no guaranteed amount of work. They do what there is to be done and leave.
While the lowest wages in Lawrence are paid by downtown merchants, KU also contributes its share of meager paychecks. Indeed, the University of Kansas, with more than 268 full-time employees receiving less than $1.60 an hour, is by far the largest local employer paying substandard wages. KU workers paid less than $1.60 include janitors, cooks, clerks and general laborers.
Another 382 KU employees, including hospital attendants, key punch operators and cashiers, receive $1.60 to $2 an hour.
In March of this year, Governor Docking and Republican legislative leaders announced that they would seek a pay raise for state employees which would set the minimum state civil service rate at $1.60 per hour. The proposal, expected to be approved by the state finance council, this spring, would go into effect July 1.
Laundries are another source of low-paying jobs. At the Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners, office manager William Dockery said, these employees are not guaranteed a 40-hour week. They work only as long as they are needed.
Dockery said he did not consider the $1.30 wages excessively low considering "the particular type of work and the type of people we get to work."
One Lawrence Laundry employee, who asked not to be identified, said her paychecks after taxes averaged $31 to $46 a week. This, she claimed, isn't even enough to pay for food, rent and utilities.
The state is not required by the federal government to pay the $1.60 rate until 1971, but it is widely felt by state employees that the raise is needed now.
"Present salaries are not in the least bit adequate," Rankin said. "I don't see how people can live on what we pay them now."
The proposed pay hike has the strong approval of KU personnel officer Phillip N. Rankin. He feels the raise is a must if KU employees are to maintain anything approaching a decent standard of living.
Kansas Union workers, although not civil service employees, are bound by the same pay rates as the rest of the University, said Union manager Frank Burge. Like Rankin, Burge feels that the current wages for lower-grade employes are grossly inadequate.
"I really feel for this category of personnel," Burge said. "It requires moonlighting, or jobs for several members of the family, for them to maintain a tolerable standard of living."
So far as starting pay is concerned, the city of Lawrence is somewhat ahead of the University. The starting salary for a full-time city employee,
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Welfare: does it stop or
By STEVE NAFUS
Kansan Staff Correspondent
The American system of welfare is a dehumanizing and degrading process which breeds dependency into the welfare recipient.
Theoretically organized to help the poor become financially independent, the system in fact, hinders him and keeps him in a low income condition.
The welfare recipient quickly learns that he is penalized for working, rewarded for having more children and given more aid if he lives in a broken home.
In Lawrence, as in cities throughout the United States, this system has led to self-perpetuating state of dependency on government aid. If a welfare recipient finds a job, his check is reduced by the amount of his salary. Thus, he will receive the same momonthly income.
If a recipient loses his job, or if his wife bears another child, the county will increase the monthly check.
KU prof investigates
This system of government aid is being investigated by L. Keith Miller, KU assistant professor of human development and family life. Miller and his wife are using a grant from the Office of Economic Opportunity Head Start program to look at problems of chronic low-income families here in Lawrence.
At their neighborhood center, 1035 Pennsylvania St., they are trying to discover how these
low-income families can free themselves from the grips of poverty.
"The idea of the self-help group is to allow people to broaden control of their own lives," said Miller. "Most low income families are socially isolated, not only from the larger community, but from their neighbors as well. They have never before gotten together to try to control their lives."
Miller explained many welfare families do not subscribe to a newspaper, thus, have no contact with the outside world. Television, virtually their only link, is mainly used for entertainment purposes.
Welfare programs are administered by authority figures from that outside world—"The Man." He can take the form of a policeman, landlord, or a welfare official.
With this lack of communication and understanding, distrust and fear of "The Man" is widespread. Every welfare recipient interviewed asked that his or her name not be used for fear of reprisal.
Not picky or cruel
John L. Derrick, director of the Douglas County Welfare Service, is aware of this feeling among the welfare recipients.
"We are not trying to be picky or cruel, but we are using public funds and must be careful; we try to be just," Derrick said.
Many people who come to.
Derrick's office seeking help are not eligible, the director said. He follows the rules set by the State of Kansas. Under these rules the main criterion for aid is need. The state considers itself responsible for the basics of survival-food, clothing and shelter. The amount of aid received is determined by a graduated schedule set by the state. The schedule takes into consideration the number of persons in the household and the number applying for aid in that household.
"The catch of welfare is that nobody can live on the basic allowance for very long, it's too small. The intention of the basic
allowance is that of a temporary measure," Derrick said.
Rent for welfare recipients is often overpriced, and the houses are usually shabby, tumbledown huts. There is no low-rent housing in Lawrence except one small complex for elderly people.
The welfare allowance for rent in Douglas County is only $50 per month. "It is next to impossible to find rental property in Lawrence for that amount of money," Derrick said, "and if found, it probably wouldn't be worth renting."
Because so many KU students are living in rentals of all prices, the low income renter is forced
to take what he can get.
Lawrence landlords, realizing they are in a monopolistic position, charge all the traffic will allow.
No food stamps
Food stamps, one of the best-known facets of the poverty program, are not available in Lawrence. Derrick said the possibilities for obtaining a food stamp program looked "bleak" last July, so he did not apply for them.
At that time, he explained, the federal government had appropriated $225 million for the food stamps and had received requests for more than $240 million worth of stamps.
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The main-traveled roads in Douglas County are lined with large, pleasant houses, with large yards and neatly clipped lawns. But on the back roads live 1,000 persons who receive from $95 to $200 each month from the county welfare department.
These 1,000 persons are only two per cent of Douglas County's population of 50,000-a forgotten minority.
In an average month, Kansas spends about seven and one-half million dollars on welfare programs. December, 1968, was typical, when $7,501,639 was doled out from the tax revenues.
Disorders made some general statements about welfare recipients.
The National Advisory Commission Report on Civil
"The basic fact is that the heads of those households who can work are working," the report said. "All but a small fraction of those on welfare are disabled by age, ill health or the need to care for their children."
The facts in Douglas County seem to support the state
seem to support the statement.
Of the 1,000 welfare recipients, 227 receive benefits to the aged, about $100 per month on the average. They are either not eligible for, or receive small pensions or Social Security payments. Too old to work, death alone will remove their
names from the welfare rolls.
An average of about 80 persons receive disability benefits, usually about $120 per month. The number varies when a temporary disability disappears and, along with it, eligibility for welfare.
Permanent disabilities have bred rumors. Men who look healthy are receiving checks for hidden health problems. John Derrick, director of the Douglas County Welfare Service, cited an example:
The doctors have told one welfare recipient that his heart is in bad shape and he cannot work. The man looks healthy, but the doctors will not allow
him to wa third floor Courthou
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Unemployment
Continued from preceding page
said City Manager Ray Wells, is $290 monthly. This contrasts with the $242 KU pays some of its new workers.
All laborers, Wells said, including trash collectors, start at $309 monthly, or $1.76 per hour.
The city government is not bound by either of the minimum wage laws, Wells said, "But the City Commission has indicated in the past that they wanted to stay above what would be an acceptable minimum wage."
Largely because of the minimum wage law, starting wages at local manufacturing plants are somewhat higher than those paid by retail establishments. The Jayhawk Box company, personnel director Martin Jost said, starts all production workers at a minimum of $1.96 per hour. This is raised to $2.01 after 30 days and to $2.06 after two months.
Hallmark's manager said it starts every employee at $1.75 an hour or more. The local Stokely-Van Camp plant pays production workers a minimum of $1.79 hourly, Sylvia Kallsen, payroll clerk, said. After two months they are raised to $1.96. This rate applies to all Stokely wage earners, she said, including janitors and related maintenance help.
While local manufacturing plants offer better wages than many service and retail establishments, some workers feel the plants have consistently dragged their feet in paying wages on a par with the national average. A chronic source of tension concerns unions, management and the rights of each.
Union men assert that plants attempt to keep wages at a standard level to weaken unions.
One attempt to break a Union occurred three years ago at the National Alfalfa Dehydrating and Milling Company, said Sam Dougan, an employee at that plant. At that time, a district manager came around asking union members to sign a paper saying that they hadn't voted for a strike. Since no strike had been voted, Dougan said he and the other workers signed.
Sketch by Richard Cantz
Several days later, the manager announced that the workers had voted the union out, Dougar recalls.
"That was a lie!" he exclaimed. "We didn't vote the union out! There was nothing else on that piece of paper."
The official who conducted the fraudulent survey is no longer with the company, Dougan said, but unpleasant memories remain.
This practice was repeatedly used at the Co-op fertilizer plant during the mid-sixities, said Victor Licktieg, union shop steward. It was halted four years ago after a new contract was signed. The contract provided that a worker be eligible for union membership after either 60 consecutive days or 75 accumulative days on the job.
Another trick used by local manufacturers, Dougan added, involved hiring an employee, letting him work during a probation period of 60 days, and then dropping him just before he became eligible to join the union. Then he would be rehired in a month or so and required to go through the unprotected, probationary period again.
Some persons said they feel that a solution to local unemployment and low wage situations is
currently on its way—in the form of increased industrialization in the Lawrence area.
Ultimately, it is generally agreed, there is no single, simplified solution to the local job-wage situation. The same knot of complexities which plague the national scene affect the local employment picture. Everything from the lack of a nurses' training program for local residents to the Vietnam war play their role in stimulating the local economy. The neglect of forty years cannot be rectified immediately.
Still there is much that can be done. An expanded program of vocational training can be established for nursing, secretarial work and other skills.
An improved system to let lower-income people know of available job openings and opportunities, could either be conducted within the State Employment Service office or outside of it.
Such programs of course would not be the entire answer. But they would be a start toward providing every local citizen with an adequate job. And as some Lawrence residents are now realizing it is only by attacking poverty at its roots—unemployment and underemployment—can Lawrence be saved from future tragedy.
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There are more than 1,000 disaster counties in the United States which have priority over all others. Kansas has none so the director felt it was impossible for the request to be granted.
$13 monthly to live
Since July, the government has appropriated more moneney to the program and Derrick said he will apply for a portion "in the coming months."
One divorced woman who did not want her name used said she and her eight children live on Aid to Dependant Children (ADC). After paying her rent, utilities and buying food, she has $13 a month for living expenses.
"We eat a lot of potatoes, rice and boiling beef, whatever we can afford," she said.
Gesturing at a 100 lb. sack of potatoes, she said she has taught her children to eat "what is put before them."
Derrick admits that "inflation has made it nearly impossible to survive on welfare." But, the director is concerned more with consequences of increasing welfare benefits.
Another requirement of the welfare laws of most
"To increase the payment would mean higher taxes," he said. "Higher taxes are hard to justify, they are high enough right now."
states-extended residency-was recently declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court.
April 21, 1969 the Supreme Court ruled that state laws which deny welfare benefits to the poor because they have not lived in that state for a certain period of time, simultaneously denied "the Constitutional precept of personal liberty to travel the length and breadth of this country without burden."
The Court also observed that such laws often affected those persons who need to migrate to start a new life.
In Lawrence, for example,
General Assistance funds have
been used to help poverty-stricken persons leave the state to find better jobs Derrick said.
Helps them leave
"It sound callous, but people are better off if we can help them get out of the county," he said. "If they are stranded here, we would have to support them anyway, so we are really doing ourselves a favor by paying for car repairs or bus tickets."
Derrick said, "jobs are not really that plentiful here and possibilities are usually better at their destination so we are willing to help them get there."
1,000 in Douglas Co.
one heart is cannot healthy, allow
him to walk upstairs to Derrick's third floor office in the County Courthouse.
About 65 persons, including 12 blind persons, receive medical assistance each month. The blind receive $95 per month, and medical assistance covers only the bare amount of the medical expense.
Aid to Dependent Children
Court-placed wards of the county number about 35. When a child is removed from its parents' custody, the county sometimes places the child in a foster home, and the foster parents are paid for their assistance. Some of the children are placed in orphanages.
(ADC) is the largest of the County's welfare programs. And the largest of its expenses. This program covers 460 children. The average size of an ADC family is about three children and the average size of the paycheck is about $200 monthly.
While the intention of such rules is to prevent funds from going to children who have another source of income, in actual practice, the effect has been to break up homes by forcing a parent to leave. Even though he lives in his home, a man might not be able to support his family on his income. As the only alternative, he leaves his family so it can be eligible for ADC.
ADC is always on the increase and payments have doubled in the last five years in Douglas County. Derrick explains it this way:
"At the very least, they are someone else's problem," the welfare director said. On the other hand, some persons, attracted by the construction and new businesses, come to Lawrence in hopes of finding a job. Often they arrive penniless and cannot find jobs because they do not have the necessary skills.
"More and more divorces are granted every day and the county is often stuck with the expense of raising the children. Women come into my office and ask how they can make their
ex-husbands pay the child support. The answer is, they can't.
"The guy was not much of a father in the first place if he neglects paying his child support, and another court order will not do much good. He can't pay it while in jail, so one way or the other, the county ends up supporting the children."
Upon totalling all the foregoing categories, one finds about 879 persons are on the welfare roles more-or-less permanently in Douglas County. Only about 121 persons are left to the General Assistance fund, a catch-all for minor emergencies and miscellaneous items.
When it is possible, Derrick said he "encourages such persons to return to their homes, and if necessary, buys their return ticket."
Welfare problems abound
Although with the Supreme Court's ruling one kink has been straightened out in the welfare system, many others remain. Most states including Kansas have a "man in the house" rule which makes welfare benefits available under the ADC program only if one or both parents are absent from the house or disabled.
Occasionally, a parent will not actually leave, but claim he has, to receive additional aid. In these cases, welfare offices investigate suspected violators of the rules.'
These "snoops" add to the distrust and ill-feeling among the welfare recipient and welfare official. The recipient feels degraded and insulted, with no privacy from "The Man."
Aid system is complex
The American system of aid, critics say, is cumbersome and complex. The three main sources of government aid—Social Welfare, Social Security and government retirement programs—all operate independently of one another. Critics contend this creates confusion when an individual case falls in the overlapping areas of all three programs. Squabbles often arise as to who should pay for what expenses.
President Nixon has promised to rearrange the various poverty programs for maximum efficiency. Experts assume this will be one of the president's foremost problems.
Federal, state, private funds help
Citizens fight for poverty-stricken
By KEN PETERSON
Kansan Staff Writer
Concerned citizens of Lawrence are waging a war—a war for the betterment of the underprivileged and poverty-stricken of the community.
Churches, individuals, federal and state officials and hundreds of volunteers have joined forces in this fight.
At the Plymouth Congregational Church, 946 Vermont St., for example, Project Headstart provides a sort of remedial education for three to five-year-olds. A federally funded project, Headstart attempts to put its culturally deprived enrollees on the educational experience plane of their middle class competitors.
For an equal start
Far too often, program administrators explain, poor kids start out in kindergarten far behind most youngsters. And they get farther and farther behind from first grade on, until, by the time they reach junior or senior high school, they drop out. With Headstart training, they will at least start out on the same footing.
Another Headstart project shares facilities with the Children's hour at 708 Elm Street, September through July. Headstart operates during the morning; the Children's Hour, financed by the United Fund, aims its efforts at older youngsters during the afternoon.
First Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St., is using state and federal welfare funds to operate the five-day-a-week UKUnited Child Care Center, to help underprivileged children.
Programs for all ages
Not all poverty programs in Lawrence are aimed at small children, however. The Rev. Dennis Bowers, assistant pastor of First Methodist, said the church helps the unskilled and the dropout find jobs.
"The labor market in Lawrence is saturated with college students," Mr. Bowers said. "The unskilled and the dropouts don't have a chance."
Lawrence businessmen are "just now facing up" to this problem. he said.
"Some people in Lawrence are starving. They don't know where their next meal is coming from," he explained. "The Emergency Action Fund is used to help such people obtain food."
Mr. Bowers said the church also has an Emergency Action Fund to aid residents in "financial crises."
Self-help and OEO funded
At Pennsylvania House in East Lawrence, several KU students distribute donated children's clothes, toys, and furniture.
L. Keith Miller, assistant professor of sociology and Pennsylvania House director, explained that the project was funded by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) and by the work of the people served—through the sale of their arts and crafts.
"We want the people to learn to help themselves," he said. "We have them get together and decide how to solve their own problems."
He said the house had helped 142 persons, informing them of such programs as social security and medicare.
Other groups have met the challenge of employment, housing and food head-on. The OEO also backs the East Lawrence Service Center, 1000 Delaware St.
Cherster Luney, Douglas County OEO administrative assistant, said the Service Center provides tutoring for grade and high school students, job finding, recreation and psychological services.
Although the center is closed for remodeling, Luney said, it would be reopened in June.
Geared to individuals
One service of the center is Job Mark, which serves as a "liaison between employer and unemployed people" without the "red tape" and personal embarrassment of the State Employment Office, Luney said.
The program's organizer goes out and looks for a job, seeking to match the "job to the individual instead of the individual to the job"—an approach
that has landed permanent jobs for 30 persons in the past five months.
The East Lawrence Center sponsors both the Neighborhood Youth Corps (NYC) and project Mainstream, Lueny continued.
Youths 16 to 21 years work 29 hours weekly for $1.40 an hour under the NYC. These are usually jobs as laborers, clerks and secretaries for the city and as teaching assistants in the schools, Luney said. In addition, they must be enrolled four to five hours per week in educational programs-for example, in high school courses.
NYC has enrolled five persons, while Mainstream has 10 persons with jobs, Luney said. The jobs include apprentice work and clerical work in city departments. One woman is a teaching assistant in New York School.
Mainstream provides the same training for persons 21 and above, Luney said. Enrollees work 39 hours a week with at least one hour of training or consultation with a center adviser.
Four to six KU students are at the center each day to provide tutorial assistance for grade and high school students, Luney said.
Mental health services
The center also provides psychological assistance because of the crowded conditions at the Lawrence-Douglas County Mental Health Center and because the persons served by the center cannot afford such aid, Luney said.
Dr. Roy Richardson and Dr. Art Thomas of the KU Counseling Psychology Clinic are on call for assistance at the center, he said.
Persons needing speech and hearing assistance are cared for at the KU Speech and Hearing Clinic, Luney went on. As soon as remodeling is finished in June, this clinic will be moved into the center.
Recreational activities, such as baseball and basketball, as well as social dinners are held at the center, Luney said.
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Transportation for the elderly to go downtown is another service provided by the center, said Luney.
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MERCURY
Bathroom
A
BATHROOM FOR MEN AND WOMEN
'No way out of the slum'
Photos by Ron Bishop and Hali Pawl
Poor housing plague
By FRED PARRIS
Kansas Staff Correspondent
Dirt steps dug into the hillside lead to the house. A splintered plywood board dropped atop concrete blocks serves as a porch.
Inside, wallpaper peels in long, leisurely strips. A naked light bulb hangs from its socket and brownish stain marks the ceiling's weaknesses.
While rusty pipes line the bathroom walls, they are purely for show. The plumbing hasn't worked for weeks and the stench from the stool permeates the bathroom and into the kitchen.
The scene is a house in East Lawrence. It could just as easily be in North Lawrence or in the district around Memorial hospital. It is typical of much of the slum like housing which exists locally.
A comprehensive survey done by a civil engineering firm (city planners) in 1963 concluded:
"Poor housing, although generally hidden from public view in relatively inaccessible sections of the city, exists in substantial quantities."
One of 20 is unfit
The survey cited 546 houses as substandard—about 4.9 per cent of all Lawrence homes. The city planners deemed one in every 20 Lawrence homes unfit for human habitation. The report affirmed the observations of Kansas task force members:
"Unlike most big city slums, Lawrence's substandard housing is neither segregated nor concentrated in a single area. Instead, it is spread throughout older, low income areas of the city."
Modest but well-maintained homes often share the same block with shacks."
At the same time, both the planners and Kansan task force members cited the area north of 15th Street and the area around 7th and New Jersey Streets as the areas hardest hit by blight.
In the New Jersey Street area north of 11th Street, the engineers said, 30 per cent of the dwellings were substandard. They branded 23 percent of North Lawrence residences below par and 13 percent of hospital area homes as blighted.
Recommendations
The planners made these recommendations:
- The demolition of unsalvageable dwellings and the construction of single-family homes in their stead will impair of basically sound structures
- Adoption and enforcement of a strict housing code and, perhaps most important,
- Sponsorship of low-rent housing project by non-profit local corporations.
Yet today, four and a half years later, only a few houses have been posted "unfit for human habitation" and demolished. And while the city commission has adopted a minimum housing ordinance similar to that recommended by engineers, the affects have, at best, been negligible.
City Manager Ray Wells said the city can inspect homes on its own initiative (as is done in Kansas City) or it can rely on resident complaints. Whichever technique is used, ordinance allows the city to require demolition or repair.
But Building Inspector Kenneth Jorgenson said his staff is too small to allow city-initiated inspections.
Citizens fight poverty
Continued from preceding page
This helps the older people get to places they couldn't easily reach, he explained.
Not satisfied with offerings
The East Lawrence Center, however, is not satisfied with its current program offerings. They hope to initiate more programs—including a food stamp program.
Mrs. C. A. McCree the center's community organizer, said "The Chamber of Commerce says there are no poor or starving people in Lawrence. "We know better. We've been trying for several months to get such a food stamp program into effect with little response."
If the food stamp programs were put into effect, people could buy a $10 stamp and be able to obtain $15 to $20 worth of groceries, Luney said. The federal government would pay the difference.
The Buddy Patrol puts the "legal agency in the hands of the community itself," Luney said. "The people would be responsible for the people."
The Buddy Patrol, a successful program in Louisville, Ky., Tampa, Fla., and New York City is also under consideration and would allow certain members of the East Lawrence Community to act as policemen for their own area.
Works with Harrison
Luney said he has worked closely with Leonard Harrison, director of a similar project in North Lawrence, the Ballard Center.
"We work together to insure that we do not do
Ballard provides 10 to 12 tutoring classes for youth, including piano, typing, woodworking, creative dramatics, dancing and high school studies, Harrison said.
The United Fund and private donations support the Ballard Center, Harrison said. Its programs are divided into three phases: Recreation, education and the community action.
the same thing for the same people," Luney explained.
Mr. Bowers, Luney, and Harrison expressed enthusiasm for a $3 million housing project to be located on MichiganStreet. The project, a joint effort of several Lawrence churches, will provide housing on a rent subsidy basis. The government will pay for what the people cannot, Mr. Bowers said. Twenty per cent of the 120 unit complex wil be filled with poverty-classified persons.
In addition, clothing is sold at Ballard at a low cost. It further provides legal aid through the Lawrence Legal Defense Fund and a credit union for the underprivileged.
Perhaps Mr. Bowers best summed up the poverty problem in Lawrence when he called it "calculated ignorance" of the Lawrence community.
"The housing, labor and poverty problems in Lawrence are a vicious circle," he said. When people cannot find jobs, they cannot have adequate housing or food. The conditions worsen, he said, until these people are in poverty and cannot help themselves.
These groups have answered the call of the poverty-stricken of Lawrence. A lot more, they agree, desperately needs doing. They haven't even scratched the surface. For that, they say, a total community effort will have to be dedicated.
He claims, however, his office does "respond" to the few complaints it gets.
While Jorgenson's latter assertion—that the city acts on complaints—is doubtful (See page 7), city officials and private citizens suggest a reason other than limited staff for the city's reluctance to inspect on its own initiative.
They would demolish, not fix
Were repairs required, city officials fear, landlords might choose to demolish rather than fix up their properties. Tenants would have nowhere to go.
Task force interviews showed tenants themselves are reluctant to initiate complaints for fear repairs might also bring higher rents.
Charles Kahn, dean of KU's School of Architecture and Urban Design, said slum property is valuable, not only because of its negligible upkeep, but for other factors.
Lawrence's housing shortage, for example, allows landlords to charge as much as the traffic will bear.
Kahn agreed landlords would demolish rather than repair. He said slum property frequently is bought in anticipation that the land, not the house, will increase in value. A rental house just adds to it.
Ironically, Kahn said, the property's value is further increased by tax laws. Property owners must pay higher taxes after improvements, Kahn explained, the rationale apparently being "If you can afford to fix up the place, you can afford higher taxes."
Efforts are underwav
Efforts are underway, however, to give slum tenants "somewhere (else) to go."
- An interdenominational non-profit group, for example, hopes to have a federally-financed 124 unit project for low and middle income families ready for occupancy by late this year (See ----, this or --page).
- The city has applied for a Department of Housing and Urban Development grant to build 600 units for the elderly. That application is now being reviewed by HUD, Wells said.
- But here, rather than housing for a priority, the city fathers have chosen to renovate Lawrence's downtown business district first.
- The city also has requested a million-dollar grant in Neighborhood Development Program (NDP) funds to renovate Lawrence's older sections—north of 15th Street, including North Lawrence.
Establishment's own first
While some residents angrily chide "The Establishment's looking out for its own, putting its business needs ahead of human needs," City Manager Wells said the city might be able to turn its attention—and left over NDP funds—to residential renewal by the fall of 1970.
Wells said advanced plans for downtown renewal were already drawn. He offered no other explanation for giving the city's tidy commercial district priority over the shockingly substandard residential areas.
The business district's facelifting and other priorities come first, however, and Lawrence's slum dwellers do the best they can, many of them making their own repairs.
One woman, an Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) recipient and the mother of eight, is panelling the living room of her rented house because the landlord refused repairs. Using scraps and doing most of the work herself, she explained, "I wanted one nice room where I could be and not be depressed," she said.
Another family, also renting, built a stone retaining wall from rocks taken from the city dump.
Other families, of course, are not so fortunate, nor so energetic.
Condemned houses sit for how long?
By FRED PARRIS Kansan Staff Correspondent
At least 18 abandoned houses sit within the Lawrence city limits. Virtually all are located in older low-income neighborhoods.
City officials say it takes only several months to condemn and demolish the crumbling structures. All that is needed to set machinery in motion is a call to the building inspectors office.
Lawrence residents living near the wrecks, however, tell a considerably different story.
- An empty house at 1236 New Jersey St., for example, has stood empty for five years. Neighbors say they have complained to the city several times over the years—with no effect.
- Another structure, at 316 Perry St. in North Lawrence has been vacant eight years.
- At 1116 Pennsylvania St. still another house, the Methuslah of abandoned buildings, has stood empty 10 years, despite numerous protests by neighbors.
Snowed under
Spokesmen for the city building inspectors office claim they are snowed under by a rash of new construction in Lawrence and that they have neither the time nor staff to take care of the problem. Confusion exists as to whether the city can do anything about even the most dangerous of the wrecks.
Regardless of age, the empty structures spell the same thing to persons living near them-trouble.
The most commonly voiced concern is blight. The decrepit appearance of the single abandoned house, residents say, depresses property values on the entire block.
Fire is another worry. The mixture of weeds, frame construction and interior litter provide a volatile combination for flames. Fire trucks have made at least three runs to abandoned houses within the last year, Lawrence Fire Captain Lee Burns said.
Threat to children
Most frightening of all, however is the threat the structures pose to children.
Structurally unsound and littered with glass, parents claim the houses are potential deathtraps for unwary youngsters. Without exception, mothers say they have warned their children to avoid the hazardous structures.
The parental warnings are not always heeded. Neighbors say children from blocks around come on bicycles to play in the empty houses.
A 14-year-old on New Jersey Street offered to give a guided tour of his abandoned house, including the crumbling upstairs.
Children have been seen playing in and around another wreck on Michigan Street, where nail studded lumber is piled just inside the door.
Rotting garbage
In several structures, only the stench of rotting garbage prevents the structures from becoming play time havens—like an abandoned structure in North Lawrence which offers children "double the fun." There, the structure also serves as a graveyard for rusting auto carcasses. Double the fun. Double the danger.
But before his office can remove abandoned structures, City Building Inspector Kenneth Jorgensen said, the city must go through a lengthly legal procedure.
Upon becoming aware of an abandoned house, the office must conduct a title search. This job requires abstractors, Jorgensen said, and can take up to two weeks.
After the owner and other interested parties are contacted, a hearing date is set, generally for 30 days later. If the owner doesn't respond to the first order, said Jorgensen, a second summons is sent allowing another 30 days.
If there is no response after two orders, the building inspector said, his office obtains a permit from the city commission allowing proceedings against the house without the owners consent.
By the time all of the legal provisions are met, Jorgensen said, a minimum of 90 days have passed.
The housing ordinance provides that owners who do appear are entitled to petition the Douglas County District Court for an injunction order which would prevent any city action. This injunction is good for up to 30 day's delay.
Take 10-15 together
Even then, legal permission to tear down a house does not mean it will be removed immediately, Jorgensen said. To save the city money, he asserts, "We usually try to get 10 to 15 of them together before we let bids" for removal. Houses are often allowed to stand for months after they have been officially condemned, waiting for "10 or 15."
Even if the house poses an immediate safety threat city officials aren't certain whether they can act prior to the conclusion of condemnation proceedings.
City Manager Ray Wells says that if a house is a definite hazard in the judgment of the building inspector, the city can board it up. Building Inspector Jorgensen, however, said that he didn't know if he had this authority. No such steps have been taken by his office, he said.
No provision in code
The city's current minimum housing code makes no provisions for such a situation-a situation which some persons feel exists in more than one empty house.
And Jorgensen points out that until June,1966,the city apparently didn't even have a building code.
He complains too, that his three-man staff is far too small to check abandoned and substandard housing, plus check the plans and construction of every new building in Lawrence, enforce zoning and sign ordinances and conduct electrical and plumbing inspections.
Residents living near the city's abandoned structures say Jorgens's assertion is all too correct—that all his office's other duties have priority over inspection of abandoned housing.
Must be fitted in
While Jorgensen says eliminating the blight and safety hazards must be fitted in where time allows, some residents think 10 years—the length of time some houses have stood abandoned—is a bit long by any standard. Several residents pointed out that new construction is relatively limited during winter months.
But while city officials talk, local citizens live—and life next door to a run-down house doesn't present a pretty view.
One long time sufferer is Mrs. Carl White, 1234 New Jersey. The crumbling wreck next to her home, she said., has been abandoned five years. She has called the city several times to complain, she said, but all they ever tell her is that they'll "be out as soon as they can."
In one sense, she said, the house isn't abandoned at all.
Germ-bearing rats infest the interior, and occasionally venture outdoors.
Tramps find temporary shelter amid the structure's broken furniture.
Neighborhood children, not having a park playground nearby, use the weed-surrounded wreck as a recreation area, she said.
Well posed danger
An open 20-foot well in the backyard posed another danger, Mrs. White said, until her husband covered it with weed and heavy rocks.
"I sure will be glad to get rid of it," she said wistfully, glancing at the wreck.
Another beleagured home-owner is Mrs. J. Gfeller, 330 Perry St. Mrs. Gfeller has double trouble. Not one but two crumbling vacant houses sit next to her.
One house, at 326 Perry St. she said, has been abandoned for three years. The other, at 316 Perry St., is an oldtimer, having been abandoned for at least eight years. Both structures are fully equipped as abandoned houses go, with weeds, rusty junked cars in the back, and plenty of rubble and broken glass.
While Mrs. Gfeller worries about all of the problems associated with abandoned houses—fire, vermin, neighborhood blight, etc.-her most immediate concern is for the weeds which surround the vacant wreck just to the west of her home. These tangled monsters, she says, which reach as high as the roof drainpipes, threaten to engulf her entire homestead–vard, house and all.
Planted garden
To prevent this, she said, she has planted a large garden between her house and the weeds. It involves a good deal of work, she says, but is necessary to keep from being overrun.
A third couple learning to live with a vacant house next door are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson, 1108 Pennsylvania. In their case, however, the eyesore is neither old nor "abandoned."
Started as a "do it yourself" homebuilding project by a Lawrence citizen, the structure was left unfinished after the city forced him to stop. For 10 years, neighbors say, the half-completed
house has stood there-windowless, surrounded by dirt and weeds and a perennial source of neighborhood blight.
No official action
On several occasions, said Mrs. Johnson, she has called the City-County Health Department about the structure. Officials said they would take care of the matter, she said, but never did.
"It seemed to be just anything to shut us up after we called," she recalls with annoyance, "to make us believe they were going to do something."
A new problem arose this year, Mrs. Johnson said, when her insurance company refused to provide fire coverage because of the abandoned house. This was eventually worked out, she said, but it made her consider moving just to get away from the wreck.
One couple moved
One couple who actually did move to escape the blight-inducing structure are Mr. and Mrs. Martin Henry, 1116 New Jersey St. After years of fruitless battling to get the eyesore removed, the Henry's finally moved themselves.
"At least now, I can look out the window and not see that thing." Mrs. Henry said.
The Whites, Johnsons and Gfellers are not alone in their feelings about the empty, decaying wrecks. Many other persons living near abandoned houses expressed irritation that such wrecks should be in their midst.
A surprising number, however, felt there was nothing they could do. Many had seen the efforts of neighbors come to nothing and concluded it was a hopeless situation.
Also, poorer renters feared the consequences of speaking out. In at least one case, courthouse records show, the owner of the abandoned house was also their landlord.
And so the matter stands. Bight thrives, citizens chafe and complain and the dty, preoccupied with checking its new growth, finds little time to maintain what it already has.
The house is surrounded by trees and vegetation. It has a wooden exterior with large windows and a front porch. There are signs of damage to the roof, including broken tiles and missing siding. A fallen tree lies in front of the house, partially obscuring the entrance. The surrounding area is covered in dense foliage, creating a shadowy atmosphere.
Grown up in weeds
Staff photo
Nail-studded lumber, broken glass and fallen tree limbs are hidden by weeds surrounding this abandoned house at 737 Michigan St.
Dear Faculty, Students
Kansas Union, the living room of the University of Kansas, was established and is operated as a non-profit corporation for the benefit and service of you, its valued customers. Since the University community contributes immeasurably to the Union's successful operation and progress with loyal patronage—and students with an added $17 fee per semester—we, the staff, take this opportunity to report directly to you at the year's end.
A record estimate of 3,300,000 individual transactions will have occurred by the end of this fiscal year June 30, about 1,185,000 of which represent persons attending 12,000 different reservation functions.
Altogether, Kansas Union departments have recorded approximately $2,996,000 in sales. In addition, student fees, office rentals, reservations, room use (except gratis use by student organizations) and miscellaneous items took in about $174,000 more for a total income of $3,170,000.
A large institutional accounting firm makes a detailed audit of Union operations each year.
The following tabulation shows the proportioned sources for each dollar of income:
FOOD SALES $ .20
BOOKSTORE SALES .62
JAYBOWL RECREATION INTAKE .01
KU CONCESSIONS SALES .11
STUDENT FEES .04
RESERVATIONS, ROOMS, ETC. INTAKE .02
$1.00
The food department includes the Union cafeteria, catering service, the Hawk's Nest, Prairie Room and Hawklet. Concessions include vending machines, athletic concessions, Strong Hall snacks, Fine Arts snacks and the Union information counter. The Union operates both the main bookstore and the one in Watson Library.Together with Jaybowl,these enterprises constitute the revenue producing departments of the Union. (A self-supporting division of the University, it receives no funds from the State budget.)
Total outgo since July 1, 1968 was about $3,157,000 for such expenditures as purchase of merchandise, supplies and equipment; replacing, repairing and modernizing equipment and building areas; paying employees.
Each dollar's expense was allotted as follows:
MERCHANDISE PURCHASES $ .60
SALARIES, WAGES, FRINGE BENEFITS .24
DEPRECIATION .03
PATRONAGE REFUNDS .03
NDEA STUDENT LOAN PROGRAM .01
PLANT MODIFICATION .01
OTHER EXPENSES .08
(including office & building supplies, equipment repairs, insurance, utilities, advertising, SUA programs, lease, rental & commissions paid to dormitory library fund & KUAA, laundry, china, silver, interest, dues & fees) $1.00
The Union spends some $750 thousand each year to obtain competent personnel to operate its vast program. Moreover, it spends at least another $500 thousand for goods and services in the Lawrence community and immediate area.
store list 8
21011B3 snT— pnttssr
s, Visitors and Friends,
The Union retains the very small amount of income remaining after all outgo bills are paid, for future expansion of facilities and purchase of new equipment.
Funds for recently remodeling the cafeteria came mostly from selfgenerated working capital. Plans now are being prepared to redecorate portions of the Hawk's Nest this summer.
The bookstore operation provided enough funds above expenses last year to return $94,000 to you as patronage refunds. In addition, some $22,000 was paid to the NDEA Student Loan Program from bookstore funds. The Union addition now under construction will provide a large browsing area as well as expanded facilities to help relieve crowded bookstore conditions, especially during enrollment periods.
The new addition also will provide a much needed auditorium as well as additional meeting and conference rooms and offices for the Alumni Association. The four major expansions since the Union's establishment in 1925 were necessary to meet the needs of a growing University family.
Plans already are in progress for a large Union satellite facility to serve primarily the large concentration of students on the Southwest Campus. You and your wishes serve as the basis for the many decisions affecting day-to-day Union operations.
One of our foremost operations, the Student Union Activities Program, provided entertainment and educational services last year with a budget of about $164,000. The Union provides facilities, staff advisors to assist the students leading the program and a nominal allocation of money above actual income.
Only $4.50 of the $17 Union fee full-time students pay per semester ($5 per summer session) comes to us to be used in our everyday operations. The remaining $12.50 is earmarked for debt service, major renovation or working capital funds. Allocation of the entire $17 looks like this:
$4.00—Retained for payment of principal and interest on Student Union Building Revenue Bonds of 1950.
2. 50—Retained to use only for debt service for the 1960 Student Union Annex and/or extraordinary repairs, replacements or renovations on the Union Annex.
5. 00 Retained for financing present Union addition and the anticipated satellite.
1. 00—Provided directly to the Union for creation of a special working capital reserve to be used exclusively for the purchase of new equipment.
4. 50—Provided directly to the Union for operations.
17.00
We hope this brief summarization has shown you a little of the scope of Kansas Union operations and that you will continue to keep us informed as to how we can better serve you. Let us know how we can make your living room at K.U. more enjoyable.
Respectfully submitted,
The Kansas Union Staff
The Kansas Union Staff University of Kansas
Housing solutions
---
(Continued from page 1)
housing office, said Coan,
Balfour, Donald Alderson, dean
of men, Miss Taylor and J. J.
Wilson, director of housing.
Alderson said, "The
University is not in any role and does not intend to be of approving or putting a stamp of approval on any housing for men. I look upon the housing list as a convenience for the
student, but I think it should be clearly understood that there are limits to which the University can go in investigating these properties. It is my belief that students today do not want the
Senate meeting plagued with red tape
(Continued from page 1)
An amendment on election procedures of the president and vice-president of the student body. The amendment could not legally be acted upon.
A resolution to censure the actions of "the demonstrators, including the members of the Student Senate and the officers of the student body for taking part in the demonstration at the
May 9 Chancellor's Review." The resolution failed.
A resolution to establish procedure for student referendums. The resolution was referred to the Elections Committee.
A resolution to "request the president of the student body to hold an election within the Senate to elect a presiding officer whom the President of the student body will ask to act as presiding officer of the
Senate." The resolution was tabled.
A resolution that a student referendum on ROTC be held next fall. The resolution was referred to the Elections Committee.
A resolution establishing a program of by laws to apply to the Student Senate. The resolution was referred to the Senate Executive Committee.
University to get too paternalistic."
In order to list housing with the University, the landlord must sign a form letter entitled "The University of Kansas Regulations and Policies for Student Off-Campus Houses, Apartments and Sleeping Rooms." In signing this letter, the landlord agrees he will not practice discrimination and will comply with state and city housing coes.
Clarence Hammer, director for the State Food and Lodging Board, said he thought KU needed an inspection system
KANSAN Comment
A motion to declare Monday night's special session invalid, and the minutes destroyed on the grounds that five members were not notified of the meeting as required by the Senate Code. The motion was tabled.
Syntactical error in Tuesday's UDK
The world at your feet
Senior men do not look forward to graduating. No one will give them jobs; they are poor business risks because soon they will "go."
This writer can not find too much good to say about the end of this school year.
Due to a syntactical error in Tuesday's University Daily Kansan, Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics, was incorrectly quoted as saying, "I am a typical landlord in the general area where I own property." The quote should have read, "I am an atypical landlord in the general area where I own property."
Senior women are frustrated because many of their friends or good friends or husbands will be gone in a few months; they too are not looking forward to graduation.
No one really can tell who it hurts more. But the pain is almost an unbearable one. The pain is there for most; the moans are silent and held within.
Dave Awbrey, student body president, announced there will be a meeting some time before the end of finals to discuss the budget and Senate standing committee appointments.
It is this silence that is a ghastly reminder of our nation's most pressing, most frustrating, most discussed problem.
It is a problem that most students try to forget about as long as they can. Some do not like the protests because it reminds them of what they must do after they walk down the hill and they know that they can do nothing about it.
It is like a terminable disease that you get when you are 18, and the young men and women must live with the disease as it spreads year after year.
But you can not ignore the symptoms: as the years go by, the parties and good times are not really that good, and the school work seems less important or relevant because everyone knows what you are going to have to do anyway.
But then, when you think about it (and think about how many times you have shoved that thinking about the disease to the back of the inside of your head . . .), it never was any fun.
It is not fun any more.
We can talk about how there are a lot of people who are in worse shape than we are. But when we tatalk about these people, graduation is still a long way off, and we still have plenty of time to pity ourselves.
This year will not be a good one. Good buy
John T. Marshall
Editor-in-chief apologizes to Goodyear, Gregg Tire Co.
Good-bye.
The articles in question appeared in the Kansan May 1 and 12. They were reports of a crusade by John Mullen, Deerfield, Ill., sophomore to obtain adjustments on a set of new tires he had purchased.
"First of all, I want it made clear that the Kansan has no evidence for believing the charges made by Mullen about 'false advertising and shoddy material' are true," Yates said.
Ron Yates, Shawnee senior and Kansan editor-in-chief, today issued an apology to the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. and the Gregg Tire Co., Lawrence Goodyear distributor, for articles involving them.
"The Kansan does not confirm the validity of these charges."
In explaining the May 1 story, Yates said the articles appeared because of "bad news judgment in editing and reporting." Yates said all staff members involved were reprimanded and a private apology was made to Goodyear through the Gregg Tire Co.
In response to the May 12 story, Yates said, "Myself and the Kansan staff involved apologize for repetition of the unconfirmed charges made about the Gregg Tire Co. and the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co."
Yates said he received a letter
KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646
Business Office—UN 4-4358
Hansen said a great amount of evidence given would not be admissible in any court of law. For example, he said, it was never established how the sound system was damaged, he said. A witness said he thought it was the defendant's intention to do damage.
Wilson said, "We have given this (hiring of a building inspector) a lot of thought. The University does not have the money and I don't think I would recommend the hiring of an inspector."
(Continued from page 1)
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Accepted for graduate mester, 10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and transportation are 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.
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Some landlords who rent housing to students do not use written contracts or written leases. The only agreement between the student and the landlord is a verbal contract.
Executive Staff
such as Kansas State University has set up.
UDB meeting
The off-campus housing committee working with the Law Students Civil Rights Research Committee (LSCRRC) is currently working on a written lease form which will be available to any students who wish to sign a written agreement with their landlord.
part of the University campus. He received applause when he said that meetings in the union, including the previous night's were often interrupted by spectators. "The Union is a separate corporation," he said.
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manager
Edition Editors
Entriksen Jr., Don Westhausen,
Marla Babeock, Sandy Zahradnik
News Editor
Joanna Wiebe
Editor Editor
Ted Turner
Editorial Editors
Judith K. Dieblow
Allison Steimel John Marshall
Hammer said the K-State housing office has a building inspector who works with the state inspector so the housing office could actually approve the buildings it lists.
Alison Steimel, John Marshall
Each witness has been asked to give the intention of the students charged and their opinions, he said. He said he seriously questions whether the board was granting the students "due process of law."
College Relations Director
c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
Please send me a free Sheraton Student I.D. Card:
Name:___
Address:___
4 KANSAN May 15, 1969
from the Goodyear Company Monday saying they had adjusted two tires for Mullen at a cost of $20.06 plus $2.44 federal excise tax each.
Yates explained: "The purpose of the second story was to report what Goodyear had done in the way of adjusting these tires for Mullen. Through an oversight in editing, the same unconfirmed charges appeared once again. The Kansan sincerely apologizes for this."
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