THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.36
Monday, Nov. 3, 1969
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
UDK News Roundup
Nixon to address nation
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—President Nixon goes before the nation tonight in a major effort to unite the vast middle ground of American public opinion behind his efforts to end the Vietnam war.
The plea for time and tolerance comes two weeks after one antiwar demonstration and 10 days before a second one.
There were no indications the 9:30 p.m. EST address, to be carried nationwide on radio and television, would include a dramatically accelerated troop pullout or other surprising new developments.
Lebanon cease-fire set
CAIRO—Lebanese and Arab guerrilla negotiators resumed their negotiations today on settling the conflict in Lebanon, where Arabs have been killing one another for two weeks.
The Lebanese army commander, Gen. Emile Bustani, and Al Fatah guerrilla leader, Yassir Araft, met for the first time Sunday, greeting each other with a kiss and embrace. They agreed to an immediate cease-fire.
Attorney may file suit
CHICAGO—California attorney Charles R. Garry was expected to file a suit Tuesday asking that Black Panther Bobby Seale, "a kind, lovable human being," not be shackled and gagged.
Seale has insisted that Barry, of San Francisco, is his attorney in the trial of eight men charged with conspiring to incite riots at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. The trial resumes today. Seale demanded he be allowed to cross-examine witnesses, since Garry is recuperating from a gall bladder operation.
Kennedy calls for reform
WASHINGTON—Sen. Edward M. Kennedy today called on President Nixon to use his executive powers to effect a broad reform of the draft system, including an end to use of the draft for punishing dissent.
Kennedy said "respect for military service can hardly be enhanced if those who protest the system are the first people to fight for our country."
He said that almost all draft reforms which should be brought about "could be instituted through executive action."
Bengalis are fire target
KARACHI—Pakistani troops opened fire Sunday on mobs of Bengalis who rioted in Dacca. Official reports from the scene said one person was killed and 19 were wounded. The traget of the Bengali violence was refugees from India.
U.S. abandons outposts
SAIGON-Stiff North Vietnamese artillery barrages have forced Allied troops to abandon three U.S. outposts along the Cambodian frontier, military spokesmen said today.
It was the first reported use of conventional artillery by the Viet Cong or North Vietnamese in four months.
--arose, he asked me and I agreed," Wunsch said.
Former state senator appointed to Regents
By KENNETH CUMMINS
Kansan Staff Writer
TOPEKA—Gov. Robert Docking appointed former state Sen. Paul R. Wunsch, R-Kingman, to succeed Vincent Bogart to the Kansas Board of Regents Friday.
Bogart resigned Thursday at Docking's request because of alleged conflict of interest. Bogart said he agreed to resign in order to be free from obligations to the Regents and the Governor to defend himself against any accusations.
Wunsch was Senate president pro tem of the Kansas Legislature for 16 years. Before holding that position he was majority leader and speaker in the House of Representatives.
Republican majority
In 1964 Wunsch was in a strong position to win the Republican nomination for governor. The nomination was won, however, by William Avery who went on to serve one term as governor of Kansas.
Docking's replacement of a Democrat with a Republican changes the political complexion of the state Board of Regents. With Wunsch's appointment the board switches from 5-4 Democratic majority to a 5-4 Republican majority. Under state law, no more than five members of the board can be from the same party.
Max Bickford, executive secretary of the Board of Regents, said control of the board by one party had never made any difference in the decisions of the board, and he called Wunsch a "very fine, capable gentleman."
Contacted at his home Sunday night, Wunsch said he was not surprised by his appointment. He said Docking had been considering him for an appointment when the terms of Henry Bubb, Topeka, and Ned Cushing, Downs, expire in December.
"When this early opportunity
Wunsch said he had no feelings about being asked to replace Bogart since he was not involved in the matter.
Bogart charged
Bogart was charged with violation of conflict of interest Friday morning in Shawnee County District Court. The charge stemmed from an investigation by the attorney general's office.
According to Richard Seaton, assistant attorney general who directed the investigation, Bogart, a Wichita attorney, appeared before the Kansas Board of Pardon and Parole to obtain a full pardon for Leon Smitherman. Smitherman, convicted of grand larceny in October 1959, was discharged from parole Dec. 20, 1963.
Bogart is accused of failing to file a statement notifying proper state officials of his interest in the case. Bogart denied being in-
(Continued to page 16)
Hijacked pilot critical of FBI
NEW YORK (UPI)—Captain Donald J. Cook Jr., the pilot of a Trans World Airlines jet hijacked from California to Rome Friday, charged Sunday the FBI had jeopardized his crew and plane during the half hour stopover at Kennedy airport.
"I'm certain the FBI agents didn't do it intentionally but they just crowded us a bit too far," Cook told a news conference on his arrival home from Rome.
Cook said he pleaded with FBI agents who had surrounded the plane to move back and allow equipment needed to refuel the plane to move in.
"I told them the hijacker wanted no one near the plane but one man dressed in coveralls told me they would move back only when they were good and ready," Cook said.
The FBI, the 31-year-old captain continued, must not have been "aware of what was going on on the flight deck."
He said the hijacker, AWOL Marine Lance Cpl. Raffaele Minichiello, had run through the plane waving his carbine and became more and more agitated as he saw cars and men approaching the plane. Cook said Minichiello
fired a shot into the roof of the plane just forward of the gallery area.
The captain apologized for a remark attributed to him in Rome that he thought the FBI acted like "idiots."
"I don't recall saying that, but if I did you must realize I was extremely tired after 40 hours in the air," Cook explained. "If I did say it I didn't mean it."
Cook said that after the flight left Bangor, Maine, for Shannon Airport in Ireland, he had the opportunity to talk at some length with the hiacker.
He said Minichiello, 20, was "a
(Continued to page 16).
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT OAKLAND
High school bands cast spell on crowd
Eighty-five high school bands from Kansas and Missouri converged on KU Saturday for the 25th annual Band Day. The more than 7,000 musicians combined at Memorial Stadium to form "KU 69" and to play "The Stars and Strings Forever." "This is My Country," and "The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
Senator denies return from Minnesota
Eugene McCarthy may seek NY seat
WASHINGTON (U P I)—Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., left open Sunday the possibility he will run for the Senate from New York.
There have been reports in recent weeks that McCarthy, who already said he wouldn't seek reelection to his Minnesota seat, might challenge Sen. Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., next year.
Asked about the rumors in a television interview, "Issues and Answers—ABC," McCarthy denied saying that he wouldn't be a candidate from any other state.
McCarthy said that his remark in turning down a re-election bid was that he "wouldn't be a candidate from Minnesota, not that I wouldn't be a candidate from any other state."
But he added, "The likelihood of my running in New York is very slight." He also said, "I pretty well made a decision when I said I wouldn't run from Minnesota that I didn't want to go back to the Senate."
McCarthy also suggested that he would join a third party "if it developed in the context of serious issues," but said that he had no desire to head one.
On Vietnam, McCarthy said that if he were to give the speech President Nixon is going to give on nationwide television Monday night, he would announce that he is going to negotiate a coalition government in South Vietnam.
The Up With People High School, Inc., and the Extramural Independent Study Center of the University Extension have joined forces in a joint educational experiment.
Three Kingman students have been awarded Judge Clark A. Wallace Scholarships for the 1969-70 academic year at the University of Kansas.
A modular curriculum developed by the Center, consisting of 20 courses, will emphasize the individual interests and musical skills of the students enrolled, according to Mrs. Barbara McLean, director of instruction for the Center. Traveling teachers will evaluate each student's work and the Center will provide consultants for the modules.
The modular curriculum designed by the Center makes use of personal experiences, course syllabi, readings and audiovisual selections. Mrs. McLean said modules averaged about nine lessons, plus a final examination, but individual instructors and students decided their priorities and worked together in determining their work load.
Scholarships awarded
McCarthy, an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination last year, said that he would also recognize Red China as it could join in offering solutions to the problem of Asia.
The Wallace scholars will be Larry N. McCullough, a sophomore in the School of Engineering, and Bertha G. Langley and Kent R. Pulliam, who will be freshmen.
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He said that he also would go
beyond that to propose "some kind of meeting of nations to deal with the long-range problems of North Vietnam and South Vietnam."
Two groups join forces
McCarthy said that he considers Vietnam "a minor problem in the context of understanding what
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'this is our policy,' and then began to withdraw troops according to a proagm," McCarthy said.
Soviets tour 'new world'
are the real problems of Asia"
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (UPI)—Soviet cosmonauts Georgiy Beregovoy and Konstantin Feokistov toured colonial Williamsburg Sunday for a glimpse of what the "new world" looked like 350 years ago.
Beregovoy watched blacksmith John Allgood make a horse shoe, then took off his coat, rolled up his sleeves and hammered out one himself. Later he said it was "the most historic event of the day."
Beregovoy, his wife and 18-year-old son Viktor, and Fekis-
tov were escorted by Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders, Mrs. Anders and representatives of the U.S. government. The stopover at the restored city was one of the last on the cosmonaut's two-week tour of the nation.
The cosmonauts joined in a white wine toast, proposed by Anders, "To many more successful space flights by both counties." Beregovoy replied with a toast "To the city of Williamsburg, which brings joy to the people and knowledge of the history of that time."
"I think Nixon would do much better as President if he said,
Andre Kole denies magic, supernatural
Andre Kole, an illusionist who has appeared in 43 different countries, performed magical tricks that were intended to give the appearance of "fourth dimensional" powers. Sunday night in Hoch Auditorium.
Kole emphasized throughout the program that many people were passing magical illusions off as manifestations of the supernatural.
"I can no more see with my finger tips than anyone here in the audience can," Kole said. "I gave this demonstration as an example of what some are presenting as real manifestations of the supernatural."
front of him, he declaimed the exhibition as a fake.
"Some of these manifestations should be called estrasensory deception, instead of extra sensory perception," Kole said.
Kole gave a demonstration in which he was blindfolded. He then had volunteers from the audience place different objects near his hands, without actually touching, so that he could get the feel." After correctly predicting the objects that were held in
"I am not saying that there is absolutely no such thing as ESP, but when looked at closely, most of the things presented can be exposed as simple tricks."
The primary purpose of Kole's unmasking of spiritualism, ESP and witchcraft was to show that there are no miracles "except those that come from Jesus Christ."
The presentation was sponsored by the Campus Crusade for Christ.
We're a diversified company. A big one. Our sales will run more than half a billion dollars this year.
They'll come from computer service, education systems, helicopters, farm equipment, space systems, all kinds of technical services.
And airplanes.
Airplanes turn us on. We've built them for going on sixty years.
Our planes scored the nation's top kill ratios against Zeros and
again against MiGs.
We've won the Thompson Trophy, the Collier Trophy, and the Doolittle Award.
Our chief exec is a reconstructed test pilot. We've got more fighter jockeys in management than any other company in the country.
Besides our attack airplanes, we're involved in the 747, S-3 and the DC-10 and the SST programs to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars.
Our simulators are the finest in
industry. So is our schedule performance. And our titanium capability. And our record of coming up with growth designs.
This is where you ought to be if you're an AE, EE, ME, or IE with a thing about airplanes.
Sit down and write our campus rep tonight. He's the guy with the long, white scarf. Address: College Relations Office, LTV Aerospace Corporation, P.O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222. We're an equal opportunity employer.
Airplanes turn you on? Join the club.
LTV AEROSPACE CORPORATION A quality company of Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc. LTV
Campus briefs
Ex-Jordanian officer to speak
Sir John Glubb, former chief-of-staff to the Jordanian army, will speak at 8 p.m. today in the Kansas Union.
Glubb's talk, "A New Look at the Arab-Israeli Confrontation," is part of the SUA Featured Speaker Series.
Glubb resigned his commission in the British army in 1926 to become an administrative inspector in the Iraqi government. He joined the Trans-Jordan government in 1930 and held several military positions in Jordan until 1956 when he returned to England.
Since his return, Glubb has published 10 books about the Arabs and the Middle East.
KU debaters grab third place
KU debaters won third place in a field of 68 teams at the Texas Christian University Invitational Debate Tournament in Fort Worth, Tex., last weekend.
The team of Bob Prentice, Turon sophomore, and Dan Beck, Mission junior, compiled a 9-1 record before losing in the semifinals.
As a result of their high standing in the tournament, the pair received an invitation to participate in the Tournament of Champions at Chicago in April. Invitations to the tournament are given on the basis of a third-or-better showing at selected tournaments throughout the year.
Applications for test due Nov. 21
Persons wanting to take the National Security Agency's professional qualification test Dec. 6 must have filled out a registration form by Nov. 21, a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences spokesman said Friday.
Any person who is a citizen of the United States and who holds, or expects to hold, at least a bachelor's degree by February 1971 is eligible to take the test. The test will be administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS) at test centers located on the KU campus
Registration forms are sent to Educational Testing Service, Berkeley, Calif. The forms are available in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences office, 206 Strong Hall.
Report on health services due
The Student Senate Committee on Health will present a report to the Student Senate Wednesday on the state of health services at KU, Dave Blahna, St. Louis Park, Mo., graduate student and head of the committee, said Sunday.
The report investigates the possibilities of either building a new hospital or the addition of a new wing on Watkins Hospital.
Nov. 3 KANSAN 3
1969
Blahna said that if the report were endorsed by the Student Senate it would be sent to William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs, and the Chancellor's office.
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Gladys B. Padget, placement director, said five universities will sponsor a Consortium for Graduate Study in Business for Negroes from 8:30 to 11:30 Wednesday in 206 Strong Hall.
5 schools here Wednesday seek Negro grad prospects
Seniors and graduates of accredited colleges are eligible to apply for these fellowships, regardless of undergraduate major.
Each man who qualifies for admission to the program will receive a fellowship consisting of free tuition plus a $2,500 stipend each year for two years, provided he maintains adequate progress toward the M.B.A. degree.
The universities which will be on campus recruiting men to pursue the Master of Business Administration degree are Indiana University, University of Rochester, University of Southern California, Washington University and
the University of Wisconsin.
Official Bulletin
Single Parent Congress, Kansas Uni-
cle All Day. Banquet, 6 p. Ramadam
Banquet
Today
Physics Colloquium by Prof. S.
Oliver of Rochester, 124 Malott,
4:30 p.m.
Tennis Tennis Club. 173 Robinson
Gymnasium. 6:45-9:45 p.m.
Architecture Lecture. "Suspended
Building" p.m.
Kansas Union Big Eight Room.
Tomorrow
Lindley Lecture. "Buber and Buterism—A Critical Evaluation." Prof.
Paul Edwards. Kansas Union Forum Room, 8:30 p.m.
**Foreign Students.** Sign up for the Nov 13 bus trip to Topeka and visits to Moorabbin Conservation Clinic and Goodyear Rubber Co. First 35 to sign get free bus fare
Lecture. "Transcendental Meditation." Jerry Jarvis. 426 Lindley Hall. 4 p.m.
Jayhawk Jogger Club. Robinson
Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
156 Cedar Ave., Brooklyn, NY 10289
Table Tennis Club. 173 Robinson
Gymnastics 6:45-8:50 a.m.
Special Fashion "v"
Special Film." Dishonored." Kansas Union, 7 p.m.
Union. 7 p.m.
Jayhawk Rodeo Club. Kansas Uni-
lon. N.R.
Christian Science Organization.
Danforth Chapel, 7.30 p.m.
Kronenwil "K"
Kansas Union Forum Room, 9 p.m.
Foreign Students. Sign up for the
Toppea and visits to Meninger Foundation Clinic and Goodyear Rubber Co.
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Jayhawk Special
To The
KANSAS
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Game November 15
- Travel to Norman by Dlx. Motorcoach
- Have a Continental Breakfast on Board
- Arrive Owen's Field at 12:30 p.m.
- Enjoy a Chicken Box Lunch on Arrival
- See the Jayhawks and Sooners in Action from your reserved seat
- Departure home after the game with a Dinner Stop enroute (cost is not included, order your choice from the menu)
EVERYTHING, that's right, EVERYTHING needed for a
THING, that's right, EVERYTHING needed for a great football outing is included: transportation to and from the game, continental breakfast and delicious Chicken box lunch reserved game ticket in KU section, ice and mix on all Motorcoaches, and a dinner stop enroute (meal not included). FULL ITINERARY WILL BE SENT WITH YOUR RESERVED TICKET.
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KANSAN Comment
Boo! Boo!—Rah!-rah!
Unfortunately Joe College and Betty Coed live.
They live under the disguise of KU seniors and are making their exit from Mount Oread this spring, in a raging blaze of good old rahrah. The only thing absent from this theater of the absurd are the raccoon coats, KU pennants and a senior prom.
However, this year's senior class seems to have found alternatives nearly as obnoxious and antiquated—tee shirts, hats and no less, "an evening at the Red Dog Inn, with all the free beer you can drink and the magnificent sounds of Spider and the Crabs."
What a pathetic commentary on the university and what an even more pathetic comment on the graduating senior.
This is supposed to be a class representative of the-generation that's involved, the generation that cares and the generation that has not despaired on the state of the world or the university.
This is supposed to be the generation that looks contemptuously on all this drivel—what a joke! Aside from the fact that one looks like an ass in his "senior regalia," the fact that so much money is wasted on this junk that could
be used so many other worthwhile and productive ways is disgusting to say the least.
There is one point in favor of all the regalia it looks great from the alumni section.
If the senior class wanted to do anything worth remembering they might have thought in terms of the future and even their own children.
They might have spent the money on improvements at the Watkins Hospital. They might have done their daughter a favor and spent the money on street lighting. They might have done everyone a favor and spent the money on scholarships.
Perhaps this is unfair from the point of a graduating senior. When asked what the class of 1970 did the old alum could recall with pride, to that fun-filled evening at the Red Dog Inn with Spider and the Crabs. He can don his dusty senior hat and hum strains of Alma Mater, followed by the KU fight song and the Rock Chalk chant.
And last but not least, he can don his moth-eaten, beer-stained senior tee shirt with the words "Today's Seniors—Tomorrow's Establishment inscribed and see the prophecy fulfilled.
Judith K. Diebolt
BOOKS
MAN'S FATE, by Andre Malraux (Vintage, $1.65) — A paperback printing of one of the great novels of the 20th Century. Malraux writes of the early period of the Chinese revolution, Shanghai in the spring of 1927, at the time that Chiang Kai-shek blood-
ily put down a Communist uprising and helped pave the way for the growth of Mao Tse-tung and his party. But the work is not just a topical portrayal; it is an illuminating examination of the human condition, and deserves the wide praise it has enjoyed for 35 years.
UNFINISHED PORTRAIT, by Mary Westmacott (Dell, 60 cents) —A gothic-type thriller by Agatha Christie, writing as Mary Westmacott. It's about a young woman and the frightening encounter that she relates to a young portrait painter, who helps her to solve the mystery.
Sorel's News Service
1900 King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved.
My only regret is that I have but one country to give for my life
SAIGON—Reporter Marsh Clark asked President Thieu to consider the following hypothetical proposition: "If someone came to you and said, 'If you resign, I can guarantee that peace will be restored and South Vietnam will have the right to determine its own fate,' would you resign?" Thieu replied: "I have no reason to resign. I am doing well."
Readers write
To the editor:
There seems to be some doubt in the minds of many Americans as to the patriotism of our young people. This is a serious indictment and unfounded. The faults in our society are many. Some came about due to a blind patriotism of a generation that were taught as all are, the difference between right and wrong. Hence, my country right or wrong I will follow blindly, is somewhat hollow. Your country and mine is involved in a military confrontation in Vietnam because of a commitment. (Political) Many thousands have died, many more maimed for life in fulfilling this commitment. I say its fulfilled, and the time has come to manifest patriotism as you the young men and women see and feel it. After graduation when the umbilical is really severed and the responsibilities of a society are your inheritance it will be your nation to preserve. The often mentioned generation gap is a myth. Political crap.
This is what you can do as students, individually or in groups (non-violent.) Boycott all athletic events, above the high school level excluding intramural events confined to the personnel of your university. Suggest to your parents and relatives to refrain the attendance of professional athletic events in their area. Do this with the aid of such allies as the Women for Peace, etc. Help your country now and continue the pressure until the effort bears fruit. Soon this nation will be your estate, free or enslaved. Again I say our commitment in Vietnam has been fulfilled.
Edwin D. Wolf Deerfield, Illinois
* * *
To the editor:
The KU Division of the 1969 Lawrence United Fund Campaign will bring its drive to a close—officially, at least—Friday, October 31. After that date the drive directors will report results to the community chairman. At this time, as campus chairman, I want to express my thanks to the members of the University staff who have made contributions—and will make contributions after the drive ends—to this campaign. In a year when controversy has surrounded the United Fund the basic purpose of the fund—to benefit 13 needy organizations in Lawrence—should not be forgotten. I am hoping that if you have not made a contribution that you will be able to do so. Pledge cards and other forms are still available, and I will be glad to forward them to you. When the drive comes to an end I will notify you about its results. And, once again, thank you for your help.
Sincerely.
Calder M. Pickett
Chairman, United Fund Drive,
KU Division
Off the wire
By United Press International
"He said he wanted to come here to Italy and fight somebody and die here."
ROME—TWA Capt. Donald Cook Jr., telling newsmen of his conversations with Raffaele Minichiello during the 17-hour international hijacking:
$$
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WASHINGTON—President Nixon, setting forth his new Latin American policy for the United States:
"What I hope we can achieve, therefore, is a more mature partnership in which all voices are heard and none is predominant—a partnership guided by a healthy awareness that give-and-take is better than take-it-or-leave-it."
* *
MOSCOW—From an interview with Andronik M. Petrosyants, chairman of the USSR's State Committee on Atomic Energy, discussing the Soviets' program of underground nuclear tests:
"The Soviet Union, in accordance with the non-proliferation treaty, is ready to share its knowledge and experience in the field of the peaceful use of nuclear explosions for the good of humanity."
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KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for holidays. Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for holidays. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60644. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior notice. Postage not payable to the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
News Adviser . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor Joanna K. Wiele
Campus Editor Joe Bullard
News Editor Ruth Rademacher
Makeup Editor Ken Peterson
Sports Editor Krys Thomas
Wire Editor Martha Mangledsdorff
Arts and Review Editor Mike Shearer
Women's Page Editor Linda Loyd
Photo and Scrapbook Editor Mike Rubee
Assistant News Editors Donna Shrader, Steve Haynes
Assistant Sports Editor Joe Childs
Assistant Editorial Editor Judith K. Diebold
Assistant Campus Editor Rick Undergrass
Assistant Photo and Graphics Editor Mike Frederick
Assistant Women's Page Editor Viki Hysten
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams
Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks
Advertising Manager Jack Hurley
National Advertising Manager Rea Osborne
Classified Advertising Manager Larry Rosnberger
Promotion Manager Reagon O'Neal
Circulation Manager Todd Smith
KANSAN REVIEWS DIRTY FILMS: And Kansas
By RICHARD GEARY
Kansan Reviewer
In Topeka last Friday, the state senate's special judiciary subcommittee on pornography met to consider legislation to regulate the distribution and exhibition of obscene motion pictures.
Unfortunately, the senators came with the idea that something restrictive had to be done—and the meeting proceeded from there. Two guests were present. One of them, the assistant Johnson County attorney, told of his trouble seizing "I am Curious (Yellow)," and the other, the Wyandotte County attorney, presented a 40-minute film, produced by a group called Citizens for Decent Literature, attacking the Supreme Court, with Abe Fortas singled out, and containing clips and pictures from the various films and magazines under condemnation.
After lunch, the group adjourned to the Gage-4 theatre for the special showing of a film in question—a real hard-core article. This particular movie raised an interesting legal problem because it had been shown in Kansas City at a large drive-in theatre, the screen of which was clearly visible for a great distance. Its title was "Eat, Drink, and Make Merrie" and was about—you guessed it—a girl named Merrie and her younger sister, who live in an apartment house where the tenants swap mates and make love 24 hours a day.
The movie was perversely hilarious not because it was terrible film-making (which it was, of course) but because it was don't-give-a-dam film-making. Those involved obviously didn't care if the picture was awful, and neither do the audiences at which it is aimed. The senators could see through the slipshod production, even though during the scene where the sister finally disrobed, they snickered self-consciously to hide the fact that they were really caught up in it.
Back in the committee room, everyone agreed that what they had just seen was, "not good enough to be called bad," and sat down to decide what to do about the problem. Various suggestions were under discussion: increase the penalties for exhibitors showing to minors; declare obscene material a "public nuisance" as a basis for legal action; provide for immediate hearings to decide the seizure of "dangerous" films; even the outright banning of all X-rated movies coming to town.
They tossed around everything except what is vital.
Are obscenity laws necessary at all; wouldn't a study to see if these films actually harm community morality be more valuable? How moral are laws telling an adult what he may read and see?
When the meeting broke up, the only definite decision the senators had made was to wait until their next meeting to decide anything definite.
If the opening shows of KU's theater season exemplify what's to come, then audiences have many thrilling experiences in store.
OPERETTA: Strauss thrilling
By GENELLE RICHARDS
Kansan Staff Writer
have many thrilling experiences in store. "Die Fleddermaus" by Johann Strauss is just that—thrilling. As the overture begins, the audience immediately falls into the mood of Strauss and Vienna.
The University Little Symphony performs the light, gay, beautiful music to absolute perfection.
All of the principal characters were very good, displaying an ability to act and sing without either overpowering the other.
Especially good in that respect, Suzanne Jouvenat as Adele gives an excellent characterization of a chambermaid of that era. Along with her, James Asbury, Carolyn Weber, Steve Robinson and John Wolfe give convincing characterizations.
The fact that a soprano sings the part of Prince Orlofsky does not distract from the production, for Audrey Cohen takes on enough masculine characteristics to form a real prince.
But Art Sloan as Frosch steals the show. He excellently portrays a drunken jailer to the point of reality. He demonstrates talent that makes his portrayal natural and not just acting.
THE LUCKY ONES
If anything in the operetta lacks perfection it might be the chorus. Some of the chorus members demonstrate a talent in acting while others don't. But all of their voices are magnificent
A delightful script aids in making the production good. Lines poking fun at 19th Century Vienna along with other comic bits make a light, entertaining plot.
Everything about the operetta sparkles—especially when the orchestra begins to play one of Strauss's magnificent waltzes; the University Theatre seems to light up. For beautiful voices, a superb orchestra, authentic sets and costumes, delightful script and music all combine to make "Die Fledermaus" excellent
Next performances of "Die Fledermaus" will be Thursday and Friday.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Some people have all the luck. For instance, about 10 per cent of all the fishermen in the United States catch more than 60 per cent of the fish, according to the National Automobile Club.
BOOKS
BRIDE OF MOAT HOUSE, by Norah Lofts (Dell, 60 cents);
PROMINENT AMERICAN GHOSTS, by Susy Smith (Dell,
60 cents)—The first is a Gothic thriller, as is fairly obvious from that title. Pretty silly, and lots of fun, with old castles and all that.
And if you don't see why "Prominent American Ghosts" occupies a place alongside this one you haven't read any Gothics.
And even if you don't believe in ghosts you might have a few uneasy feelings while reading this one.
A GUN FOR JOHNNY DEER,
by Wayne D. Overhaler (Dell,
50 cents)—A western, of course,
about a guy framed for murder
who becomes a marked man and
has to fight the whole territory to establish his innocence.
Nov. 3
1969 KANSAN 5
PRETTY MAIDS ALL IN A ROW, by Francis Pollini (Dell, 95 cents)—A sexed novel set in one Sawyerville High School, its hero a football coach, guidance counselor, drama instructor, its heroes the stupid little dames who have their eyes on him. Murder and sex are the result. This one will have a few readers.
SATURDAY, NOV. 8
AKENA 8:50 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium
Kansas City, Mo.
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at Auditorium Box Office
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check or money order to Aud.
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ARENA 8:30 p.m.
Exclusively on Warner Brothers Records
IN PERSON
Peter, Paul
and Mary
SUA invites you to the 1969 Homecoming Concert featuring Steppenwolf and The Turtles on November 8 at Allen Field House
PETER JACKSON AND THE MONSTERS
Tickets: 3.50 - 3:00.-2.50
Available at:
SUA Office, Kansas Union
Richardson's Music Co.
Bell's
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Order will be enforced
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell expressed hope Sunday that the federal government would not have to resort to force to carry out the Supreme Court's historic order to end segregation "at once" in the nation's public schools.
"We assume now that the Supreme Court has spoken local school boards will comply with it," Mitchell said. "If they do not, obviously the Justice Department will be obligated to take action."
The attorney general, interviewed on the television show Meet the Press, reiterated his pledge of last week to use "all the facilities" and resources at the Justice Department's command to enforce the Supreme Court's ruling.
Asked whether he meant the Nixon administration would be willing to use federal troops to force desegregation, as Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy did in Arkansas and Mississippi, Mitchell replied: "We feel the area of cooperation and the time of cooperation has arrived that we will not find it necessary to use any means other than persuasion in order to enforce the order of the court."
Mitchell said the government would begin implementing the mandate as soon as the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans issued orders for desegregation of the 33 Mississippi districts involved in the Supreme Court's decision last Wednesday.
Veterans get advantages
Veterans and their families, through the Veterans Administration (VA), receive numerous benefits from the government
Holders of National Service Life Insurance policies receive a lifetime level premium lower than other permanent plans and avoid periodic premium increases of term insurance.
According to the VA, a veteran may receive a $160 wage credit for each month of World War II duty if he was discharged under other than dishonorable conditions and he had at least 90 days of active service.
6 KANSAN
Nov. 3
1969
Nixon's speech to be discussed
Tonight's nationwide address by President Nixon concerning the policy in Vietnam and major withdrawal of troops will be the topic of a panel discussion at the meeting of the KU Student Mobilization Committee at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the UCCF Center, 1204 Oread.
Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare, Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science and Lawrence Velvet, associate professor of law will discuss the speech, its relevance to the moratorium activities and analyze any changes that might be made in the present policy.
Secretary says no more wars in Asia
Time said the study, in the Defense Department as "Strategy Memorandum Number Three," recommends the United States "remain a Pacific power only through air and naval strength."
NEW YORK (UPI) — Time magazine said Sunday the Nixon administration has under consideration a "strategy memorandum" written by Deputy Defense Secretary David Packard which says "U.S. forces of the future need not be prepared to wage a massive land war in Asia."
The magazine said, "The only extensive foreign presence of U.S. ground troops would be in Europe, to meet NATO commitments. The Joint Chiefs of Staff would be required to plan for a major war there and a brushfire engagement elsewhere, the so-called 'one-half war' strategy, rather than for major actions in both Europe and Asia.
"No plans for full-scale military operations in Africa or Latin America would be considered."
ECUMENICAL GIFT
On Friday, during a speech at Los Angeles, Defense Secretary Melvin E. Laird said U.S. forces should become "smaller, leaner, more mobile, certainly more volunteer." Laird has also said the United States is shooting for a capability of fighting one big war and one small one instead of trying to cope with two big ones and a small one.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The University of Southern California, a nonsectarian private university founded in 1880, was built on land donated by a Catholic, a Jew and a Protestant.
After the discussion the group will plan publicity for events leading to the November war moratorium. They will also hear progress reports concerning the anti-war marches in Topeka and Washington, D.C., to take place Nov. 15.
tion Committee to increase the number of days by one each month until all troops are out of Vietnam.
The national November war moratorium will be two days long in following the plan suggested by the National Student Mobiliza-
Tom Ashton, graduate law student and steering committee member of the local organization, said the KU committee will urge open classes, similar to the October war moratorium, to be held only on Nov. 14.
The two-day event will culminate Nov 15 with a mass march and rally from the Mall past the Capital Building in Washington, D.C., in protest of the Vietnam war. A similar demonstration is planned to take place in San Francisco.
The KU committee also has tentative plans to march on the Capitol building in Topeka in conjunction with the national demonstrations.
Make it both ways!
[A cartoon character holding a stack of cash, with a halo above their head. The character is dressed in a suit and tie.]
YOU CAN MAKE GOOD AND DO GOOD IN AN AETNA CAREER
Insurance is a service business. It serves people. Whatever your major, you can satisfy your pocketbook and your conscience in one of these basic career areas:
- ADMINISTRATIVE
- ANALYTICAL
- SALES MANAGEMENT
If you'd like to hear more about doing your thing at Ætna, here's what to do:
- Ask for a copy of "Your Own Thing" at your Placement office.
OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE
- Make an appointment to see our representative. He'll be on campus on:
Aetna
LIFE & CASUALTY
Mr. John M. Dell
November 7, 1969 or March 6, 1970
An Equal Opportunity Employer and A Plans for Progress Company
Got a '67-'68-'69 Chevrolet Still in Warranty??
If you do, come in and let me help you take full advantage of this great Chevrolet feature. Some services are owner responsibility-some are your selling dealers. Come by 8th & New Hampshire, and I'll visit with you and help you get the most from your factory warranty.
Lauren McClure, service manager-Ship Winter Chevrolet downtown at 8th & New Hampshire
When will it all end?
Pokes hand KU 5th straight
23
The turning point
By STEVE SHRIVER
Kansan Sports Writer
Kansas always seems to bring out the best in opposing football teams and Oklahoma State was no exception Saturday when they beat the Jayhawks, 28-25. KU was razzle-dazzled by the Pokes on a 97-yard kickoff return and, subsequently, lost their fifth straight game. It was the first Big Eight win for Oklahoma State under new head coach Floyd Gass and pushed KU deeper into the conference cellar.
Three men handled the ball on the kickoff return that broke the backs of the Hawks. Moments earlier KU had stormed back from a 14-3 halftime deficit to a
KANSAN Sports
Cowboy speedster Wayne Hallmark sprints past a host of Jayhawks en route to a 97-yard kickoff return in the third period. The runback came after Kansas had gone ahead for the first time 17-14 and was cited as the key play of the game by winning OSU coach Floyd Gass.
17-14 second half lead when George McGowan caught Phil Basler's 13-yard TD pass.
On the ensuing kickoff Bobby Cole, speedy sophomore tailback, caught the ball on the three-yard line. He ran straight up the field to the 15 where Dick Graham was standing and handed off to him. Graham immediately gave the ball to Wayne Hallmark who was angling across the field. Hallmark got a block, turned the corner and raced the remaining 85 yards to paydirt and KU never recovered.
The flashy Cole supplied the big spark for the Cowboys and gained 243 yards total output—80 rushing, 104 pass receiving and 59 on kickoff returns. He caught a 70-yard TD pass and made a 59-yard run in the fourth quarter to set up the Pokes clinching touch-down.
It was a frustrating day for the Hawks who were haunted again by penalties, mostly of the long pass interference variety. And the Cowboys were able to break the big play, something KU has failed to do all year.
Trailing 28-17 with 131 remaining in the game the Jayhawks staged one of their patented last ditch rallies—the kind that always seem to fall short. KU launched a 45-yard drive after Emery Hicks recovered a 'Poke fumble and finally scored when McGowan caught his second TD
pass from Basler for 16 yards.
Basler passed to sophomore fullback Chuck Schmidt for a two-point conversion and with 1:18 left it was O-State 28, KU 25.
After an onside kick failed the Pokes took over on their own 34. Three running plays and three time outs later they punted and KU took over on their own 46. With only 43 seconds left Basler was thrown for a loss and then tossed an interception to Benny Goodwin. The Cowboys then ran out the clock.
Some fans who left the game early missed the only excitement of the afternoon when KU began its rally. It was a cloudy day and the 8,000 high school bandsmen, here for Band Day, showed more excitement and enthusiasm than did the rest of the 40,000 hometown fans.
It started off as a bad day even
before the game began when Pepper Rodgers announced the suspension of John Riggins, the Jayhawks leading ground gainer and All-Big Eight fullback as a sophomore. Riggins had broken training rules. Rodgers said he would review the case later to decide if Riggins will play again this year.
The Cowboys beat KU in every category rolling up 206 yards rushing and another 178 passing. Quarterback Bc Cutburth had 248 yards total offense, passing for two touchdowns and running for another.
Basler completed nine of 22 for 138 yards and two touchdowns. He only threw one interception but it was costly, stopping the Hawks' last drive. A couple of his passes were dropped and several other times he missed receivers who were open.
The last ditch rally might not have been needed if KU had been able to convert their first golden opportunity. On the fourth play of the game, McGowan intercepted a Cuthurb pass and returned it to the O-State 23. Basler passed to John Mosier to the 11 for a first down. The drive was stymied when two running plays and an incomplete pass left the Hawks with a fourth-and-three situation on the four-yard line. Then Bill Bell missed a 22-yard field goal.
Kansas scored on its next possession, a 52-yard drive when Bell kicked a 31-yard field goal. But the lead didn't last more than two minutes as Cuturth and Cole teamed up on a 70-yard pass play. Cuturth dumped the ball over the line of scrimmage, Cole caught it, broke a tackle and outran everyone to the end zone.
By JOE CHILDS Assistant Sports Editor
The score was 17-14. KU had taken the lead for the first time on an intercepted pass which three plays later was turned into a touchdown. Kansas had momentum for the first time in well... two ball games. Bill Bell teed up the football and sent a booming kick to the OSU three-yard line. Bobby Cole hauled in the football and started up field. The sophomore speedster ran into trouble and handed off to Dick Graham who handed off to Wayne Hallmark who skirted around right end and went all the way for the score.
After the game an elated Floyd Gass sat in the OSU locker room and said that the return was undoubtedly the turning point. He was right.
Last year with Bobby Douglass, Donnie Shanklin and company, Pepper Rodgers had big plays coming his direction in every game. His Orange Bowl squad was heralded as an offensive machine which could break a game open at any time. This year Kansas has yet to fashion over a 40-yard scoring play as are they yet to win their second game.
Sitting in his dressing room leaning—as he usually does—against his locker, Rodgers moaned over the fact that his Hawks haven't seen many big plays this season and when they have, they have been for the bad guys. "I'll tell you we have had more big plays against us this year, in every way," the KU skipper said. "This particular play didn't surprise us. We had seen their films and we knew they had a good football team with fast backs, but it sure hurt us."
And hurt it did, not only in tns game but in the opener at Texas Tech, here against K-State, and at both Nebraska and Iowa State. Each time the long gainer—the one thing that promises to change momentum did exactly that—and spelled defeat for the Javhawks.
Now the 'Hawks stand at 1-6. Discussing the season Rodgers said, "We've played some good football this year—better than our record indicates, but we've never played good for 60 minutes.
"I'm not blaming anything on anybody's inexperience. I still say our team isn't bad, but it is so (Continued to page 8)
Riggins action reviewed today
Tailback John Riggins, KU's leading rusher, was suspended from playing in Saturday's game with Oklahoma State for breaking training rules.
Coach Pepper Rodgers said he had held a squad meeting last Monday and re-emphasized the training rules he expects team members to follow.
"John Riggins broke those rules this week," Rodgers said.
Rodgers added that he will review Riggins' case today and decide at that time whether the 232-pounder will be allowed to rejoin the team for the remaining three games.
"When this fact became known and John admitted he broke the rules he left me no alternative but to discipline him."
Until he meets with Riggins, he said, he will have no further comment.
Details of Riggins' infraction were not disclosed.
New Mexicans have voted for the winning Presidential contender in every election since New Mexico became a state in 1912.
Nov. 3
1969 KANSAN 7
[CONFLICT]
by
"A new Look at The Arab-Israeli Confrontation"
Sir John Glubb
a world renowned authority on the Middle East
Monday, November 3
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union
sua
Union Ballroom
pepper up Jayhawks
5th straight for Jayhawks
(Continued from page 7)
(Continued from page 7)
hard for our boys to have confidence when something like this happens to them every week. I wish I had the answer for it. If I did we would be winning."
Friday night John Riggins, KU's leading rusher, was suspended from the team forcing the injury plagued Jayhawks to mold a makeshift offense. Sophomore Steve Conley was inserted at the tailback position to fill the gap left by Riggins. Ron Jessie played with a broken hand and sophomore Chuck Schmidt started at fullback.
Both coaches agreed that the absence of Riggins was insignificant to the KU loss. Gass said, "Their loss of Riggins didn't alter things on our part. They have such a diversified offense we couldn't have keyed on him anyway."
Conley was second among Kansas ground gainers with 52 yards in 14 carries, and was impressive as a punt returner.
The loss gave KU sole possession of the cellar in the Big Eight with an 0-4 league record and a 1-6 overall mark. After the narrow defeat to the Cowboys Pepper Rodgers stood shaking his head wondering what else could go wrong. He said, "It is a wonder these guys haven't quit. They might as well. Everything has happened to them."
But Pepper might have pinpointed it the week before when he said—as he has before—that his team just isn't that bad, and added that he was willing to prove it—"We'll play any 1-5 team in a bowl." This week, it's 1 and 6.
STATISTICS
Okla. St. Kansas
First Downs 17 16
Rushing Yardage 206 138
Passing Yardage 178 146
Return Yardage 95 51
Passes (Comp'd—Att'd—Had Inte'd) 10-20-2 9-22-1
Punts (Number-Average) 6-40 10-39
Fumbles Lost 2 0
Yards Penalized 79 109
Score by Quarters
Oklahoma State 7 7 7 7–28
Kansas 0 0 11 7–27
Oklahoma State 7 7 7 7-28
Kansas 3 0 14 8-25
OSU—Cole 70 pass from Cutburth (Pruss kick)
(Pruss kick) KAN—Conley 5 run (Bell kick)
KAN-Contley y run (bell kick)
KAN-McGowan 13 pass from Basler (Bell kick)
OSU-Hallmark 97 kickoff return, included 12 return by Cole and 85 return for Hallmark on lateral (Pussick kick)
O'Sullivan 97 kickoff return, included 9 return for Hallmark
Hawk heroics
Kansas split end George McGowan slips between three OSU defenders into the end zone on the first of his two scoring receptions. Starting the game at safety, the versatile McGowan (besides receiving 13 and 16 yard touchdown tosses) made two unassisted tackles and intercepted a Cowboy aerial.
(*PRITS* kRK)
KAN-McGowan 16 pass from Basler (Schmidt pass from Basler)
Attendance—40,000
31
Chiefs stampede Buffalo, 29-7
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) — Jan Stenerud kicked five field goals, including a 37-yard go-ahead boot with 14:09 to go, and Johnny Robinson intercepted two Buffalo passes to set up insurance touchdowns Sunday as the Kansas City
Chiefs whipped the Buffalo Bills 29-7.
Stenerud's kicks, from 47, 34,
37, 44 and 18 yards, were all the
Chiefs needed to overcome a 7-0
first-period deficit.
The 37-yard game-winner that put the Chiefs ahead 9-7 came after Caesar Belser recovered Bubba Thornton's fumbled kick-off return at the Buffalo 22 and
the kansas City drive was halted when running back Robert Holmes was dropped by a charging Bills' line at the 30.
Buffalo's only score came on a 14-yard pass from Darragh to Marlin Briscoe with 5:42 remaining in the first period.
Stenerud cut the Buffalo lead to 7-3 after 2:35 of the second period with his 47-yard field goal.
Foster. Nelloms pace Frosh
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Writer
The KU freshman football team, paced by quarterback Marvin Foster's 54-yard touchdown run on KU's initial play of its opening series, rolled to its third straight victory Friday by trouncing Oklahoma State 35-14 at Stillwater.
Foster got the Hawks off on the right foot when he scampered around right end, picked up some excellent blocking, and raced untouched into the end zone before many of the fans had settled into their seats.
Foster, who directed KU on two other first half scoring drives, led the frosh rushing attack by picking up 90 yards on nine carries. The slender Kansas City Central product alternated at split end and quarterback. As a quarterback he completed 4 of 10 passes for an additional 47 yards total offense.
The KU defense pounced on four OSU fumbles and the Hawk offense capitalized by turning three of the recoveries into touchdowns.
KU recovered a fumble on the Colts' five yard line after a 32 yard punt by Jerry Evans had pinned OSU on the one yard line. Just two plays later, fullback Jerome Nelloms scored the first of his three touchdowns by cracking over from the two-yard line. The conversion made the score 14-0 and it appeared that KU was off and running.
KU, taking advantage of the first of OSU's costly fumbles, scored again shortly after Foster's dazzling run.
Oklahoma State, yet to chalk up a victory in three attempts, came right back to score on the first play of the second quarter. The 62-yard drive was capped when quarterback Emory Ballard plunged 1 yard between his guard and center for the score. Tailback James Williams, a thorn in KU's side all afternoon, gained 24 yards and three first downs during the 62-yard drive.
Nelloms, who also scored on a 1-yard plunge in the second quarter and on a 17-yard burst in the fourth quarter, rushed for 70 yards on 16 carries.
Williams, who picked up 95 yards rushing on 19 carries, riddled the KU defense for 85 of
8 KANSAN Nov. 3
1969
his yards during the first half.
Williams has now picked up 336
yards rushing during OSU's three
straight defeats.
Four minutes later in the second quarter, Dellard, facing a fourth-and-one situation on the OSU 40, tried to sneak for the first down but fumbled and KU again recovered.
33
KU marched 40 yards in nine plays for its third touchdown. Foster, who hit 2 passes for 27 yards, set up the score with a 15 yard toss to tight end John Schroll at the one. Nelloms dove over guard on the next play for the score.
A one-yard pass from Dellard to flanker John Weldon with 58 seconds left in the first half cut the Hawks' half time margin to 21-14.
KU's defensive unit shut off Williams and the OSU offense in the second half to preserve the victory. Williams was able to gain just 10 yards rushing in the second half.
M. J. H. W. M. J. H. W.
Jerome Nelloms
The Jayhawks clinched the victory with two fourth quarter touchdowns. Quarterback Bob Bruegging tossed 16 yards to Schroll for the first of the two scores.
Schroll, by catching five passes for 90 yards against the Colts, overtook Foster as KU's top pass receiver. Schroll has caught 12 passes for 159 yards this year and Foster has snagged 10 for 161 yards.
Nelloms' third touchdown, a 17-yard run, climaxed KU's offensive explosion. Bob Helmbacher, KU's new soccer style placekicker, kicked his fifth extra point to conclude the Jayhawks' 35-14 victory.
MOVABLE PARK
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI)To beautify a barren block cleared for urban renewal in the business section here, a portable park has been opened by a merchant group. The park, believed to be the only one of its kind in the United States, can be dismantled quickly and reassembled elsewhere in the city as other areas are razed.
Flowering crab apple trees were brought from Ohio and set in decorative planters. In addition to trees and shubbbery the park contains two bus stop shelters. During evening hours picturesque gaslights provide soft, mellow illumination in the mini park.
It's Your Next - to - last Chance
to enroll in classes beginning Mon. Nov. 3, 7-10 p.m., Regular Section Tues., Nov. 4, 2:30-5:30, Freshmen English 7-10 p.m., Western Civ.
CALL VI3-6424
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics
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Big Eight Wrap-Up
Missouri turns the Purple blue
Missouri 41, Kansas State 38
In one of the epic contests in Big Eight history, Missouri survived a blistering second-half comeback by Kansas State to regain a share of the conference lead.
Down at various times 14-0,
21-6 and 28-12 (the last with 5:50
left in the third quarter) the
Wildcats stormed back behind
Osawatomie Lynn Dickey's brilliant passing. In another record-
setting performance, the white-shoed junior moved the Deep Purple to score 26 points in the last 20 minutes of play, although it was his fumble and intercepted pass in the last three minutes that snuffed out last-ditch rallies.
Dickey threw 49 times (a Big Eight record), completing 25 for 394 yards (another conference mark). His 411 yards of total offense is also a new Big Eight standard.
The Wildcat quarterback's performance all but overshadowed a brilliant display by Missouri's Jon Staggers. The Tiger tailback accounted for 291 yards as he scored two touchdowns (one a 99-yard kickoff return), threw for another and returned a punt 40 yards to set up the final Missouri score.
The game turned into a wild offensive show by the two teams who now share the conference lead (with 3-1 marks) with Nebraska. Combined total offense of both teams was 979 yards. Ka pass interception in Colorado territory.
Mack Herron scored four K-State touchdowns, raising his season scoring totals to 18 touchdowns and 108 points, best in the nation in both categories. Missouri's Joe Moore was the game's leading rusher with 144 vards.
Nov. 3
1969 KANSAN 9
State gained 24 first downs to Missouri's 21.
Next week: Missouri vs. Oklahoma at Columbia; Kansas State at Oklahoma State.
Oklahoma 37, Iowa State 14
Advanced Reading Technique
Steve Owens, the Oklahoma scoring machine, carried the ball 53 times for a school-record 248 yards as the Sooners rolled over Iowa State Saturday at Norman.
The senior tailback tallied four touchdowns—leaving himself just one short of the NCAA three-year career record held by Glenn Davis of Army. He scored on runs of 2,4,1,and 3 yards.He also completed a pass of nine yards and caught one for 6 vards.
Oklahoma was impressive in their comeback from a 59-21 loss to Kansas State the previous Saturday. Their season won-loss record now stands at 4-2 overall and 2-1 in Big Eight play.
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Oklahoma also scored on a 50-yard touchdown pass from sophomore quarterback Jack Mildren to wingback Geoffrey Nordgren and a 23-yard field goal by Bruce Derr.
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Nebraska 20, Colorado 7
The Big Red of Nebraska converted two of three pass interceptions by Dana Stephenson into touchdowns as the Cornhuskers upset Colorado. The victory gave Nebraska a share of the lead in the topsy-turvy Big Eight title race.
Oklahoma overcame four lost fumbles, two pass interceptions and 113 yards of penalties as they
Nebraska 20, Colorado 7
dominated the game, picking up 339 yards on the ground, while holding Iowa State to 72.
Next week: Nebraska vs. Iowa State at Lincoln; Colorado at Kansas.
Mary Todd Lincoln was born near the present downtown section of Lexington in 1818. She moved to Springfield, Ill., in 1837 and married Lincoln five years later. The couple had four sons.
Next week: Oklahoma at Missouri; Iowa State at Nebraska.
22
Colorado scored first on a 7-yard run by Bob Anderson, former all-conference quarterback now playing tailback for the Buffaloes. But a 61-yard scoring drive after Stephenson's pass interception, added to a field goal by Paul Rogers, gave Nebraska a half-time lead that it never lost
The Cornhuskers scored again early in the second half on a 27-yard pass from quarterback Van Brownson to Dan Schneiss, after
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI)—The wife of Abraham Lincoln, 16th president of the United States, was born here and her home is a local point of interest.
Staggers the imagination
LINCOLN'S WIFE
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
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BIII Manser graduated in 1967 with a B.S. degree in Industrial Engineering.
CARL E.
After an intensive training program, Bill became an IBM marketing representative. His job: selling computer systems.
His technical background is valuable
Many of Bill's customers are involved in scientific and engineering applications."That's where my engineering degree really pays off. I can come to grips with technical details without losing sight of the overall picture."
Marketing is solving problems But, as Bill points out, there's a lot
more involved in marketing at IBM than just selling a product: "I sit down with the customer and learn what his information handling problems are. Then I have to analyze his total operation in depth.
Only after weeks—sometimes months—of analysis do I recommend a specific computer system that will answer his needs.
"One of the best things about my job is that I get to deal with people at the top. Company presidents. Decision-makers. And my work helps them make multimillion-dollar decisions.
"I have a partner and we operate as a two-man team. IBM believes that small teams generate more and better ideas. So do I."
Visit your placement office
Bill's is just one example of the many opportunities in marketing at IBM. For more information, visit your placement office.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
IBM
"My engineering degree helps me sell computers."
computers.
Promote three to staff sergeants
KU Campus Police centralize operations
KU's Traffic and Security Department is undergoing a reorganization procedure and three men will be promoted to shift sergeants, Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, and E. P. Moomau, director of traffic and security, said Friday.
Police adopt constitution
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)—Police men from 11 U.S. cities announced Sunday the adoption of a constitution, with a no-strike clause, forming the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, AFL-CIO.
The announcement of the union came at a news conference following a two-day,closed-door session.
John J. Cassese of New York City, acting chairman of the group, said the constitution would be submitted to the AFL-CIO executive council and, if approved, would be circulated among police groups throughout the country.
Sgt. Robert Bragg, Omaha police union president, said that one of the goals discussed informally between meetings was the possibility of national legislation similar to a Nebraska law which recently went into effect requiring mandatory arbitration when police have grievances.
Bragg also said that a possible financial goal would be standardization of all police salaries.
State and federal governments collect an annual average of $155 in special taxes on each motor vehicle in the United States.
10 KANSAN Nov. 3
1969
They explained the organizational move had been planned for some time but that state civil service regulations formerly did not provide a job classification.
Lawton said the move will centralize all security functions under one division and that the two main reasons for the merger were increasing security problems caused by the expansion of the campus, and the desire to coordinate the men responsible for
Letter urges halt of M-Day action
CHICAGO (UPP)—The Reunite Our Families Group released a letter Sunday sent to the 17 senators and 47 representatives who supported October Vietnam moratorium urging them not to repeat their action.
The group, composed of relatives and friends of the 1,350 men held by North Vietnam, said it objected to the suggestion that Hanoi release all information about prisoners to the New Mobilization Committee to End the War.
William Kunstler, chief attorney for the eight persons now on trial here for conspiring to create a riot during the 1968 Democratic National Convention, said last week that he had met with spokesmen for North Vietnam who allegedly told him that all information regarding prisoners would be released through the peace group.
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promoted to shift sergeants to provide adequate supervision for the added manpower. They were promoted on the basis of competitive examinations taken by the entire department.
security in all areas.
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Lawton indicated the unification move had been under consideration for at least the last five years.
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They are now being placed under Moomau's authority to provide coordination in the security department, said Lawton.
The move will place 53 men under Moomau's control. Lawton and Moomau also announced that former patrolmen Robert Kampschroeder, Bobby Ellison and Ralph Welliver have been
In the past, three divisions have been responsible for different aspects of the University's security. The dormitory patrolmen have been under the authority of the housing department, and the building watchmen have been under control of the building and grounds department.
Three attend honors program meeting
cuss new ideas for undergraduate honors.
Eugene Fox, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and two undergraduate students left Thursday to attend the National College Honors
Council Friday and Saturday in New Orleans.
The two students accompanying Fox are Larry Rosen, Topeka junior, and Sue Wilson, Overland Park junior.
Fox said the council was a meeting of people interested in honors programs. The purpose of the council, he said, was to dis-
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Vietnam cited by Angie Brooks
UN President says responsibilty For Problems belongs to nations
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Angie Brooks, president of the United Nations General Assembly, said Sunday that responsibility for settling problems in the Middle East and Vietnam lies with the nations involved, not the United Nations.
Miss Brooks said settlement of the Vietnam conflict has never been placed on the U.N.'s formal agenda and therefore cannot be discussed.
However, she paid tribute to behind-the-scenes efforts by U.N. Secretary General U Thant who has tried to negotiate on the war
"The United Nations cannot be blamed for not ending the war nor is it at fault in the Middle East situation," Miss Brooks said. "The responsibility rests with those parties involved."
Miss Brooks, a lawyer, represents Liberia at the United Nations. She is the first African woman to serve as U.N. General Assembly president.
Miss Brooks sees the world body as "man's only hope."
"Perhaps we haven't done the best, but I think the United Nations has done a good job," she
Penalties for pot labeled too harsh
"In my carefully considerate opinion, nobody at any age should be allowed to probably smoke anything," Knowles said.
said in an interview, "and now we must combine our efforts to achieve the goals we set out for."
BOSTON (UPI)—Dr. John H. Knowles, executive director of Massachusetts General Hospital, said Sunday he does not believe in smoking of any kind, but the penalties for smoking marijuana should be reduced.
Back in Liberia, Miss Brooks leads an entirely different life from the sophistication of New York's international community. Life is on a farm some 60 miles from Monravia, where she takes care of the children of her laborers when they are ill or in need, and bit by bit has become foster mother to them. She adopted three girls in 1962 while in Ruanda.
Knowles said he took exception to recent remarks by anthropologist Margaret Mead that children at age 16 should be allowed to smoke marijuana.
Miss Brooks was reluctant to talk of many issues before the U.N., of whether Red China should be admitted to the U.N., and the like. She explained that hers was an overall role as president, not one of expressing personal views.
The president reflected about when she first came to the United States to study.
Knowles, in a radio interview, said, however, "I do agree with her and others that the penalties under the law for smoking marijuana propounded by Attorney General John N. Mitchell's office are much too harsh."
Providing for these children's education she called "a rewarding experience."
Her own two children from a marriage which ended in divorce are Richard, 22, an engineer, and Wynston, 21, a pilot.
On her arrival from Liberia, a country of less than two million persons, she recalled that Baltimore was "an overwhelming metropolis. I thought, 'Where do all these people live?'" Miss Brooks was only 17.
Asked to define herself, she said, "I am a humanitarian."
She went on to receive a bachelor of arts degree from Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C., a master of science degree in political science from the University of Wisconsin and a doctor of laws
from Howard University. All the while, she supported herself with menial jobs, including scrubbing floors.
Hijackers returned to U.S. face piracy, kidnap charges
Nov. 3
1969 KANSAN 11
PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. (UPI) Six Americans who hijacked planes to Cuba returned to the United States Sunday to face charges of air piracy and kidnapping rather than remain under the Communist regime of Fidel Castro.
The six men, one of them bringing his four-year-old daughter with him, arrived in Montreal late Saturday night as passengers on a Cuban freighter
Royal Canadian Mounted Police handcuffed them and drove them to the border at Champlain, N.Y., and handed them over to FBI agents who brought them here for arraignment.
Four of the suspects waived even an arraignment and were taken directly to cells.
Two men indicated they would seek help from attorneys, although none were present at the arraignment. The six were held on a total of $750,000 bail.
The men were expected to be returned to the areas in which the hijackings took place. U.S. Attorney James Sullivan said, however, formal orders would have to be obtained along with
enough escorts and he did not believe the men could be moved before Tuesday or Wednesday.
The daughter of one of the hijackers, Mrs. Jean McDaniel of Baltimore, said she doubted the State Department had advance warning of their return because it had forwarded one of her father's letters last week and said the two could correspond.
Her father, Raymond L. Anthony, an unemployed car salesman, was reported to have been drunk when he hijacked a Miami-bound plane last June wearing Bermuda shorts and sandals.
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TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION
AS TAUGHT BY
MAHARISHI
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TRANSCENDENTIAL MEDITATION IS A NATURAL SPONTANEOUS
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Introductory Lecture
by JERRY JARVIS DIRECTOR of SIMS
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 4:00 p.m.
426 Lindley Hall
Ask the people involved with jobs for minority groups about Etna.
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Learn about Ætna. Ask for "Your Own Thing" at your Placement Office. An Equal Opportunity Employer and a JOBS-participating company.
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There's a lot more to be done. But we feel we've made a start. With a number of pioneer programs for the disadvantaged. One teaches men to work computers. Another helps women learn office skills. Still another gets non-drivers qualified for licenses—and jobs.
Some go to work for $ \varEta t n a $ , but there are no strings attached. The important thing is we've prepared them for good jobs.
We understand human needs like these. Our business may be selling insurance. But our concern is people.
Etna is the kind of place where you can do good and make good, too.
AEtna
LIFE & CASUALTY
OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE
Approval on tax reform bill sought by senators before end of year
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., predicted Sunday the Senate would pass his committee's tax reform bill by the end of the year if the senators do not demand an item-by-item explanation and do not insist on extensive amendments.
Long, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which approved the measure Friday, said in a television interview on Face the Nation that he felt sure President Nixon would approve the bill as it is now written. He said that he could not say how the President would view any amendments that may be attached to it on the Senate floor.
PETER WOODS
Rhodes nominees
Four KU senior men are competing for Rhodes Scholarships. From left they are Walt Stromquist, Charleston, Ill.; Darrel E. Reed, Leawood; Steven L. Bredehoeft, Overland Park, and Chris Saricks, Lawrence. Stromquist, Reed and Saricks have also been nominated to compete for Marshall Scholarships.
USSR scorns US policy
MOSCOW (UPI)—The Soviet Union today accused the United States of pursuing a dangerous policy in Laos in violation of the 1962 Geneva agreements.
Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko said in a statement sent to nations that took part in the Geneva Accord on Laos, expressed "serious concern over the
alarming situation that has been created in Laos as a result of further widening of U.S. interference in the home affairs of that country."
SO NEAR, AND YET . . .
12 KANSAN Nov. 3
1969
SO NEAK, AND YET ...
OVIEDO, Spain (UPI) — Jose Fanjul, 26, is the proud owner of a luxury roadster, but he can't drive it. Authorities said he failed his driving test for the 27th time—a new Spanish record.
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Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield meanwhile predicted that the bill would be approved this year and praised Long and the other members of his committee for "working like dogs" to meet the Oct. 31 deadline for reporting the bill to the Senate floor. Mansfield said the Senate would begin discussing it just as soon as it disposed of the controversial nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth to the Supreme Court.
Long declined to predict what amendments would be offered, but he said a likely one would be to raise the personal income exemption from $600 to $1,000.
Moon man steps out
HOUSTON (UPI)—Astronaut Alan L. Bean, spending his last weekend with his family before his flight to the moon, took his wife and daughter to Astro-world Amusement Park Sunday.
The outing technically violated his 21-day preflight quarantine, which began Oct. 24.
"It looks like Al overstepped his bounds," a spokesman at the Manned Spacecraft Center said. "But he probably won't get in any trouble for it."
THE BAND
Danforth nominees
Five KU seniors have been nominated to compete for the Danforth Fellowships. From left they are John J. Mason, Salina; Warren D. Harral, Larned; Bill Nye, Leawood; Walter Stromquist, Charleston, Ill., and Chris Saricks, Lawrence. Saricks, and Stromquist have also been nominated for Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships.
OUR OWN BUBBLY
CINCINNATI (UPI) — America's first bottle of native champagne was produced in 1847 by Nicholas Longworth, Cincinnati, and offered to the American public in competition with imported champagne.
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the STADIUM BARBER SHOP
Closed Wednesday
1033 Mass. VI 2-9400
BELL
BELL SYSTEM
Recruiting Team On Campus
Tuesday, November 4, 1969
Representing
American Telephone & Telegraph, Long Lines Department—Bachelor's and Master's candidates - Electrical, Mechanical, Civil, Mathematics, and Physics candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Locations: Mid-west states initially.
Bell Laboratories Research and Development B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E., M.E., Physics, Engineering Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Opportunities for graduate study. Locations: New Jersey, Illinois and elsewhere in eastern half of U.S.
Sandia CorporationMaster's Degree in Mathematics, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering. Bachelor's candidates of outstanding scholarship in Engineering considered for technical development program. Locations: Albuquerque, New Mexico; Livermore, California.
Southwestern Bell Technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments—E.E.; M.E., E.P.; C.E.; Math-Physics.
Locations: Kansas and the Mid-West.
Western Electric All Engineering disciplines needed to fill Technical Engineering positions in design, product, systems, military research and management training.
Locations: Southwest—Mid-West—Eastern and Northern States.
Sign Interview Schedule in Engineering Office
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Band Day parade draws a crowd
1970
Looks of both awe and amusement showed on spectators faces as they lined a Lawrence street to watch high school students participating in the Band Day parade. Three band members who have already completed their part in the parade show varying emotions as they watch the rest of the bands.
1952
Photos by Halina Pawi
Students from 85 high schools in Kansas and Missouri participated in a parade down Massachusetts Street before Saturday's game. The parade was followed by halftime performances at the KU-Oklahoma State football game.
Reservations for a second bus will be made but if the bus is not filled the money will be refunded, Wolfe said. The reservation deadline is Nov. 9.
Louis Wolfe, program director of the Lawrence Peace Center and coordinator for the chartered bus trip, said Friday 25 people had paid for a reservation. A 400 dollar risk had been paid to insure the charter, although 10 more reservations are needed to fill the bus, he said.
At least one busload of University of Kansas students will leave for Washington, D.C., to participate in the November war moratorium demonstrations.
The KU group will leave Lawrence about midnight Nov. 13 and arrive in Washington sometime after midnight Nov. 15. It will travel independently of any other group, Wolfe said.
He said anyone other than students who is interested in participating in the Washington rallies may make a reservation on the KU bus.
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
The Kansas representatives will begin marching in the March Against Death early Nov. 15, Wolfe said. Beginning at Arlington National Cemetery and continuing past the White House, each marcher will represent one Kansan who died in the Vietnam War.
The marchers will also be in a mass march on the Capitol Building the same day, after the March Against Death. Anti-war sympathizers from all over the nation are expected to participate in both demonstrations.
Nov. 3
1969 KANSAN 13
Wolfe said car pools will also leave from Lawrence and anyone interested in either offering or finding a ride may contact the Peace Center.
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STUDY BREAK SPECIAL
Organized crime said to be influence in marijuana harvest
Hutchinson that federal and state law officers are concerned about the problem.
"They convinced me that regardless of the debate about marijuana as a drug and as a sociological problem, Kansas faces a common enemy—organized crime," Docking said.
Docking has already said he would ask the 1970 session of the legislature to enact a program for eradication of the plant.
Switzerland has not participated in armed conflict since the end of the Napoleonic wars in 1815.
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HUTCHINSON—Kansas and federal law officers see definite indications that organized crime is encouraging the harvesting of wild marijuana in the state, said Gov. Robert B. Docking.
Docking told delegates to the Kansas Rehabilitation Association convention Thursday in
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Area problem girls given new chance
By CAROLYN BOWERS Kansan Staff Writer
A chance for girls to grow up in Lawrence without being sidetracked by unhappy family situations is being sought through a local community organization.
The chance will be in the form of a foster home that houses five or six pre-delinquent girls, ages 12 to 16, who, through a difficult home life, may be headed for trouble during their late teen years.
The program will allow the girls to remain within the community during their rehabilitation. Mrs. Catherine McCree, community organizer of the Lawrence Office of Economic Opportunity, and Mrs. Cynthia Turner, neighborhood developer of the Ballard Community Center, first recognized the home's need after realizing that the only rehabilitation centers for girls were the Girls' Industrial School or other such institutional homes.
They brought their ideas to Leanard Harrison, acting director of the Ballard Center, and the three organized the project.
"We are trying to provide a home situation," Harrison said in explaining the project's aim, "a home with two parents that offers things like allowances and home activities such as cleaning and cooking meals."
The "parents" will act in that capacity by carrying the responsibility for the girls' care and training. A part-time social worker will counsel both the girl and her family during and after the girl's stay in the home.
"They (the staff) can help the family understand what the problems of their child are and help them accept their child's need to have a different kind of home situation," explained Donald Lira, licensing supervisor in the Division of Children's Services in the State Department of Social Welfare.
The girls themselves will help decide which of their behavioral problems need the most attention. Plans for rehabilitation can then be made according to the individual need.
"We're trying to get away from the traditional institutional program with rigid rules where others decide the program and the girls have no say in it," a project assistant said.
Harrison said the home will be the first of its kind offered to girls
SCLC to Oklahoma City
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) — Two top representatives of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) said Sunday "if Oklahoma City has to be another Birmingham, Selma or Charleston, then it will be."
through state or federal appropriations in Kansas. Applications for funds will be made after the operating budget has been determined.
Johnson said he probably would return to Atlanta Monday to report to the SCLC head. He said the SCLC was prepared to "dump its whole organization in Oklahoma City if necessary."
The purely non-discriminatory home will admit girls on the following basis: (Girls living within Douglas County will be given priority.)
- Girls who have been observed as potential delinquents by the juvenile court for exhibiting such behavior as running away from home, shoplifting, truancy or vagrancy.
- Girls referred by other agencies such as the welfare office, or schools who may benefit from living in the home.
In addition to various Lawrence counseling services and vocational training groups, certain departments within the University of Kansas will be employed to write proposals, give advice and lend skills.
14 KANSAN Nov. 3 1969
- Girls who are not allowed to live in their homes or whose home situation are unbearable due to internal family conflicts.
"We are trying to reach a medium through this project where the University and the community can work together," Harrison said.
Although he has consulted University faculty members and students for advice and planning, Harrison stressed that the home is strictly a "community-oriented project."
The North Lawrence Group Boarding Home, a non-profit corporation of nine to fifteen people, will be formed after approval of funds. It will lease the home from the owner, name it, approve all research and evaluation done within the home and conduct all business affairs.
The corporation will also hire each staff member and evaluate and determine the home's effectiveness.
Although application will be made for federal funds, each girl will be supported during her stay in the home by her referral agency.
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The image is a black and white woodcut artwork depicting two figures seated on a bench. One figure appears to be operating machinery, possibly a tractor or similar vehicle, while the other figure is sitting quietly. The background consists of horizontal lines that suggest a textured surface, resembling wooden planks. The overall composition is simple yet dynamic, with bold lines and contrasting shading that emphasize the figures' forms.
7
Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr
A ONE-DAY EXHIBITION & SALE Graphics presented by
LONDON GRAFICA ARTS Publishers of contemporary printmakers
November
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
More than 400 lithographs, etchings,
woodcuts and screenprints on show,
including works by : PICASSO, DURER,
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GAUGUIN, TOULOUSE-LAUTREC
Also MANUSCRIPTS AND MAPS
ITEMS FROM $8 to $3000
South Lounge,
Kansas Union
4, 1969 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
To sophisticated for the downtown hassle? Then Kirsten's women's sportswear may be for you. Try us. We're located two doors from the YUK in the Hillcrest Center.
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---
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Applications and Nominations
- Due November 10. Turn in at the information Desk in the Student Union.
- Selection will be based mainly on one criteria-whether the student has made an impact on KU:whether he left this school changed. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before.Keep that in mind.
- NOMINATIONS should be signed by 3 students. The nomination should include a list of activities and/or accomplishments of the nominee, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- SELF-NOMINATIONS OR APPLICATIONS should include letters of recommendations by 2 students or 1 student and 1 faculty member, a list of activities and/or accomplishments, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- All candidates must be classified as SENIORS.
- Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier, Inputs for mag, or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM, Aux. Will match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY HEART'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcraft with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-godGar-B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday ff
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Que, if you
want goodness, Bar-B-Que is the place
Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special-
phone, phone, phone
I 2-951- Closed Sun - Tue
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive,"New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition
Campus Campus Md House, 411 W. 14th St.
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. tf
FOR SALE -1967 VW Karmann-Ghia Conv. 35,000 miles. New tires, paint, battery. FM-AM. Randy Lefwellwi. 102 Emery Rd. Apt. C-13 842-432-261
Forced to sell, must sarcifiere our 1965,
1 owner Cherry Sea blue exterior,
new black vinyl interior. A.C., side-
walls, power. Ph. VI 3-8445. 11-4
Turn On! Get a blacklight, all sizes.
Turn Off! Turn off the camera.
$12.00 Battery 842-8753, today!
11-4
1865 Montana GTO, 4 spd, 4 BBL., 2115 Pontiac GTO, 4 spd, 4 BBL., 11-4
terior $1375, Calf V 1-3971.
For Sale: must sell "66 TRA IRS OD. L"
for extras, call x450 11-44
7905 after 4 p.m.
63 Chevy H Nova S.S., power steering and brakes. Automatic on floor, snow tires included. Ask for Janet, 442, 842-2420. 11-1
New 695-14 Mustang snow tires, never
625 for both, by Ray Stonebuckle
929 M5I
11-5
4 Track stereo tape recorder, reel to
reel, speakers, cables, mikes. Also
have tapes, $75 or best offer. 842-6180.
11-5
Love wife and 67 Mustang too, but
can't keep both. She's under 23,000
miles. In good condition, standard
insurance. V8 with radio and phone.
er. b42-7402. 11-5
Electric piano made by Fender. 200
watts amp. 4 heavy duty 12 inch
speakers, good condition. 842-4802.
11-1
1967 Pontiac Lt Mans sport coupe,
Shape Call after 5:00, 843-633-11-1
Shape Call after 5:00, 843-633-11-1
'65 Oldsmobile F 85, blue, 4 door,
automatic, radio, 5 good tires,
mechanically sound. Only 50,000 miles.
842-7491. 11-5
Garrard 8 Lab 80 turntable and cartridge (809)E-ADCO) elliptical and magnetic. $70. Call 843-9001 after 5 p.m. 11-5
Rambler, 1964 convertible, red, white,
runs well, $400. 842-4802. 11-5
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
1961 Falcon; four door, 6 cylinder;
good body and engine but needs battery.
$135. Call Chuck, VI 2-9402.
Leave name and number. 11-6
Jaguar—XK-120 FHC. BRb. MAGS mechanically perfect with new everything. Complete records on this unique automobile. Graduation and Navy force sale. Call 842-9044 after six. 11-6
For Sale—Choice Building sites available now in Holiday Hills. Buy direct financing to suit you. Home you'll want later. Construction Co. Vi 3-6153. 11-6
3 locations to serve your every need
How to win friends and influence people* cover your bare walls with *fand* - and - them - only - at Hodge Dogge* posters and blacklight posters. 11-7
Raney Drug Stores
For Sale: one man's contract, Naismith—call VI 3-7239. 11-4
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Remember his or her special day with an extra special gift from the Hodge Podge. Open for last minute shopping. M-F: 10-5:30. Thursday night: until 9:30. Saturday: 9:30-5. 15 W. 19th. 11-7
Forced to sell: 1968 Red Flat 850 Spider convertible. Go best to offer. 27 miles to the gallon, carpeting. For information call 843-8706. 11-7
"For Sale" .22 cal corsair automatic pistol. Also must sell plans and parts of Volkswagen Powered airplane. 842-1380. 11-5
NOTICE
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white, everything in it tat—good mechanical shape, not front seat. Call Frank Kinsman, 2-4014 or write 211. E.九th nute, Kansas. 11-14
Quality '68 Chev. Imp. ash gold, 4d h.T. H., R. P.S., A.C. turb-hydro-matic. 250 H.P., bus reg., undercoated, low mileage, excel. cond. Has 5-yr-50,000 mile warranty. Priced to sell. See at 1339 Penn. M-F. 5-7 p.m.
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair problem. We offer repair station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynakis and Marantz. Call 843-1484. If
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive. "New Book of Western Civilization" 4th Edition at Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Pennyriah bra and girdle for the figure you should have. For the comfort you should have. Call for your private fitting. Pennyriah bra. Call for your private fitting. B 2-1266 or M 3-2799. 11-6
Two Kustom speaker enclosures with three 15" Lifetime Jensens in each Good condition. Call VI 2-4718 after 5:30. 11-5
Sunflower Dress Factory. Unique clothing for men and women. India prints, fringed leather coats, handmade shirts and dresses, antique clothes, bellbottoms, jewelry. 19 W. 9th. Open 12-5. 11-7
KU's sports car center is located 30 miles due east in Overland Park. We drive through our complete inventory in stock now. 3-MGB's sports cars. In stock now. 2-TMG's pallets, 2-TR4'S, 1-Tiger, 2-MGA's TRR's, many many others and our motor Imports. 9006 W, 50 W Highway. 9006 Park, Kansas, AD 6-5055. 11-5
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
摄影师
"Please call for appointment"
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass.
VI 3-0330
World's fastest production sports car 0 to 50 mph in 3 seconds. Why buy a Corvette when you can own a Cobra Coupe type TVR? Gross Motor Imports, 9006 W. 50 Highway, Overland Park, Kansas, ADS 6-1055. 1-800-742-3900.
Take over payments on a walnut finish stereo with AM-FM radio, 4 sp. changer, White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. 11-4
Sports Car Buffers-put snow tires on your car: 6:00-6:50 by 13, good shape, $20. 842-1047. 11-4
Would you like to sub-lease my three to four person Harvard Square Apt. Good location, close to campus information call John at VI 2-04231-11-11
Visit our stere component room basement floor and get this 33 stere album for 25c with this ad as a coupon Ed Ames, Peter Nero, Henry Cohen, Liam Carey, Sarah Gold, Arthur Fledler, Liam Stirling, Min. Morton Gould, Si Zenter, at Ray Stoneback's, open Mon. and Thurs. eaves, downtown. 11-5
ments and Yountain service.
Anything in components amplifiers
watts synchronous echange's
39-8200 you can save at a factory, direct dealer Ray Stoneback's 929. Mass 11-5
FREE—two 8-week old affectionate
female kittens. Completely house-
broken. Please give them a good
home call VI 3-6211 after 5 p.m. 11-6
Do you sew but can't afford high priced fabrics? Just arrived from New York, beautiful designer fabrics; 58-94, low prices, call 843-58-94 or appt. 11-12
Rosalea's Hotel is an oasis in the middle of nowhere. When school becomes a drag, drive to Harper. Kan, who will spend the night in the heaviest bed, won't believe what you see and experience. It's not a booze palace nor a pad but people who are capable of being themselves really dig it. Write for her, write about her, or for reservations — (r a t e s.) $4-$1. phone: (316) 896-9121; ip: 7z058. 11-6
It is significant to note in this connection that graduate students will gather for coffee and conversation in the Traditions Room 7.30 Friday. 11-7
1 or 2 male roommates to share 2 store house. $37.50 monthly plus 4 utilities. Good location to campus. Call Tim or Larry, 843-9635 11-7
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Lost—burlap and leather Princess Gardner billfold at Rubayaty or Gatehouse. Keep the money—reward for L.D.'s Call JoAnn at 843-6101. 11-7
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Contact:
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111 Flint Hall
- Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
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Wunsch named to state post
(Continued from page 1) volved in the case.
The investigation was turned over to Shawnee County Attorney Gene Olander for prosecution. Olander said he would have considered himself "derelict to duty" if he had not filed the charge
A warrant was issued for Bo-gart's arrest at the same time the charge was filed and bond was set at $500.
Bogart, appearing in Shawnee County District Court later Friday morning, waived formal arraignment and posted bond.
Olander said the case would not be placed on the docket until December because the investigation was not yet completed. The trial will be early next year.
Weather
Cloudy and cold with scattered light rain or drizzle today. Snow likely mixed with rain early this forenoon. Clearing and colder tonight. Partly cloudy and not quite so cold on Tuesday. Light northwest wind through tonight. High today in 40s. Low tonight upper 20s.
16 KANSAN Nov. 3
1969
Conviction of the failure to file a disclosure statement carries a fine of not less than $100 and not more than $1000 and/or up to one year in the county jail.
Convicts fill escape way
BOISE, Idaho (UPD)—The 40-foot long tunnel at the Idaho State Prison was nothing more than a topic of conversation Sunday, while convicts were busy pouring dirt, cement and rocks into it.
What had started out as a "great escape" attempt, fizzled when prison officials, who had been looking for weeks, finally found the escape route.
Prison officials said that "seven or eight" convicts were being held in isolation in connection with the attempted break but that charges had not been filed against any of them.
It was estimated that as many as 15 convicts had something to do with the tunnel.
"They sure worked at it, too bad it wasn't something more constructive and along the lines of rehabilitation," a prison spokesman said.
FBI actions criticized
(Continued from page 1)
good companion, a nice guy."
Cook said that they discussed Vietnam at times but he never pressed the conversation along that line.
Cook said the Marine's state of mind changed frequently. "I would say he was erratic." Cook said.
Flight engineer Lloyd Vernon Hollarh, 32, a native of St. Charles, Mo., said the hijacker had 250 rounds of ammunition on the plane. The situation at Kennedy airport, he said, was so charged with danger that, "I felt eight different bullet wounds in back. I was sure it would happen."
Referring to the FBI, Holllar said, "I don't think they did it intentionally either but I felt my life at that time at Kennedy airport was in danger."
All of the crew members agreed that the only dangerous situation occurred during the time the plane was at Kennedy for refueling. Refueling was never carried out because the hijacker ordered immediate takeoff for Bangor for refueling.
Cook disclosed that during his conversation with Minichello, the youth told him he wanted to buy a plane ticket to Italy, saying that "I just don't want to spend any time in jail."
The reference was to a court martial proceeding against Minichiello for allegedly breaking into a post exchange at Camp Pendleton.
Oklahoma City council seeks strike settlement
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) — A behind-closed-doors meeting in the Oklahoma Governor's mansion Sunday has been given a chance of settling the two and one-half-month-old strike by Oklahoma City Sanitation Department workers.
A black Friday March by 2,000 supporters of the striking workers was tense as the demonstrators who marched without a parade permit were told they were entering an off limits area, proclaimed so by Mayor James Norick in a limited state of emergency statement the night before.
The recent awakening last week included another walkout and has stiffled garbage collection, so that some areas receive no pickup service from the city. Garbage trucks have been stationed at 26 fire stations so that citizens may have a place to take their over-filling garbage cans.
State Rep. Archibald Hill, D-Oklahoma City, said the meeting had a 50-50 chance of providing the key to a solution, but after six hours there was no comment from participants.
The Aug. 19 strike by nearly 200 workers lost strength until recently because of a city council promise of a pay hike for workers, but none appeared on paychecks. The council ammended their position which was accepted only "in principle."
Police yielded however; there was no violence.
Gov. Dewey Bartlett offered his home as a neutral site for negotiations and both sides were hopeful of a compromise and an early settlement.
The participants on both sides did not meet face-to-face in the secret meeting, but were kept in separate rooms and presented offers and ideas through an undisclosed mediator.
All but one member of the council was present and Norick was reported out of town.
Plans for a midnight march were still indefinite as late as 10 p.m. with a decision to be based on the outcome of the talks.
The city was in a position of not being able to act to settle the strike, because a council meeting was required to change city employment policies, the main issue at odds between the council and the workers.
The city indicated they might agree to rehire 13 strike leaders in their old positions on a probationary basis, but no firm offer had been made, nor could it be until the city policy could be changed. Some workers hired back after the original walkout were hired back in lower job classifications at less pay.
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The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 1969
Chancellor refuses BSU queen demand
By CAROLYN BOWERS and KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Staff Writers
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. refused the Black Student Union's (BSU) demand to crown a black Homecoming queen in a confrontation Monday.
The group pressed their demand, first made in a meeting Friday, during a 20-minute session in the Cancellor's office.
The 40 students demanded that the black queen be crowned during halftime ceremonies of the KU-Colorado football game Saturday, when the University Homecoming queen will be crowned.
The BSU first discussed their demands downstairs, then decided to confront Chalmers, who was in a meeting at the time.
Referring to the Chancellor, Jerry Mumford, Lawrence sophomore and BSU vice-president, said, "He's downgrading our women by placing them second to white women."
One student referring to the administration said, "To them we're just a bunch of kids and we don't even belong."
Although the matter of a black homecoming queen seemed trivial, Mumford said, it was a start for black persons toward gaining their place in the University.
One student said that not all the black students had tickets to Saturday's game.
"We'll get even if we have to crash the gate down," another remarked.
We're going to have our queen, one way or another." Mumford said.
Then a student suggested going upstairs to see the Chancellor.
"He skipped town," John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore, said.
"We'll go upstairs and wait," the student replied.
"You might be waiting until next June, Spearman said.
Several students then voiced approval of the idea and a group of about 25 marched upstairs.
Filing into the Chancellor's private office, they waited for Chalmers, who left a
(Continued to page 12)
JOHN R. BRYAN
Photo by Joe Bullard
Chalmers listened, but refused
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. listened as Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., senior and Black Student Union president, demanded the crowning of a black Homecoming queen.
Nixon rejects hasty pullout
UDK News Roundup By United Press International Capitol march shapes up
WASHINGTON — Leaders of antiwar demonstrations scheduled later this month ridiculed President Nixon's war policy speech as disappointing and insulting, predicting that his comments will only drive more protesters into the streets.
"I think, in a sense, the speech is a clear impetus to our efforts to bring large numbers of people to Washington," said Ted Johnson, a leader of the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. That group is sponsoring a Nov. 13-15 march on Washington.
Apollo 12 launch set
Conrad and lunar module pilot Alan L. Bean, 37, are scheduled to land on the eastern edge of the moon's Ocean of Storms Nov. 19 while command module pilot Richard F. Gordon, 40, remains in lunar orbit in the command ship Yankee Clipper.
CAPE KENNEDY—Apollo 12's astronauts plan to set out on a 10-day mission next Friday that will start returning scientific dividends from America's $25 billion moon flight investment.
Lebanese conflict ends
JERUSALEM—Their two-week conflict with the Lebanese officially ended. Arab guerrillas today returned to the Viet Cong-like war to regain Arab lands occupied by the Israelis.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon Monday night rejected demands for a hasty U.S. pullout from Vietnam and appealed to "the great, silent majority" of Americans to support his course of carefully staged withdrawals keyed to Communist activity.
In an eagerly awaited, 33-minute speech broadcast nationwide from his White House office, the President pledged he eventually would get all American forces back home. But he warned that a "precipitate withdrawal," was not possible.
Nixon said he had a timetable for removing all U.S. combat troops from Vietnam, but refused to make it public. If he did, he said, the Communists would simply wait "and then move in." The timetable could change, he added, if the Communists increase their assaults significantly.
The reaction to Nixon's appeal for greater domestic support of his policies was predictable.
House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford endorsed the President's message completely and declared: "We must not have an American Dunkirk in Vietnam." But Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., said American hopes had been "raised and cruelly dashed."
Ted Johnson of the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, which is organizing a protest march on Washington Nov. 15, said it was "a war speech, not a peace speech," one that was "an insult to the intelligence of the American people."
Unlike his May 14 Vietnam address, which stressed a negotiated settlement with mutual troop withdrawals, Nixon's speech Monday clearly revealed his growing lack of faith in the possibility of progress at the Paris talks.
He appeared at times to assume there would never be a mutual withdrawal or a diplomatic settlement of the war. Instead, he concentrated on his flexible plan for gradual U.S. disengagement under conditions that would leave the Saigon government strong enough to hold its enemies at bay.
Even before he was inaugurated, Nixon said, he made two private offers to Hanoi through an unnamed individual for a rapid settlement of the war. Other private initiatives were made in Paris, through the Soviet Union and through other secret channels, he said.
"The effect of all the public, private and secret negotiations which have been undertaken since
the bombing halt a year ago and since this administration came into office on Jan. 20 can be summed up in one sentence—no progress whatever has been made except agreement on the shape of the bargaining table."
Nixon warned that if Communist infiltration or American casualties increase while the United States is trying to scale down the fighting, "it will be the result of a conscious decision by the enemy" that will be met by "strong and effective measures."
The President replied in a conciliatory tone toward youthful demonstrators demanding an immediate end to the war. Yet he made clear that war decisions (Continued to page 13)
(Continued to page 12)
Candidates battle in off-year state and city hall elections
By United Press International
Candidates for two state governorships and a handful of big city mayorships fired their final campaign shots Monday on the eve of today's off-year elections.
In addition to the governorship races in New Jersey and Virginia, city hall battles are on tap in New York, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Detroit.
President Nixon has personally involved his political prestige in the New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial elections which observers view as nip and tuck. Nixon made a one-day campaign swing into New Jersey on behalf of the GOP candidate, Rep. William T. Cahill, who is opposed by former Gov. Robert B. Mevner.
The President also went into
Virginia to endorse the Republican contender, Linwood Holton, who is trying to capture the governorship for the GOP for the first time in a century. Democrat William C. Battle, the son of a former governor and Kennedy administration ambassador to Australia, opposes Holton.
The New York City mayoralty battle is a three-way contest in which incumbent John V. Lindsay has forged into the lead as an independent-Liberal candidate after being rebuffed in the GOP primary earlier this year.
The New York Daily News poll which is known as an accurate barometer predicted Lindsay would roll up 48 per cent of the vote compared to 27 per cent for
(Continued to page 12)
Campus briefs
CYD to meet tonight
KU Collegiate Young Democrats will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Room 305A in the Kansas Union.
Committee reports will be presented and discussed.
Action group meets
James L. Koevenig, KU associate professor of biology, will speak at the meeting of the Ecology Action Group Nov. 5 on the problems of human ecology.
The meeting, which is open to anyone interested, will be at 7:30 in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Ecology Action is a course offered by the Free University. It was formerly named Politics of Ecology.
Yogi's theories to be discussed
A representative of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, spiritual leader from India, will be on campus today to speak about the Maharishi's theories of transcendental meditation.
Representative Jerry Jarvis will speak at 4 p.m. at 426 Lindley Hall, said Don Anderson, adviser to the KU branch of the Students' International Meditation Society.
Jarvis is international director of the society, and has been with the Maharishi since 1961. The Maharishi founded the society to popularize his ideas among students.
Campus aids United Fund drive
Volunteers from fraternities, sororities, scholarship halls and resident halls will canvass apartment complexes in North Lawrence Wednesday night for the United Fund campaign.
M. Mark Retonde, Kansas City, Mo., senior and president of the Interfraternity Council said the United Fund collections have been bad in this area in previous years and "we hope we will be able to give better coverage."
The Tee Pee will sponsor a "dollar night" Wednesday and all collection volunteers will be admitted free, said Retonde. Proceeds will be given to the United Fund.
Anyone wishing to participate in this project should contact the IFC office, 112B Kansas Union, or go to the Kansas Union Wednesday night.
Octavio Paz speaks on the body
Octavio Paz, Mexican poet and former ambassador to India will lecture on "The Body: Ritual and Rebellion," at 8 p.m., Thursday, in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium.
This is the second of the 1969-70 series of the Humanities Lectures.
Football, rally, bonfire planned
The Homecoming Bonfire and Rally will be at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the northwest corner of Allen Field House.
The rally will be preceded by a band and torch parade from Daisy Hill and a car caravan from the Greek houses.
The guest speaker for the Rally will be Coach Pepper Rodgers. The Homecoming Queen candidates and members of the Joadawk
2 KANSAN
football squad will attend along with the KU marching band
Nov. 4
1969
Fireworks and a Colorado Buffalo barbeque are also planned.
LAST CHANCE
Tues., Nov. 4, 2:30-5:30, Freshmen English 7-10 p.m., Western Civ
to enroll in classes beginning:
Call now for more information
When the 1699 University of Kansas homecoming queen is crowned Saturday, she will be serenaded with "Let Me call You Sweetheart" by 140 men—all members of the KU marching band.
V13-6424
The band will fulfil its traditional role of providing background music for the ceremonies during which Kansas Gov. Robert
Band to offer a 'spoonful of music'
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics
While the queen circles the track in a convertible, the band will play "Cute," featuring Norm Weinberg, Prairie Village freshman, solo drummer.
Docking and Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. will crown the queen.
Official Bulletin
Today
Lecture. "Transcendental Meditation Jerry Jarvis. 4 p. 426 Lindley Hall
The traditional pregame ceremony will contain a new element. Four members of the KU Parachute Club will skydive to the
Jayhawk Jogger Club. Robinson Gymnasium, 4.30 p.m.
Gynnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Jay Janes - Frosh Hawks. Kansas
oboh, b. 30 p. i.h.
Ubbin, c. Club. Bld. 172 Robinson
Gunnison, b. 453, d. 59 p.
Rush hawks, Kansas
Union, 6:30 p.m.
Table Tennis Club, 127 Robinson
playing field as smoke canisters trail crimson and blue smoke.
5:38 p.m.
Special Film "Dishonored" Kansas Union, 7 n.m.
3 p.m. Christian Science Organization
Danford Church, 7:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Rodeo Club, Kansas Un-
Jayhawk Rodeo Club, Kansas Union,
Room 24, 7:30 p.m.
Special Film "Anna Karenina"
Forum Room, Kansas Union, 9 p.m.
Foreign Students. Up sign up for the Nov. 13 trip to Topeka and visits to the Menninger Foundation Clinic and the Goodyear Rubber Co.
Tomorrow
Kansas State Tennis Association,
Dellegates, Kansas Union,
9:30 a.m.
East Asia Lecture, "Philippine-
American Relationships." F Stonil J
4o n.m.
Because the homecoming theme is "A Spoonful of Pepper Helps the Buffalo Go Down," the band will enter the field at halftime playing "A Spoonful of Sugar" from the Walt Disney movie "Mary Poppins."
Classical Film, "Cleo 5 to 7," Kansas- Union Ballroom, 7 & 8, P
Union, 4:30 p.m.
Le Cercle Francais. Se reunira 4:30
dans la Salle Kansas.
sas.Union Ballroom, 7 & 9 p.m.
Concert Course, Budaya, Indonesia
Concert Course, Budaya, Indonesia
Dia Troupe. University Theatre.
8:20 p.m.
8:20 p.m.
Hillel Meeting. General meeting.
McCoy
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Colfax County, N.M., was named for Schuyler Colfer, vice president of the United States from 1869 to 1873.
Games for Weekend 11/8-9
TOPS
Games for
Weekend 11/8-9
TOPS
Wardrobe
Care
Centers
TOPS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
1517 W. 6th—1526 W. 23rd
In By 9 – Out By 5
Same Day Service
"PIGSKIN PICKS CONTEST"
Winner of this week's contest will receive $10 worth of dry cleaning service. 2nd & 3rd place winners $5 worth of dry cleaning services.
Circle Your Choice as Winner
Iowa State at Nebraska
Kansas State at Oklahoma State
Oklahoma at Missouri
Utah State at Air Force
Alabama at L.S.U.
Arkansas at Rice
Mississippi State at Auburn
Baylor at Texas
Georgia Tech at Tulane
Michigan at Illinois
Michigan State at Purdue
Notre Dame at Pittsburg
Wisconsin at Ohio State
Princeton at Harvard
Washington State at Southern Cal
S.M.U. at Texas A&M
South Carolina at Tennessee
Texas Tech at T.C.U.
Georgia at Florida U.
Slippery Rock at Clarion
Pick these scores:
Colorado ___ at Kansas ___
San Diego ___ at K.C. Chiefs ___
Name
Address
CONTEST RULES
To enter: Clip this slate out of the paper or pick up a free entry blank at either TOPS store—1517 West 6th—1526 West 23rd, mark or write out choices and send then to TOPS Pigskin Picks.
1. Print name and address plainly on entry.
2. Mail entries to TOPS Pigskin Picks, 1517 West 6th, or bring in personally at either location. No entries accepted postmarked pr delivered after Noon Friday.
3. Winners will be posted in both TOPS stores Monday, and will appear in next week's contest in the paper.
4. Only one entry per person each week.
5. Winners will be judged on most correct guesses and on closest scores of KU and K.C. Chiefs games. In case of ties, earliest postmark decides.
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS
1—Floyd Temple
2—Mrs. Fred Hageman
3—Janet Jones
Art awards bequested
More than $300,000 to support scholarships in painting and sculpture has been bequested to the Kansas University Endowment Association. The money comes from the estate of Mrs. Clyde Bonebrake Lockwood of Taos, N.M.
Mrs Lockwood, widow of artist and muralist Ward Lockwood, directed the residue of her estate be used to establish the Clyde Bonebrake Lockwood and Ward Lockwood Art Scholarship Fund. The fund is to be used to give annual awards to senior or graduate male students of high merit and exceptional promise in creative painting or sculpture.
The scholarships are to be of sufficient monetary value to provide living expenses and tuition so recipients can practice or study art for a year. Recipients can spend their time at KU, another school or abroad.
In addition, the Endowment Association will also receive nearly 120 of Mr. Lockwood's major works. Sixteen nationally-
alberto jacques
Nov. 4
1969 KANSAN 3
Ward Lockwood
known museums are to be offered one painting each for their collections, but KU will retain the majority. Later, the proceeds of the sale of any of the paintings will be added to the scholarship fund.
Barrow is an English term for an ancient burial place covered with a large mound of earth or stone.
Students who need financial assistance to attend the University of Kansas are the special concern of the Office of Student Financial Aid.
That concern reaches many. One of every three University students receives scholarship or loan assistance from the University. Two of every five students hold part-time jobs while they are attending the University.
KU scholarships plentiful
Queen activities include travel
Monday the finalists were interviewed at a Kansas City, Mo., television station. Tuesday and Wednesday the coeds are traveling to Topeka for television interviews. Thursday they will appear at the homecoming rally at Allen Field House.
By the time the homecoming queen finalists find out who is queen, the three coeds will be known by many people in eastern Kansas.
Saturday will be the busiest day of all for the three.
In recent years more than $2.-
500,000 has been provided annually through KU's Student Financial Aid Program.
The University offers more than 1,700 scholarships annually with a cash value of nearly $700,000.
Over 2,250 short-term loans totaling $400,000 are made each year from University of Kansas Endowment Association funds.
Another $650,000 is available to KU students for long-term loans under the National Defense Student Loan Program.
Students applying for financial aid are asked to submit family
financial information. In determining a student's financial need, a comparison is made between the estimated amount the student and his family can be expected to provide and the total cost of attending the University for one academic year.
Student loans are available from four major sources: funds held by the Kansas University Endowment Association; from the National Defense Student Loan Program; from the United Student Aid Funds Loan Program, the Federally Insured Student Loan Program and from Education Funds, Inc.
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KANSAN Comment
Alienating our friends
PEACE
NOW!
Photo by Joe Bullard
Marching away from "old" friends
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
George Bernard Shaw, in Man and Superman, wrote, "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man."
To a large extent, taking Shaw's artistic overgeneralization into consideration, I have always believed that the reasonable man, in the traditional connotation of the phrase, spends too much time trying to adjust himself to situations which should and could be changed. Oscar Wilde warned that most people die of a "sort of creeping common sense" which is, I believe, somewhat similar to that overly adaptive reasonableness Shaw mentions.
A great portion of my generation is dedicated to making abrupt changes, changes that I usually support with little hesitance. But very recently I've begun to understand a side effect of our determination not to die of that creeping common sense.
I had a talk with a professor, a worried professor. He enjoys teaching and, maybe even more than the actual teaching, enjoys knowing and liking students. He has been teaching for a respectable length of time, but within the past few years, he said, he has detected new "barriers" between himself and some of the students, including some of the type of student to whom he had for years felt closest.
He convinced me that he truly grieved over the new barrier which made him feel uneasy to speak freely in the classroom for fear someone would become hostile and turn off anything else he ever said.
His case is not the one described by Walter Lippman: "As men grow older and take charge of affairs, they must battle a persistent human tendency to see the world through spectacles that fitted them twenty or thirty years earlier. When they are not successful in distinguishing between what they learned when they were young and what reality is coming to be now that they are older, generation gap results." Knowing this professor personally, I am certain that the barrier or gap is not from his own myopia.
I think, rather, that I have been responsible for this barrier. I have been responsible as a member of a generation which, in its enthusiasm to change systems and to change policies has been guilty as the "Easy Rider" Southerners in classifying persons, often of like opinion, at opposite poles.
Don't trust anyone over 30!" say the Yippies—a much—quoted warning.
"I am four years old. We are born twice. My first birth was in 1938, but I was reborn in Berkeley in 1964 in the Free Speech Movement," says Jerry
Rubin. When we say, 'Don't trust anyone over 30,' we're talking about the second birth. I got 26 more years.
"When people 40 years old come up to me and say, 'Well, I guess I can't be a part of your movement,' I say, 'What do you mean? You could have been born yesterday. Age exists in your head.' "
The problem with Jerry's revivalist zeal is that we are not born twice. We're born infinitely more times than that, and rebirth is not necessarily a revocation of your physical age, as if physical age were a sin. The "movement" does not belong to any age group, so there is no reason why a 40-year-old man should revoke his 'first life.' That life surely has something to offer his new-found self.
Jerry Rubin's statements are necessary and in many ways, eloquent. He does recognize certain injustices in American institutions about which most people neither want nor will think. And he sees in justified dissent "the seeds of a new society." But I wonder, and I suppose my professor friend wonders too, if Jerry really thinks those seeds are only within the young, as defined by himself. I might be misinterpreting his ideal of youth, because his ideal seems to me too elitist. Maybe in reality, he believes as I do that every man is reborn many times for many reasons and that the seed of change is in every man—unextinguisherable.
Perhaps Harvard teachers being beaten, Clark Kerr being hit with a pie and other assorted student-faculty incidents around the country're related to the hostilities and the barriers professors are experiencing right here in Kansas. If so, this side effect of a great social force—student power—must be curbed by us students. We have much left to learn, because not only can what we know kill us, but so can what we don't know. It can kill us in many ways. It can kill us while we are trying to breathe life into what we consider dying society.
This does not mean that we should embrace all of our professors and the educational system with which we are involved. There are poor teachers and poor educational traditions, both hindrances to attaining maximum education.
I firmly believe that the teacher-dictator is a relic, an old Edison phonograph which is playing next door to some very fine stereo, full-sound equipment. And educational systems in general are too eager to train persons to fill existing slots in society without taking a galloping pursuit toward supplying society with people who have both the ability and the sense of moral obligation to make changes in that society.
What a great many education critics, particularly students, fail to do is to distinguish noble persons within universities from the old Edison phonographs. This lack of discrepancy has led to what I call a surplus of hostility. This surplus is being thrown in pie pans and it's being carried in fists; it is aggressively negative and its ends will probably prove as profitless as its means.
Yes, Jerry, we must "rise up and abandon the creeping meatball," but we must alienate the fewest number
possible while doing so—not simply because it is good tactics . . . but because "old" professors can be good friends.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646
Business Office—UN 4-4358
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MSSA subscription rates: $6 a semester. 10% payable at Lawrence, Kan. 66044.
Accommodations, goods, services and lodging for students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions express, are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor .. James W. Murray
Managing Editor .. Alan T. Jones
Journalist .. Joanne Rathbun
Campus Editor .. Joe Bullard
News Editor .. Ruth Rademacher
Keeper .. Karen Duffy
Sports Editor .. Jay Thomas
Wire Editor .. Martha Manglesdorf
Editor .. Linda Shearer
Women's Page Editor .. Mike Loyd
Photo and Graphics Editor
Mike Rieke Assistant News Editors
Donna Shrader, Steve Haynes
Assistant Sports Editor. Joe Childs
Assistant Sports Editor Joe Childs
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Business Manager
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GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
a fish is falling from a tree
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
WHY DID YOU DO THAT?
Unicorns
WHY DID YOU DO THAT?
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Daily Kansan.
PETER A. SMITH
MARCO SAN PIETRO
1970.
Photo by Randy Leffingwell
Varied expressions flashed across the face of Robert Wells
FCC member gives opinions
The only broadcaster on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Robert Wells, gave his views on his recent appointment to the FCC yesterday in the Flint Hall film studio.
Wells said his position in a regulatory agency would be quite a jump from his former position as a businessman. He said he had few rigid guidelines for his new job.
He does not favor any governmental agency with only seven members having the power to determine what is in the public interest, he said.
A large part of the responsibility for looking after the public interest, he said, must be exercised by the broadcasters on the local level. He said the broadcasters' code of ethics should play a major role in the decision making.
"A broadcaster who doesn't pay attention to the interests of
the public won't last too long anyway," he said.
Wells said the FCC should not only encourage broadcasters to bring their opinions to it, but also the FCC should go to the broadcasters and solicit their opinions.
Wells said he believed that cable television does not represent a threat to radio, free television or newspapers because the history of mass communications had proven differently. Newspapers were not eliminated by the advent of radio, and neither radio nor newspapers were eliminated by television, he said.
Wells was president and general manager of KIUL, Inc., Garden City. His appointment required his disposing of his interests in the Harris Group of radio stations in Illinois, Iowa, Colorado and Kansas which included minority stockholdings.
Wells was appointed by Pres. Nixon to fill the unexpired term of James J. Wadsworth. His
nomination by Sen. Robert Doles, R-Kan., was approved by the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee Wednesday.
Wells will begin his job as FCC commissioner January 1970. His term expires June 30, 1971. He said this short period allowed him
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Davis elected VP
Prof. Jed Davis, director of the University of Kansas Theatre, has been elected second vicepresident of the American Educational Theatre Association and will take office Jan. 1.
Professor Davis was elected during the 33rd annual meeting held Aug. 24-27 in Detroit.
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Frank S. Zilm, St. Louis senior and student body vice-president, said he will propose a compromise to the Senate. He will ask the body to vote that the architects be given permission to go ahead with the working plans, and that the University Senate Planning and Resources Committee and Parking and Traffic Board be requested to conduct a study to determine ways to alleviate the traffic congestion near the proposed site
New union awaits OK
The proposed KU Sateline Union, in planning since 1966, waits in limbo pending the outcome of Wednesday's Student Senate meeting.
On or before the date when the working plans for the Union are complete, the two committees will be asked to report their findings to the Student Senate.
of the Satellite Union which will be located west of Allen Field House.
William M, Balfour, dean of student affairs, said the Union Operating Board will not meet until after Wednesday's senate meeting, because any decision they might reach with regard to the Satellite Union will depend on the outcome of the senate meeting.
Russian study planned
The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures is accepting applications for an advanced Russian language program in Leningrad this summer.
The program consists of six weeks of study at Leningrad University for eight credit hours, two
ARTHRITIS TREATMENT
BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)—Disability from arthritis can be prevented in the majority of cases if proper treatment and comprehensive care are started early, according to the California director of public health.
Dr. Louis F. Saylor said an estimated 1 1/2 million persons in California alone suffer from some form of arthritis and urged those afflicted to seek medical help promptly.
Saylor said arthritis is not one disease but several related illnesses, including osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis. Women are affected more often than men and incidence appears to increase as family income decreases.
Nov. 4
1969 KANSAN 5
weeks of travel in the western Soviet Union and a week of free time at the end of the tour.
Participants in the 1966 summer program at Moscow University, or the 1967,1968 and 1969 summer programs at Leningrad University are not eligible.
The deadline for application and requests for financial assistance is Jan. 15, 1970.
Financial aid is available to cover the $1,700 cost.
Lyle L. Ost, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arden H. Ost, Burr Oak, has been awarded a Munchin Foundation Scholarship for the 1969-70 academic year in the University of Kansas School of Engineering.
A minimum of three years of college Russian is required.
Muchnic award given
Ost, who will be a senior in electrical engineering, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.08.
The scholarship, which cover fees and many books, was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering.
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Big things happen fast at Tenneco. Why not let them happen to you?
When you get going on your career, you want big things to happen. But in most big companies they happen slowly. At Tenneco they happen fast.
Tenneco itself happened fast. We got our start in 1943 just 4 or 5 years before you were born.And yet,in your lifetime we've grown from nothing to one of America's largest industrial corporations.
And we're still growing. Because we're still building businesses. Like natural gas pipelining. Oil. Manufacturing of construction and farm machinery, automobile components. Shipbuilding. Packaging. Chemicals. And land use.
Which means that we can offer you the chance to make it big fast in just about any field you're interested in. And just about anywhere in the U.S.
If that's the chance you want, talk to the Tenneco representative when he comes to your campus. Don't let your draft status or anything else keep you from making an appointment. It could be the biggest date you've ever made.
We're coming to University of Kansas November 17.
Contact your Placement Office for an interview appointment. Or write Jerry May, Recruitment Manager, Tenneco Inc., P.O.Box 2511,Houston, Texas 77001.
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Harriers outdistance field in Kansas Federation meet
By DAN REEDER Kansan Sports Writer
The Kansas varsity harriers ran away with the victory at the Kansas State Federation Cross Country meet in Manhattan Saturday. KU's other entry, the
KANSAN
Kansas Track Club, showed pronounced improvement in its first meet against major college teams, but still placed a distant last in the seven team competition.
Doug Smith ran the low time for KU, placing 5th in 19:58. Jay Mason placed 6th in 20:01, and Rich Elliott, Dave Andersen and Jon Callen took the next three places with times of 20:13, 20:15 and 20:18.
Rick Trujillo of Colorado University clocked the winning time of 19:44.5 over the four mile
course. Allan Pinka, Ft. Hays State, ran second in 19:45. Roy OldPerson, formerly of Haskell Institute and now running for Wichita State was timed in 19:53 followed by Jerome Howe, K-State, in 19:55.
Team scoring was as follows:
KU-35; K-State-51; Ft. Hays
State-78; Wichita State-116; Colorado
University-120; Butler
County Community Jr. College-148; KU Track Club-223.
Coach Bob Timmons said that the KU harriers looked great. "The five men that ran together were absolutely superb," Timmons said. "They ran back a little bit too far, but other than that they were simply tremendous."
The cross country team will compete in the Big Eight Cross Country Meet at the Stag Hill course southwest of Manhattan at 10:30 Saturday.
"Everybody will field a full team," Timmons said. "We anticipate a very good meet."
Track Club runs well
The KU Track Club, coached by former KU track coach Bill
Back of the Week goes to Staggers
KANSAS CITY (UPI)—Jon Staggers likes music, so well, in fact, that he keeps a tape recorder above his locker in the Missouri dressing room at Columbia, Mo.
Jon had to turn down his favorite rock-and-roll blast Saturday afternoon, so besieged was he by reporters asking questions.
Under prodding, Staggers, a 182-pound senior slotback, admitted he had played a "fairly decent" game.
"I just had a beautiful feeling about this one," said Staggers.
Riggins returns after suspension
John Riggins, Kansas' All-Big Eight fullback, was reinstated to the team by coach Pepper Rodgers Monday.
Riggins missed last Saturday's 28-25 loss to Oklahoma State because he broke training rules.
"He broke one of our training rules," Rodgers said. "We have the same type of training rules that everybody in the country has. He did this after I went over what was expected of the players last Monday. What he did does not necessitate suspension for the remainder of the season."
Rodgers also announced two position changes Monday. George Garrett was promoted to No. 1 split end and Niles Hauser moved up to the first team as an offensive guard.
The Jayhawks lost tailback Mike Reeves for the season Saturday with a dislocated shoulder
Kansas, which has lost five straight games, loosened up in a 90-minute practice session. The Jayhawks host Colorado Saturday.
Nov. 4
1969 KANSAN 9
AUTO WRECKING
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Metal Sculpture
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Tires and Batteries
A Bankmark Store
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
Staggers left 60,000 Missouri fans with a "beautiful feeling," too. All he did was score two touchdowns on a 19-yard pass reception and a 99-yard kickoff return. throw a 4-yard touchdown pass and set up the winning touchdown with a 40-yard punt return to Kansas State's five-yard line.
He handled the football 19 times for an incredible 295 yards total offense. And Missouri turned back Kansas State, 41-38, in one of the wildest football games ever played.
Monday Staggers was named Back of the Week in the Big Eight Conference on a split vote with Oklahoma's Steve Owens, who gained 248 yards on 53 carries and scored four touchdowns in the Sooners' 37-14 victory over Iowa State.
"Jon really deserves the honor," said Missouri coach Dan Devine. "And I'm really happy for him. Yeah, Jon was the difference in the game, but he wouldn't have gone 99 yards without the help of his teammates. There was a lot of good football played in this game."
Staggers was at his best after Kansas State had rallied to go ahead, 31-28, early in the fourth quarter. He set up Missouri's go-ahead touchdown with an 11-yard reception to the Wildcats' one before unreeling the punt return that put the game out of reach.
Jay Stein, president of the KU Track Club, said that the team members ran their best times Saturday.
Easton, has improved considerably since the beginning of the season.
Added Kansas State coach Vince Gibson, "Gee whiz, what a day he had!"
The KU Track Club is currently trying to raise funds to go to the National Federation Cross Country Meet at Penn State on Nov. 24. "We are asking that donations be sent to the Douglas Country State Bank in care of the Kansas Track Club," Stein said. "If we can raise enough money to attend the meet, I think we can make a good showing. It would be great to see our name at a national level," he said.
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
STUDY BREAK SPECIAL
SMALL PIZZA (Sausage, Pepperoni, Beef) PLUS DRINK (Beer or soft)
$1.25
10 to 12 P M
SHAKEY'S
544 W. 23rd VI 2-2266
Big Eight Standings
W L T P Tet Pts. Opps
K. St. 1 0 P 75 13 97
Mo. 3 1 P 75 13 97
Mo. 3 1 P 75 61 44
Okla. 2 0 P 75 61 44
Colo. 2 0 P 50 83
Okla. St. 1 2 P 333 52 69
Okla. St. 1 2 P 333 69 69
Kan. 0 4 P 0 84 19
Conference
All Games
Mo. 6 1 0 1 L T Pe. Pts. Opps.
Mo. 6 1 0 857 14 132
K_K_S 5 2 0 714 261 150
Neb. 5 2 0 714 161 89
Okla 4 2 0 667 202 159
Okla S 4 2 0 571 150 134
Okla S 3 4 0 506 139 128
Iowa S 3 4 0 429 136 129
Kan. 1 6 0 143 126 173
All Games
Intramural Standings
INDEPENDENT B Division I
KU Laws 2-0
Asseh Hall 10N 2-1
Emmon's X 1-2
Dorm Wing (5S) I 0-2
Templin Hayjacks 2-0
Bang Gang 1-0
MREA 1-0
Ellsworth 5N 0-2
Ellsmith 0-2
Division II
Division III
Division III
Frumious Bandsatchnatt 2-0
Bud Boys 2-0
Papa Jake's Boys 1-2
Oliver 0-1
Templin Bazzoms 0-2
Division IV
Radiation Biophysics 3-0
Grendel's Mother 2-0
Bellis (Pharmacy) 1-2
Ellsworth 6S 0-2
Biology Chiefs 0-2
Division V
NEGB Sports Authority 2-0
NUBE 2-1
Eight-Pak 2-1
A L.C H 1-2
Friends of Freud 0-3
Division VI
Military Complex 3-0
Chem Tech 2-1
Beth Tum 2-1
AFROTC 1-2
Insect Squad 0-3
UP
THIS CAN GET YOUR HEAD TOGETHER
Lead your own life.
Enjoy it.
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Anacin may not bend your mind, but it sure will get your head together.
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To sophisticated for the downtown hassle? Then Kirsten's women's sportswear may be for you. Try us. We're located two doors from the YUK in the Hillcrest Center.
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Mon - Sat, 9:30 - 6:00
Thurs. till 8:30
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In the Hillcrest Center
KU Coeds—Dinah Caves and Sherri Berger for Kirsten's
JESSICA SMITH
Photo by Halina Pawl
Ann Marshall
Music demands concentration and emotion. Ann Marshall, Atchison junior, devotes many hours to practicing her violin and other instruments.
Who's Whose
Carolyn Henry, Shawnee Mission junior, majoring in anthropology, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Scott Pro, Shawnee Mission junior, majoring in italian, Delta Tau Delta.
Pinnings
Susan Kandt, Wichita junior, majoring in mathematics, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Ward Whelan, Topeka junior, majoring in business, Sigma Chi.
Lauri Burt, Shawnee Mission, sophomore, majoring in elementary education, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Bob Heath, Shawnee Mission junior, majoring in photo journalism, Phi Gamma Delta.
Carol Markham, Parsons junior, majoring in French, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Bob Stoddard, Roeland Park senior, majoring in chemistry, Phi Delta Theta.
Bobbye Cooke, Wayne, N.J., junior, majoring in music education, to Cary Gluesenkamp, St. Louis junior, majoring in chemistry, Phi Kappa Tau.
Cammy Kocour, Kenilworth, Ill., junior majoring in language arts, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Justin Healey, Durango, Colo., junior, majoring in history, Phi Gamma Delta.
Brenda Pine, Lyons junior, majoring in education, Alpha Pni,
to Dave Dulny, Joliet, Ill., junior, majoring in psychology, Delta
Sigma Phi.
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Coed spurs talent
By CAROLYN BOWERS Kansan Staff Writer
Unlike many aspiring maestros who begin piano lessons at an early age through parental encouragement and later drop them in junior high, Ann Marshall has developed her musical ability in many channels.
The Atchison junior is concertmistress (first chair violinist) of the KU Symphony. In addition to
KANSAN
violin and piano, Ann plays the flute, guitar, viola and recently began organ lessons.
Also she minors in vocal music and will sing a soprano solo in the Chamber Choir concert Nov. 8.
"Ive always wanted to sing," she says, "but I was never sure how it would turn out so I've kept my music mostly instrumental."
She plays the principal second violin for the Little Symphony, made up of students, faculty and Lawrence residents, is the first violin in a string quartet and plays in the pit orchestra of "Die Fleddermaus."
10 KANSAN Nov. 4 1969
She is no stranger to the principal chair of an orchestra, becoming concertmistress of the University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra, a position usually held by an upperclassman, when she was a sophomore.
Summer of 1967 she traveled to nine countires as concert-mistress of All-Student Orchestra USA. The group, sponsored by the Shenandoah Conservatory of Music in Winchester, Va., was composed of selected students who performed 16 concerts in four weeks.
For the past two summers, Miss Marshall has played second violin in the Colorado Philharmonic Orchestra in Evergreen. The 61-piece group, chosen from over 900 applicants, is made up of college and graduate students and professional musicians.
Although her life with strings and notes cuts down on other activities Miss Marshall doesn't regret it.
She said she plans to get a master's degree although she hasn't decided between violin and voice.
"It gets tiring but I enjoy it," she said, "I'd rather be practicing than doing bookwork."
"Of course, I'd like to sing or play professionally," she said in regard to her career plans, "although its hard for a woman to find a position in one of the really big orchestras. Eventually I'll probably teach violin or voice."
The Importance of Insurance SERVICE to the College Man
You see, there are American General offices in all 50 states and many foreign countries. That means convenience, speed and service when you need it—a very important consideration for the college men.
Regardless of where your future takes you after graduation, the College Insurance Plan you acquire today from American General Life Insurance Companies will be just as easy to service as it is now.
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Call these Campus Representatives today
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VI 3-1891 VI 3-1922
Announcement:
to Apartment Renters
You can find a wide variety of rental prices by contacting:
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St. (adjacent to campus)
Visit the office at above address or call 843-4993 for further details. Rental prices are established on an incentive basis, and are competitive with quality one-bedroom as well as two-bedroom apartments.
There is a price for two, three and/or four occupants. YOU CHOOSE THE PLAN TO FIT YOUR REQUIREMENTS.
SAVE MONEY and LIVE BETTER at these CONVENIENTLY LOCATED APARTMENTS.
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WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the advertisement are reserved to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier. Inputs for mag, or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM, Auw. Will match any speaker system. **A40.** Call V2-2618 after 6. **tf**
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY boots in Frye. Beneathcraft with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles express your individuality. Mass. 12-11
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que. If you want honest one-to-good Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone V1 2-9510. Closed Tuesday, Tuesday tf
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, you want some honest-to-gooodness Bar-B-Queue this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sun-Tues. tf
Western Civ Notes—Now on sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Ed. Campus Med House, 411 W. 14th St.
Forced to sell, must saerifie our 1965,
1 owner Cherry Sea blue exterior,
new black vinyl interior. A.C., side-
walls, power. Ph. V 3-84455. 11-4
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. ff
Turn On! Get a blacklight all sizes.
Turn Off! Get a blacklight all sizes.
$12.00. Call $42-875, today!
11-4
For Sale: must sell "66 TRA 19S IOR. OS-
extras", call xx4.
7905 after 4 p.m.
11-4
1965 Pontiac GTO. 4 spd, 4 BBL, 2
white 1375. CALLS V 1-3791, white 11-4
terior 1375. CALLS V 1-3791, white 11-4
New 695-104 Mustang snow tires, never
825 for both. Bay Stonebacks, 115-
929 Mile.
---
4 Track stereo tape recorder, reel to reel, speakers, cables, mikes. Also have tapes, $75 or best offer. 842-6180. 11-5
Love wife and 67 Mustang too, but
can't keep both. She's under 23,000
miles of good condition, standard
insmission, W8 with radio and belts,
842.7402. 11-5
'65 Oldsmobile F 85, blue, 4 door,
automatic, radio, 5 good tires, me-
chanically sound. Only 50,000 miles.
842-7491. 11-5
Garrard 8 Lab 8 turntable and cartridge (809E-ADCO) elliptical and magnetic $70. Call 843-9001 after 5 p.m.
11-5
Remember his or her special day with
the family.
Podge. Open for last minute shop
ping. M-F: 10-5:30. Thursday night.
6:30-7:30. Saturday: 9:30-5:15. 11-7
19th.
For sale: '64 Mercury Park Lane Conv. Replaced top, new tires, blue with white interior, excellent condition, $650 or offer, VI 3-6172. 11-6
Topsy's
on the Mall
pop corn
candy apples
ice cream
home made
fudge
LOFT'S
Cakes
open till 10:00 p.m.
$ \oint_{C} \frac{1}{x^{2}} d s $
806 MASS.
VI 3-1171
**O** PORTRAITS
**O** APPLICATION PICTURES
**O** PASSPORT PICTURES
**O** PHOTOFINISHING
1961 Falcon; four door, 6 cylinder;
good body and engine but needs battery.
$135. Call Chuck, VI 2-9402.
Leave name and number. 11-6
Rambler, 1964 convertible, red, white,
runs well, $400. 842-4802. 11-5
Jaguar--XK-120 FHC, BRB, MAGS,
mechanical brakes.
Complete records on this
unique automobile. Graduation and
airy force call. Sale 842-9044 after
sell.
For Sale—Choice Building sites available now in Holiday Hills. Buy direct from developers in the neighborhood. Enjoy time all want later. Lake Construction Co. VI 3-6153. 11-6
For Sale; one man's contract, Naism-
sill—call VI 3-7239. 11-4
How to win friends and influence people • cover your bare walls with find • them = only - at - the Hodge Posters • posters and blackhit 11-7
Forced to sell: 1968 Red Fiat 850
Spider convertible. Goes to best offer.
27 miles to the gallon, carpeting. For
information call 843-8706. 11-7
"For Sale". .22 cal corsair automatic pistol. Also must sell plans and parts of Volkswagen Powered airplane. 842-1380. 11-5
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white, everything in it a t—good mechanical shock. Over front seat. Call Frank I-2-4014, write 211 E., 9th, 11-4 nite, Kansas.
Quality '68 Chev. Imp., ash gold, 4 dr. H.T., R. P.S., A.C., turbo-hydromatic, 250 H.P., bush reg., undercoated, low mileage, excel. cond. Has 5-yr.-50,00 mile warranty Priced to sell. See at 1339 Penn, M-F, 5-7 p.m.
Sunflower Dress Factory. Unique clothing for men and women. India prints, fringed leather coats, handmade shirts and dresses, antique clothes, bellbottoms, jewelry. 19 W. 9th, Open 12-5. 11-7
Two Kustom speaker enclosures with three 15" Lifetime Jensens in each. Good condition. Call VI 2-4718 after 5:30. 11-5
MGA-16 00-196 1-red, new black top and interior, body and motor in ex- condition, see at 2028 Hampshire after 4:00 weekdays this week.
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear end. Aqua/white, $85.00, contact Mrs. Koehn, UN 4-3633, after 5:30am, 5469. 11-17
Private Guitar lessons -folk flamenco, classic-six years experience also fender stratocaster for sale- Call 842-0340 for Garth. 11-10
NOTICE
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair prob- lability, microrecovery repair station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynakit, and Marantz. Call 843-1844.
Pennsylvania bra and girdle for the figure you should have. For the comfort of your wrist, call for new Pennsylvania bra. Call for your prerfit fitting VI 2-2166 or IV 3-2797. 11-6
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Edition, Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
KU's sports car center is located 30
kUs miles due east in Overland Park. We
complete inventory of preowned
sports cars. In stock now: 3-MGB's,
2-TR4's, 1-Tiger, 3-MGA's, 3-
TRS' s, many, many others and our
major motor import. Impress
9006 W, 50 W, Highway, 11-5
Park, Kansas, AD 6-5055
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Henrys
U
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's h & Mo. VI 3-21
Hurry to Henry's
6th & Mo. VI 13-2139
FOR RENT
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let
World's fastest production sports car. Buy a Corvette when you can own a Cobra Coupe type TVR? Gros Motor Land Park, Kansas, AD 6-5055, 11-5
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Anything in components amplifiers 5-130 watts synchronous changers' batteries can be stored. You can save at a factory, direct dealer. Ray Stoneback's 329 Mass. 11-5
Sports Car Buffs—put snow tires on
60-50-60 to 13, good shoes on
82, 842-1047-90
$120
Take over payments on a walnut finish stereo with AM FM radio, 4 sp. changer, White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. 11-4
Visit our stere component room basement floor and get this 33 stere album for 25e with this ad as a coupon. Ed Ames, Peter Nero, Henry Mancini, Floyd Cramer, Marty Gold, Robert Fletcher, David Hickey, Min, Mort Gould, SI Zenter, at Ray Stoneback's, open Mon, and Thurs, eves, downtown. 11-5
Do you sew it but can't afford high priced fabrics? Just arrived from New York, beautiful designer fabrics, 3 yd. thickness, low prices, call 843-858-2222 appt. 11-12
TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations
Would you like to sub-lease my three to four person Harvard Square Apt. Good location, close to campus. For information call John at VI 12-11-11
FREE—two 8-week old affectionate female kittens. Completely house-broken, large and distemper shots required. Give them a gift home. Call VI 3-621-2 after 5 p.m. 11-6
Rosaleo's Hotel is an oasis in the middle of nowhere. When school becomes a drag, drive to Harper, Kan. How can you get there? The heaviest hotel in the Midwest. You won't believe what you see and experience. It's not a booze palace nor a pad but people who are capable of being themselves really dig it. Write a letter to Rosaleo for reservations — r (at a rate: $4-$7), phone: (318) 896-9121, zip: 67058 11-6
You can be the 1 to live in these
carpeted, Drapes, All Electric Kitchen
with dishwasher. Call Hird Construe-
rion V. I. 3-6154. Evenings VI.
5739.
Malls Shopping Center
Have one 2 Bedroom Apt. for 3 or 4
rooms. For kitchen for kitchen
appliances, VI 3-6188
It is significant to note in this connection that graduate students will gather for coffee and conversation in the Traditions Room 7:30 Friday 11-7
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for wiener roasts and Hayrack rides. For more information, Call: Max Laptad, VI 3-4032. tf
1 or 2 male roommates to share 2 store house. $37.50 monthly plus 14 utilities. Good location to campus. Call Tim or Larry. 843-9635. 11-7
Rooms for Rent: Rooms with refrigerator for males. Linens furnished and laundered, off street parking, parking area, and near downtown. Call Vi 3-5767. 11-6
Rent a straight sewing machine. $4.00
a month, White Sewing Center, 916
873-825-9200.
University Terrace Apt., 1 & 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished available. Mgrs. Office, 1529 West 9th. Call 842-1105 or 843-1433. 11-6
VI 3-1211
For Rent Furnished apt. for 2 or 3
room. VI 3-7890; after 16-
call VI 3-2851.
LOST
Lost—*Shmeese* Sealpoint neutered male, no front claws, clipped whiskers, very crosseyed, very big, 15-20 pounds. Reward VI 2-4539. 11-4
Lost Sunday 26 in Danforth Chapel
Reward Ball 842-473-11-5
Reward Ball 842-473-11-5
Johnny Carson is a great guy. We love him, so does everyone else, but we would like to have his picture back. The FLIJS. 11-6
New York Cleaners
Losl-`burlan` and leather `Princess Gardner billfold at Rubayyat or Gate-house`. Keep the money--reward for L.D.'s Call JOAnn at 843-6011. 11-7
Lost pair of women's octagonal tortoise-shell glasses near Flint Hall. Thurs, call Jay Ghilino, VI 3-1101. I'm blind without them. 11-7
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
Lost—Dietzen slide rule in brown case. Has initials "A.M." engraved in black on slide and rule. $5.00 reward to finder. 842-9297. 11-7
FOUND
926 Mass.
Lost full tool box. Oct 26 evening between Lawrence (4th and North) and Tonganoxie via Hwy. 40. Urgently needed. Call 843-8468. 11-10
Approx. 2 weeks ago a Black um-
brella was discovered in L1-5
call 842-7136 and pay for 11-5
Found—a very nice mule cat. Describe
describe him, pay for this
call. Cail 842-3997
HELP WANTED
EXPERIENCED Student Linotype Operator to work 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. Job good pay, working conditions, steady job. Can Wm, Smith, U 4-3412.
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part person only; person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa.
VI 3-0501
WANTED: Dishwasher to work in Fraternity apprx. 8:30-9:30 a.m.; and/or 12:30-1:30 p.m. Call Rick Nelson, VI 3-6244 after 6 p.m. 11-4
Wante d'l Rock bands. Apply at
Dell, and 5--directly behind Linn's. 11-10
WANTED
Male & Female students for local sales promotion work. Phone VI 3-7881, 9 a.m. to 12 midnight—Monday thru Friday. 11-7
Home of the "Big Shef"
Ironings to do in my home. 842-3447
Earn $60.00 per sale full or part time.
Coin vending equipment. Interview
Tues., Wed., or Thurs. Call Mr. Sigler,
842-8622
11-6
Baby sitting in my home. Play yard
toys. 3020 Iowa, H19. Call 11-5
3584
BURCER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Someone with attractive hand printing or writing to address a few dozen customers per envelope 1 furnish accommodation and envelopes 843-3726 after 6 p.m.
Babyshirt Monday and /or Wednes-
afternoons 1:15-3:15 Call Vibes 11-5
7822
Wanted: part time male and female help for bartenders and waiters. Apply between 4 and 5. Tues.-Fri, at 840 W. 24th, directly behind Lum's. 11-10
TYPING
Theses, term papers, manuscripts, and miscellaneous. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama. VI 3-1522. 11-4
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist and/or editor. English glish-Speech Education. Electric office-size typewriter. 843-2873. 11-24
TYPING: Experienced typist will type
thesis, themes, misel. typing. Have
written with pier wires on a
Efficient and fast service. Phone
13- 15-
9554, Mrs. Wright. Phone 12-
Prompt, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, dissertations, miscellaneous papers. Electric VI-Corona. Pica paper, Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. Pica paper, Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440.
ENTERTAINMENT
SERVICES OFFERED
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kaua'i, 913-648-1777.
Foreign Car Service Wayne Harper,
Foreign Car Sales now specializing in foreign car sales. Machine work, MG, Jag, Austin Healy Ernie Cars Sales 716 N 2nd VI 5-4
Minnie Pearl's
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKIE
Call in or Carry Out
FREE Delivery over $5.00
VI 3-8200
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
SPECIAL
November 4
DISHONORED 7:00 p.m. starring Marlene Dietrich
FILMS
ANNA KARENINA
9:00 p.m.
starring Greta Garbo
75c or $1.00 for both
Kansas Union
POPULAR
November 5
CLEO 5T07
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Director Agnes Varda 75c Kansas Union
November 7,8
ELVIRA MADIGAN
7:00 and 9:30 p.m.
50c
Kansas Union
Chancellor refuses BSU's demand
(Continued from page 1)
Council of Deans' meeting and spoke with them.
After about 20 minutes, the group quietly left the office.
Chalmers said after the meeting that the discussion centered on the recruitment of black students and faculty, and the implementation of instructional programs for blacks.
The students had also requested that equal time be allowed for the crowning of a black homecoming queen.
"I said this was not possible," Chalmers said after the meeting, "because selection of the queen and the crowning ceremony represents the total University community. This group involved only a small portion of that community."
He said he expected a black queen to be crowned despite his statement.
Chalmers said he had been presented a list of requests at Friday's meeting with the BSU. He told the group then that he would bring the requests to the attention of the appropriate University officials and reply in ten days to two weeks.
Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill.
Election battles rage across U.S.
(Continued from page 1)
Democrat Mario E. Procaccino and 23 per cent for Republican John J. Marchi.
In Cleveland, Carl Stokes, the first Negro to be elected mayor of a major city, was bidding for a second term in a close contest with Republican Ralph J. Perk.
The Pittsburgh race matched Democrat Peter F. Flaherty, who upset the regular party organization to win nomination, against the GOP's candidate John K. Tabor.
A nonpartisan election in Detroit pits two Democrats for the mayoralty—Richard H. Austin, Wayne County auditor and a Negro, against Wayne County Sheriff Roman S. Gibbs who is white.
12 KANSAN Nov. 4 1969
Ω OMEGA
for a lifetime of proud possession
A watch she'll love
automatically
Self-winding Ladymatic, winds it-
self on the wrist. 14K white or
yellow solid gold case. Sapphette
faceted crystal ... $150
With strap ... $150
Marks Jewelers
Del Eisele, certified gemologist
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
AGS
BRONZE
WATCH
100M
20"
15"
10"
5"
20"
senior and BSU president, called the Friday meeting unsuccessful.
AGS
"It was the usual discussion, the usual send-it-to-committer-
Weather
Mostly fair with warmer daytime temperatures today through Wednesday. Light west to northwest winds today and tonight. High today mid 50s. Low tonight upper 20s. Precipitation probabilities near zero today, tonight and Wednesday.
NO FAT IS A DISEASE
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—To adherents of the slimming diet cult, total lipodystrophy, which is the complete absence of fatty tissue in the body, may sound like a dream come true. Hardly. Such a condition is a disease and, fortunately, it is relatively rare.
Dr. Richard L. Wesenberg, Dr. John L. Gwinn and Dr. George R. Barnes Jr., radiologists at the University of Southern California School of Medicine, studied four children with the disease and their x-ray findings showed a striking lack of fat, easily discernible on x-ray film; advanced bone age; over-development of sinuses and mastoids in the skull; and sometimes a slightly larger heart and almost always larger kidneys.
have - to - discuss - it - with - the-other-deans procedure," he said.
Bright said Chalmers agreed to work with two members of the BSU to seek a settlement.
The BSU, Bright said, wanted these students included in every administrative meeting for interpretation, so that none of the demands would be misread.
Bright and Spearman returned to ask the Chancellor for a statement in the next 24 hours concerning the homecoming queen
"Ive given the final word," Chalmers said.
Spearman asked why the Chancellor had gone to the meeting of the deans without notifying the black students.
Chalmers replied that he had not understood the students' request included sitting in on every administrative council which met.
"You have to. We don't want your interpretation and his interpretation and his interpretation," Bright said, pointing to faculty members present in the room. "You might think it was a good program but it still might not be what we wanted."
Bright said after the meeting that the black students were in the process of electing a homecoming queen to be chosen Thursday or Friday.
"We will ask anyone to nominate any black girl who fills this position," he said, explaining the selection process.
Asked if students planned to carry out their own crowning ceremony at the game despite the Chancellor's statement, the BSU president did not comment.
Although he expects black students to sit together at Saturday's game, Bright also did not comment on the statement made at the meeting in Strong Hall concerning those without game tickets.
Nixon rejects hasty pullout
(Continued from page 1)
were his alone to make as President.
Speaking midway between nationwide antiwar demonstrations, the President told the nation's youth: "I respect your idealism. I share your concern for peace. I want peace as much as you do."
Then, the President said, "To you, the great silent majority of my fellow Americans, I ask for your support."
"Let us be united for peace. Let us also be united against defeat. Because let us understand: North Vietnam cannot defeat or humiliate the United States. Only Americans can do that."
Despite fruitless U.S. diplomatic efforts in Paris and elsewhere, Nixon listed areas of success in de-escalating the conflict and
carrying out his announced intention on Guam last July of turning more of the burden of the fighting over to South Vietnam.
The President said we must "persist in our search for a just peace through a negotiated settlement if possible, or through continued implementation of our plan for Vietnamization if necessary—a plan in which we will withdraw all of our forces from Vietnam on a schedule in accordance with our program, as the South Vietnamese become strong enough to defend their own freedom."
Nixon said his course "is not the easy way, but it is the right way."
Despite his "discouraging" report on diplomatic initiatives, the President indicated strongly that
secret U.S. probings were continuing in the hope of some sort of breakthrough.
At one point in his speech, he said: "We have taken other significant initiatives which must remain secret to keep open some channels of communication which may still prove to be productive."
Yet, he said, "there can be now no longer any doubt that progress in negotiation depends above all on Hanoi's deciding to negotiate seriously."
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
Bandolino
Bandolino
BANDOLINO PRESENTS
Lazy Daisy Bandolinos ... fresh, sparkey mini-shoes that do nice things for all your walking hours ... Two-part Bandolinos: the newest of new fashion shapes and the pure undistilled fashion colors of Fall. Hand crafted in fine Italian leathers by those fine Italian hands. Bene—black patent, camel, red, navy, blue. Bombetta—black patent. Sizes 4A to B to 11.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
BOMBETTA
BENE
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
VENICE
BOMBETTA
COLLEGE OF STATISTICS
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
BROOKLYN, N.Y.
Photo by Burt Lancaster
Black Homecoming proposals discussed
Black Student Union members (from left) John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore, Geraldine Jones, Kansas City freshman, and Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., senior, left Strong Hall Tuesday morning after discussing their homecoming plans with the Chancellor.
The University of Kansas Homecoming Committee voted Tuesday night to give recognition to a black queen at Saturday's homecoming game, but vetoed the Black Student Union's (BSU) request to honor the black royalty at the same time as the University queen.
BSU's queen plan rejected
The committee, considering requests made earlier by the BSU in regard to the halftime ceremonies and crowning procedures, approved several alternate opportunities for recognition of the BSU queen. They are:
- A five-minute pre-game period during which the BSU may hold a crowning ceremony on the football field and/or a motorcade around the track between the time the teams leave the field and the band enters to play.
- A period of time at the conclusion of the half-time homecoming ceremony after the Homecoming queen's motorcade has completed its circuit of the field for a motorcade for the BSU queen and her attendants, with appropriate announcement by the homecoming narrator on the public address system.
- A combination of a pre-game crowning ceremony on the football field and a motorcade at half-time at the conclusion of the University Homecoming queen's motorcade.
The BSU has been requested to submit an outline and script of its planned ceremony to the ceremonies committee by Thursday noon for the Committee's approval. The BSU will be responsible for all planning and arrangements although the Homecoming committee has offered to help with details.
Earlier four representatives of the BSU had appeared before the Homecoming Committee to request the sharing of the half-time ceremonies of the KU-Colorado homecoming game with the crowning of the black students' queen.
Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., senior and BSU president, requested the crowning of the black queen prior to the crowning of the University Homecoming queen. He outlined specific proposals concerning details of the half-time ceremonies.
Emily Taylor, dean of women and member of the steering committee, pointed out to the committee that the BSU had had the opportunity to go through the proper channels of nominating a queen candidate but refused to do so.
Jennifer Gille, Topeka junior and chair-
(Continued to page 16)
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
U.S. offers peace plan
CAIRO—The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al Ahram said today the United States has offered Egypt a new peace plan for the Middle East. The report coincided with a new Israeli warning to one of its Arab neighbors.
Israel told Lebanon it reserved the right to attack in retaliation for guerrilla raids staged from Lebanese territory. The warning was made in a televised statement Tuesday by Foreign Minister Abba Eban.
Brominski wins election
WILKES-BARRE, Pa.—Judge Bernard C. Brominski, whose ruling on a request for an autopsy on Mary Joe Kopechne is expected shortly, won a lopsided re-election victory Tuesday at the Luzerne County Court.
With 335 of 408 divisions in Luzerne County reporting, Brominski, an 11-year-veteran of the bench, received 62,543 yes votes reaffirming his seat. He received 7,743 against retention.
Nixon gives cabinet rank
WASHINGTON—President Nixon has named Bryce Harlow and Daniel P. Moynihan presidential counselors with cabinet rank —only the second and third men to hold that title.
Nixon also named his counsel, John D. Ehrlichman, to the new post of presidential assistant for domestic affairs.
Arthur Burns, the first person to be designated counselor, was named by Nixon in October to become chairman of the Federal Reserve Board Jan. 31.
Options face committee
WASHINGTON—A last-minute offer by broadcasters left Congress uncertain today whether cigarette commercials should leave the air by law or industry abstinence—and when.
The Senate Commerce Committee faced three options today in a closed meeting. One would outlaw television and radio cigarette commercials.
A second would grant nine cigarette makers a special antitrust exemption so they could carry out their offer to stop voluntarily all broadcast advertising next September.
The third, the National Association of Broadcasters promised to black out cigarette commercials effective Sept. 1, 1971.
--man to be elected mayor in Kentucky.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of KansasLawrence, Kansas Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1969
Election results mixed
By United Press International
Republican candidates captured the governorships of New Jersey and Virginia from Democrats in Tuesday's elections and sent President Nixon's political stock soaring.
Results were mixed in big city elections, where racial tensions and the law-and-order issue dominated the campaigns. Mayor John V. Lindsay was reelected in New York. Cleveland re-elected a black mayor but in Detroit, a black candidate was beaten in a tight contest.
Voters in the predominantly white community of Glasgow, Ky., of about 10,000 have chosen to keep their Negro mayor, Luska J. Twyman, for a full four-year term, making him the first black
The Democrats re-elected Carl B. Stokes, only elected Negro mayor of a major American City, in Cleveland, the nation's eighth largest. In Louisville, Ky., and Syracuse, N.Y., the Democrats turned out incumbent Republican administrations.
Lindsay, denied renomination by the Republican party, was re-elected as the Liberal party and independent candidate but with less than a majority of the vote. His law-and-order opponents were Democratic City Controller Mario A. Procaccino, who finished second and Republic State Sen. John J. Marchi, also the Conservative party nominee, who ran a weak third.
In Detroit, the nation's fifth largest city, Roman S. Gribbs, Wayne County sheriff, and son of a Polish immigrant farmer, defeated Richard H. Austin, county auditor and a black, in a close nonpartisan contest which divided the city largely along racial lines. Both candidates are Democrats.
In New Jersey, Rep. William T. Cahill won over former Gov. Robert B. Meyner by a margin of about 3 to 2 to restore the governorship of that state to the GOP for the first time in 16 years.
Republican A. Linwood Holton, a loser four years ago, defeated Democrat William C. Battle, a Kennedy administration ambassador, to give the GOP the gov-
(Continued to page 16)
University social policies on Student Senate agenda
The Satellite Union, Watkins Hospital, and University social policies will be among the topics on the agenda of the Student Senate tonight.
Frank Zilm, St. Louis senior and vice-president of the student body, will present a resolution allowing the Student Senate and the Union Operating Board to ask the Campus Traffic and Security Committee and the Campus Planning and Resources Commission to study potential traffic dangers to students walking to the proposed Satellite Union site and the Daisy Hill dormitories."
Zilm said he will also urge the go ahead for Satellite Union working drawings to be finished in March.
Another report from the Student Health Committee will ask the Senate to push for a new student hospital.
Brad Smoot, Sterling sophomore and a member of the committee, said the committee felt the present health center is inadequate and will recommend three proposals. One is for a new wing for the present structure, another for a temporary building in front of Watkins Hospital for additional office space for doctors and administration, and the third proposal asks for a new hospital that the committee estimated would cost $2 million.
The Senate will also discuss social policies and regulations in living groups at KU. David S.
Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said the Senate has jurisdiction over the social policies of all living groups as stated in the Senate Code.
Awbrey said he had encountered opposition from Barbara Blee, Bonner Springs senior and president of the Panhellenic Council, concerning Senate action on social policies. Awbrey said he believed such action was necessary and justified.
Awbrey said seven new senators will be elected to fill vacancies, and Senate committees will give reports.
The meeting is at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Wednesday Night
Only
Midnight
Refreshments
MIDNIGHT
SWEATERS ...11.00
NECK TIES ... 2.00
DRESS SHIRTS 4.00
Madness
KNIT SHIRTS ... 4.00
SPORT COATS ...25.00
JACKETS ... 9.00
SLACKS...10.00
WASH PANTS .3.50
- These are only a sample of the insane prices on special groupings.
- Take advantage of this opportunity to pick up that homecoming garb.
MANY OTHER SPECIALS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST
Alterations Not Included
MISTER GUY
920 MASSACHUSETTS
All Sales Final
Campus briefs
Mexican poet to talk Thursday
"The Body: Ritual and Rebellion" will be the topic of the second Humanities Lecture of the 1969-70 series. Octavio Paz, Mexican poet and former ambassador to India, will deliver the talk at 8 p.m. Tuesday, in the Kansas Union woodruff Auditorium, instead of Thursday, as was incorrectly reported in Tuesday's Kansan.
Mortar Board meets today
Mortar Board will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Dean of Women's office. A representative from the graduate school will be there to discuss the problems of entering graduate school. Anyone interested in graduate school is invited to attend.
Talk set for physics majors
"Graduate Opportunities in Physics" will be discussed at 7:30 p.m. today in 238 Malott Hall, J. P. Davidson, professor of physics, will provide information on physics departments in graduate school, application procedures, fellowships and assistantships.
Chalmers to lunch with group
The abilities and attitudes of business students will be discussed during the fall meeting of the Board of Advisers to the School of Business Thursday at the Kansas Union.
Three business school professors and five students will lead the discussion, which will be featured in the morning session. Chancellor Chalmers will join the group for lunch. A panel discussion led by members from the Executive Committee of the Board will be presented after the luncheon.
Fraternity to hold informal rush
The Alpha Delta Sigma national advertising fraternity (ADS) will hold an informal rush meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Regionalists Room. Oscar Bassinson, Creve Coeur, Mo., senior and vice-president of ADS, said the meeting is open to all students who have an interest in advertising.
Slippery Rock poet at KU
Ken Smith, faculty member at Slippery Rock State College in Pennsylvania, will give a public poetry reading at 4:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Students win scholarships
Two Larned students have won Pawnee County Alumni Club Scholarships of $150 each for the fall semester. Barbara J. Seba, sophomore, and Wayne E. Urban, freshman, are the winners. Contributions from KU alumni and friends in Pawnee County finance
friends in Pawnee County finance the scholarships.
Nov. 5
1969 KANSAN 3
The University of Kansas Department of Concessions began the installation of 13 cigarette vending machines on the campus and in residence halls Monday.
STUDY BREAK SPECIAL
that are the most popular in sales according to the department's survey of local vendors. They will continue to stock these brands until an analysis has been made as to what brands are preferable in the areas where the machines are located.
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
SMALL PIZZA (Sausage, Pepperoni, Beef)
PLUS DRINK (Beer or soft)
Kevin Remick, Union concessions manager, said the machines may be found in the Union, all major residence halls, Summerfield Hall and Strong Hall. No plans for installing machines in Memorial Stadium have been made because it was so late in
Red Dog Inn - 8:00
Spider and the Crabs
Enjoy your
Homecoming
weekend
with the
most exciting
8 piece group
ever.
Fri & Sat
Cigarettes made available machine installation begins
Any revenue from sales in the Union and campus buildings will go into the Union's general operating budget.
$1.25
10 to 12 P.M.
SHAKEY'S
544 W. 23rd VI 2-2266
the football season, he said.
Remick said the machines presently offer cigarette brands
The vending machines, costing six hundred dollars apiece, were purchased by the board through the National Vendors Company. Thursday Remick obtained a separate cigarette vendor's license, required by the state, for each machine from the cigarette division of the State Department of Revenue in Topeka.
1963, "I feel we shall achieve victory in 1964."—Tram Van Dong, South Vietnamese General.
1964, "The U.S. still hopes to withdraw its troops from South Vietnam by the end of 1965."—McNamara.
1967, "I expect the . . . war to achieve very sensational results in 1967."—Lodge
1969, " (There will be) a complete withdrawal of U.S. ground combat forces on a timetable...as the South Vietnamese become strong enough to defend their own freedom."-Nixon
PROFESSORS
KATZ,VELVEL,KETZEL
will discuss the implications of Nixon's Vietnam speech at the SMC meeting
TONIGHT
7:30 - UCCF (12th & Oread)
KANSAN Comment
Nixon's peace is no peace at all
Fifty years ago, Woodrow Wilson scored a spectacular success at the negotiating table in Paris. The Peace Conference voted on Jan. 25, 1919 to incorporate the League of Nations as an integral part of the Versailles treaty.
This effort for peace was waylaid immediately by Republican critics in America, ironically, led by Henry Cabot Lodge, who introduced a proposal signed by 39 senators or senators-elect, saying "the constitution of the League of Nations in the form now proposed to the peace conference should not be accepted by the United States."
Wilson's position at the negotiating table in Paris was weakened and his stance for peace lost much of its firmness.
In his address to the nation Monday evening, President Nixon said Wilson's dream for a "just and lasting peace" was "shattered by power politics." In truth, Wilson's hope was shattered by his fellow Americans—both the Republican senators and the muddled-headed majority who voted for a boob like Harding in a clear rejection of the ideas for which Wilson had fought.
I assume Nixon has read his history books—but on this issue of Wilson's failure he completely missed the point Monday evening.
Faced with the present situation.
Nixon is also missing the point. He confronts large numbers of Americans—in seats of power and those with no power but the ballot—who want to see America abandon outmoded imperialistic "save the world" goals, Nixon's "fellow Americans"—as he so constantly alludes to the populace—are urging him, in increasing numbers, to withdraw all troops from Vietnam and order a unilateral cease-fire.
We saw a demonstration of this Oct. 15.
In a recently released Louis Harris poll in Time magazine, it was shown that today only 55 per cent of the general public and 49 per cent of the leaders still say the Vietnam war is necessary to resist Communist aggression in Asia, a severe drop from 83 per cent of the public who professed this view two years ago.
And most Americans polled agreed that the war has tragically kept America from facing her own problems at home.
Wilson's efforts for world peace, his call for an abandonment of American imperialism in his 14 Points—were destroyed by opposition from Americans more interested in saving face than promoting peace.
Today, the situation is reversed. More and more Americans call for a withdrawal of American forces from
Vietnam, and the rest of Asia, and Europe. More and more Americans would like to see the abandonment of the unworkable imperialistic "America is the hope of the world" policy in favor of a less condescending, supercilious role in world affairs. Today the President is the chief apologist for "saving face." America's first defeat in history would involve a deplorable "collapse of confidence" in America, he said, both abroad and at home.
If Americans would see the horrors of Communism entrenched in South Vietnam, they would be overcome with remorse and guilt about leaving the South Vietnamese at the mercy of the Communist murderers, Nixon said. He cited the bloody massacres of Hue, strongly hinting that this would become common practice.
And well it might.
But what moral right does America have to assume responsibility whenever evil crops up in this big bad world? Nixon's scare tactics reflect the "Big Brother" concept which has led to equal horrors - yes, and even murder. (remember the Spanish-American war? And how about other American intervention in Latin America and South America?)
"America is the hope of the world." Nixon said solemnly Monday night.
"We Americans have no commission
Hear the people, Mr. Nixon
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
The three beers of early afternoon had worn off.
I, an impudent snob and ideological eunuch, was soberly braced in front of that perpetual screen. I was ready to meet The Man.
But The Man wasn't ready to meet me. Hiding behind a blond blue suit and framed on both (both!) sides by an American flag sat as much of The Man as The Man would put forward. To his right, very noticeably, was a framed picture of Pat and the family. Beneath his desk, I imagined, lay a sleepy Beagle or maybe a yellow cat—nothing ferocious. A coffee pot was no doubt steaming near by.
And as much of The Man as The Man would reveal began to talk.
Lyndon Johnson started the war in Vietnam, he said in a soft voice.
That's irrelevant, I yelled, demanding he tell me what he was going to do.
Withdrawal, he said, would be 'a disaster of immense magnitude.
The war is a disaster, I yelled, tos ing patience with this I-have-a-plan man.
Then The Man did something that changed my policy. For years I had scrupulously concerned myself with not using the word "murder" in reference
to war deaths. In all of my rampages, with a few forgivable exceptions, I had tried to escape that petty and passionate argument. But The Man used it. Bloody reign of terror, atrocities, nightmare, MURDER! But our half of the murder (which according to James Turpin—"Vietnam Doctor"—has been more pronounced and ugly than the other half's part of that abomination) is "protection of American fighting men"—is "not the easy way, but it is the right way"—is "defense of freedom"—is anything but murder. So my policy now includes the use of the word "murder."
I aimed my finger at the tube, ready to unsheath a few words I'd saved from my early days of reading chalked obscenities on sidewalks, but The Man had something else to say.
If infiltration and American casualties increase while we are scaling down our part in the war we will stop scaling down the war, he threatened. This is not a threat, he added.
Then he spoke to the vocal minority, equating our suggestions with the opposite of reason. He continued: To the young people of our nation concerned about this war (a lengthy euphemism for impudent snobs and ideological eunuchs and I suddenly were stricken with a pang of respect for Spiro Agnew), I want to say nothing more than peace.
Then, using the old onion trick, he said he had written 83 letters last week to mothers—mothers who no longer had sons. He wanted nothing more than a continued decrease in that number of letters. But he hinted that if he didn't have to send any next week that would be a little too drastic.
Then, he addressed himself to the silent majority (i.e. the apathetic majority) and said some encouraging, meaningless words about peace.
Lastly, he said he would be sustained by my prayers.
I leaped to the floor, ready to be heard. But he was gone, vanished into that big electronic box, hidden from me, gleeful, no doubt, that he had sewn his rhetoric into the FCC's air then disappeared before I could say a word.
So I wandered outside, where I knew I could be heard if only by those FCC gusts of relatively clean air. And I really didn't expect the president to hear me, but I talked to him.
I quoted Edna St. Vincent Millay saying, "I shall die, but that is all that I shall do for Death./ I am not on his pay-roll."
Addressing myself right to the president, I said, "Man, The Man, I will
from God to police the world," Benjamin Harrison said in 1888. Harrison's sentiments seem to be spreading among Nixon's fellow Americans" who want to return home to take care of the ghettoes, the slums, the boiling racial hatreds, the starving children in the cities and Appalachia, the polluted, stinking air and water, the fierce rifts between the young and the old, the black and the white, the rich and the poor.
In increasing numbers, Americans would like to come home and stay home for a long, long time. They have a lot of housecleaning to do which has already waited much too long while they were out trying to tidy up the neighbor's homes.
Nixon says he wants peace—the "just and lasting peace" for which Woodrow Wilson longed. As long as he maintains his imperialistic posture, standing like an eagle with talons eager to draw blood wherever Communism pops up, I just can't believe him.
Joanna K. Wiebe
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646
Business Office—UN 4-4758
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year over holidays and examination periods, 6 p.m., mester, 10 a.m. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Students' services and employment advertised to students without regard to color; creed or national origin. Opinions ex- necessary those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
not pray for your mysterious plan. I will not pray to give you the faith to continue the murder of the Vietnamese people and of our own troops. I will not pray for you.
"I don't believe, sir, that peace is dependent on Hanoi—as you said. And now I know that it does not depend on you.
"I know now, better than ever before, that peace depends on me and people like me."
And then I was quiet in the night. I glanced at some lit windows and hoped no one heard a mad man addressing another mad man far away.
Then I walked down the appropriately dark street and I prayed. I prayed prayers that have perhaps been prayed so often that they have lost all of their drama with who ever it is who listens to such mumblings in the night.
And I prayed for victory. Not victory in Vietnam but for victory in the struggle to remove men from bland blue suits and put them in new robes before it is too late.
Then I said "amen" and watched the word drift into the air as if it knew that the air would always be there. And I hoped it would.
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
"I SHOT AN ARROW INTO THE AIR..."
"I SHOT AN ARROW INTO THE AIR..."
"It FELL TO EARTH I KNOW NOT WHERE."
I've just gone and lost a perfectly good arrow!
"IT FELL TO EARTH I KNOW NOT WHERE."
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
I'VE JUST
GONE AND
LOST A
PERFECTLY
GOOD ARROW!
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Dally Kanan.
Spearheaded in Kansas
Biafra interest lessens
Interest in Biafra has lessened here, but Europeans are still as interested in it as we are in Vietnam, said Mrs. Judith Kahane.
Mrs. Kahane, Lawrence graduate student and wife of Associate Professor Howard Kahane, is one of the ten members of the Central Coordinating Committee of the North American Federation for Biafra.
Last year, with the cooperation of many political, religious and civic leaders. Mrs. Kahane helped focus American attention on Biafra.
"Senator Pearson has helped us considerably; he was one of the few senators who was making speeches in Congress prior to the conflict warning about possible tribal warfare in Nigeria. He has given us his support ever since," she said.
Not only has Pearson helped but so has Governor Robert Docking who proclaimed "The Kansas Month of Hope for the Children of Biafra/Nigeria" from Thanksgiving till Christmas last year. Many churches in the state also sold a Biafran Christmas card which was designed and produced by the Kansas Biafran committee.
"We were very proud of the support we received for both projects. Docking's proclamation was the first of its kind in the nation and it had a snowball effect on the governors of other states. I know that Governor Shafer of Pennsylvania proclaimed such a month this August," Mrs. Kahane said.
"The Christmas card we produced cost us $400. One Catholic church in Topeka raised over $1,000 alone on their sales of the cards. We started receiving inquiries about it from all over the nation," she said.
The Kansas group also started a nation-wide trend in making Biafra a non-partisan issue. The KU group enlisted the support of both the Collegiate Young Democrats and the Collegiate Young Republicans. This type of help has characterized the Biafran support across the nation and was patterned after the KU example.
Harold Eads, a Methodist minister formerly from Topeka, has also been very active in Biafra, said Mrs. Kahane. Sent to Africa originally on a Topeka Rotary Club scholarship, he became very active in setting up refugee villages in Biafra. At present, there are over 21,000 feeding and refugee centers crammed into what remains of the sessionist state. Eads is currently the minister at the Methodist East Harlem parish and helps coordinate American relief efforts for Biafra working from his New York City post.
Mrs. Kahane and the KU Biafran group will present a film made by Eads at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Kansas Union Room 101. Entitled "Biafra," it consists of interviews with Biafran soldiers, civilians and medical missionaries.
"One of the unusual aspects of the movie is that one of the interviews was conducted at a hospital during a Nigerian air raid. The film shows what the Nigerian air force did to the hospital," Mrs. Kahane said.
Another film, "Mercy Bridge to Biafra," shows the tense missions carried out by pilots in efforts to
ORIENTATION FOR BLIND
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (UPI) Twenty-one college-bound blind students are on the University of California campus here for a special six-week program of orientation to college life.
Mrs. Mary Lou O'Donnell, the program coordinator, says the course will give the blind students a chance to learn about "everything from academic standards and library use to social life on a college campus."
Nov. 5
1969 KANSAN 5
fly supplies to the isolated country. As of last week, according to the French Red Cross, 15 plane loads or about 180 tons of supplies were reaching the country each night. The French embassy said a state of "generalized famine" existed and estimated that 60,000 children and adults were dying weekly.
Mrs. Kahane said the group would discuss the adoption of a Biafran family and a trip to Kansas City to hear Chief of Radio Biafra, Clyrapian Ekwensi, who will appear at the University of Missouri at Kansas City Tuesday.
"I have been in personal contact with an Irish father at one of the missions and he proposed we adopt a family there. We think our packages will get through to
Interest in Biafra will probably increase as the rainy season ends in November. Mrs. Kahane said, the Biafrans are expecting the Nigerian "big push" to end the war as soon as the land dries. At present, the surrounded Biafran forces have little territory to fall back upon should a retreat be necessary.
"The sad thing is this country is fighting not only Nigerians but also Hungarians and East Germans. Until a few months ago, the MIG's used against the Blafarrs were flown by Egyptians but new MIG's have been introduced and the eastern Europeans have taken over the bombing and strafing raids. This information comes from the extremely reliable and impartial Clearing House Weekly. News" she said.
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The story of a man...a woman.. and a girl who rated all her lovers in a little black book!
R
Steppenwolf & The Turtles
WALT DISNEY PRODUCES MOTION PICTURES, NOT FOREIGN FLICKS!
---
STARTS TONIGHT!
Available at:
Good Seats Still Available.
Tickets $3.50, $3, $2.50
November 8 Allen Field House
You only need eyes to enjoy these two motion pictures!
ALL WALT DISNEY PROGRAM!
Mat. 2:30 Wed., Thurs.
Fri., Sat., Sun.
Eve, 7:15-9:15
WALT DISNEY'S Darby O'Gill and the Little People TECHNICOLOR
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI B-5780
SUA Office, Kansas Union Richardson Music Information Booth The Sound Bell Music
R
THE FRENCH ANSWER
TO "DO YOUR OWN
THING"
"'Alexander'
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pleasure!'"
- Playboy.
ALEXANDER
G
A CINEMA V RELEASE IN BEAUTIFUL EASTMANCOR
ARTS TONIGHT
Hillcrest
All Seats
$1.50
IN A JULIAN BLAUSTEIN PRODUCTION
"3 into 2 won't go"
SHOWS
Hillcrest
7:00 - 9:08
ALL SEATS $1.50
WALT DISNEY presents THE TATTOOED POLICE HORSE
1000
27
SHOWS:
7:15 - 9:20
All Seats $1.50
All Seats $1.50
You Mean You Have Only Seen Butch and The Kid Once?!!
Hillcrest
IF YOU THINK 'THE COMIC' IS JUST ANOTHER MOVIE ABOUT HOLLYWOOD... HERE'S PIE IN YOUR FACE!
"THE COMIC"
"THE COMIC"
DICK VAN DYKE • MICHELE LEE • MICKEY ROONEY
Written and Produced by CARL REINER and AARON RUBEN · Directed by CARL REINER · Color
Varsity
THEATRE ... Philadelphia WI 3-1065
Mat. DAILY 2:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:10
Versity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI.3-1065
Platform is peace
Male chosen as queen candidate
The election for Military Ball Queen candidate from Oliver Hall resulted in the election of a rather unorthodox candidate.
A group of Oliver residents conducted an intensive write-in campaign for Bill Snifflin, Lenwood freshman, to "protest the military establishment at KU." Snifflin received 78 of the 312 votes, and was the numerical winner over six female candidates.
David Gordan, Sioux City, Iowa, freshman, and spokesman for Sniffin's supporters, said his victory was "an indication of the sentiment of the silent majority at KU."
"We didn't do this as a joke.
We just wanted to in some way
protest the presence of the military on this campus," Gordan said.
Gordan said signs had been posted in Oliver advertising Sniffin as the "peace candidate."
Sniffin said at first he thought the attempt was a joke. But he said later he saw some value in the movement.
Gordan wasn't sure if the voters for Sniffin considered the nomination a joke. "I can't say why they voted for Bill, but I'm sure some of them voted for him as a peace candidate," Gordan said.
Gordan said Sniffin would move aside for the female candidate who received the most votes. Gordan explained that Sniffin couldn't continue his campaign because of physical qualifications.
Blood, Sweat, Tears will give KU concert
Blood, Sweat and Tears, the nine-piece brass band that recorded "Spinning Wheel" and "You Made Me So Very Happy," will appear Dec. 2 in Hoch Auditorium.
Warren Harrell, Lawrence senior and Student Union Activities (SUA) concert chairman, said the SUA Winter Concert would consist of a 7 p.m. and a 9:30 p.m. performance.
Mail surveys find new jobs
Preliminary reports from a project begun by Clifford D. Clark, dean of the School of Business, show many challenging and rewarding job opportunities for business majors.
Clark said mail surveys were used to discover unusual opportunities for graduates. Small group meetings of businessmen, students and professors were conducted to exchange information and ideas on business education. The meetings were designed to convince businessmen that students are interested in small enterprises despite the risks involved.
"The problem of business, Clark said, "is not so much one of improving its image with college students, but one of communicating with them."
CHEAPER BY THE SEVENS?
SALISBURY, Md. (UPI)—The seven children of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Beach of Delmar, Md., had their tonsils removed on the same day at Peninsula General Hospital here.
6 KANSAN Nov. 5
1969
Talk to A Good 'ol Country Boy About Some Insurance
Tony Croman Buzzi & Assoc. 842-7771
Tickets will be on sale after Nov. 17 for $3, $3.50 and $4 each, Harrell said. They may be purchased at the Kansas Union, the Jayhawk Boulevard information booth, Kief's, Richardson's, Bell's and the Sound.
Each member of the group is an accomplished musician, Harrell said.
"Some of them play two or three instruments," he said, creating the versatility of a much larger band."
Organized by David Clayton-Thomas, lead-vocalist and song writer, members of the group formerly performed with symphonic orchestras, jazz bands and rock groups such as the Blues Project and the Buffalo Springfield.
Clayton-Thomas summarized their goals. "We want to bring to our audiences, an awareness of music as an intellectual stimulation, not just as a groin stimulation.
"Rock has degenerated to the point where you're supposed to come to a concert and become an animal. Our thing is to come to a rock concert to listen to some good music and be cool and dig it," he said.
VISIT US
PRIMARILY LEATHER
812 Massachusetts
FED UP WITH DORM FOOD?
P
PARTICIPATE IN MEN'S OPEN RUSH REGISTER
AT ANY OF THE FOLLOWING:
THE DEAN OF MEN'S OFFICE — 228 STRONG INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL OFFICE 112B KANSAS UNION ANY CWC OFFICE
Owens attacks records; Herron heads top scorers
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Oklahoma's Steve Owens is closing in on one of the nation's most hallowed scoring records, but he's having a difficult time keeping up with Kansas State's Mack Herron in the Big Eight Conference.
Owens now has 50 touchdowns in three years and needs only one more to tie the national record set by Army's Glenn Davis in 1944-45-46.
But Owens is not leading the Big Eight scoring derby, despite a four-touchdown performance last Saturday against Iowa State. He has 17 touchdowns for 102 points this year.
Herron also had a four-touchdown afternoon against Missouri and now has 18 touchdowns for 108-points. The squat 5-7 by 175 wingback has scored 13 touchdowns in Kansas State's last four games. One more touchdown will give Herron a tie for the school record, set by Harvey Roots in 1909.
NEW YORK (UPI)—The oddsmakers, anticipating another weekend of lopsided college football scores, included only three teams from the top ten in the betting line Tuesday.
Oddsmakers anticipate easy weekend
Third-ranked Tennessee was picked by 21 points over South Carolina and ninth-rated Purdue was given an 11-point margin over Michigan State. However, No. 8 Missouri was expected to have trouble with Oklahoma and was only a one-point favorite.
The rest of the games involving the top ten seemed so one-sided on paper that the oddsmakers declined to touch them. Ohio State, ranked first, is expected to ruin Wisconsin. Ohio State's first six opponents this season have a grand total of only eight victories against 33 losses and a tie, and Wisconsin, with a 2-5 record, doesn't promise to be much of a test either.
Other games not included in the betting line are second-ranked Texas against Baylor, fifth-rated Southern California against Washington State, sixth-ranked Arkansas against Rice and No. 10 Notre Dame against Pittsburgh. Penn State (No. 4) and UCLA (No. 7) are idle.
Nov. 5 KANSAN 7
1969
MIGHTY
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A HUGE DOUBLE
CHEESEBURGER
(with cheese in the middle
and a pickle on top)
only 39c
Sandy's
HAMBURGERS
come as you are
...hungry
Opposite Hillcrest Center
The Nebraska middle guard dropped out of school in the eighth grade in Jacksonville. Fla.
It was then that Geddes was sent to Boys Town, Neb. He resumed his education there. "All I ever wanted to do," says Geddes, "was finish high school."
New Defense
He's been just as good in his new position. Coach Bob Devaney and his staff created a new defense for Colorado and tailback Bob Anderson last week.
All-Big Eight linebacker last season. But he was switched to middle guard this year.
It wasn't until his senior year that college became a possibility. Geddes has been a standout player at Nebraska. He was an
The Big Eight's offensive wizards continued to pile up statistics last week. Owens' 248 yards rushing gives him 881 for six games. Missouri's Joe Moore has 898 in seven outings.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)— Ken Geddes isn't an ordinary college football player.
Ken's job was to stop Colorado's attack from tackle to tackle. He did his duty in Nebraska's 20-7 victory and Monday was named the Big Eight's Lineman of the Week.
Kansas State's Lynn Dickey, with another record-breaking game, took command of the passing derby. Dickey has completed 129 passes in 230 attempts for 1,649 yards and a 56.1 percentage.
He's averaging 235.6 yards per game through the air lanes. Dickey also is the total offense leader with 1,598 yards.
Missouri's Jon Staggers had a memorable day against Kansas State, scoring twice and throwing for another touchdown. As a result, he's the kickoff and punt return leader. Staggers is averaging 30.8 yards per kickoff and 9.9 per punt.
Nebraska's Geddes sacks Big Eight lineman honor
36
Steve Owens
1603 West 15th St. (adjacent to campus)
An Invitation from:
To investigate the new, unique incentive rental plan now in effect
This incentive rental plan offers numerous price ranges for married couples, graduate students or undergraduates. The plan is designed to provide a two-bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartment at prices competitive with one-bedroom or two-bedroom apartments, yet offer much more in space and quality, convenient location and services.
Visit the office at 1603 W. 15th, or call 843-4993 to get complete information. Inspection is welcomed.
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Big Eight Stats
LEADING PASSERS
Player, School G Cmp Att. Pet. Int. Gain G.Avg. TD
Lynn Dickey, KS 7 129 129 561 1.61 1649 235.6 11
Jerry Tagen, NU 7 83 145 572 1.0 1072 153.1 3
Terry McMillan, MU 7 59 138 428 10 1039 145.4 9
Jack Mildren, UG 6 45 90 500 7 828 138.0 10
Jerry OS, UG 6 50 101 500 7 810 135.0 7
Obert Tisdale, IS 7 47 117 402 5 874 929.7
Jim Ettinger, KU 7 39 92 424 8 534 76.3 4
Van Brownson, NU 7 32 95 582 3 395 56.4 2
Paul Arendt, CU 7 19 45 422 3 345 49.3 1
Phil Basler, KU 7 23 48 429 3 320 15.2
Most Yards Game: 394 (25-49-3) by Lynn Dickey, KS, vs. Missouri (1-1).
Longest Pass for TD: 79 by Paul Arendt to Monte Huber, CU, vs. Missouri (10-25).
TOTAL OFFENSE ING BASSING
| Player, School | RUSHING | PASSING | TOTAL | Play | Game |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lynn Dykin, KS | G | 10 Yds. | Cap. | Yds. | Yds. |
| Jerry Tackley, NU | 7 | 68 | 129 | 145 | 102 |
| Jack Mildren, OU | 6 | 69 | 199 | 83 | 102 |
| Jack Mildren, OU | 6 | 69 | 199 | 83 | 102 |
| Bob Cuthburn, OS | 6 | 97 | 154 | 60 | 110 |
| Steve Owens, US | 6 | 209 | 881 | 2 | 25 |
| Bob Anderson, CU | 6 | 156 | 743 | 13 | 124 |
| Obert Tisdale, IU | 6 | 113 | 50 | 47 | 379 |
| Bingley, KU | 6 | 48 | 39 | 92 | 534 |
| Paul Armstrong, KU | 6 | 48 | 39 | 92 | 534 |
| Roy Bell, OU | 6 | 61 | 382 | 1 | 154 |
| John Riggins, KU | 6 | 117 | 437 | 0 | 188 |
| Hace Herron, KU | 6 | 117 | 437 | 0 | 188 |
| Joey Kuehler, KU | 6 | 93 | 143 | 0 | 193 |
Most Yards Game: 411 (17 rush, 394 pass) by Lynn Dickey, KS, vs
Kansas (114).
PASSING OFFENSE
| | Comp. | Att. | Int. | Pct. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| K-State | 130 | 235 | 13 | 553 | 1674 | 239.1 |
| Nebraska | 117 | 209 | 9 | .560 | 1490 | 212.9 |
| Missouri | 66 | 158 | 12 | .418 | 1108 | 158.3 |
| Oklahoma | 49 | 96 | 7 | .510 | 870 | 145.0 |
| Ohio ST | 61 | 173 | 10 | .353 | 813 | 135.5 |
| Kansas | 62 | 141 | 11 | .440 | 854 | 135.4 |
| Iowa State | 58 | 145 | 6 | .400 | 678 | 96.9 |
| Colorado | 50 | 136 | 11 | .368 | 650 | 92.9 |
PASSING DEFENSF
| | Comp. | Att. | Int. | Pct. | Vds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nebraska | 56 | 151 | 16 | .371 | 737 | 105.3 |
| Kansas | 74 | 132 | 7 | .561 | 897 | 128.1 |
| Iowa State | 88 | 177 | 14 | .491 | 1048 | 149.7 |
| Colorado | 75 | 172 | 9 | .436 | 1054 | 150.6 |
| KState | 73 | 184 | 10 | .397 | 1090 | 155.7 |
| Oklahoma | 70 | 149 | 11 | .470 | 966 | 161.0 |
| Okla. St. | 72 | 168 | 12 | .429 | 997 | 166.2 |
| Missouri | 94 | 213 | 12 | .441 | 1475 | 210.7 |
TOTAL DEFENSE
| | G Att. | Yds. | Avg. | G Att. | Yds. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma | 6 | 478 | 2526 | Nebraska | 7 | 514 | 1820 | 260.0 |
| Kansas St. | 7 | 581 | 2889 | Kansas St. | 7 | 512 | 1870 | 267.1 |
| Missouri | 7 | 587 | 2752 | Colorado | 7 | 510 | 1930 | 275.7 |
| Nebraska | 7 | 566 | 2560 | Kansas | 7 | 507 | 1291 | 313.0 |
| Colorado | 7 | 556 | 2658 | Missouri | 7 | 511 | 2262 | 323.1 |
| Kansas | 7 | 502 | 2082 | Iowa State | 7 | 504 | 1793 | 315.0 |
| Okla. St. | 6 | 425 | 1567 | Oklahoma | 6 | 464 | 2090 | 348.3 |
| Iowa St. | 7 | 498 | 1490 | Ohio St. | 6 | 519 | 2297 | 371.2 |
Ohio State, yet to be seriously threatened this season, held its number one national ranking in the Kansan poll for the seventh consecutive week.
Buckeyes still No.1
The powerful Buckeyes were not an overwhelming favorite over Texas, however. Unbeaten, the Longhorns record now stands at 6-0 as they shoot for the Southwestern conference title.
Boasting an awesome ground game Texas is headed for its best season in years and seems to improve with each contest. This Saturday Darrell Royal's crew takes on the winless Baylor Bears.
8 KANSAN Nov. 5 1969
Eastern power Penn State held on to the fourth spot, as Arkansas moved up to take the fifth position with Southern Cal dropping to sixth.
Rounding out the ten best is Missouri, UCLA, Purdue and Kansas State.
1. Ohio State
1. Tennessee
2. Texas
3. Tennessee
4. Penn State
5. Arkansas
6. Southern Cal
7. Missouri
8. UCLA
9. Purdue
10. Kansas State
HOMECOMING PEP RALLY & BONFIRE
- March from Daisy Hill with the KU Band
- Come by way of the car caravan from outer reaches of campus
- Join in the Torchlight Parade to bonfire
TO BARBEQUE THE BUFFALO
Coach Pepper Rodgers Football players Queen candidates—and everyone else will be on hand
... the makin's of a real rally
BARBECUE BUFFALO is the word... Thursday, November 6, 6:30 p.m. is the time... NW of Allen Field House is the place..
'FLAT ORANGES'
Basler, Riggins, Jessie to start
starting assignment will be Jesie's first since breaking his right hand against Nebraska.
Kansas University coach Pepper Rodgers announced Tuesday after sending his players through a 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ hour practice, that sophomore signal-caller Phil Basler would start Saturday when the Jayhawks meet Colorado.
After the workout, Rodgers said his players were loose and prepared for anything.
WE CAN RALLY... YEAH... OH WE CAN RALLY!!!
Basler, from Independence, Mo. was cited by Rodgers as having improved greatly.
"I'm not in line for any coach of the year, all Big-Eight or anything, so I'm real loose," he added.
The Big Eight skipper also announced that Ron Jessie would start at tailback Saturday. The
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Tangerines, which are neither round nor oval, are known in many parts of the world as "flat oranges," according to Sunkist Growers.
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Live Entertainment - Dancing - Beer
Politics implied in dismissal
TOPEKA (UPI) — A Garden City man may have been fired from his state job because he failed to support Democratic Gov. Robert B. Docking in his 1968 bid for re-election.
Ladislado Hernandez, a 34-year-old Mexican American, was hired in September by the Docking-controlled State Highway Department as equal employment
opportunity officer. His job was terminated Oct. 31 while he was still on probation under state civil service.
C. A. Hallburg, department personnel director, said Tuesday the dismissal of Hernandez was "a management decision. The job required a lot of tact."
R. L. Peyton, assistant highway director, was asked why the man
was dismissed. He said "It was in an area that was quite sensitive, and he was not proving out."
Neither would comment on whether or not politics was involved.
A Hutchinson newspaper quoted Hernandez as stating Tuesday that he had learned the firing came about because of an inquiry by Duane West, Finney County Democratic chairman.
United Mexican American Voters of Kansas. He had urged that group to work for the election of Republican Rick Harman as governor in 1968.
Hernandez is state treasurer of
Docking writes
Docking said in the letter: "If there are complaints against any member of this administration, I want—and I demand—to be informed."
Frizzell told newsmen last Friday he was investigating five or six complaints involving "influence peddling" by appointees of the democratic governor. His statement was made after charges were filed Friday against Vincent L. Bogart, a former Docking appointee to the Kansas Board of Regents, for violation of the state conflict of interest law.
disagreed with Docking's education policies and also didn't feel he had done enough for minority groups.
Letter to Frizzell demands information
TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking demanded in a letter to Attorney General Kent Frizzell today that he be fully informed on investigations Frizzell is making of Docking appointees.
Frizzell said that he would also cooperate with the governor, but any information given him would have to remain confidential, at least, while under investigation.
"I'm glad that Docking is concerned about possible influence peddling in his administration," Frizzell said.
The governor cited a section of the State Constitution which permits the state's chief executive to request information from any state official.
Docking also asked specifically for the names of any Kansas Bureau of Investigation agents who might be involved in the investigations. He said his office would cooperate fully in any investigation.
Devil's consort released
NEW CUMBERLAND, W. Va. (UPI)—A switch by nine came in time Tuesday to bring down the curtain on a witchcraft trial involving a horse trainer and his former neighbors.
Daminger had filed a $50,000 damage suit against 10 of his former neighbors on grounds that they had damaged his reputation and name by accusing him of
Nine neighbors of Frank Daminger, 33, a horse trainer at Waterford Park in Chester, W. Va., had a change of heart during the second day of the trial and apologized to him. They said in a statement that they did not believe Daminger was, "a warlock who had supernatural or evil powers."
Daminger accepted the apology and the trial ended before Hancock County Judge Ralph E. Pryor.
being a "warlock and Devil's consort."
The trial opened Monday after selection of a 12-man jury.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—The buying power of California factory workers in March reached its lowest point in five years, according to figures released by the state government.
The average pay of factory workers in March was $141.71 a week, a 4.2 per cent increase over March, 1968, but because of higher taxes and inflation, the workers could buy less. Purchasing power for a worker with three dependents dropped 2.4 per cent during the year and 3.3 per cent for a single worker, the statistics showed.
TAXES HIT PAY BOOSTS
10 KANSAN Nov. 5 1969
The Saturn V rockets are assembled in New Orleans in what was a World War II tank factory.
Free Beer!
THURSDAY
7:00 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
"So far as my part in the matter is concerned, when I read of Mr. Hernandez' appointment in the paper, I did make an inquiry in Topeka as to how he had gotten a state job since he had fought the governor so hard in 1968," he was quoted as saying.
Lounge
West told the newspaper he had inquired into Hernandez's employment.
Hernandez told the newspaper that he had supported Docking in his first term, but had worked against him in 1968. He said he
West said, however, he had no power to hire or fire any state employee.
WE CARE ABOUT YOU
United Pentecostal Church
12th & Connecticut
Lawrence, Kansas
Phone 842-3350
Revival Services now in progress please come. 7:00 p.m.
"DON'T GIVE UP ON RELIGION UNTIL YOU'VE TRIED PENTECOST."
Arensberg's = Shoes
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SUA programs reflect student taste
By ROBIN STEWART
Kansan Staff Writer
Students' tastes in activities have changed over the years, and Student Union Activities (SUA) reflects these changes. Not many years ago SUA sponsored University dances in Hoch Auditorium, and only this year the SUA Carnival, a tradition of almost 50 years, bowed to the Coffee House, a folk entertainment program.
A board of four student officers and eight other students in charge of various activities head SUA. Officers are chosen each year by the Kansas Union Operating Committee.
The board drew up SUA's annual budget, and funds were obtained through the Kansas Union Operating Committee, said Kendt Longenecker, Shawnee Mission senior and president of the board.
Innovations in the travel program include an expanded travel center in the Kansas Union which would offer travel information including national and foreign transportation fares, accommodation rates, tour information, airline black-out information and other travel hints. Films of various countries would be shown under a travelogue program to promote interest in travel.
Several programs are sponsored by SUA. One program deals with travel, and one of the main functions of the travel committee is to plan student trips. This year's trips include a Christmas ski trip to Austria, a summer flight to Europe and a spring trip, possibly to Mexico.
Forums is another area dealt with by SUA. Speakers of national and international promi-
Barrow is an English term for an ancient burial place covered with a large mound of earth or stone.
Nov. 5
1969 KANSAN 11
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*Dwight Boring
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representing
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nence are brought to KU under the forums program. Forums on minority opinions, current events and world affairs will be included this year.
The new University Seminar, involving professors, KU administrators, Regents and congressmen from Kansas, was set up. A highlight will be an exchange between students and Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers next semester.
The Hyde Park forum is an experimental project which will involve spontaneous participation of students and citizens on subjects of their choice. Topics for other forums planned include city problems and community actions, and the use and effect of drugs.
Popular and classical films and
special film series are provided students at low cost by SUA. A final exam week film series is also scheduled for both semesters, and films will show continuously throughout the exam days to provide relaxation between finals.
Films are rented and are shown on a non-profit basis. The cost of admission pays for the film rental fee.
The special events division of SUA is concerned with providing entertainment to KU. Main events this year include the homecoming concert Nov. 8, featuring Steppenwolf and The Turtles. Blood, Sweat, and Tears will be featured at a winter concert Dec. 2. Other concerts scheduled include the Relaws concert
April 18 and a concert in March. The addition of Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium would present opportunities for more events, said Warren Harman, Larned senior and board member in charge of concerts.
SIGN AGREEMENT
Hour and a photography contest. The public relations division handles functions for alumni and after-game receptions. A recreation division coordinates and sponsors various campus clubs that are competitive in nature.
The fourth SUA sponsored Festival of the Arts will take place from March 30 to April 4. Six nights of presentations by artists and critics in various fields of contemporary arts will compose the program. A new effort is being made this year to obtain artists who can remain on campus during that entire week to speak to classes and in forums.
The fine arts division of SUA arranges exhibits in the Kansas Union and sponsors the Poetry
HELSINKI (UPI) - Finland and Romania have signed a five-year agreement on technical and commercial cooperation. The agreement, signed in Bucharest during a visit by Finnish President Urho Kekkonen, is the first of its kind between Finland and a socialist country. Informed sources said similar agreements are expected with Bulgaria and Czechoslovakia.
Maybe our name
gives you the opportunity to
Maybe our name gives you the wrong impression.
You might think that if you come to work for us we'll stick you behind a desk making phones for the rest of your life.
Don't be misled by the word Telephone in our name.
Uh-uh.
Actually we're a group of over 60 companies and some of them happen to be in the telephone business. They're in our General Telephone group and are involved in developing new ways for man to communicate.
So if you want to work for our phone group, you can.
But if your interest lies in other things,you might prefer working for another of our companies, like Sylvania.
Sylvania manufactures over 10,000 products alone, knocking out everything from Micro-Electronic Semi-Conductor Devices to Educational Communications Systems.
The communications field is one of the fastest-growing industries around. The more it grows, the more we grow and the more room you have to stretch within us.
We're looking for Scientists and Engineers with ambition and ideas.
Together we can discover new worlds.
Or make an old one easier to live in.
General Telephone & Electronics
Sikvania Electric Products • Lenkart Electric • Automatic Electric • Telephone companies. 34 States • General Telephone Directory Company • General Telephone & Electronics Laboratories • General Telephone & Electronics International • G/TE Data Services • G/TE Communications
Sports Car Club promotes rallies
The Sports Car Club at KU is for anyone interested in having fun with cars, not just for people with sports cars.
"We're dedicated to sports in cars, not sports cars," said Gene Roberts," president of the club.
The club sponsors road rallies, provides information to the members about racing events and serves as a place where people with a common interest in cars can share that interest.
Roberts said the club has sponsored three rallies so far this year. The next rally is scheduled for Nov. 22, after the KU-Missouri football game.
12 KANSAN Nov.5 1969
The KU Sports Car Club is not officially affiliated with the University, but Roberts said there is "intercollegiate competition" with the clubs of Oklahoma State and Kansas State Universities.
The club sponsors the AURH gymkhana each spring and is also the home of the Business School racing team, whose members enter their cars in actual track competition.
"Our main purpose is to enjoy our cars and have a good time. We have fun at all our rallies, but
the best one of all is the Braille Rally," Roberts said. Each spring the club stages a rally at the Kansas City School for the Blind, with each of the blind students acting as a navigator.
PAPER FATTENS CATTLE
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI)—Waste paper is fattening cattle faster than feed grain at Texas Technological College's research station near Amarillo. A study showed cattle gained 5 per cent faster on a diet of 15 per cent paper than they did on alfalfa hay.
BIRK ENTERTAINMENT TEAM SOB FP 17
And a lone engineer . . .
The Business School racing team and their powerful machines are a part of the KU Sports Car Club.
Midnight Madness
Tonight Only 7:30 to 12 p.m.
Refreshments—Free
Loud Music—You’ll love it
New fashions for Homecoming
Bizarre and Insane Surprises
Special group of blouses $1.50-$2.50 each
Special group of skirts, blouses, etc. 50% off
Pick up your "Beat Colorado" sticker
ROTC week proclaimed by council
A
Photo by Douglas W. Sheffner
Riedel proposes ROTC week
Col. Philip Riedel, professor of military science, asked the Lawrence City Commission Tuesday to proclaim Nov. 10 through Nov. 15 "Army ROTC Week" in honor of the program's 150th anniversary.
The Lawrence City Commission has proclaimed the week of Nov. 10 through Nov. 15 "Army ROTC Week" in recognition of the 150th anniversary of the Army ROTC program.
Col. Philip H. Riedel, professor of military science, and David Jeans, Army ROTC cadet commander and Independence, Mo., senior, submitted the proclamation to the Commission at a Nov 4 meeting. It was passed unanimously with no debate.
The proclamation was passed to honor "those men commissioned through Army ROTC who have gone on to protect our freedom at home and abroad in both the active Army and the Army Reserve."
"This proclamation is in no conflict with the moratorium or anything else." Riedel said. "It is simply a statement of fact."
Riedel said the proclamation is part of a nationwide recognition effort. The Department of the Army requested that the ROTC units in each state declare one week in commemoration of the anniversary.
The week of Nov. 10 was selected by the four collegiate Kansas Army ROTC units because all four units have scheduled their
Bulgarian to lecture
Vladimir Georgiev, vice-president of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, will lecture at 8 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
Georgiev will discuss "Some New Problems in Indo-European Linguistics."
military balls for that week. Proclamations similar to the one passed in Lawrence have been adopted in Manhattan, Wichita, and Leavenworth. ROTC cadets will submit a similar resolution in Pittsburgh.
Gov. Robert Docking has agreed
to make a statewide proclamation. This proclamation will be announced publicly Nov. 10.
WIBW will interview Riedel and Jeans Nov. 11. Riedel and Jeans will discuss the role of ROTC on campus and the present controversy.
SKI
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December 26 — January 4
7 nights in INNSBRUCK
1 night in PARIS
$285 (price includes)
Transportation - FROM NEW YORK
Accommodations
Meals
Lift Reductions
Transfers, etc.
Open Forum Nov. 11
RESERVATIONS DUE IMMEDIATELY
CONTACT SUA
Assembly vetoes vote resolution
MADISON (UPI) — The state Assembly Tuesday overwhelmingly voted down an effort to make Wisconsin the final state to force a federal constitutional convention to enact the proposed "Dirksen Amendment" on legislative apportionment.
On a 63-26 vote, Assemblymen rejected a resolution asking Congress to call the convention to overturn the one man, one vote legislative apportionment ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Thirty-three other states have already approved similar resolutions although some are expected to face lengthy court challenges.
Nov. 5
1969 KANSAN 13
MIGHTY The Hi Lo
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man and his environment ...a challenge to the engineer
Man's mounting concern with his environment and with the complex worlds of today and tomorrow is presenting some monumental challenges and opportunities to the young engineer...A chance to blaze a trail of achievement in his specialty. Dorr-Oliver, too is taking up the challenge applying its expertise in producing fertilizers and processing food, in water management, in more fully utilizing the chemical and mineral resources of the earth, and in moving goods and people faster and more economically.
Sign up at your Placement Office or send an outline of your background and interests to Mr. G. F. Hyde, Manager-Professional Employment, Dorr-Oliver Inc., Stamford, Connecticut 06904. An equal opportunity employer.
These capabilities at Dorr-Oliver can be the catalyst for your professional growth and development . an environment encouraging translation of your ideas into positive, meaningful action. Take on the challenge of your life — with Dorr-Oliver.
campus interviews: ENGINEERING GRADUATES
November 10
Sanitary·Civil
·Chemical
DORR-OLIVER INCORPORATED
PASO CALIFORNIA
NASA building going up
The NASA Space Technology building is taking form in the campus west area near the Center for Research in the Engineering Sciences. Scientists from many fields of study will mingle in the interdisciplinary structure.
Permit talks halted
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Justice Department said Tuesday it would not grant a permit for a mass demonstration down Pennsylvania Avenue Nov. 15 because of some persons "planning to promote violence."
The New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (New Mobe) said the Justice Department "broke off" negotiations for parade permits Monday.
Ron Young, a leader of the New
He said the talks, which up until Monday had been cordial, had been broken off just hours before Nixon's nationwide television address.
Mobe, said Tuesday, "I have a suspicion that the Nixon hardline that he expressed last night, and the Justice Department hardline are connected."
14 KANSAN Nov. 5
1969
The Justice Department gave a different story. A spokesman said the department denied the demonstration permit because, "The department has reliable reports that a minority of those expected to come to Washington may be planning to promote violence."
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Moratorium communist backed?
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Chairman Richard H. Ichord of the House Committee on Internal Security charged Tuesday that the planned November war moratorium is not a legitimate protest but one of "blatant communist manipulation, exploitation and subversion."
Ichord said in a floor speech that his staff investigators found that moratorium leaders "have become intimately allied with a distinctly pro-communist program and leadership."
He entered the staff report in the Congressional Record in order, he said, "that my colleagues in the house and all other Americans are appraised of the nature and extent of this blatant propaganda assault upon our nation."
The Vietnam Moratorium Committee, which conducted the October war moratorium, and the new Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (New Mobe) are organizing similar demonstrations for Nov. 13-14-15.
Ichord said evidence uncovered by his investigators showed that the moratorium committee plans "meshed precisely with the plans and leadership of the New Mobe.
PEDWIN Tahoe Boot
You're going great! Pedwin advances the cause of fashion with a handsome gold-color buckle strap, and slightly squared toe. Antique brown grain, 18.95.
McCoy shoes
813 Mass. VI 3-2091
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Use Kansan Classified
10
Tuffy black coat by Weathertowne $45
Yes, Alley Shop girls are special
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WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the newsletter of Woman's Week are served to all students without regard to color, creed, or origin national.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier. Inputs for mag or crystal phone, tape, AM, FM, Aux. Will match any speaker system. $40. Call V2-3618 after 6. tf
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ Notes--Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive,"New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus Park Madhouse, 411 W. 14th St.
1967 VW, Ll. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. ff
New 965-14 Mustang snow tires, never
$20 for both a Hill Rockestone baggage
929 Mile
Love wife and 67 Mustang too, but
can't keep both. She's under 23,000
good condition, stands
transmits, V8 with radio and
heating. 842-7402. 11-5
'65 Oldsmobile F 85, blue, 4 door,
automatic, radio, 5 good tires, me-
chanically sound. Only 50,000 miles.
842-7491. 11-5
Gearard 8 Lab 80 turntable and cartridge (809;E-ADCO) elliptical and magnetic. $70. Call 843-9001 after 5 p.m.
11-5
Remember his or her special day with an extra special gift from the Hodge Podge. Open for last minute shopping. M-F: 10-5:30. Thursday night: until 9:30. Saturday: 9:30-5. 15 W. 19th. 11-7
For sale: '64 Mercury Park Lane Conv. Replaced top, new tires, blue with white interior, excellent condition, $650 or offer, VI 3-6172. 11-6
1961 Falcon; four door, 6 cylinder;
good body and engine but needs battery.
$135. Call Chuck, II 9-2402.
Leave name and number, 11-6
Rambler, 1964 convertible, red, white,
runs well, $400. 842-4802. 11-5
Jaguar--XK-120 FHC. BRb. MAGS,
mechanically perfect with new every-
thing. Complete records on this
unique automobile. Graduation and
Navy force sale. Call 842-9044 after
six. 11-6
For Sale—Choice Building sites available now in Holiday Hills. Buy direct from us and save. Fencing, siding home you'll want later.建 Construction Co. I 3-6133. 11-6
Forced to sell: 1968 Red Fiat 850 Spider convertible. Go to best offer. 27 miles to the gallon, carpeting. For information call 843-8706. 11-7
How to win friends and influence people: cover your bare walls with Hodge Poke, - only them. - only Hodge Poke" posters and blacklight posters. 11-7
"For Sale". .22 cal corsair automatic pistol. Also must sell plans and parts of Volkswagen Powered airplane. 842-1380. 11-5
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white, everything in t act—good mechanical shape; front seat. Call Frank nute, bill 211 E., 9th, 14-11, Kansas.
Quality '68 Chev. Ins., ash gold, a.d. h.T.H.; R. R., P.S., A.C., turb-hydromatic 250 H.P., bush reg., undercoated, low mileage, excel. cond. Has 5-yr.-$50,000 mile warranty Priced to sell. See at 1339 Penn, M-F. 5-7 p.m.
GOODYEAR TIRES
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Complete Mechanical Service
Brake adjustment 98c
Brake mounting 98c
Carburetor
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment,
1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694
Page Fina Service
Two Kustom speaker enclosures with three 15" Lifetime Jensens in each. Good condition. Call VI 2-4718 after 5:30. 11-5
Sunflower Dress Factory. Unique clothing for men and women. India prints, fringed leather coats, handmade shirts and dresses, antique clothes, bellbottoms, jewelry. 19 W. 9th, Open 12-5. 11-7
MGA-16 00-196 1-red, new black top and interior. body and motor in excellent condition, see at 2028 New York show after 4:00 weekday week. 11-10
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear end. Aqua/ water $855.00, contact Mrs. Kesko 8-5-40 U-4-363, after 5:30 8-549. 5469. 11-17
Private Guitar lessons--folk flamenco, classic—six years experience also fender stratocaster for sale- Call 842-0340 for Garth. 11-10
One woman's Nalmsh阴士dorm contract for second semester. Call VI 11-1111
Fischer FM stereo receiver, model 440
Red Rose at UN 4-124.5
V3-I-0435.8
2 tickets for KU-Oklahoma game.
Doug Henson, VI 2-1200. 11-11
Small RCA console stereo phonograph enclosed in a wood cabinet. Excellent condition, $85. Bob, 842-7254 evenings 11-7
BURCKEK CHEF
HAMPTON BURGERS
BURGER CHEF
Home of the "Big Shef"
NOTICE
For sale by owner: 66 Olds Toronado Deluxe and '66 Olds Delta 4 dr. H.T. Both cars equipped with 70 PS, A/C air condition, lift kit, telescopic steering wheel, cruise control, power trunk lid, and near new fiberglass bolted tires. Toronada also has large cargo doors and large dows. Call Bob VI 3-5751 after 6 p.m.
Try One Today
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-guard Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-6510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf
814 Iowa
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair prob- station or repairory repair station in the Mid-West, ART, Dynakit, and Marantz. Call 843-1484.
Pennyriach bra and girdle for the nure
penyriach you should have. For the comfort
you should have. For the comfort
Pennyriach bra. Call for your private
fitting. VI 2-2166 or VI 3-2799. 11-6
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised. Comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th ed. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
World's fastest production sports cars
buy a Corvette when you can own a
Cobra Coupe type TVR? Gross Motor
land park, Kansas, AD 6-5035. 11-5
KU's sports car center is located 30 miles due east in Overland Park. We have a dedicated floor through our complete inventory of owned sports cars. In stock now: 3-MGB's, 2-TR4's, 2-TR4's, 1-Tiger, 3-MGA's, 2-TR4's, 1-Tiger, 3-MGA's, TR3's, many, many others and our team's vehicles. AD 9006 W, 50 W, Highway, Overland Park, Kansas, AD 6-5055. 11-5
Would you like to sub-lease my three to four person Harvard Square Apt. Good location, close to campus. For information call John at VI 2-0042.
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
W
- Stretcher Frames
- Oils and Acrylics Bankmark Services
McConnell Lumber
L. G. Balfour Co.
Exclusive Representative
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
Visit our stereo component room basement floor and get this 33 stereo album for 25c with this ad as a coupon. Ed Admes, Peter Nero, Henry Arthur Fledder, Lamer, Marty Gold, Arthur Fledder, Lamer, Sam Gold, Min, Morton Gould, Si Zenter, at Ray Stoneback's, open Mon. and Thurs. ew, downtown. 11-5
- Badges
- Favors
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
Dedges Canada
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers
- Stationery
It is significant to note in this connection that graduate students will gather for coffee and conversation in the Traditions Room 7:30 Friday. 11-7
Rosalie's Hotel is an oasis in the middle of nowhere. When school becomes a drag, drive to Harper, Kan. You can't spend the night in the heaviest hotel. You won't believe what you see and experience. It's not a booze palace nor a pad but people who are capable of it. Write for entertainment scheduled for reservations - r (a t e s.) $4-$7.
phone: (316) 896-9121; ip: z7058.11-6
- Gifts
- Plaques
Anything in components amplifiers
watts synchronous changes'
39-8200 you can save at a factory, direct dealer.
Ray Stoneback's 929, Mass. 11-5
1 or 2 male roommates to share
2 store house. $37.50 monthly plus
4 utilities. Good location to campus.
Call Kent or Ron at 842-4188. 11-7
- Guards - Mugs
- Responds - Rallies
FREE—two 8-week old affectionate female kittens. Completely house-strikes. Hire a distemper shots Strokes. Give the kitten a gift. Call ME I-3-6211 after 5 p.m. 11-6
Do you sew in seab but can't afford high priced fabrics? Just arrived from New York, beautiful designer fabrics; 3 yd. low prices, low prices, call 843-883-6666 appt. 11-12
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
Biology Club - Nov 11, 7:30 p.m., 222
Snow. Discuss on where to go and how to get in Medical, Dental, and
graduate schools.
11-11
Rings - Crested - Letters
Part time student employment, work full school term, drivers license required. Call for appointment VI 2-2899 between 4 and 6 p.m. 11-7
FOR RENT
Loans to junior, senior and grad stu-
per financial Finance. 725 Mass V.
S3-8074.
- Sportswear
For Rent. Furnished apt. for 2 or 3 KU boys. Phone VI 3-7890; after 7, call VI 3-2851. 11-6
Rooms for Rent: Rooms with refrigerator for males. Linens furnished off street parking, borders campus and near downtown. Call VI 3-5767. 11-4
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6165
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens to $185 plus utilities. Hird Construction Company VI 3-6135 or VI 3-5730.
University Terrace Apt., 1 & 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished available, Mgrs. Office, 1529 West 9th. Call 842-1105 or 843-1433. 11-6
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35
Monthly. Available now call VI $16
$16
Tony's 66 Service
starting service
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
1105 Mass.
CASA De TACOS
VI 3-9880
- Applications
Tacos Tonight?
- Passports
- Portraits
"Please call for appointment"
LOST
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
VI 3-0330
721 Mass.
GARDENLAND. INC.
914 West 23rd
VI 2-1596
Aquariums & Fish
Lost Sunday 26 in Dandorf Chapel
B-ward. Call 824-7313. 11-5
Lost pair of women's octagonal tortoise-shell glasses near Flint Hall. Thurs. call Jay Ghilino, VI 3-110. I'm blind without them. 11-7
A fish is swimming in the water. There are plants and rocks around it.
Johnny Carson is a great guy. We love him, so does everyone else, but we would like to have his picture back. THE FLIJ'S. 11-6
Lost - Dietgen slide rule in brown case. Has initials "A.M." engraved in black on slide and rule. $5.00 reward to finder. 842-9297. 11-7
Lost—burlap and leather Princess Gardner billfold at Rubayyat or Gate-house. Keep the money—reward for I.D.'s Call JoAonn at 843-6011. 11-7
Lost full tool box Oct. 26 evening between Lawrence (4th and North) and Tonganoxie via Hwy. 40. Urgently needed. Call 843-8468. 11-10
Brown assignment notebook—very
owner reward- reward to
UDK office. 11-7
Man's billfold in Trailroom, Kansas Union. Keep the money—return the John Pizimzian at Museum of Nat History or leave it sack. UN 4-3178.
Two personalized checkbooks belonging to Robert E. Townsend, Jr. 1606 North Third, Garden City, Kansas Reward offered, call Bob at VII-31-11
FOUND
Apraxus 2 weeks ago a Black um-
bricade to Bremen
Call 842-7161 and pay for 11-5
HELP WANTED
EXPERIENCED Student Linotype Operator to work 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. university job. Good pay, university conditions, steady job. Car Wm. Smith, UM 4-3413.
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part
person only Burgee
Chef, 814 Iowa.
Male & Female students for local sales promotion work. Phone VI 3-7881, 9 a.m. to 12 midnight—Monday thru Friday. 11-7
Wanted t: Rock bands. Apply at
and 5—directly behind Laim's. I-10
Earn $00.00 per sale full or part time.
Coin vending equipment. Interview
Tues., Wed., or Thurs. Call Mr. Sigler,
42-8622. 11-6
Good experienced organ player needed for Rock Band. Losing our organ player as soon as replaced. Call Glen Morton. VI 3-7810. 11-11
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid, VI 3-4032. tf
$ \mathcal{E}_{s} \models_{f} \varepsilon s $
806 MASS.
VI 3-1171
- PORTRAITS
- APPLICATION PICTURES
PASSPORT PICTURI
PHOTOFINISHING
THE
STEREO STORE
A
UDIOTRONICS
NEW & USED COMPONENTS
9:30 - 5:30 Daily
Thurs. 8:30
928 Mass.
VI 3-8500
WANTED
Ironings to do in my home. 842-3447 11.5
BabySits in my home. Play yard
toys 9620 school. H19. I19. 11-5
5384
Someone with attractive hand printing accessory per month. a few dozen envelopes per month. a home. 2c per envelope. I furnish 2c per envelope and envelopes. 843-795 after 6 p.m.
Babyatty Monday and/or Wednes-
afternoons 1:15-3:15 Call Us:
7822 7825
TYPING
Wanted: part time male and female help for bartenders and waiters. Apply between 4 and 5. Tues.-Fri. at 804 W. 24th, directly behind Lum's. 11-10
Prompt, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, dissertations, miscellaneous papers. Electric VI-Corona, Plea type, Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440.
TYPING: Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misel, typing. Have electric typesetter with piez device. Phone 12-5-9554, Ms.Wright.
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist Elizabeth Lovett glish-Speech Education Electric office-size typewriter 843-2873. 11-24
ENTERTAINMENT
SERVICES OFFERED
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kan., 913-648-1777. ftt
Foreign Car Service, Wayne Harper,
with Ern's Cycle Sales now specializing
in foreign car tune-ups and machine
work. MG, Jag, Austin Healy.
Ern's Cycle Sales. 716 N. 2nd., VI
3-8515.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
Metal Sculpture Supplies
Tires and Batteries
A Bankmark Store
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
ROYAL MASTER CLEANERS 842 Mass.
- Men's & Ladies' 2 piece Suits $1.29
- Plain Dresses -- $1.29
- Shirts Laundered 4 for $1
Mon., Tues. & Wed.
with dry clean order
7:30 - 6:00 Mon.- Sat.
The Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
1 1/2 Mi. North of the Kaw River Bridge
Sizzling steaks and fresh seafoods await you when you dine at the Sirlain. We serve only the finest . . . preparing the selections as you like them with all the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirlain for uncomparable dining pleasure.
Open Daily—Except Monday
4:30 p.m. VI 1-1431
BSU's Homecoming plan vetoed by committee
(Continued from page 1) man of the queen selection committee, said the BSU was allowed an extra day to secure signatures on a nominating petition.
"We even offered to go out and dig up signatures for them," Miss Gille said.
David S. Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said a very high percentage of black students live off-campus.
Fifty signatures of off-campus residents were required on petitions to nominate candidates who did not live in organized living groups.
Bright had said earlier that obtaining 50 names was a difficult procedure.
A member of the selection committee said two off-campus candidates were nominated. He said that the committee spoke to the BSU and they were not planning to nominate a queen candidate.
Bright outlined the blacks' specific requests in regard to the half-time ceremonies. The proposals were as follows:
ert Docking. The BSU attendants would then be announced, followed by the announcement of the University Homecoming attendants. Both queens and their attendants would share the same platform.
- A black queen would be crowned by Bright before the crowning of the University Homecoming queen by Gov. Rob-
- The black royalty would be escorted onto the field by the BSU members and black faculty. The black queen and her attendants would be announced by a BSU member in the pressbox.
- The crown and robe for the BSU queen would be provided by the BSU but the University would furnish her flowers.
ernorship of Virginia for the first time in a century. Both are moderates within their parties, Holton polled about 53 per cent of the vote and Battle 45, with the balance going to splinter party candidates.
Nixon's stock soars
(Continued from page 1)
Nixon staked personal prestige on the outcome of the New Jersey and Virginia contests and made his first political appearances since the 1968 campaign in behalf of Cahill and Holton last week. He telephoned congratulations to both before midnight.
James Gunn, director of University relations, asked Bright if this request was contingent upon the second request concerning the details of the ceremony.
"The primary request," he said, "is for a court chosen by the BSU to participate in the University Homecoming ceremonies."
The two state victories gave the GOP 32 to 18 margin over the Democrats in governorships and left the Democrats with only Texas among the nation's most populous States. Holton's victory also puts Republicans in governorships of three of the 11 once-solidly Democratic Dixie states.
These victories also went far to offset the damage suffered by the GOP in losing three congressional seats in special elections earlier this year.
In New Jersey Tuesday, Republican Eugene Boyle made a surprisingly strong showing against Democrat Robert A. Roe for a vacant Democratic seat in the House. The final count showed Roe with a margin of about 1,000 votes but faced with a recount in some precincts.
Gives GOP 32-18 Margin
"It is contingent upon the queen going out onto the field and being crowned," Bright said, "but some of the other details could be comprised."
New Jersey voters rejected a proposal to give the vote to 18-year-olds. Ohio turned down a proposal to extend the vote to 19-year-olds.
Rick Harmon, Kansas Republican gubernatorial candidate in 1968, will be a dinner guest of the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity tonight.
Republican Jack C. Hunter, considered a political amateur and a heavy underdog until labor violence swung the odds his way, unseated three-term Democratic Mayor Anthony B. Flash of Youngstown, Ohio, by a slim margin.
In Cleveland, Stokes won another close contest as he had
Discussion was held as to whether a queen chosen by the BSU was representative of the entire black student community.
Lindsay's victory gave him the eminent position of mayor of the nation's largest city but without authority to speak for a major political party. Nixon, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and the national GOP organization had endorsed Marchi, who polled barely more than a fifth of the vote.
Rick Harmon TKE guest
Hunter, a pipe-smoking exmarine who served two terms on City Council, ran a vigorous law-and-order campaign in this eastern Ohio steel mill city of 175,000.
Is Without Authority
Harmon will speak informally at the house and will answer questions of the members and guests. He may possibly discuss President Nixon's Nov. 3 Vietnam address and his own political plans for the future.
erate” in comparison to their earlier demands.
two years ago by attracting enough white voters—about 20 per cent—to go along with his almost 100 per cent backing from the Negro community.
In Pittsburgh, City Councilmen Peter F. Flaherty, who defeated the city organization candidate in the Democratic primary, easily won over Republican John K. Tabor.
Bright said the BSU was "the voice of the black students."
In Louisville, Ky., former Democratic Congressman Frank W. Burke won the mayoral contest from John P. Sawyer, Republican businessman. The Republicans held the job for eight years.
- Bright, along with Awbrey, would escort Gov. Robert Docking onto the field. The Chancellor would be escorted by a BSU member along with the KU Jayhawk.
16 KANSAN Nov.5 1969
One black student present at the meeting said every black student was an honorary member of the BSU.
- Two cars, provided by the University and driven by BSU members, would carry the queen and her attendants around the field. The first car would be occupied by the black students' queen while the University Homecoming queen would ride in the second. She would be followed by the black attendants in the third car with the University attendants in the fourth.
Awbrey warned the committee of the difficulties that might arise this week-end if they chose not to comply with the black's request.
Rusty Leffel, Prairie Village senior and chairman of the Homecoming steering committee, said there were two requests before the committee.
Gunn asked Bright if the BSU would object to setting aside a small part of the half-time for the separate recognition of a black student queen.
A statement released by the BSU concerning the earlier meeting with the Chancellor Tuesday morning said, "The Black Student Union announced their demands for positions within the University structure in the areas of student affairs, urban affairs and black studies."
"We're going to have two separate universities unless we get them involved," he said.
"You decide what you're going to do and then let us know," Bright said. The BSU president, accompanied by the three black students, then left the meeting.
Awbrey, who said he has met and talked with several members of the BSU, said that Bright's proposals regarding the homecoming ceremonies were "mod-
Chalmers said the three BSU members made an offer to provide two students to meet with university administrators in considering demands made by the BSU to the Chancellor Friday.
"I welcomed their proposal and will suggest to individual administrators that they meet with them," Chalmers said.
Chalmers, who refused Monday to meet demands for a black homecoming ceremony, said there should be some recognition of the black community during Homecoming.
"I would be happy to recommend recognition but I am not in a position to recommend sharing of the halftime ceremonies." he said.
The CPA: he's where it's at.
SCHLOMBERG
When there's a tough business decision to be made, the Certified Public Accountant is a man everybody wants to have around.
His advice often makes the difference between success or failure.
He's a key man in developing and interpreting economic data.
And in every type of enterprise You name it: television, steel, oil government, hospitals, aerospace.
What qualities should a CPA have? He should be able to think creatively analyze problems,and come up with imaginative solutions.And he should be the kind of man that people can put their confidence in.
A CPA might join an accounting firm and eventually become a partner. Or he might open a practice for himself and go it alone. Or he can work in almost any type of business he chooses. What other profession offers so many choices?
You can select courses now that could earn you your CPA certificate soon after graduation. Or you might want to go on to graduate work. Ask your faculty adviser about it.
We've prepared a booklet with the whole CPA story. Just drop a card or note (mentioning the name of your college) to: Dept. 15, AICPA, 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10019.
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Color to reduce ghosts
CAPE KENNEDY—Apollo 12's astronauts will teleview their walks on the moon in color. It will mean a clearer and more spectacular show.
Mission commander Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr. said the color television camera should reduce the "ghosts and phantoms" that appeared from the Apollo 11 astronauts' black and white camera during their moonwalk in July.
Rates down $237 million
WASHINGTON—Americans will be paying $237 million a year less for their long distance telephone calls by February--but the giant Bell System will be authorized to earn more than ever on such calls.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the American Telephone and Telegraph Company's rate reductions plans Wednesday by a 5 to 1 vote.
The cuts could take the form of lower costs per each long distance call, or they could be achieved by lengthening the amount of time one may talk at the reduced rate.
Lodge may want out
WASHINGTON—Well-informed sources report Henry Cabot Lodge is dismayed at the floundering Paris talks and wants out of his job as chief negotiator by the end of this year.
Both the White House and the State Department refused to confirm Lodge wants to be replaced, but the sources said they were unsure if the veteran diplomat had yet made a formal request to be relieved of his post.
Appointees questioned
TOPEKA—Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell planned to present a written report to Democratic Gov. Robert B. Docking today on "10 or 12" complaints involving "three or four individuals" appointed to state posts by the governor.
Docking said he planned to tape record any conversation between him and Frizzell, and invited the attorney general to do the same. Frizzell said Wednesday he wasn't sure if he would or not.
The two men met for 12 minutes Wednesday in Docking's private office. Docking has demanded to be told of any investigations and Frizzell said he would comply so long as the information was kept confidential.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 39
The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, Nov. 6,1969
BSU accepts plan
By KENNETH CUMMINS and CAROLYN BOWERS
The Black Student Union (BSU) executive committee voted Wednesday night to accept the proposal by the University Homecoming Committee to allow a five-minute pre-game crowning ceremony for the black students' queen and a motorcade for the black royalty during halftime.
Kansan Statt Writers
The proposal allows the crowning ceremony to take place on the football field before the start of the KU-Colorado homecoming game. The motorcade around the
field will take place after the conclusion of the University Homecoming queen's motorcade.
Four members of the BSU appeared before the University Homecoming general steering committee Tuesday afternoon to request that a black students' queen be crowned at the same time as the University Homecoming queen. They also requested that the black royalty be included in the motorcade.
The committee vetoed these requests and offered the proposals that the BSU queen be crowned during a pre-game ceremony
Mistrial declared,but Seale gets four years for contempt
CHICAGO (UPI)—U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman Wednesday declared a mistrial for Black Panther leader Bobby Seale on riot conspiracy charges and sentenced him to four years in prison for contempt of court in tumultuous courtroom outbreaks that repeatedly stalled the trial of the "Chicago Eight."
Hoffman ruled that the trial of the other seven defendants charged with conspiring to incite the riots that swept Chicago during the 1968 Democratic National Convention would go on. He said he severed the Black Panther national chairman from the case because it was his "duty an obligation to insure that the trial continue."
The judge imposed jail terms or three months each on 16 separate counts of contempt against Seale for the violent and obscene outbursts that caused the court to
order the Negro militant gagged and shackled for three days last week. He ruled that the terms would run consecutively.
Seale's ailing San Francisco lawyer, Charles Garry, said he would appeal the jail sentence "to the highest court in the land." He called the sentence "a savage one
illegal and contrary to law." Seale interrupted several times during the reading of the specifications, twice shouting "that's a lie."
Hoffman found Seale in contempt after a fellow judge, U.S. District Court Judge Edwin A. Robson, had upheld Hoffman's action in ordering Seale gagged and shackled.
Robson ruled that "no other remedy was available" to Hoffman when Seale's violent outbursts threw the trial into chaos and triggered the gag-and-bind order for three tumultuous days last week.
and/or included in a motorcade during half-time after the conclusion of the University Homecoming queen's motorcade.
The BSU also elected their queen and her attendants at the Wednesday night meeting. The queen is Lorene Brown, Value, Miss., freshman. Her attendants are Annie Dennis, Wichita sophomore, and Frances Robinson, Kansas City junior.
BSU representatives presented the Chancellor with a list of their demands during a meeting with him Friday.
The demand for a black students' queen to be crowned during half-time ceremonies of Saturday's homecoming game was immediately refused by Chalmers. He told the black students he would respond to the other demands within ten days to two weeks.
The list of demands also called for the creation of the positions of Dean of Black Students and Dean of Black Student Affairs.
The Dean of Black Students would have the responsibility of recruiting black students and faculty to the University. The job also would have the responsibility of setting up a tutoring program and finding jobs for all black students desiring to work both before and after graduation. The Dean of Black Students would have the power to determine his own budget and expense account.
His administrative powers would be synonymous with those of the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women and the Director of Student Financial Aids. All scholarships and grants from all departments and schools within the University will be coordinated under the office of the Dean of Black Students.
All black students would be tried by the Black Disciplinary (Continued to page 16)
1974
Photo by Halina Pawl
Where have all the senators gone?
Attendance at the Student Senate meeting last night dwindled as the meeting continued. A quorum was called twice, and both times just enough senators were present to conduct elections for new senators to fill vacancies. The quorum call was contested and some senators said they might contest the elections at the next Senate meeting.
Senate hears reports
A Student Senate, at times barely comprising a quorum Wednesday night, heard 23 committee reports, passed 2 resolutions and filled 7 vacancies during a $4\frac{1}{2}$-hour meeting in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Senate Executive Committee chairman Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student, presented a proposal asking for the dismissal of any senator who misses three consecutive senate meetings.
"There are some senate members who have not attended a meeting this year," George said. "I think this shows a lack of interest in the senate and such action should result in their expulsion from the senate."
The resolution passed directing the Union Operating Board to start working on drawings for the proposed Satellite Union in "N" zone parking area, located west of Murphy Hall and north of Allen Field House.
The resolution also called for an investigation of possible pedestrian and traffic conflicts around the proposed site as well as the possible installation of a cooperative or discount sundry store at the site.
Also presented at last night's meeting were three alternatives for upgrading student health services by Dave Blahna, St. Louis Park, Minn., graduate student and chairman of the Student Health Committee.
The alternatives included adding a new wing to Watkins Hospital, the construction of a new health center at an estimated cost of $2 million, or building temporary structures near the hospital's present site at a cost of $16,000.
The seven new senators elected at last night's meeting were: John Morris, Emporia junior, at large; Fred Krebs, Wichita, Roger Laub, Omaha, Karen Wade, Columbus, Ohio, and Jack Casey, all from the Graduate School; Mike Haggans, Wichita, and Joe King, Potwin, both from the School of Architecture.
BULLETIN
Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry, was announced today as the recipient of the 1969 Hope Award, which is presented by the senior class to an outstanding faculty member.
Bricker, who won the 1966 award, stressed it was a department effort and he was merely the representative of his staff.
Campus briefs
Woodcut exhibition Sunday
Mrs. Herta Galton, Lawrence artist, will present an exhibition of woodcuts and pastes from 1:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sunday at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The works on display will be for sale.
Presidents to talk
Four members of the Young Presidents Organization will speak at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 13 in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room.
Young Presidents are men under 40 years of age who have become president of a firm which grosses at least $1 million annually. The company also must employ at least 50 people.
The lecture is sponsored by the KU Business Council.
Parrenin Quartet to open
The Parrenin Quartet will open the Chamber Music Series 8 p.m. Nov.11 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The Quartet will play selections by Beethoven, Karel Husa and Debusy.
Bloodmobile here
The Red Cross Bloodmobile will be on campus Nov. 11, 12 and 13. Tuesday and Wednesday the bloodmobile will be in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The bloodmobile will be at Joseph R. Pearson Hall on Thursday during the same hours.
Any student who is 18 years of age or older may participate in the blood drive. The Red Cross requests donors weigh at least 110 pounds said a representative from the Douglas County Red Cross
A local beer distributor will provide tickets to all donors for a free beer. These tickets will be redeemable at a local establishment Tuesday through Saturday, next week.
The blood drive is co-sponsored by the Douglas County Chapter
Official Bulletin
Today
Kansas State Teachers Association.
State Session. 1:30 p.m. Allen
Fleish Center.
Faculty Forum. Panel. "Middle East Crisis." Noon, Westminster Center.
Westfield Center.
Jayhawk Joggers Club. 4:30 p.m.
Bobinson High School.
University Theatre, "Die Fledermaus." 8:20 p.m.
Free University Rock Music Class.
7am. p.m. 1247 Tennessee. Anyone
welcome.
Latin American Club. General
Room. 8 p.m. Kansas Union Oread
Room.
of the American Red Cross and the Pershing Rifles.
Tomorrow
Kansas State Teachers Association.
10 a.m. Allen Field House, General Store.
Bio-Science "Lecture, "Biological Clocks" Frank A. Brown Jr., professor Northwestern University, 124 Malott (via TV from KUMC).
Homecoming House Decorations on
View, 5-11 p.m.
Popular Film. "Elvira Madigan"
7 & 9:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium.
International Film Theatrical and
theater (Hungarian) Hoch Audio-
triumph
University Theatre." "Die Fledermaus." 8:20 p.m.
LOOK MA, NO TEETH
OSLO, Norway (UPI)—Norway should be able to claim a world record for bad teeth, statisticians say.
More than 700,000 Norwegians have lost all their teeth and only one out of 1,000 Norwegians in their twenties have perfect teeth.
DOUBLE-DECKER
TOKYO (UPI) — Hitachi, Japan's largest manufacturing firm, has built a two-story elevator which will lift 260 persons at a time.
Hitachi claims it is the largest elevator ever built. It will be installed at the 1970 Japan World Exposition.
Nov. 6
1969
KANSAN
Environmental study group calls new effects of pollution dangerous
Environmental pollution and possible preventive action were discussed Wednesday night by the Ecology Action Group. The group is concerned with the effects of pollution on natural environment.
James L. Koevenig, associate professor of biology, cited newly-discovered effects of mercury poison from wheat crop treatment and asbestos powder from crumbling buildings as examples of ever-increasing dangers to man's natural environment. Death from mercury poisoning and lung cancer from asbestos powder are some of the effects of pollution on man, he said.
"We favor man's sensible use of the environment. We are against activities opposed to natural physical and biotic resources which lead to a lessening quality of human life," Koevening said replying to an accusation that crusaders against pollution were against progress.
Although city water pollution, insecticide poison and air pollution are known dangers, little has actually been accomplished. Koevenig attributed lack of effective action to misinformation, legislatures plagued by influential pressure groups and individual hesitancy to act. One example of effective action was the abandonment of air explosions by the Atomic Energy Commission.
Koevenig suggested formation of four action groups in the Lawrence area. Students, community people, scientists and a biology club would make up the groups. Research and initiation of legal action would be two main
goals.
Bill Silvert, assistant professor of physics, encouraged the groups to work with established national organizations and to involve the University in environmental research.
TRAVEL INFORMATION now available at SUA TRAVEL CENTER
with student agents 12:30-4:30 Monday-Friday
2
Information on:
1. Flight schedules
2. Student Travel ID's
3. Overseas travel, study and/or work
M
The college you can't get into without a job.
The college is ours-Western Electric's Corporate Education Center in Hopewell, New Jersey.
Like your college, ours has a campus with dorms, dining halls, labs and a library. Unlike yours, you can't get into ours without a job. A job at Western Electric.
Our students-engineers, managers and other professionals-develop and expand their skills through a variety of courses, from corporate operations to computer electronics. To help bring better telephone service and equipment, through the Bell System.
For information contact your placement office. Or write College Relations Manager, Western Electric Co., Room 2500, 222 Broadway, New York, New York 10038. An equal opportunity employer.
Western Electric
Manufacturing and Supply Unit of the Bell System
Local merchants to display products in 'Home Show'
Students will have a chance to see and try out some of the products offered by the merchants of the Lawrence community.
For the first time in 20 years, Lawrence is having a Home Show, from 1 to 10 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the National Guard Armory, north of 6th and Iowa Streets on the west Turnpike access road.
Activities will be going on in booths set up in the building throughout the Home Show. The activities include demonstrations of wig fitting and hair styling with some of the women in the audience invited to participate, and demonstrations of musical instruments, stereo equipment
and exercising equipment.
The largest feature of the show will be a 12- by 65-foot mobile home which is being sponsored by a local mobile home dealer. The home will be completely furnished, decorated and heated, so the public can go in and see what mobile home living is like.
The show also will feature many local services available to the college student, including laundries, insurance and kitchen and bath fixtures and repair.
Todd Crittenden, 1956 KU graduate in advertising and business and now an employee of the Ad Ideas, Inc. of Kansas City, is one of the coordinators of the Home Show. He said one of the highlights will be a "Home Show Bookstore" which will feature hard- and paper-back books on such topics as gardening, cooking, building and decorating. Crittenden said he thought these books would be of interest to those students now living in apartments or who are contemplating moving into one in the near future.
Free University class says anarchy 'matter of survival'
Members of the Breakfast Optimist Club of Lawrence will operate a concession stand as a fund raising project.
Anarchist theory does not deal with politics, but with the survival of man, claims the coordinator of the Free University course called "Anarchist Theory."
Rich Smith, coordinator and Wichita freshman, said, "We are trying to dispel the idea that an anarchist is a man dressed in black who carries a bomb."
The class discusses the writings of "anarchists" such as "Obsolete Communism: Left Wing Alternative" by Daniel Cohn-Bendit.
Smith said anarchy, as discussed by the class, represented a state of human emancipation.
Nov. 6
1969 KANSAN 3
Numbers have been the major problem encountered in the class. There are three persons who have attended class regularly since it began, although at a single class there have been as many as eight people present. Smith said.
Developers of the Lake Perry region will also be on hand to talk about the lake lots for sale in the reservoir area. Crittenden said the U.S. Coast Guard will send a 20- by 10-foot display featuring boating and safety regulations to demonstrate water safety.
Crittenden said booths which feature art work might be of interest to the student for personal enjoyment and also for livening up living quarters. Part of the art work will be that of KU students, he said.
Those in the class last Tuesday agreed political systems were hindering the survival of man. Political systems are unnatural, one said.
Smith said the ideal relationship among men would be a system in which all the members were subject to all other members and not to any higher rule.
Additional booth space has been reserved for use by civic, church and community organizations.
The class meets at 7:30 Tuesday at 1340 Tenn. St.
Professional Betty Bonn models will be at the show to assist exhibitors and to staff the show office and bookstore.
NONPARTISAN MONUMENT
MORGANTOWN, Ky. (UPI) Civil War monuments are common on courthouse lawns in Kentucky, but the monument on the Butler County Courthouse lawn is the only one in the state honoring both Northern and Southern soldiers.
NEW TEE PEE
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KANSAN. Comment
Of pilots and police
By HOWARD PANKRATZ Kansan Staff Writer
FBI agents were intent on stopping hijacker Raphael Minichiello as the TWA jet stood on a secluded part of Kennedy airport. As one of the crew put it later, "We almost lost the game at Kennedy," for as the young Marine, a recent immigrant from Italy, became increasingly agitated, he fired a shot to indicate he would kill the crew if the plane didn't take off immediately.
On the ground, FBI agents peered through their rifle sights as ground crew stalled and two overseas pilots, licensed to fly trans-Atlantic routes, climbed aboard. Later, Donald Cook would call the agents "idiots" for trying to apprehend the frantic boy and placing him and the crew in danger.
Though it cannot be doubted that the FBI and all law enforcement officers were primarily concerned for the safety of the crew; it is interesting to note the way in which the case was handled. For here was one of those rare chances for federal agencies to stop something that had frustrated them in the past—an airliner hijacking.
As the plane flew from Denver to New York, I visualized the pandemonium that reigned at Kennedy and on the freeways leading to it. Undoubtedly, I thought, many well-armed government officials were on their way to stop this maniac. Fully expecting a real episode of "The FBI" to come to life before my eyes, I switched on my TV. TV coverage there would not be, but an attempt to stop the boy would be made.
To many of us at KU, TWA and airlines mean fathers who are pilots and flight engineers, and friends who are stewardesses. We know they're human; we've either lived with them or dated them and we know they have a human side few passengers see. But we also know they are trained to handle people, emergencies and hijackers.
Of all the hijackings that have taken place, only once has the crew "lost the ball game," and that was in a South American country. American crews have succeeded in saving their passengers' lives, including one time when a time bomb was on board, by cooperating and keeping cool.
It should be noted that law officers are rarely held responsible if an innocent bystander is killed, whether the person killed be a hostage in a get-away car, or a crewman in a taxiing plane.
Under the felony-murder law, if an officer
kills a hostage, the kidnaper will be charged with murder, the theory being that if the kidnaping hadn't taken place to begin with, neither would the killing. Thus the kidnaper is directly responsible for the death. It is also reasoned that to hold an officer responsible for the death of hostages would hinder action which might be necessary in emergency situations. This is probably true.
The only trouble is, the lack of restraints often give infuriated law officers free rein to jeopardize lives that would not be in jeopardy otherwise. The simple cry, "they're getting away," causes a reflex action in some officers. Unfortunately, reflex actions are necessary to the very survival of lawmen and soldiers, but endanger the life of the civilian.
Hijackers of American planes have not killed anyone. The hijackers, for the most part, have been men on the run—men running from money problems, from what they feel are racial injustices or simply running because they are misfits in American society. Rarely do men of this type want to kill. That they can kill is beyond question: any man as frustrated as these has that potential. But if they are treated with the quiet dignity and respect at which airline crews are masters, they will not kill.
That they are utterly confused and bewildered individuals can be seen by the return Monday of six hijackers to the United States. The mental isolation of an alien environment such as Cuba's was even worse than all the loneliness they had suffered here.
Capt. Don Cook was accused of trying to "hog all the glory" by a member of the Queen's district attorney's office. This is a malicious statement prompted undoubtedly by the idea that airlines employ nothing but cocky, hot-shot pilots and wild stewardesses. Glamor there is, to an extent, but to anyone who has known a crewman who has survived a plane crash, a stewardess who has lost a roommate in a midair collision, to those who know the effort stewardesses put into keeping trim and waiting long hours on standby, there is also another side.
Letters to the Editor
I have faith in the crews that fly our skies and their ability to keep their passengers and themselves alive. To the officers, I would only say that the hijacker will probably return voluntarily to the United States at some later date. Any "heroic" action on their part is foolish action.
To the editor-
Regarding Judith Diebolt's editorial "Boo Boo - Rah Rah"": Can there be an informed person in this country today who will deny that our generation is as involved or more involved than any of those past? Yet the senior class, while learning of involvement and responsibility, has not forgotten how to be young.
While Miss Diebolt appears to be today's cynic and tomorrow's too, the senior sweatshirt speaks of the real world, "Today's Seniors- Tomorrow's Establishment": It can be no other way.
Robert E. Franzen St. Louis, Mo., senior
Readers' write
Andre Kole
FUCHA
To the editor;
We've been taken! For those of you who did not attend the "startling demonstration and discussion of extra-sensory perception, witchaft and the supernatural" by Andre Kole, "America's leading illusionist" last Sunday night at Hoch Auditorium, we congratulate you on your good fortune. The advertisements requested that no children be admitted. We now see the wisdom of this since even as adults we had trouble remaining still in our seats throughout the "startling performance."
Perhaps a better description would be that it was a sermon including a few obvious tricks and corny jokes.
We would like to thank Campus Crusade for Christ (CCC) for bringing Mr. Kole to KU to tell us basically that there are no such things as illusionists. It turned out the real purpose of this gathering was to further the beliefs of this organization. This being the case, we believe that this fact should not have been hidden so cleverly in the advertisements.
When an organization employs these tactics in an attempt to gain a few new adherents, perhaps it is time for them to reevaluate their basic ideology. We hope that our dollar admission fee will be used by CCC with this in mind.
Jim Hess
Wichita senior
Spike Lynch
Leawood senior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansas 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. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor... Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor... Joanna K. Wiele
Campus Editor... Joe Bullard
News Editor... Ruth Rademacher
Makeup Editor... Ken Peterson
Sports Editor... Jay Thomas
Wire Editor... Martha Manglesdorf
Arts and Review Editor... Mike Shauer
Women's Page Editor... Linda Loyd
Photo and Graphics Editor... Mike Rieke
Assistant News Editors... Donna Shrader, Steve Haynes
Assistant Sports Editor... Joe Childs
Assistant Editorial Editor... Judith K. Diebold
Assistant Campus Editor... Rick Fendergrass
Assistant Photo and Graphics Editor... Mike Reuvers
Assistant Women's Page Editor... Viki Hysten
BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor .. Mel Adams
Business Manager ... Jerry Bottentfield
Assistant Business Manager ... Mike Banks
Advertising Manager ... Jack Hurley
National Advertising Manager ... Rod Osborne
Classified Advertising Manager ... Larry Rosenberger
Promotion Manager ... Robson O'Neal
Circulation Manager ... Todd Smith
Member Associated Collegiate Press
THE OLYMPIC TALLEY
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. '360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
WHAT'RE YOU LOOKIN' AT?
OUR OLD BABY PICTURES, OSCAR...
HERE'S ME AND THE UNICORN AS KIDS...
WHAT'S THAT BLACK DOT, OVER THERE?
THAT'S DAISY...
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Daily Kansan.
KANSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Stale champagne
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
Claire Bloom and her uniquely talented ex-husband Rod Steiger may have fallen into what I call the Liz-Dick syndrome.
Both, with many movie credits under their belts, have assumed that their talents can carry any script, but anyone who saw Liz Taylor and Richard Burton struggling through "Boom" or "Cleopatra" or any one of several other flops knows that acting talent alone cannot make a movie. Gregory Peck, one of Hollywood's finest actors, is likewise a dupe for a bad script.
"3 Into 2 Won't Go" starts no where and very carefully weaves its way through what might been interesting circumstances . . . to end up no where.
I usually have a moral qualm about revealing a movie's end in a review, but I can say with no moral hesitance whatsoever that all four characters in the movie simply walk away, separately, and I like to imagine that they all went to search for a new agent who could find them a good script.
I was so sick of the strained drama of the film that I kept hoping, fruitlessly, that they would all link elbows and sing a gauche finale. The Rockettes would have been a real treat at the end of this film.
I even wondered at points if I had overjudged the acting talents of Steiger who simply comes off like stale champagne. Judy Geeson (I think she was in "To Sir With Love") does the best acting job in the movie, but she is too little relief from the severe tedium.
Hopefully, neither Claire Bloom (who has done good movies) nor Steiger is going downhill. Hopefully, "3 Into 2 Won't Go" is the only moldy radish in salad.
BOOKS
McLUHAN PRO AND CON, edited by Raymond Rosenthal (Pelican, $1.45)—The most popular philosopher of today may well be Marshall McLuhan, even though many, including some of his adherents, do not always understand him. He has addressed himself to the problem of communication more thoroughly than other modern figures, and has become a great target to throw darts at. Some of the darts are in this book, and some of the praise of the McLuhanites, too. The book is not a one-sided treatment, and it will be absorbing reading for many.
Nov. 6
1969 KANSAN 5
OPENS TOMORROW, LAWRENCE
HOME SHOW
Fri., Nov. 7th—Sat., Nov. 8
Sun., Nov. 9—1 - 10 p.m.
NATIONAL GUARD BLDG.
North of Ramada Inn
COME SEE
T
Come see over 50 exciting exhibits! Many demonstrations going on in the booths. Scores of prizes for lucky families. Gifts for all! Park free. Bring the whole family. YES, IT'S FREE!
Betty Bonn Int'l-Official Modeling Agency
WALT DISNEY PRODUCES
MOTION PICTURES,
NOT FOREIGN FLICKS!
WALT DISNEY'S
Darby O'Gill and
the Little
People
TECHNICOLOR
EXPINCOLOR
Mat. 2:30 Wed., Thurs.
Fri., Sat., Sun.
Eve. 7:15-9:15
ALL WALT DISNEY PROGRAM!
You only need eyes to enjoy these two motion pictures!
Granada
THEATRE...telephone VI 5-3284
WALT DISNEY presents THE TATTOOED POLICE HORSE
By BOB BUTLER Kansan Reviewer
For the last 15 years, Country and Western music has been a bland rehashing of themes created by Hank Williams, stagnant blue-grass (not that it isn't fun—it just never seems to be going anywhere), and urban schlock-rock (D-I-V-O-R-C-E, truck-drivin' songs, etc.).
RECORDS: As the C & W sound used to be
Then, three years ago, the Buffalo Springfield created a revitalized C & W that not only had catchy tunes but displayed great technical virtuosity. The Byrds (traditionally the first group to push new trends) came out with their beautiful "Sweetheart of the Rodeo" album and by 1969 the rush was on.
But although these groups are highly successful (and fittingly so—their music is delightful), their art is at best only a pleasant distortion of true Country music (albeit a more innovative distortion than that of the Southern-fried gentlemen who crank out records in Nashville).
Which brings me to "Sweet Moments with the Blue Velvet Band" on Warner Brothers records. At last Hank Williams can rest in peace. The Blue Velvet Band treats its material (some of it by Hank Williams himself) like works of art.
In fact, "Sweet Moments" is the only album I know which doesn't have some flaw. Not one guitar lick or one whine of the pedal steel guitar is out of place
The four gentlemen who comprise the Blue Velvet Band Bill Keith, Jim Rooney, Eric
PROTEST UNWED MOTHERS
COPENHAGEN (UPI)—Beginning Jan. 1, 1970, the names of unwed mothers involved in paternity suits will no longer be made public. The alleged fathers will continue to be identified.
Weissberg and Richard Greene have experience beyond their years and are the products of such groups as the Jim Kweskin Jug Ban, Ian and Sylvia, and Sea Train.
The best cut on the album is
Hank William's "Ramblin' Man." Slow, rolling, with a whining fiddle and steel guitar in the background, it is the epitome of Country and Western music. Innovative, but not radically so; full-bodied, but still compact.
IF YOU THINK 'THE COMIC' IS JUST ANOTHER MOVIE ABOUT HOLLYWOOD... HERE'S PIE IN YOUR FACE!
"THE COMIC"
DICK VAN DYKE · MICHELE LEE · MICKEY ROONEY Written and Produced by CARL REINER and AARON RUBEN - Directed by CARL REINER - Color
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
mat. DAILY 2:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:10
World Campus Afloat is a college that does more than broaden horizons. It sails to them and beyond.
Again in 1970, the World Campus Afloat program of Chapman College and Associated Colleges and Universities will take qualified students, faculty and staff into the world laboratory.
Chapman College now is accepting final applications for the next three consecutive semesters: Spring 1970, Fall 1970 and Spring 1971. Preliminary applications also may be made for all future semesters.
Fall semesters depart New York for ports in Western Europe and the Mediterranean, Africa and South America, ending in Los Angeles. Spring semesters circle the world from Los Angeles through the Orient, India and South Africa to New York.
For a catalog and other information complete and mail the coupon below.
I am so sorry to hear that you are going through a difficult time. I hope that you can find comfort and support in your friends and family. You are not alone in this journey.
SAFETY INFORMATION: The s.s. Ryndam registered in The Netherlands, meets International Safety Standards for new ships developed in 1948 and meets 1966 fire safety requirements.
Art student Leana Leach of Long Beach sketches ruins of once-buried city during World Campus Alloat visit to Pompeii.
CARRIER
---
---
WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT
Director of Student Selection Services
Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 92666
Please send your catalog and any other material I need to have
Mr. Miss Mrs.
SCHOOL INFORMATION
Last Name First Initial
Name of School
Campus Address Streat
HOME INFORMATION
Campus Phone (___)
Area Code
Home Address Street
City State Zip
Home Phone (___)
Area Code
Until ___ info should be sent to campus □ home □
approx. date
I am interested in □ Faff Spring □ 19 ___
□ I would like to talk to a representative of WORLD
CAMPUS AFLOAT
Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale
ASCAP award to KU man
For those who do not think that the world of music revolves around Steppenwolf and the Turtles, the announcement of a serious music award to a University of Kansas faculty member should bring joy.
John W. Pozdro, professor on music theory, is a recipient of a 1969-1970 American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) award. The award is given by an independent panel with judging based upon the unique prestige value of each writer's catalog and the performances of compositions.
"In making grants such as this, we are glad to join with your educational institution in sup-
Campus Interviews
These companies will hold placement interviews on campus next
School of Engineering, 111 Marvin Madsen
Beech Aircraft Corp. M.S. in engineering, physics, math; B.S. or M.S. mechanical or industrial engineering; aeronautics in aerospace or electrical engineering.
Door-Oliver Inc., B.S. or M.S. in civil engineering.
Morton Chemical Co., B.S. or M.S. in chemical engineering; summer work available for seniors, written application must be submitted.
Granite Steel Co., B.S. in architecture industrial or mechanical engineering
Northern Natural Gas Co., B.A.
M.S. in chemical, electrical, industrial,
mechanical or petroleum engineering,
milled math, B.S. in civil engineering
3 F. Pritchard & Co., B.S. or M.S. in
mechanical engineering
aerospace, civil architecture, M.S. in
industrial, industrial, mechanical or
petroleum engineering; B.S., M.S. or
in chemical engineering; B.S.
in engineering or physics or combination civil engineeering and business administration.
Celanese Corp, B.S. or M.S. in electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering; B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. in chemical engineering; Ph.D. in physics.
Chicago Bridge & Iron, B.S. in aerospace, civil or electrical engineering; B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. in chemical engineering; B.S. or M.S. in mechanic-engineering; summer work available or sophomores, junior and seniors.
General Motors Corp., B.S. in electrical, industrial, civil or mechanical engineering; B.S. or M.S. in chemical engineering.
Gulf Research Division, Ph.D. in chemical engineering.
Proctor & Gamble, (same as Tuesday).
Armeco Steel Corp., B.S. in architectural, civil, chemical, industrial or mechanical engineering; engineering physics or combination civil engineering and business administration: interested in January and June graduates.
Hughes Aircraft Co., B.S. in electrical or mechanical engineering, engineering physics; interested in June and August graduates.
Fridav
Cities Service Gas Co., B.S. in electrical, industrial, mechanical or civil engineering; summer work available. Respected located in January and June graduates.
Laclede Gas Co. B.S in chemical, electrical, chemical, petroleum engineering.
The Magnavox Co. B.S. in chemical engineering, physics, physics, computer science or combination civil engineering and business administration interested in
Tektronix, Inc., B.S. or M.S. in chemical, electrical or mechanical engineering; interested in January, June and August graduates.
U.S. Dept. of Agriculture (Forest
Seeding) of Florida; interested in January, June
neering; interested in January, June
School of Journalism, 105 Flint
U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, B.S. or M.S. in news-editorial or magazine sequence, with background in natural sciences
Western Auto Supply, B.S. or M.S.
in Automotive Engineering resented in January
and June graduates.
Wednesday
Proctor & Gamble, interested in people for the sales department.
Hallmark Cards, B.S. or M.S.
in news & information
of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
206 Strong Wednesday
Defense Intelligence Agency, degrees in computer science, economics, engineering, geography, math, physics geology, will consider all degrees.
6 KANSAN Nov. 6 1969
TARR'S LAUNDRY
TARR'S LAUNDRY
Daily 8-5 p.m.
Saturday 8-1 p.m.
"We Do Your Laundry
For You."
1903 $^{1}$ Massachusetts
porting the growth and development of our nation's musical future," wrote Stanley Adams, ASCAP president, in a letter of congratulations.
Pozdro was included in the field of composers and authors of symphonic, operatic and concert works. Awards totaled $338,650 for 583 writers. A remaining $326,710 will be distributed to 1,214 writers in the popular field. Top talent in this area included Jim Webb, who wrote "Galveston," "Wichita Lineman," and "Where's the Playground, Susie." Pop-folk winners were Joan Baez, Judy Collins and Bobbie Gentry while Janis Joplin was presented with a rock-blues award.
Current rock scene awards for groups were presented to the Doors, The Band, The Grateful Dead, The Youngbloods and Blue Cheer.
The panel of distinguished authorities consisted of Donald E. Brown, director of the School of Music of Barrington College, Rhode Island; Donald Engle, director of the Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music, Inc.; Frederick Fennell, conductor of the University of Miami Symphony; Walter Hendle, director of the Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester; and Louis G. Wersen, director of music education for Philadelphia public schools.
LOGICAL NAME
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (UPI)
The founding and naming of this city came about in the 1800's when a man named Col. Baker let travelers rest overnight in his pasture. As the word spread of his hospitality it became known as Baker's field.
tuesday night is fashion
tuesday night is ladies free
so take a study break tuesday
have a brew and relax
yuk down
Tuesday
LADIES' NIGHT FREE
SKI
AUSTRIA
December 26—January 4
7 nights in INNSBRUCK
1 night in PARIS
SKI
AUSTRIA
December 26—January 4
7 nights in INNSBRUCK
1 night in PARIS
$285 (price includes)
Transportation - FROM NEW YORK
Accommodations
Meals
Lift Reductions
Transfers, etc.
Open Forum Nov. 11
RESERVATIONS DUE IMMEDIATELY
CONTACT SUA
Why is a Business Administration graduate like Chuck Carpenter glad he chose Ford Motor Company?
Charles A. Carpenter
B.S. in General Business,
Wayne State University
"You don't get lost in the numbers."
"You retain your individuality," says Chuck Carpenter, a Business Management Specialist in the Detroit District Sales Office, "because people know each other here."
An extraordinary example? Not at Ford Motor Company. Chuck wasn't even sure where he'd fit in the automobile industry when he started in 1968. "Now, I know where I'm going. It took about a year to get a solid business background. I'm doing what I like best—meeting with people, analyzing their problems, finding solutions. And it looks like I'll reach my goal, District Sales Manager.
much sooner than I expected."
What about Chuck's rapid advancement? "Not everyone can go as far as fast," he admits. "It depends on how much of yourself you put into your job." Naturally, Chuck's wholehearted interest got noticed at Ford Motor Company. And his future is unlimited. Yours could be, too. Provided you're interested; and a college graduate, and looking for a challenge.
There are many opportunities open to graduates in Business in fields like—Accounting, Financial Management, Purchasing, Traffic Sales, Manufacturing Operations.
Ford Interviewer Will Be On Campus NOVEMBER 11, 1969
Industrial Relations, Systems Analysis.
See our college recruiter when he visits your campus. Or contact Mr. Richard Rosensteel, College Recruiting Department, Ford Motor Company, American Road, Dearborn, Michigan 48121. An equal opportunity employer.
Ford
... has a better idea
Running for the title
This Saturday the Big Eight conference title in cross-country will be decided. The KU team has been running and working all fall hoping to successfully defend their title. The race will cover four miles at Staggy Hill Golf Course in Manhattan at 10:30 a.m., and it will be the first title race in Big Eight cross-country history to exceed three miles.
- Photos by Jim Ryun *
51
K. U.
TRACK
609
Training in cross-country demands hard work, running over varying terrain in all kinds of weather. Cross-country athletes must run on the Kansas roads in cold weather and train on steep hills when the sun is burning brightly. In addition, they must face the monotony of hundreds of laps around the track during the season.
99
H
BAYBACK
208
2
Although cross-country requires dedication and work, it also provides time for horseplay with the coach. However, it is all in quest of the conference title.
ALAN GILFREICH
NOW OPEN!
Bachelors IV
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By MARY ARNOLD
Kansan Sports Writer
Khalifa Sports Writer After last Saturday's Oklahoma State-Kansas game, a little boy came up to Head Coach Pepper Rodgers and said, "This
Perhaps this pressure has been an incentive to practice harder and win the last three games with Colorado, Oklahoma and Missouri.
Last year with the conference
M. P. G. R. A. C.
'This isn't last year.'
championship and bowl bids at stake it was not hard for the players to get ready to play.
"When you're winning, the championship and bowl bids are incentive to get up for a game." Coach Travis said, "but when the team's losing, the individual player has to get himself ready to play. He has to contend with his own pride."
Sandy Buda, assistant coach, added that last year when the team was 7-0 they knew they could win, but now the coaches have to convince them they can win, and instill confidence in them.
"Football is a hard game to play, but we hope it is fun for the players and that they like it," Buda said and then added,
"Of course winning is more fun."
Last year football was fun—KU was winning. It was fun for the players, fun for the coaches and fun for the fans. Everyone was boasting "We're number one" and "Miami bound."
That was last year. It's 1969, and KU's not number one and KU's not bowl bound, but they do have a chance to spoil the records of the other Big Eight teams.
At this point in the season, Kansas has only one way to go and that's up.
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isn't like last year at all."
Travis added that he thought the players felt pressure from the student body.
"The players feel the student body is depending on them and they have let the students down." said Travis.
"When you're winning, there is pressure on you to keep winning and when you're losing everybody is pressured by their peers. Everybody wants to know what the problem is and why we're losed." Travis said.
But obviously this is a new season and the situation is different. The 'Hawks are 1-6 and are in the cellar of the Big Eight. They have lost four conference games, three by four points or less. A fact that emphasizes the balance of the Big Eight and perhaps that KU isn't all that bad.
"We just haven't had the right plays at the right times to win," Rodgers said, "and we've made errors that have hurt us."
isn't like last year at all."
"Son," replied Pepper, "this isn't last year."
KANSAN
"We won't give up. We'll be out there ready to play, but," he added, "we might not whip, and then again we might."
The KU boss added that the Jayhawks have played strong teams this year and Saturday faces a tough Colorado squad.
No, this isn't last year, because at this time last season KU was 7-0. They were rated No.3 nationally and were optimistic about a major bowl bid and winning the Big Eight conference title. The football situation at Kansas looked better that it had for a number of years.
Larry Travis, assistant coach,
said there was a different type of
pressure involved in losing
and in winning.
The pressures on a football team are tremendous. The players and coaches must contend with the thoughts of the student body, alumni and other schools. Opinions on the degree of pressure on a winning team and on a losing team vary.
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"It's like playing golf," he said,
"when you play and you're not good there's more pressure on you to play good and win."
Pepper said that he thought there was more pressure on a team when they weren't so good.
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Four dominate Big Eight stats
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)— It's easy to see why four teams are tied for the lead in the Big Eight Conference with one loss each.
It's easy, that is, if you look at the team statistics. Kansas State, Oklahoma and Nebraska dominate the figures. The other leader, Missouri, ranks in the first division in all but two of the eight statistical categories.
NY Knicks far in front in pro race
(By United Press International)
So, break up the Knicks.
Somebody better stop the New York avalanche before the Knicks players begin to think they're invincible and believe they can finish the National Basketball Association season with an 81-1 record.
New York won its 12th game in 13 starts Tuesday night when the Knicks clobbered the Phoenix Suns, 116-98, behind Willis Reed's 34 points. The NBA record percentage is .840 achieved by Philadelphia when it posted a 68-13 won-lost mark en route to the league title in 1966-67. The Knicks currently have a .923 percentage.
Connie Hawkins did his best to keep Phoenix in the game, but his 39 points were merely second best in the Knicks' camp.
Philadelphia beat Chicago, 113-109, Baltimore routed San Francisco, 124-105 and Seattle downed Detroit, 116-102, in other league games.
Philadelphia remained $41\frac{1}{2}$ games behind New York in the Eastern Division as the 76ers overcame a two-point halftime deficit to beat Chicago. The Bulls lost a chance to tie the game with 13 seconds remaining, but Chet Walker lost the ball before he could get a shot off. Walker had a game-high 28 points. Archie Clark led Philadelphia with 22 points.
The Baltimore Bullets got double figure scoring from four of its starters and finally cracked a slump that threatened to plummet the team into the Eastern cellar. Jack Marin led the Bullets with 26 points, two less than the 28 pumped in by San Francisco's Jeff Mullins.
10 KANSAN Nov. 6 1969
Kansas State's aerial circus, with Lynn Dickey at the controls, leads Big Eight passers (239.1 yards per game) and scoring offense (37.3 points per game). The Wildcats have put 261 points on the scoreboard in compiling a 5-2 record.
Oklahoma, with Steve Owens setting records left and right but mainly up the middle, leads the conference in rushing (276 yards per game) and total offense (421 vards).
Nebraska's forte is defense. The Cornhuskers' defensive unit, labeled the Black Shirts by the red-coated faithful, leads the passing defense, total defense and scoring defense. Nebraska is allowing only 105.3 yards through the air per game, 260 yards total defense and 12.7 points. Much of Nebraska's consistency on defense can be traced to middle guard Ken Geddes, an all-conference linebacker last year.
Kansas State is the rushing defense leader, allowing only 111.4 yards per game.
Missouri, which hosts Oklahoma in the Big Eight's showdown game this week, is near the top in almost every category.
For instance, the Tigers are second in rushing defense, third in scoring defense, rushing offense, passing offense, total offense and scoring offense.
After Dickey's bombardment of last week, however, Missouri is last in passing defense and fifth in total defense.
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Coaches corner
Travis cites concentration as key for win against CU's Buffaloes
Larry Travis, KU linebacker coach, was carefully watching a 'color film of last week's Colorado-Nebraska football game. When it finished, he propped his feet up on the table and grinned. "They're a good football team," he said.
Throughout his playing career present boss Pepper Rodgers was a member of the Gator coaching staff. After graduation Travis remained in Gainesville to assist Ray Graves and was there four years before joining the KU staff following the 1966 campaign. He
And he should know. Travis started at guard on Florida's team from 1960-62. As a senior he was chosen for the All-Southeast Conference team and the SEC's All-Academic team.
1963
Nov. 6
1969 KANSAN 11
Larry Travis
received his M.A. in physical education administration from Florida.
"KU's football team is certainly much better than the record indicates," Travis said. "Last week against Oklahoma State we let down on a kickoff return and it cost us. That razzie-dazzle return worked for them. I've heard the comment that it was a high school play. That's not true. I've seen pros use it. If it works, it's a good play. If it doesn't, they end up on the 10 yard line."
Travis said that the team was playing pretty good football, and in spots was excellent. One of the problems is that there have been more big plays executed against us than we have made. "Some of the plays have been official's flags," he said. "The morale of the squad is good. We have a great bunch of kids. They're not quitters and they won't lay down for anybody."
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"I would rather have a team that doesn't project a lot of false enthusiasm and lip service," he said. "I want to see concentration on the field. That builds spontaneous enthusiasm."
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Travis's personal enthusiasm makes him beam. He not only loves to coach football, but he lends support to the student body.
"The Jayhawks have worked hard in practice this week. They will not add anything to the play book, but will concentrate on executing what is already there," Travis said.
"The KU kids on a whole have been just great," he said. "They give us great support at the games, but I'd like to see a bit more support during the week."
Hicks doubtful starter
Yet another injury cropped up on the injury-depleted Kansas football team yesterday. All-Big Eight linebacker Emery Hicks, suffering an elbow injury, was listed as a doubtful participant in Saturday's homecoming game with Colorado.
Hicks apparently hurt the elbow in Tuesday's practice. It was swollen and coach Pepper Rodgers said sophomore Gary Cooper, a 6-1, 215-pounder, probably would get the call.
Middle guard Al Jakobcic may spell Cooper during the game, Rodgers said. If so, either Bob Tyus or Steve Wilhelm will play middle guard.
Rodgers also said tailback John Riggins and wingback Ron Jessie definitely will start Saturday.
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Photo by Lew Ketcham
Harman speaks to TKEs
12 KANSAN Nov. 6 1969
Rick Harman, 1968 Republican candidate for governor of Kansas, was a dinner guest at the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house Wednesday night.
Preliminary judging to choose KU's Best-Dressed Coed, sponsored by the AWS Fashion Board, will be held from 6 p.m. to 10 pm. tonight in the Kansas Union Curry Room.
Board to pick 25
Fifty applicants, representing organized living groups and off-
Gifts promote growth
Private gifts to KU have been cited by the Executive Secretary of the KU Endowment Association as a major reason for KU's growth.
The statement by Irvin Youngberg appeared in a booklet released by the Voluntary Support Committee of the National Association of Land-Grant Colleges.
Coed flees attack
A KU coed escaped unharmed Tuesday after an unidentified man tried to molest her.
The woman told Lawrence police that she accepted a ride to campus from 1800 Engel Rd. with a man whom she described as being 18- or 19-years-old, about 6 feet tall and weighing 160 pounds.
Driving east on 18th Street, the man stopped on a dead-end street and tried to molest her, she told police.
campus students, will be judged by members of the AWS Fashion Board, said Pam Russell, Iola senior and president of the board.
Contestants will wear church attire for the preliminary judging.
A panel of students and faculty will judge 25 semi-finalists from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday in the Union Centennial Room. Contestants will again wear church clothes.
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The Best-Dressed Coed will be chosen from 10 finalists at a fashion show at 7 p.m. Nov. 20 in the Union Ballroom.
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Teachers' association opens 106th state convention today
The 106th Kansas State Teachers' Association (KSTA) convention and sectional assembly in the Lawrence area began today.
Richard W. Warren, Leavenworth, presided over the opening session this morning at Allen Field House. Greetings were extended to the convention by Dale Scannell, dean of the KU school of education, and Robert Payne, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Kenneth McFarland, Topeka, presented the address entitled "Selling America to Americans." It was sponsored by General Motors. The entertainment was provided by the Leavenworth Senior High School and ROTC units.
This afternoon's session will include a general session at the Field House. The program will be the presentation of the new vicepresident for the 1970 convention who was elected at the sectional delegate assembly Wednesday.
Survey for union
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) is sponsoring a survey of the opinions of students living in the residence halls on the proposed satellite union.
The survey is to determine how many of the people living in the residence halls actually want the satellite union, what kind of facilities they want and which of the proposed sites they prefer for the building.
Questionnaires will be distributed to all students in residence halls by resident assistants today.
Nov. 6
1969 KANSAN 13
John E. Valusek, chief of seminar education for Psyche, Inc., of Wichita will present the address on "Emotional Slavery." He is a clinical psychologist and has lectured in the Division of Continuing Education and summer workshops at Wichita State University. Some of his topics have included emotionally disturbed children, sex education and race relations.
Also included on today's program are department meetings which will be in rooms at Lawrence High School, South Junior High School, Murphy Hall and Summerfield Hall. There will also be sectional and subject area seminars Friday.
The convention in Lawrence is one of eight sectional conventions throughout the state today and Friday.
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Nixon's Viet policy no surprise
There's still nothing new as far as American policy in Vietnam is concerned.
This was the general opinion voiced by three University of Kansas professors in regard to Monday night's nationally televised address by President Richard M. Nixon concerning United
Vote offenders fined
States policy in Vietnam and the withdrawal of troops.
A $10 to $100 fine can be assessed any freshman violating Student Senate rules during the Nov. 12 freshman elections.
Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science; Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare; and Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, participated in a panel discussion at the KU Student Mobilization Committee meeting Wednesday night in the United Campus Christian Crusade building.
Tom Gleason, Ottawa senior and Student Senate elections committee co-chairman, said that violations for which fines may be assessed are: voting twice, voting under an assumed name and using another student's ID to vote.
Katz called the President's speech a "reiteration, if not a classic position of the administration and of Nixon."
"For this reason," Ketzel emphasized, "what happens in November must be non-violent in order to have the same support as the October moratorium."
Polling places for the election will be set up from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., in the Kansas Union, Strong Hall and Murphy Hall. From 6:15 to 10 p.m., polls will be set up in Oliver Hall, Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall and Ellsworth Hall.
Ketzel pointed out that the placing of the speech between the October and November war moratoriums was used to gain the support of the "silent majority" of Americans who have made no commitment to the War.
After the panel discussion, Tom Ashton, Lawrence graduate student and mobilization committee member, announced that room is available on the bus to Washington, D.C. for the November war moratorium.
Oil accounted
Domestic offshore crude oil and condensate production accounts for 14 per cent of total U.S. output annually, reports Shell Pipe Line Corp.
14 KANSAN Nov. 6 1969
Announcement:
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There is a price for two, three and/or four occupants. YOU CHOOSE THE PLAN TO FIT YOUR REQUIREMENTS.
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Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Catalogue are offered to
all students without regard to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier, Inputs for mag, or crystal phone, tape, AM, FM. Aux. Will match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition
Campus Med Mansion, 411 W. 14th St.
1967 VW, Lt. Blue, Radio, Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. ff
Remember his or her special day with
an extra special gift from the Hodge
Podge. Open for last minute shopping.
M-F: 10-5:30. Thursday night:
until 9:30. Saturday: 9:30-5. 15 W.
19th.
For sale: '64 Mereury Park Lane Conv. Replaced top, new tires, blue with white interior, excellent condition, $650 or offer, VI 3-6172. 11-6
1961 Falcon; four door, 6 cylinder;
good body and engine but needs battery.
$135. Call Chuck, VI 2-9402.
Leave name and number. 11-6
Jaguar—XK-120 FHC, BRb, MAGS,
mechanically perfect with new every-
thing. Complete records on this
unique automobile. Graduation and
Navy force sale. Call 842-9044 after
six. 11-6
For Sale—Choice Building sites available now in Holiday Hills. Buy direct access to the building, financing, stu home you'll want later. Bait Construction Co. VI 3-8153. 11-6
How to win friends and influence people • cover your bare walls with you'll • bind • only • at • through • Padge • posters and heighten poster flags. 11-7
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white, everything in it a taut—good mechanical front door; front seat. Call Frank I- 2-9041, write 211. E-9. nute, Kansas 9-11-14
Forced to sell: 1968 Red Flat 850
Spider convertible. Go to best offer.
27 miles to the gallon, carpeting. For information call 843-8706. 11-7
Quality '68 Chev. Imp., ash gold, 4d. h.T.H., R. P.S., A.C. turb-hydromatic, 250 H.P. bush reg., undercoated. low mileage, excel. conh. Has 5-yr-50,000 mile warranty. Priced to sell. See at 1339 Penn, M-F, 5-7 p.m.
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Audio Sale
Buy at Factory Cost plus 10%
You pay shipping
No better discount anywhere
Call
842-0477 Eve. 4-10 p.m.
A. R. Dynaco Dealer
Exclusive Representative
L. G. Balfour Co.
of
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Favors
- Guitars
- Mugs
- Reconceptions
- Riddler
- Badges
- Favors
- Guards
MGA-16 00-196 1-red, new black top and interior, body and body in excellent condition, see at 2025 on afternoon afire after 4:00 weekdays this week. 11-10
- Lavaliers
- Stationery
- Gift
- Bank
- Mugs
- Recognitions Paddles
- Assignments
- Paddles
- Lavaliers
- Stationery
- Gifts
Sunflower Dress Factory. Unique clothing for men and women. India prints, fringed leather coats, handmade shirts and dresses, antique clothes, bellbottoms, jewelry. 19 W. 9th, Open 12-5. 11-7
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear end. Aqua/轮胎 $85.00, contact Mrs. Keean 8-5/8, U-4 3-6835, after K. Sevee 5469, 11-17
- Sportswear
Private Guitar lessons—folk flamenco, classic—six years experience also fender stricatocaster for sale Call 842-0340 for Garth. 11-10
One women's Naimiah dorm contract for second semester. Call VI 217-560-8933. 11-11
Rings - Crested - Letters
2 tickets for KU-Oklahoma game.
Doug Hugen, VI 2-1200. 11-11
Fisher FM stereo receiver, model 440
ViS red Rose at UN 4-4212
V1 3-0435
VI 3-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Small RCA console stereo phonograph enclosed in a wood cabinet. Excellent condition, $85. Bom; 842-7254 evenings. 11-7
Al Lauter
Lauer V13-1571
For sale by owner: **66 Olds Toronado Deluxe and 66 Olds Delta 4 dr. H.T. Both cars equipped with P.S. P.B. cars, scorpion steering wheel, cruise control, power trunk lid, and near new fiber-glass blasted tires. Toronada also has power seat and power windows. Cob Call Eob VI 3-1731 at 11-7
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. If you want some honest-to-government Bar-B-Q que is the place to get some, Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone I 2-9510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday ff
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair probes, as well as many repair stations in the Mid-West, AR Dynakit, and Marantz. Call 843-1484.
Pennyrich bra and girlle for the figure you should have. For the comfort you need try Pennyrich bra Call for your private fitting V 2-1266 B
Loans to junior, senior and grad. students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Mass. VI 3-8074. tf
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
Table Tops
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 4th St.
Raney Drug Stores
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
V
Would you like to sub-lease my three to four person Harvard Square Apt. Good location, close to campus. For information call John at VI 2-0442.
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass.
Do you sew but can't afford high priced fabrics? Just arrived from New York, beautiful designer fabrics, yd pcs, low prices, call 843-5884 1apt.
FREE—two 8-week old affectionate
house mice kittens. Completely house-
Stoken Altrease to it, at temper shots.
Stoken Altrease to it, give
home. Call V3-6211 for p. 5. m i n.
4.
Rosaldo's Hotel is an oasis in the midwest of nowhere. When school begins a drag, drive to Harper, Kan. You can spend the night in the heaviest hotel in the country. You won't believe what you see and experience. It's not a booze palace nor a bad but people who are capable of entertainment schedules and care for reservations - (r at es) $4-$7.
phone: (316) 896-9121; ip: zg058.11-6
It is significant to note in this connection that graduate students will gather for coffee and conversation in the Traditions Room 7:30 Fri. 11-7
1 or 2 male roommates to share 2 story house. $37.50 monthly plus 1/4 utilities. Good location to campus. Call Kent or Ron at 842-4188. 11-7
Biology Club-Nov 11,7:30 p.m., 222
Snow. Discussion on where to go and
how to get in Medical, Dental, and
graduate schools. 11-11
Part time student employment, work full school term, drivers license required. Call for appointment VI 2-2899 between 4 and 6 p.m. 11-7
FOR RENT
University Terrace Apt. 1 & 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished available. Mgrs. Office, 1529 West 9th. Call 814-1105 or 843-1433. 11-6
1850
Minnie Pearls
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
FREE Delivery over $5.00
VI 3-8200
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
A man riding a bicycle
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
Hurry to Henry's
Maupintour
Malls Shopping Center
PLANNING A TRIP??
TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations
Let
6th & Mo. VI 1-2139
VI 3-1211
DOWNTOWN PLANT
202 W. 6th
V1-3-4011
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
Independent
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
COIN OP. PICK UP LAUNDRY STATION 19th and La. 2346 Iowa 9th and Miss. VI 3-9868
For Rent. Furnished apt, for 2 or 3 KU boys, Phone VI 3-7890; after 7 call VI 3-2851. 11-6
Rooms for Rent: Rooms with refrigerator for males. Linens furnished and off street parking, bedrooms camper and near downtown. Call VI 3-5767 11-6
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6168.
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens to $165 plus utilities. Bird Construction Company VI 3-1635 or VI 3-5730.
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35
a month. Available now, call VI
3-2116. tf
LOST
Johnny Carson is a great guy. We love him, so does everyone else, but we would like to have his picture back.
The FLIJ'S. 11-6
Lost—burlan and leather Princess Gardner biltfold at Rubayaty or Gate-house. Keep the money—reward for I.D.'s S call JoAonn at 843-6101. 11-7
Lost pair of women's octagonal tortoise-shell glasses near Flint Hall. Thurs. call Jay Ghilino, V 3-1101. I'm blind without them. 11-7
Lost full tool box Oct. 26 evening between Lawrence (4th and Noel and Tonganoxie via Hwy. 40. Urgently needed. Call 843-8468. 11-10
Lost—Dietzen slide rule in brown case. Has initials "A.M." engraved in black on slide and rule. $5.00 reward to finder. 842-9297. 11-7
Brown assignment notebook—very important to owner—reward—return to UDK office. 11-7
Man's billfold in Trailroom, Kansas
Union. Keep the money—return the
Contact John Pizzizem
Munizum History or leave message.
UN 4-3-178
Two personalized checkbooks belonging to Robert E. Townsend, jr., 1606 North Third, Garden City, Kansas Reward offered, call Bob at V1 3-3483
EXPERIENCED Student Linotype Operator to work 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. on clean, good pay, working conditions, ready Job Cail Wm, Smith, U 4-4341
HELP WANTED
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
926 Mass. VI 3 60
New York Cleaners
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part time. Apply in person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. tf
Male & Female students for local sales promotion work. Phone VI 3-7881, 9 a.m. to 12 midnight—Monday thru Friday 11-7
Wanted. Rock bands. Apply at Draught House Tues.-Fri, between 4 and 5—directly behind Lum's. 11-10
Earn $60.00 per sale full or part time.
Coin vending equipment. Interview
Tues., Wed., or Thurs. Call Mr. Sigler,
442-8622. 11-6
WANTED
Good experienced organ player needed for Rock Band. Losing our organ player as soon as replaced. Call Glen Morton. VI 3-7810. 11-11
Barn available for barn parties. Spor for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Laplad, VI 3-4032. tt
TYPING
Wanted: part time male and female help for bartenders and waiters. Apply between 4 and 5.Tues.-Fri, at 84 W. 24th, directly behind Lum's. 11-10
TYPING: Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misel, typing. Have with pica type Efficient and fast service. Phone W1954, 9554, Mrs. Wright. 12-5
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist or graduate student. glish-Speech Education. Electric office-size typewriter. 843-2873. 11-24
Prompt, accurate typing of manuscript, theses, dissertations, miscellaneous papers Electric VI-Corona, Pica type. Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440.
ENTERTAINMENT
SERVICES OFFERED
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kan., 913-648-1777. fax 913-648-1770.
Foreign Car Service, Wayne Harper,
with Ern's Cycle Sales now specializing
in foreign car tune-ups and machine
work. MG, Jag, Austin Healey.
Ern's Cycle Sales 716 N. 2nd., VI S-
8515. tt
Topsy's
on the Moll
pop corn
candy apples
ice cream
home made
fudge
COST'S
Laundry
open till 10:00 p.m.
CLASSIFIEDS Mmmm-
SNOOPY
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact: Larry Rosenberger
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
BSU accepts proposal
(Continued from page 1)
Board of which the Dean of Black Students would be chairman.
Members of the Board would be appointed by the BSU executive committee.
The Dean of Black Student Affairs would have administrative powers comparable to those of the Dean of Student Affairs.
The two proposed deans would be permanent members of the University of Kansas Planning Board. The BSU would have the power to hire and fire the two deans and their actions would be subject to approval by the BSU. These two positions are to be filled by the fall semester, 1970.
BSU representatives also demanded the establishment of the Afro-American Institute for Research and Community Development, as a part of the Black Studies department.
The Institute would be solely responsible for initiating and developing programs for the black community and would be staffed by black administrators and faculty. The amount of a budget granted to the Institute by the University would be determined by the director of the Institute, called the Urban Coordinator, and his staff. An advisory board, composed of members of the BSU, would review programs initiated by the Institute and make recommendations to it.
The list of demands also called
'SHOW WINDOW' FAIR
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UPI)—The Wyoming State Fair, rapidly becoming the "show window" of the people of the state and their enterprises, is operated as a division of the Department of Agriculture under the control and supervision of the state Board of Agriculture.
16 KANSAN Nov. 6
1969
for the construction of Malcolm X Hall. The 40-classroom building would contain a 500-seat lecture hall, office space for the BSU and its newspaper, an Afro-American library and furnished lounge area.
A parking lot with space for 150 cars would also be constructed near the hall.
A group of about 25 BSU members occupied the Chancellor's private office Monday afternoon to ask again that equal time be allowed during the half-time ceremony of the homecoming game to crown a black Homecoming queen.
Chalmers, who was called from a Council of Dean's meeting to speak with them, restated his position.
"I said this was not possible," he said after the meeting. "The same request was made by representatives of the BSU last Friday afternoon and I told them the same thing at that time.
"I offered, however, to ask the
Weather
Fair and continued mild today tonight and Friday. Southwest winds 10 to 15 miles per hour through tonight. High today 70 to 75. Low tonight near 50.
IT REALLY MEANT NO
TREAKLY MEANT NO MANCHESTER, England (UPI) —Stanley Lucas' car, parked in a no parking zone, was crushed when tons of iron scaffolding tumbled on to it. The car was a writeoff, but it made no difference to Manchester police.
University Homecoming Committee to provide recognition for a black homecoming queen. This offer was rejected by the smaller group of students Friday."
A policeman who was about to pin a parking ticket on the windshield and had to flee for his life when the scaffolding began to fall said the ticket will be mailed to Lucas' home.
Three BSU members returned to the Chancellor's office Tuesday morning for an unscheduled meeting with him.
The three BSU members offered to provide two black students to meet with University administrators to assist them in forming a response to their proposals.
Steppenwolf and The Turtles November 8 Allen Field House
"I welcomed this proposal," Chalmers said, "and will suggest to individual administrators that they meet with them."
Good Seats Still Available. Tickets $3.50,$3,$2.50
Available at:
SUA Office, Kansas Union Richardson Music Information Booth The Sound Bell Music
You Are Invited To Meet Roland Swanson and Kent DeVore Representing
HALLMARK CARDS
(Contemporary Line) of Kansas City
Time: 7:00 P.M.,MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10th Place: JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION
An informal meeting to discuss the contemporary card writing program on this campus by Hallmark, with a question and answer period following presentation.
YOU'RE WANTED BY THE DRAUGHT (House-That Is) coming very soon
Live Entertainment Dancing Beer
The college spot owned and operated by college kids for the college crowd
Now accepting applications for part-time male and female help and rock bands. Apply at The Draught House Mon.-Fri. from 4 to 5. 804 W.24th-directly behind Lum's
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
Hospital improvements suggested
100
Have patience
Photo by T. L. Simmons
Inadequate facilities at Watkins Hospital have forced patients to form a makeshift waiting room in the hall. Some read, some nap, some study, all worry.
inadequate health facilities at Watkins Hospital prompted the Student Senate Wednesday night to recommend improvement of present services or construction of a new hospital facility.
A report drawn up by the Student Senate Committee on Health and accepted by the Senate pointed out health needs of the University community in contrast to existing hospital conditions.
- Based on the American College Health Association studies, a physician-student ratio should be one physician per 1,000 students, while at KU the ratio is about 1 to 2,000.
- There should be enough examining rooms to allow doctors to examine more than one patient at a time. At Watkins Hospital there is an insufficient number of examining rooms to permit this procedure.
- An efficient student hospital should have waiting rooms capable of handling 50 to 100 persons. In contrast the waiting area at Watkins is restricted to hallways.
- A physical plant should conform to current standards of hygiene and safety, but the present plant, designed in the 1930's, is outdated.
- Sufficient space should be allotted for laboratory, X-ray, food production and administrative functions. These functions are presently carried out under crowded conditions.
- Adequate parking should be provided for patients and staff, with easy access for delivery and emergency vehicles. Currently, staff parking is limited and patients' and visitors' parking is non-existent.
(Continued to page 24)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 40, Sec.1
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, Nov. 7, 1969
Special Homecoming Edition
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Burmese clash with Reds
RANGOON, Burma—Premier No Win disclosed Thursday that Burmese troops have fought a series of clashes with Communist forces on the Red Chinese border.
The fighting has left 133 Burmese troops dead,250 wounded and 42 missing,the general told a conference of the Burmese Socialist Program party (BSPP) in a review of Burma's 21 years of independence.
At no point did he identify the Communist forces as Chinese, but it was clear he was referring to the Chinese as well as Burmese tribal dissidents backed and armed by the Peking regime.
Four under question
TOPEKA—Gov. Robert B. Docking and Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell discussed Thursday investigations of possible illegal activity by four of the governor's state appointees.
The Republican attorney general said following the closed-door, 25-minute conference with Docking that the charges involve possible violation of the state conflict of interest laws and the Securities Act and possible solicitation of a bribe.
Frizzell presented a written, confidential report to the Democratic governor on his investigation of nine complaints or incidents involving the appointees.
Nixon to Cape on M-day
WASHINGTON—President Nixon will fly to Cape Kennedy, Fla., Nov. 14, in the midst of a three-day mass antiwar demonstration here, to witness the launching of the Apollo 12 lunar space flight, it was announced Thursday.
Nixon will be the first incumbent President to see the launching of a manned space flight since they began in 1961.
M-day defense set
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Justice Department said Thursday it would use "the minimum force necessary" to keep antiwar demonstrators from conducting a mass march down Pennsylvania Avenue past the White House Nov. 15.
But Rep. Allard K. Lowenstein, D-N.Y., one of the original sponsors of the antiwar drive to dump President Lyndon B. Johnson, warned the government's refusal to permit the march only increased the danger of violence.
Deputy Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst told a news conference if the protesters tried to conduct a mass march down Pennsylvania Avenue—instead of a symbolic procession as approved by his department—they would be committing an illegal act and
we would attempt to stop it with the minimum force necessary."
Despite the government warning, Ron Young, a leader of the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, said the protesters have requested to be allowed to encircle the Executive Mansion Nov. 15 with thousands of demonstrators.
Young also accused the Justice Department of mounting a "scare campaign" to try to keep demonstrators from attending the march. But he predicted "a larger crowd than if they hadn't started this scare stuff" by warning against the possibility of serious violence.
Lowenstein, told a news conference the prohibition of the march in itself raised the danger of violence. But Kleindienst said the possibility was already a reality and the march would only give those who would create violence a chance to act.
Lorene Brown
Committee approves outline for BSU crowning ceremony
Ana S. Johnson
The assembly of a large crowd on the avenue, he added, "greatly increases the potential for success (Continued to page 24)
"It is the view of the Department of Justice," Kleindienst told reporters, "that there is a substantial likelihood of serious violence. . . We have notified the New Mobilization Committee . . . that we cannot grant a permit for a mass march down Pennsylvania Avenue."
The University Homecoming general steering committee approved Thursday an outline submitted by the Black Student Union (BSU) concerning the details of the pre-game crowning ceremony of the BSU queen.
The Homecoming committee Tuesday afternoon heard and denied a request from Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., senior and BSU president, for the crowning of the BSU queen at the same time as the University Homecoming queen. Three proposals allowing a pre-game crowning ceremony and/or a motorcade during half-time at the conclusion of the University Homecoming queen's motorcade were made available to the BSU.
The BSU queen, Lorene Brown, Value, Miss., freshman, will be crowned in a five-minute ceremony between the time the teams
Homecoming
1969
Photo by Ron Bishop
A pop rally at the northwest corner of Allen Field House Thursday night kicked off KU's 1969 homecoming. See related story on page 14.
Bookstore hires men to catch thieves
University adopts new shoplifting policy
By HOWARD PANCRATZ Kansan Staff Writer
A new policy concerning shoplifting has been implemented by the KU administration. Under the new policy, the offense will be kept strictly between the offender and his dean. The administration will try to avoid bringing in law enforcement agencies from outside the University.
Unlike previous years, however, students are not longer allowed to "beg-off" when caught. Formerly, many would be allowed to go after paying for the book or apologizing for their misconduct.
To implement the new policy and to help reduce the annual $30,000 loss, two men have been hired by the Union Bookstore specifically to apprehend shoplifters.
Jim Christman, acting manager of the Bookstore, said the Bookstore had no power to punish offenders. He added he would
refuse the power if offered to him.
Chrestman said he would give the student a chance to pay for the item and whether the student paid for it or not he still would be reported to Donald Alderson, dean of men, or Emily Taylor, dean of women.
"We also state whether they were hostile or not. Most students are pretty shaken on being caught so relatively few of them are hostile," he said.
Alderson said many of the cases that reach him are never submitted to the University Disciplinary Board (UDB). Cases are only presented to the UDB if the student continues to deny he was shoifling or if he thinks the punishment was too harsh.
Alderson said the University does not want to disrupt the education of first offenders. "This is not to say that we give everyone one chance to shoplift while they're here. Most of the students are sorry for what they've done and we feel that they learn
an important lesson from the experience. We consider such incidents 'learning experiences.'"
The usual punishment for first offenders is probation for one year. If another incident of shoplifting, vandalism or the breaking of University guidelines is committed, the case is reviewed.
"Normally, the student will be asked to withdraw if a second offense occurs," Alderson said.
"Shoplifting is not recorded on a student's transcript because such a notation can have an adverse effect on the student in later life disproportionate to the offense," Alderson said. However, the student's University file will contain a reference to the incident.
Class schedule in '70 means rush week bind
Next year's class schedule has created a problem for sororities and fraternities.
Fraternity Council (IFC) adviser. The IFC rush committee has come to no definite decision about the problem.
Because classes will begin Aug. 31, rush week will be during the summer.
Many students would find it hard to quit their summer jobs in mid-August to participate in rush, said Jay B. Strayer, Inter-
The Panhellenic Council is also trying to find a new rush period. Suzanne Cherot, Panhellenic rush chairman, said the rush council met and discussed the situation but no time for next falls rush week had been set.
Nov.7 1969
Spokesmen for both organizations said rush dates will be released as soon as possible.
Chrestman said he doubted that Americans realized the extent of shoplifting. He said after working in four university bookstores he was aware of the problem and it continued to depress him.
"The shoplifting here runs in a pattern and the accused students are sometimes lined up waiting to talk to me in the afternoon. The highest period of
2 KANSAN
shoifloping occurs between 3:30 and 5 p.m.," Alderson said.
"After 3 p.m. business begins to drop and employees relax. The students seem to think they can get away with more because they are being less closely watched," he continued.
Chrestman said most students feel they are doing nothing worse than stealing green apples off a neighbor's tree.
Steve Miller
Band
Your
Saving Grace
reg. $4.98
$399
Capitol.
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
C
LOOK DRIVER,
IT'S NOT WHETHER YOU
WIN OR Lose,
IT'S HOW YOU MAKE IT TO
THE GAME!
GO BIG BLUE
LAWRENCE BUS CO., INC.
841 Pennsylvania VI 2-0544
SOON TO BE THE BIG COLLEGE MEETING PLACE AT KU
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT - DANCING - BEER
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
For the Edification, Recreation & Enjoyment of the KU student body. They don't call us The Draught House for nothing
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Campus briefs
Bugs on display
The entomology department has set up a display of live insects in the third floor hall of Snow Hall.
The display, set up Tuesday by Rex O. Bare, Wichita graduate student, contains a large scorpion, a large centipede, several spiders and other venomous insects. These insects are being fed in the display. George W. Byers, professor of entomology, said the display is like little zoo.
Concert tickets still available
Tickets to the Homecoming concert will be sold at the Union until 5 p.m. today, and at Allen Field House until 7 p.m. Saturday, one hour before the concert begins.
Cheryl Kloesel, SUA activities adviser, said Thursday nearly 5,000 of the total 8,000 concert tickets have been sold. The concert will feature Steppenwolf and the Turtles, rock groups.
Miss Kloesel said sales had slowed Thursday, in spite of the rush which began when the tickets first went on sale.
Tickets are available at $2.50 each.
Acacia breaks tradition
Acacia fraternity will donate the $50 usually spent for homecoming decoration expenditures to the Lawrence Ballard Center.
Instead of chicken wire, papier mache and the usual school spirit at Homecoming, the 1969 Acacia pledge class voted to spend the money to show more interest in the community and its needs, said Tim Winters, pledge class president. Winters added that he hoped more houses would break away from the papier mache tradition.
Grad student receives money
A KU graduate student, Mary A. Halloran, Silver Lake, has won an $800 Allen S. Wilber Scholarship for the 1969-70 academic year.
J. A. Burzle, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said preference in awarding the scholarship was given to students who planned graduate study in the social sciences and modern languages.
Wilber, a KU alumnus, was interested in these fields as an under-graduate, and established the scholarship three years ago.
Miss Halloran is working toward an M.A. in comparative literature
Exhibit features John Brown
Exhibits on the Middle Ages and John Brown will be on display throughout the semester at Spencer Research Library.
"The Revival of the Middle Ages" exhibit includes files from the court of the Exchequer, legal forms, tax receipts and a book of coats of arms. Included in the John Brown exhibit are Brown's personal letters, a portrait of him and an 1848 Sharps rifle. The exhibition will be held at the Museum of History.
The exhibits will be on display from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays.
Students to attend convention
Three KU students will attend a national convention sponsored by two advertising organizations Monday through Wednesday. Linda Brownning, Prairie Village, Chicago.
Linda Browning, Prairie Village senior; Shelley Bray, Bartlesville,
Ohio, senior; and Katie G.
Okla., senior; and Zoltan Czupor, Lawrence senior, will represent the collegiate chapters of Gamma Alpha Chi and Alpha Delta Sigma at the first joint meeting of the two groups to be held in St. Louis. Both groups will make individual and chapter awards at the convention.
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 3
$$
\phi_ {5} + \phi_ {6}
$$
806 MASS.
VI 1-1171
For:
• PORTRAITS
• APPLICATION PICTURES
• PASSPORT PICTURES
• PHOTOFINISHING
Searching for a settlement that would avoid all-out military confrontation, panelists discussed the Middle East conflict at the Faculty Forum Thursday.
Fawwaz Ulaby, associate director of the center for research in engineering science, and Jacob Enoch, associate professor of physics, presented the concluding discussion of a three part series to 35 faculty and staff members. Robert Shelton, acting assistant professor of religion, served as moderator.
Ulaby said the Palestinian Commando units reflected the view of Arabs today.
The speakers said two changes had improved chances for a settlement.
Panelists discuss peace to end Middle East conflict
"In the past Arab leaders were very emotional," he said. "Today they have a very different view. They want to live with the Israeli people as one nation. There is no longer talk about massacres and pushing the Jews into the sea."
First time voting
Enoch said Arabs in newly acquired lands had just voted for the first time in their lives. "They voted in very surprising numbers," he said, "and they overwhelmingly supported the present government."
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Ulaby said withdrawal of Israeli troops from fortified areas would be a precondition for peace talks. He also insisted that negotiations take place with the Commandos rather than the Arab governments.
"We want to see the attitude of Israel change," he said. "We want them to show us that they really want to solve the problem."
Peace opportunities have been rejected by the Arabs many times, Enoch said.
"When partitioning was suggested," he said, "it was unfavorable to both groups. Israel, however, accepted the plan. It was
Another chance was rejected in 1953 when a suggestion for joint engineering project to use the water of the Jordan was presented, he said.
a practical chance to have collaboration but the Arabs never gave it a try."
"Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Israel would have benefited," Enoch said, "but the only country to ratify the proposal was Israel." Solution: economic development
Enoch said he felt the solution was a large economic development project such as irrigating land.
"We need to start in a realistic way. We can't ask impossible things of each other if we are to reach a solution," he said.
Ulaby said the Palestinian people should be given their land, country, dignity and freedom. He suggested a secular state established by the Commandos.
Paul Haack, assistant professor of music education, will give an illustrated talk on "Teaching Music Via the Visual Arts" Monday at the state convention banquet of the Kansas Music Teachers Association.
The Commandos were not the major issue for Jews, Enoch said. "Israel faces much greater danger from other Arab countries as well as the Soviet Union. I definitely don't agree that Commands are the only problem." he said.
Haack is responsible for development of teacher training programs in the areas of secondary school classroom music and music in the humanities.
HOME ACCIDENT DEATHS
Haack to lecture
NEW YORK Accidents in homes cost more than 28,500 persons their lives in 1968, reports the Insurance Information Institute.
Ulaby also blamed failure to settle the crisis on Israeli retaliatory raids.
"With this attitude how can we ever reach a settlement?" he asked.
Retaliation effective
Enoch said the Israeli government believes retaliation was effective.
"It's bad that there are casualties and particularly bad that there are civilian casualties. However, as long as there is war, this must be expected.
"All retaliation is motivated by security considerations. This is the only reason Arabs are treated with suspicion," he added.
Although no concrete solutions were proposed at the meeting, both spokesmen agreed more than history must be considered.
"If the problem is to be solved, we must look at the situation as it exists today." Ulaby said.
Next week the Faculty Forum will meet at the United Campus Christian Fellowship center for a presentation by John McNown, professor of civil engineering. He will speak on higher education in Africa.
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KANSAN Comment
A matter of timing?
Was it a demand for liberal white middle class breast-beating coupled with "mea culpas" and/or the old "ask for a mile and get an inch" technique?
Regardless of the approach and/or technique, the latest demands of the Black Student Union are a cause for question and concern.
It is no astute observation to declare the demand for a black dean of students and a black dean of student affairs as well as the construction of a hall in memory of Malcolm X totally unfeasible.
The university cannot even fill the excavations at the site of Wescoe Hole, let alone plan for new buildings.
Even if we could plan new buildings, we
may as well add a Bishop Fulton J. Sheen Hall for the Catholics and a Che Guevara Hall for the more militant elements of the campus.
It is simply economically and administratively impossible to meet these demands at present. It takes no clairvoyant to realize this.
The structure of the university lacks in many respects for the university's minority groups. As an articulate spokesman for the "Black student" the BSU can and should work with the administration in changing the curriculum and establishing scholarship programs to meet the needs of the blacks.
The time for establishing more meaningful priorities for the black segment of the student population is here—where is the BSU?
"Turn, turn, turn . . ."
"
(Editor's note: This is a true story of a moratorium sidelight at KU)
By CHARLIE CAPE Kansan Staff Writer
A rebellious young man stormed into the school administrator's office. He hit the desk with his clenched fist and exclaimed, "I don't give a damn about what the administration's policy is, I'm going to participate in the moratorium march on Topeka."
The administrator who had been interrupted from his work, looked up and said, "okay." He then finished part of what he was doing.
The look of defiance on the young man's face had changed to a look of bewilderment and confusion. "You mean it's okay?" he asked when the administrator again looked back at him.
"Yes," came the answer, "we don't care." All of this was said with a smile.
All the young man could say was, "Gee, thanks." Then he turned and started for the door.
"By the way," called out the administrator. The young man stopped and faced him. "You do know when the march is, don't you?"
The young man replied, "Sure, it's Nov. 15."
"Okay," said the administrator, as he turned back to the work that still lay on his desk. "We don't really care what you do with your Saturdays. . ."
ARMY RECRUTING CENTER
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
THE @ All rights reserved 1969
"I'D LIKE TO ENLIST IN THE GRAFT AND CORRUPTION DIVISIONS!"
Readers' write
To the editor:
Professor Howard Kahane was misquoted in your lead story of October 31. You reported that he moved to amend Professor Price's motion, subsequently passed by the University Senate, asking that "ROTC courses not be integrated into University departments and that their credit be dropped." Actually, Professor Kahane asked that ROTC courses not integrated into regular University departments not carry credit after September, 1971 except for those students currently enrolled in them.
The sense of his amendment was to effect by legislation what Professor Price's successful motion envisioned as desirable—the integration of most military science offerings into the course lists of academic departments. The justification for such integration, held by both Professor Price and Professor Kahane, is the establishing of full academic respectability for such courses. Right or wrong, ROTC courses lack such respectability because of the special way they are regarded and taught. Professor Kahane's view, as I understand it, is that assurance of substantial content and of academic freedom for teacher and student depends upon subjecting a course which carries Military Science credit to the same sort of academic review and discipline as any other course, and that this is best accomplished by integrating it into a regular academic department. His motion removes credit, but not the course itself, from those not so integrated after a certain date.
I was one of those who regretted Professor Oldfather's ruling that the amendment was out of order. I understand Professor Oldfather's concern that the autonomy of the College and the schools be safeguarded on matters of granting or not granting course credit. Still, in the special case of ROTC courses I feel that the appropriate body to decide on credit standards is the University Senate. Though technically offered in the College, ROTC courses are taken University-wide. By their nature they are a matter of common concern. It is clear that the Senate may set credit maximums for degree programs, so, in this case, it is arguable the Senate has the power to limit the credit the various schools may allow for a program which is special, sui generis, and University wide. I doubt very much that had Professor Oldfather allowed Kahane's motion it would have opened the door to Senate meddling in the special affairs of the College and the Schools. I say this with all respect for Professor Oldfather, whose contribution to the University and to the liberalization of University government cannot be said.
I hope that Professor Kahane chooses to introduce his proposal to the College faculty, for I support it and would like to vote for it. As one who tried to keep freedom from the unfortunate passion and polemic which has surrounded the ROTC issue, it seems to me that regularization of credit standards for ROTC courses can be supported by any of us, whether we are "pro" or "anti" ROTC. After all, by voting the establishment of a committee charged with achieving exactly this end, the University Senate has endorsed just such regulaization. All Professor Kahane's proposal adds, is a tool for this committee to use in actually achieving this goal.
Richard Cole Professor of Philosophy
Off the wire
Quotes From The News By United Press International
CLEVELAND—Mayer Carl B. Stokes, who won re-election Tuesday night, in a statement at his headquarters;
"Black people and white people, Catholic and Protestant, Christian and Jew, everybody had a part in this night.
"Many thousands of people voted against me, but that's not only their right, but it's their duty in a democracy."
- * *
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for a weekend visit to Amherst, a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60644. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without charge. Services available to students necessary those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor... Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor... Joanna K. Wiele
Campus Editor... Joe Bullard
News Editor... Ruth Redemacher
Makeup Editor... Ken Peterson
Sports Editor... Jay Thomas
Wire Editor... Martha Manglesdorf
Arts and Review Editor... Mike Shaorer
Women's Page Editor... Linda Loyd
Photo and Graphics Editor... Mike Rieke
Assistant News Editor... Donna Shrader, Steve Hagnes
Assistant Sports Editor... Joe Childs
Assistant Editorial Editor... Judith K. Diebolt
Assistant Campus Editor... Rick Pendergrass
Assistant Photo and Graphics Editor... Mikey Hysten
Assistant Women's Page Editor... Viki Hysten
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser . . Mel Adams
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Advertising Manager Jack Hurley
National Advertising Rod Osborne
Classified Advertising Manager Larry Brownberger
Promotion Manager Reagon O'Neal
Circulation Manager Todd Smith
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KANSAN REVIEWS
FILMS:Enter funnyman
By JOHN TIBBETTS Kansan Reviewer
Iris-in to scene at beach with bathing beauties. Frolics at the seaside. Enter funnyman with shuffle, little hat and crooked smile. Enter the girl, all bright and fluttery, million dollar teeth and Garbo eyelashes. The day is saved when the hero rescues Doris Dazzle from the surging breakers. Fade-out with smiles and a bouquet of flowers. . .
Addenda: the funnyman is an egocentric lush who hits the flask and makes business deals with producers' wives. A has been at thirty, he fades out for thirty years like an old silent film crumbling into dust.
Result? That's it. "The Helen Morgan Story" all over again with titles.
"The Comic" opens at the funnyman's funeral. Appropriately enough. The picture dies right before our very eyes. The dead comic narrates his past and it flickers before us in a series of flashbacks, the images and characterizations like celluloid—flat and transparent. It's a serious
and transparent. It's a serious film but it tries to be funny and ends up being neither.
What it was like in the early days of screen comedy, the studios, the stars, the mad way of making films, the nostalgia of a vanished era, the funny little men on the screen, the galloping flickers . . . here is where "The Comic" belongs, not following a third-rate plot that's pure soap.
Devotees of the silent film will occasionally note parallels of Our Hero to the later career of Buster Keaton; the reference to Laurel and Hardy's "Battle of The Century" in one of the blackout sketches; or to Barrymore in a tepid "Jekyll and Hyde" routine. That's pretty paltry fare.
The rest of the time we follow Van Dyke around tearing up what he believes is the house occupied by his wife and lover, skipping down to Mexico to hit the skids (HIT THE SKIDS—term referred to when a character in a Hollywood movie gets drunk and sick and leaves his career behind him to follow a life of ruin) or doldering around with Mickey Rooney on park benches as two old has-beens in some incredibly boring sequences.
The wealth of possibilities never explored is unbelievable. The re-creations of silent comedy are at best second-rate and totally unworthy of the work put out even by the lesser stars of the period like Bevan or Chase. The character of Van Dyke, on and off screen is only a caricature. Carl Reiner's direction is barely adequate and writing is barely zero. "The funnyman's life was like a bad comedy," he seems to say, but 'why show this in a bad movie?' We keep waiting for that insane flash of wit that we have a right to expect from Reiner, that bit of madness that will save the day. But does he save us like the hero at the beach saved Doris Dazzle? No, fade-out and house lights up. We're still floundering.
There is a glimpse of the Brown Derby and the Avenue of Stars in Los Angeles (the Brown Derby looked fake), a few bits and pieces of gags, a rusty silent projector (courtesy of the prop department), and one memorable glimpse of Van Dyke at the end, sitting stonily in front of the tube watching one of his old films . . .
But a work of the seriousness and intent of a Sunset Boulevard or of the occasionally brilliant satire of a Singing in the Rain it ain't. Not by the length of Chester Conklin's whiskers it ain't.
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 5
ENDS SAT.
"THE COMIC"
SHOWING
DICK VAN DYKE
MICHELE LEE
MICKEY ROONEY
M Color C
Mat. 3:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:10
Varsitu
THEATRE ... Telegone VI 3-1065
BOOKS
THE RUNNING GUN, by Robert MacLead (Gold Medal, 60 cents); THE ILL WIND CONTRACT, by Philip Atlee (Gold Medal, 60 cents); THE MAN WHO PLAYED THIEF, by Don Smith (Gold Medal, 60 cents)—Some light ones for the light time of year (if anyone still believes summer session is a light time). "The Running Gun" is a western, whose plot lines will reveal nothing that wasn't in the pulps half a century ago. "The Ill Wind Contract" is another in a series about a counterspy named Joe Gall. The setting is Southeast Asia, with Communists all over the place, naturally. "The Man Who Played Thief" is a suspense tale that takes place in London, Paris and the Riviera.
Steppenwolf and The Turtles
November 8
Allen Field House
Good Seats Still Available.
Tickets $3.50, $3, $2.50
Available at:
SUA Office, Kansas Union Richardson Music
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STARTS TONIGHT!
The story of a man...a woman.. and a girl who rated all her lovers in a little black book!
---
Rod Steiger Claire Bloom Judy Geeson
O
IN A JULIAN BLAUSTEIN PRODUCTION
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WALT DISNEY PRODUCES MOTION PICTURES,
NOT FOREIGN FLICKS!
WALT DISNEY'S Darby OGill and the Little People
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ALL WALT DISNEY PROGRAM!
WALT DISNEY presents THE TATTOOED POLICE HORSE
Billy better learn fast ...or die young!
Talbot Youngstein Productions present
ROBERT MITCHUM
ANGIE DICKINSON
"YOUNG BILLY YOUNG"
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Mat. 2:30
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Billy better learn fast ...or die young!
Choir appears Sunday
The KU Chamber Choir makes its first appearance Sunday under the direction of James Ralston, teaching associate in choral music. The concert will be a 3:30 p.m. in Swarathout Recital Hall.
The choir consists of 31 students and is the most select of six ensembles. Annually it conducts a tour of Kansas cities and last year performed at the KMEA convention in Lawrence and at the
SWMENC convention in St. Louis.
---
Ralston, Director of Choral Activities, has headed the Choral Department since 1966.
The program will be: "Behold! I Build a House" by Lukas Foss. James Moeser, associate professor of organ and head of the Organ Department, will be featured as guest artist.
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Chalmers speaks on protests
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said yesterday that as next week's moratorium approaches, people would be looking for new content and new meaning.
"I am afraid that accelerating moratorium activities will make it increasingly difficult to find new material to present," Chalmers said. "I would hope, however, that the thrust that was provided by the previous moratorium would continue."
Chalmers said that moratorium activities ought to follow a community approach by having as many panel discussions as possible.
Chalmers reiterated his belief that KU's moratorium was a good supplemental experience to a student's formal education.
Don't neglect education "I attended the panel discussion at Ellsworth Hall for the last moratorium," Chalmers said. "I have never seen a more thoughtful or penetrating discussion by panelists anywhere.
"I hope, however, that moratorium activities will not interfere with a student's formal education," Chalmers said. "Technically, moratorium means to postpone and not to suspend. I hope that both students and faculty—the latter especially—will remember that and try to fulfill the education that their fees have paid for."
Chalmers said that as moratorium activities increase, demands upon the participants would increase, at the expense of other things that students may wish to do.
"It is one thing to indicate concern," Chalmers said, "but it is another to make sacrifices for that concern."
Matter of individual concern Chalmers discussed the impact that the press has had in affecting moratorium events. He said that the news media had been credited with having more influence in increasing participation than they actually had.
On the whole, Chalmers stated, it is a matter of individual concern; students who want to demonstrate will do so anyway. There is no real need to publicize events excessively, because anyone concerned knows when and where things will take place.
Much criticism has been leveled at students participating in the moratorium by government officials. Chalmers said that he could not agree with that criticism.
"I support the Bill of Rights, since it is one of the critical elements of the Constitution. The right to march and assemble peacefully was not violated in the last moratorium so I can see no reason why the moratorium should not continue," Chalmers said.
ANIMAL INDUSTRY
MANILA (UPI) — Some 900 pesos ($225 million) were invested in 1968 in the production of livestock and poultry in the Philippines, according to Animal Industry Director Anacleto B. Coronel. He said the big investment has given the Philippines the most modern and most progressive poultry and swine industry in Southeast Asia.
6 KANSAN
Nov. 7
1969
Topsy's
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candy apples
ice cream
home made
fudge
LOFT'S
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open till 10:00 p.m.
1967 FORD MUSTANG
Car flips; driver uninjured
By NILA WALKER
Kansan Staff Writer
"Conscription," according to Arlo Tatum, "is a law passed by middle-age men to use the bodies of the young for the purposes of middle age."
Photo by Clifford Roth
The driver of this 1969 Mustang escaped serious injury when his car flipped over and crossed the median into the opposite lane on Naismith Drive. The driver was William Willis, Wichita junior. Conditions at the time were clear and dry and the KU Traffic and Security Office said a report on the accident would be issued sometime today.
One of the basic reasons for the inequities in the draft law, Tatum said, was the fact that it existed substantially unchanged since enactment in 1940 when World War II was approaching. Although understandable at the time, Tatum called the present draft a "wartime measure in time of peace and an act of war against draft-age men."
Tatum, the executive secretary for the Central Committee of Conscientious Objectors, is not a young revolutionary. He is himself a slightly bald, bespectacled middle-ager adamantly opposed to the draft in any form. Describing himself as a "oneman agitator rather than a oneman revolutionary," he spoke Thursday night as a part of the SUA Minority Forum.
Tatum speaks against the draft
Convinced a generation gap exists, Tatum said the draft contributed to its hostility. Older generations, he added, regretted the sacrifices they made during the Depression and resented the freedoms given ungrateful youth.
Noting the social injustices resulting from draft laws, Tatum said that military service cyphons off potential leadership in the ghetto and prevents the poor from attending college because part-time study is not considered an exemption.
Local draft boards have been assigned physically impossible
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tasks, Tatum admitted. He said that many classifications were randomly assigned without examination of the individual case and that even appeals were decided without personal consideration by all members of the board. Enforcement of laws even as they now exist, however, would cost
millions of dollars for extra employees.
O
to believe the United States can be the world's policeman."
"It is politically possible to end the draft when it expires in 1971," he continued. "I hope movements begin all over the country to encourage President Nixon to do what he said he would do—end the draft."
Abundant manpower facilitated involvement in the Vietnam War, Tatum said. "With the rate of men now going into service, we could become involved in three Vietnams. One must be pro-draft
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Bricker wins HOPE Award again
P. M. G.
A. G. H.
D. R. M. S. H.
I am a man of great achievement. I have been an educator for many years, and I have taught students in both the public and private sectors. I am also a proud member of the educational community. I enjoy sharing my knowledge with others and helping them succeed. I am excited to be part of this vibrant community.
Photos by Mike Rieke
HOPE Award winner Clark Bricker-professor, chemist, author, and champion of innovative teaching
By MARY QUINN
Kansan Staff Writer
Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry, was named recipient of the 1969 HOPE Award Thursday.
He has been a member of the KU faculty since 1963 and received the award for the first time in 1966.
Bricker said he was pleasantly surprised and honored when Pamela Russell, Iola senior and co-chairman of the awards committee, congratulated him.
"There is no better satisfaction for a teacher than to be recognized by students. A professor is revered by his colleagues because this is a significant and distinct honor," Bricker said.
Award started in 1959
Award started in 1959 The class of 1959 instigated the award which is given to faculty members who are interested in students, explore new teaching methods and urge students to make full use of their educational opportunities.
Bricker thinks students and faculty members are "in the game together" and that they should have "a spirit of cooperation." This philosophy is utilized to help his students, Bricker said. An informal person-to-person basis backs his attitude of treating students the way he would like to be treated.
Bricker graduated from Gettysburg College in 1939, received his M.A. from Haverford College and his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1944.
He has written three books and approximately 50 scientific articles.
Bricker memorizes students
Bricker, an amateur photographer, uses his skill to help him remember students. Because of his large teaching load of 680 students, he photographs each student with their name plate and memorizes them to help his person - to - person teaching method.
An educational device he em-
All entries must include the name, address, college and classification of the writer, as well as the name of the person submitting the entry.
The entry must have appeared in the college newspaper or magazine during the 1969-70 academic year, and may be submitted by anyone, including the writer.
National awards too
The winner of the award will
receive $35 in cash and a ciertate at the Kansas Engineering Society's meeting-in Wichita in June, 1970. Up to two other entrants will receive certificates for honorable mention awards.
Contest announced
Nov.7 1969
The Kansas Engineering Society has announced its second annual contest for articles written by college journalists.
An entry consisting of a single article or a series should deal with engineering subject matter. This category includes new developments in the school of engineering, air and water pollution or any other topic concerning KU or their surrounding areas.
KANSAN
Awards to be given to college journalists
The deadline for entries is May 1, 1970, but entries may be mailed in any time prior to that date.
First-place and honorable mention entries may be submitted to the contest sponsored by the National Society of Professional Engineers, which annually awards three cash prizes of $200, $100 and $50.
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- Portraits
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his department from faculty to janitors. He said no single person is worthy of the HOPE Award honor and he wanted to share it with all members of his staff.
of education, difficulty in keeping students enthusiastic and no opportunity to express the philosophy of life.
Bricker said his philosophy of teaching utilizes every man in
Well-known for his strides in education, Bricker received a distinguished teaching award in 1967. In 1968, he received the Manufacturing Chemist Association award for outstanding contribution to the field of chemistry education.
ploys to reach students is a video tape of his lab sessions. Students can watch experiments and work problems in groups of 20 or less. His recitation classes usually have about 60 students. This method enables Bricker to work better with his students.
Come in right now and try one. You'll agree, it's the best sandwich in town. If you can't get here, don't give up. Just call us and we'll deliver from 5:00 p.m. to 12 midnight (we start at 4:00 on Sundays). Check our other delicious extras too!
Our famous HERO sandwich (a meal in itself) is causing people to flip over its generous portions and delicious flavor. It's made with mouth-watering heaps of salami, ham, turkey and roast beef, with lettuce and our own special sauce.
He emphasizes drilling
"Technical education requires more quantitative analysis and accurate thinking. This is a result of more drilling. Students must be drilled for more emphasis in relating abstract principles to everyday life," Bricker said.
His future expectations for teaching methods include computerized, programmed instruction and video tape instruction. These enable students to study on their own time without an instructor. Professor Bricker sees two drawbacks to this type
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KU Coeds—Dinah Caves and Sherri Berger for Kirsten's
Homecoming Quiz
Where can you have a bite to eat? ...Raney
Who has the largest cosmetic department...Raney in Lawrence?
Who has a complete line of Hallmark Gifts?...Raney
Where can you get Pepper Up Jayhawk Buttons?... Raney
Raney's three convenient stores are happy to satisfy any of your needs. We have a wide range of products to satisfy any need you could have.
Let us help you to have a great homecoming weekend. Drop by before or after the game so we can serve you.
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THE TOWN MUSEUM OF HUNTINGDON
Photo by Ron Bishor
Displays near completion
Members of the Delta Chi fraternity work on a Homecoming display in front of the their house on West Campus Road. The theme for the weekend displays is, "A Little Pepper Helps the Buffalo Go Down." Each display will be judged and winners will be announced during the Homecoming Weekend.
Seniors to don gowns
Members of the senior class have decided to wear caps and gowns at commencement, said Pam Russell, Iola senior.
Nov. 7 1969 KANSAN 11
In a referendum voted on by the Senior Class Wednesday, students have the option of participating or not participating in commencement exercises. If, however, a student decides to take part in the ceremony; he must wear the traditional cap and gown.
County planning studied
By DAVE BROYLES Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence City Commission and the Douglas County Commission are acting to insure adequate planning for Lawrence in the future. Two major steps were taken jointly on June 1 to facilitate comprehensive planning.
On that date, the City of Lawrence hired two full-time city planners. Previously, Lawrence had one part-time planner. The staff shortage had limited comprehensive planning.
Also, the Lawrence Planning Commission and the Douglas County Planning Commission were combined. The new City- County Planning Commission was given the task of planning for urban growth in Douglas County.
Planning Director Ron Short explained the necessity for strong planning efforts.
Welfare Important
"It is important that the general welfare take precedence over individual property rights. Whatever one landowner does affects all the surrounding properties," he said.
Short said vested interests that ignore public welfare could, through excessive cost cutting and improper land utilization, leave the city with difficult and expensive problems in the future.
"In other urban areas, proper planning has generally lost to vested interests," Short said. "The question is: Can planning win out in Douglas County. Because of the problems inherent in maintaining proper planning, the city and county have united in an intensive long-range effort."
One major subject of study is the Clinton Reservoir. With completion still five years away, it is not too early to begin detailed planning, Short said.
Lawrence reservoir
The Clinton Reservoir area will
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This incentive rental plan offers numerous price ranges for married couples, graduate students or undergraduates. The plan is designed to provide a two-bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartment at prices competitive with one-bedroom or two-bedroom apartments, yet offer much more in space and quality, convenient location and services.
Visit the office at 1603 W. 15th, or call 843-4993 to get complete information. Inspection is welcomed.
The planning commission will also anticipate needs for public facilities, schools, utilities, transportation, and recreation. Strict subdivision regulations will be adopted and model developments planned.
Short cited the recently-completed Perry Reservoir as an example of problems resulting from poor planning. Btween 7,000 and 10,000 lots, mostly of minimum size, have been platted. Few lots have water or sewer facilities
Pollution problem
Pollution problem As a result, Perry Reservoir is confronted with a potentially serious pollution problem. Raw sewage is already seeping into the lake. As population density increases, the pollution problem will probably worsen, Short said. Short said similar problems could result at Clinton Reservoir unless development is tightly controlled. "Poor streets and utilities and poor land utilization could turn a potentially beautiful asset into a nightmare."
But even with an early start, a bright future is by no means insured. "Right now we have a very sophisticated County Commission," Short said. "But when we have elections, what will happen? It is hard for people to look 20 years into the future and anticipate what will happen."
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Will Saturday be the day?
Buffs 'meat' hungry 'Hawks
By JOE CHILDS Assistant Sports Editor
Last August at the Big Eight coaches football luncheon Colorado's head coach Eddie Crowder said that he had one of his best teams in recent years, but that in the tough Big Eight conference his Buffaloes would be lucky to finish in fourth place.
Crowder was right—as usual—on both counts. After building his offense around All-American candidate Bob Anderson and patching up deficiencies in his defensive unit the Buffs boss molded a squad that convincingly
11
Bob Anderson
defeated two pre-season foes, Tulsa and Indiana, losing only to fourth ranked Penn State on the Nittany Lion's home field.
Saturday Crowder will send his Buffs against the hapless 'Hawks to try to avenge last year's 41-27 defeat.
Rated at one time during the '69 season as the 20th team nationally, CU promises to throw a stingy defense and a threatening offense against KU, who will be seeking its second win.
Before the Buffaloes' game with Indiana, Crowder came up with the surprise of the young season and shifted Anderson, his allBig Eight quaterback, to tailback. Since the move, Anderson has carried the load for the offensive unit and at present ranks third among Big Eight rushers with 746 yards on 156 carries for a 4.7 average.
The Buffs 4-3 overall record and 2-2 mark in league play isn't impressive at first glance, but considering that Colorado has played the tougher part of its schedule upsetting powerful Missouri at home and falling eight points short of Oklahoma in the snakepit at Norman makes them anything but weak.
Besides their 31-24 win over MU the Buffaloes' other league victory came at the loop opener at Ames, Iowa as Anderson, playing tailback for the first time against a Big Eight opponent, ran 69 yards from scrimmage in the first quarter to spur the Iowa State defeat. In the contest the highly touted CU defense held the Cyclones to 200 yards total offense and three yards on the ground.
Anderson, also a dangerous passer, hasn't put the ball in the air through five games, and in Saturday's encounter Pepper Rodgers definitely feels that the pass is something to watch for from the ex-quarterback.
Since his switch, Anderson has paced the CU rushing attack but sophomore quarterback Paul Arendt can call on his fullback Ward Walsh, a 219-pound junior, or sophomore Ron Rieger who, at 200 pounds, has good speed and is a strong fill-in for Anderson at the tailback spot.
12 KANSAN
Nov. 7
1969
Ranking last in the conference in passing, it is no secret that the Buffers rely heavily on their running game. Averaging only 92
77
Bill Brundige Buffalo Guns
7
Eric Harris
yards per contest in the air, Colorado doesn't figure to throw much Saturday, especially against the Jayhawk tight secondary.
Although CU's passing attack isn't impressive statistically they have three capable receivers. At split end, 188-pound senior Monte Huber and his back up man Steve Dal Forto, a 194-pound junior, combine for a strong one-two punch. In addition Bob Masten
at 206 pounds is a dangerous slotback. Huber leads the corps of receivers with 18 receptions for 273 yards.
For Colorado to have a great game Anderson must have a great day. The Buff standout sustained a hip-pointer against Nebraska last weekend, but has responded well and will be at full speed for Saturday's game.
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If KU is to have a great day Saturday and upset the Golden Buffs their offensive unit will have to be at its best, for the CU defense is one of the best around. Ranking third in the conference in total defense, Colorado has several standouts both on the line and in the backfield.
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Long known as the home of fine defensive back CU has lived in its tradition throughout the 1969 campaign. Leading the crew is right cornerback Eric Harris, picked by Kansas City Chiefs talent scout Tommie O'Boyle as one of the top two cornerbacks in the country. Harris teams talents with junior Pat Murphy who is regarded by many to be as strong a defensive back as Colorado has had. Throughout the season the Durango, Colo. junior has chalked up 27 unassisted tackles, been in on 25 more and has picked off three interceptions.
Anchoring an extremely quick defensive line is 6-5, 250-pound
Bill Brundige at right end. Equally as menacing is Bill Collins at the right tackle. Also a senior, Collins stands at 6-1, 227-pounds leads the Buffers with 50 assisted tackles and 22 unassisted.
Last weekend against Nebraska left tackle Rich Varriano a 5-11, 225-pounder suffered a knee injury and is listed as the only injured player on the CU roster for Saturday's game. Varriano will be replaced by 238-poundier Jake Capra.
On all counts Crowder's squad is more than impressive on defense. They are quick, have a tough secondary and boast good pursuit.
KU's passing attack is improving each weekend since the insertion of Phil Basler at quarterback. John Riggins will be back after his suspension from last week's contest with Oklahoma State, and Ron Jessie will start at tailback for the first time since he broke his hand at Nebraska four weeks ago.
Buffs had offensive problems because the Huskers keyed on Anderson.
Against Nebraska last week the
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Big Eight Championship
Harriers confident,face tough foes
By DAN REEDER
Kansan Sports Writer
The KU cross-country team is favored to win their sixth straight Big Eight conference championship at 10:30 Saturday. But the harriers face tough competition in a race which will cover four miles at Stagg Hill Golf Course in Manhattan. It will be the first title race in Big Eight cross-country history to exceed three miles.
Coach Bob Timmons said that Missouri would be a very strong contender for the title.
"As far as I know, Mizzou has been undefeated this season. They are an excellent team. They are aggressive and balanced," he said. Missouri has beaten Nebraska, K-State and Iowa State.
Strongest contenders for individual honors in the race is Colorado's Rick Trujillo, first place finisher in the Federation meet in a record time of 19:44.5. Trujillo was a cross country All-American in 1967, when he finished seventh nationally.
K-State has the home course advantage. "They always run well in the conference," Timmons said. "And they could be plenty potent."
The Wildcats finished second to KU in the Kansas State Federation meet, but the team has good potential in Jerome Howe, Bob Barratti, Don Henderson, Steve Kadel, Charlie Copp and Ken Swenson. Howe placed fourth in the Federation meet in 19:55.
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 13
Iowa State has a better team
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than in past years. So far in the season the team has beaten Drake, the perennial Missouri Valley champs. Dennis McGuire, undefeated this fall and fourth in the conference last season, is a strong contender, and Chuck Schneider and Bill Biliskis could also fit into the top 10 picture for the Cyclones.
Nebraska will field a strong team. They have beaten K-State and run Missouri a close meet. The Huskers, with Peter Brang and Greg Carlberg, who placed sixth and seventh in the 1968 championships, will be trying to move up from their fourth place spot of last year. Other top Husker harriers are Jim Lang, Bob Tupper and Mel Campbell.
If Peter Kaal has recovered
from an injury, Oklahoma State could challenge for a first division spot providing George Stewart and Larry Rose run as expected
Oklahoma's top entrant appears to be Roger Woolery, a freshman. He'll get support from another freshman, Deane Foote, and veteran Craig Wise.
Timmons said that he was pleased with KU's practices this week.
"The guys are running very well without as much effort now," Timmons said.
"I feel certain that we will run well," Timmons said. "We have a young team, but they know what they have to do. They've learned a lot this year, and now they have some experience to do well in this meet."
(Continued to page 14)
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BLOOD,SWEAT&TEARS In Person
BLOOD, AND MY YEARS
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BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m. Tues., Nov.18,1969—One Night Only Advance Tickets on Sale at Kief's Records, Red Dog Office, All Jenkins Stores in K.C. Get Your Tickets Now-While They Last.
Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
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Rodgers ignites rally
Approximately 1100 Jayhawk fans worked themselves into the spirit of Homecoming Thursday night at a pep rally at the northwest corner of Allen Field House.
It was a beautiful evening, but the fair-weather-fans stayed home. Perhaps their thoughts are still in Miami where the sun shines every day.
The rally was highlighted with fireworks and torch parades in addition to the pep band, pom pon squad and the yell leaders.
But nothing topped Pepper's performance. After Emery Hicks, team captain, and Pepper burned the Colorado Buffalo, the KU boss circled the bonfire several times to the strains of the Kansas fight song and ignited the crowd by turning one of his patented somersaults.
Introducing the senior football players, Coach Rodgers said that the seniors were the ones that gave KU a winning season a year ago and last year took Kansas to the Orange Bowl. But he added that they and himself were having a tough time this year.
"But these guys (the seniors) are going to end up in a blaze of glory." Rodgers said, "because we are going to burn someone yet this year."
Bob Hartman, head yell leader,
introduced the Homecoming
A spoonful
queen finalists Janet Merrick, Prairie Village senior, Candice Heavin, Overland Park senior and Nancy Watson, Kansas City, Mo., senior.
of Pepper
As he introduced Pepper Rodgers, Hartman said "We're looking forward to a good game this year—er,uh this week."
Pepper responded. "We're going to nail Colorado this week. We've been setting them up for several weeks now. They think we're no good, but we are."
And so, set with an optimistic outlook, the "peppered-up" Jay-hawks go into Saturday's game with Colorado, hopefully followed by lots of tanked up, er pepped-up KU fans.
SPACE AGE WATER
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Some of the purest drinking water in the world is not used for drinking.
The Honeywell Solid State Electronics Center here, which employs a de-ionization process to make its water 100,000 times as pure as well water, uses the water to help manufacture microelectronic devices for the space age. The de-ionization process reduces the salt particle content to less than four parts per billion.
(Continued from page 13)
Although there are great individual runners in the Big Eight conference, the individual strength seems to stand out in the KU team. In the last dual meet, the combination of Smith, Mason, Andersen, Elliott, Glenn Cunningham and Callen bunched together to cross the finish line with 26 seconds anart.
Title run tomorrow
(Continued from page 13)
The KU team has two big meets scheduled after Saturday's conference run. The Central Collegeate Championship at Carbondale, III, will be run on Nov. 15, and the NCAA meet will be run at Bronx, N.Y., Nov. 24.
"I'm really glad that we have such a fine course to run on in Manhattan," Timmons added. "People probably don't realize how important a good course is. K-State has the best course in the Midwest, and it naturally makes the guys run better. It prepares them mentally to know that they will have good footing. Being mentally prepared for a meet is almost as important as being in good physical shape," he said.
"We're taking these meets one at a time, but if we win the conference, the team will have the momentum it needs going into the really big ones." Timmons said.
And the team is in good shape. Team members run more than 100 miles per week in practice." When you have seven guys that can run side by side for that distance, you
know you have to have a good team." Timmons said.
If everyone runs up to their potential, it should be good enough.
TRICHINOSIS REPORT
FRANKFORT. Ky. (UPI)— Eighty-four cases of trichinosis were reported to the National Communicable Disease Center in 1968, the Kentucky State Department of Health reports.
The cases, from 22 states, were traced to pork products 71 per cent; bear meat 10 per cent; hamburger 19 per cent. The hamburger cases "probably reflect contamination of beef when ground in meat grinders used previously for pork," the report said.
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Playoffs next week cap intramural season
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Only one day remains in the intramural football season and playoffs for the Hill Championships begin Monday, Nov. 10. Nearly all teams have been decided in the single elimination playoffs with the top two teams in each division advancing to the finals.
Fraternity A League Division I
Phi Kappa Psi 5 0
Delta Upsilon 3 2
Sigma Chi 2 2
Alpha Chi Lambda 1 3
Lambda Chi Alpha 0 4
Division III
Division II
Independent A League
Division II
Beta Theta Pi 4 0
Phi Delta Theta 3 1
Tau Kappa Epsilon 2 1
Sigma Chi 1 2
Delta Chi 1 0
Phi Gamma Delta 4 0
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 3 1
Tau Tau Omega 2 2
Delta Tau Delta 1 3
Sigma Tau Epsilon 0 4
KU Laws ... 6 0
College Kids ... 4 2
JRP ... 0 4
Kumquats ... 0 4
Division II
Grace Pearson 5 1
Battetone 4 2
Pearson 2 4
Stephenson 1 5
Independent B League
KU Laws 4 0
ASCE 3 2
Emmon's X 2 1
Owen Hall 10 N 1 3
Dorn Wing 5 S I 0 5
Division II
Templin Haylacks ... 3 1
Bang Gang ... 3 1
MBA ... 3 1
Ellsworth 5N ... 1 3
Naismith ... 0 4
Bud Boys 4 0
Frumious Bandersnatch 3 2
Papa Jake's Boys 2 2
Trompin Bazoos 1 3
Oliver 0 4
Division III
Grendel's Mother 4 0
Radiation Biophysics 3 1
Physiology 1 2
Biology Charts 1 3
Ellsworth 6S 0 3
Division IV
14 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
Division V
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
Division¹
NEGB Sports Authority 4 0
NUNS 3 1
Eight-Pak 2 2
AAC ChE 1 2
Privilege of Froud 0 4
Division VI
Table Tops
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Military Complex 4 0
Chem Tech 3 1
Embryo Tech 2 2
AFROTC 1 3
Insect Soud 0 4
Division II
Fraternity B League Division I
Division V
Beta Theta Pi No. 1 5 6
Hairy Chi Alpha 4 1
Triangle 3 2
Theta Tau 2 2
Phi Kappa Tau 1 4
Ascidia 0 5
Pi Kappa Alpha 4 0
Delta Tau Delta 3 1
Alpha Pi Alpha 2 2
Pi Nu Delta Theta 1 3
Sigma Nu 0 4
Division IV
Division VI
Division III
Phi Gamma Delta 4 0
Kappa Sigma 3 1
Phi Kappa Beta No. 1 2
Sigma Ipsilon No. 1 0 4
Alba Epsilon Pi 0 4
Beta Theta Pl No. 2 4 0
Theta Chi 3 1
Signa Tau No. 2 3 1
Alpha Tau Omega 0 2
Phi Kappa Psi No. 2 0 4
Tau Kappa Epsilon 4 0
Kappa Phi Kappa Psi No. 1 3 1
Natal Phi Kappa Psi No. 2 1 2
Beta Sigma Psi 1 3
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 0 4
Phi Kappa Sigma 4 0
Delta Upsilon No. 1 2 2
Sigma Phi 2 2
Phi Kappa Theta No. 2 1
Alpha KappaLambda 1 3
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Theta Chi 27, Sigma Chi No. 2 0
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WELCOME HOME HAWKS!
Every Homecoming, the city of Lawrence fills with the smiling faces of loyal KU Alumni and friends, ready to lustily cheer their team to victory and once again gaze upon their beautiful campus. It's a memorable occasion, and a happy one. After the game, satisfy your hunger at Henry's. We'll have all our delicious sandwiches, burgers, chicken, and shrimp dinners piping hot and ready to take the edge off your appetite. We're right on the way to the Turnpike, and eager to please. Be our guest!
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Thomas-Childs 61-33-2, Chalmers-Stinson 60-34-2
Big week propels Editors
After four weeks of laying back and giving the Chancellor and Athletic Director a taste of superiority, Messrs. Thomas and Childs finally decided that enough was enough and poured it on last weekend. On a Saturday of upsets, the Eds correctly picked Auburn's conquest of previously unbeaten Florida and BYU's surprise win over Arizona to pave the way to a 10-4 record.
Chancellor Chalmers and Director Stinson (though admittedly the Chancellor went it alone last week) lost their season-long
NEGRO SCORE TWO FIRSTS
NEW YORK (UPI)—Benjamin Banneker, the first watchmaker to make a clock in America, also was the first Negro to receive a presidential appointment, according to researchers, for a watch company.
President George Washington appointed Banneker, who was born a free man in Maryland in 1731, to assist in the survey of what was to become Washington, D.C. Banneker, who was also an expert on astronomy, the science on which time keeping is based, began to issue annual astronomical almanacs, starting in 1791, the Bulova researchers report.
Nov. 7 1969 KANSAN 15
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lead as a result of their 7-7 mark. The Editors are riding high at this stage in the season and with their heads in the clouds will probably blow the whole bit this weekend.
Tomorrow's choices:
Colorado at Kansas
Chalmers-Stinson-Kansas by 21
Thomas-Childs-Colorado by 10
Iowa State at Nebraska
Chalmers-Stinson-Nebrakee by 7
Thomas-Childs-Oklahoma by 14
Oklahoma at Missouri
Chalmers-Stinson-Missouri by 6
Thomas-Childs-Missouri by 5
Chalmers-Stinson-Kansas State
Chalmers-Stinson-Kansas State by 12
Thomas-Childs-Kansas State by 15
Utah State at Air Force
Chalmers-Stinson-Air Force by 20
Thomas-Childs-Oklahoma by 14
Mississippi State at Auburn
Chalmers-Stinson-Auburn by 21
Thomas-Childs-Auburn by 17
Georgia at Florida
Chalmers-Studio-by 3
Thomas-Childs-Georgia by 3
Iowa at Indiana
Thomas-Childs—Iowa by 10
Thomas-Hilders-Sinnon - Alabama at 10
Chalmers-Sinnson-LSU, even
Thomas-Childs-LSU by 10
Thomas-Childs-Mistle at Purdue
Chalmers-Sinnson-LSU by 7
Thomas-Childs-Purdue by 12
Kentucky at Vanderbilt
Thomas-Childs-Vanderbilt by 3
Thomas-Childs-Kentucky by 6
San Jose St. at Brightam Young
Thomas-Childs-Even
Thomas-Childs-San Jose at 10
South Carolina at Tennessee
Chalmers-Sinnon-Tennessee by 20
Chalmers-Sinnon-Tennessee by 15
Chalmers-Sinnon-Atlanta by 6
Chalmers-Sinnon-Wyoming by 6
Chalmers-Sinnon-Utah by 3
THE LOST GALLERY
DRIVERS MUST LEARN AID BONN (UPI) — All applicants for drivers licenses in West Germany must take an eight-hour course in first aid to automobile accident victims, under the terms of a new amendment to the Road Traffic Law
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Students practice juvenile delinquency
Crime class probes the criminal mind
By MARY QUINN Kansan Staff Writer
Have you ever wanted to commit a crime?
If the answer to this question is yes, you ought to think about enrolling in Juvenile Delinquency #177, in the sociology department.
William R. Arnold, professor of sociology, said the course was designed to observe the interaction of members of a juvenile group while they plan a crime. It is not the crime itself, he said, but the planning and execution of the crime which gives the basis for observation.
The class is divided into groups of seven, the average size of a gang, he said. They take on the role of a delinquent while planning a crime, Arnold said.
He discussed the crimes planned in last semesters class but said few were carried out. One group decided to rob a bank, but after approval of the bank president it was squelched because the bank's bonding company decided it was too risky.
Another group was going to paint windows of the campus traffic control booths black, but they retreated from their venture. Some students decided to rob a liquor store. After choosing and easing the store they asked a police officer's permission to execute the experiment, but permission denied. However, they spent an interesting hour at the police station discussing crime in Lawrence, Arnold said.
The only crimes completed were robbing Arnold's home and the delinquent act of having class called off by employing an impersonator. One morning a group of students walked into Arnold's office with nic-nacs they had taken from his home. He said they did him a favor by breaking into his home because he then took precautions against this happening with actual thiefs.
Arnold said the students wrote papers discussing the development of norms in the groups, development of leadership in the group and the reasons for retreating from or executing the crime.
"In the heat of discussion the
Senior class spends for many reasons
Senior class fees are used for a variety of activities, said Don A. Farrington, Oswego senior and senior class president.
Activities financed by senior class fees include the senior coffee, senior breakfast, an undetermined number of class parties, the annual senior film and the HOPE award. A portion of the $12 fee is also allotted for such items as sweatshirts and hats.
Class officers and committee chairmen decide how class fees are spent.
"We try to poll senior class members on how they would like their money spent whenever it is possible," Farrington said.
A $3,000 loan fund available to senior needing financial aid is also supplied by the fees, Farrington said.
Part of the fees also pays for a class service project, Farrington said.
"But," he said, "This year an emphasis is being put on utilizing manpower and not just money."
16 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
He said that no students have committed crimes to his knowledge except against him and other members of the class.
police when they call.
desire to complete the crime heightens and if the students can't leave immediately to commit the crime, they rarely execute their plans, Arnold said. If they
deceive and plan over a long period of time, enthusiasm for the act dies."
Arnold said he always gambles that the students won't go
through with the act if it is against the law. But, he requires students to inform him of their plans when committing a crime so he can explain the situation to
STEVENSON OLDS
Telephone VI 3-0218 1008 W. 23rd St.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
OLDSMOBILE
BELL BOTTOMS
SHIRTS
DRESSES
TIES, SASHES & SCARVES
BELTS
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UNDERGROUND PAPERS
LAMPSHADES
RINGS & EARRINGS
RECORDS
CELESTIAL LIGHTS
STROBE LIGHTS & CANDLES
PIPES
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INDIAN MIRRORED ANIMALS
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HEAD BANDS
TAROT CARDS
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FIELDS
712 Mass.
Open 11-6 Mon. Thru Sat.
What kind of store is Gibson's...
It's a store designed with you in mind. The famous brands you know and trust are offered at low discount prices. Tremendous selections of these brand names appear throughout the store in every department. All items are offered at discount prices everyday at 25% to 40% below their usual retail value . . . all perfects, factory firsts at fantastic savings. Gibson's volume buying power makes these low, low prices a reality. You are free to scrutinize each item carefully by yourself...if you should need assistance, trained courteous personnel are always on hand.
Gibson's gives you a double guaranty on your purchase-one by the manufacturer . . one by Gibson's. If you aren't satisfied with your purchase, you may exchange it or your money will be refunded.
That's Gibson's . old fashioned quality and courtesy at discount prices every day of the week.
GIBSON'S
DISCOUNT CENTER
25th and Hiway 59 - Lawrence, Kansas
Watch For Opening Soon
Must be over 18 years
The Pill 'available' to coeds here
Special to the Kansan
The so-called "Sexual Revolution" of the past decade, which has liberated many young people from hang-ups about pre-marital sex, can be partly attributed to the birth control pill.
The invention of the Pill—and the improvement of other birth control devices—has nearly eliminated fear of pregnancy when used correctly.
In Lawrence birth control devices are legally available to any woman—married or not—literally for the asking.
"Girls no longer have to lie about being married," said one
enlightened KU coed, "and they don't have to use their friends' pills or make up stories to their doctors. That's a stupid way to get birth control pills."
Instead of risking her health on unprescribed pills, a KU coed can go to any one of several sources.
Planned Parenthood, the Douglas County Health Dept., Watkins Hospital and Lawrence physicians all dispense birth control devices. Only Planned Parenthood and the Health Dept., however, regularly prescribe to unmarried women.
"By Kansas law, anyone over 18 can come to the public Health Dept. and receive birth control
Feminine D.J.'s compete for broadcasting equality
By IRENE ECONOMOUS
Kansan Staff Writer
The femmes fatales have struck again. This time they've invaded the broadcasting ranks at KUOK, the campus radio station.
Although many coeds would shrink at competition with men in a traditionally male profession,
Ana Tavares
Wishful Sinful
KUOK disk jockey Cindy Willis, Overland Park senior, is one KU coed who has invaded the traditionally male profession of broadcasting.
Ellen Holtzberg, Wilmette, Ill. senior, and Cindy Willis, Overland Park senior, don't view their jobs as a mere competitive threat to the male of the species.
Discrimination on the KUOK staff is subtle, not overt, says Miss Willis, who is known to radio fans as Wishful Sinful. "In some respects, I'm treated just
pills," said Dr. Dale Clinton, clinic director.
18 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
"Even though KUOK isn't the Big Time, you can't fool around on the air. That's a live mike you're speaking into. I still get butterflies," admits the 20th Century Fox, who worked last summer for WLS radio station in Chicago.
"It (KUOK) wreaks havoc with your studies." Miss Holtzberg admits. "It's especially bad for me because I broadcast from 6 to 8 am, every day."
like one of the guys. But when men get the better broadcasting times, you can feel the discrimination," she says.
Both coeds use fictitious broadcast names because they have received crank calls. "One morning about 2 am, I got a call from someone who didn't like the show," says Wishful Sinful.
"Everybody wants to be a jock," she says, "but not everybody can make it.
The life of a disk jockey has been popularly portrayed as being glamorous, but Miss Holtzberg, known on radio as the 20th Century Fox, says the job isn't as easy as it appears.
Communication while broadcasting is a problem for the female disk ickews.
"If you work the shift from 2 to 6 a.m., you don't know if anyone is listening. To get satisfaction from broadcasting you must be able to picture an audience."
Yes, things are changing for women. As one fellow staff broadcaster said, "These are two bright stars in the broadcasting ranks of females today."
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"We don't sell pills at all," Clinton said. "We either write a prescription—which can be filled at any pharmacy, including Watkins Hospital—or we give the pills away to those who can't afford them. What pills we do dispense are free."
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
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Tires and Batteries
A Bankmork Store
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VI 3-0956
KANSAN
DL 710167
About 300 women a month visit the clinic for birth control information. About one-third of these are new patients; the rest are returnees.
"We see everybody, from all income brackets," Clinton said. "Probably half or more are KU students. We don't keep records on marital status, but most of the students are not married."
The Classic Segovia
The Biograph of
Andrés
Segovia
"For all practical purposes, any college girl can walk downtown and get pills. I don't require a physical examination, but I do recommend that patients have them," Dr. Clinton said. Women students may get pelvic exams at Watkins Hospital, he said.
The other agency in Lawrence which offers birth control devices to unmarried women is Planned Parenthood, Inc., a national nonprofit organization designed to control the population explosion by preventing unwanted pregnancies. The Lawrence office is affiliated with the Kansas City branch.
Andres Segovia, far and away the master of the classical guitar. "The Unique Art of Andres Segovia" offers a new program of wide-ranging selections. A magnificent treat.
The Classic Segovia
The Biograph of Andrés Segovia
The Planned Parenthood clinic is open every Thursday evening. Each woman patient must fill out a complete medical history record with the assistance of a nurse. A film of birth control methods is shown to the group, which sometimes includes males.
After the film, each woman has a pelvic examination by Dr. Alex C. Mitchell, a Lawrence physician who volunteers his time each week for Planned Parenthood.
INCREDIBLE NEW
EXCITEMENT ON
DECCA RECORDS
AND TAPES.
Planned Parenthood supplies about six brands of pills, several
2000
types of inter-uterine devices (IUD's), condoms and various spermacidal foams, jellies and cremes. Each woman decides which method to use, after discussing them with Mitchell. If she decides on pills (which most unmarried women do), Mitchell usually prescribes a three-month supply.
During the school year, about 36 women visit Planned Parenthood clinic each month. Mrs. James Summerville, clinic director, estimated that at least 60 per cent of the patient load was KU women.
"I don't know how many of these women are married. That's not our concern at all. We feel that an unwanted child is far, far more of a problem than taking birth control pills," Mrs. Summerville said. "From what I gather, Lawrence physicians would rather not prescribe pills to unmarried women. They are rather conservative. In spite of 'scare' articles in popular magazines, statistics prove that birth control pills involve much less medical risk than getting pregnant. Pills are nearly 100 per cent effective."
Dr. Howard Wilcox, Lawrence physician specializing in gynecology, said, "I can't speak for other doctors in town. There's no universal policy, but probably the majority don't prescribe birth control pills to unmarried women. My policy is to prescribe pills to married women without question. But we don't give them to every
MANILA (UPI)—Two cities in the southern Philippines have proposed "Project Open Doors 1970" to promote tourism.
THE WELCOME MAT
Officials of Illigan and Cagayan do Oro, about 350 miles south of Manila, said they would offer tourists: free accommodations, meals and laundry for as long as four days; free local transportation; free beer and soft drinks, free recreational facilities and even free fiestas for large groups.
unmarried girl that asks, unless there's another medical reason."
"Our policy has been the same for years. We have supplied women claiming to get pre-marital examinations. And we prescribe birth control pills in numerous cases for other medical problems," Schwegler said.
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of the Student Health Center at KU's Watkins Hospital, said, "It is this very conservatism that has made us reluctant here to prescribe birth control pills to unmarried women students.
"A long while ago, this was a big issue. But when KU students found out that birth control pills—or any other method—are readily available at other places in Lawrence, the controversy ceased."
Official Bulletin
Today
Kansas State Teachers Association.
Cape session. Allen Field House,
1:30 p.m.
Bio-Science Lecture. "Biological Clocks." Prof. Frank A. Brown Jr., Northwestern University. 203 Balley (via TV from KUMC) 3 p.m.
Homecoming House Decorations on View. 5 to 11 p.m.
Popular Flim. "Elvira Madigan."
Dyche Auditorium. 7 & 9:30 p.m.
International Film at The Red and
International Managern (Hoch Audio-
trium), 7:30 pm
University Theatre. "Die Fledermaus." 8:20 p.m.
Class of 1959. Buffet Luncheon,
Program, Ramada Inn. Anniversary
Party at the Ramada Inn after the
game, 11 a.m.
Kenneth Spencer Research Library Open House, 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
Homecoming Reception, Queens
Deans Faculty Present, Kansas Uni-
lon
Homecoming Buffet Luncheon, Kansas Union Ballroom. 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
School of Law. Social Hour. Eagles
Lodge, 4:30 p.m.
Medford, Medford, Medford
Football. Kansas-Colorado, Memorial Stadium, 1:30 p.m. Cider, doughnuts after game at the Kansas Union. Soccer. Social Hour. Eagles Lodge, 4:30 p.m.
Popular Film. "Elvira Madigan"
Dyche Auditorium, 7 & 9:30 p.m.
SUA Homecoming Concert. Steppeen
House, 8 p.m. The Turtles." Allen Field
House, 8 p.m.
KU Cricket Club. Practice. East of Robinson, Gymnasium, 11 a.m.
Chamber Choir. Swarthout Recital Hall, 3:30 p.m.
Free University Newspaper. Planning meeting. 1036 Mississippi, 1 p.m. Carillon Recital. Albert Gerken. 3 p.m.
Film Society, "The Scarlet Letter"
Dyche Audiotourism
Fast Friendly
Service
Open Flame
Broiling
BURGER
HUT
843 Mass
you've gotta be... putting us on!
JOHN MEYER
OF NORWICH
THE COMMITTEE CONSIDERING THE MODEL OF INSTITUTION
Photo by Jim Ryun
Nut
Photo by Kathy Hird
Strong provides contrasts; houses planners, painters
Lots of different things are happening in Strong Hall during any given day.
In crowded quarters on the third floor aspiring artists mold, create, paint and "do their thing." In slightly less crowded spaces on the second floor, deans of the university meet to discuss, plan, analyze and "do their thing." And in extremely roomy comfort in the basement, a student takes time out after a busy day to read, relax, put his feet up and "do his thing."
Strong Hall is all of these-different kinds of people doing different things, but doing what is important to them.
Satellite Union compromise possible
The Student Senate may be willing to compromise with the Union Operating Board on the site of the proposed Satellite Union.
Frank Zilm, St. Louis senior and vice-president of the student body, presented a resolution to the Senate Wednesday night asking the Senate to direct the Traffic and Securities Committee and the Campus Planning and Resources Committee to study the traffic-pedestrian conflict around the proposed site northwest of Allen Field House.
The Student Senate rejected the Allen Field House site proposal by the Union Operating Board on the grounds that the site was
not feasible. Zilm had recommended a site in parking "N" west of Murphy Hall.
Zilm said that the Senate might be willing to accept the Allen Field House site if the traffic problems around the site could be solved. He added that he doubted that the Union Operating Board would accept the "N" zone location.
"When we hear the reports from the committees, see the working drawings and get an idea of possible student fee increases and student hospital plans, then
we will consider a compromise," Zilm said.
The reports and working drawings should be completed by March, Zilm said.
FISH STORY
THE HAGUE (UPI)—Dutch exports of fish products last year rose from 173,000 tons to 181,000 tons, from $76 million worth to $83 million worth. Imports of fish products rose last year from 63,500 to 68,000 tons, from $27 million to $31.8 million worth.
20 KANSAN NOV. 17
1969
Alices
Restaurant
Soundtrack
(Arlo Guthrie)
reg. $5.98
UNITED
ARTISTS
$399
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
20 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
Alices Restaurant
Soundtrack
(Arlo Guthrie)
reg. $5.98
$399
UNITED ARTISTS
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
KU Students
Cleaning Headquarters
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
daily pickup & delivery to all
dorms, fraternities and sororities
1029
New Hampshire
Phone
843-3711
aJ
UNITED ARTISTS
$399
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
KU
KU Students
Cleaning Headquarters
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
daily pickup & delivery to all
dorms, fraternities and sororities
1029 Phone
New Hampshire 843-3711
KU Students
Cleaning Headquarters
LAWRENCE
Photo by Jim Hoffman
EXIT
BREEZE THROUGH THE FREEZE
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Winter driving.
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STUD SERVICE for snow tires naturally--any make any amount.
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EARN DAILY INTEREST
On All Passbook Savings Accounts
at
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
Another Progressive Service
from Your Bank of Friendly Service
Open a savings account of $100 or more (or deposit $100 or more in an existing Douglas County State Banks savings account) and receive a free Jayhawk poncho while they last!
FOR YOUR AUTO
AUTOMOBILE
BLU PIRATE
KU
LET'S SUPPORT THE TEAM!
KU
Come in and ask a teller for a KU Auto Pennant FREE!
Pick up a Jayhawk poncho free when you open a savings account of $100 or more (or add $100 or more to an existing Douglas County State Bank savings account). Jayhawk ponchos keep you warm, dry, and wearing a smile for those exciting games this season. And its amazing what a Douglas County State Bank savings account can do for you, too. It's a great idea to save for a rainy day. Come by today. Your Bank of Friendly Service.
Pictured The reigning 1969 Miss Lawrence-KU, Miss Susan E. Wassenberg
DCB
DOUGLAS COUNTY
State Bank
A FULL SERVICE BANK
Member F.D.I.C.
9th and Kentucky
STATES INDUSTRY CO., LTD.
Photo by T. L. Simmons
A scientific pressure cooker
Sitting among a multitude of dials, switches, and gauges, Fred Kurata (left) and George Swift, professors of chemical and petroleum engineering, look at a diagram of the Low Temperature Laboratory. The laboratory, donated by the E. I. Dupont Co., is used to study the effects of low temperature and high pressure on material.
Petroleum engineering class utilizes low temperature lab
Using pressure tanks and vacuums, professors and students at KU's Low Temperature Laboratory study characteristics of materials under combinations of low temperature and high pressure.
The laboratory, a part of KU's department of chemical and petroleum engineering, is mostly concerned with developing knowledge useful to the petroleum and natural gas industries.
The laboratory recently received a $250,000 portable plant for studying the separation of helium from natural gas. The gift from the E. I. DuPont Co. arrived at KU in August and will be operational by next spring.
"As engineers we're interested in commercial applications," said George W. Swift, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering. Swift said other departments use the facilities for more theoretical research.
KU was singled out for the gift because of the role KU has played in helium research. Helium was first isolated by H P. Cady, KU professor of chemistry, in 1907. Since that time several KU professors and graduates have been instrumental in
developing the United State's helium resources.
"Kansas probably has the largest helium reserve in the world," said Fred Kurata, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering.
"Natural gas is still the only commercial source of helium. Kansas natural gas contains about one-half of one per cent helium, one of the highest percentages in the world," Kurata said.
The Low Temperature Laboratory also studies pressure-volume-temperature relationships and viscosity properties of liquids and gasses. Equipment in the laboratory can reach temperatures within a few degrees of absolute zero and pressures exceeding 12,000 pounds per square inch.
Located west of Iowa Street.
TAX-FREE DIAPERS
LONDON (UPI) — Baby diapers are exempt from the extra purchase tax announced in Britain's 1969-70 budget, on one condition.
"They will have to be clearly identifiable as nappies (diapers)." said a Customs and Excise spokesman.
the laboratory occupies two buildings surrounded by old barns and a farmhouse.
Despite the locations, Kurata said the facilities are adequate.
New
Donovan LP
Bara Bajagal
$399
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
Students of many lands study at KU
More than 870 foreign students, representing 85 countries, are enrolled at KU this fall.
Of these, 737 live on the Lawrence campus and 136 attend the KU Medical Center in Kansas City.
Six hundred and eighty-seven are men and 186 are women.
Engineering has the largest enrollment with 177 students. The sciences have 157. The social sciences have 99 foreign students and medicine has 93 students enrolled.
Foreign students enrolled in other schools are: humanities, 57; pharmacy, 23; business and education, 21 each; liberal arts, 19; journalism, 10; fine arts and architecture, 9 each; intensive English, 144.
Thirty-five are special students.
22 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
Cocktails
with
PETER
PAUL AND
MARY
INTERVIEWS
Thurq., Nov. 13, 20
UNITED AIR LINES
Administrative Offices
Kansas City Municipal Offices
BY APPOINTMENT
421-7092
Go places!
...as a
UNITED
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一
If you are a high school graduate, at least $19 \frac{1}{2}$ years of age, 5'2" to 5'9" in height with weight in proportion, and single, we'd like to talk to you!
"The friendly skies of United" are a great place to work! An exciting, rewarding career is yours as a United Air Lines stewardess.
United Air Lines An Equal Opportunity Employer
Cocktails
with
PETER
PAUL AND
MARY
1970
ikee
Make the evening complete by bringing your date to the Post PP and M Concert Party at the Phillips Hotel (12th and Baltimore). It's a cocktail party supporting the November Moratorium and the candidacy of Robert Sloan. She $500 donation per person includes all the cocktails you can safely consume. Support the MORATORIUM - Support ROBERT SWAN. Plan to attend.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
workplace must be served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier, Inputs for mag. or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM, Arm. Will match any speaker system. A40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
BOOTS----look at PRIMARIL LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of strap, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Remember his or her special day with an extra special gift from the Hodge Podge. Open for last minute shopping. M-F: 10-5:30. Thursday night; until 9:30. Saturday: 9:30-5. 15 W. 19th. W.17-
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after **fr**
How to win friends and influence people • cover your bare walls with wolf • find a partner - only - at - the Haven Podge" posters and blackish 11-7 posters.
Forced to sell: 1968 Red Fiat 850
Spider convertible. Go best to offer.
27 miles to the gallon, carpeting. For information call 843-8706. 11-7
1952 Cadilla ambulance—white, everything in it a t a t —good mechanical front door. Call Frank
SV 2-4041 write 211 E. 9th, 11-14
mess, Kansas.
Quality '68 Chev. Imp. amp, ash gold, 4 dr. H.T., R. P.S., A.C. turb-hydro-matic 250 H.P. burns exel, under-coated. low mileage, excel. cond. Has 5-vt.-50,000 mile warranty. Pried to sell. See at 1393 Penn. M-F. 5-17 7-12
Sunflower Dress Factory. Unique
clothing for men and women. India
prints, fringed leather coats, hand-
made shirts and dresses, antique
clothes, bellbottoms, jewelry. 19 W.
8th Open 12-5. 11-7
MGA-1600--1961-red, new black top and interior, body and motor in excellent condition, see at 2028 for flight after 4:00 weekdays this week. 11-10
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear end. Aqua/white $85.00, contact Mrs. Karen CAMPON, 4-3637; after 5:30 569-U9, 11-17
also Rodger sialbaenator for sale
Call 842-0340 for Garth. 11-10
Private Guitar lessons—folk flam-
bonese, classic—six years experience
One women's Nauheim dorm contract for second semester. Call Ivie 2-355-7010.
2 tickets for KU-Oklahoma game.
Doug Henson, VI 2-1200. 11-11
Fischer FM stereo receiver, model 440
T. Call Fred Rose at UN 4-4422 or
VI 3-0425. 11-7
Small RCA console stereo phonograph enclosed in a wood cabinet. Excellent condition, $85 Bob, 842-7254 evenings. 11-7
For sale by owner: 66 Olds Toronado Deluxe and '66 Olds Delta 4 dr. H.T. Both cars equipped with P.S. P.B., air conditioning, seatbelts, siepcic steering wheel, cruise control, power trunk lid, and near new fiberglass blasted tires. Toronada also has power windows, and power doors. Call Bob at VI 3-5761 after 11-7 pm.
1963 Tempest 2 door hardtop.
1963 Tempest heavy duty sup-
pension, radii heat, headlamp,
tinted glass, full instrumentation.
Room 337. VI 2-1200. 11-13
Portable TV, 12 inch. BW with UHF and ear piece. Great for dorm viewing. Need to disturb roommates. Must have 842-3197 after 9 p.m. except Tuesday.
PHILADELPHIA
66
Tony's Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. VI13-2139
5 string bluegrass banjo; Harmony.
Excellent condition with case included. Contact Larry at 842-9100, rm. 327 or leave name and phone. 11-12
NOTICE
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que. If you want some honest-to-god bar-B-Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair prob-
The are the only factory repair station in NY, Dynek and Marantz. Call 843-1844.
Loans to junior, senior and grad. stud.
equipmefal Financial. 725 Mast II.
V-31-8074.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revise, Comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Edition Campus Mad House, 411. 14th St.
Would you like to sub-lease my three to four person Harvard Square Apt. Good location, close to campus or information call John at VI 1-204-11
Do you sell but can't afford, nign priced fabrics? Just arrived from New York, beautiful designer fabrics, nud products, low prices, call 845-8381 appt. 11-12
It is significant to note in this connection that graduate students will gather for coffee and conversation in the Traditions Room 7.30 Friday. 11-7
Biology Club--Nov. 11, 7:30 p.m., p22.
Snow. Disc on where to go and how to get in Medical, Dental, and graduate schools. 11-11
1 or 2 male roommates to share 2 story house. $37.50 monthly plus 4 utilities. Good location to campus. Call Kent or Ron at 842-4188. 11-7
Part time student employment, work
full school term, drivers license
required. Call for appointment. VI 2-
2899 between 4 and 6 p.m. 11-7
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laplaid, VI 3-4022, tf
If you would like to see a course in Modern Hebrew offered at KU next Fall, please contact Sidney Flarman. 842-7822. 11-12
If you can't go to Khandam to shop,
come to the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open 8:30-4:30 daily.
12:30-4:30 Sunday. 11-12
FOR RENT
University Terrace Apt. 1 & 2 bedroom furnished or un fitted available. Mgrs. Office. 1529 West 9th. Call 842-1105 or 843-1433. 11-6
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to tour boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6185.
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens with dishwashers, $150 to $185 plus refrigerators. Companion Company 3-6153 or VI 3-5730
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35a
a month. Available now, call VI
3-2116. tf
For Rent: 1 bedroom unfurnished apartment. 2 blocks from campus.
$110 per month plus utilities. Call 842-3750. 11-13
Furnished, wood-panelled 4-room
apartment for one or two. One block
from campus at 1500 Kentucky.
Parking. Available. No. 842-
5921.
Lost—burlap and leather Princess Gardner billfold at Rubayyat or Gate-house. Keep the money—reward for I.D.'s Call J.OAnn at 843-6101. 11-7
LOST
Lost pair of women's octagonal tortoise-shell glasses near Flint Hall. Thurs. call Jay Ghilino, V-1-310. I will blind without them. 11-7
UDIOTRONICS
A
NEW & USED COMPONENTS
THE
STEREO
STORE
928 Mass.
9:30 - 5:30 Daily Thurs. 8:30
Raney Drug Stores
VI 3-8500
3 locations to serve your every need
Lost- Dietzen slide rule in brown case. Has initials "A.M." engraved in black on slide and rule. $5.00 reward to finder. 842-9297. 11-7
Lost full tool box Oct. 26 evening between Lawrence (4th and North) and Tonganoxie via Hwy. 40. Urgency needed. Call 843-8468 11-10
Brown assignment notebook -very
owner reward -reward to
UDK office. 11-7
Two personalized checkbooks belonging to Robert E. Townsend, jr. 1606 North Third, Garden City, Kansas Reward offered, call Bob at VI 3-3481
Man's billfold in Trailroom, Kansas
union. Keep the money—return the
wallet to John Palmer or
Museum of Nat History or leave message.
UN 4-3178
11-11
Slamsee, sealpoint neutered male, no front claws, clipped whiskers, very crossreed, very big, 15-20 pounds reward. Please call Sherry. 842-139-6728
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Light blue girls billfold, contains important cards. Keep money and call Nancy at 842-6378. 11-10
Lost small brown purse in Strong or
lost small brown dayward—reward
Kathy. 843-8505. 11-10
Small male kitten, white with brown gray markings, plastic flea collar. Last seen near Sandalwood Monday. 843- 34435. 11-10
HELP WANTED
Male Nite Help Wanted; full or part time. Apply in person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. tf
EXPERIENCED St udent Lintotype Operator to work 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. Good job working conditions, steady job. Call Wm. Smith, UN 4-4341.
Male & Female students for local sales promotion work. Phone VI 3-7881, 9 a.m. to 12 midnight—Monday thru Friday. 11-7
Wanted: Rook bands. Apply at Draught House Tues.-Fri., between 4 and 5—directly behind Lum's. 11-10
Good experienced organ player needed for Rock Band. Losing our organ player as soon as replaced. Call Glen Morton, VI 3-7810. 11-11
Male - evening and weekend help wanted. No experience needed. Apply at Harold's "66" Service. 1401 West 6th Street. 11-13
WANTED
Wanted: part time male and female help for battenders and waiters. Apply between 4 and 5, Tues - Fri, at 804 W. 24th, directly behind Lunus. 11-10
Wanted: Typist who is full-time student and qualifies for work study program Phone 864-3819 or 843-3718. 11-13
CASH—for your, your old weight-lifting outfit that's been gathering dust under the bed for so long. Call 843-8215 in the A.M. (Keep trying).
TARR'S LAUNDRY
Daily 8-5 p.m.
Saturday 8-1 p.m.
"We Do Your Laundry
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Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Wanted: To buy 1 set of Mag Wheels for a 1968 Chevy Nova. Cali VI 2-6000 and leave a message for Jose. Room 753. 11-13
Must have 3 tickets to the MU-KU game. If you can help, call Lee at 842-4725. Important. 11-12
TYPING
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist Charles L. Monsanto, Glish-Speech Education. Electric office-size typewriter 843-2831. 11-24
TYPING. Experienced typist will type themes, theses, misel typing. Have electronic typeset with pica typee. Efficient service. Phone W2-815-9544, Mrs.Wright.
Prompt, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, dissertations, miscellaneous papers. Electric VI-Corona. Pica type, Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. Pica type, Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440.
PERSONAL
Pilots飞 at bulb in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparative information chart. Phone 842-1124.
Ralph. Let's meet and compare prog-
ress, tomorrow, lunch—Irving, 11-7
ENTERTAINMENT
PLANNING A TRIP??
SERVICES OFFERED
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kan., 913-648-1777, fax 913-648-1777
Bicycle
Foreign Car Service, Wayne Harper,
with Ern's Cycle Sales now specializing
in foreign car tune-ups and machine
work. MG, JAG, Austin Healey.
Ern's Cycle Sales. 716 N. 2nd., VI 3-
8515.
Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE
Let
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations
Malls Shopping Center
VI 3-1211
the Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining
Sizzling steaks and fresh seafoods oowait you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest . . . preparing the selections as you like them with all the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
Open Daily—Except Monday 4:30 p.m. VI 3-1431
1 1/2 Mi. North of the Kow River Bridge
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
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PICK UP STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 3-9868
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
CLASSIFIED
Mmmm
Snoopy
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact: Larry Rosenberger
University Daily Kansan
111 Flint Hall
Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
1 time —25 words or less—$1.00—Add. words $.01 each
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3 times—25 words or less—$1.50—Add. words $ .02 each
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Hospital improvements suggested
(Continued from page 1)
A student hospital should be located near student residence areas rather than classrooms. Studies made by Watkins hospital show that students usually come to the hospital from their residences.
To solve all of the present health service's problems, the committee recommended the construction of a new $2 million hospital.
Another answer would be the addition of a wing to the south
D.C. march defense set
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) for those provience groups which are seeking to infiltrate the mass march."
The District of Columbia police department has cancelled all leaves and days off for Nov. 14-15. In addition, the D.C. National Guard, with 2,700 troops, has scheduled a "training weekend" and will be assembled and ready for action.
If necessary, 10,000 Army troops stationed in the Washington area in troop units could be used. But the Pentagon said there were no plans for alerting the 82nd Airborne Division at Ft. Bragg, which on two occasions within the past two years had been called to Washington to put down disorders.
Lowenstein said he had been assured by demonstration leaders that every effort was being made to keep the protest peaceful. But Kleindienst said the Justice Department has intelligence information to the contrary.
24 KANSAN Nov. 7
1969
A Paulist Goes Forward ...not backward
Time never stands still — and neither does a Paulist.
Issues are raised, conflicts appear and the world changes, but the Paulist is always part of the new . . . blending the best of the old with the hope and promise of the future.
Because one of the major characteristics of the Paulist is his ability to cope with, and welcome, change, he's better able to meet the needs of modern man: he uses his own talents to work for Christ and is given the freedom to do so.
If you've given thought to the priesthood, find out more about the order that never stands still. Write today for an illustrated brochure and a summary of our recent Renewal Chapter Guidelines.
Write to:
Vocation Director
Paulist Fathers
Vocation Director
Paulist Fathers
Room 100
415 West 59th Street
New York, N.Y. 10019
side of Watkins Hospital at a cost of $1 million. Although meeting the immediate problems of space, this plan would fail to allow for future expansion and gradual deterioration of the old structure.
Construction of a wing would also disrupt the normal functions of the hospital and would not solve parking and location problems.
The expense of either solution would be met by increased student fees, although contributions are a possibility in financing a new structure.
Recognizing that either of the proposed solutions would require at least two years to complete, the committee offered temporary
Weather
Sunny and warm today with westerly winds 10 to 15 miles per hour. Clear and mild with light westerly winds tonight. Sunny and continued warm Saturday. High today 70 to 75. Low tonight 38 to 44. Probability of rain near zero per cent today, tonight and Saturday.
solutions to deal with immediate problems.
The establishment of one or more out-patient clinics in residence halls would take some of the pressure off the hospital, the report stated. However, this solution would be time consuming and costly, and would create staff problems.
Another proposal suggested the construction of a temporary structure, similar to those located
between Summerfield Hall and new Haworth Hall, beside Watkins Hospital.
At a cost of $16,000, this structure could house office operations now located on the hospital's third floor. The third floor could then be used for examining rooms and offices for additional doctors.
The Senate sent the report to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, and William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs, and requested
immediate consideration of it.
Members of the Student Senate Committee on Health compiling the report included: David Blahna, St. Louis Park, Minn., graduate student and committee chairman; Frank Bangs, Wichita junior; Susie Bocell, Kansas City junior; Martha Fankhauser, Lyons sophomore; Brad Smoot, Sterling sophomore; and Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital.
Homecoming committee approves plans for BSU pre-game crowning ceremony
(Continued from page 1)
leave the field and the band enters to play the national anthem and the alma mater.
Two cars furnished by the BSU will carry Miss Brown and her attendants, Annie Dennis, Wichita sophomore, and Frances Robinson, Kansas City junior, around the field. The crowning ceremony will take place in the middle of the field on the 50-yard line. The BSU queen and her court will enter the field from the east side.
The queen and her attendants will be announced by the regular
announcer, William Conboy, professor of speech and drama. Bright will crown the queen and present her with flowers furnished by the BSU. A gift purchased by the BSU will be presented to her at that time.
Bright said a platform would not be used because the time allotted for the ceremony did not allow for the moving of the platform on and off the field.
The BSU queen will leave the field by the west side followed by her attendants. The motorcade will then proceed around the track and out of the stadium through the southeast corner.
Julio Meade, St. Albans, N.Y., senior, and Richard S. Kaiser, Kansas City, Mo., junior, will play the drums throughout the entire ceremony.
The BSU queen and her court will return to the stadium for a motorcade around the field during half-time after the University Homecoming queen's motorcade has completed its circuit of the field.
150 years ago,a new idea came to the college campus. A concept that has helped to keep America strong.
In 1819, at what is now Norwich University, military instruction was first offered on a civilian college campus.
It was a natural development of our Country's traditional concept of the citizen-soldier and of civilian control over our Defense Forces.
Today,150 years later Army ROTC is carrying on that
tradition and has become an important resource of leadership, not only for national defense, but for civilian enterprise as well.
BEST ACADEMY FOR BOOK LITERATURE
Army ROTC
Some 16 percent of our congressmen, 14 percent of our governors and thousands of business and professional leaders have had ROTC training.
Army ROTC offers both four- and two-year scholarships to outstanding students. It enables ROTC graduates to fulfill their military obligations as officers. And it provides leadership experience that gives them an edge in any career they choose.
Any way you look at it, Army ROTC is a vital factor in helping to keep America young and strong.
150th year of officer training on the college campus.
1001...
1002...
1003...
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Section Three
Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, November 7, 1969
一
By RANDY LEFFINGWELL
Kansan Staff Writer
"Get up." he yells.
You rise slowly to a squatting position, turn and face the open door. You wait.
"Alright, Step out," he yells. You have second thoughts.
You swing around, inch your foot out onto the small platform and reach out to grab the wing strut.
"Go!" he yells, and slaps you on the leg.
You kick up your feet, push off with your arms and fall. Then everything goes gray.
You suddenly remember that you are supposed to be counting to make sure that everything is working.
"How far have I fallen? How long ago did I jump out?" You start to panic, wondering if your equipment is malfunctioning.
You are still falling on your back, but suddenly you are flipped over onto your front, then jerked upright.
are aright. The parachute opened. You are now a skydiver. The gray haze in your mind clears, and you realize where you are: about a half mile up in the air, hanging from a parachute, listening to the radio in your helmet. A man on the ground is giving you instructions to land.
You reach up for the steering toggle lines above your head. You pull one and swing around towards the target area, a big red and orange cross in the middle of a field down below.
"Turn your canopy towards the target and run with the wind," he says.
"You're right on course. Keep it there."
"That's good. Now bring it around and head it into the wind. Turn it away from the target and prepare to land."
"Ah well, back to work," you think. Reach up and grab the toggle line again, pull it down and swing around 180 degrees.
You bring your legs together, take a deep breath and glance down to see how fast the ground is coming up to hit you.
"Feet together—ready to land!" the radio barks in your ear. Your heart skips a beat on its way up your throat.
The ground reaches up, you hit,
fall and roll over.
"Are you alright?" Someone runs up to you.
You nod your head and swallow your heart again. Others run up and help you to your feet, gather your parachute together and try to get you to talk slower.
"It's like nothing I've ever done before!" you blurt out. "Just like you said. Jumping out of an airplane going 80 miles an hour, 3,000 feet in the air is like nothing you can imagine." But finding out what it is like—and learning how to do it—are what KU's Skydiving Club is all about.
The higher up the jumper leaves the plane, the longer his freefall before opening his parachute.
The flying, the freefall, is skydiving. The sport is the freefalling before the parachute is opened.
But for the beginner, the sport is much slower. After five hours of ground instruction at the KU Skydiving Club's drop-zone one mile north of Sunflower Village, the student can take his first parachute jump, from 3,000 feet. However, even at that, the parachute is automatically opened one second after he leaves the plane, by a static line from the plane connected to the ripcord of the parachute.
It is probably one of the fastest sports man participates in. In skydiving competition, acrobatics in the air usually take less than ten seconds. In ten seconds, jumpers fall 1,760 feet. That is one-third mile, at 180 miles per hour.
Instruction in "PLF," parachute landing falls, is followed by numerous lectures and discussions of parachute "flight" theory. Instructors Jim Garrison, Independence, Mo., and Matt Farmer, Topeka, each guides his students through all the procedures, including the proper procedures for leaving the aircraft in flight.
While one instructor rides up in the plane with the students who will jump, the other remains on the ground to "talk them down" through radios in the jumpers' helmets.
62
The students first five jumps are with static line, to teach him the correct parachute handling techniques before he makes his first freefall.
The club's instruction costs $25 for the first day's training and the first jump. The remaining four static jumps and the first freefall cost $5 each. All of these are closely supervised by the club's instructors. Beyond this, while the jumpers are watched, they are largely free to progress at their own rate.
Depending on the individual, it takes between 50 and 100 free-falls to gain enough confidence in freefall acrobatics to enter competition. Judging is based on the speed and the precision with which these acrobatics are performed. Consisting of three series of left turn, right turn, back loop, the best competitors complete these in less time than it takes to say them. In last year's National Collegiate Contest in Miami, Fla., the winner completed this triple series in 7.4 seconds.
The other important element of skydiving competition is judged on the jumpers' landings. The object is to land as close to the target as possible. Competition targets are six inch disks in the center of pea-gravel pits.
For a team to compete successfully, its three members should land right on target on each of their three individual jumps. In last year's contest, the team from West Point did just this, leaving the plane at 3,000 feet and flying the parachutes to perfect landings on each of the team's nine jumps.
This perfect on-target landing is quite an achievement, considering the competition parachutes (different in some aspects from those the students use), can travel along the ground at 15 to 18 miles per hour in no wind. Jumpers usually land with the wind in order to keep their eyes on the target and insure greater landing accuracy.
Competition is stiff. A number of schools sponsor teams. Kansas
State and Missouri have intercollegiate teams. Harry Brubaker, Casper, Wyo., senior and KU Skydiving Club president, said the KU club is hoping for University recognition in order to field a team to this year's national contest in Phoenix, Ariz. Nov. 27-30.
Another enjoyable aspect of skydiving is "relative work." This involves a team of two or more jumpers working in relation to each other, trying to come together to clasp hands while freefalling. But this, too, requires many individual freefalls to learn maneuverability in the air.
Because most skydiving goes on too high up to watch easily, it is mostly a participant's sport.
"Most people who continue on after the third or fourth jump usually buy their own equipment," Brubaker said. "Parachutes like those the club uses for its students cost between $90 and $130. But those like we use in competition cost more, about $500 to $600," he explained.
While there is a vast difference in price between the competition parachute canopies and those modified for training use, there are no differences in safety, and only little difference in performance.
"In the last year and a half," said Brubaker, "we've put more than 200 people through the course. At least half of them have been KU students or faculty. For a lot of them, it is just a one time thing, so they can say they've done it. But, there are some who come out and keep coming out after their first jump."
It's for those one time jumpers, as well as for the experienced jumpers, that KU's Skydiving Club continues to teach its students and members how to safely jump out of airplanes going 80 miles an hour, 12,000 feet in the air; to fall, fly, float—and enjoy it.
Photos on page 8
WHAT YOU READ IS YOUR BUSINESS
HOW YOU READ IS OURS.
CALL VI3-6424
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
---
In the laboratory
The electrobalance weighs ticks and mites
The science laboratories of the University are a fascinating world of test tubes, animals, apparatus and men. The visitor can find almost anything, from chickens which raise mites to machines which weigh them to devices that extract substances from them. If he looks.
Photos by Burt Lancaster
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 3
and Zoe Medlin
Gaspollison V
This device extracts hormones from insects
This chicken raises mites
I am a chemist. I work in the laboratory to help people understand how to make new products.
Coffee on a bunson burner
IMPORTED FROM ITALY IMPORTED FROM ITALY IMPORTED FROM
Nobody but your cobbler makes shoes like Divina.
Divina!
priced from seventeen
McCall's
sight twenty-nine massachusetts
lawrence
---
drink
a toast
to the
Jawhawks
THE MAD HATTER
THOMPSON
maxi-coats
Go around in our Maxi's—the coats that can turn you into something fantastic. See our great selection in camel, herringbone or plaid wools. Junior sizes.
$65
Coats—2nd Floor
garland
Great young knits are here — clinging, hugging, shaping you. Done by Garland, so you know they're exactly right. Pants, sweaters, turtle socks. Misses sizes.
$10 to $20
Sportswear—2nd Floor
GO
KU
BEAT CU!
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inn Welcome
$65
Coats—2nd Floor
GO
KU
GO
ku
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
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Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857
Welcome
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SHOP HERE BEFORE AND AFTER THE GAME!
-Remember-it's Weaver's for first in Fashions.
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Smartly tailored two button sport coats. Somewhat shaped, detailed with flapped pockets, ticket pocket, side vents. Great patterns, wonderful plains.
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Men's Shop—1st Floor
---
Make Church a Part of Your Homecoming Weekend..
THE WEEKLY BREAKFAST CARD
CENTRAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
1501 Massachusetts
Lawrence R. Kurth, pastor
Church School, 9:30 a.m.;.
Worship, 10:30 a.m.
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
10th and Vermont
Rev. Ronald L. Sundbye, pastor
Rev. Stuart W. Herrick, assoc. pastor
Sunday Worship, 9:30 and 11 a.m.
Church School 9:20 a.m.
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
802 W. 22nd St. Terrace Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.; Morning Worship, 11 a.m.; Evening Services, 7 p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS.
1900 University Drive
Navy Bowman, presiding elder
Church School 9:30 a.m.;
Morning Worship 11 a.m.
The Liahona Fellowship welcomes all
alumni.
Worship this Sunday at one of these Lawrence churches:
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL
925 Vermont
Dr. John E. Felible, minister
Rev. Guy Stone, assistant minister
Dr. James Moesier, musical director
Worship Service, 10 a.m.
Fellowship, 11 a.m.
BIBLE BAPTIST CHURCH
1449 Kasold Drive
Rev. Vernon Longstaff
Sunday Service, 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School 10 a.m.; Young
People's Service, 6:45 p.m.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH AND STUDENT CENTER
15th and Iowa Rev. Norman Steffen, Mo-Synod Rev. Donald Conrad, ALC-LCA Morning Worship Services, 9 and 11 a.m.
801 Kentucky
Rev. M. C. Allen
Worship Service, 11 a.m.
Church School, 9:45 a.m.
Baptist Evening Fellowship, 6:15 p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST
19th and Naismith Rev. Clint Dunagan, pastor Worship Services, 8:30 a.m., 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.; Baptist Student Union Meeting, 5:15 p.m. Training Union, 5:45 p.m.
CHURCH OF ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST CATHOLIC CHURCH
1229 Vermont Father Moriaity Father Hansenkamp, priests Sunday Masses, 6, 7:30, 9, 10:30 a.m., 12 noon and 5 p.m.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
2415 W. 23rd Rev. Harold Mallett, pastor Rev. Forest Link, assistant pastor Worship Services, 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Church School, 9:45 a.m. Coffee Fellowship after each service Free bus service to and from church. Bus leaves Haskell at 10:20, stops at 9th and Mass., Corbin, Chi Omega Fountain, Daisy Hill, Oliver Hall and Stewart Drive.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
1105 W. 25th
Wilburn C. Hill
Owen Mitchell, preachers
Sunday Services, 9:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
ALC GOOD SHEPHERD
LUTHERAN CHURCH
2312 Harvard
Sunday Worship Services, 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.
ST. LAWRENCE STUDENT PARISH
1915 Strattford Road
Father Downey
Masses: St. Lawrence Chapel, 8 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m.; Hoch Auditorium,
9:30 and 11 a.m.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1000 Kentucky
Rev. Roy Hanan, minister
Church Service with the Lord's Supper
8:30 and 10:45 a.m.; Church School
(Student Class), 9:30 a.m.; Youth
Meetings, 4 and 6 p.m.
LAWRENCE HEIGHTS
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
2332 Westchester Road
Rev. J. E. Woolsey, pastor
Bible School, 9:45 a.m.
Church Service, 10:55 a.m.
---
Student faces hills
Wheelchair no problem
DGER KLEEFER
Photo by Zoe Medlin
Neither snow, nor sleet, nor KU hills . . .
The confines of a wheelchair and thoughts of winter weather do not discourage Roger Keffer, Lawrence senior, from attending classes at KU. Keffer has found shortcuts to buildings and help from students to keep him going.
By MARCIA MITCHELL Kansan Staff Writer
The confines of a wheelchair and wintry thoughts of a slick and sliding hill did not discourage Roger Keffer, Lawrence senior, from attending the university of his choice.
Upon graduation from Hutchinson High School, after two years in his wheelchair, Keffer and his entire family moved to Lawrence. As a freshman, he learned the usual ropes of shortcuts from building to building
"There are two shortcuts to Malott and I take the back way into Strong where there are no stairs at the basement door."
Getting to school poses no problem. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Keffer and neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edmondson, provide the needed transportation. There is also an emergency parking place reserved in the loading zone behind Strong Hall. From there on, however, Keffer depends upon himself.
Majoring in American studies and political science, Keffer found his classes widely distributed in Strong Hall, Blake Hall, Fraser Hall, Carruth-O'Leary Hall and Malott Hall. Although the only ramp on campus is in front of Blake Hall, Keffer finds students very willing to assist.
"Foreign students most often go out of their way to help," said Keffer.
As Keffer was wasting time on campus between classes one day, a student offered to push him somewhere. When Keffer explained that he wasn't going anywhere in particular, the student said he must hurry to his
NEGRO SCORES TWO FIRSTS
NEW YORK (UPI)—Benjamin Banneker, the first watchmaker to make a clock in America, also was the first Negro to receive a presidential appointment, according to researchers, for a watch company.
President George Washington appointed Banneker, who was born a free man in Maryland in 1731, to assist in the survey of what was to become Washington, D.C. Banneker, who was also an expert on astronomy, the science on which time keeping is based, began to issue annual astronomical almanacs, starting in 1791, the Bulova researchers report.
Nov. 7
1969
6 KANSAN
own class, but sent Keffer on down the sidewalk with a hefty shove.
"I appreciated his thoughtfulness, but my wheelchair almost tipped before I got control of it," he said with a chuckle.
KU enrollment proved to be the biggest problem. Although Keffer usually had his class cards pulled for him, two years ago, he and brothers Clark, 12, and John, 8, faced the ominous threat in the Kansas Union Ballroom alone. The only mishap occurred when John caught his finger in the wheelchair.
Because of Keffer's lack of coordination, his tests were usually oral or instructors increased the length of time needed for written tests.
"I have had an awful lot of help here, especially from instructors," said Keffer.
"They usually ended up sending the tests home with me," Keffer laughed.
In January, Keffer applied for work at the University Extension
Office in the Extramural Independent Studies Center (previously the Correspondence Bureau). John R. Willingham, professor of English, suggested that Keffer apply.
Carrying only three hours to graduate, Keffer is now a regular student employee. Besides editing, he also grades test papers for three students taking correspondence courses.
He began in March, editing and publishing course syllabi and was on the work-study program until August.
Although Keffer enjoys his work at the Extension Office, he jokingly admitted that the road to it is "naturally the worst hill on campus."
But things look well with graduate school in American studies for next semester's plans. And Keffer will be there in his well-known cowboy hat.
"I wear a cowboy hat because I like it. I'd wear cowboy boots if I could afford them, too," he smiled.
For Your Homecoming Lunch—
GO TO BURGER CHEF!
BURGER CHEEF
bos
WHERE A HAMBURGER IS ALWAYS A MEAL!
- 100% Pure Beef-
9th & Iowa
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
ET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
CONTEMPLATING A TRIP?
10
- Airline Reservations (at no extra cost to you!)
- Student Travel at Discount with Youth Cards
- Hotel Reservations
- Home-Town Owned and Operated
- Motel and Resort Accommodations Anywhere
- Special Interest Excursions by DLX. Motorcoach
- Interview Trip Arrangements
- Steamship and Cruises World-Wide
- Internationally Recognized Agency
- Car Rentals for Your Arrival
- Honeymoon Arrangements Tailored for Your Budget
- Weekly Film Seminar on Exotic World Areas
TRIP OUT to
Ski Snow-Masse or Sun in the Bahamas or Golf at Pebble Beach or Hydrofoil St. Thomas or Relax at Lake Geneva or Play Caesar's Palace Grand Casino
Maupintour ✕
711
VIking 3-1211
West 23rd (The Malls)
Strong Hall University's stoic heart
Strong Hall, at first thought, a blurred vision of student fees and administrative responsibility, in reality contains a panorama of life at the University of Kansas. Behind that bland, rather stoic exterior lurks a hub of activity revealed only to those who wander from the depths to the heights, a feat requiring not only muscle but endurance.
Any tour of Strong must begin in the basement, for here lie two areas of vital concern among students—relaxation and financial aid. Students line the walls busily engaged in conversation or hurriedly gulping lunch before rushing to the next class. Their chatter combines with the banging and clanging of a profusion of vending machines, thus contributing to a general aura of chaos.
Not all is light-hearted enjoyment, however, for the observant tourist realizes beneath the clang and clatter, students are caught in a frenzy of last-minute preparation and painful struggle to cope with their unmerciful surroundings. Failure here makes the efforts of Student Financial Aid, Scholarships and Loans (located just down the hall), totally fruitless. It is no wonder the poor student sits head in hand as he flounders in his concentration.
Leaving the relaxed atmosphere in the basement, our humble tourist climbs the time-worn stairs to the first floor. Proceeding past fee windows, selective service windows and the Office of Admissions, it occurs to him his entire college career is being plotted and documented in these unpretentious offices.
With thoughts of the future still in his mind, suddenly the tourist stands in the midst of history. A bust of Frank Strong, Chancellor from 1902 to 1920, looks out to the sprawling evergreens beyond the front steps. Commemorative plaques dating from the class of 1881, plus a listing of every member of the Board of Regents since 1925, dot the walls of this main entrance.
First floor also provides classroom facilities for the thousands of eager and not-so-eager students who stare blankly at the same blackboards their predecessors regarded with distaste Blackboards here are still black, a certain indication of old age.
Second floor presents a real challenge to the uninformed. Any attempt to reach second by using the side stairs ends with dismal failure as the unwary find themselves greeted by the splatters of paint and smell of turpentine peculiar to the third floor.
Highly-polished tiles, carpeted offices and intercoms reminiscent of the executive offices in a well-established corporation characterize the second floor. Authority precludes the atmosphere as one respectfully walks past the offices of the Dean of Women, Dean of Men and the Office of the Chancellor.
Strong Hall was begun in 1911 and not completed until the 1920's. Originally it was to face the north, but the construction of later buildings shifted the direction of the campus, thus making Strong's back its front. If its appearance from Jayhawk Boulevard seems totally disenchanting, this could be the explanation.
Through the years Strong Hall has been the focal point for student protests and student pep rallies. It embraces the most conservative and the most liberal elements on the University campus and the decisions which affect both ends of that spectrum are made in this building. That's quite an accomplishment for a building turned backward by a construction mistake in the reading of blueprints.
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 7
SIR BOOT
part of the great boot brigade
Fashions
Fashions
THAT SET YOU "APART FROM
ALL OTHERS"
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Created expressly for the man whose attire reflects his status. London tan, Black grain.
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts
THE Taylor-Made SHOE
After freefall that lasts just short seconds (left), Harry Brubaker, KU Skydiving Club president, pulls his ripcord, and begins to guide his parachute down to the ground. By pulling his toggle steering lines (above right), he steers his parachute around towards the landing site. Then, as he has finally maneuvered his chute into position, he relaxes for a few seconds and just enjoys letting his parachute fly (lower right).
Photos by Randy Leffingwell
SUNDAY, JULY 26, 1970
Built for science
Bailey's role changed
Bailey Hall was built in 1900 and the School of Education was organized in 1910, but the two did not come together until 46 years later.
The school's quarters in the basement and first floor of Fraser Hall had been too small for many years. When the School of Pharmacy and the chemistry department moved into recently completed Malott Hall in 1954, Bailey became available.
And Bailey, though 69 years old, is still in good physical condition.
The building was planned by architect John G. Haskell and Prof. E. H. S. Bailey, chemistry professor at KU from 1883 to 1933. The two men visited the principal chemical laboratories of the country before drawing up plans for what was to be one of the finest laboratories west of Chicago.
A legislative appropriation of only $55,000 forced the elimination of everything planned for architectural effect. The rock used to construct the building was quarried in excavation. Some of that native limestone was colored yellowish by iron oxide, and this was used to face the rear wall.
The building, with its forest of flues, was known for years as "Bailey's Barn." The Jayhawker reported that in the basement there was a "liquid air machine, and there is a hot air machine on every other floor."
Interior walls were of frame "nogged" with brick between the studs. At each end of the central
Blake has a long history
Blake Hall, which is perhaps best known as the home of the political science department, is the successor to a building with a far more exciting character.
Old Blake Hall stood in the same location as New Blake from 1895 to 1963, before being razed for the construction of its replacement.
Old Blake was a physics building named for Lucien I. Blake, KU physics professor from 1887 to 1906. Blake wanted to draw the plans for the building himself, and the structure was to have resembled Green Hall.
A jealous struggle between Blake and the state architect developed, and, unfortunately for Old Blake Hall, the state architect triumphed.
As a result, the building emerged looking, according to the University Review of March, 1895, "like a speckled chicken." The Review continued, "If there be no lotion to remove this blemish, let a screen be put before the building."
Old Blake had other problems besides its appearance, among them a large clock mounted on the roof that seldom kept accurate time, and a top floor used as a gymnasium for women students.
Until it was abandoned for Malott Hall in 1952, Old Blake served the University faithfully. The building stood dormant for several years, while various plans to remodel it were drawn up and discarded for lack of funds.
In 1963, demolition work began on the building, and in 1964, New Blake Hall was completed.
JAPANESE LIMIT
TOKYO (UPI)—Calls from pay telephones will be limited to three minutes in Japan starting Oct. 1. The Diet (parliament) approved a bill placing the limit on the nation's 350,000 public telephones. At the end of three minutes, a chime will sound and the circuit will disconnect automatically. Of course, the caller can dial again for 10 yen (2.7 cents).
portion, four-foot brick walls contained both heating and ventilating flues. Flues were also built into every available place in the exterior walls. The flues were grouped into brick chimneys which were for many years Bailey's most distinctive feature
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 9
In 1955 the state legislature appropriated $400,000 and two years later an additional $250,000 to remodel the building-12 times the original cost of construction
Most of the money went into the interior. Halls received colorful ceramic tile at wainscot height, and the original double floors of $1_{3-4}$ inch hard pine were covered with vinyl tile. New fireproof entrances with finish face brick walls and steel steps were added on the south and east and equipped with glass doors.
The offices and class rooms were completely remodeled and redecorated, clinics and laboratories constructed and equipped and the former student lecture room, room 201, became a modern auditorium equipped with audio-visual facilities and seating over 200 persons.
One of the most important items in the remodeling project was the air-conditioning of the entire building, the first such classroom building on the KU campus.
...
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---
FIRST GENERATION
Acacia—1100 Indiana
SUNY College of the Holy Cross
Alpha Kappa Lambda—2021 Stewart
THE FOOTHILL HOUSE
Alpha Tau Omega—1537 Tennessee
THE MIDDLE FARM HOUSE
Delta Chi—1245 W. Campus
Maison
Delta Tau Delta—1111 West 11th
1930
Delta Upsilon—1025 Emery Road
---
Kappa Sigma—1045 Emery Road
Lambda Chi Alpha—1918 Stewart
Phi Gamma Delta—1540 Louisiana
Phi Delta Theta—1621 Edgehill Road
Kappa Sigma—1045 Emery Road
EAGLE
1918
PIONEER
The School
---
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The Schoolhouse
Phi Kappa Alpha—1145 Louisiana
Phi Kappa Psi—1602 West 15th
PLEASANT VILLAGE MUSEUM
Phi Kappa Tau—1120 West 11th
THOMPSON MILLS
Phi Kappa Theta—1941 Stewart
POTTERY HILL MUSEUM
Sigma Alpha Epsilon—1301 West Campus
EAGLE
FRATERNITIES
THOMPSON Mansion
Sigma Nu----501 Sigma Nu Place
Thora Chi - 1320 West St.
Theta Chi—1329 West 9th
THOMPSON HISTORICAL MUSEUM
Triangle—1116 Indiana
THE FIRE
Tau Kappa Epsilon—1911 Stewart
Tau Kappa Epsilon—1911 Stewart
Sigma Phi Epsilon—1645 Tennessee
COLUMBIA
Sigma Chi—1439 Tennessee
EAGLE
---
Easy transportation
Cyclists enjoy freedom
350
Down hills...
FRED SMITH
KU students find motorcycling a convenient means of transportation. Whether rolling around the countryside or going to class, cycles use very little gas and are easy to park. They offer the rider adventure and freedom.
... and up
By DENNIS McFALL Kansan Staff Writer
Is it a means of transportation, or is it another way to get a little high? .
To the pleasure of about 150 KU students, motorcycling is both.
Gun the motor, let the clutch lever go, and you pop forward. A flick of the left toe and a twist of the handlegrip are all you need to change gears.
Roll out into the countryside, turn down the first old road you see, and you're free. In command of some 400 pounds of dynamic, finely-crafted iron, aluminum and chrome, you ride power reduced to its essentials.
It can make you feel like a giant.
Fall and spring are cycle seasons. On a warm day a dozen or more bikes glisten in the sun by the Gaslight sidewalk, while many others put forth their insolent roars and musical throbs on the streets of Lawrence.
From the popular 125 and 250 cc. machines to the big 750 cc. and even larger ones, cycles meet
the requirements of our mobile adventurous, free-wheeling generation.
The brand names evoke brusti vitality: Bultaco, Yamaha, Triumph, Guzzi, Honda.
Practicality suggests the motorcycle as good student transportation. A gallon of gas lasts from 35 to over 200 miles. A cycle can be parked in one of the niches between barge-like cars that other students have driven around the block, searching for a parking place. Licenses cost less than those for a car, and the problem of ride-bumming friends is reduced.
Horns used more than gas
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) — A car horn is as essential to a Brazilian motorist as the gas pedal—and it's used about as often.
Asking a motorist to stop honking is like asking a rooster to stop crowing at dawn or a waterfall to stop roaring.
As soon as a traffic light turns
red, motorists start honking their horns, as if the noise will force the signal to change back to green. Normal conversation is impossible between 5 and 7 p.m. in apartments and residences at busy intersections.
Many motorists are not content with the power and volume of the factory horns in their cars. They install more powerful ones.
Automotive shops do a thriving business in musical horns which blare out bars of rock music.
12 KANSAN Nov.7 1969
On the other hand, the mandatory helmet is a major inconvenience.
All things considered, the motorcycle seems to be the most appropriate form of transportation for a generation hooked on freedom, power and excitement.
Audiotronics
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THE STEREO STORE
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Enjoy your homecoming hamburger at Burger Chef!
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University Terrace and Old Mill Apartments
She 'thinks'
Woman president says UN 'man's only hope'
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) — The woman who presides over the 24th session of the United Nations General Assembly sees the world body as "man's only hope. I think."
The words are those of Angie Brooks, the first African woman to serve as UN General Assembly president. She truly feels this way about the UN, even though she told its delegates when she became president that they had a tendency to view world affairs somewhat parochially, as if they were being played out at New York headquarters.
"Perhaps we haven't done the best but I think the United Nations has done a good job," she said in an interview, "and now we must combine our efforts to achieve the goals we set out for."
Miss Brooks was reluctant to talk of many issues before the UN, of whether Red China should be admitted to the UN, and the like. She explained that hers was an overall role as president, not one of expressing personal views.
14 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
The president reflected, as she sat in her spacious office overlooking the East River, on the 1940's when she first came to the United States to study.
On her arrival from Liberia, a country of less than two million persons, she recalled that Baltimore was "an overwhelming metropolis. I thought, 'Where do all these people live?''" Miss Brooks was only 17.
She went on to receive a Bachelor of Arts degree from Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C., a Master of Science degree in political science from the University of Wisconsin and Doctor of Laws from Howard University. All the while, she supported herself with menial jobs including scrubbing floors.
Back in Liberia, Miss Brooks leads an entirely different life from the sophistication of New York's international community. Life is on a farm some 60 miles from Monravia where she takes care of the children of her laborers when they are ill or in need and bit by bit has become foster mother to them. She adopted three girls in 1962 while in Ruanda.
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KU offers varied fine art degrees
Art students sketch campus scenes
Photo by Halina Pawl
Art students, take advantage of an Indian summer day to sketch outdoors. The versatile Kansas weather and scenic KU campus offer this opportunity often.
By GENELLE RICHARDS Kansan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas, like many other land-grant universities, offers students a wide range of possibilities for studies in the field of the arts, including theatre, music and art.
At KU, the School of Fine Arts gives students a chance to specialize in varied aspects of music and art.
In music fields, bachelor degrees are available in Music and Music Education. Masters degrees are given in Applied Music, Music Theory, Composition, Music Education, Music Education with a Major in Functional Music and Master of Arts in Musicology.
Nov. 7 1969 KANSAN 15
A Doctor of Philosophy in Musicology, Music Theory and Music Education is offered in addition to a Doctor of Education and a Doctor of Musical Arts in composition or performance.
Besides the degrees, music offers students a chance for varied experiences. The School of Fine
Arts and the Department of Speech and Drama combine to present musicals, opera and operetta in University Theatre.
This year the production of "Die Fledermaus" by Johann Strauss is being done through these combined efforts. Second
semester this combination will again take shape to present "The Three Penny Opera."
In 1966, KU specifically commissioned the opera "Carry Nation," which has appeared on Broadway, to commemorate the Centennial celebration. Presented before a full house, all roles except the four leads were sung by KU students.
Students in music have the chance to perform in the University Symphony Orchestra, the University Concert Band, Varsity Band, Marching Band and the Little Symphony, the University String Quartet and the University Woodwind Quintet.
Voice students may display their talents through the Concert Choir, the Chorale, the Chamber Choir and the Brass Choir.
Other degrees in the School of Fine Arts are: Bachelor of Fine Arts, Art Education and Bachelor of Science in Occupational Therapy.
Those students who take a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree may take their majors in ceramics, commercial art, design, drawing and painting, fashion illustration, history of art, industrial design, interior design, jewelry and silversmithing, print making, sculpture, textile design in weaving, theatre design and theatre and voice.
Graduate study in art makes available a Master of Fine Arts degree in Design or Drawing and Painting, Master of Arts in History of Art or Art Education, Master of Science in Education with a minor in Art Education and doctorate programs in art education.
In the Department of Design, candidates for degrees are required to have individual showings of their work three weeks before graduation. Students must also leave two pieces of their original work to the School of Fine Arts.
The work of the students in drawing and painting is left under the control of the instructor until after the annual commencement week student exhibition. Candidates for degrees may be required to leave two or more pieces of original work to the School which are added to the permanent collection and exhibits of graduates and former students
SCHLITZ
Schlitz
Necessary Equipment for a Successful Homecoming
(Continued to page 16)
1. Large Pop-Can Wastebaskets—to be used for catching excess paper, oranges or purple chickens thrown by the opposite team.
3. KU Hawker Horn—to be used to blast Colorado out of the stadium and show plenty of KU spirit.
2. Jayhawk Soap-on-a-Rope—to be worn around the neck to keep the Buffaloes away.
4. Brass Spitoon—to be used for carrying crying towels to hand out to upset Buffalo fans at half-time, a collection bowl for Pepper and the boys or a gift for any occasion.
To have a Successful Homecoming, get your Survival Supplies at
the BATH HOUSE
TOWELS·RUGS
ACCESSORIES
841 MASS.
Welcome Alums and Friends
See our great selection of casual and dressy fashions from
Young Edwardian Howard Wolf Jonathon Logan and many other fine lines.
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Glow through cocktails, dinner and theater in this crystal pleated rayon metallic perfect date timer. Topped to perfection with long fringed scarf, by Jonathan Logan, to be sure.
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---
Music groups, exhibits aid learning
SIXTEENTH
ANNUAL
DESIGNER-CRAFTSMAN
EXHIBITION
Photo by T. L. Simmons
Sure, it looks weird, but it's culture
(Continued from page 15)
In the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, students interested in theater may receive a Bachelor of Science in Theater, Masters and doctor degrees are also available in the Department of Speech and Drama.
experience from performances in productions at or associated with the University.
Students in theater may gain
This year as in past years, a full schedule of plays is planned for production on the main stage or in the experimental series. "Summertree,""A View From The Bridge" and "The Homecoming" are examples of the plays being done this year.
Students gain professional experience from performing outside of school in summer repertory companies. At KU there are two available—one at Creede, Colo. and one here on the Lawrence campus.
QUALITY PONTIAC-CADILLAC
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Beard checks on magnetic waves
Explanations of how magnetic storms and radio communication blackouts occur could come from research conducted by a University of Kansas physicist.
David B. Beard, chairman of the KU department of physics and astronomy, will search for these and other explanations under a $63,200 grant from the National Science Foundation for a project entitled "Extraterrestrial Contributions to the Magnetic Environment." The grant is a two-year renewal of a grant held last year.
Beard said the purpose of the project would be to "try to calculate distortions due to the interaction of the geomagnetic field and the solar stream."
Phillips gives KU $5000 for growth
Phillips Petroleum Company awarded a $5,000 grant to the University of Kansas from the company's professional development fund, according to an announcement by Dr. James R. Surface, acting chancellor.
The Phillips fund supports and encourages professional growth and development of students and faculty in engineering the physical sciences, business administration and related fields of study that are of critical importance to the petroleum and petrochemical industries.
Western Electric makes award to Cunningham
Alan R. Cunningham, formerly of Bartlesville, Okla., now of Guayama, Puerto Rico, has been awarded the Western Electric Fund Scholarship in the University of Kansas School of Engineering.
Cunningham, who is a junior in civil engineering, was chosen by a faculty committee. He is a member of Chi Epsilon, honorary society for civil engineering students.
The Western Electric Fund Scholarship is awarded each year to an outstanding student in engineering who is a citizen of the United States.
16 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
EAGLE STAR LEAF BARBELLOW BARBELLOW BARBELLOW
Leaders are not Born, They're Made The choice is yours through Army ROTC
You have a choice to earn a college degree in any field you choose and at the same time qualify to serve your country as an officer. Or if you want, you could choose to overlook $50 a month pay during your junior and senior year or to disregard our scholarship programs. But you can't afford to overlook the development of your leadership potential and, friend, that's what ROTC is all about.
For further information: Contact Colonel Riedel at the Military Science Building, room 203 or call UN 4-3311.
First US railroad located near Boston
QUINCY, Mass. (UPI) — This suburb south of Boston is known to most Americans because two Presidents were born here.
But Quincy has another significance, unknown to most Americans—the Granite Railway, the nation's first commercial railroad which lugged huge slabs of granite used to build the Bunker Hill Monument.
The Bunker Hill Quarry site was neglected until an inquisitive amateur archeologist, Richard Muzzrole, excavated the area in 1958. His findings revealed the initial 150 feet of railroad bed, which he restored and the
Nov. 7 1969 KANSAN 17
sites of the buildings in which the granite was cut. He also uncovered granite working tools, some of which are considered the oldest granite working tools in existence.
The railway was designed by Gridley Bryan, an engineer, in association with Solomon Willard who was called the "Father of the Granite Industry."
Approximately 6,700 tons of granite were transported from the quarry to Boston's Charlestown section, where the Bunker Hill Monument stands.
NAMES IN FINLAND
HELSINKI (UPI)—Marja is the most popular girl's name in Finland in the 5-14 age group while Kari is the most popular among boys.
Welcome Alums
from the company thats helping to build KU.
B. A. GREEN CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.
Cecil B. Green, P.O. Box 8 Patrick G. Green, 1207 Iowa St. Robert J. Green, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Ernest P. Haas, 843-5277
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6.50 13 $23' 11.50' 1.79
6.95 14 $24' $17' 1.96
7.00 13 $25' 12.50' 1.94
7.35 14 $26' $13' 2.07
7.35 15 $26' 13' 2.08
7.75 14 $28' $14' 2.20
7.75 15 $28' 14' 2.21
8.25 14 $31' 15.50 2.36
8.15 15 $31' 15.50 2.38
8.55 14 $34' $17' 2.57
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FURTHER BOARDWIDTHS
8.30 to 11.40
8.00 to 11.25
7.75 to 11.20
7.50 to 11.15
7.25 to 11.10
7.00 to 11.00
6.75 to 11.00
6.50 to 10.90
6.25 to 10.90
6.00 to 10.75
5.75 to 10.70
5.50 to 10.45
5.25 to 10.40
5.00 to 10.30
4.75 to 10.35
4.50 to 10.30
4.25 to 10.30
4.00 to 10.25
3.75 to 10.25
3.50 to 10.25
3.25 to 10.25
3.00 to 10.25
2.75 to 10.25
2.50 to 10.25
2.25 to 10.25
2.00 to 10.25
1.75 to 10.25
1.50 to 10.25
1.25 to 10.25
1.00 to 10.25
0.75 to 10.25
0.50 to 10.25
0.25 to 10.25
0.00 to 10.25
REPLACED SIZES
8.40 to 11.35
8.30 to 11.25
8.00 to 11.15
7.75 to 11.20
7.50 to 11.15
7.25 to 11.10
7.00 to 11.00
6.75 to 11.00
6.50 to 10.90
6.25 to 10.90
6.00 to 10.75
5.75 to 10.70
5.50 to 10.45
5.25 to 10.40
5.00 to 10.30
4.75 to 10.35
4.50 to 10.30
4.25 to 10.30
4.00 to 10.25
3.75 to 10.25
3.50 to 10.25
3.25 to 10.25
3.00 to 10.25
2.75 to 10.25
2.50 to 10.25
2.25 to 10.25
2.00 to 10.25
1.75 to 10.25
1.50 to 10.25
1.25 to 10.25
1.00 to 10.25
0.75 to 10.25
0.50 to 10.25
0.25 to 10.25
0.00 to 10.25
PRICE DACH
WHITE FIFTY TANKER
1.75 to 1.75
1.94
2.14
2.34
2.54
2.74
2.94
3.14
3.34
3.54
3.74
3.94
4.14
4.34
4.54
4.74
4.94
5.14
5.34
5.54
5.74
5.94
6.14
6.34
6.54
6.74
6.94
7.14
7.34
7.54
7.74
8.04
8.24
8.44
8.64
8.84
9.04
9.24
9.44
9.64
9.84
10.04
10.24
10.44
10.64
10.84
11.04
11.24
11.44
11.64
11.84
12.04
12.24
12.44
12.64
12.84
13.04
13.24
13.44
13.64
13.84
14.04
14.24
14.44
14.64
14.84
15.04
15.24
15.44
15.64
15.84
16.04
16.24
16.44
16.64
16.84
17.04
17.24
17.44
17.64
17.84
18.04
18.24
18.44
18.64
18.84
19.04
19.24
19.44
19.64
19.84
20.04
20.24
20.44
20.64
20.84
21.04
21.24
21.44
21.64
21.84
22.04
22.24
22.44
22.64
22.84
23.04
23.24
23.44
23.64
23.84
24.04
24.24
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199
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KU exchange program offers study in Costa Rica
By CASS SEXSON
Kansan Staff Writer
As KU students on the Hill don their heavy coats in preparation for the winter, seven of their colleagues will be studying for finals in their shirt sleeves.
These students are in the last month of their Junior Year in Costa Rica, an exchange program between KU and the University of Costa Rica, in San Jose, Costa Rica.
The program, which is administered by KU in conjunction with the University of Colorado, has been in operation since 1960. Since that time, 111 students from KU, CU and other institutions have been participants.
One of the biggest problems for the American students was adjusting to the Costa Rican environment. In a questionnaire sent to all previous participants by the International Office at KU, 18 out of 40 replying admitted that they never fully adjusted to the change.
Judith Myers Clinton of Lawrence, who went to Costa Rica in 1965, said it was difficult for the students to escape the KU group image and fit into the student life of the University as individuals.
Those who did adjust were pleased with the difference in environment and culture. Earle B. Ellis of Palo Alto, Calif, who was with the 1964 group, said, "My experience in Costa Rica taught me that this country (United States) is not the only place where I can live—that there is a place where happiness and peace are a part of the culture."
18 KANSAN Nov. 7
1969
Myrna Wilkins, who participated in the first year of the program and now lives in Venezuela, compared the similarities between America and Costa Rica.
"The year gave me a better understanding of our customs and culture, and a clearer picture of how people everywhere are much the same in needs and desires," she said.
Miss Wilkins added, however, that she was sometimes ashamed of her North American classmates, who seemed at times to be insensitive to the customs and culture of the Costa Ricans.
Other past participants said the experience of being a foreign student gave them added maturity and responsibility. JoAnn Brauchi Walcott, San Mateo, Calif., said, "It put me in a new and responsible role in which I represented not only myself but my country and my culture."
One participant, Jan L. Flora, Quinter, who was with the 1963 group, disagreed. "The setting was artificial, so I feel any maturity gained in Costa Rica was left in Costa Rica—an isolated maturity," he said.
The caliber of students accepted into the KU-Costa Rica program is high. Of the 40 who returned the questionnaires, 31 had better than a 2.00 grade average. Thirty-eight have or expect to get a baccalaureate degree, 20 have or are working toward a master's degree, and 5 are working on doctorates. Two past participants have graduated from medical school.
Honors won by past participants in the program include three Woodrow Wilson fellowships, four Fulbright scholarships and four memberships in Phi Beta Kappa, national Liberal Arts honor society.
Many past participants in the program have traveled outside the United States since returning from Costa Rica. Most have returned to Latin America in their travels, but others have gone to far-flung areas of the globe—West Africa, Korea, England and the Far East.
The effect of the program is still being felt by some of the students and nearly all said the experience had changed their goals in some way.
Rebecca King Shutt, who went with the 1962 group and now lives in Mystic, Conn., said. "Seven years later I'm still assimilating the perspectives."
Jan Flores has maintained connections with Costa Rica in another manner. Through his urging, his parents sponsored one of his Costa Rican colleagues at the University as an immigrant to the United States.
Two former group members, Pvt. Andrew J. Schlagel, a member of the 1966 group, who is stationed at Ft. Campbell, Ga., and Joseph Jones of Emporia, who was with the 1968 group, returned to the United States with Costa Rican wives.
Rebecca King Shutt echoed the sentiments of many of those who have gone to Costa Rica in her answers as what she liked best and least about the year in Costa Rica.
The best aspect of the trip, Mrs.Shutt said,was that in Costa Rica the poor have more music,orchids and dignity than in the United States.
She liked least, she said, "the feeling of where-on-earth-dowe-even-start to work against poverty—and do the orchids go with it?"
Griff's
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Spin discs from wheelchair
Handicapped operate station
VANCOUVER, B.C. (UPI) At first glance the small radio station looks similar to countless others scattered across North America.
The young disc jockey sits at his turntables spinning the latest rock numbers. The newsroom buzzes as writers prepare their hourly broadcast and announcers wait patiently for a break to extol their sponsors' products.
There is a major difference, though. This is C-JAZ Radio, a closed circuit station, where crutches and wheel chairs are as important to the operation as the electronic equipment.
All the C-JAZ staffers are handicapped. The list of afflictions ranges from polio and cerebral palsy to cripping spinal injuries suffered in traffic accidents,
"We are trying to get off the pensions and into a productive role," said the 21-year-old station manager, Jack Banford, British Columbia's first Easter seal "Timmy."
A victim of muscular dystrophy, Banford is the driving force behind the unique project.
"It all started about four years ago," he said. "I was very interested in radio broadcasting but after job interviews I was always
LUNG CANCER
NEW YORK (UPI) - The American Cancer Society reports that 21 million Americans quit smoking in 1968 but that lung cancer cases are "alarmingly increasing."
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 19
told 'you have a good voice, but you just can't handle it. You're not fast enough.'
"I couldn't give up on this idea. So I decided, well, if it's going to be this way then I'll start my own radio station, using other handicapped persons."
Government Helps
Banford contacted the federal government and was surprised when Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau sent former Transport Minister Paul Heller to Vancouver to discuss the project.
"We were given government support to help us fight for a license (from the Board of Broadcast Governors)," Banford said.
With government backing assured, the determined youth then floated a $5,000 loan to buy electronic gear, and recruited and trained 25 staffers ranging in age from 18 to 35.
The recording industry came to their aid with donations of the latest discs and Banford personally wrote hundreds of letters to every major company across the continent appealing for sponsors.
Only 15 companies replied "but we have a lot of people who have assured us they want advertising after we get going," Banford said.
"Right now we're in the process of promoting ourselves. Our main objective is to find some financial support. Once we have this we will be in a position to help ourselves . . . to become self-supporting . . . earn decent wages."
The group needs to raise about $200,000 to establish a commercial station in North Vancouver. The
North Shore has been without a resident station since 1962 when CKL moved to Vancouver.
"The way we look at it is once we get C-JAZ operating successfully we will be able to go across Canada and help other groups of handicapped persons," Banford said.
TROPHY
"We can stop them from just sitting and watching the world pass them by, we can train them to help them,"
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Composers get bad break on US copyright laws
NEW YORK (UPI) — The United States is the only country in the world that discriminates against composers.
Its antiquated copyright law is bad enough for the writers of its popular music but it is even worse for the composers of serious music who do not have record royalties as a cushion.
These composers lose revenue because in drafting the copyright law of 1909 the legislators decided they would have to be paid for their music only if the performances were "for profit."
"You can't perform a play or exhibit a movie without the consent of the copyright owner even if it is non-profit," said Edward M. Cramer, President of Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI). "You can't reprint textbooks for school use without copyright liability.
"You can't copy and distribute works of art without license whether or not they are for profit. Music is the only economically important work that is singled out for this discriminatory treatment and it is practiced only in the United States."
BMI and the American Society
20 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) are the guardians of the rights of composers in this country.
"It sounds reasonable to say a non-profit institution shouldn't pay for music," Cramer said. "But if it holds an art festival it will pay for the plays, it will pay compensation for material used in the souvenir book, it will pay the musicians who perform. Only the composer is not paid. This strikes hardest at the writers of serious music whose work is intended for schools and colleges, religious organizations and other non-profit civil groups."
Cramer said it was hoped a new copyright law would eliminate this discrimination. In the meantime, he urged wider observance of the present rights of composers.
"A music educator who would reject in horror the idea of buying stolen instruments will distribute stolen property of another sort," he said. "That is he will make copies of sheet music. This is clearly a violation of the copyright law both civil and criminal and legally and morally it's precisely the same as any other form of stealing or using stolen property."
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Author protests sex-oriented life
NEW YORK (UPI) — Someone asked the little boy if he knew the difference between the sexes and he replied seriously:
"Of course I do. Women are the ones who dance backwards."
From this and other examples of the fresh and innocent view of life held by the young, Sam Levenson has drawn the theme of his book, "Sex and the Single Child," his first since his autobiography, "Everything but Money" made the best-seller charts a couple of years ago.
Levenson described his book in an interview as "a defense of innocence against the conscious pressure for sex in everything in our society."
"Unfortunately," he said, "we seem to be creating a world in which all innocence must be eliminated immediately because it is equated with ignorance. At the same time we are attacking the awe and wonder with which children have always learned about the world. Children instinctively avoid the scientific approach. They are more interested in creation—who am I?— than creation.
"Believe me, at three he's already worried about immortality. He wants to know if 'they' sent him can 'they' take him back."
Levenson said the book represents years of thought on the subject.
"What happens between two
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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—A research project that took months or years before the University of California's Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute installed a computer can now be completed in between five minutes and one and one-half days.
Nov. 7 1969 KANSAN 21
people should be love not sex. I think a child who believes in God has a very good start. He has a feeling that comes from eternity, a feeling of the universality of life—and not an obsession with the plumbing. We used to say 'what's your hurry to grow up?' Now we pressure cook our children into maturity."
Levenson said sex was a three-letter word into which people were trying to put too many four-letter words. For this he blames "the intellectuals" wildly theorizing as though humans were a brand new species.
"They've eliminated all the old inhibitions about sex so why are so many people on the psychiatrists couches, confused, bewildered and sated?" he said.
ALUMS & FRIENDS The STADIUM BARBER SHOP
"They write endlessly on every aspect of human relations, finding something new every day—like the portentous advice given mothers on how to prepare a child for the arrival of another son or daughter.
"My own introduction to a new brother or sister were the words 'move over' from my father. What's wrong with that?"
INVITES YOU TO DROP IN AND TREAT YOUR MEMORY TO 23 YEARS OF KU SPORTS PHOTOS. VI2-9400
Closed Wednesdays
---
Congratulations, Alumni!
Congratulations for making KU the wonderful institution it is, and many thanks! Your Alma Mater is now our experience, and we're proud to share it with you. Our sincere wishes that your Homecoming is a memorable one!
Kappa Kappa Gamma Alpha Gamma Delta Pi Beta Phi Sigma Kappa
Alpha Delta Pi Kappa Alpha Theta Alpha Epsilon Pi
Delta Delta Delta Gamma Phi Beta Alpha Chi Omega ga Alpha Phi
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Chi Omega
Happy Homecoming!
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Alumni and students to view New Union addition Saturday
By KENNETH CUMMINS
and
IRENE ECONOMOUS Kansan Staff Writers
Homecoming visitors at the University of Kansas this year will be able to view the result of five years of planning and construction in the nearly completed addition to the Kansas Union.
Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, called the $1,100,000 addition, "the capstone to the building."
"We wanted to create a building that would do something to people and for people," Burge said. "I had very high expectations for this project and the results have met my expectations."
Photo by T. L. Simmons
I
New room adds style The Governors Room, decorated and furnished by the Class of 1967, is a conference room with a seating capacity of 15.
New room adds style
Vince J. Bilotta, field director of the Alumni Association, said the association would conduct tours through the addition during an open house from 10:30 to 12:30 Saturday.
The tour begins in the basement of the Union in the Mount Oread Book Shop, which opened Oct. 27. Orange carpeting leads visitors from the old building to the shop's quarters in the new addition.
The book shop handles best sellers and current books. Stewart Nowlin, manager of the shop, said the shop handles trade books while the Union bookstore handles mostly textbooks and school materials.
Nowlin said three-fourths of the book shop's supply is paperbacks.
A blue-tiled stairway leads from the bookshop entrance to the first floor where the Governors Room, Alumni Association offices and the Council Room are located.
Katherine Giele, Union activities director, said the Union bookstore had been very limited in the number of books it could carry. Mrs. Giele said the bookstore had only carried about 8,000 titles while the book shop has over 20,000 titles.
"The book shop has more of a browsing atmosphere, rather than that rush-through-thing down-stairs." she said.
The Governors Room, adjacent to the Alumni Association Office, is a conference room with a capacity of 15 persons. Vince Bilotta said alumni still give
class gifts and much of the first floor of the new addition was furnished through class gifts. The class of 1967 decorated and furnished the Governors Room
22 KANSAN Nov. 7
1969
The Alumni Association Office includes a reception area and staff offices. The class of 1943 furnished the reception area. One office is specifically designated as class headquarters for the freshman, sophomore, junior and senior class officers. The office was furnished by the class of 1944.
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
exclusively in
A donkey with a stick in his mouth.
In the northwest corner of the Alumni Office is a glass-walled, sound proof room where the duplicating equipment and key punch machines are kept.
Three vertical, rotating files containing permanent records and biographical data on nearly 100,000 alumni are located in the Alumni Association Office. These files have information, such as news clippings, obtained after the individual's graduation from KU.
ference room. It can be entered from the blue carpeted hallway leading past the Governors Room and the Alumni Association Office, or through the Music Browsing Room in the old part of the Union.
Another file contains a record on any person who ever enrolled at the University.
The Council Room, completed this week, is a 60-member con-
The International Room and Woodruff Auditorium are on the (Continued to page 23)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1989,
University Daily Kansan.
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4
Union addition to be viewed
POLLINARIA
Photo by T. L. Simmon
Students find browsing area in new shop
The Oread Book Shop, recently opened in the new Union addition, offers current books and best sellers, mainly in paperback form. The Union Bookstore will continue to handle textbooks and school materials.
(Continued from page 22)
second floor. The International Room is a conference room with a capacity of 40 to 50 persons. Mrs. Giele said all the conference rooms were available to any group wanting to use them.
100
Files machine operated
The KU Alumni Association office has moved into the new Union addition adding space and better facilities for its file system.
Nov. 7 1969 KANSAN 23
The Laurence C. Woodruff Auditorium is not yet completed but Burge said he expected it to be completed by the end of the Thanksgiving holidays. The acoustically designed auditorium has a seating capacity of 600.
The delay to the auditorium was caused by an ordering of priorities. When it became apparent the addition would not be completed on time, work was accelerated on the bookstore and the Alumni Association offices where completion was considered critical.
Completion of the auditorium was also hampered by a 57 day sheet metal workers strike last summer.
Some events, such as the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company production of "Iolanthe," have been moved to other buildings until the auditorium can be completed. One hundred twenty reservations have already been made for the Auditorium's use, Burge said.
Since the other areas of the addition are 80 per cent completed, Burge said, construction will now be concentrated on finishing the auditorium.
Burge said he had been dedicated to keeping this original building intact because of the tradition and sentimental value attached to it. "You cherish something more the older it grows," he said.
On the third floor of the addition is an open air terrace which gives a view of the Mount Oread landscape to the west and the Lawrence community to the north. The terrace is covered by 17 coats of a plastic material which has a spongy-like feel similar to a Tartan track.
In the middle of the terrace is the projection room for the auditorium. The room can also be approached from the auditorium through an internal stairway.
The addition to the Kansas Union is the result of planning that began in 1964. Bidding started in 1967 and the actual construction began last year.
The delay in the completion of the new Union facilities will not raise the cost of the addition, since the project is under a fixed contract.
Accessibility to the Union had to be increased, Burge said. Greater accessibility to the building was the idea behind the tunnel which connects the X zone parking lot to the Union. Despite the controversy about the cost of the tunnel and whether or not it was needed, Burge said that many people who have used the tunnel said they were grateful that it was included. The tunnel cost was only 10 per cent of the entire project, he said.
The Union Building, erected in 1926, has had three previous additions. This fourth addition is considered terminal by Burge.
Despite the slight delay in completion, Burge said that the students have been very understanding. "They haven't minded stepping over an electrical wire when it was in the way," he said.
Burge said he was gratified by the response that he has received from the students who have complimented him on the appearance of the new addition.
"This addition was made by and for the students so I feel very good when they say that they like what we have done." Burge said.
The addition to the Union was built by the Green and Norris construction companies. Architectural planning was done by Mann & Co. of Hutchinson, who also did the planning for the other three additions to the Union.
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Ends 60-year span
Old Haworth to fall from Mount Oread
By MONROE DODD Kansan Staff Writer
Clothed in the tenacious ivy that, vulture-like, clings to the majority of KU's more decadent buildings, "Old" Haworth Hall stands atop Mount Oread. Most inhabitants are unaware of the impending doom of one of the Hill's oldest structures.
Haworth, having lived its life on Jayhawk Boulevard, finds it duties—and its inmates—gone to happier surroundings, the Center for Experimental Biology and Human Development, "New" Haworth.
Meanwhile, the end approaches for the crumbling building, fashioned from native stone as part of a 1909 Legislative spending spree.
Shortly after the turn of the century the Kansas State Legislature benignly eyed KU (student population: 2,000) and decided to grant the relatively bare Lawrence campus $200,000 for the construction of engineering, mining and geology facilities.
From Legislature
From the Legislature's fertile mind sprang Marvin Hall, which took $150,000, and Haworth, which got the remaining $50,000.
In 1910 the construction company etched "Geology and Mining" just out of sight above Haworth's corneia and declared it ready to accept KU's geology and mining departments and the Kansas Dept. of Geology.
Rockhounds trod the now-creaking stairs and dusky halls wainscoted with dark oak for 35 years, stopping occasionally to ponder the plaque that dedicates the building to "Erasmus Haworth, professor of geology 1892-1920, pioneer geologist, inspiring teacher, loyal friend." (It is interesting to note that Haworth was nicknamed "Daddy" in an era when professor-student relationships were apparently not so tenuous as today.)
However in 1945 the geologists were able, through some sort of political magic, to have Lindley Hall erected. They quickly made off with the tools of their trade and Kansas' largest mineral collection, leaving Haworth to first-year medical students.
During that time, according to the Daily Kansan, Haworth was plagued by a fire—believed to have been started by a cigarette flung from a window onto an awning—causing a meager $20 damage.
Haworth survived the attack upon its dignity but was helpless to withstand the onslaught of medical students and their odorous cadavers.
Med school picks Pharmacy head
Harold N. Godwin has been named director of pharmacy at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. He came from the Ohio State University Hospitals in Columbus, where he was assistant director of the pharmacy.
A native of Ransom, Kansas, Godwin grew up in Ness City and earned the B.S. in pharmacy at KU in 1964. He earned the M.S. in hospital pharmacy in 1966 at Ohio State and since has been supervisor and instructor as well as assistant director in Ohio's pharmacy department.
Godwin also will be a teaching associate in the School of Medicine and assistant professor of pharmacy on the Lawrence campus.
24 KANSAN Nov.7 1969
The medical students stuck it out until 1962, when the last Lawrence medical courses were transferred to Kansas City, but the smells remained as the College's departments of anatomy, biochemistry and physics moved in.
Along with the assigned departments, Haworth served as the receptacle for various overflow classes.
Haworth's fate was finally sealed by the University's 10-year Master Plan, which called for the razing of Haworth and the adjacent Robinson Gymnasium to make room for a proposed new humanities building (today's Wescoe Hole).
Scheduled to have been demolished by now, Haworth clung to life after it was pressed into service to accommodate more maverick classes unable to find room anywhere else.
due to be levelled before the end of the 1970 spring semester.
The "old" building, now designated as such by a gilt-lettered sign attached above its name, is
Sign Distinguishes It
At the foot of the hill is Haworth's $3 million replacement, just completed and boasting eight stories of bright, sterile cubicles.
The campus will not note Haworth's passing—except for those students with tender nostrils laced by fumes from anatomy classes—yet perhaps some alumni may recall in the coming years the benches where groups of people rested, directly in front of a symmetrical rockpile named incongruously "Geology and Mining."
BLACK LUNG
FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI) — Kentucky plans dust quality testing in coal mines in an effort health and mine officials hope will lead to control of black lung and other respiratory diseases.
Conducting the program will be the State Department of Health and the Department of Mines and Minerals. Kentucky is the first state to initiate extensive research on black lung.
HOMECOMING WEEKEND IS DR. PEPPER TIME!
Anytime is a good time for Dr. Pepper . . . especially Homecoming Weekend. Check the Dr. Pepper schedule below for weekend activities.
FRIDAY:
- Homecoming decorations at the living units will be on display from 5 to 11 p.m.
- At 8:20 p.m. the University Theatre will present "Die Fledermaus" in Murphy Hall.
- SATURDAY:
- Homecoming decorations will be on display in the morning.
- At 10:30 a.m. there will be a one hour general homecoming reception with the three homecoming queen finalists in the Kansas Union Lobby.
- 1:15 p.m. begins the pre-game show with the Marching Band in Memorial Stadium.
- Kick-off time will be at 1:30 p.m. between the Jayhawks and Colorado Buffaloes.
- Steppenwolf and the Turtles concert at 8 p.m. in Allen Field House.
Dr Pepper
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Campbell's
Campbell's is...
Men's Wear
Jayhawk Headquarters
The Jayhawk Blazer ... $50.
The Jayhawk Tie ... $ 6.50
The Jayhawk Stadium Blanket ... $20.
The K.U. Blue Rain Hat ... $ 4.
C
Campbell's Men's Wear
843 Massachusetts
VI 3-0454
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)
80th Year, No. 40—Section Two
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, November 7, 1969
Homecoming 1969
KANSAS
And The Band Played On . . .
University of Kansas band members marched proudly during their first home performance Sept. 27. The team played like Orange Bowl Jayhawks as they defeated Syracuse 13-0. Pompon squad members and fans had reason to be enthusiastic with the sparkling performance of KU musicians and team members.
Football also brutal to loyal fans
Bang! Thud! Bump! Crunch!
Twisted faces mirror pained expressions of enthusiasm and defeat. Writhing bodies pile on top of one another as the big game gets under way.
Football. The word has for 100 years sparked life in the wrinkled bodies of old men and stirred young men to heights of self-torture.
On the field, however, the situation has changed greatly since 1869. The players, once clad only in leather beanies and pajama-like uniforms,
now wear pads of all description; reinforced helmets with cage-like face masks, mouth guards, mammoth shoulder pads, hip pads, forearm pads, thigh, knee, and shin pads, and cleated shoes.
They are aided by vitamins, hormones, on-the-spot oxygen and medical aid, and mountains of protein food and Gatorade.
But for the fan, the game has become a spectator sport in its strictest sense.
For the dyed-in-the-wool
88
football fan, game day often means arising before dawn in freezing temperatures to make the 200-mile drive to Muckadilla—or some such place—to cheer his favorites on to victory.
Ettinger tosses a long pass in Hawks home opener
Fighting the opposing fan for one of the three thousand parking spaces, which must suffice for the 40,000 plus cars, can become more of a challenge than 3rd and four on your own 40.
Once parked, the fan next fights his way up the long ramps leading to the stadium. Inside the stadium his next foe is a worthy one, the 15,000 students fighting for position with only 7,000 available student seats.
Finally seated, after arranging his many blankets, firing up his hand warmer and pouring his first drink, the fan realizes to his dismay he has missed the opening kick off.
After the final gun, the weary fan drags himself back to his car and starts his long homeward journey, wondering how football could possibly be 100 years old.
ST. CHARLES, Mo. (UPI) Lindenwood College, the oldest women's college west of the Mississippi, will include a men's college next September. About 50 male students will be enrolled in the resident freshman class.
GOING COED
Schedule of events
University of Kansas students and alumni will celebrate the 57th annual Homecoming today and Saturday.
The schedule for the 1969 event has been announced by Vincent J. Bilotta, field director of the Alumni Association.
The two day schedule of events includes informal public activities as well as specifically oriented functions.
The "Buffalo Barbecue" is open to the public and will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.
Steppenwolf and the Turtles will present the concert Saturday night. Tickets have been on sale since Oct, 27 for $2.50, $3 and $3.50 each.
The class of 1959 also has several activities planned. The complete two day Homecoming schedule is as follows:
Friday
5 to 11 p.m. ... Homecoming decorations on display
8:20 p.m. ... University Theatre
Saturday
Morning...Homecoming decorations on display
10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m...Alumni registration, Kansas Union
10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m...Open house,
Alumni Association office
10:30 a.m. Reception in the Kansas Union Lobby
11 a.m. to 1 p.m...Open house at Spencer Library
11 a.m. Luncheon, class of 1959 at Ramada Inn
11 a.m. to 1 p.m."Buffalo Barbecue," Kansas Union
12:40 to 12:50 p.m...Band music from Campanile Hill
1:15 p.m...Pre-game show
1:30 p.m. Kick off of the Kansas-Colorado game
Halftime ...Crowning of queen and presentation of awards
After the game ...Coffee hour in the Kansas Union Lounge
4:30 to 6 p.m...Law School social hour at Eagles Lodge
4:30 p.m. Class of 1959 reunion at Ramada Inn
8 p.m. Homecoming Concert, Allen Field House
31
Pepper Talk
Coach Pepper Rodgers talks to fullback John Riggins during the Syracuse-KU game. A record crowd of 44,000 watched the Jayhawks home opener.
kroger
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Open Daily
9 to 9
Sundays 9 to 6
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Welcomes students, faculty,and alumni to
share in our Homecoming Specials
First Purchase
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ea. 59c
Reg. 77¢
First Purchase
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First Purchase
Come in and visit
and
First Purchase
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ea. 49c
Reg. 58¢
us,
First Purchase
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5 1b. Gold Medal Flour
ea. 49¢
Reg. 59¢
First Purchase
Gallon Clover Valley
Ice Cream
ea. 99c
Reg. $1.15
First Purchase
11 oz. Morton Dinners
3/$1.00
Reg. 43¢
--or
And don't overlook our Everyday Discount Prices
Nationally advertised Fliteline Luggage Reg. $18.88 $13.88
STP Oil Treatment 54c limit2
before
Quaker State Oil
3/$1.00
Reg. 49¢
Kodak Film CX 126-12 12 color prints 2/$1.86
after
the
Barbasol Shave Cream
11 oz. size
Reg. 98¢ ea. 2/$1.00
game
Breck Shampoo
7 oz. size
Reg.$1.15 77c ea.
2-Piece Gown & Peignoir Set
100% Nylon S-M-L-XL
Blue, Pink, Yellow, Green
$5.95 Value $3.44
Brand Name Bra Sale
Values to $5.00
Sizes 32-40, A, B, & C $1.00
Misses Pant Tops
Assorted Styles—Prints & Solids
Sizes 32-38
Reg. $2.97 $2.44
Famous Brand Name Men's Dress Shirts White & Stripes Complete size range Values to $6.50 $3.00
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THE ROBERTS
ALEXANDER L. ROBINSON
KU's family next door
Meet the Chalmers family.
They're really not much different from most families. In fact, they are in many ways like the family next door.
It's just that when Mrs. Chalmers, Mary Ann, sends her husband off to the office in the morning, it is to the office of the Chancellor of the largest university in Kansas that she sends him.
The other men in Mrs. Chalmers life are E. Laurence Jr., "Chip" 16, and Tom, 13.
The family enjoys being together. Though the Chancellor's responsibilities tend to make those special family times infrequent, they seize every opportunity to be together. When time permits, they go to their cabin in Colorado which they built themselves. Or they take their hydroplane to a nearby lake for a cruise.
Chip is involved in many activities at Lawrence High School. He is on the student council and has a part in the school play.
His "pad," as he calls it—an area of the basement—houses his electric organ, which he plays in a combo. He also plays harpsichord in a baroque group.
10
The high school junior is an Eagle Scout.
Tom, an eighth grader at Central Junior High, is interested in science. He has several turtles, one of which, a gopher turtle, he raised from an egg he found when the family lived in Florida. He has read a lot about turtles and is a little disappointed that Kansas doesn't have a very wide variety of the creatures.
The younger teen plays French horn and is tutored in French twice weekly to keep up with the language he has studied since he was in fourth grade.
The 13-year-old's first reaction to the prospect of moving to Kansas, his mother said, was, "It's all right, if I can have a snowmobile." He is looking forward to the first snowfall.
A very important member of the Chalmers family is Buffy, a pomeranian. His registered name is Chalmers Lord Buff, "a pretty big name for such a little dog," Mrs. Chalmers mused. Buffy meets guests at the door with his favorite sock in his mouth.
Tom is the family chess champion. He often out-maneuvers his father and older brother at the game of strategy. The game table in the living room is always set up for impromptu matches.
MARIA LOPEZ
The Endless Summer
'Hawks chalk 50th year
By CASS SEXSON
Kansan Staff Writer
Tradition, innovation and spirit mark the fiftieth anniversary of homecoming at KU.
The annual event was put on the official University calendar in 1919, though homecoming festivities were observed unofficially for several years.
Originally, homecoming was scheduled during Thanksgiving, and featured a Thanksgiving Day football game between the Jay-hawks and one of their two major rivals—Nebraska and Missouri. In odd-numbered years, the 'Hawks clashed with the Cornhuskers; in even-numbered years the gridiron battle was with the Tigers.
In 1940, tradition was broken when the homecoming game was played against the Oklahoma Sooners. Since then, homecoming game opponents have included the Kansas State Wildcats and the Colorado Buffaloes.
House decorations have been a homecoming tradition since 1913. At first, decorations consisted of banners and posters welcoming alumni and the visiting football team.
Lawrence businesses began to offer prizes for the best decorations in 1921. The idea of a unifying theme soon followed, and the decoration tradition quickly grew to today's proportions.
The only exception was in 1951, when organized houses decided to donate the time and money which would have been spent on decorations to clean-up projects in the north Lawrence flood area.
Pep rallies and informal gettogethers have always been a part of homecoming. Old Timer's Night, begun in 1914, was changed to a "men only" bullfest in 1921. At the insistence of female alumni, that tradition has evolved into informal mixers.
The first annual torchlight rally and parade was held in 1932, with more than 5,000 participants.
The Ku Ku Club, a now-defunct men's pep organization, created "Doc Yak" in 1919. This sprightly medicine man, played by a student, distributed pep pills and tonic to students and alumni for more than 40 years, but vanished when the Ku Ku Club folded.
Some events traditionally held during homecoming in past years have fallen victim to the changing times. During homecoming in the '20's, the freshman-sophomore olympics decided the question of whether freshmen would be compelled to wear their caps until spring.
After freshmen quit wearing caps, the tradition was changed to the annual Law-Medic football game.
The Law-Medic games eventually fell by the wayside, as did the float parade, nightshirt parade, and the handcair race down Massachusetts Street.
Hobo Day, a University tradition since 1894, became a regular homecoming event in 1922, but died out when it became the vogue to look like a hobo every day.
Another long-forgotten feature of past homecomings is the turkey run, in which first place won a turkey, second place won a goose, and third place won a chicken.
Organized events on campus have been with us since the first homecoming occasion. In 1924, featured events included exhibitions of boxing, fencing, parallel bar work and a wrestling match. Audience participation was urged in the final event—a free-for-all fight.
Gradually, organized events
gravitated toward the cultural aspect of campus life, and included concerts, films and theatrical productions.
Campus talent highlighted the Jayhawk Frolic in 1933, which set the precedent for years of the succeeding Jayhawk Follies. The Follies grew to sufficient proportions to merit recognition in itself, and evolved into the Rock Chalk Revue.
Other homecoming traditions remain virtually unchanged. The first official homecoming queen was selected in 1932.
Only minor changes have been made in the queen tradition, such as the method of selecting the perfect coed to wear the crown. The task was originally entrusted to the football team, then to the entire student body, and finally to a panel of judges.
The University Daily Kansan began putting out special homecoming issues in 1929 with a 22-page edition.
KU homecoming celebrates its golden anniversary without some of the old traditions, but many remain with us. Homecoming '69 will have a queen, house decorations, concerts, a pep rally, and -oh yes!-a football game with Colorado.
Project improves homes
By CRAIG PARKER Kansan Staff Writer
The New Jersey Street project is a name that rings a bell for many people. For many students it is a reminder of something they meant to do, but never quite got around to doing.
But for those who were involved in the housing revitalization project in the spring of 1969, New Jersey Street means people working together, people helping other people.
The most important thing about the New Jersey Street project is that it was just people working together-students, community organizers, and most important of all, the residents themselves.
"They painted our house and cleaned up the yard," said Mrs. Dorothy Graves. "It was a big help." She said that having the outside of the house painted left time for her to work on the inside.
The project was initiated by the Ballard Community Center. Mrs. Turner, a community organizer there, went into the 1200 block of New Jersey Street early in the spring.
"We wanted to see what the residents wanted help with. You
know, you can't just go into an area and say, 'Here we are to fix up your homes.' It has to be people working in a joint effort, and that's what the New Jersey project was."
Many of the residents in the area were unable to afford major improvements. But, with the materials provided by local businessmen, the residents eagerly made improvements on their homes, with help and advice from architecture students in an advocacy planning class at KU.
Mrs. Freda Dayton, a New Jersey Street resident, had nothing but praise for the project. "They painted my house, except for the backside. We had to put up some more siding there, but they left us paint to finish the job. I think it was really great."
One woman noted that by removing big junk from the yards, the students made it much easier for residents to take care of the yards.
There was at the time of the revitalization project much criticism about the effect it would have. People said it was only a superficial change that wouldn't really solve any problems.
"Admittedly it's very superficial," said Myles Stevens, assistant professor of architecture.
"but we have to start somewhere. Something is better than nothing, and this is the first, the very first, thing that has been done to help the residents of that area."
Both Stevens and Mrs. Turner said that the important thing about the project was that it involved people working together. There is so much more to be done, but the New Jersey Street project is a start.
The area of New Jersey Street that was worked on last spring still looks nice today and, in some ways, looks better. People are working to fix up the inside of their houses and some of them have shown remarkable improvement.
Even the residents who didn't do work on their houses last spring applauded the joint effort, and some of them have improved their homes over the summer.
The original goals of the people involved in the New Jersey Street project were to revitalize the homes in the neighborhood and help develop leadership in the different areas of the community.
4 KANSAN Nov. 7 1969
WELCOME HOME, JAYHAWKS!
A cordial greeting and best wishes to all returning Alumni and friends from the Kansas Union Bookstorewe hope that your Homecoming has been a momentous one! During your visit, be our guest and feel free to browse through the Bookstore. Choose from our wide selection of souvenirs—this is one weekend you won't want to forget!
kansas union BOOKSTORE
WELCOME ALUMNI GO BIG BLUE!
It's always a thrill to come back to KU, and Homecoming is the greatest of them all! Alumni and friends travel from afar to gather once again, stirring old memories and starting new ones. Let the Kansas Union be your host this memorable Homecoming. You're cordially invited to enjoy all of our facilities meet with friends in our comfortable atmosphere. Feel free to inspect our beautiful new Northwest addition. The Union aims to please after all, this is your weekend!
KANSAS UNION
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Sandy's
Sandy's Sandy's
K
KU
U
Welcomes its Alums
After the game come as you are tired, spirited and hungry Sandy's is KU's number one spot for hungry students. We meet the students,we'd like to meet the parents. Sandy's is a pretty friendly place for all, so why don't you come on in after the game and get a bite to eat!
Sandy's specializes in big hungers. Try our big double decker the mighty BIG SCOT-designed to tackle any post football game hunger.
"Come as you are ...Hungry"
Sandi's
Sandi's
BURGERS
THRIFT
FROM
SWIFT
Sandy's
HAMBURGERS - SHAKES
HAMBURGERS
THRIFT
SWIFT
Opposite Hillcrest Plaza 2120 West 9th Street
Sandy's
Sandy's
Just one big happy family
By CASS SEXSON
Kansan Staff Writer
...
For the student who wants to live cheaply and can take a little of the unusual, there is a choice besides a dormitory, an apartment or a Greek house—the commune.
What started on the West Coast as an American experiment in communal living has spread to other parts of the nation, including KU, and is meeting with widespread success.
Communal living comes to KU
Lawrence has several communes; the Kansan visited one at 1340 Tennessee St. which houses eight persons.
Or so we were told. When this reporter entered the house, about a dozen people were watching the news on a small television set in the living room. Later, eighteen sat down to a mammoth spaghetti supper.
With the remains of a huge repast waiting to be cleared away, the residents of the commune at 1340 Tennessee St., and their guests, relax into a typical family pose. Only eight people live in the commune, but several visitors for supper is not unusual. Cooking chores for the group are split up on a volunteer basis.
Occurrences such as this are not out of the usual. Mike Warner, a resident of the Tennessee commune explained that some of the visitors were from another Lawrence commune, some were visiting from Oklahoma State University for a meeting on the urban plunge project and others were regular guests.
The adage "the more the merrier" seemed to apply, however, and everyone joined in on a picture-taking spree, including the reporter and the household pet, a small black kitten.
Two couples and four men live in the spacious house, which has one drawback—a single bathroom. There are six bedrooms and ample "crashing space" for the frequent guests. The living room alone has three sofas.
Expenses average $50 a month
Nov. 7
1969 KANSAN 7
per person, including rent, food and utilities, making the commune one of the least expensive living situations. Housekeeping and cooking chores are split up on a volunteer basis.
The commune also has other advantages, according to its residents. "It's a more natural way to live," said David S. Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president.
Ideally, the commune should have a balanced number of men and women, said another commune resident. "That's how the commune got its name, from a community-type atmosphere," she said. "It's unnatural to segregate groups of men and women, as in dormitories. In a commune there's more of a family atmosphere."
Ironically, the most prevalent problem of the commune is preserving its community. Unlike dormitories or Greek houses, not all of those living in the commune are students. The problem arises of a "common experience, one that everybody can relate to," as one resident explained it.
"Lack of common experience is not really a problem as far as living together is concerned," said Warner. "But not being able to relate to each other hampers the ideal situation of communal living."
Another commune resident, who was visiting the Tennessee commune, said that in some ways the diversity of the group was beneficial. "It's more representative of a true community," she said. It's helpful to have a common basis outside of the commune, but the living situation itself is a common experience."
The Tennessee commune does not seem to be split by diversity or lack of "common experience." The atmosphere is relaxed.
though at times it appears chaotic to the inexperienced observer.
The commune on Tennessee was organized last June. There were 15 people living in two houses, said Warner, but one house was closed and its residents moved—some into other communes, some into dorms, and some into private apartments.
"The number of persons living in the house now is about eight," Warner said. "We have eight permanent residents and several who come and go."
Those who are living in the commune say they genuinely like the living situation, not simply because it is less expensive than other living quarters, but because it offers what one resident called "a natural atmosphere in an unnatural environment."
WELCOME BACK ALUMNI!
(even though you don't know me!)
Hi, Alumni! Allow me to introduce myself. I'm the new Oread Bookshop, located in the new Northwest addition of the Kansas Union. I may be a newcomer to KU, but I've already been rated as the finest trade bookstores in the Midwest! See for yourself—I've got over 20,000 paperbacks alone, not even counting my wide selection of hardbacks and contemporary cards.
If you like to read, we've got something in common. Drop in at the Union, and let's get acquainted!
OREAD BOOKSHOP
KANSAS UNION
OREAD BOOK SHOP
UNIVERSITY
STATE
BANK
843-4700
WE JOIN EACH OF YOU IN THE SPIRIT AND JOY OF HOMECOMING
TOMMY E. ROBINSON AND HER MAIDEN
Photos by Halina Pawl
S
Highlights of KU's 57th Homecoming
The University of Kansas' Homecoming Day 1969 was bright and beautiful at Memorial Stadium despite KU's 17-14 loss to the University of Colorado. Jan Merrick, Prairie Village senior representing Chi Omega sorority, was crowned Homecoming Queen by Gov. Robert Docking, top left. Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry and recipient of the 1969 HOPE award, top right, viewed the game attired in his senior hat and sweatshirt. Bottom right, the Black Student Union queen, Lorene Brown, Value, Miss., freshman, and her attendants, Annie Dennis, Wichita sophomore, and Frances Robinson, Kansas City junior, were driven around the field at halftime, following their pre-game crowning ceremony.
I am ready to fight with my whole heart and soul. I will be the leader of our nation. I will lead us to a better world. I will be the champion of justice. I will be the protector of the earth. I will be the guardian of our dreams. I will be the pillar of our community. I will be the spirit of our nation. I will be the voice of our people. I will be the torch of our future. I will be the flag of our country. I will be the symbol of our freedom. I will be the emblem of our strength. I will be the heart of our destiny. I will be the spirit of our nation. I will be the champion of justice. I will be the protector of the earth. I will be the guardian of our dreams. I will be the pillar of our community. I will be the spirit of our nation. I will be the champion of justice. I will be the protector of the earth. I will be the guardian of our dreams. I will be the pillar of our community. I will be the spirit of our nation. I will be the champion of justice. I will be the protector of the earth. I will be the guardian of our dreams. I will be the pillar of our community.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas-Lawrence, Kansas Monday, Nov. 10, 1969
Doctors OK moon trio
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) Doctors performed a last major medical examination on the three Apollo 12 astronauts Sunday and pronounced them in tip-top physical condition for a takeoff next Friday on America's second moon' landing mission.
"They are in excellent spirits and eager to fly," reported chief astronaut physician Dr. Charles A. Berry after the 3.5-hour checkup given Charles "Pete" Conard, Richard F. Gordon and Alan L. Bean.
"They are properly rested and in good health, with no evidence by laboratory or clinical examination of any infectious disease which might interfere with the launch." Berry said.
The moonbound trio spent the afternoon relaxing in the crew
quarters at the spaceport and reviewing the flight plan for the 10-day mission.
At the launch pad Sunday, ground crews resumed the countdown after a 31-hour rest period and began pumping oxygen and helium into the moonship poised atop the huge Saturn 5 booster. The oxygen is for the astronauts to breathe in space and the helium is used to pressurize fuel tanks in both the command ship, Yankee Clipper, and the moon lander, nicknamed Intrepid.
Apollo 12 is scheduled to blast off at 10:22 a.m. CST Friday. Conrad and Bean are due to land Intrepid on the moon's Ocean of Storms at 12:53 p.m. Nov. 19, while Bean stays aboard Yankee Clipper in lunar orbit. All three
return to earth for a Pacific Ocean splashdown Nov. 24.
Besides making certain the astronauts are healthy, the medical examinations gathered data to be compared with the results of similar tests after the pilots return to earth.
The initial moon landing carried out by the Apollo 11 crew in July showed no evidence that organisms exist on the moon. But biologists are taking no chances. They have carefully catalogued the organisms common to the astronauts' systems so that they will quickly know about any alien bugs they might bring back.
Conrad, Gordon and Bean are already in a semi-quarantine which limits their exposure to personnel not essential to their launch preparations.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Nonmilitary funds cut
WASHINGTON = Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield says the Defense Department will be "violating the law" if it spends one penny from future funds on nonmilitary research. Last year it spent $400 million in this field.
Troops on combat alert
MANILA — The government put its 54,000-man armed forces on combat alert today in an effort to quell election campaign violence already accountable for 43 deaths.
The 30,000 U.S. servicemen stationed in the Philippines were asked to stay on their bases until Wednesday, the day after the voting.
SALT talks begin
WASHINGTON—Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir S. Semenov, 67, will head the Soviet delegation to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) with the United States, it has been learned.
The SALT negotiations begin in Helsinki next Monday.
--other institutions in the Big Eight, the Big Ten and independent universities; second, the tuition charges for A.L.'s be dropped.
Low salaries plague assistant instructors
(Editors' note: This is the first of two articles on the financial plight of graduate students teaching at the University of Kansas. The second article will appear in Tuesday's Kansan.)
By CRAIG PARKER
Kansan Staff Writer
Assistant instructors and teaching assistants at the University of Kansas received a $100 raise in salary this year, the first raise since 1966.
Graduate students have been trying to improve their financial status for several years. The most concerted effort made to improve salaries recently was by the Student Association of Graduates in English (SAGE).
The SAGE report, which was submitted to former Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, said, "The salary currently offered to assistant instructors has never been and is not now adequate to meet basic living costs."
In Fall, 1967, SAGE prepared a detailed report about the history of salaries for assistant instructors (A.I.'s) and about KU salaries in comparison to other universities'.
Although this report was compiled two years ago, nearly all the information in it is still applicable to present salary levels.
The 1967 SAGE report asked that two improvements be made: first, salaries be increased to a level offered by
From 1960 to 1967, salaries of beginning A.I.'s rose $300. But the annual increase in fees consumed 30 per cent of that salary increase for the average graduate student.
For the current school year, A.I.'s salaries range from a low of $2,400 to the top salary of $3,200. For teaching assistants the low is $2,300 and the high is $3,100. The SAGE report noted for 1967-1968, of the 113 A.I.'s in the English department, only six received above $2,400.
There are many sides to the
Most graduate students agree with Phil Weiss, Western Civilization instructor, who said, "Everybody agrees that salaries are bad; everybody is sympathetic, but they all say 'We don't have any money.'"
problem of salaries for A.I.'s.
Weiss said because of the low salaries, most A.I.'s and T.A.'s have to go into debt to live. He referred to this as the "graduate student syndrome."
The report said the average total amount borrowed is
The SAGE report said, "One-half of the A.I.'s sampled have incurred indebtedness. The amount increases dramatically with every year spent in graduate school."
The report also noted, of all the A.I.'s sampled, only two were able to save money without some outside source of income. In both of those cases the total amount saved was less than $100.
When talking with graduate students who are handling teaching duties, one often hears the complaint the Regents are getting away with "cheap help" or "slave labor."
$1,757. Some of it is borrowed to pay tuition costs.
In Spring, 1969, A.I.'s comprised about 40 per cent of the KU teaching staff.
Assistant instructors at KU have full responsibility for the
(Continued to page 12)
Alums have mixed feelings concerning BSU crowning
The alumni, like much of the student body, viewed with mixed emotions the crowning of the Black Student Union (BSU) queen before the start of Saturday's homecoming game.
Several alumni said they saw no harm in the pre-game ceremony. "I think its all right if that's what they want," one woman said. "I can't see any harm in it."
Another alumnus said the crowning ceremony gave the black students a way to relate to homecoming.
Several persons, however, disagreed with these views. "I think it's very undemocratic when 600
or 700 persons start running this University," one alumnus remarked.
A few persons interviewed said they believed the ceremony was a step backward—toward segregation.
"For years the blacks fought for integration," one person said, "and now they're wanting seperation again. This is nothing more than a move toward separation."
Lorene Brown, Value, Miss. freshman, was crowned as the BSU queen by Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., senior and president of the BSU, during the pregame ceremonies. Bright presented Miss Brown with a long spear and a bouquet of long-stemmed roses dyed black for the occasion. The two attendants were Annie Dennis, Wichita sophomore, and Frances Robinson, Kansas City junior.
During the ceremony one BSU member dropped a burning torch, used in the ceremony, setting fire to the field.
During half-time the BSU queen and her attendants, riding in a black automobile, followed the University Homecoming queen's motorcade around the track. The black royalty circled the field waving clenched fists.
Official Bulletin
"Physics Colloquium, "Paired Phonon Analysis in Theory of Liquid He." Prof. E. Freenburg, Washington University, 124 Mottell, 430 n.
Table Tennis Club. 175 Robinson
Gymnasium, 6:45-9:13 p.m
Gymnasium, 6:45-9:45 p.m.
KU Judo Club. Robinson Gymnasium, 7 p.m.
Freshman Football. Oklahoma at N.
Michigan.
Freshman Football. Oklahoma at Norman, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Rectal Miriam Stewart
Green soprano Swauthout Rectal
H. 8 18
Film Society. "Way Down East." Dyche Auditorium.
Theatre Research Colloquium, Grad
theses report 341 Murphy,
3:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club. East door.
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Tennis Club. 173 Robinson
Gymnasium, 6:45-9:45 p.m.
Last door.
Robinson Gymnasium, 4.30
Table, Tegnis Chath, 173 Robinson
Gymnastics, 6:45-9:45 p.m.
chamber Choir (Delayed broad-
cast) ENTRANCE FM
Special Film, Any. Number Can Play. Kansas Union Forum. 7
Jayhawk Rodco. Club, Kansas Union,
Room 2A, 7:30 p.m.
Christian Science Organization.
Dunforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
Chamber Music Series, Parreni
Quartet Swarthout Recital Hall, 84
Broadway
Humanities Lecture. Octavio Paz
post-diplomat, Mexico. Kansas Union
Lecture. "Czech Theatre and Drama Today, After Capek." Ivan Klima, Czech dramatist and critic, Kansas Room 305, 3:30 p.m.
Special Film. "Underworld." Kansas Union Forum Room, 9 p.m.
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
OPENING IN? DAYS
DANCING — BEER —
ENTERTAINMENT
Located behind
Lum's
The University Seminar Committee of Student Union Activities will present its second seminar at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
KU professor to speak
The featured speaker is John Wright, associate professor of human development and family life. Wright's topic will be "Get off the Hill."
The committee is working on a Dec. 18, seminar which would include members of the Kansas Board of Regents, state officials and national legislators from Kansas. The seminar would be primarily a question-and-answer time in which students could have a prolonged dialogue with people whose legislative and administrative actions affect students.
The committee will sponsor a talk by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. on Feb. 12, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Three men served as President of the United States in 1841—Martin Van Buren, William Henry Harrison and John Tyler.
2 KANSAN Nov.10 1969
TIME The longest word in the language?
By letter count, the longest word may be pneumonoultramicroscopiesilicovolanocontiosis, a rare lung disease. You won't find it in Webster's New World Dictionary, College Edition. But you will find more useful information about words than in any other desk dictionary.
Take the word time. In addition to its derivation and an illustration showing U.S. time zones, you'll find 48 clear definitions of the different meanings of time and -27 idiomatic uses, such as time of one's life. In sum, everything you want to know about time.
This dictionary is approved,
and used by more than 1000
colleges and universities. Isn't
it time you owned one? Only
$6.50 for 1760 pages; $7.50
At Your Bookstore
WEBSTER'S
NEW WORLD
DICTIONARY
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OLLEGE EDITION
Al Winder wants you.
AI Winder wants you.
If you're an engineering major, At Winder wants you.
Because he's got something to say.
The company is: the Power & Light Company. The city: Kansas City. A city in the midst of its first real growing pains. A city with many challenges.
About a company. And a city. About challenges. And decisions.
For you, the challenge could be an 848,000 kilowatt power station now in the building stage; 345,000-volt transmission lines in a constantly
growing network; or solving environmental problems such as air pollution or beautification of facilities. All this, and more, to satisfy the human and social needs of the city...and a demand for electric service that will almost double in the next 10 years.
Decisions to meet these challenges can be yours. (But first you must decide to see Al Winder.)
If you do, you'll see he only cares about one thing: whether you're big enough to help a company help build a city.
KCPL
Kansas City Power & Light Company Needs Engineers.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Electrical, mechanical, civil engineers—interviews November 20th, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sign up now to see Al Winder (pronouner WINER-der) at Placement Office.
Campus briefs
Czech critic to speak
One of the signers of the 2,000-word manifesto for intellectual freedom that appeared just before the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia, will lecture twice at KU Tuesday.
Ivan Klima, Czech dramatist and critic currently in the United States on a University of Michigan grant, will speak at 3:30 p.m. in Kansas Union Room 305 on "Czech Theatre and Drama Today: After Capek" and at 8 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium on "The Artist-Intellectual in Czechoslovakia."
Bequest left to Med School
A scholarship fund for women studying medicine has been established with a $12,000 bequest from Gerlie Gillespie, SturGIS, Mich.
Although Mrs. Gillespie was neither a KU alumna nor a Kansas resident, she left her entire estate to the KU School of Medicine as a memorial to her employer and friend, Dr. Nina C. Wilkerson, a 1929 graduate of the KU School of Medicine.
The first Gerli Gillespie-Dr. Nina C. Wilkerson scholarships will be awarded for the 1970-71 academic year.
Debaters place second
University of Kansas debaters placed second among 82 teams entered in the novice division of the Central State College Invitational Debate Tournament at Edmond, Okla., last weekend.
Neal Pease, Lawrence freshman, and Bill Hensley, Wichita freshman, won eight rounds of debate before their loss in the finals to take the runner-up spot.
Senior loans available
A loan fund has been set aside by the senior class for use by its members
Three thousand dollars has been given to the Endowment Association to be distributed to the seniors who need money to help them complete their graduation, said Nancy Miller, Shawnee Mission senior. A maximum of $300 will be loaned to any one student at four percent interest rate to be paid over an 18 month period, Miss Miller said.
Miss Miller added the major requirement for the loan was to show a need for the money. She said the seniors who wanted to receive a loan should go to the Endowment Association office and apply.
Biologist to get research grant
A research project to study cell metabolism will be supported by
Nov. 10
1969 KANSAN 3
a $2,664 grant from the Brown-Hazen Fund of the Research Corp. of New York. Brower R. Burchill, assistant professor of biology, will receive the grant.
The
DRAUGHT
HOUSE
OPENING IN? DAYS
DANCING --- BEER---
ENTERTAINMENT
Located behind
Lum's
Grants given Research Corp. in the physical and biomedical sciences help initiate scholarly research by young faculty members who are beginning their careers as teacher-researchers and foster pioneering or speculative research by established investigators.
"VIVA O'ROURKE"
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Tom Stern, producer-star of "Hell's Angels '69," in partnership with American Universal films, will produce "Viva O'Rourke," an epic of the Mexican oil fields of the 1920s.
THE LOST GALLERY
Custom Framing
12-8 Sat. 12:30-6 Sun.
PAINTINGS
JOHN GARCIA
November 9-30
Oil Paintings
11 - 6 Mon. - Fri.
by
Reception Nov. 9,2-6 p.m.
711 W.23rd
Grace Pearson captures grand sweepstakes award
V12-1714
Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall won the Grand Sweepstakes award for the 1969 Homecoming decorations and placed first in the men's living group division.
First place winner in the mixed housing division was Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Second and third places went to Delta Upsilon fraternity and Pi Beta Phi
sorority and Delta Chi fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Second and third places in the
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
OPENING IN? DAYS
DANCING — BEER —
ENTERTAINMENT
Located behind
Lum's
men's living group division were won by Triangle fraternity and Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
sua
University Seminar presents John Wright, Assoc. Prof. HDFL and selected speakers Topic: Get Off The Hill Nov. 12, 7:30-Big Eight Room Discussion after presentation
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KANSAN Comment
Pint for pint
Pacifism and aversion to death and war is too often considered as a series of negative non-actions. "I don't kill. I don't join the army," the young student says proudly.
As he speaks, a 43-year-old man with a face the color of newsprint lies in a hospital, being "killed" by the same student. The man needs a blood transfusion and the hospital can't match his blood type. The student could have saved the man's life—but he was too busy handing out anti-war literature to visit the Red Cross Bloodmobile and become a donor.
But perhaps altruism—positive action—never excited you much. So why should you stop by the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday to participate in the blood drive?
If you like beer, after you've given blood, you can pick up a ticket for a free beer at a popular local tavern, provided by a local beer distributor. A pint of beer for every pint of blood. But don't become a donor thinking
secretly, "when you're out of blood, you're out of beer," because your largesse will be limited to a pint.
In past years, says Mrs. Marcella Wolfson, chairman of the Douglas County Red Cross Blood Drive, "Manhattan has beaten the pants off KU in every blood drive because the students there have been given free beer."
Becoming a blood donor is getting easier every year, too. No longer do 18-year-olds need parental consent. You don't have to quit eating before visiting the bloodmobile, as in the past. Practically the only requirement you must meet is a weight of at least 110 pounds.
Whatever your reasons for becoming a donor—altruism, duty, school pride, or thirst—that man whose life you have saved will thank you.
Visit the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union any time from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday.
And enjoy your beer.
Joanna K. Wiebe
Letters to the editor
To the editor:
When student leaders, invested with authority by a representative student government, submit to the demands of an agitating, vocal minority, they obviously no longer represent their constituency. The decision of the Homecoming Committee to allow a small fragment of the University community to be represented independently at the expense of the bulk of the student body suggests that weakness, cowardice and tainted tokenism exemplify our student leadership.
Since their decision was undoubtedly made to benefit the entire University, and since from their decision it appears that the Committee duly weighed the rationality of their decision against the reality of this University's situation
en masse would be sincerely appreciated by this member of the Great Silent Majority. Through your action, you gentlemen have kindly represented us to this minority group as weak and submissive; we feel such injustice should be rewarded for its merit.
Thank you again, Committee of the Whole, for demonstrating that leadership, intelligence and courage are not expendable elements in student government; and that the penalty for their absence is humiliation. Finally, I am assured by reason that you—with weakness as your shield, cowardice as your sword, and appeasement as your strategy—will never be called on again to defend with integrity the rights of the real student community.
Jim Yost
Pittsburg, Kan. junior
Sorel's News Service
1969 King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved.
© 1969, King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved.
Reason in high places
WASHINGTON—On the eve of this country's second moon landing, a deep theological rift has developed as a result of the first. "The greatest week in the history of the world since Creation," exuded President Nixon. Reproved Rev. Billy Graham from the Baptists State Convention in North Carolina: "It's the greatest thing since Jesus Christ."
ADMINISTRATION WE'LL ENCORE A COURT VOLUNTEER
CIVIL RIGHTS
THE MENAKER JOURNAL
"YOO HOO! DID I HEAR SOMEONE YELL FOR HELP THE OTHER DAY? Readers' write
To the editor:
The editorial entitled "Boo! Boo! — Rah! Rah! (Nov. 3) can be, at best, classed as useless; at worst, it is in remarkably poor taste.
We personally feel that the question of senior jerseys—to be or not to be—is not of paramount importance to anyone but seniors themselves. And if the sight of a senior in his "regalia" is so embarrassing, the solution is simple enough: avert your sensitive eyes.
The fact that one has attained the age of 21 or the class rank of senior does not automatically relegate him to the dusty files of the has-beens or old fogies. A senior is not denied the right to have fun, even if his methods are regarded as outdated and cornball by a precious few ultra-sophisticates. Perhaps the KU seniors are proud of themselves for having made it through the toils and trials of undergraduate study. Perhaps they are proud to let everyone know they are seniors.
Perhaps that degenerate evening at the Red Dog Inn is, for some seniors, a nostalgic last glance at their college days. And who has the right to criticize and condemn them for it? No one.
It is not fair to berate these seniors for their final fling, if that's what it is, even though it might appear frivolous. And who is Miss Diebolt to make value judgments about someone else's taste?
The memorable activities of the class of 1970 are not accomplished in the few days of senior activities. The accomplishments of this class have been made during the four hard years of undergraduate work, and it is not undone in one evening spent with Spider and the Crabs. It is grossly unfair even to insinuate that the KU seniors are beer-guzzling, mindless fools, for if they were, they would not be KU seniors.
If the 1970 class of KU seniors has accomplished nothing and left no note of its existence on the sands, it is the result of years of carelessness and neglect. Senior jerseys, senior hats and Spider and the Crabs do not cause sudden irresponsibility. They don't even represent it.
Barbara Brown
Clarendon, Ark. senior
Mina Relph,
Fredonia junior
Brenda Richmond
Kansas City, Kan. junior
* * *
To the editor:
May I extend a belated but sincere thank you for your article about the KU Reading Center in the Oct. 29, 1969 issue of the Kansan. We appreciate your well-written account of our services.
Robert T. Williams
Head, KU Reading Center
1. laxuscinet A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for holidays and special subscription a year. Second class postage paid at Lawnings 68044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without a prior fee. Prices subject to availability. Incumbently those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor Joanna K. Wblee
Campus Editor Joe Bullard
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Wise Editor Martha Manglesdorf
Arts and Review Editor Mike Sheaver
Women's Page Editor Linda Loyd
Photo and Graphics Editor Mike Rieke
Assistant New Rilee Donna Shraader, Stefan Kayas
Assistant Sports Editor Joe Childs
Assistant Editorial Editor Judith K. Diebolt
Assistant Campus Editor Rick Pendergrass
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BUSINESS STAFF
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Advertising Manager Jack Hurley
National Advertising Manager Rod Osborne
Classified Advertising Manager Larry O'Neil
Promotion Manager Reason O'Neill
Circulation Manager Todd Smith
Homecoming bands express views
By GENELLE RICHARDS Kansan Staff Writer
Two traveling rock groups paused briefly in Kansas Saturday to unload a concert, KU's Homecoming concert.
While here, The Turtles and Steppenwolf also unloaded some views on Kansas, Vietnam and premarital sex.
The Turtles, which began in 1965, consists of Howard Kaylan, Al Nichol, Mark Volman, Jim Pons and John Seiter.
Kaylan, commenting on the University of Kansas, said: "It looks like an all time great college town. The whole town is built around the campus, everywhere we drove there was a sign pointing to the University of Kansas."
Kaylan said that Europe was next on their agenda. The group's plans include more recordings and possible television appearances but no plans for movies. Kaylan said they were not planning any movies because there were "too many great ones," around already.
Comparing European and American audiences, the Turtles said they had been scared and unsure when appearing before Europeans for the first time but in a couple of days they realized that they were "just people."
Kaylan said they preferred college audiences in America because they "respect what you do and sit and listen. The listen to everything you do and not just to
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your hits. The teenagers are too busy worrying about how hip they are and if they should like this song because it is in."
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Discussing the approaching football game last Saturday afternoon the group said they had purchased tickets in the end zone. All of the group members agreed that football was "really great."
Kaylan said his favorite music groups were the Beatles, The Who. The Kinks. Quicksilver Messenger Service and the original Loving Spoonful. He said about Steppenwolf; "They used to be real good, but I don't think people should confuse what they are doing with rock and roll."
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Speaking about fashion, Kaylan said, "I'm for a see-through
have to do, it's a part of growing up," said Kaylan.
Volman, who like the others is a college drop-out, said, "College should be shortened because it is all a clique."
"College is somewhere to go until you decide what you want to do," said Nichol.
The Turtles' opinions of Kansas was that it was warm, conservative and "truly the middle."
"I've gotten an education from what I'm doing because I've learned more about people by traveling on the road," said Kaylan.
About the concert that night, Kaylan said, "I hope the kids that come can dig our music. We want everyone to have a good time."
About fashion, Kay said, "The shorter, the better. Fashion is moving in the right direction. Clothes for years have been designed by people who must have disliked women or they wouldn't make them look so terrible."
er gives up but he should never have been president," he said.
Talking about drugs Kay said, "You must separate addictive kinds from the gifts of nature. Drugs are an integral part of living which have been used for thousands of years, but kids sometimes find out about them too soon."
Steppenwolf just arrived back in the states two days earlier from Europe. While in London Kay said the audiences were "very receptive."
sicians as Jimi Hendrix, Crosby. Stills and Nash, amoug others but said that he doesn't like all of their songs 100 per cent.
"Music is coming together now like it is meant to be," Kay said.
KWSAN REVIEWS
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blouse anytime. Levis with T-shirts are great for guys; they never go out of style. We're not trend setters, we're just too normal to worry about that."
On Vietnam, Kaylan said he doesn't "actively support anyone involved in it."
"The moratorium was good," he said, "but of course everyone knew that it wasn't going to change anything. It was nice to know that so many believed. It was anti-establishment."
On drugs, Kaylan said. "Marijuana is good but it is up to the individual."
"If it was legalized people could bring it out in the open and not be afraid. They wouldn't have to go to the local junky," said Nichol. "Now they bust pot parties instead of speakeasies."
"Pre-marital sex is prequisa of a marriage. It's something you
THE DRAU GHT HOUSE
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While the other members of the group sat looking calm or walking around the room, John Kay of Steppenwolf talked about national and international issues.
On Vietnam Kay said, "Let's get out of there. There are no complicated solutions; our excuses are too weak. Look at who has the support of the people.
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THE JACKSON VALLEY
Photo by T. L. Simmons
Pepper's anguished cry
Pepper Rodgers buried his face in a towel after Colorado completed a 40-yard pass to the KU 11 in the final minutes. On the next play, CU tailback Bob Anderson twisted into the endzone to hand the Jayhawks a 17-14 Homecoming defeat.
Mizzou, Nebraska sharing top perch
(By United Press International) And then there were two.
Missouri and Nebraska emerged from Saturday's Big Eight football warfare tied for the lead. Two others, Oklahoma and Kansas State, had entered the day at the top with the Tigers and Cornhuskers.
In a head-to-head confrontation, Missouri spotted Oklahoma 10 points, then pummeled the Sooners, 44-10, with Terry McMilan inflicted the damage.
Oklahoma State returned home after three straight road encounters. The Cowboys, greeted
KANSAN Nov.10 1969
by 35,700 homecoming fans, also overcame a deficit and stunned Kansas State. 28-19.
Saturday's results left Missouri and Nebraska alone at the top with 4-1 conference records. Both teams must play their last two games on the road. When the two met earlier in the season, Missouri won, 17-7.
Missouri would seem to have the best of the schedule. The Tigers finish at Iowa State and Kansas, two teams that have not beaten any other Big Eight eos. Nebraska, however, finishes at Kansas State and Oklahoma.
Nebraska kept pace with Missouri by defeating Iowa State, 17-3.
Throatful of buffalo: Colorado shades KU
By MARY ARNOLD
Kansan Sports Writer
Saturday was an ideal day for KU's Homecoming—clear skies, warm weather, two queens and 37,000 fans.
Just as beautiful was the scoreboard as the Jayhawka clung to a 14-10 lead in the waning minutes. Then with 2:29 remaining, Colorado's Bob Anderson wriggled 12 yards for a touchdown.
And it became another ugly day.
KU discovered that a spoonful of pepper just wasn't enough to make the Buffalo go down as Colorado squelched the Jayhawks, 17-14. Thus, Kansas suffered its fifth consecutive Big Eight defeat and its season ledger slipped to 1-7.
Anderson's TD blast culminated a 59-yard scoring drive in three plays. Fullback Ward Walsh had cracked seven yards before quarterback Paul Arendt pegged a 40-yard pass to Bob Masten. Masten rambled from the KU 44 to the 12 with Arendt's short pass.
Defense starred
Until then, KU's defense had stolen the show. Al Jacobic had blocked a punt by Colorado's Dick
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A 27-yard field goal by Dave Haney trimmed the advantage to 7-3 at halftime.
Fumble revived hope
Colorado pushed 56 yards in 12
plays, scoring with 10:49 left to
play on Arendt's eight-yard
keeper. But the Jayhawk defense,
with Dale Holt's fumble recovery
at the CU 35, gave the Jayhawks
a go-ahead opportunity.
Sophomore quarterback Phil
Basler lobbed a 28-yard pass to (Continued to page 8)
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Rodgers now a prophet frustrated by "flukes"
60 50
Joy in Mudville
Pepper Rodgers said after the Oklahoma State game last week that everything had happened to his Jayhawks this season. Kansas had been beaten time and again on punt returns, kickoff returns, interceptions and freak plays of every variety.
But Rodgers later qualified his statement. "We haven't had a fumble recovered on us in mid-air yet. That's about the only thing that hasn't happened to us. Now that I've said it, it probably will happen."
And it did
Colorado defensive back Pete Jacobsen recovered a George Garrett garrille after the KU split end had caught a 28-yard pass. That's right, Jacobsen caught Garrett's fumble in mid-air.
That KU misee did not sink the Jayhawks Saturday, but it gave a freakish note to a 17-14 defeat—the same sort of fluke that has haunted Pepper's crew since the season's opener. Now 1-7, the 'Hawks must finish with Oklahoma and Missouri.
Rodgers summed up the frustration in the KU locker room.
"With all honesty, we're just not a very good football team. We've tried to win. We're in the game with everybody we play, we just don't win. This must be the most frustrating season in the history of anyplace. If anybody says they know how our team and I feel, they don't."
Defeat, though, has not snamed the Jayhawks.
"I am really proud of the kids," Rodgers said. "They keep hanging in there. It's easy to get 'em up when you win. It's really hard when you don't."
Colorado coach Eddie Crowder paid tribute to the KU team, saying, "This Big Eight conference is something else, and the balance is the best ever. The difference between Missouri on top of the league and Kansas on the bottom, is about 1/64th of an inch.
Linebacker Kenny Page (50) leaps joyfully, tugging at the sleeve of Emery Hicks, as KU scored its first touchdown. Hicks had just given the football the forbidden "spikeritis" in the end-zone after his six-yard run with the Colorado punt blocked by Al Jacobic.
"This Kansas team is just as good as last year's, except for two things," added Crowder. "They are playing against tougher opposition and they are inexperienced at key positions." Crowder
indicated the inexperience hurts most in the pressure situations. And with the balance of power and talent so evenly distributed in the conference, clutch errors can make the difference between winning and losing.
KU notches 6th straight title
Kansan Sports Writer
By DAN REEDER
MANHATTAN—KU's runners were bunched together, 9th through 13th Saturday, but the Jayhawks were all alone again as Big Eight cross country champions.
A real "team" effort in an individual sport carried KU to its
sixth consecutive title. The 55 points wrested the crown from challengers Nebraska (72), Missouri (79) and Kansas State (82).
KU's Jay Mason, knocked down early in the race and losing almost 30 yards on the pack, recovered to place ninth in 19:53 over the Old Stagg Hill golf course.
Placing 19.58, freshman Jon Callen clocked 10.58. Three KU harriers—Dave Anderson, Doug Smith and Rich Elliott—followed
Nov.10 KANSAN 7
1969
within one second of each other
with Anderson posting 20:02
Howe ranks No.1
In the medal chase, Kansas State sophomore Jerome Howe sprinted past Iowa State's Dennis McGuire on the final 150 yards for a course record 19:29.6 victory. Howe's time over the four-mile course bettered by 14.4 seconds the mark set by Colorado's Rick Trujillo one week earlier.
McGuire, Howe, Trujillo and
Douglass stars
THE DRAU GHT HOUSE
CHICAGO (UPI) — Rookie quarterback Bobby Douglass fired touchdown passes of 25 and 12 yards, sparking the Chicago Bears to their first (1-7) victory of the season Sunday in a 38-7 rout of Pittsburgh's Steelers.
Gale Sayers plunged for TDs of two and one yards while rushing for 109 yards.
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An informal meeting to discuss the contemporary card writing program on this campus by Hallmark, with a question and answer period following presentation.
Unbeaten frosh collide tonight
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Staff Writer
Remember 1968, when the KU varsity was battling for a conference championship and a bowl berth while the KU freshmen were fighting hard for their first victory?
Pepper Rodgers' varsity came through with a share of the league title and represented the
Big Eight well in the Orange Bowl, but Dick Tomey's fresh stumbled through an 0-4 season.
This year Rodgers and Tomey find their roles reversed.
The varsity, now 1-7 for the year, instead of being nationally ranked and fighting for the league crown is just hoping for a victory or two so that they can escape the Big Eight cellar.
McVea spurs Chiefs
KANSAS CITY (UPI)—Warren McVea broke open a rugged defensive struggle with a 50-yard scoring pass and a two-yard run for a touchdown Sunday as the Kansas City Chiefs retained their lead in the American Football League's Western Division with a 27-3 victory over the San Diego Chargers.
MeVea, obtained in a trade with Cincinnati before the season began, tossed a left-handed strike to Frank Pitts, who was all alone
behind the Chargers' secondary. Pitts' touchdown came with 1:32 to play in the third quarter and gave the Chiefs some breathing room at 20-3.
McVea added another touchdown on the end of a 31-yard drive after Willie Lanier intercepted a Marty Domres' pass. Big play was a 21-yard pass from Len Dawson to Pitts. From the 10, McVea swept end to the two, then scored on the next play.
Buffs wreck Homecoming
(Continued from page 6)
George McGowan on 3rd-and-14,
moving KU to the 11. Basler swept three yards on a suspense-
ful 4th-and-2, and on the next play, wedged one yard into the endzone for a 14-10 margin at 5:46.
The Buffs, after a punt exchange, struck quickly for the winning TD. Jim Cooch's interception, the third suffered by
KU squad best again
(Continued from page 7)
Nebraska's Pete Brang led the race, moving ahead in the 54-man chase after the first half-mile. McGuire and Brang, both under Trujillo's former record, finished second and third respectively.
The Jayhawks travel Saturday to Carbondale, Ill., for the Central Collegiate championships and a five-mile test.
Basler, killed the Jayhawks' last-gasp effort.
Kansas defenders limited the highly-touted Anderson to a scant 26 yards rushing in the first half, and the Jayhawks forged a 221-187 rushing advantage for the game. Anderson finished with 85 yards on 21 carries, just ahead of KU fullback John Riggins-82 yards on 16 assignments.
But KU suffered with its passing game, or lack of it. Basler completed 4 of 20 aerials for 83 yards while Arendt connected on 9 of 18 for 165 yards. Colorado held a 352-304 total offense edge.
Basler's passing misfortunes, and three missed field goals by Bell—two of those within his range—soured the day for the Javahaws.
Nov.10
1969
8 KANSAN
The setback gave the Jayhawks a woefully good chance at reversing its 9-1 record of the 1968 Orange Bowl entry. Oklahoma and Missouri remain on the schedule, the latter opponent leading the conference (5-1) and journeying to Lawrence Nov. 22 in the season finale.
Nevada, driest state in the nation has an average annual rainfall of 8.81 inches.
Coach Tomey's powerful freshman team, after rolling over K-State, Missouri and Oklahoma State in succession, will venture to Norman today to try and stop an unbeaten Oklahoma freshman team and end the year with a perfect 4-0 record. Game time is 7:30 p.m.
Tomey, after starting a different quarterback in each of the Jayhawks' three victories, has settled with Bob Bruegging as his starting signal-caller for the Oklahoma game. Bruegging, 6-3 and 185 pounds, passed KU to a 30-20 victory over Missouri in his first starting role. Last week, while backing up Marvin Foster, Bruegging fired a 16-yard touchdown strike to tight end John Schroll.
Foster, who started at quarterback last week against Oklahoma State, will return to his split end position this week.
Joining Bruegging in KU's potent backfield will be tailback Tom Woods, the team's leading rusher; wingback Mike Cerne, and hopefully fullback Jerome Nelloms, who suffered a shoulder injury in practice this week. If Nelloms is unable to start, Tomey will probably shift the hard-running Woods to fullback and move
KU's defense, which has been outstanding all year and was especially good in shutting out Oklahoma State in the second half, is again anchored by linebacker Don Perkins and tackles Andy Sibbernsen and Gery Palmer.
Jerry Evans, the team's punter,
to the tailback slot.
Oklahoma (2-0) nudged Tulsa, 28-24, and then trounced Texas Tech, 50-14.
Last year, under quarterback Jack Mildren, Oklahoma's frosh humiliated KU, 55-20.
Two powerful backs head this year's talented Oklahoma squad. Joe Wylie, a wingback from Henderson, Tex., and one of the nation's most sought after prep stars in 1688, was very impressive in OU's two wins. Wylie and fullback A. J. Perryman are the nucleus of OU's crushing ground game.
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March for Peace November 15th at the State Capital in Topeka
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KSTA told self-esteem vital in work
Self-esteem can make the difference between an effective teacher and one who has problems with discipline in class.
This was one of the points emphasized by John Valusek, a Wichita clinical psychologist, speaking at the second general assembly of the 1969 Kansas State
Teachers Association Friday. Five thousand teachers from northeast Kansas attended the meeting Thursday and Friday at Allen Field House.
Valusek said that society makes emotional slaves of both adults and children by teaching them at an early age to measure their
worth by conventional criteria of success. He said teachers must learn to value themselves according to subjective standards, not those imposed by society.
"Teachers who do not condemn themselves for not living up to pre-determined standards are
free to accept and love their pupils," he said.
Valusek also said that teachers should encourage the emotional expression of their pupils, since society-imposed repression could cause later problems such as ulcers.
SYRIA SETS RECORD
SYRIA SETS RECORD
DAMASCUS, Syria (UPI)
Syrian cotton exports this year have reached a record level, according to the officia1 Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA).
SANA said contracts for the year ended July 31 totaled 120,043 tons.
Top importer was the Soviet Union with 28,000 tons, followed by Communist China, 18,000 tons, and France, 11,743 tons.
Gilbert & Sullivan cast set
The Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company has chosen casts for 2 one-act plays and an evening of famous Gilbert and Sullivan musical selections, to be presented during the spring semester. The company plans to present the productions to civic and educational groups.
The cast for "Cox and Box": James Rigler, Highland Park, Ill., sophomore; Geoffrey Steere, associate professor of American Studies; and Scott Holmes, Kenilworth, Ill., junior.
The cast for "Trial by Jury" Paul Gilbert, Seneca junior; Richard Weston, Washington, N. J., graduate student; Scott Foster, Topeka sophomore; Alfred Lata, lecturer in chemistry; Doug Hofmeister, Overland Park sophomore; and Kristine Holdomb, Hugoton freshman.
The cast for the evening of musical numbers: Carolyn Weber, Topeka sophomore; Lila Jensen and Sharon F.K. Zongker, Wichita graduate students; Rigler; Weston; Lata and Holmes.
Paz to visit, lecture at KU
Octavio Paz, Mexican poet and essayist, will give the second Humanities Lecture of the year 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union ballroom. The lecture topic will be "The Body: Ritual and Rebellion."
Paz will spend three days at the University of Kansas and will speak to classes in philosophy, Spanish, Latin-American literature and contemporary poetry during this time.
Paz has published more than 20 major works of poetry, essays.
short stories, plays and criticisms. Seven of his books will be on sale soon. He founded and edited several literary magazines, founded an experimental theater group and has collaborated with new poets, novelists and painters in Mexico and Spanish America
Paz served as Mexican ambassador to India for six years. He resigned this office as a protest against the Mexican government's "repression" of the student movement.
Nov.10 1969 KANSAN 9
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Paz is currently a professor at the University of Texas.
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Spin-Spin studied
A $62,000 grant from the National Science Foundation will support the research of Jack W. Culvahouse, professor of physics, in the field of magnetism.
Culvahouse hopes the research project, "Origins of Spin-Spin Interactions in Insulating Solids," will uncover the causes of magnetism.
Two graduate students in physics will be assisting Culvahouse. They are Lawrence G. Pfortmiller, Natoma, and Robert T. Dixon, Excelsior Springs, Mo.
"This Lillian Gish evening provides a fascinating glimpse of the early cinema as well as a tribute to one of its all-time greats. Miss Gish offers a lively running commentary about the stellar personalities of the silent screen. It was lascinating, and the capacity crowd awarded the star a standing ovation."
with Miss Gish in person and a program of rare early films including Griffith, Chaplin, Keaton.
Lillian Gish & The Movies
★★★
Lillian Gish In Person
"A theatrical experience that should not be missed. N.Y., 3815."
SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER
Student Union Thursday, Nov.13 8:00 50c
presents
November 13 - 22
Murphy Hall
University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
by Brenden Behan
The Hostage
For Tickets Call: UN 4-3982.
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This month try meds. They come in regular or super with a soft polyethylene applicator.
See how much better fewer tampons can be.
MLC SIM and MGDESS are trademarks of Personal Products Company.
Homecoming Queen's week a hectic one
KU's new Homecoming Queen Janet Merrick, Prairie Village senior, will be going out with her two attendants some time this week, not for a victory celebration, but for a thank-goodness-its-over celebration.
Not that Miss Merrick and the other two Homecoming Queen candidates didn't enjoy the excitement and the honors given them, but there were some hectic points in the two weeks between the time judging began and last Saturday's game, when Gov. Robert Docking crowned Miss Merrick.
In addition to the preliminary strain of appearing before the judges who were to choose the new queen, Miss Merrick and her attendants, Candice Heavin, Overland Park senior, and Nancy
Watson, Kansas City, Mo., senior, spent a strenuous week touring Kansas, making television and radio appearances.
Miss Merrick, who has a high B-average in personnel administration, said Sunday that she was surprised when she was announced as Homecoming Queen.
"It was something I didn't think I'd ever experience," she said.
She said that there was such good rapport between her and the other two candidates that they didn't care which of them won. She said the girls were very different from one another, but that the three had gotten along perfectly.
"They're just peaches," Miss Merrick said, speaking of Miss Heavin and Miss Watson.
Miss Merrick said that her parents were very proud.
A whirlwind schedule of 10 performances in three days begins today for the University of Kansas symphony orchestra. The orchestra is on its fall tour, and is to appear in five towns in Kansas and Missouri.
Dr. George Lawner, former assistant conductor of the San Francisco Opera Company, directs the KU symphony.
Orchestra's annual fall tour begins
Among the selections to be played on the tour are a suite from Prokofiev's "Romeo and Juliet," the Prelude and Love Death from Wagner's "Tristan and Isolde" and music by Mendelssohn.
Featured soloists on the programs are Carl Pieper, cellist and Tulsa graduate student, and Ken Wiley, French horn player and St. Joseph senior.
Four days after it returns to KU the symphony will present its annual fall concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, in the University Theatre.
On its fall tour the symphony is to play at the following schools: Monday, Topeka West High School, Washburn Rural High School and Bishop LeBlond High School in St. Joseph, Mo.; Tuesday, Hiwatah High School, Nemaha High School in Seneea and Clay Center High School; Wednesday, Highland Park High School in Topeka.
FIRE WINS
ST. ANDRE DE LEURE, France (UPI)—Firemen lost their truck in the line of duty. A windswept grass blaze encircled and destroyed the pump track and firefighting equipment while they were trying to put out the blaze.
10 KANSAN Nov. 10 1969
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
MONDAY NIGHT IS
"GREEK NIGHT"
BEER
10¢
(light stein)
(Dark stein-15¢)
BOOMBA-LA-ROOMBA
SHAKEY'S
544 W. 23rd VI 2-2266
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
"My mother was more nervous beforehand than I was," she said.
THE
DRAUGHT
HOUSE
OPENING IN? DAYS
DANCING — BEER —
ENTERTAINMENT
Located behind
Lum's
Miss Merrick comes from a family of four girls, and two older sisters had already been candidates for Homecoming Queen at KU before her. She said, however, that the most beautiful girl in her family is her younger sister, who is 15. Miss Merrick said that her father already had high hopes for his youngest daughter.
Miss Merrick said that in a sense she would never be completely done with her ceremonial
duties as queen. As a representative of KU she will probably be called upon to appear at other KU functions during the year.
"Even though my 'regal reign' is over now," she said, "they know they can always call on me."
Announcement:
to Apartment Renters
You can find a wide variety of rental prices by contacting:
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St.
(adjacent to campus)
Visit the office at above address or call 843-4993 for further details. Rental prices are established on an incentive basis, and are competitive with quality one-bedroom as well as two-bedroom apartments.
There is a price for two, three and/or four occupants. YOU CHOOSE THE PLAN TO FIT YOUR REQUIREMENTS.
SAVE MONEY and LIVE BETTER at these CONVENIENTLY LOCATED APARTMENTS.
THE PLAYBOY CLUB IS HOLDING A "CASH IN"
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CASH IN—SEE PLAYBOY'S MAN ON CAMPUS. Playboy's campus rep has all the details on how you can apply for your own personal Playboy Club Cash Key. He'll prove to you that an evening at the Playboy Club is the best buy in town. You'll find his name and phone number listed here. Or contact the General Manager of the Playboy Club. Prefer to write? Use the handy coupon below. Do yourself a favor and apply for your Playboy Club Key today.
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WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kman are offered
all at the university to color to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier. Inputs for mag, or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM, Musk Will match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of strap, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Edition.
Campus MD House, 411 W. 14th St.
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white, everything in tact—good mechanical shank. front seat wall. Call Fire Dept., write 211. E. 9th. chute, Kansas. 4105. 11-14
1967 VW, Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. ff
MGA-1600-1961-red, new black top and interior, body and motor in excellent condition, see at 2028 for condition after 4:00 weeks this week. 11-10
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear end. Aqua/white, $85.00, contact Mrs. Thomas, $85.00, U 4-3833, after 5:30 84-12-5469, UN
Private Guitar lessons-folks-flamenco, classic—six years experience also fender stratocaster for sale Call 842-0340 for Garth. 11-10
One women's Naismith dorm contract for second semester. Call VI 2-5898. 11-11
2 tickets for KU-Oklahoma game.
Doug Henson, V 1-2100. 11-11
1965 Tempest 2 door hardtop, V8, 4 bbl, stick, heavy duty suspension, radio, heater, whitewalls, tinted glass, full instrumentation. Clean, one owner. $1295. Call Steve, Room 337. VI 2-1200. 11-13
1967 Chevelle SS 396, 4-speed, 2 dr.
drive, top, of, warranty I
Call 842-8852.
5 string bluegrass banjo; Harmony. Excellent condition with case included. Contact Larry at 842-9100, rm. 327 or leave name and phone. 11-12
Portable TV, 12 inch, BW with UHF and ear piece. Great for dorm view-* no need to read room windows.* $5. Call 842-3197 after 9 p.m. except Tues. 11-12
For Sale. Five tickets to the QU-KU game, at a reduced price of $5.00 (they cost us $6.10). Contact Steve at VI 2-8732. 11-14
'67 Honda 305ce Scramble; stock,
very clean, no damage; plus helmet,
extras for $425. Call Rick, VI 3-7415.
No. 423 after 6. 11-12
Complete equipment set for a dark room enlarger. Dursh M 600. Contact Majid Samaam any time after International House 1204 Oread.
NOTICE
515 Michigan St, Bt. B-B-Que, if you want some honest好-to-goodness B-B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our speciality. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday f
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair probation station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynafit, and Marantz. Call 843-1484.
Loans to junior, senior and grad. students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Mass. VI3-8074. tf
Raney Drug Stores
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
3 locations to serve your every need
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition, Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Would you like to sub-lease my three to four person Harvard Square Apt. Good location, close to campus. For infomation call John at VI 2-0042.
Do you sew but can't afford high pried fabrics? Just arrived from New York, beautiful designer fabrics; 52% cotton, low prices, call 843-388-112 for appt.
Biology Club—Nov. 11, 7:30 p.m., 225
Snow. Discussion on where to go and how to get in Medical, Dental, and graduate schools.
11-11
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapid, VI 3-4032. tf
If you would like to see a course in Modern Hebrew offered at KU next Fall, please contact Sidney Flarman, 842-7822. 11-12
If you can't go to Khandamu to shop,
come to the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open 8.30-4.30 daily.
12.30-4.30 Sunday. 11-12
Need extra cash. I will die if I don't get an Economics 10 tutor—instructor is Pritchard. Call 842-2887
A.S.A.P. 11-12
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens furnished to $185 per unit. Hired by Construction Company VI 3-6153 or VI 3-5730. If
FOR RENT
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6185.
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35 a month. Available now, call VI 3-2116. tf
Furnished, wood-panelled 4-room apartment for one or two. One block from campus at 1500 Kentucky. Parking. Available Now. 842-15921.
MAN ON A PUBLIX BIKE
For Rent: 1 bedroom unfurnished apartment. 2 blocks from campus. $110 per month plus utilities. Call 842-3750. 11-13
Have moved into an apartment. Must sell woman's Naismith contract. Will take any reasonable offer. Call VI 2-1188. 11-14
Lost full tool box Oct. 26 evening between Lawrence (4th and North) and Tonganoxie via Hwy. 40. Urgently needed. Call 843-8468. 11-10
LOST
Man's billfold in Trailroom, Kansas
Union. Keep the money—return the
wallet to John Fizzizman at the
Museum of Nat. History or leave
message. UN 4-3178. 11-11
Two personalized checkbooks belonging to Robert E. Townsend, J. 1666 North Third, Garden City, Kansas. Reward offered, call Bob at V1-11-11
Slamsee, sealpoint neutered male, no front claws, clipped whiskers, very crosseyed, very big, 15-20 pounds, reward. Please call Sherry, 842-123-6900
Small male kitten, white with brown gray markings, plastic fea collar. Last seen near Sandalwood Monday. 843-3453. 11-10
Lost small brown purse in Strong or
Long day—sunny reward—11-10
Kathy, #843-8505. 11-10
Light blue girls billfold, contains important cards. Keep money and call Nancy at 842-6378. 11-10
Men's & Ladies' 2 piece Suits $1.29
PLANNING A TRIP??
ROYAL
Mon., Tues. & Wed.
with dry clean order
7:30 AM 6:00 PM
- Plain Dresses __ $1.29
HELP WANTED
- Shirts Loundered
4 for $1
Let
Maupintour
7:30 - 6:00 Mon. - Sat.
ROTAL MASTER CLEANERS 842 Mass
842 Mass.
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part
in person only. Burger
Chef, 814 Laws
Wanted d: Rock bands. Apply at
5—directly below Lamys. H-10
and 5—directly below Lamys. H-10
TRAVEL SERVICE
Malls Shopping Center
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations
Good experienced organ player needed for Rock Band. Losing our organ player as soon as replaced. Call Glen Morton. VI 3-7810. 11-11
VI 3-1211
Wanted: part time male and female help for bartenders and waiters. Apply between 4 and 5. Tues.-Fri., at 84 W, 24th, directly behind Lum's. 11-10
Male - evening and weekend help wanted. No experience needed. Apply at Harold's "66" Service. 1401 West 6th Street. 11-13
Wanted: Typist who is full-time student and qualifies for work study program Phone 864-3819 or 843-3718. 11-13
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in Lawrence at least one year. Prefer graduate preferred. Phone VI 3-6424. 11-21
WANTED
CASH—for your old weight-lifting outfit that's been gathering dust under the bed for so long. Call 843-8251 in the A.M. (Keep trying). 11-13
Wanted: To buy 1 set of Mag Wheels for a 1968 Chevy Nova. Call VI 2-6600 and leave a message for Jose. Room 753. 11-13
Must have 3 tickets to the MU-KU game. If you can help, call Lee at 842-4725. Important. 11-12
TYPING
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and or edited by experienced typist Richard Kline, gish-Speech Education. Electric office-size typewriter 843-2873. 11-24
TYPING: Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misel. typing. Have文具 with pica type. Efficient and fast service. Phone 9554, Mrs. Wright. 12-5
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
Prompt, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, dissertations, miscellaneous papers. Electric Corona- Pica paper. Mrs. Troxel, VI 247-11-10
AUTO WRECKING
Metal Sculpture Supplies
Tires and Batteries
A Bankmark Store
East End of 9th St.
V13-0956
NEW and USED PARTS
PERSONAL
Plots fly at half in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparative information chart. Phone 842-1124.
Passenger Tires 215% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Complete Mechanical Service
Brake Lighters 98c
Carburetor Service
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment.
GOODYEAR TIRES
Ralph Dobyns. Where are you? Call Tony Croman. 842-7771 or 843-8585. 11-14
11-19
- Portraits
- Passports
Page Fina Service
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
摄影师
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
Home of the "Big Shef"
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
Mass. VI 3-0330
Audio Sale
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Buy at Factory Cost plus 10%
You pay shipping
No better discount anywhere
Call
842-2047 Eve. 4-10 p.m.
A. R. Dynaco Dealer
ENTERTAINMENT
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment need call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kaua'i, 913-648-1777, iff
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Oils and Acrylics Bankmark Services
- Stretcher Frames
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
Exclusive Representative of
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
L. G. Balfour Co.
- Bodges
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers - Stationery
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers
- Stationery
- City
- Sportswear
- Gifts
- Plaques
Mugs
- Favors
Rings - Crested - Letters
Al Lauter
A Lester 915-1371
645 Moss. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
VI 3-1571
Sizzling steaks and fresh seafoods await you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest . . . preparing the selections as you like them with all the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
The Sirloin Alwaus Pleasurable Dinina
Open Daily—Except Monday 4:30 p.m. VI 3-1431
1½ Mi. North of the Kaw River Bridge
HAPPINESS IS A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Contact: Larry Rosenberger
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
Financial woes plague instructors
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from Page 1)
classes they teach. Nine hours is considered a full-time load for teachers at KU, but most A.I.s while teaching six or nine hours of classes, are said to be carrying two-thirds the load of a full-time teacher.
While teaching two-thirds of a full load, A.I.'s are getting one-fourth the pay of full-time teachers. An assistant professor could be making $10,000 a year teaching nine hours, while an A.I. could be getting $2,500 a year teaching six or nine hours.
In April, 1969, a committee of graduate students circulated a petition urging three reforms in the salary scale.
The first request was for a $200 raise for all A.I.'s and T.A.'s starting this fall. This request was met
halfway, with $100 increase in the base level.
The second request asked the University to allow for an annual percentage increase in the salary levels of A.T.'s in order to match the cost of living.
When inflation is increasing the cost of living by 4-6 per cent a year, and the salary level remains the same from year to year, it becomes practically impossible for a graduate student, especially one with a wife and children, to make ends meet, even with outside financial help such as another job or G. I. Bill money.
This second request has not been acted upon.
The third request was for the state legislature to remove whatever obstacles would prevent the remission of fee payments for
A. I.'s and T.A.'s. This request, too, has not been acted upon.
A bulletin issued by an ad hoc committee of graduate students this fall commented on the new $100 salary increase.
The bulletin said, "This is a step in the right direction, but we should keep working next year to reach the goals originally asked for. By that time they'll be obsolete anyway."
There are other problems involved in the salary-level situation. One problem is a few departmental chairmen use the money originally set aside for A.L.'s salaries for other purposes.
If money is not specifically budgeted for salaries, a department head may resort to taking money out of his general fund when other expenses arise. This lump is also the source of A.I.'s salaries.
State tightening deferment rules
Selective Service boards in Kansas are getting stiffer in their requirements for student draft deferments.
The State Selective Service Headquarters has instructed local Selective Service boards to be strict regarding the number of credits required in an academic year (12 months) to determine continued eligibility for the II-S classification.
Currently, 25 per cent of a four-year program or 20 per cent of a five-year program must be completed each year. Those students who will be two or three semester
12 KANSAN Nov.10 1969 1969
hours deficient may not have jeopardized their II-S classification, but they should check with their local boards for clarification.
State Headquarters will be issuing the following guide lines for local boards:
- A curriculum that requires 120-130 hours for graduation should be considered an eight-semester program.
If KU can't attract high-quality graduate students because of low salaries and tuition payment, which are not present at many other schools, a large portion of the teaching staff, especially in freshman and sophomore sections, could decline in quality.
To help correct this situation, Francis Heller, dean of faculties, sent out a memorandum which said any switching of funds by department chairmen must be reported to his office. This is a step to centralize accounting procedures and eliminate some casual practices that have been costly to A.L.'s and T.A.'s in the past.
A curriculum that requires 131-145 hours for graduation should be considered a nine- semester program.
- A curriculum that requires 146 or more hours for graduation should be considered a ten-semester program.
Tomorrow: Feeding the family
The ramifications of continuing low salaries for assistant instructors and teaching assistants are many.
Students with problems should see Kenneth Ivers, assistant to the dean of men, 228 Strong Hall.
If KU can't compete with other large schools in the region, it will become increasingly difficult to attract the best graduate candidates, and, as a result, the high standards reputed to belong to KU graduate programs may begin to fall.
A FIRST
SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI)—Bobby Foster became the first New Mexico fighter to win a world title when he captured the light-heavyweight crown in 1968 from Dick Tiger.
Bubbles under study
Bubble shapes as they form and detach from a liquid surface during boiling will be studied by a University of Kansas professor with the help of a two-year grant totaling $42,000 from the National Science Foundation.
THE DRAU GHT HOUSE
OPENING IN? DAYS
DANCING — BEER —
ENTERTAINMENT
Located behind
Lum's
Dr. Russell B. Mesler, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, will conduct the research with high speed photographs and computers.
Bubble detachment from a boiling surface is, according to Dr. Mesler, one of the most commonly used heat transfer methods. This has application to such things as cooking, air-conditioning, and liquid-fuel rockets, he said.
Three barbers— no butchers
the STADIUM BARBER SHOP
Closed
Wednesday
1033 Mass. V1 2-9400
ALTERNATIVES
JANUARY 19
EDUCATION
TO
APRIL 25
CIDOC INVITES YOU TO CUERNAVACA for sixteen seminars aimed at finding ways to free education from schooling. Seminar leaders will include:
JEROME BRUNER
PAULO FREIRE
PAUL OGOODMAN
JOHN HOLT
IVAN ILLICH
JONATHAN KOZOL
Take the entire program or enroll in individual seminars. Take advantage of conference and courses on Latin America and of INTENSIVE INSTRUCTION IN SPOKEN SPANISH.
For detailed information write: CIDOC----SPRING 1970
APD0 479, CUENAVACA, MEXICO
OUR HAMBURGERS ARE
ALWAYS A MEAL—
Go To BURGER CHEF!
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the only thing
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Campbell's
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Men's Wear
V1 3-0454
Salaries give 'inadequate' support
(Editors' note: This is the second of two articles on the financial plight of graduate students teaching at the University of Kansas. The first article appeared in the Monday Kansan.)
By CRAIG PARKER Kansan Staff Writer
Assistant instructors (A.I.'s) at the University of Kansas receive a salary of $2,400 their first year. The salary does not increase quickly after that and can reach a high of only $3,200.
Alan B. Wallace, assistant instructor of English, has been a graduate student at KU for six years. He makes $2,800 a year as an A. I.
Wallace, who is married and has two children.
"Salaries for A.I.'s are totally inadequate to support a man with a wife and family." said Wallace.
agrees with other graduate students that salaries at KU are too low.
He said unlike many other universities, KU makes no allowance in its salaries to graduate students for the number of dependents they have.
Wallace said he and his family were able to survive for two reasons.
"My wife and I have learned to live cheaply," said Wallace. "Neither of us come from families where there was a lot of extra money, so we're pretty thrifty."
The other reason Wallace can get by is that
he has come across some good deals. He rents a house for only $75 a month and both he and his wife work part time.
"Summer is the worst time of the year," Wallace said, "because it's hard to get a job in Lawrence. In September we have to pay rent, tuition, and buy books. My first paycheck doesn't come until October L."
In his six years as a graduate student, Wallace has gone to summer school only once.
"If I didn't have to work every summer, I could have finished my graduate studies a year earlier. I'd like to take courses in the summer, but I can't afford to," he said.
(Continued to page 12)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.42
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1969
UDK News Roundup
Tear gas in Memphis
MEMPHIS, Tenn—Police sprayed tear gas down half a block of a south Memphis street Monday night to quell 600 Negro demonstrators angered by the arrest of the Rev. Ralph Abernathy and 53 of his followers.
Moments after Abernathy and the others were taken away in a bus when they defied police orders against a rush hour march, bottles and bricks began flying on Hernando Street. At least one firebomb was reported.
Haynsworth loses vote
WASHINGTON—Sen. Thomas J. McIntyre, D-N.H., who had been counted among the undecided in the controversy over the Supreme Court nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth, announced Monday he would vote against the Greenville, S.C., appeals court judge.
This brought to 44 the number of senators considered firmly against President Nixon's nominee, against 37 in favor and 19 still undecided. It is those who still have not made up their minds who will decide the issue after Senate debate on the nomination begins Thursday.
At least 13 persons were murdered in political crimes Monday and early today, pushing the death toll to 56 since campaigning started July 1.
WASHINGTON — America's Catholic priests asked their bishops Monday for a full voice in the policy-making councils of the church.
Violence mars election
Priests ask policy vote
MANILA — Filipinos voted in general elections today amid reports of new political violence, including ambushes, kidnapings and killings. Officials said that a Communist killer squad was out to assassinate President Ferdinand E. Marcos who is running for an unprecedented second term.
They received immediate assurances the U.S. Catholic hierarchy is moving in that direction.
The priests' plea for greater sharing of authority was similar to the one made by bishops of the world at a meeting with the Pope in Rome last month. Pope Paul VI promised he will collaborate closely with bishops in making a decision affecting the whole church.
---
Military alerted for M-day march
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Defense Department has alerted an unspecified number of troops to be ready to put down any disorders in the Washington area during this week's antiwar demonstrations, the Pentagon said Monday.
Last week, the Justice Department cited the possibility of violence in refusing to permit war protesters to conduct a mass march down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House.
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said the units alerted are more than 100 miles from Washington and are in addition to 28,000 regular military personnel already available here, plus the 2,700 men in the District of Columbia National Guard.
"Certain commanders have been advised to assure that the responsiveness of their units is appropriate to meet possible needs," Friedheim said.
He refused to identify the units alerted or the numbers of men involved, but they presumably included elements of the 82nd Airborne Division at Ft. Bragg, N.C., which have been used here twice in the last two years for such purposes.
Backers of a pro-administration Veterans Day rally meantime predicted that 10,000 persons would attend the event at the Washington Monument grounds at 1 p.m. CST today.
"I think it is high time we had a public outpouring of sentiment for those who support the effort to reach a lasting peace in Vietnam through strength," said Sen. John G. Towers, R-Tex., one of the backers.
While continuing to discuss the mass march with the protesters, the Justice Department issued a permit to allow the new mobilization committee to hold a 40-hour march beginning at 6 p.m. Thursday and lasting until 10 a.m. Saturday.
Participants, to be permitted to carry candles and small placards bearing names, will move single file across memorial bridge over the Potomac River to Pennsylvania Avenue, then east on Pennsylvania in front of the White House and on to the Capitol.
STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES
MISS ROBERT LEE
SENATOR
FOR PARK AVE. LINCOLN
WASHINGTON, D.C.
STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES
MISS MARIE BROWN
SENATOR
FOR PARK AVE. LINCOLN
WASHINGTON, D.C.
STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES
MISS ALBERT FAYRE
SENATOR
FOR PARK AVE. LINCOLN
WASHINGTON, D.C.
STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES
MISS ALAN HARRISON
SENATOR
FOR PARK AVE. LINCOLN
WASHINGTON, D.C.
STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES
MISS ANTHONY JACKSON
SENATOR
FOR PARK AVE. LINCOLN
WASHINGTON, D.C.
STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES
MISS ALEXA JOHNSON
SENATOR
FOR PARK AVE. LINCOLN
WASHINGTON, D.C.
STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES
MISS ALEXA JOHNSON
SENATOR
FOR PARK AVE. LINCOLN
WASHINGTON, D.C.
VOTE
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
8:00am - 6:00pm - Strong, Merrimack, Union
NESSEX - 630w30o - 2SP, Union
Photo by Ron Bishon
Those were the days
In the age of instant replay, people sometimes get carried away. This bulletin board listing candidates for last spring's Student Senate elections recently was placed in front of Strong Hall. The lists were apparently left on the board when it was put away for the summer.
The parade permit requires them to remain on the sidewalk at all times.
The president of the student body and the chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee are pushing for freshman representatives in the Student Senate.
Freshmen in Senate ask voice
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student and chairman of the committee, said he and David S. Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president will present a motion to the University Council Thursday asking the University Senate to amend the Senate Code allowing officers of the freshman class to automatically become student senators.
George said many senators feel freshman are being shut out from University government.
"Freshman have gripes and problems most of the older senators have long forgotten about. If we could have freshman representation in the Senate,we could hear of the problems and the freshmen would have a voice in student government," George said.
George favors officers as senators because double elections would be avoided.
"If the elected officers were immediately appointed to the Senate, double elections involving personalities would be avoided. The senators would know the freshman senators were capable and intelligent," George said.
The idea of freshman representatives was presented to Awbrey and George by Steve Hicks, Overland Park freshman and candidate for Freshmen Class president.
Campus briefs
Project Concern founder to speak
Dr. James Turpin, will present a public lecture at 8 p.m. tonight in Battenfeld Auditorium at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
in Battentreff Auditorium at the University of Kansas Medical Center. As founder of the Project Concern, an independent, non-profit, medical relief program, Dr. Turpin will present practical and specific ways to involve physicians and others in meeting the medical needs throughout the world.
Weather lecture Thursday
Verner E. Suomi, director of the Space Science and Engineering Center at the University of Wisconsin, will give a public lecture, "Atmospheric Turbulent Seen from Space," at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Dyche Auditorium.
Suomi will describe an international program for the extended coverage of weather prediction by the end of the "70's. The lecture is sponsored by the KU chapter of Sigma Xi; Professional fraternity.
Sex education topic of lecture
P. K. Houdek will speak on sex education Nov. 11, at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Room 305
Houdek is the head of the Kansas City Social Health Society and of the teachers' instruction program in Kansas City. The lecture is sponsored by the Student Education Association.
Parrenin Quartet in concert
The KU Chamber Music Series opens this year with the Parrenin Quartet.
They will perform at 8 p.m., Nov.11 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
They will perform at 8 p.m. Nov. 11 in Swarthout Recital Hall. The ensemble was formed in 1944. It has appeared throughout five
weeks.
The ensemble was formed in 1947. It has four continents. It has won acclaim in Geneva, Leige and Paris. In Mexico
City in 1965 the group performs us. 2,000h concert.
2 KANSAN Nov.11 1969
The group will perform works by Beethoven, Karel Huss, and Debusy.
Faculty Fireside, the KU-Y program which promotes small group interaction between faculty members and KU students, needs participants.
Nearly 6,000 tickets were sold for the 1969 Student Union Activities (SUA) Homecoming concert Saturday featuring Steppenwolf and the Turtles, an SUA official announced.
Chat groups need members
Ten groups have already formed and included in each are from five to ten students and one faculty member. Each group selects its own time, place, and frequency of meeting. The members also decide on which activities they wish to participate in or attend. Many times the families of faculty members are included.
The next SUA concert will feature Blood, Sweat and Tears December 2 in Hoch Auditorium.
Thousands to concert
communication by classroom-stiffed students. Mutual understanding of current issues and problems is another goal of the program, he added.
The program presents a faculty member in a family setting, said Mike Blakely, Topeka senior and chairman of the Faculty Fireside program. He said presenting the faculty member in an informal setting promoted
Activities of the groups have included films, concerts, plays, picnics and informal discussions in the professors' homes.
As program chairman, Blakely said the KU-Y would like to have groups organized and functioning by Nov. 15. He said participants in the program help make it possible by paying their annual Y-membership dues of $2.50 at the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union.
Official Bulletin
Today
Theatre Research Colloquium, Grad Students Theses Report. 341 Murphy, 3:39 p.m.
Jayhawk Juggers Club, East Door
Robbins Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Table Tennis Club, 173 Robinson,
6:45-9:45 p.m.
6-45 9-45 p.m.
Chamber Choir (Delayed Broad-
ing)
Chamber Choir, (Delayed Broadcast)
KANU. 915.FM. 7.p.m.
Special Film. "Ary Number Can play." Forum Room, Kansas Union, 7.
Open Forum on Austrian Ski Trip.
Film and Speaker: Kanas Room. Urn.
Tel: 342-705-2222. Fax: 342-705-2221.
Jayhawk Rodeo Club, Kansas Union,
Room 2A, 7.36 p.m.
Christian Science Organization.
Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
Chamber, Music, Series. Parrinen Quartet Swarthowit Recital Hall, 8
Humanities Lecture. Octavio Paz.
post-diplomat. Mexico. Union Ball-
tle.
Lecture. "Czech Theatre and Drama Today, After Cappev." Ivan Klima, Czech dramatist and critic. Room 305, Kansas Union. 3:30 p.m.
Lecture. "The Artist-Intellectual in Czechoslovakia." Ivan Klima, Czech dramatist and critic. Dyche Auditorium, 8 p.m.
Special Film "Underworld" Forum Room, Kansas Union, 9 p.m.
Tomorrow
Carrilon Recital. Albert Gerken, 7 p.m.
Classical Film, "Veridiana." (Span-
ish) Duplo Audience. 8 pts.
Recital. Robert Clark, guest organist,
Swarthot. Recital. Gail Also.
Also. Recital.
Foreign Students. Sign up now for Christmas International Houses around the United States. 226 Strong Hall.
Meet the Nominees. Freshmen Class Officers
Spencer Davies
(President)
Jeanie Allen
(Secretary)
Tom Perry
(Vice - President)
Melissa Wayne
(Treasurer)
They're Psyched ... Are You?
PAID—DWAP
Games for Weekend 11/15-16
TOPS
Games for
Weekend 11/15-16
TOPS
Wardrobe
Care
Centers
TOPS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
1517 W. 6th—1526 W. 23rd
In By 9 – Out By 5
Same Day Service
"PIGSKIN PICKS CONTEST"
Winner of this week's contest will receive $10 worth of dry cleaning service. 2nd & 3rd place winners $5 worth of dry cleaning services.
Circle Your Choice as Winner
Missouri at Iowa State
Nebraska at Kansas State
Oklahoma State at Colorado
Air Force at Stanford
Miami (Fla.) at Alabama
Arkansas at S.M.U.
Auburn at Georgia
Notre Dame at Georgia Tech
Indiana at Northwestern
Michigan at Iowa
Mississippi State at L.S.U.
Tennessee at Mississippi
Purdue at Ohio State
Maryland at Penn State
Southern Cal. at Washington
T.C.U. at Texas
U.C.L.A. at Oregon
Yale at Princeton
Kentucky at Florida U.
Syracuse at Navy
Pick these scores:
Kansas ___ at Oklahoma ___
K.C. Chiefs ___ at New York ___
Address
CONTEST RULES
To enter: Clip this slate out of the paper or pick up a free entry blank at either TOPS store—1517 West 6th —1526 West 23rd, mark or write out choices and send then to TOPS Pigskin Picks.
2. Mail entries to TOPS Pigskin Picks, 1517 West 6th, or bring in personally at either location. No entries accepted postmarked or delivered after Noon Friday.
3. Winners will be posted in both TOPS stores Monday, and will appear in next week's contest in the paper.
4. Only one entry per person each week.
5. Winners will be judged on most correct guesses and on closest scores of KU and K.C. Chiefs games. In case of ties, earliest postmark decides.
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS
1—Sandy Brown
2—James L. Koevenig
3—Al Cornelius
All you need is leaves
A pile of leaves and a balmy day are all that are needed for this sport. Andrew Garrison, 10, left and Marty Miller, 11, both fifth graders at Cordley Elementary School, demonstrate the proper techniques for jumping into a pile of leaves they found in the woods behind the Kansas Union.
Revue deadline set
Final deadline for 17 living groups trying out for Rock Chalk Revue will be Dec. 19. At this time ten scripts complete with floor plans and set and costume drawings will be submitted for judging over Christmas vacation, said Kathy Colton, producer.
Over vacation three unknown judges read scripts giving points
Nov.11 1969 KANSAN 3
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On Jan. 4 announcements will be made of the four skis with the highest points. These living groups will then participate in Rock Chalk Revue.
Past deadlines have called for rough draft copies of the scripts so as to avoid duplicates before the final deadline.
"Right now John Balk, assistant producer, and I are going around keeping those involved from becoming discouraged. We are encouraging everyone not to give up yet," Miss Colton said.
There are two open spots for in-between acts which have not yet been filled, Miss Colton said. Anyone interested in performing for four or five minutes between skits can try for one of these openings.
The living groups submitting scripts for final judging are Kappa Kappa Gamma and Alpha Kappa Lambda, Gamma Phi Beta and Alpha Tau Omega, Pi Beta Phi and Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta and Delta Chi, Delta Gamma and Delta Tau Delta, Chi Omega and Sigma Chi, Delta Delta Delta and Tau Kappa Epsilon, Ellsworth, McCollum and Naismith.
Lillian Gish, silent film actress, will give a lecture at 8 p.m. Nov. 13 she has previously presented on a world tour. In addition, she will show film clips from "Intolerance" and "Way Down East," which she starred in during the 1920's.
Lillian Gish will visit KU
movies of silent screen stars Douglas Fairbanks and Buster Keaton, said John Tibbetts, Lansing graduate student and president of the KU Film society.
She will also show clips from
Miss Gish will be in the Mount Oread Bookshop 10 a.m. Nov. 13 to sign copies of her book "The Movies, Mr. Griffith and Me."
Her book is the combination of many years work to bring the talents of director D. W. Griffith to the public eye. Tibbetts said
Miss Gish started her film career in 1911. In 1915, she starred in the classic film "Birth of a Nation."
Dorm students favor satellite on Daisy Hill
In a survey conducted by the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH), 561 students living in residence halls indicated they were in favor of a satellite union in the Daisy Hill area. Sixty-four were against it.
The survey was conducted in the residence halls last Thursday and Friday.
Out of 601 respondents to the second question, 545 students
Frosh vote for officers
Freshmen will elect class officers Wednesday.
Polling places will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Kansas Union Lobby, Murphy Hall Lobby and Strong Hall Rotunda. Polling places will be set up in the lobbies of Oliver, Ellsworth and Gertrude Sellards Pearson Halls.
Candidates for president are:
Rett F. Alonzi, Wilmette, Ill;
Spencer Davies, Wichita; Steve Hix, Overland Park; John Rooker, Leawood.
For vice-president, the candidates are: Robert Dale Barky-youmb, San Francisco; Jim Burgess, Wichita; Tom Perry, Topeka, Ann Reed, Topeka and Fred Stubenrauch, Leawood.
Candidates for secretary are; Betsy Adams, Overland Park, and Jeannie Allen, Hutchinson.
Candidates for treasurer are Christy Chapman, Topeka, and Melissa Wayne, Shawnee Mission.
NASA gives fund
A $57,080 grant from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration will fund an aerospace engineering department study to discover improved methods of control and aerodynamic design of light and general aviation aircraft. Project director is David L. Kohlman, associate professor and chairman of the department.
were in favor of the original plan for the Union. Fifty-six were for the site proposed by Frank Zilm, St. Louis senior
The majority of those polled (499 of 625) are willing to pay the extra $6.50 to have the satellite union; 126 were not.
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m. Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only Advance Tickets on Sale at Kief's Records, Red Dog Office, All Jenkins Stores in K.C. Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last'
BLOOD,SWEAT&TEARS IN PERSON
BLOOD,SWEAT&TEARS
IN PERSON
On the question of whether or not the Union Operating Board should continue with plans for the original site or begin a second investigation on the site proposed by Zilm. 531 students felt the board should continue with the original site and 75 felt that the Zilm site should be investigated.
Sign-up deadline for Comp set
Dec. 19 is the deadline for signing up for the Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination to be given Jan. 10, 1970.
Every KU student, except students in the School of Fine Arts or the School of Social Welfare, is required to successfully complete the exam for a B.A. or B.S. degree. Those who plan to take the exam can sign up in the Registrar's office in Strong Hall.
Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
The comprehensive will not be administered again until May, 1970. Anyone with questions about the exam can go to the Western Civilization Office in 428
A critic once said of Lillian Gish, "When Lillian Gish cuts loose, her acting is like nothing less than a pure white flame."
Miss Gish's appearance is being sponsored by SUA.
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KANSAN Comment
Stay home, or become Nixon's scape-goat
(Reprinted from the Salina Journal)
If my friends at Kansas Wesleyan, Marymount and the other college campuses sincerely want peace they will forego the public demonstration planned for this month.
It is a matter of hard-headed reality. It also is an intelligence test.
Mr. Nixon has his back up. With the propaganda forces at his command, he has been able to convince a substantial number of Americans that the real enemy—at least the enemy handy to attack—is not in Hanoi but in the college streets.
You are to be the scape-goats for Vietnam and all its tragedy.
If you want to draw fire, you must understand the possible consequences. We Americans already are divided and frustrated. Mr. Nixon and Mr. Agnew deliberately have deepened that division. It is now hardening into anger and hatred. Further demonstrations could erupt into riot. Action now can provoke violent reaction.
If you shift the warfare from Vietnam to Kansas and the other states, you hardly will be promoting peace. Moreover, you may be delaying peace in Vietnam.
It is not that marches, bloody or peaceful prevent successful negotiations at Paris. In their present course, they already are down the drain. But you can change Mr. Nixon's mind and reverse his plan, his plan to bring the troops home under a pretext of victory and an unburdening upon the South Vietnamese. It you rob him of the illusion you can destroy the fact of disengagement.
As Californians know, Mr. Nixon is a poor and revengeful loser. But he has not lost. The real danger to peace is in what he might do were he to believe himself put down.
His game is winning. His intense desire for a political win is shown by the hatchet-work of his vice-president. Mr. Agnew's speech at Harrisburg last week was a shrewd attempt to mobilize the prejudices of middle America against the collegians, against the intellectuals and against the peaceniks.
At first I thought it might be dismissed as the angry striking back of a bumpkin baited once too often. But then came the full Agnew text, circulated apparently with White House blessing. It was the calculated incitement of Marc Antony's oration over Caesar. It was to stir the white-collar mob.
So, if you truly want peace you do not hunt the battlefield. You do not invite the program.
It may be hard to stay home, to do nothing more than talk, write letters and vote. But the streets are not for peace. Wisdom is not found in anger. Let the cool, sweet voice of reason be your own.
EFFETE
SNOBS
IDEAL
EUNCHS
GIRL
OF
ROTTEN
APPL
SMFARO
AGNEW
CORRESPONDENT
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
'Yes, sir, you're my kind of vice-president!'
DIRTY FACIST PIG FILTHY
LONG-HAIRED HIPPIE STUPID
BLIND MURDERING PIG COMMIE
PIG REVOLUTIONIST PIG COMMIE
( WORTHLESS COWARD GOD
BANNER MEN GOIN' NIN
MOON SUN SUN
WOOD MEN
WHO KNOWS, WE MAY ALL LACK THE GENES AND CHROMOSOMES FOR SURVIVAL? HATE HAS BECOME SAFER THAN LOVE.
Jerry Hoffman
Readers' write
To the editor;
Thank God "Joe College and Betty Cood" live. For many long years the seniors have worked hard to get where they are now, preparing themselves to go out into the world and try to make it a better place to live. So why not take some time off, spend a few dollars, and have some fun, meeting old friends that may not have been seen since freshman days and who might never be seen again.
As to whether or not one looks "like an ass" in his hat and tee shirt, that is a matter of opinion, for there are those who think that the long-haired men of today look like asses, still others who think that those who wear uniforms look like pigs. Who is to say one form of dress is any better than any other? If the seniors are going to wear hats and tee shirts why not have them look alike just for the fun of it. No one condemned the football team for wearing their look-alike helmets and jekseys to the game, why seniors?
Who says that just because a senior wears his "regalia" he does not care about what is going on around him? The mere donning of a hat and tee shirt does not alter one's beliefs or ideals, it does not mean that he will become any less involved in what is going on around him, or cares any less about the world or the University. Sure there was a lot of money spent on the senior "regalia," but much more is just as equally wasted by the studentry (sic) every weekend on booze, cigarettes, drugs, etc. So if the Kansan is so worried about the students wasting their money, why doesn't it start a fund collecting this money for the much-needed improvements in Watkins Hospital, etc.
Wm. Ray Sellers Wheaton, Ill., senior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646
Business Office—UN 4-358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except, paddys day and a day before. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior notice must be submitted on time. Not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
THIS DICTIONARY DEFINES "GRIFFIN" AS "A FABULOUS ANIMAL"...
THIS DICTIONARY
DEFINES "GRIFFIN" AS
"A FABULOUS ANIMAL"...
NATURALLY!
NATURALLY!
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969.
University Daily Kansan.
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: The Brig's Marines
By JEFF LOUGH Kansan Reviewer
Perhaps too much has been said about the military, especially by those of us who abhor it in one way or another for any one of an eternity of reasons. However, tonight at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the U.C.C.F. building at 12th and Oread an opportunity will be presented in which a very powerful interpretation of military life and the effect of the military on the individual can be viewed.
This will be the showing of the underground film "The Brig."
"The Brig" is a play written by ex-Marine Kenneth H. Brown. It is played by the precursors of the avant-garde radical theater movement, The Living Theater, Antonin Artaud, the controversial theater-liberationist, once called for a "theater of cruelty
in which violent physical images crush and hypnotize the sensibility of the spectator seized by the theater as by a whirlwind of higher forces."
"The Brig" can do nothing but seize your sensibilities. The film-play has proven to be so powerful a piece that it moved a "New York Times." film reviewer to demand a presidential investigation if the conditions depicted were true.
Jonas Mekas, who appeared at KU last year with some of his later films made "The Brig" in such a way that the individual spectator himself feels like he is confined in the tiny bank-lined cage. And in the outside corridor one sees the wild, blank-faced prisoners bob around like frightened robots at the bidding of their torturers. The artistry of the The Living Theater group and filmmaker Jonas Mekas combine to make a thought provokingly cruel rendition of a military prison into a visual reality.
CONCERTS: The trio expounds
By TED ILIFF Kansan Staff Writer
Folk singers Peter, Paul and Mary spent nearly six hours communicating with their fans Saturday night. Three hours were spent in a concert at Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium, and the other three hours at a cocktail party in the Hotel Phillips after the concert.
Those attending the concert and cocktail party heard Peter, Paul and Mary promote the moratorium activities in Washington D.C. next Saturday.
At the party each of the entertainers sat with groups of people around them informally explaining their beliefs on religion and non-violent protest which are characteristic of their concert repertoire.
Paul led a group of about 25 persons to a lobby outside the party room to explain his philosophy on religion. He told them that religion had to be a personal feeling, not the feelings of others forced upon an individual.
"God is there, but you have to find him yourself," he said. "No matter what your parents or anyone else has taught or forced on you, you have to feel comfortable with your belief in God, or it is no good."
Mary explained to her group how violent protest would be fruitless. She said there is great danger to the New Left because the government can lock them up and shut them up.
"For me to throw a rock at a cop is dumb," she said. "In a
Nov.11 1969 KANSAN 5
demonstration, all you can control is yourself. So a small group decides to throw stuff, and a lot of non-violent people get their heads cracked."
She said victory for the left can only be obtained through nonviolence. "If you don't hit a cop back, you can come back to march again."
Peter, who appeared to be the leader and spokesman of the group, explained how the group's stage performance reflects their beliefs. He said they have taken an enlightenment point of view.
Billy better learn fast ...or die young!
Billy better learn fast ...or die young!
Labor Youngstown Productions present
ROBERT MITCHUM
ANGIE DICKINSON
"YOUNG BILLY
YOUNG"
COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists
Mat. DAILY 2:30
Eve. 7:15-9:00
By GENELLE RICHARDS
Varsity
THEATRE · Telephone VI 3-1065
'The Hostage' opens Thursday
Coming from France, Jacques Parrenin, violin; Marcel Charpentier, violin; Denes Marton, viola; and Pierre Penasson, cello compose the quartet.
The first in the Chamber Music series, the Parrenin Quartet performs in Swarthout Recital Hall tonight at 8 p.m.
"A comedy with tragic relief."
"The Hostage" by Brendan Be-
French quartet opens season
Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy Hall box office. Students will not be admitted free with KU ID.
BOOKS
A MOMENT IN CAMELOT, by Maggie Rennert (Crest, $1.25)—Lest you think this is another book geared to King Arthur and all that business you must be steared rapidly from that course. No. This is another book geared to Jack and Jackie and all that business. No doubt about the matter, for this is about a brilliant young senator and the brilliant and beautiful young woman (pre-Onassis) who helped make him fact, legend, and myth. How politics have become mass entertainment!
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MICHAEL
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ANTHONY
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CANDICE
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Shows
7:00
9:05
Hillcrest
The "Silent Majority" stood by Hitler's war policy
( . . . and Auschwitz came as kind of a surprise)
March for Peace November 15th at the State Capitol in Topeka
if you will march and/or drive your car.
Vietnam Moratorium Committee
CALL VI 3-6425
Directed by Roy Sorrels, assistant instructor of speech and drama, the play replaces "Rosecrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" originally scheduled to appear.
han, opens in the Experimental Theatre Nov. 13 and runs through Nov. 22.
An Irish play. "The Hostage" takes place in a contemporary house of prostitution in Dublin.
"There are many colorful people in the play. It is a comic play, alive and very easy to watch," said Shannon Hackett, Winnetka, Ill., sophomore, a member of the cast.
The plot centers around a soldier sought for a murder. Kept hostage in the house of prostitution, he falls in love with a young orphan girl who wanders to the house. The police eventually raid the house run by a man and his common law wife and find the hostage.
"The play is very Irish with all their humor and love of life. It's as much fun for the audience as it is for the cast," said Miss Hackett.
The major actors include: Pat, John Young, Shawnee Mission senior; Meg, Barbara Berman, Prairie Village senior; Lesley, Richard Gilland, Overland Park
Other characters are: Monsewer, Michael Rapport, Pasadena, Calif. senior; Miss Gilchrist, Patti McGill, El Dorado senior; and IRA officer, James Congdon, Wilmette, Ill. junior.
sophomore; and Teresa, Shannon Hackett.
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WALT DISNEY'S
Darby O'Gill and
the Little
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TECHNICOLOR
1953 Walt Disney Productions
PLUS
DOUBLE FEATURE!
WALT DISNEY'S
Darby O'Gill and
the Little People
TECHNICOLOR
1969 Walt Disney Productions
PLUS
WALT DISNEY presents
THE TATTOOED
POLICE HORSE
TECHNICOLOR
©1904 Walt Disney Productions
Now! 7:15 - 9:45
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
©1964 Walt Disney Productions
Now! 7:15 - 9:45
Ganada
THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-5780
FLY INTO 20 YEARS OF ALASKAN WILDERNESS!
COLOR by DeLUXE G
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065
THIS IS MY
ALASKA
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
STARTS WEDNESDAY!
"A fantastic film in which all of life becomes a week-end—a cataclysmic, seismic traffic jam. The film must be seen for its power, ambition, humor and scenes of really astonishing beauty. One of the most important films Godard has ever made. There's nothing like it at all."
—Renata Adler, New York Times
ALEXANDRA ROBINSON
GROVE PRESS PRESENTS
JEAN-LUC GODARD'S
WEEKEND
WRKING MIREILLE DARC AND JEAN YANNE
A MUST SEE FILM
Wed. Mat. 2:00
Hillcrest
A Hilarious yet Touching Story of a First Love
P
STARTS WED. The Sterile Cuckoo Hillcrest HOLISTIC SUNSET, FESTIVAL & MORE Adults $1.50 Child 75c
MUSEUM OF ART
Photo by Mike Rieke
Balmy weather brings November flowers
The uncommonly warm weather this week has brought
6 KANSAN Nov.11 1969
flowers to bloom in front of Spooner Hall. The clear skies and sunshine are reminiscent of summer but the afternoon's long shadows still serve as a reminder of the fast-approaching winter.
Vested suits are your way of life on campus.
Put vested interest in your campus suit wardrobe. There are extra style dividends in our vested suits . . . richly textured or patterned fabrics, natural shoulders, wider lapels, slight shaping and deeper vents. Make a suit investment which will pay richly in interest.
The Town Shop
839 Mass. VI 3-5755
The University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633
KU receives 12 TV films
Albert J. Rosenberg, vice president of the McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York City, has donated 12 nonfiction motion pictures to KU for classroom use.
The films were donated from Rosenberg's personal collection.
Richard D. MacCann, professor of journalism, accepted the films on behalf of the University.
The half-hour films are on the political, scientific, economic and social-cultural aspects of American life in the early 1950s. They were produced by March of Time, a division of Time-Life, Inc., for television broadcast.
The films will be available to all departments on campus through the Campus Film Service of the Bureau of Visual Instruction.
KC party scheduled
International Clubs from KU and five area colleges will sponsor a party for members and their guests from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the Ranchmant Auditorium in Kansas City, Kan.
Tickets for admission to the party will be mailed to International Club members later this week.
The KU International Club will provide bus transportation to Kansas City. The bus will load at 6:45 p.m. and leave at 7 p.m.
Refreshments at the party will be served and music will be provided by "Together."
COLLEGIATE SKI BLAST
Aspen, Colorado
THANKSGIVING VACATION
- Round trip transportation (train and bus) to Aspen
- Special private party car on train with free refreshments
- Lodging at a reserved private lodge in Aspen
- 6 meals
- Refreshments
- 2 parties on mountain
- All ski rental
- All ski lift tickets (4 days)
- Snowmobiling
- Ski lessons
All this for only $159.50
INTERNATIONAL TOURS
Contact Mike Sauder at VI 3-6866
Use Kansan Classified
Go On! (FIND YOURSELF...)
Call 800-325-2594 TOLL FREE
If you'd rather "switch than fight it", come to a 118-year-old college that's NEW!
It was a girls' school . . . now we're admitting men too. (Our male-female ratio is better regardless of how you look at it!) Our new curriculum emphasizes individual study and career preparation. We look new! By semester's end, we'll even have a new name.
Our college is right in the middle of the action in College Town U.S.A. . Columbia, Missouri You can even arrange a course of study that includes work at Missouri University and Stephens College. That's three schools in one.
If you're ready for a new outlook . . . call Bill Brown,
Director of Admissions collect today. . . 800-325-2594 For Non-
Residents of Missouri. . . 314-449-0531 For Missouri Resi-
dents...all night calls to 314-442-1903 or write
CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, Columbia, Missouri 65201 For an application and literature.
Frosh finish 3-1; OU hits big ones
Shot down by three big plays in a wild-scoring fourth quarter, the KU freshman suffered their only seasonal loss last night, a 50-26 drubbing by the Oklahoma frosh in the final game of the 1969 campaign played in Norman, Okla.
The Boomers (nickname for the OU freshman), were tied by the Junior Jays 20-20 late in the third quarter when Gary Adams picked off an OU pass and returned it 35 yards for the tying score. In the fourth quarter the Boomers wasted no time breaking the deadlock as Joe Wylie scored twice on runs from scrummage of 75 and 51 yards. Minutes later Cliff Hollinger took a screen pass and went another 75 yards for the TD. The score had balloned to 43-20 in just a few minutes time and the freshman had been victimized by the same game-breaking big play that has sent the Kansas varsity spinning to the cellar of the Big Eight.
KU completed their scoring midway through the final quarter on a 59-yard bomb from Rich Jones to split end Marvin Foster. Foster hauled in the ball on about the Boomer 20-yard line and the Kansas City Central flyer turned on the speed to score unmolested.
Twenty-six points had been chalked up by the two teams in only thirteen minutes, but with 2:38 remaining Boomer end Mark McGaughlin gathered in a pass and turned it into a 35-ward scoring play that finally capped off the victory.
Home-field success evident in Big Eight
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) The home-field advantage, long a definite factor in basketball, has become one in Big Eight football this fall.
In 19 conference games, the home team has won 15. Three of those losses were by last-place Kansas and one by seventh-place Iowa State.
KANSAN Sports
Kansas State's Vince Gibson pointed to his team's loss at Oklahoma State last Saturday as a prime example. Kansas State had controlled the game until Herman Eben raced 85 yards with a pass to give Oklahoma State a 14-13 lead in the third quarter.
"After that, school was out," said Gibson. "The homecoming crowd went wild. I don't think anybody could have beaten Oklahoma State then."
"We're all human," said Kansas' Pepper Rodgers. "When you get 60,000 people into a stadium, they're all for the home team. But I don't think it's just this year. Playing at home always has been an advantage."
"I'd rather play every game at home," said Nebraska coach Bob Devaney.
Missouri's Dan Devine has been saying the home-team edge has been "just a coincidence" all
Nov.11 KANSAN 7
1969
season. But Devine has been at home the last two weeks. He changed his tune a bit yesterday with Missouri lacing two straight road games.
One theory advanced is that Big Eight teams are so evenly matched this season that the home crowd is just enough extra edge to decide the outcome.
The condition of center Dale Evans was the prime concern of Kansas coach Pepper Rodgers yesterday.
"That's why we have the greatest conference in America," said Gibson. "We have people all the way through it we can win on a given day." That's an old cliche, but it seems an accurate reflection of the Big Eight this season.
Rodgers also expressed concern about Oklahoma's ability to regroup. The Sooners lost to Missouri, 44-10 last week.
"We're slightly bruised up," said Rodgers. "I guess not more than usual, but it seems like it."
KU practice
THE LOST GALLERY
Evans, an all-Big Eight candidate, suffered a bruised knee in Saturday's 17-14 loss to Colorado. He worked out with the Jayhawks in a 90-minute drill Monday, but was limping noticeably.
Kansas lost quarterback Jim
Ettinger for the season. Ettinger
underwent surgery yesterday for
a shoulder separation.
Oil Paintings
Custom Framing
"I'm worried because after they get beat by Kansas State, they came back and murdered Iowa State," said Rodgers. Kansas will play Oklahoma in Norman, Okla., Saturday.
11-6 Mon.- Fri.
12-8 Sat. 12:30-6 Sun.
PAINTINGS
by
JOHN GARCIA
November 9-30
Reception Nov. 9, 2-6 p.m.
711 W.23rd
Intramural football kicked off the battle for the coveted title of "Hill Champion" yesterday with eight games being played in both the fraternity and independent leagues.
Intramural play-offs
V12-1714
Each division is represented in the playoffs by its top two teams which compete in a single elimination tournament.
The playoffs continue through this week, capped by the contest for the Hill title Monday, Nov 17, between the champs from fraternity A and B and the winners from Independent A and B.
Beta Chi Delta Alpha 12, Kappa
ma
Beta Theta Pi No. 2, 12, Phi Kappa
ma
Lambda Chi Alpha 12, Kappa Sigma 9
Yesterday's Results:
Theta Chi 2, Phi Gamma Delta 0
Theta Chi 2, Phi Ipsilon 1, Sigma Phi Epsilon 0, Farelli 3.
Independent B League
Temp. Haujays 8. Chem Tech 6.
Grendel 1.
Bandit 5 Mother 7 ASCE 0
Bandit 6 Biophysics 26 Frumious
Bandernatch 6
BUSY GRIDDERS
Bud Boys vs. Grendel's Mother
Bud Gang
KU Laws vs. Topham Hill
Tempiplin Bayjacks S. Chou Tech 6
Templin Bay jacks S. Chou Tech 6
Radiophysics Biophysics 26. Furious
Radiophysics Biophysics 26. Furious
Bang Gang 1, Nuns 0 (Forfeit)
TODAY'S GAMES
Kappa Alpha vs. Beta Theta Pi No. 2.
Kappa Signa vs. Beta Chi Alpha
phi Kappa Signa vs. Lambda Chi Alpha Kappa Enfin vs. Thata Chi
Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Theta Chi
Beta Theta Pt No 1 vs. Delta Tau
LISLE NEGB Sports Authority vs. Radiation Biophysics
SEWANEE, Tenn. (UPI)—Football is now a once-a-week sport, but between Nov. 9 and 14 in 1899, the University of the South at Sewance whipped five major college teams—Texas, Texas A&M, Tulane, Louisiana State and Mississippi—in six days on a 2,500-mile trip by train.
R
Are you still borrowing your best friend's typewriter? Why not Drop into
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
700 Mass. VI 3-3644
and look into their typewriter Rental Purchase Plan. It could save a friendship.
Announcement:
to Apartment Renters You can find a wide variety of rental prices by contacting:
to Apartment Renters
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St.
(adjacent to campus)
Visit the office at above address or call 843-4993 for further details. Rental prices are established on an incentive basis, and are competitive with quality one-bedroom as well as two-bedroom apartments.
There is a price for two, three and/or four occupants. YOU CHOOSE THE PLAN TO FIT YOUR REQUIREMENTS.
SAVE MONEY and LIVE BETTER at these CONVENIENTLY LOCATED APARTMENTS.
University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
presents
The Hostage
by Brenden Behan
November 13-22
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall
For Tickets Call: UN 4-3982
Med Center makes it with music
The Medical Arts Symphony of the University of Kansas Medical Center begins its 10th season this year.
Melvin P. Mohn, professor of anatomy and president of the symphony said the season promises a full and exciting year.
"The Medical Arts Symphony was organized originally," said Mohn, "to provide an opportunity for members of the student body, faculty, house staff and their families to maintain and improve musical skills. At the same time it provides a pleasant source for recreation and diversion from the day-to-day routine."
Getting the correct balance of instruments is just one problem faced by the group, Mohn said. Finding a time when all members can rehearse is another.
To help support the symphony mints are sold in the hospital cafeteria. This nets only about half the amount needed to keep the group going. This year they are returning to a membership fee of $10 for students and $20 for other members to help defray expenses.
The money is used for renting instruments when they are needed, buying music and stands, paying professional musicians when it's necessary to balance a musical section and financing publicity efforts.
This year the group is learning the same music as the Kansas City Kansas Symphony so member reciprocity can be utilized. Leopold Shopmaker, a music instructor and member of the Kansas City Philharmonic, conducts both the Medical Arts Symphony and the Kansas City Kansas Symphony.
8 KANSAN Nov.11 1969
so Pendleton
The casual way to live with fashion . . . pure virgin wools from the Country Clothes Collection. Here, the shirtwaist dress in silhouette plaid with chain belt, sizes 8-18, 40.00
Country House
839 Mass. St.
V1 3-5755
Fairy Tale Cottage
Fear of mononucleosis is unfounded
Mononucleosis, a disease generally attributed to fatigue should not greatly alarm students, said Dr. Raymond A. Schweegler, director of Watkins Hospital.
Schwegler said there had been an increase in the number of cases of mononucleosis reported at Watkins Hospital, but added this was not unusual for this time of year, Margaret E. Haggan, a doctor at Watkins, increased the number of cases increased during midterms and finals when students are usually not getting as much rest.
The number of mononucleosis cases has increased from three
hospital cases and ten clinical cases in September to ten hospital cases and twenty-one clinical in October. Out of twenty-three people in Watkins Hospital on Monday, seven had.mononucleosis, Schwegler said.
Mononucleosis is believed to be a virus, she said. It is a disease of the white blood cells and glands, and almost always involves the liver and spleen. Because mononucleosis affects the white blood cells, which are defenses against infections, other infections may arise.
Dr. Haggan said mononucleosis is sometimes known as the "kissing disease," but if two people were dating, and one contracted mononucleosis, the other is not likely to get it. When a patient learns he has mononucleosis, she said, he usually panics, but the disease is usually not cause for
such concern.
Only a small proportion of students with mononucleosis are confined to the hospital. Most patients are treated on an outpatient basis. Students that do stay in the hospital are allowed
Appointment made
to go to classes if they feel like it, Dr. Haggan said, and they are allowed to have visitors. The disease usually runs it's clinical course in about three weeks, she said.
Thomas W. McKern, professor of anthropology, has been appointed an editorial adviser in anthropology to Science Digest, a monthly magazine with a circulation of more than 150,000.
McKern has had articles in scientific and professional journals and general interest magazines for adults and children.
LEWIS' MINI-THEATERS
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Jerry Lewis will open a string of mini-theaters—seating capacity from 200-500 for round-the-clock, automated film showings.
A blood test determines if a patient had mononucleosis. Treatment varied according to the individual case, but rest and a good diet are always prescribed, Dr. Haggan said.
WHY'S A NICE GIRL LIKE YOU FEELING MAMMOTH EVERY MONTH? THAT'S PREHISTORIC!
WHY'S A NICE GIRL LIKE YOU FEELING MAMMOTH EVERY MONTH? THAT'S PREHISTORIC!
You're not as mini as usual? It's only temporary, you know. A monthly problem. But who cares when you have that puffy, bloated, "Oh, I'm so fat feeling"? TRENDAR, that's who. TRENDAR'LL help keep you slim as you are all month long. Its modern diuretic (water-reducing) action controls temporary pre-menstrual weight gain. (That can be up to 7 pounds!) Start taking TRENDAR 4 to 7 days before that time. It'll help make you look better and feel better.
TRENDAR...IT MAKES YOU GLAD YOU'RE A GIRL!
Happy Birthday
ATTENTION:
La librairie de la bibliothèque Watson vient de recevoir un choix de plus de 200 livre en langue française
Venez nous voir
1:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
closed Saturday
UN 4-3239
LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR LOTR
SUA Presents
Blood Sweat & Tears
in Concert at Hoch Auditorium
December 2
7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
Tickets $3.00, $3.50, $4.00
On Sale Nov. 17th
'Aged' club members jog back into shape
By HOWARD PANKRATZ Kansan Staff Writer
Are you deteriorating? Is that head getting bald and that tummy getting fat? If so, your solution may be Bill Easton and the KU Joggers Club.
Although Easton can't help your bald head he may be able to help you attain your vital capacity and retain some of that youthful zest you're losing at the ripe old age of 30.
Action deferred
Senate committee ok's lottery selection system
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Armed Services Committee agreed Monday to approve a House-passed random selection draft bill this year and promised to begin hearings on a more comprehensive selective service reform in February.
Chairman John Stennis, D-Miss., said the committee passed a resolution supporting the House lottery system, but making it clear it opposed any attempts to broaden the scope of the measure before it is sent to the President.
Action on the lottery bill itself was deferred until Stennis meets with the Senate leadership, including Democratic whip Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
Kennedy's insistence on broader reform had stalled further action on the lottery bill but last week he agreed to a compromise to get the lottery this year and make sure wider reform would be taken up next year.
Under the compromise, the effective expiration of the Selective Service Act would be moved up from July 1, 1971 to Dec. 31, 1970, forcing Congress to act on the draft next year.
Nov.11 KANSAN 9
1969
Kennedy had planned to offer amendments to the lottery bill seeking far-reaching changes in the law — particularly to stop selective service boards from using the draft as a device to punish dissenters.
Nearly 400 persons toured the Alumni Association's new offices Saturday morning. The official open house lasted from 10:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m.
Alumni tour office
The Alumni Association's new offices, located in the Kansas Union's northwest addition, are the headquarters for all alumni and class activities, and the open house was planned to give those returning KU graduates a look at where most of those activities originate. The new offices now, at last, house under one roof all the facilities of the Association, and mark the end of a series of moves of offices around the campus.
PECK & TUESDAY
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Gregory Peck and Tuesday Weld will costar for Columbia Pictures in "An Exile," based on Madison Jones' novel.
"Most of the members of the club are over thirty-five," Easton said. "We certainly would like to encourage those faculty members or students in their late twenties or early thirties to join us. That is when most young men begin to deteriorate."
The joggers meet every Tuesday and Thursday at 4 p.m. at the east door of Robinson Gymnasium. Easton posts a running schedule but the joggers need not adhere to it.
"Ideally joggers should work out four days each week.Those in our group often work out on Wednesday as well as Tuesday and Thursday," Easton said.
"We have a mile and a half
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
STUDY BREAK SPECIAL
SMALL PIZZA (Sausage, Pepperoni, Beef)
PLUS DRINK (Beer or soft)
route laid out for them to run and the ultimate goal is to run it in less than 20 minutes," he said.
$1.25
10 to 12 P.M.
SHAKEY'S
544 W. 23rd VI 2-2266
Those interested in joining should first have a medical examination according to Easton. To attain vital capacity or the ability to reach a pulse rate of 160 per minute requires hard work and fairly constant exercise. Thus it is imperative that men who have not exercised strenuously in a number of years first be examined by their doctor.
"A person in good physical condition is one who is able to feel
relaxed rather than tired after finishing the jogger's schedule," said Easton. "In completing the program members learn much about themselves and their bodies. Few people today have much awareness of their physiological make-up."
On Satdays Easton conducts a clinic for joggers from northeast Kansas. The aim of the clinic is to encourage the participants to start their own clubs. Lectures and a light lunch comprise the clinic schedule.
PRES.
ALONZI
Class
of
'73 '73
OFFICERS
VP
BARKYOUMB
COMING
(very soon)
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
"Women work harder"
A secretary of state swings, too
By CAROLYN BOWERS Kansan Staff Writer
The slight woman paused beneath the giant State House rotunda to rummage through an over-sized black purse for her car keys.
Mrs. Elwill M. Shanahan, Kansas secretary of state, had just ended another day of administering to one of the highest state offices in Topeka.
1983
'Let me check'
Mrs. Elwill M. Shanahan, Kansas secretary of state, takes time from her busy schedule to make an appointment with a friend.
Although one of only seven women secretaries of state in the United States and the first female secretary of state for Kansas, Mrs. Shanahan appears unaffected by
10 KANSAN Nov. 11 1969
her role in the traditionally masculine world of state politics.
"I don't feel I'm doing anything unusual as a woman by being the secretary of state," she said, "I know I'm not the only woman driving on the highways doing her job.
"The only difference with this job is that a woman just works harder than a man," she said, "it's the nature of a woman to spend more time thinking and making decisions.
"They aren't any more lentent with me because I am a woman."
Mrs. Shanahan assumed her duties in April 1966, two weeks after the death of her husband, Paul, who had held the office for about 15 years. Mrs. Shanahan was appointed by former Gov. William Avery.
Before this, the feminine state official had been a public health nurse in Saline County and the Douglas County Health Department.
Her interest in the secretary of state's office began several years ago during a campaign. Someone approached her and asked what the office involved.
"I looked at him and said, 'I really don't know,'" she said, remembering the small town in western Kansas where she campaigned for the first time with her husband.
"That was one of the greatest things that ever happened to me," Mrs. Shanahan said, "I went to my husband and told him that because I was campaigning for him, I must know what the job involved."
She learned all she could by visiting the office in the State House and attending various meetings and conventions.
Her desk today is cluttered with copies of state documents, memos and notes of appointments, which surround a picture of her late husband.
recording and keeping all deeds and abstracts of state properties, registering trademarks and publishing numerous state documents.
Mrs. Shanahan's office handles all state, national and county election proceedings in Kansas. In addition, she and her staff perform other duties which include
Although she walked into the office with a sound knowledge of its duties, Mrs. Shanahan said she was unprepared for putting together the secretary of state's budget.
"Can you imagine trying to do this for the first time?" she said while leafing through a ream of pastel-colored papers which list the expenditures and appropriations for her office.
"Fortunately I was able to depend on staff members who had worked on the budget before," she said.
KANSAN features
Although dealing with budgets and abstracts may impress one as a dull job, this swinging secretary of state explained why her time is not "completely spent with county clerks and court treasurers."
Besides meeting with county officials across the state, Mrs. Shanahan attends meetings of women's groups, professional organizations and special interest groups.
"One time I'm speaking to the Optimists', another time it's the Lions' Club. Last summer I even judged two queen contests," she said. She recently spoke before two high school government classes.
Her liveliness in dealing with her job spills over to her office staff of 24 employees. There is presently a rivalry between University of Kansas and K-State supporters.
A graduate of the Swedish Convent Hospital School of Nursing in Chicago, Mrs. Shanahan described her attempts to remain neutral.
"One day I'll wear red and get chewed out and the next I'll wear purple and get chewed out."
Campaigning for office is rigorous for any politician, man or woman. According to Mrs. Shanahan, it's fun for she meets people.
"It's not any harder on me being a woman politician," said "Auntie Shanahan," as she was described by one small Kansas newspaper after attending a reception there.
"In fact many times people come up to me and tell me its good there's a lady running for public office."
Lillian Gish In Person
A theatrical experience that should not be missed
No. 10832
Mary
Lillian Gish & The Movies
with Miss Gish in person and a program of rare early films including Griffith, Chaplin, Keaton.
★★★★
"This Lillian Gish evening provides a fascinating glimpse of the early cinema as well as a tribute to one of its all-time greats. Miss Gish offers a lively running commentary about the stellar personalities of the silent screen. It was fascinating, and the capacity crowd awarded the star a standing ovation."
SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER
Student Union Thursday, Nov. 13 8:00 50c
MALE STUDENTS
A REAL OPPORTUNITY TO BE A PILOT OR NAVIGATOR THE AIR FORCE TWO-YEAR ROTC PROGRAM OPENS SOON FOR KU STUDENTS INQUIRE NOW
ADVANTAGES
— Leads to an officer career and interesting flying
(Training Program worth $156,000)
— $50.00 per month as a cadet (Legislation under
way to raise this to $128.00 per month)
— Paid six week summer training program
— Free AFROTC textbooks and uniforms
— Good companionship
— Base visits and orientation flights
— Support by the "ANGEL FLIGHT"
— Obtain your private pilots license
Obtain your private pilots license
Good academic standing with 1.00 GPA or better
ELIGIBILITY
- Physically qualified for flying
- Two academic years remaining for graduation from September 1970 as an undergraduate, graduate, or combination
— Poss Air Force Officer qualification test
DON'T DELAY
SERIOUSLY CONSIDER THIS OPPORTUNITY
Physically qualified for flying
CONTACT: The Air Force ROTC Office 108 Military Science Building UN 4-4218
NOTE: Limited openings for non-flying cadets
Test walk a Plymouth.
Oxford and buckle boot in rugged pre-antiqued brown grain.
Plymouth
Middleboro, Massachusetts
Manufacturers of world famous Apache Mocs
Robinson Shoe Co.
Kansas City
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
annual newsletter are offered to
all students without regard to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILLA LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier. Inputs for mag, or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM. Aux. Will match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Ed.
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 140 St.
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. If
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white, everything in t a c t—good mechanical shape; front seat. Call Frank Kline, wri tile 21.1, write 21.4, nite, Kansas. 9,14-11
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear rear. Aqua/air. $895.00, contact Mrs. Lloyd. 8-5-00 U-4-3833, after 3:20. 842-5469 11-17
One women's Naismith dorm contract for second semester, Call VI 2-5898. 11-11
2 tickets for KU-Oklahoma game.
Doug Henson, V 1-2100. 11-11
1965 Tempest Custom 2 door hardtop, V8.4 boll, sticker, heavy duty suspension, radio, heater, whitewalls, tinted glass, full instrumentation. Clean, one owner. $1295. Call Steve. Room 337. VI 2-1200. 11-13
Portable TV, 12 inch, BW with UHF and ear piece. Great for dorm viewing. Need to disturb rooming. Hours 842-3197 after 9 p.m. except Tues. 11-12
1967 Chevette SS 396, 4-speed, 2 dr.
twin turbo top, or warranty, 11-14
Call 842-8852
5 string bluegrass banjo; Harmony.
Excellent condition with case included.
Contact Larry at 842-9100, rm. 327
or leave name and phone. 11-12
Complete equipment set for a dark room enlarger. Durm D 680, Contact Majid Sammam any time after 15:30 International. Office Room Oread. 11-14
For Sale. Five tickets to the OU-KU game, at a reduced price of $5.00 (they cost us $6.10). Contact Steve at VI 2-8732. 11-14
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
67 Honda 305ce Srambler; stock,
very clean, no damage; plus helmet,
extra for $425 Call Rick. V-3 7145.
No. 423 after 6 11-12
4 OU vs. KU football tickets, together or separate. Call 842-5639. 11-13
Superb 1957 Cadillac Fleetwood now available at only $375. Many power options. Must see to appreciate Call for 233 evenings or inspect an Indiana. 11-17
Get started in photography Must sell Mamiya 500TL F. 200mm F4.5; 2x
Mamiya 70mm F2.8; Home Honor Flash case and various accessories
$140.00, @ 842-5962, Mike 11-17
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
NOTICE
Large and small scale equipment for sale. Amplifiers PA horns, etc. Contact. Doug Pierce, 1209 Tennessee, 843-7863 If not there, leave message.
Do you sew but can't afford high priced fabrics? Just arrived from New York, beautiful designer fabrics, 3 yds. low prices, low prices, call 843-852-6671 appt. 11-12
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road.
843-4836. 12-2
Raney Drug Stores
Biology Club—Nov 11, 7:30 p.m., 222
Snow. Discussion on where to go and how to get in Medical, Dental, and
graduate schools. 11-11
Metal Sculpture Supplies
Tires and Batteries
A Bankmark Store
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
515 Michigan St. St. B-Qu, if you want some non-numeric goodness. See some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat. V I 2-610, Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
3 locations to serve your every need
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair probation station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynallift, and Marantz. Call 843-1484.
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Would you like to sub-lease my three to four person Harvard Square Apt. Good location, close to campus. For information call John at VI 2-141-1-711
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Loans to junior, senior and grad, slu-
sional, institutional Finance. 725 Mam
VT-8074.
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- Men's & Ladies' 2 piece Suits $1.29
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1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
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INSTALLATION
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid, VI 3-4032. tt
Table Tops
If you would like to see a course in Modern Hebrew offered at KU next Fall, please contact Sidney Flarman, 842-7822 11-12
If you can't go to Khabmandu to shop,
come to the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open 8:30-4:30 daily,
12:30-4:30 Sunday. 11-12
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Need extra cash. I will die if I don't get an Economics 10 tutor—instructor is Pritchard. Call 842-2887 A.S.A.P. 11-12
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One for four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-8168.
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens with dishwashers. $150 to $185 plus cleaning. Company VI 3-6153 or VI 3-5730
Furnished, wood-panelled 4-room apartment for one or two. One block from campus at 1500 Kentucky Parking. Available Now 11-11 842-5921.
FOR RENT
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35 a month. Available now, call VI 3-2116. tf
For Rent: 1 bedroom, unfurnished apartment. 2 blocks from campus. $110 per month plus utilities. Call 842-3750. 11-13
Have moved into an apartment. Must sell woman's Naismith contract. Will take any reasonable offer. Call VI 2-1188. 11-14
Man's billfold in Trailroom, Kansas
Union. Keep the money—return the
John Pizimizm at Museum of Nat. History or leave one
sage. UN 4-3178 11-11
LOST
Two personalized checkbooks belonging to Robert E. Townsend, Jr. 1606 North Third. Garden City, Kansas. Reward offered, call Bob at B17-3-483.
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Aquarium with fish and plants.
Sliames claepoint neutered male, no front claws, clipped whiskers, very crossed, very big, 15-20 pounds, reward. Please call Sherry. 842-4938
Home of the "Big Shef"
LOST—Man's Black framed glasses—somewhere between Summerfield and Strong. Bring to UDK office or contact McColm Hall, Rn 113-7 843-6600.
Lost Ladies' Hamilton Watch, gold case
case off at air on campus. Rewards 11-17
lost. KU Big 8 swimming Champion
Neward, Call Ray, 842-6982 11-17
Lost: brown checkbook under name of Romnie Warman Jr. and an Over-()
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HELP WANTED
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part time. Apply in person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. ff
BURGER CHEF
Good experienced organ player needed for Rock Band. Losing our organ player as soon as replaced. Call Glen Morton. VI 3-7810. 11-11
Male—evening and weekend, help wanted. No experience needed. Apply at Harold's "66" Service. 1401 West 6th Street. 11-13
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in need at least one year. Ready to graduate preferred. VI 3-6424 11-21
CASH—for your old weight-lifting outfit that's been gathering dust under the bed for so long. Call 843-8215 in the A.M. (Keep trying).
WANTED
Wanted. Typist who is full-time student and qualifies for work study program. Phone 864-3819 or 843-3718, 11-13
Wanted: To buy 1 set of Mag Wheels for a 1968 Chevy Nova. Call VI 2-6600 and leave a message for Jose. Room 753. 11-13
Must have 3 tickets to the MU-KU
call 842-7425. Important.
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Lowrence, Kansas 66044
Wanted: Rock bands, Apply; at
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Wanted—part-time male help and female help for bartenders and waiters Apply between 4 and 5 Tues. - Fri. at 804 W 24th, directly behind Lum's
TYPING
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Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist Themes, theses, dissertations typed glish-Speech Education Electric office-size typewriter 843-2871. 11-24
A character playing the piano.
TYPING. Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misel, typing Have electric typewriter with pen type Service. Phone service. Phone 12-5455, Ms. Wright.
Ralph Dobyns Where are you? Call Tony Croman 842-777-371 or 842-777-390 11-14
Pilots fly at half in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparative information chart. Phone 842-1124
11-19
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Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt accurate work. Call M1 3-4281. Mrs Kraukman
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Whittle your ears to the sound of times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kan., 913-648-1777, ff
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Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact:
Larry Rosenberger University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall
Classified Rates
Classified Roles
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
- Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
Salaries give 'inadequate' support
(Continued from page 1)
Wallace said his family budget is so tight that when any emergency, such as hospital bills or car repairs comes up, he has to take out a loan.
"So far I've borrowed a total of $2,500 in National Defense Education Act loans. That's in addition to numerous small bank loans," Wallace said. He is currently paying off three bank loans.
The thing that hurts most, he said, is the rising cost of food.
"It's a good thing we live in a college town." Wallace said, "because most of the entertainment is very inexpensive."
Until a year ago, when he got an extra job working for the Headstart Program, Wallace's family income was under the government poverty level.
"The only reason I can't receive welfare payments, is that I have a part time job," he said.
Although he brings home $260 a month from the University, Wallace said a list of his expenses
12 KANSAN Nov. 11 1969
would show it costs much more than the University is paying to support even a small family. He listed his living expenses as approximately:
Rent and utilities-$120 a month
Food-$100 a month
Car payment-$55 a month
Insurance-$40 a month
Drugs, sundries-$30 a month
“contingency expenses”-clothes,
extra books, repairs, etc.-$50-
$55 a month
With expenses of at least $400 a month, it is very hard to make ends meet he said, even with a part-time job.
"Another problem, or disadvantage, is that I can't send my children to any nursery school," Wallace said. "I can't get them in Headstart, I can't afford to send them to a private nursery school and the waiting list at the KU nursery school is too long."
Wallace said still another problem is the University's policy of giving raises.
"When I passed my master's exams, it was in October and I didn't get a raise until the following September. Then, I passed my doctoral comprehensives last November and didn't get a raise
He said he thought the raise should have gone into effect the following semester, instead of a year later.
until my first paycheck this year," Wallace said.
What makes the case for higher salaries for A.I.'s and T.A.'s at KU so forceful is that Wallace's situation is not unique. He is a typical example of a married graduate student.
There are other problems faced by teaching graduates. Their income is taxable. Last year the major universities in the country worked out an agreement with the government to allow teaching assistants not to pay income taxes.
It now appears the government is backing down on its part of the deal and is trying to collect for the back taxes not paid.
Most graduate students and administrators at KU agree the quality of graduate students teaching here will drop if KU's salaries are not competitive with other schools in the midwest.
This alone gives urgency to the demands for higher salaries for assistant instructors and teaching assistants.
GI war captives discussed in U.N. committee
Mrs. Rita E. Hauser, permanent U.S. representative on the U.N. Human Rights Commission, will raise the question of the fate of 400 to 1,300 U.S. servicemen believed in Hanoi's hands when the General Assembly's Social, Humanitarian and Cultural Committee begins its rights debate today.
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)— The United States will begin a major drive today for action on North Vietnam's treatment of American prisoners of war.
bringing it before the full assembly as a major agenda issue because the desire was to emphasize the human rights of the captives rather than stir up a political issue, an American spokesman said.
Washington chose to raise the question in the relatively subordinate committee rather than
Official approaches by the U.S. negotiating team at Paris have brought no information from the Hanoi representatives.
The North Vietnamese position is that the prisoner-of-war question must await settlement of political issues. Hanoi contends that U.S. captives in its hands are "war criminals" rather than war
prisoners and therefore are not guaranteed protection under the 1849 Geneva Convention.
Anti-war meeting
The KU Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
This will be the final organizational meeting of the group before the November war moratorium activities begin Friday.
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Du Pont's innovation ? Hollow, semiipermeable nylon fibers much finer than human hair. Symmetrical, with an outer diameter of .002 inch and a wall thickness of .0005 inch, with an accuracy of manufacture maintained at close to 100%. Twenty-five to 30 million of them encased in a precisely engineered unit 14 inches in diameter by 7 feet long.
The result: a semipermeable surface area of about 85,000 square feet—the size of a 2-acre lot—and up to 10,000 gallons of desalted water per day.
So far "Permasep"® permeators have been used experimentally to purify brackish and polluted water, and in various industrial separations. But the potential to desal seawater, too, is there.
So Du Pont scientists and engineers are even now working toward improved fibers, units and plant designs that should make it possible to get fresh water from salt at a price that any town or nation can afford.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1969
80th Year, No. 43
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
VIRGINIA POLICE DEPARTMENT
Photo by Douglas W. Sheffner
Cadets honor veterans
Col. Philip H. Riedel, professor of military science, addressed a group of ROTC cadets Tuesday and called upon them to honor and draw inspiration from our veterans. Members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, post 14 of the American Legion, and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, post 852, were also present for the official observation of Veteran's Day.
Students prepare for Topeka march
By CAROLYN BOWERS Kansan Staff Writer
Approximately one thousand marchers are expected to participate in a march at 2 p.m. and rally at 3 p.m. in Topeka Saturday to protest the war in Vietnam.
Tom Ashton, Lawrence graduate student and KU mobilization steering committee member, said that this figure was estimated from reports received from mobilization committees at several Kansas colleges.
A permit to march was granted Monday to Mike Beiriger, Prairie Village freshman and parade coordinator, by the Topeka Police Department said Mrs. Jean Ashton, Lawrence senior and steering committee member.
The march will proceed from 2nd Street and Van Buren Avenue to the south steps of the State House.
Professor to speak
Harry G. Shaffer, professor or economics; Mrs. Wes Santee, spokesman for the Lawrence residents' mobilization group and Bob Swan, unsuccessful 1968 Congressional candidate,will speak before the rally on the steps.
Those participating in the march will meet in X-Zone parking lot at 12:30 p.m. Saturday. Ashton said cars will be available for anyone needing a ride.
The Topeka Police Department has asked that cars be parked near the State House to avoid congestion at the parade site, Ashton said.
The KU mobilization committee has asked that only one day of classes be set aside in observance of the November war moratorium instead of the plan prescribed by the national organization to increase by one day each month.
Impracticality cited
"Since this is a university and education is the reason why everyone is here. It would be impractical to try and build moratoriums lasting several days," Mrs. Ashton said.
The two-day moratorium will begin Friday with speeches and open classes scheduled on the campus similar to the October event.
An all-day silent vigil in front
of Strong Hall will begin events at 9 a.m. Friday. Rev. C. F. "Dutch" Stoltz, Episcopal campus priest of Canterbury House, will speak at a memorial service at the proposed site of Wescoe Hall at 9:15 a.m.
Students will have an opportunity to express their views concerning the war at an open mike session following the service at the same location.
Faculty speakers
Several faculty members will also speak at the open mike throughout the day. Robert E. Nunley, associate professor of geography, will speak at 10 a.m.; Donald Marquis, acting assistant professor of philosophy, will speak at 11 a.m. and Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, will speak at 1 p.m.
At 2:30 p.m., the open mike session will end with folk singing and poetry reading. Two open classes will also be sponsored by professors in lieu of their regularly scheduled meetings.
At 9:30 a.m., John Wright, as-
(Continued to page 16)
Crowds show Nixon backing
Nation honors war dead
By United Press International
Americans observed Veterans Day Tuesday with traditional ceremonies honoring the nation's war dead and a show of support both silent and vocal-for President Nixon's policies to end the war in Vietnam.
In the nation's traditional No. 1 Veterans Day observance—the laying of the President's red, white and blue wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington National Cemetery—an administration spokesman bid for support of the "silent majority."
Donald E. Johnson, head of the Veterans Administration, said "thousands of Americans are
speaking up, proudly proclaiming their unashamed love of America and urging the overwhelming silent majority of their fellow Americans to join them in declaration of love for, and faith in, our great country."
An estimated 10,000 persons gathered at the foot of the Washington Monument Tuesday and gave noisy support to President Nixon's efforts to end the Vietnam War.
U. S. park police reported a few scattered incidents but no violence during the Veterans Day demonstration held two days before the start of mass antiwar protests in the capital and across the country.
Isolated groups of long-haired youths argued with middle-aged men, one of whom carried a placard reading "communism is the eneny." Another, saying he was a World War II veteran, turned on five khaki-clad youths and shouted they should join the draft and stop criticizing "good Americans." Both youth groups left without incident.
The Monument crowd was by far the biggest of the day in Washington. Lee Edwards, a Washington lawyer who was Barry M. Goldwater's presidential
(Continued to page 16)
Scott says Haynsworth plan not true
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott denied reports Tuesday that he would vote for the nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., to the Supreme Court only if his vote were needed.
Friends of the Pennsylvania Republican told UPI that Scott planned to duck the confirmation roll call expected next week. They said he planned to vote for confirmation only if his vote assured
nomination and "no" if the issue is decided without his vote.
But Scott denied he had such plans. He said he had told no one which way he stood on the question, "not even my wife."
If Scott's friends were correct, Haynsworth would have to face the confirmation vote without the support of three of the top Republican leaders — Scott, whip Robert P. Griffin of Michigan and Republican conference chairman Margaret Chase Smith of Maine
garet Chase Smith of Maine.
who already have publicly opposed confirmation.
But Scott's statements would leave him in the column of uncommitted who hold the key to the outcome of the vote. Their number grew by one Tuesday with a Republican senator privately opposed to confirmation switching to the undecided.
That left 20 senators in the undecided column—12 Republicans and eight Democrats—with 43 senators opposed and 37 in favor.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
March route okayed
WASHINGTON—The government has agreed to allow an antiwar M-day march, perhaps involving up to 70,000 demonstrators, to pass within one block of the White House in exchange for a pledge of nonviolence from leaders of the protest.
The agreed-upon march route involves use of Pennsylvania Avenue.
Leaders of the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam 'New Mobe', who had fought for use of Pennsylvania Avenue during lengthy negotiations with the Justice Department, hailed the agreement as a victory.
LBJ may have to testify
CHICAGO—If the defense in the Chicago riot conspiracy trial has its way, it will put on the witness stand a parade of past and present political powers, including former President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Stewart Ball, a member of the legal staff defending the seven men charged with conspiring to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention, said Tuesday subpoenas were being drawn for Johnson, Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., and J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., and former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark.
DRIVER EDUCATION CAR
KANSAS 569
D·741·G
Photo by Burt Lancaster
Would you believe it was the other guy's fault?
Wood Design now offered
An illustrated short course on timber design and construction will be offered from 1:30-4:30 p.m. Nov. 17 in the Kansas Union . Forum Room.
The course will cover a wide range of wood uses in various structures with emphasis on proper specifications and techniques. The short course is designed to augment existing courses in design, construction and materials.
300 Kansans will go to D.C. for M-day
Sponsors are the Southern Pine Association, American Institute of Timber Construction, American Plywood Association and Southern Pressure Treaters Association. Representatives of each of these organizations will conduct color slide presentations to demonstrate correct procedure in engineered timber construction, lumber and plywood utilization, finishing and preservation treatment.
Leaders condemn action
By CAROLYN BOWERS
Kansan Staff Writer
Mobilization leaders are unhappy but not discouraged by the Justice Department's denial of a parade permit for Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C.
The march was originally scheduled by the New Mobilization Committee (New Mobe) to take place along Pennsylvania Avenue. The Justice Department agreed Friday to allow marchers to proceed down Constitution Avenue. New Mobe rejected the alternate route.
National guardsmen will be present during the march. Leaders of the KU Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam condemned the Department's decision last week as "an unrealistic attempt on the part of the government to discourage marchers from coming to Washington."
No one from the Lawrence area is discouraged, said Fred Murphy, Fayette, Mo., sophomore, Dave Ranney, Wichita junior and Louis Wolfe, program director of the Lawrence Peace Center.
Murphy and Ranney are steering committee members of the KU Mobilization Committee. Wolfe has coordinated plans for a chartered bus to Washington.
Rights are challenged
"Although the issue is still the Vietnam war and not the right for any given street, I seriously question the intentions of our government when it tries to simulate confrontation," said Wolfe, who views the Department's action as "strictly political."
"The right of Americans to congregate in American streets is still challenged." Wolfe added.
"The purpose of denying the permit is to tear down the moratorium and what it's trying to do and say." Murphy said.
"I want to go now more than ever to support it," Ranney said. "I'm not violent and I want to show that I'm against the war."
300 from Kansas
Wolfe, who has canvassed state colleges for several weeks to interest others in the Washington trip, expects approximately 300 people from Kansas to go. Students from K-State, Wichita State University and Bethel College in Newton are among those who will be going, he said.
"A conservative estimate of the number of people who will be in Washington on Saturday is a quarter of a million," he said, "although this could easily grow to 500,00 or even a million."
"There is no doubt that a large part of the people will be university-oriented," he said"but we also expect a fairly large involvement of Congressmen and representatives of church-related groups."
"The administration could contend with this if there were only students participating but there
will be too many other people involved," he said.
Troops cause concern
The presence of National Guard troops will only incite violence, Ranney said.
"This is just what the government wants," Ranney said. "With all those people there, it's to be expected that someone will get out of line. This will be an excuse for the troops to clear the street."
Jean Ashton, Lawrence senior and steering committee member, expressed concern for the government's expectation of violence.
"I suppose in their fear they feel they need to have troops there," Mrs. Ashton said, "but I hope they use discretion and don't crack down on the slightest provocation."
CATGIF
7:00 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 14
at the
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— Refreshments —
Campus Crusade
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2 KANSAN Nov.12 1969
Alices
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Those leaving in car pools for the Death March will meet in the same parking lot Thursday at 8 p.m. and leave by 8:30 p.m, Wolfe said. Upon arrival in Washington, students will meet at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, 1313 New York Ave. 2 a.m. Saturday. Shuttle buses will transport marchers to the parade site.
is scheduled to begin Thursday from Arlington National Cemetery and continue through Saturday. Each marcher will wear the name of one soldier from his home state who was killed in Vietnam. Kansas marchers are expected to begin marching early Saturday morning.
your thing
"The government is playing up violence because it doesn't want people against its policy in Washington," Bob Mears, Northfield, Minn., graduate student and steering committee member said.
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Wolfe said a 39-passenger bus, sponsored by the local moratorium committee, will begin loading 11 p.m. Thursday in the parking lot west of the Kansas Union on Mississippi Street and will leave 11:30 p.m.
new groove
The bus will arrive in Washington in time for passengers to participate in the March Against Death early Saturday morning. This demonstration, preceding Saturday's mass march and rally,
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Campus briefs
WAC officer to speak
A speaker from the Women's Army Corps will talk to the Physical Therapy Club tonight at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Pine Room.
The speaker, Capt, Bonnie E. Martin, is from the Army's Medical Special Corps. She will speak on the role of physical therapy in the Army, on what the Army has to offer students, and on the question "Why go Army?"
Wright to talk on KU influences
Wright's speech, "Get off the Hill," is sponsored by the SUA and is part of the University Seminar program. The speech will deal with the many things which influence a college public but primarily with those that influence the KU community.
John Wright, associate professor of human relations and family living, will lecture at 7:30 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Through blood drives, the Red Cross collects enough blood to supply half of the more than five million blood units used each year in the United States. Every component of each pint is used
Organist to play, lecture
Clark will present a public organ recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall. There will be no admission charge.
It's a little like the way the Plains Indians treated the bison; nothing went to waste, and everything was put to the best possible use.
A University of Michigan faculty member, Robert Clark, will be the first participant in the visiting artist and lecturer series offered this year by the department of organ.
Clark will also present public master classes at 9:30 a.m. Thursday and at 1 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall. His class subject will be J.S. Bach's Clavieruebung, Part III.
The University of Kansas is within the Wichita Regional Blood Center, one of 59 regional centers located throughout the country. The Wichita center
Engineering lecture tonight
Don W. Green and Kenneth A. Bishop, associate professors of chemical and petroleum engineering, will address the KU chapter American Institute of Chemical Engineers at 7:30 p.m. tonight in 209 Learned Hall.
Green and Bishop will talk on their work, "Hybrid Computing."
Chemical and petroleum engineering students and faculty are invited, and the treasurer will be available to collect the annual $2 dues from anyone who would like to join.
Learjet representative will speak
Red Cross utilizes blood for many different needs
The American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics will present Ron Neal of Learjet at 8 p.m. tonight in 200 Learned Hall.
Neal will speak on "Aviation and the Role of the Aviation Engineer."
Gibbs scholarships offered
The Katherine Gibbs School of New York City is offering two national scholarships for college senior women.
Each scholarship consists of full tuition of $1,550, plus a $500 each award. The scholarship is for a full secretarial training course at one of the Katherine Gibbs Schools in Boston, New York, Montclair or Providence.
For application, write: Memorial Scholarship Committee, Katherine Gibbs School, 200 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017.
The committee will choose the winners on the basis of college academic record, financial need and potentialities for success in business.
Elections decided without voting
For the five open offices in the Engineering Council only five petitions were submitted, one for each office, said Donald E. Metzler, associate dean of the School of Engineering.
"Since there appears to be no competition against these men for their offices," Metzler said, "they are hereby considered duly elected."
their offices." Metzler said, "they are hereby considered duly elected." The officers are: Robert A. Bibb, Mission senior, president; Allan Shumaker, Wetmore junior, vice-president; David C. Dwyer, Mission senior, corresponding secretary; Terry D. Extrum, Denver Col. senior, treasurer; John Heather, recording secretary.
After hour treatment discouraged
Students requiring treatment in the laboratory or use of the pharmacy created a special problem because technicians and pharmacists have to be called to work at an extra cost to the hospital
A large number of students coming to Watkins Hospital after regular hospital hours for routine purposes is creating a costly problem, said Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, Thursday.
Schwegler said students needing routine health care should try to come to the hospital during regular hospital hours, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., but he stressed students having immediate health needs should not hesitate to come to the hospital after hours, if necessary.
John Brown display at Spencer
A display in the regional history section of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library memorializes John Brown, the controversial abolitionist.
Brown's letters and other literature of the period of "bleeding Kansas" are flanked in the display by a well-preserved Sharp's Rifle
Nov. 12
1969 KANSAN 3
(one of the "Beecher's Bibles" smuggled through pro-slavery Missouri to Kansas) and a pike (one of 2,000 such weapons ordered by Brown for use by slaves in rebellion).
A man, believed by Lawrence police to be wanted in connection with a car theft, threatened an injured motorist at an accident at 19th and Iowa and fled on foot last night.
John Gentry of Bartlesville, Oklahoma chased the occupant of a cream-colored 1968 Cadillac after it rammed a car in which he was riding. Another car was also hit at the intersection.
Two injured man flees
Gentry said he ran after the man and asked him where he was going. "I don't remember too much except he was carrying a package under his arm. I grabbed his shoulder and he muttered something. Then he swung around and said if I didn't let go he'd knife me. He lunged at me, I let go, and he ran," Gentry said.
Lawrence detectives said they believed the car had been stolen in Topeka. The officers conducted a brief search of the area for the man but abandoned it later. An officer said the suspect would probably turn up.
Because Douglas County participates in the Red Cross blood program, KU students and county residents are entitled to Red Cross blood privileges.
After interrogation at the scene by police, Gentry was taken to the hospital by Alan Cunningham, Bartlesville junior. Carol Cunningham, an employee of KANU and the driver of one of the involved autos, was taken to the hospital earlier.
serves 100 participating counties in Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri and Texas. It also serves 150 hospitals in this region with a total population of two million.
Official Bulletin
Today
Carillon Recital. Albert Gerken, 7 p.m.
Classical Film, "Viridiana." (Spanish) Dyche Auditorium, 8.p.m.
robert Clark, clerk, grow organi-
tal. State University.
Also Broadcast, KANU 915 FM, 8 p.m.
Sign Students. Sign up now for
Christmas in houses around
the U.S. 226 High Hall.
Kansas Asphalt Paving Conference.
Kansas Union, all day.
Jayhawk Joggers Club. East door Robinson Gymnastium, 4:30 p.m.
"Sigma Xi Lecture." "Atmospheric Turmell Seen from Space." Verner E. Ubom, Director, Space Science and Engineering of Wisconsin. Dyche A. 7:30 p.m.
Broadcast. "The Tempest." Recording of the Marlow Society and Professional Players. KANU, 91.5 FM, 7 p.m.
SUA Seminar. "Get Off the Hill"
PRO John Wright. Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m.
University Council, 108 Blake, 3:30 p.m.
lnbukw
Free University Rock Music Class.
1247 Tennessee. 7:30 p.m.
SUA Feature. Lillian Lilian in person
film. Kansas Union Ballroom,
8 p.m.
Dragon
ATTENTION:
La librairie de la bibliothèque Watson vient de recevoir un choix de plus de 200 livre en langue française
Every student is entitled to Red Cross blood at a cost of 13 dollars a pint whether or not he donates blood. This contrasts a cost as high as $100 per pint in some metropolitan hospitals which do not participate in the program.
Venez nous voir
1:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
closed Saturday
UN 4-3239
The Red Cross blood program differs greatly from hospital blood banks. A blood bank usually supplies its own area. The Red Cross also supplies more than 50 per cent of all blood used in research. This blood can only be supplied to non-profit research organizations. Three per cent of all blood collected by the Red Cross goes to research.
After the blood is collected, it is primarily sent to distribution points and hospitals. Needed blood is often supplied by the hospitals' own stocks. If more blood is needed, sub-center distribution points, operating from
the main center in Wichita maintain a 24-hour service.
When a hospital uses Red Cross blood, it pays the Wichita center $13 per pint, the cost to the patient. Transportation costs to the hospital are paid by the Red Cross. The $13 charge partially pays the cost of collection, processing and distribution. The policy of the Red Cross is to supply blood, components and derivatives to hospitals at less than the cost of production.
After the blood is collected, it may be stored for 21 days. After this period, the red cells are no longer useable. These cells are then removed and the remaining plasma may be stored for an indefinite period. Some derivatives may also be removed from the cells.
In order to properly participate in the blood drive program, each county should collect units equivalent to 4 per cent of that county's population. This is needed to meet in-county and out-of-county needs, derivatives program, research, blood for disasters, the Department of Defense, Veterans Administration, and regional military hospital needs and dependents of servicemen overseas.
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KANSAN Comment
Democrazy in action
Members of the University Senate—KU's representative governing body for faculty and students—attempt to reach a consensus.
Photo by Halina Pawl
Just because 200,000 persons march in the streets for peace, said Spiro Agnew this week, we have no excuse to assume that the marchers represent the millions of American citizens. President Nixon has beamed and pointed to the stacks of letters and telegrams which the "silent majority" have addressed to him since his Nov. 3 speech. And the Moratorium organizers argue that their numbers are increasing rapidly and can cite polls to prove it.
It all points to a staunchly-held American belief that if enough support can be garnered for a particular point of view, then that viewpoint will be considered worthwhile. Whatever "the people" want must be morally right—merely because they want it. Morality somehow has become an offspring of large numbers.
We've seen that viewpoint at KU, where members of the Student Senate have balked on vital action, saying they would like to poll their constituency before voting.
This is the democratic way of government, which has seen America through nearly 200 years. And when we are deciding matters such as the raising or lowering of taxes, the hiring or firing of public officials, or the building or destruction of government programs, majority rule seems to work out okay.
It does slow things down. Referendum votes take time, and so does the building of mass support for any plan of action. The election process, for instance, is spun into several months of psychologically-oriented spiderwebs aimed to catch the voters' minds. Surely a dictator would be much quicker.
But we're not interested in saving time. America began with the intent to provide government of and for the people and we've seen that the idea is basically sound.
Yet in spite of the somewhat steady success of American democracy, several flaws are inherent in the system. Alexis de Tocqueville, in Democracy in America, called one flaw the "tyranny of the majority." Americans have embodied a social myth, an abstraction, with an ethical sanction. Tocqueville questioned whether a nation so conceived could long endure.
Nelson W. Polsby and Aaron B. Wildavsky, in Presidential Elections, carry on this point, saying advocates of consensus government suggest "no external criteria by which policies can be measured in order to determine whether or not they are in the public interest. So long as the process by which decisions are made consists of intergroup bargaining, within certain specified democratic 'rules of the game,' they regard the outcome as being in the public interest."
Polsby and Wildavsky suggest that what "the people" want may not always be the best way to decide what is good for them. External standards need to
be available to limit the control of the majority. Some controls have been built into the American system. An example is the electoral college. Pummeled though it is by criticism, it is a better way to elect a president than by direct popular vote.
During election time, candidates inadvertently exhibit some of the sadder aspects of consensus government. In order to collect votes, candidates apply principles of advertising to merchandise themselves. This engineering of consent and consensus reached its full—and somewhat ugly—flowering during the last presidential elections. The public relations and makeup men today can fashion and remake history.
Within a consensus form of government, where decisions are made by reaching majority agreements, sometimes the battles are bloody before a mass of Americans can decide to agree on something. "Consensus is threatened by sharp disagreement over economic issues, by the diversity of our economic, racial, religious, ethnic and sectional groupings, by our restless and immoderate people and by the tendency of a nontraditional society to push political conflict to its most unfortunate logical conclusion," Polsby and Wildavsky write.
We have seen this tendency toward civil war many times in American history. Again this weekend, we are warned, violence may erupt as thousands of Americans attempt to vote in the streets in the second Moratorium observances.
Then too, there is always the nagging doubt: Is the common man even competent to make the decisions which govern his life? On a national level, we can surely argue that few know enough of the political, historical, social and economic aspects of the war in Vietnam to make a soundly-based decision on U.S. involvement there. At KU, few students know enough about the costs and need for a new satellite union to vote intelligently on its construction.
When ignorance prevails, it is easy for a clever man to lead the people like so many silly sheep.
Such folks as Philip Wylie think the masses are nothing but a bunch of boobs. He is nauseated by the common man. "For it is our American common people," he says, and not the highly-educated ones, who have chucked overboard the critical method and thereby cut loose the ship of state from its sounding machinery, its rudder, its glass and its keel, leaving the whole business to drift where the blather of common men blows it."
I would not criticize government by consensus so strongly as Philip Wylie does. I have a little more faith in the abilities and capabilities of mankind.
But American government does have its faults—faults which we often ignore, standing under the red, white and blue banner of patriotism.
Consensus government, as I have said, contains too few insurances against mass decisions which might be gravely wrong and dangerous to society. It is too easy to provoke popular support for a viewpoint or a person merely by exploiting advertising techniques. Conflict before reaching consensus often means figurative and/or literal headchopping. And sometimes the citizens are simply too ignorant to make the right decisions.
There are other pitfalls in government by consensus, but to me these seem to be the biggest flaws in the diamond. To get rid of all these problems, we would have to throw out the whole system of government—which would be like tossing baby out with the dirty bathwater. Somehow that doesn't seem worthwhile.
Those involved in government—and in America that means everyone—should take a sober look at these and other fallacies inherent in the system.
And they must keep in mind the comment of Joseph Wood Krutch in the Jan. 10, 1953 issue of Saturday Review: "... to confuse The Best with the most
widely and most generally acceptable is to reveal a spiritual confusion which is subtle and insidious as well as fundamental."
Perhaps if we know where the booby-traps are and what they look like, we will be able to avoid them some of the time.
Joanna K. Wiebe
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 periods. Mail subscription rates $3 per month, 10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Job duties: provide guest services and employment advertised to students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor . . Alan T. Jones
Editor of California Journal
Editor . . Joe Bullard
News Editor . . Ruth Ademacher
Editor . . Ken Peterson
Sports Editor . Theo Manseldorf
Wire Editor . Martha Manglesdorf
Arts and Review Ed. . Mike Shearer
Writes with Lloyd Loyd
Photo and Graphics Editor
Mike Rieke Assistant News Editors
Editor
Donna Shrader, Steve Haynes
Assistant Editor, Joe Childs
Assistant Editor, John DeMuro
Judith K. Diebolt
Assistant Campus Editor
Campsus Bison
Rick Pendergrass
Tufts
Assistant Women's Page Editor
Viktoria Hertzen
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Advisor ... Mel Adams
Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield
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Advertising Manager Jack Hurley
National Advertising Manager Rod Oaborne
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Promotion Manager Bill McCirculation Manager Todd Smith
Member Associated Collegiate Press
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
ANTS
"OH, WHAT A TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE, WHEN FIRST WE...
ZAP!
I HAD TO OPEN MY BIG MOUTH
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
"OH, WHAT A TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE, WHEN FIRST WE...
ZAP!
I HAD TO
OPEN MY
BIG MOUTH
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Daily Kansan.
Class hides out in bushes
Lost: One Design 1B class somewhere on campus. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of this elusive group of nine dizzy females and two bashful males please contact Phillip Blackhurst, instructor of the class.
The 11 militant art students were reportedly seen outside the Mechanical-Engineering building at 2:29 p.m. Monday afternoon, just after walking out of class. Reliable sources say the students left class after Blackhurst assigned them to make an honest effort at establishing or breaking a world record. The group disappeared shortly thereafter.
Speculation has it the group may be trying to "ditch" their instructor.
Blackhurst was observed crawling under bushes, groping through trash, wading Potters Lake and climbing trees and flagpoles desperately searching for some trace of the missing students that would give him hope. Among the few clues discovered are scraps of paper with handwritten messages carelessly scrawled across them. These notes contain such warnings as "We've already been here." "Are you tired of walking? We're not."
An elderly woman reported spying the missing students getting off a campus bus in front of the Kansas Union at approximately 4:20 p.m. The driver of the bus, bus 148, said the eleven students had been riding for one hour and 40 minutes on their initial fee of 15 cents each (possibly a world record).
Zellar loses moon dust
Edward J. Zeller, professor of geology and physics has received a letter from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration stating that the experiments on moondust he had originally planned will be performed by Robert Walker of Washington University.
Walker has been designated principal investigator for Apollo missions 11, 12, and 13. Because Zeller has requested dust from Apollo missions 14 and 15 as well, he said he doesn't know if NASA's decision also affects there.
Zeller said he will inquire about whether or not he has been excluded from the moon dust studies.
Kansas Viet army unit may return for holiday
TOPEKA (UPI)—Some members of the Kansas Army National Guard's 69th Brigade now serving in Vietnam may be home for Thanksgiving.
Col. Thomas J. Kennedy, commander of the unit headquartered at Ft. Carson, Colo., said Tuesday men of the brigade in Vietnam would return to their home armies the week of Nov. 24.
He said nearly 1,500 men serving in Vietnam will be flown directly home without prior processing at Ft. Carson. The 900 men of the 69th on duty at the Colorado Army post will be reassigned to their home armories Dec. 5, he said.
Nov. 12 KANSAN 5
1969
The possibility of foul play has not been ruled out in the case.
Four members of the design class who did not participate in the walkout said they could not go along with the group's "anarchist activities." The four students called the entire situation a "carnival."
There are more than 30,000 caves in the United States.
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Emphasis on treatment of waste
Lab seeks pollution solution
By CRAIG PARKER Kansan Staff Writer
An often heard complaint about the university these days is that it is not involved enough in actually solving community problems, that it is not "relevant."
But there is at least one group of people at KU, those in the C. L. Burt Environmental Health Laboratory, that are actively seeking feasible solutions to some of the problems that threaten modern technological man.
"We're an action-oriented group," said Ross E. McKinney, professor of civil engineering and director of the environmental health graduate program at KU. "We're strongly oriented towards solving problems and doing practical work."
McKINNEY SAID the laboratory is concerned with all aspects of pollution, but puts most of its research emphasis on water treatment techniques and solid waste disposal.
feel that we have a unique type of education to offer our students."
Recently the recipient of a $22,590 grant to study sewage treatment, McKinney said much of the research done at the lab is in this area.
"To do the kind of work we do, it's very helpful if a student has a background in both science and engineering," said McKinney. One of McKinney's special interests is in the area of biological waste treatment, which calls for knowledge of both biology and engineering.
"We are concerned with students doing lab work, then evaluating it in actual field practice," said McKinney. "There is one student here at the lab who works part time for the city of Lawrence on solid waste disposal problems. We are also involved in working with the Lawrence Water Treatment plant."
"ONE OF THE major problems we face is trying to get new ideas out to people." Mca small scale, say in some biological system, to larger systems," said McKinney.
A
Photo by Fred Chan
JOHN W. CROSSMAN
Photo by Fred Chan
'We hope to solve some problems'
"We have quite a few different grants from the government," said McKinney. "We have one from the Federal Water Pollution Control Administration to study bio-systems and their applications to solving pollution problems." McKinney said they also have a grant from a Kansas agency to study the removal of algae-producing nutrients from waste water.
"WE HAVE ABOUT 22 graduate students here, 16 of them at the Ph.D. level and six at the Masters level," said McKinney. "Four of these students are working on solid waste disposal and the rest are concerned with water pollution."
McKinney said he was glad the group was fairly small. This, he said, allowed them to work together easily and gave the faculty members more time to work with each student.
"WE ARE VERY proud of our program in environmental health research here," said McKinney. "Many of our students work together after they leave KU. We
Walter O'Brien, associate professor of civil engineering, and Carl Burkhead, associate professor of civil engineering, are the other staff members at the environmental health laboratory.
KANSAN
6
Nov.12
1969
"We try to get the students to build for themselves," said McKinney. One student is doing research on algae growth and has built much of the apparatus needed for the experiment.
Kinney said. "This is why I am such a firm believer in education. By educating young people, you can get your ideas out a lot faster."
McKinney emphasized that the laboratory tries to give the students practical experience as well as a theoretical background.
MOST OF THE analytical equipment in the laboratory is like that found in chemistry and biology labs and is used to study materials and organisms related to pollution and the solving of these problems.
McKinney recently received a patent for a unique waste treatment process he developed. "We hope eventually to refine this system to the point where we can make some money for the University through waste treatment operations.
"We try and emphasize the application of fundamentals on
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MEMBERSHIP TEA
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2:00-3:00 p.m. Sunday
Nov. 16
McKinney works with microorganisms to help ease pollution problems
AN EXPERIMENT McKinney is currently involved in is being performed on the roof of Learned Hall. Its purpose is to study the aerobic surface stabilization of paper and other refuse. The paper is ground up, mixed with different substances, and left out on the roof to be exposed to normal weather conditions.
"The most common way to get rid of refuse now is to bury it," said McKinney. "With that method, a disposal site is used up in a period of about five years. If we can get paper to decompose, through the use of micro-organisms and other techniques, we could make a disposal area useful for as long as 50 years."
The students and faculty at the Environmental Health Laboratory at KU are "action people" interested in eliminating problems that face an urban, industrial society today. Their work starts as a concept in the laboratory, but invariably ends up being applied to a practical solution.
WORKER PROTECTION
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NEW YORK-Most American workers today are covered by workmen's compensation insurance, notes the Insurance Information Institute. Employers in 1968 paid $2.875 billion in premiums for this protection, designed to provide for the cost of medical care and weekly payments to injured employees or to dependents of persons killed in work-connected accidents.
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Even if you don't trust anyone over 30, thats no reason for not seeing Tenneco. We're only 26.
You were probably born in the late 1940's. We were born just a few years earlier - in 1943. Which makes Tenneco a company of your generation.
And yet, in our short 26 years, we have grown in assets from nothing to the nation's 16th largest industrial corporation.
We're big in a number of major areas. Oil. Chemicals Natural gas pipelining. Land use. Packaging. Manufacturing of automobile components, construction and farm machinery And shipbuilding. Which means that we can offer you just the career you're looking for. And just about anywhere in the U.S.
If you want to experience the challenge and satisfaction of building, Tenneco could be for you. Our representative will be on your campus. He wants to see you regardless of your draft status.Hear what he's got to say.
We're coming to University of Kansas November 17.
Contact your Placement Office for an interview appointment. Or write Jerry May, Recruitment Manager, Tenneco Inc., P.O.Box 2511, Houston, Texas 77001.
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12
Weak-kneed Namath
Long before the Bachelors' III incident threatened Broadway Joe's pro career, his brittle knees during college days at Alabama caused many coaches to question his success as a pro. Quarterbacks such as Namath have been susceptible to knee damage this year as seen locally with the injuries of the Chief's Len Dawson and KU's Jim Efinger.
Passing booms in Big Eight
By United Press International Big Eight Conference football teams are passing more and the fans are enjoying it.
Divison playoffs continue
Intramural playoffs continue this week with six games Thursday and six games Friday. The two championship games between the winners from Fraternity A and B and the champs of Independent A and B will be played Monday, Nov. 17.
Tuesday's Results: R League
Bang Gang 8, Military Complex 3
Grendel's Mother 23, Bud Boys
6
Dawson, Ladd, Ettinger, Mears, Evans...
Templin Hayjacks 8, KU Laws 2
NEGB Sports Authority 16,
Radiation Biophysics 0
Beta Theta Pi No. 1 44, Delta Tau Delta 8
Phi Kappa Sigma 24, Lambda Chi Alpha 6
Beta Theta Pi No. 2 12, Pi Kappa Alpha 6
Theta Chi 13, Tau Kappa Epsilon 0
TODAY'S GAMES
Fraternity A League
Phi Gamma Delta vs. Phi Delta Theta
Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Delta Upsilon
Independent A League KU Laws vs. Battenfeld
College Kids vs. Grace Pearson
Nov.12
1969
8 KANSAN
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The league's teams are averaging 195 passes per week. Last year they averaged 187.
Kansas State, with white-shod Lynn Dickey doing the throwing, leads the way. The Wildcats have completed 150 of 281 passes for 1,846 yards this season.
Nebraska, which plays Kansas State Saturday, is not far behind. The Cornhuskers' quarterbacks, Jerry Taggie and Van Brownson, have completed 130 of 233 aerials for 1,695 yards.
By anology, what happens when a knee injury occurs is similar to a sharp knife and rope. If you hold a rope slack between your hands, a knife won't cut it. If the rope is pulled taunt, as are ligaments when full weight is placed on one leg, the knife will easily sever the rope. Ligaments won't sever, but they will tear.
Missouri is next. The Tigers, with quarterback Terry McMillan, have completed 83 of 195 for 1,420 yards.
Ernie Ladd and Len Dawson know an Oklahoma City doctor familiar to many a pro and collegiate player. He is Dr. Don O'Donoghue, a big man who once played football, now considered the best orthopedic surgeon in the world. His connection with athletics caused him to specialize in orthopedics and, in particular, sports-related orthopedic injuries.
Missouri traditionally has been a conservative team under coach Dan Devine. In last week's 44-10 conquest of Oklahoma, however, McMillan threw 37 passes, completing 17. In the second quarter alone, McMillan threw 19 times as Missouri scored 17 points.
Editor's note: Pankratz has had two knee operations performed by Dr. O'Donoghue.
Knee injuries swell this year
By HOWARD PANKRATZ Kansan Staff Writer
Injuires have always played an important part in football; but one type, knee injuries, strike terror in the coaches and players more than any other kind. A knee injury to a key player not only hampers the success of his team but often makes success elusive for the injured player once he has recovered.
More important to KU fans are the three knee injuries which have plagued this year's KU squad. Early season knee injuries have hindered the progress of senior quarterback Jim Ettinger and forced defensive back John Mears to undergo an operation. KU's
Bad knees have hampered Gale Sayers and Broadway Joe. Len Dawson has overcome his while the one belonging to the Chief's Ernie Ladd couldn't be forgotten.
Every Big Eight team, except one, is averaging more than 100 yards per game passing. Iowa State is that exception but is close with a 99.6 average.
So far, conference teams have thrown 61 touchdown passes. Missouri leads the conference with 13 touchdowns. Last year 68 touchdowns were thrown and Kansas led the league with 14.
is hit in the knee at the precise second he's pushing-off . . . his season's over.
latest vietim, all-Big Eight Center candidate Dale Evans, is a doubtful starter for this week's clash with Oklahoma. Evans suffered a bruised knee against Colorado and saw limited action against the Buffaloes.
A quarterback, just before he passes, will momentarily place his weight on one leg to gain leverage. Should he be hit in the knee at that instant, an injury will probably occur.
O'Donoghue's office is adjacent to St. Anthony's Hospital where he performs surgery. His waiting room is a strange picture of lame (Continued to page 9)
Quarterbacks and the "suiicide squad," as the kick-off team is called, are particularly susceptible to this injury. They receive more knee injuries because they provide easy targets for tacklers and blockers.
The injury is usually a result of a good block or tackle in the area of the lower leg or knee of the player when he has his weight on that leg.
A lineman, and especially a lineman going down field on a kick-off, may be "blind-sided" by a blocker he does not see. If he
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Injuries haunt foes
Kansas
KU will go into its battle with Oklahoma at Norman Saturday in less than top physical shape.
Coach Pepper Rodgers said it is very doubtful that veteran center Dale Evans, suffering from a bruised knee, will see action.
Three other Jayhawks are expected to be slowed because of current bouts with the flu. They are fullback John Riggins, kicker Bill Bell and offensive guard Dave Aikins.
Dale Holt will replace Dick Hertel at left halfback in the starting line up.
Oklahoma
NORMAN—Two Oklahoma mainstays, out with injuries in last week's game against Missouri, were recovering slowly Tuesday.
"In fact," coach Chuck Fairbanks said, "It's doubtful either will be able to play against Kansas."
The crippled players are defensive halfback Joe Pearce, out with a bruised shoulder, and wingback Geoffrey Nordgren, side-lined with bruised ribs.
The Sooners pleased their head coach during a long noncontact workout.
"We practiced real well, with lots of spirit and hard work," Fairbanks said. "We could use the same kind of practices the remainder of the week."
Oklahoma hosts Kansas Saturday in a Dad's Day game. More than sixty-thousand.
FAIRBANKS
Knees, Part 2
Dale Evans, KU's all-Big Eight center candidate, has started 29 straight games for Kansas but a knee injury suffered last week against Colorado makes him a doubtful participant in the Oklahoma game this Saturday in Norman.
HOUSTON (UPI) — The National Collegiate Athletic Association forbids bowl game invitations before noon Nov. 17, but that doesn't prevent selection committees from naming teams they want to see in their bowl boundaries.
Bowls eye prospects
Lou Hassell, head of the AstroBluebonnet Bowl committee, said Tuesday he would like to have the Southwest Conference runner-up for the New Year's Eve classic in the Astrodome.
"Ever since the game was started, we have attempted to get the runner-up team in the Southwest Conference, and we'll try again this year," Hassell said.
Texas or Arkansas are the likely SWC winner, who is duty bound to go to the Cotton Bowl.
The list of eligible teams is the same for every bowl: Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Missouri, Penn State, Louisiana State, Florida, Nebraska, Kansas State, Auburn, Georgia, South Carolina, West Virginia, Mississippi, Arizona State and Syracuse.
"With eight major bowls, there has to be 16 teams to fill them and it isn't easy to do," Hassell said.
Nov. 12
1969 KANSAN 9
Knee ailments plague gridders
NCAA has strictly warned bowls this year to observe regulations on invitation extension dates or face loss of certification.
young men and little children with their mothers.
(Continued from page 8)
Behind a curtain is a passageway; on one side are seven examination cubicles and on the other are the x-ray and therapy rooms. In one corner is O'Donghue's wood-panelled office with its "Big Red" plaques, attesting to the specialists' OU alumni activities, and a perculating coffee maker. An x-ray projector and pictures adorn his desk.
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O'Donoghue often recommends surgery when other doctors don't. This is well-kown among coaches such as Hank Stram of the Kansas City Chiefs. When O'Donoghue recommended surgery for Dawson, Stram called 1; a St. Louis Specialist for consultation.
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The St. Louis doctor said that with proper care the knee would recover without surgery. Because the Chief's needed Dawson and because of O'Donoghue's tendency to recommend surgery (O'Donoghue initially thought Dawson would not need an operation), Stram and Dawson decided to forego surgery.
The post-operative period of a knee operation is made bearable only by drugs and O'Donoghue's unwritten rule that his patients get together. He makes sure that each patient has the room numbers of at least two other of his wards. A patient is expected to tell the good-humored doctor not only how he feels but how the other two feel.
On release, O'Donoghue gives his patients a daily schedule of weight exercises. He expects the leg and knee to be built up to certain levels by subsequent visits.
The Oklahoma specialist doesn't recommend operations because he needs monetary relief. Rather, he believes "minor" injuries need to be corrected in a region as sensitive as the knee. Without such correction, the knee becomes susceptible to further and more serious injury.
O'Donoghue has one minor obsession and it concerns soap. For a month prior to entering the hospital, the knee must be scrubbed daily with soap. Not any soap, mind you; it has to be Dial. When he explains why, you'd swear he's straight out of a commercial . . . "it kills bacteria like no other soap can."
Orthopedic surgeons like O'Donoghue play an unheralded, but very important part, in the game of football. It is through their efforts that injured super-stars, such as Namath and Sayers, can return to the gridiron.
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Students to help in solving problems
Fine Arts School sets up advisory board
By IRENE ECONOMOUS Kansan Staff Writer
Last spring, rapid expansion of enrollment, inadequate facilities and lack of money posed serious threats to continuing the excellence of KU's art department.
This fall the situation is similar, with one exception; students now have a means of communicating their needs to the administration.
A dean's advisory board has been set up, one of many new committees in the School of Fine Arts, that includes students as well as administration, said Collene Collins, Leavenworth senior.
The purpose of the committee, Miss Collins said, is to function in an advisory capacity to help open channels of communication between students and administration; to examine and seek solutions to many of the problems within the school and to instigate action leading to the solution of these problems.
Debaters center on Vietnam
"I doubt that living under the North Vietnamese is much different from living under the communist regimes of Eastern Europe," said Carl Lande, professor of political science, before the Lawrence Rotary Club Monday.
Lande and Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare, appeared before the group to debate the pros and cons of President Nixon's Vietnam policy. Katz said that his views and Lande's were basically not too far apart but added that he didn't feel it was the responsibility of the United States to tell the Vietnamese what kind of government they should have.
"Mistakes on our part are the reason we're there now," Katz said.
"Under the Geneva accord a temporary line was drawn across Vietnam to facilitate the removal of French troops from there. The line was to be only temporary and was to have been erased after national elections. Of course, those elections never came about," he said.
"Our aid to an illegal government south of that line was in direct violation of the Geneva convention. Nixon could pull us out right now if he wanted to but he is simply taking action based on what he thinks is best for his personal political posture and that of his party. In taking such a stance, he has succeeded in polarizing the nation," he said.
Lande stressed that if the United States pulled out, a large massacre would take place. He said he felt the South Vietnamese could pull themselves together if given the proper support for any length of time.
"It is true that the South Vietnamese don't have as much freedom as the average American, but in comparison to the freedom of the North Vietnamese, they have a great deal more," Lande said.
"There is more and more evidence that the Vietnamese are supporting the government in the South. Increasingly, more of them are willing to risk their lives as representatives of the South Vietnamese. This makes them prime targets of the terrorists," he said.
WORK ACCIDENTS
NEW YORK-The number of work injuries and deaths per 100,000 workers has been dropping steadily in the past 25 years, says the Insurance Information Institute. In 1968, with an employed labor force of 75.9 million persons, 14,300 persons were killed, approximately 19 out of every 100,000 workers. This was about 36 per cent lower than the 1944 rate of 29.6 deaths per 100,000 workers.
Nov.12 1969 KANSAN 11
The problems that have existed will continue to exist until there is a total effort from the adminfstration, faculty and students. The burden has been placed on the administration and faculty too long." Miss Collins said. "It's as much the students' responsibility as it is anyone else's."
The immediate problem in the art department is a lack of library facilities. Miss Collins said
"This problem is absolutely crucial," Miss Collins said. "The books have been moved to Watson Library and have not been catalogued so no one has access to them."
"It is extremely difficult to keep up with contemporary developments in art when we don't have access to contemporary publications," she said.
The library was previously in the department office, said Downer Dykes, head of the design department. The department office was moved and the old room was turned into a badly needed studio, Dykes said.
"We never have had funds for a librarian or adequate resources for a library." Dykes said.
"I'm sure that many other departments could make just as good a case as we could for needing expanded facilities." Dykes said.
It has been recognized that visual arts needs expanded facilities urgently, Dykes said, but it doesn't appear that the department will get them for another five years at least.
Dykes said it was not a question of the administration refusing to supply funds, but rather a question of priority.
The result of the overcrowded situation, Dykes said, is a lack of cohesiveness. Classes are scattered in many different buildings as a result of overcrowding in Strong.
Lack of art scholarships is another major complaint of students in the art department, Miss Collins said.
Dykes said lack of art scholarships was not a situation unique to KU. The situation is generally the same for art departments everywhere.
"If you go to any university,"
Dykes said, "there is less research done in fine arts than in other departments. It is unfortunate but understandable that private industry is more interested in the sciences," he said.
Another change students favor, Miss Collins said, is student evaluation of teachers.
Dykes said a couple, of years ago such a program existed, but he did not consider it to be one of the major problems now.
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Astronauts ready for 10-day mission
Apollo 12 to blast off Friday
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)—Apollo 12 commander Charles "Pete" Conrad inspected Tuesday the towering Saturn rocket that will hurl him and two companions toward the moon Friday. He said preparations were going "great," and went for a spin in a jet.
Conrad, in jaunty spirits and dressed in blue flight coveralls and a baseball cap bearing the insignia of Apollo 12, took off alone in a T38 jet trainer at 3:30 p.m. EST for 40 minutes of aerobatics.
He said when he returned that his radio had failed, but that this hadn't caused him any problem.
Conrad did his soaring in crystal clear skies. Earlier in the day, the Apollo 12 crew got the all-clear from weatherman for the Friday takeoff for the moon.
"The radio isn't any good in that thing. It pooped out," he told ground crewmen as he climbed from the jet.
In Boulder, Colo., John McKinnon, a spokesman for the government's space disturbance center, said there were indications radiation outbursts might develop around Apollo 12's launch time.
Such a solar flare could endanger spacefliers and force the delay of a launch, but McKinnon
said it was too early to predict its severity and its affect on mission plans.
Conrad, Richard F. Gordon and Alan L. Bean spent much of the day in their spaceport quarters, tapering off from their rigorous training routine and reviewing the flight plan.
Conrad said he passed up a planned helicopter ride to practice moon touchdown techniques and instead went to the launch pad for a close-up look at the Saturn 5 booster.
It looked "fine." he reported.
"You don't get to see it very often with the 'remove-before-flight' tags off it," said the Navy commander.
Conrad later decided on the jet flight to accustom himself to some of the sensations of weightlessness he will experience in space.
"We've been ready to go for a long time." Gordon said recently.
The space fliers were confident they are ready for the risky 10-day mission.
"I think we're well enough trained. If the hardware holds together and we don't have too many problems, I think we'll be able to do the job," he said.
At the oceanside launch pad where the 36-story combination of the Saturn 5 rocket and the
Bombs rock N.Y. City letter explains actions
NEW YORK (UPI)—Three homemade bombs apparently planted by an anticapitalist conspiracy damaged three corporate skyscrapers in Manhattan Tuesday and touched off a rash of bomb scares and building evacuations.
The bombs, described as high explosives, detonated shortly after 1 a.m. EST and no one was injured. An elevator operator in the new General Motors building was shaken up and hospitalized briefly.
It was business as usual in the
Lecture series features Paz
Octavio Paz, Mexican poet and former ambassador to India, spoke Tuesday night in the Humanities Lecture Series.
Paz's speech on "The Body: Ritual and Rebellion" showed the relationship between signs that represented the body and nonbody.
He said contemporary art did not give a picture of the body and each civilization's art represented their image of the human body.
Paz said different religions and societies of the world had varied approaches to the body and its use such as in homosexuality, heterosexuality, free love and sex education of the young.
Sex belongs in the catalog of human rights but sexuality tends to change socially, he said. He added the motives for the use of the body were industry (reproduction), health and social welfare and entertainment.
Paz said the contemporary student rebellions are " not wasted in a succession of outcrys."
The student revolutions today were an "empty fiesta." Passion is the force that brings them together, Paz said. The western world has been waiting for revolution since 1870 and now its coming swiftly, he said.
Decline of revolution signaled a nearness to the end, he said.
The paper he presented is part of a study on "conjunctions and disjunctions."
12 KANSAN Nov. 12 1969
GM, RCA, and Chase Manhattan Bank buildings despite the blasts, except in the devastated areas.
Police and FBI experts tested fragments of the bombs found for some clue to the identity of the bombers.
The most important bit of evidence was a special delivery letter sent to United Press International and the New York Times.
The letter said the bombs had been set off during the week of the Vietnam moratorium as a blow to "the giant corporations of America that have now spread themselves all over the world, forcing entire foreign economies into total dependence on American money and goods."
"Spiro Agnew may be a household word, but it is rarely-seen men like David Rockefeller of Chase Manhattan, James Roche of General Motors, and Michael Haider of Standard Oil who run the system behind the scenes," the letter said.
"The empire is breaking down as peoples all over the globe are rising up to challenge its power . . . and finally, from the heart of the empire, white Americans too are striking blow of liberation."
Informed sources said the bombings appeared to be the work of a conspiracy, since one person could hardly have carried out the operation.
Rockefeller is chairman of Chase Manhattan and member of the family who founded Standard Oil. Roche is chairman of GM and Haider retired as chairman of Standard Oil six weeks ago.
There were also telephone calls made to the buildings shortly before the blasts to warn personnel. The caller was described as a young-sounding male with a pleasant, unaccented voice.
spacecraft was poised in its service tower, ground crews had a 16-hour rest period before activating the spacecraft fuel cell batteries early Wednesday in pre-launch preparations.
All the bombs exploded within a span of eight minutes at locations spaced as widely as midtown and the financial area in lower Manhattan.
There were 1,300 nightworkers in the 60-story Chase Manhattan building at the time of the explosion on the 16th floor, just below Rockefeller's office, but none was in the blast area.
Conrad, Bean and Gordon are scheduled to blastoff at 11:22 a.m. EST Friday on America's second moon landing mission.
More than 300 nightclubbers were evacuated from the RCA building's 65th floor Rainbow Room when the explosion ripped through the 20th floor.
The blast in the nearly unoccupied 50-story GM Tower was on the 20th floor.
Conrad calls this "the opener of the next generation."
Weathermen forecast satisfactory conditions at launch time despite a cold front expected to move through central Florida Thursday. The prediction is for partly cloudy skies, moderate northerly winds and a temperature of around 60 degrees.
Mission plans call for the astronauts to orbit the earth once after blastoff, and on their second orbit to fire the Saturn's third stage
engine a second time to put them on course to the moon.
Conrad, the 39-year-old veteran of two Gemini spaceflights, and Bean, the youngest of the trio at 37, should land on the moon at 1:53 a.m. EST Nov. 19, for a 32-hour stay that will include two walks on the lunar surface.
They head home Nov. 21 for a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean Nov. 24.
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Thunderbirds
TOPEKA—The Thunderbirds, the Air Force precision flying team, performed for the 1,112th time at Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka Tuesday. The group has performed in all 50 states and in 44 nations.
- Top right—The Thunderbirds are beginning a maneuver called the diamond changeover cloverleaf.
- Top left—Completing the diamond to line abreast loop, the pilots seem to be flying atop of each other.
- Bottom right—A little girl watches in amazement as the Thunderbirds roar overhead.
Photos by Zoe Medlin and Burt Lancaster
___
Tansy offers unusual books
Tansy, a yellow garden flower, is also the name of an independent bookstore which opened recently in Lawrence.
The bookstore, located above the Coach House at 1144 Indiana, is operated by two brothers, John and David Moritz of Olympia Fields, Ill.
John Moritz, a former KU student, said the flower tansy was once sprinkled in front of doorsteps to keep rats and rodents out of the place.
"This description sort of stuck in my mind and I decided to use it for the name of our store," he said.
John said Tansy was stocking mainly what the Kansas Union Bookstore isn't able to stock.
Nov. 12
1969 KANSAN 13
"I felt there was a vacuum in the literature available in Lawrence," he said.
Browsing through the shelves of books I noticed works by Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Norman Mailer, Kenneth Rexroth and William Carlos Williams. Several copies of "I Am Curious Yellow" stood on one shelf (that probably wouldn't be found in the Union bookstore).
"I like a good poetry section," John said, "and my brother wants a good stock of books on astrology. Between our individual preferences we keep a good balance of selections available."
Tansy stocks some current selections and best sellers, a supply of the classics in literature, a selection of some of the more contemporary but obscure works and a selection of works from
"underground writers" as well as a collection of record albums.
John said one of his hopes for the bookstore was for it to serve as an outlet for local talent. He said he wanted to publish original material and offer original art work for sale.
A collection of poems entitled "Put Poems" by Bill Holm, Richard Deutch, Victor Contoski and Gary Brower has already been published by the Tansy bookstore.
Several paintings by Nan Hill decorate the walls of the bookstore. A radio-stereo combination and a stack of records stand along one wall and a pot of boiling water used for brewing tea rests on a table.
John said the place offers the student a place to read, listen to music, drink tea, and relax.
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Uncertainty may go
Draft change to strip '67 law
By MONROE DODD Kansan Staff Writer
A selective service lottery system that would lower the period of uncertainty for draft-eligible men appears to be on the way to adoption after an agreement by U.S. Senate committee Tuesday.
The agreement removes the one roadblock to President Nixon's proposed reforms to the 1967 draft law which requires the oldest men in the pool to be drafted first.
Senators, including Edward Kennedy, who stalled the Nixon measure in order to open the law for widespread reform decided to forego sweeping amendments until 1970 on the promise that a complete review of the draft would be undertaken at that time.
Sign stands as untasty reminder of a spoiled plot
The measure, as proposed by Nixon and passed by the House, would eliminate from the 1967 Selective Service law the provision which bars the President from instituting a method of random selection.
Both Nixon and former President Johnson have urged random selection to eliminate draft inequities, but both were stymied by Congress' requirement that the oldest men in the draft pool (ages 18 through 25) be drafted first.
The "oldest first" rule means that eligible males must undergo a seven-year period of uncertainty, making it difficult to plan adequately for education, jobs or marriage.
With Nixon's random selection, or modified lottery system, all birthdates in one year would go into a hat from which they would be picked at random. Draft calls for that year would then be filled from eligible men born on the dates in order of selection.
All 19 year-olds and those whose deferments had expired would be eligible during the year. At the end of that year they would become immune to the draft, except in the case of a national emergency.
"Constructive" 19 year-olds
Uncertainty Apparent
After graduation, college students would go into the draft pool as "constructive" 19 year-olds. Their order of calling would be the same as it would have been had they received notices at age 19.
If a graduate's birthdate had been pulled from the hat first when he was 19, but deferred, he would go first after graduation.
For example, if March 26, the first birthdate selected in the lottery, all 19 year-olds ("constructive" or real) born on that date would be drafted first until their supply was exhausted. Then men born on the second date selected, would be called for induction.
A further lottery would determine the order of selection for men born on the same date. After all potential draftees with the same birthdates had been classified according to the first letter of their last name, the alphabet would be scrambled and letters picked. Men whose names began with the first letter chosen would go first.
With the Nixon system, the period of uncertainty would be reduced from seven years to 12 months and men born in September would not necessarily be less vulnerable than those born in January.
Proposals Planned
Proposals Planned Also included in the President's May 13 proposal were:
- A reassurance that undergraduate deferments remain untouched. Nixon called the exemption of undergraduates a "wise national investment."
- A recommendation that graduate students who receive draft notices be allowed to complete that year of study. Today, graduate students may only finish the semester in which they are enrolled.
14 KANSAN Nov.12 1969
GUESS HOS
COMING TO DINNER
- A review of Selective Service standards, procedures and guidelines by the National Security Council, presented by December 1. Special attention to ge given to the system of occupational deferments.
Photo by T. L. Simmons
This last remnant of the University of Kansas Homecoming festivities was still standing Tuesday in front of Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
Nixon held off presenting his request to Congress to throw out the "oldest first" provision until August 14, when it got an indifferent reception from the House Armed Services Committee Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, (D-S.C.).
Januav 1 Order
When the President announced cancellation of November and December draft calls on September 19, he said that if Congress failed to act on his draft reform legislation, he would issue an executive order by January 1, reducing the number of years of eligibility and beginning a quasi-lottery plan termed the "moving age" system.
In response to the President's threat to by-pass Congress, Rivers opened committee hearings on the bill September 30.
The Armed Services Committee reported the bill favorably to the House floor Oct. 22, after approving it 31-0. With the committee report went the understanding that no other draft proposal was germane to the bill.
Critics of the measure's limited scope ranked under the no-amendments, no-debate rule, even after Rivers promised them a full review of the draft in 1970.
Bill Ok'ed
The bill passed the Full House by a vote of 382-13, and was sent to the Senate. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.), said that the plan would not be considered until the next session of Congress.
Mansfield saw that Senate rules, unlike those of the House, could not prevent widespread attempts at draft revision and subsequent slowing of the bill.
Mansfield and other leaders said the Senate's agenda was too full with such matters as the Supreme Court nomination of Clement Haynsworth and tax reform to have time for lengthy debate over the draft proposal.
New Selective Service Act?
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) looked favorably upon a proposed rider to the bill that would move the expiration date on the present draft law from June 30, 1971, to January 1, 1971, forcing consideration of a new Selective Service Act next year.
Yale University President Kingman Brewster proposed the rider in an attempt to speed a
Yale University President Kingman Brewster proposed the rider in an attempt to speed a vote on the Nixon Proposal with
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Kennedy and other reformers agreed to a vote on the Nixon bill and to wait until 1970 to rewrite the law after a meeting Tuesday with Senate Armed Services Committee chairman John Stennis, D-Miss).
Volunteer Army?
Lurking in the background of this year's debate on lotteries, orders of call and deferments, is the plan to do away with the draft altogether and establish a volunteer army.
Stennis' committee must approve the measure before it can reach the Senate floor. After Senate passage, Nixon will be free to establish his proposals.
The all-volunteer armed force was supported by Nixon during the 1968 campaign and was one of the 43 resolutions on draft reform presented to the House by representatives.
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The cost of the volunteer force is the major drawback to its enactment, along with the fear that Congress would not have the ability to quickly raise a force in
time of national emergency.
Pentagon estimates place the tab on increased salaries to induce more volunteers at $8 billion—far higher than the more palatable $3 to $5 billion estimated by Nixon in the campaign.
Nixon holds that his May 13 measure is only a "way station" on the road to abolition of the draft, but the volunteer force, while infinitely more acceptable than the draft, appears to be several years in the future.
sua
University Seminar presents
John Wright, Assoc. Prof. HDFL
and selected speakers
Topic: Get Off The Hill
Nov. 12, 7:30-Big Eight Room
Discussion after presentation
University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
presents
The Hostage
by Brenden Behan
November 13-22
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall
For Tickets Call: UN 4-3982
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Accommodations, goods, services,
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Portable TV, 12 inch, BW with UHF and ear piece. Great for dorm viewing. Need to disturb roommates. Wear bait 842-319 after 9 p.m. Tues. 11-12
5 string bluegrass banjo; Harmony.
Excellent condition with case included.
Contact Larry at 842-9100, rm. 327
or leave name and phone. 11-12
1967 Chevelle SS 396, 4-speed, 2 dr.
hardtop, vinyl top, on warranty $1650.
Call 842-8852. 11-14
Complete equipment set for a dark room enlarger. Dursh M 600. Contact Majid Samaan any time after 12:54. International House 120-14 Oread.
For Sale. Five tickets to the QU-KU game, at a reduced price of $5.00 (they cost us $6.10). Contact Steve at VI2-8732. 11-14
4 OU or, KU football tickets, together or separate. Call 842-5639. 11-13
67 Honda 3050c Scrambler; stock, very clean, no damage; plus helmet, extrax for $425. Call Rick, VI 3-7415, No. 423 after 6. 11-12
Superb 1957 Cadillac Fleetwood now available at only $375. Many power windows. Must see to appreciate II V-1 3765 evenings or inspect at 1810 Indiana.
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
Tacos Tonight?
Minnie Pearls
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKIE
Call in or Carry Out
FREE Delivery over $5.00
VI 3-8200
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
Audio Sale
Buy at Factory Cost plus 10% You pay shipping No better discount anywhere Call 842-2047 Eve. 4-10 p.m.
Get started in photography. Must sell Mamiya 500TL F2, 200mm F4.5-2.8 converter, CW8, Variac, Honeywell microwave, and Variac microwave $140.00, call 842-5962, Mike 11-17
Large and small scale equipment for sale. Amplifiers, PA harps, etc. Contact. Doug Pierce, 1209 Tennessee, 843-7863 If not there, leave message.
A. R. Dynaco Dealer
Your Saturday night blasts will be a bright success with candles and strobe candles found only at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 11-18
11-17
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale.
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road.
843-4836. 12-2
1967 VW Karmann-Ghia conv. New
tires, battery, paint, FM-AM radio.
Best Offers. Randy Leffingwell 842-
4325. 11-18
NOTICE
Four KU-OU tickets, call Jack, VI 2-
1745.
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Qe If you want some honest-to-goodness Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some, Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty, Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair problem. They provide factory repair station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynask and Marantz. Call 843-1848. tf
Loans to junior, senior and grad. students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Mass. VI 3-8074. tf
Western Civilization Notes—New On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Edition Campus Murdah House, 411 W 14th St.
Do you sew but can't afford high priced fabrics? Just arrived from New York to beautiful designer fabrics, 3 yd. pieces, low prices, buy 845-838-1222 appt. 11-12
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti, VI 3-4032, tf
If you would like to see a course in Modern Hebrew offered at KU next Fall, please contact Sidney Fiarman, 842-7822. 11-12
If you can't go to Khandam to shop,
come to the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open 8:30-4:30 daily.
12:30-4:30 Sunday. 11-13
ERN'S CYCLE SALES
Foreign Car Service
and
Machine Shop Work
Machine Shop Work
716 N. 2nd VI 3-5815
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
Need extra cash. I will die if I don't get an Economics 10 tutor—instructor is Pritchard. Call 842-2887.
A.S.A.P. 11-12
PHOTOGRAPHY
HIXON STUDIO
721 Mass.
Bob Blank, Owner
Rosalesa's Hotel needs you. Do your
come in, Come find out, call (316)
889-4214 for reservations. Write
per, Kansas, 67058 for entertainment
schedules. 11-18
Looking for that unique Christmas gift for the person "who has every
an expertly rehabilished trunk
found on a Hodge Podge Ridge
answer" 15 W. 9th. 11-18
FOR RENT
VI 3-0330
VOLLEYBALL
Brand new two bedroom, unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6188.
Exclusive Representative
LOST
Married Couples--2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens, master bedroom to $655 plus utilities. Hire Company-II VI 3-6138 or VI 3-5730.
For Rent: 1 bedroom unfurnished apartment. 2 blocks from campus. $110 per month plus utilities. Call 842-3750. 11-13
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35
a month. Available now, call VI
3-2116. tf
of
L. G. Balfour Co.
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Guards
- Badges
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
Have moved into an apartment. Must sell woman's Naismith contract. Will take any reasonable offer. Call VI 2-1188. 11-14
Lost: KU Big 8 swimming Champion
Bruno, Cal Ray, 842-6982, 11-17
Roward, Cal Ray, 842-6982, 11-17
- Oils and Acrylics
- Stretcher Frames
Slamsee, sealpoint neutered male, no front claws, clipped whiskers, very crosseyed, very big, 15-20 pounds–reward. Please call Sherry, 842-4538
Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters
Need one student to take over my lease and live with three other man at Gatehouse. $58.75 per month-available immediately—no deposit required. Lease runs through May. V1 3-7881. 9a.m. to 12 p.m. 12-3
- Guards
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers
- Favors
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
Bankmark Services
- Statione
- Plagues
Al Lauter
VI 3-1571
LNB Bldg. #306
PLANNING A TRIP??
- Sportswear
- Mugs
For the best in:
● Dry Cleaning
● Alterations
11-12
- Gifts ● Plaques
Lavaliers
Gifts
TRAVEL SERVICE
Maupintour
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations
New York Cleaners
Let
V1 3-1211
Malls Shopping Center
645 Mass.
926 Mass.
Paddles
VI 3-0501
- Reweaving
GOODYEAR TIRES
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Complete Mechanical Service
Brake Adjustment 98c
Corrosion Safety
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment.
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Page Fina Service
LOST·Man's Black framed glasses—somewhere between Summerfield and Berry. Bring to UDR office or contract with McColm Hall, Ri 843-6000. 11-17
Lost: brown checkbook under name
Ronnie Warman Jr., and an Overland
Warman Jr. and Hardy Bardy
found contact Ronnie Warman
9100, room 619, reward. 11-17
Lost: Ladies' Hamilton Watch, gold case. Black cord band. Lost on Thursday art. on campus. Reward 11-17
HELP WANTED
Tan suede belt from ladies' jacket at Steppenwolf concert, reward offered Call VI 2-8332 after 5 p.m. 11-18
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part time Apply in person only. Burger Chef. 814 Iowa. tf
Male - evening and weekend help wanted. No experience needed. Apply at Harold's "66" Service. 1401 West 6th Street. 11-13
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in Lawrence at least one year. Reading graduate preferred. VI 3-6424. 11-21
BURCER CHEF
Home of the "Big Shef"
Wish to employ noon hour lunch room playground supervisor for elementary school, 11:30-12:30, phone VI 3-4866 or VI 3-3263 for appointment. Consider man or woman, consider anyone. 11-18
Part time help during school; full time in summer. Must have experience in packing and moving of house. Call 843-0380 for appointment. 11-18
3 men, $62 per week. 3 evenings and Saturday. Apply 9 p.m. Thurs. at 301 Summerfield. 11-14
Male student. Kitchen helper from 2 p.m.-9 p.m. 6 days a week. Apply in person at Virginia Inn West 6 11-18
WANTED
CASH—for your old weight-lifting outfit that's been gathering dust un-
der the bed for so long. Call 843-8251 in the A.M. (Keep trying). 11-13
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Wanted: To buy 1 set of Mag Wheels for a 1968 Chevy Nova. Call VI 2-6600 and leave a message for Jose. Room 753. 11-13
Wanted: Typist who is full-time student and qualifies for work in program. Phone 864-3819 or 843-3718. 11-13
Must have 3 tickets to the MU-KU game. If you can help, call Lee at 842-4725. Important. 11-12
CRYPTOCURSE
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66048
Tony's 66 Service
Wanted; Rock bands Apply at Draught House Tues - Fr., between 4 and 5—directly behind Lum's. 11-13
Wanted—part-time male help and female help for bartenders and waiters. Apply between 4 and 5 Tues. - Fr. at 804 W. 24th directly behind Lum's room.
TYPING
TYPING: Experienced ixterist will type
themes, thesis, misc. typing. Have
typewriter with pica type.
Efficient device service. Phone 12-5
9544, Ms. Wright.
Themes, theses, dissertations, typed and or edited by experienced typist in English-Speech Education Electronic file-size typewriter. 843-2873. 11
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. WkI 3-3281. Mrs.ruckman.
Ralph Dohyns, Where are you? Call Tony Croman 842-7771 or 843-9858.
Theses, papers typed in English, German, transliterated Russian by experienced, literate typist, IBM Electronic Mrs. Harwell, 842-5298. tf
Pilots fly at half in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparative information chart. Phone 842-1124
PERSONAL
Life insurance is bought not because someone will die but because someone must live David L. Robinson, 14, Mutual Life Co. VI 2-808
ENTERTAINMENT
FOOD
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment, call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kan., 913-648-1777, fax 913-648-1777.
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Hungry? Chili supper by Kappa Phi
Nov. 1; May 4 from 4:30-7:00 p.m.
at First Church of Methodist Church,
Fellowship Hall 843-5849 or 842-9298
tickets. 11-17
BUY, SELL, TRADE good used appliances and furniture. Also antiques, guarded ware and tree delivery. Hamas and appliances. 839 Pennsy vania. 842-0576.
TARR'S LAUNDRY
Daily 8-5 p.m.
Saturday 8-1 p.m.
"We Do Your Laundry
For You."
1903 1/2 Massachusetts
Always Pleasurable Dining
The Sirloin
Sizzling steaks and fresh seafoods await you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest... preparing the selections as you like them with all the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
Open Daily—Except Monday 4:30 p.m. VI 3-1431 1½ Mi. North of the Kaw River Bridge
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
SNOOPY
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact:
Contact:
Larry Rosenberger
University Daily Kansan
111 Flint Hall
Classified Rates
Classified Rates
1 time — 25 words or less—$1.00—Add. words $.01 each
3 times — 25 words or less—$1.50—Add. words $.02 each
5 times — 25 words or less—$1.75—Add. words $.03 each
- Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
Students plan march
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
sociate professor of human development, will hold an open class in the Toddler's Room in New Haworth Hall. Howard Kahane, associate professor of philosophy, will also conduct an open class at 10:30 am. in 205 Flint Hall.
Several students and faculty of the School of Business will hold an open student-faculty discussion at 1:30 p.m. in 302 Summerfield Hall.
Beginning at 10 a.m. and lasting until 1 p.m., a rice lunch will be served at the United Campus Christian Fellowship building. The charge for the meal is 50 cents.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, will speak briefly at a teach-in at 3:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
At the teach-in, three faculty members will also discuss the historical, sociological and chemical and biological affects of the Vietnam war. They are William R. Arnold, associate professor of sociology, James L. Koevenig, associate professor of biology and Michael J. Maher, associate professor of biology.
In a statement released Tuesday, the mobilization committee outlined its main objectives in the war moratorium as an end to the Vietnam war, and the immediate withdrawal of troops from Vietnam. The statement included the assumption that the war is politically centered and unjust, and reaffirmed that the committee does not condone violence in expressing its views.
The immediate goal of the committee, according to the statement, is to "get the body of undecided citizens to think about the validity of the Vietnam war."
16 KANSAN Nov. 12
1969
(Continued from page 1)
Americans honor war dead
(Continued from page 16)
campaign press secretary in 1964,
estimated that 15,000 persons
turned out, but U.S.park police
Lt. Archie L. Fingan said it
totaled 10,000 at its peak.
Along with the oratory and music—patriotic and country—the audience showed its sentiments with "tell it to Hanoi" lapel buttons and placards reading "do your thing, Dick—the silent majority" and "sock it to Hanoi."
Several signs chose as their target Sen. J. William Fulbright. One read: "Send Fulbright to Vietnam." Another: "Judas William Fulbright."
Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., the featured speaker at the monument rally, said he hoped similar pro-administration demonstrations would be held in the future to show that "we still love liberty more than life itself."
"We Americans don't start wars," he said. "We only finish them."
Rep. Donald E. "Buz" Lukens, R-Richo, denounced the war protesters as "new barbarians attempting through carnival-like tactics to impose their minority view on the American public."
Rep. John Buchanan, R-Ala., said he was convinced that Nixon's policy would succeed and added: "Both the strength and the virtue of the Saigon regime have been greatly underestimated by its critics."
"The unity that has always been the bedrock of America needs expression today more than at any time in the past century," Johnson said, before a full crowd of 3,000 persons waving tiny American flags at the Arlington Cemetery amphitheater.
Opponents of Nixon's Vietnam peace plan, Johnson said, "would have others think that they alone understand and abhor the suffering and savagry of war. They do an injustice to America's 40 million veterans, living and dead."
An estimated 90,000 persons turned out in Hayward, Calif., to watch a parade of more than 3,000 persons—one of the six parades in the nation officially designated by the President's Veterans Day Committee. Watchers stood eight deep at points along the route.
Police estimated 35,000 persons lined a parade route in Chicago's Loop. Thousands watched parades in New York City.
Some 50,000 persons ignored rain in Providence, R.I., and heard Mayor Joseph A. Doorley Jr. lash out at moratorium participants. Doorey, said, "People carrying flags of our enemies—and we have seen incidents of this in the past several months—are committing an act of treason."
Speaking in Minneapolis, Minn., on the 50th anniversary of the first American Legion convention, Legion National Commander J. Milton Patrick urged full support of the President's policies.
"All legionnaires and most Americans are crying out for the
militants and revolutionaries to be put down," he said.
Throughout the nation, the "silent" people flew flags and drove cars with headlights on.
President Nixon greeted veterans of three wars in the lobby of the District of Columbia Veterans Hospital and then, with reporters barred, toured the wards with Mrs. Nixon.
The President visited the veterans hospital because, as he had said earlier, he wanted to "let them know that the nation has not forgotten their service and sacrifices."
In Lawrence, activities were limited to ceremonies in South Park sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), the American Legion and the Veterans of World War I. The Rev. Harold G. Barr, dean emeritus of the School of Religion, spoke at the meeting. He said he was "disturbed and confused" about the increasing disharmony among Americans over foreign and domestic policy.
A minor scuffle broke out at the park when Douglas A. Hensley, Wichita senior, was chased by a member of the American Legion and allegedly struck. Hensley said he had been talking to members of the Legion about the war and communism.
Dale Kerr, commander of American Legion Post 14, said his organization did not have anything planned in the way of a counter-demonstration for November 15th.
The VFW will also have no official observances' during the moratorium. Asked if he had any plans for the moratorium, Arthur Olson Jr., senior vice-president of the VFW said: "I'm going to fly the flag."
HOME ACCIDENT DEATHS
NEW YORK—Accidents in homes cost more than 28,500 persons their lives in 1968, reports the Insurance Information Institute.
Pathet Lao threatening criminal trials for airmen
VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI)—An official of the Communist Pathet Lao organization said Tuesday more than 158 American airmen are being held captive in Laos and repeated a threat that they will be tried as criminals.
"The United States and Laos have never formally declared
The official, Soth Petrasi, displayed a list of the Americans and said it included 51 whose planes were shot down over Laos last year and 41 who were captured between January and June of this year.
war and therefore there will be no prisoners," Soth told newsmen. "They will be tried by a Laotian peoples court as criminals."
The threat of trials has been raised several times by the Pathet Lao, but there has never been any information on whether such trials are actually held or if the threat is merely a propaganda move.
For the first time, however, Soth said Tuesday he would try to forward letters and telegrams sent him by the relatives of the
captured Americans. He has previously rejected all such requests
The list Soth displayed Tuesday is one which originates from American sources and is forwarded to him periodically by the International Red Cross.
U. S. officials have never admitted American air activity over Laos other than armed reconnaissance flights. But military sources have reported that U.S. air strikes, including close support missions for ground troops, have involved as many as 500 planes per day over Laos.
Davenport, Iowa, Ohio St., Ohio U., Akron U., Toledo U.
And Now . . . KANSAS UNIVERSITY
Dance on the largest dance floor in Lawrence, and listen to bands from across the country. Created especially for the college student. Coming very very SOON
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
804 W. 9th Directly behind Lum's
---
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.44
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, Nov. 13, 1969
Photo by Ron Bishop
Blood donors increase from last year
KU students apparently were more eager to give away their blood this year than last. As a result the Red Cross blood drive netted a total of 298 pints of blood Tuesday and Wednesday. The drive continues today with facilities set up at Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
KU fee increase foreseen for 1970
Incidental fees at the University of Kansas will probably be increased in September, 1970.
"I would guess the incidental fee increase will be around $50 a semester," Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Wednesday. "It is not definite that there will be a fee increase, but it appears highly probable."
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University of Kansas, listed three reasons for the increase.
"According to state policy, incidental fees should cover 25 per cent of the University's annual budget. The percentage covered by KU's incidental fees has fallen below 25 per cent." Nichols said.
"Also, our incidental fees are at least $50 a semester below the average for midwestern state universities. Three years ago our present fee level of $120 per semester was just above average." Nichols said.
"Third, Gov. Robert Docking requested the increase in his budget message to the Kansas Legislature last January." Nichols said. "I know from what he said that the fees will have to be increased."
Nichols pointed to the budget cuts made for fiscal year 1970-1971 by Kansas Budget Director James Bibb. Bibb recommended to Docking that the $43,952,764 budget requested by the Board of
(Continued to page 12)
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Mrs. Gandhi Boosted
NEW DELHI Mrs. Indira Gandhi crushed a bid today by old guard Congress party leaders to oust her as prime minister of India.
In a special meeting, a majority of the ruling Congress party's members of parliament expressed full confidence in the continued leadership of Mrs. Gandhi. The final vote count was not immediately available.
Her supporters cheered Mrs. Gandhi and unanimously adopted a resolution which condemned the attempts of Congress party President Saddavvanshali Nijalingappa and his backers to remove the prime minister.
Bandits take $1.4 million
NEW YORK—Three men armed with pistols abducted three guards and robbed a Wells Fargo truck returning from Aqueduct race track of an estimated $1.4 million yesterday.
It was the largest cash haul in a holdup since 1962 when a gang robbed a U.S. mail truck of $1.5 million in Plymouth, Mass.
The truck was carrying two days worth of Aqueduct receipts to the Morgan Guarantee Bank in Manhattan, police said.
Two down in riot trial
CHICAGO—Yippie leader Jerry Rubin, who walked out of the Chicago riot conspiracy trial yesterday without the judge's permission, returned to the federal building four hours later and surrendered to U.S. marshals.
Rubin said he left the courtroom about 15 minutes before the session was scheduled to end to make a flight to New Jersey, where he had been scheduled to make a speech at Rutgers University at New Brunswick. Rubin said he heard about the judge's order to have him arrested when he was on his way to the airport.
--crews planned to work through most of the 10 hours and 22 minutes of rest time that had been scheduled for the terminal phase of the countdown.
Apollo faces delay
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) Ground crewmen found a leak in the vacuum insulation of a liquid hydrogen tank in the Apollo 12 moonship Wednesday and raced the clock to launch America's second lunar landing mission on time Friday.
If they fail, the launch would be postponed to Dec.14.
A space agency spokesman said that if the faulty tank cannot be replaced and checked out in time for astronauts Charles "Pete" Conrad, Richard F. Gordon and Alan L. Bean to blast off as planned between 10:22 a.m. and 1:27 p.m. CST Friday, there would be no attempt to meet an alternate launch time that had been set for Sunday.
Technicians took a liquid hydrogen tank from the Apollo 13 spacecraft, being readied for a March launch, to replace the Apollo 12 tank, which would not keep the liquid hydrogen cold enough because of a leak in the vacuum jacket insulating it.
To make the change, ground
Launch operations chief Paul C. Donnelly said the new tank should be filled with 28 pounds of liquid hydrogen by 5 p.m. today.
It was the first time the launch crew had attempted to replace the easy-to-reach tank on the firing pad.
While the battle with the technical problem went on, mission commander Conrad attended a lengthy conference with top project officials in which all phases of the voyage were discussed. The decision was made during that meeting to forego a Sunday launch try.
The space agency originally had planned to launch Apollo 12 Sunday if the Friday date could not be met.
Class of 1973 elects Steve Hix president
Steve Hix, Overland Park, defeated three other candidates Wednesday to become president of the freshmen class.
Computerized results released at 12 midnight, gave Hix 411 votes, 44 more than his closest opponent, Spencer Davies. Wichita.
Others elected to freshmen class
offices include: Tom Perry, Topeka, vice-president; Betsy Adams, Overland Park, secretary; and Melissa Wayne, Shawnee Mission, treasurer.
A total of 1,062 freshmen out of a class of 3,565 voted in the elections which were held from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday.
Troops airlifted to D.C.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Nineethousand soldiers and Marines, dressed for combat and carrying rifles, began arriving by airlift Wednesday to be ready for use against possible disorders stemming from antiwar demonstrations this weekend.
A defense Department spokesman said all the troops, most from North Carolina, were "thoroughly trained in civil disturbance operations" but would remain on federal property unless asked by the Justice Department or the District of Columbia to help restore order.
A weekend of demonstrations organized by the new Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam begins tonight and will be climaxed by a Pennsylvania Avenue parade Saturday that will pass within a block of the White House.
Organizers, who have promised there will be no violence, have said they expect 200,000 war protesters to take part in the three days of demonstrations with
70,000 participating in the Saturday parade alone.
Those troopers unloading with their vehicles from C130 transport planes at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., wore green combat uniforms and most carried packs and their weapons, including sheathed bayonets.
Jerry W. Friedheim, a Pentagon spokesman, said the troops were summoned at the request of the Justice Department and the government of the District of Columbia, which have responsibility of maintaining order.
Campus briefs
Meditation lecture tonight
A lecture on the techniques of transcendental meditation will be given by K. C. Coleman at 8:00 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Forum Room. Coleman is a meditation instructor from the Students' International Meditation Society (SIMS).
Tenight's address is the second of two lectures offered in a course in transcendental meditation. The course, which consists of lectures and the practicing of meditation techniques, is sponsored by the KU chapter of SIMS.
UNICEF cards sold
UNICEF greeting cards, notepaper and calendars will be on sale from Friday, Nov. 14, through Dec. 24 at some area stores, the public library and post office, said Mrs. Tom Moore, representative of the Douglas county chapter of the United Nations association.
Mrs. Moore said proceeds from the sale of UNICEF items will be donated to the United Nations Children's Fund. The money will be used to help provide food and medication for children in 120 countries.
Wood course given
A three hour seminar, "Designing with Wood," will be presented from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the Kansas University Forum Room Monday.
Design exhibit opens Sunday
"Exhibit," a display prepared by industrial design students, will be in the Kansas Union from Sunday through Nov. 22.
Under the direction of Peter North, assistant professor of design, the designers have attempted to create a series of controlled environmental experiences of emotional responses to sight, touch and hearing. An informal reception and guided tours of the exhibit will open the show Sunday.
Union addition almost done
Work on the new addition to the Kansas Union should be completed shortly after Thanksgiving vacation, said Frank Burge, director of the Union, Wednesday.
Burge said the brick work and mechanical systems for the addition had been completed. All that is left to be finished is the top floor, including an auditorium which seats 600 persons and the International Room, a conference room with a capacity of 60 persons.
Stairways in the new addition were opened Wednesday.
Student receives GAX award
One of three national awards for student members of Gamma Alpha Chi advertising organization, was presented to a KU advertising student.
Shelley Bray, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, was named as the National Advertising Leader of Tomorrow at the Gamma Alpha Chi and Alpha Delta Sigma convention held Monday and Tuesday in St. Louis.
2 KANSAN
More than 250 attended the first combined meeting of the two advertising associations. Gamma Alpha Chi was observing its 50th anniversary.
Nov.13
1969
BLOOD,SWEAT&TEARS IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS
IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person
Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m.
Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only
Advance Tickets on Sale at
Kief's Records, Red Dog Office, All Jenkins Stores
in K.C.
Get Your Tickets Now—While They Lost.
Alison Sanders
Nearly 80 students and faculty attended the meeting where the committees were created to do preliminary research and planning. Much of the group's initial work is gathering and disseminating information among students concerned about air and water pollution, poisons in frequently-used household products and food, and other environmental pollution, Koevenig said.
A group of KU students is meeting in several committees this week and in the near future to study environmental pollution and possible actions to combat it in the Lawrence area.
At an introductory meeting Wednesday night, James L. Koevenig, associate professor of botany and biology, said ecological problems are caused by man's careless use of his environment
Students wanting to take part in the activities of the organization can call Tom Suwalsky (843-0490 before 10 p.m.) for information.
After informing themselves of the facts about such pollution, the students plan to pass their knowledge along to the rest of the University community, he said, and will plan specific action that can be taken to improve
California at Berkeley this weekend. Koevenig said.
Group plans pollution research
Are you a conscientious college man or woman? Then you might want to talk to me.
the quality of the environment. Some of the interested students will attend a national ecology action seminar at the University of
Group picks KU man
Charles J. Baer, professor of mechanical engineering, has been named a representative of the American Society for Engineering Education to the United States of America Standards Institute.
JAPAN IMPORTS GRANITE
The appointment places Baer among the 10 per cent of the membership composed of educators. During his two year representation Baer will work on standardization of decimalized measure.
Tony Croman says:
YOKOHOMA, Japan (UPI)— The Yokohoma customs office reports that 23,601 tons of granite were imported in Japan during fiscal 1968, mostly from South Africa, Brazil and Sweden.
Buzzi and Associates
2323 Ridge Court
VI 2-7771
Announcement:
to Apartment Renters You can find a wide variety of rental prices by contacting:
to Apartment Renters
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St.
(adjacent to campus)
Visit the office at above address or call 843-4993 for further details. Rental prices are established on an incentive basis, and are competitive with quality one-bedroom as well as two-bedroom apartments.
There is a price for two, three and/or four occupants. YOU CHOOSE THE PLAN TO FIT YOUR REQUIREMENTS.
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New director makes changes
Firemen, police reorganized
By HOWARD PANKRATZ Kansan Staff Writer
Gilbert Smith, director of public safety for Lawrence since May, said the Lawrence police and fire departments have been reorganized to give "maximum protection in a minimum amount of time."
Smith, who holds a master's degree in police administration, was brought to Lawrence by the city to implement reforms. He oversees the police and fire departments and a newly created Department of Public Safety.
The Department of Public Safety is unique in its members are "cross-trained" to act both as firemen and police officers. They drive cars marked "Department of Public Safety" and wear blue sport coats. They are trained in both police procedure and in the most advanced methods of first aid. They carry resusitators and know how to handle heart attacks, shock and drowning victims.
Members of the three departments are now being subjected to new and intensive training programs. Besides being sent to the new police academy at Hutchinson, they must continually pass minimum physical and mental standard programs and attend compulsory "in-service" meetings. The meetings are lectures designed to teach the participants about all spectrum of public safety.
"The in-service training is conducted by a large number of people and organizations," said Smith, "the Kaw Valley Heart Association, Citizens Ambulance, local doctors, and many others are helping this program get off the ground by speaking to us."
To "maximize service" to Lawrence residents, a "911 service" will soon be available. Any citizen who finds himself in an emergency situation, be it a robbery or a heart attack, will be able to summon help simply by dialing 911, Smith said. Lawrence will be the first city in Kansas with this service and only the third city in the southwestern-south central region of the United States with the system.
"The earliest this system can be installed is December 1, but we plan to start a pre-publicity campaign on that date. Smith said, "It is a tremendous system since it can be dialed quickly, and by children or bed-ridden invalids."
"The state statutes put a limit on the property taxes which can be ivied. This ties the hands of the city and the city's police department," he said. "These statutes have to be revised by the legislature if qualified professional men are to be hired and retained.
"The only other solution is to turn to the federal government but in this part of the country, most people like to think they can run their police departments on grass-roots support."
Smith said one of the reasons Lawrence did not have a canine corps was because the dogs cost
The biggest problem facing Smith is the lack of funds to pay
for equipment and to pay officers reasonable salaries.
from $2,000-$5,000 each to buy and train. Their yearly upkeep is in excess of $1,000.
CATGIF
7:00 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 14
at the
Alpha Chi Omega
Sorority House
Refreshments
Campus Crusade
for Christ
Amendments Official Bulletin discussed
Nov. 13
1969 KANSAN 3
One amendment will ask that freshmen officers become members of the Student Senate upon election, said Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president.
The other amendments will deal with procedural and administrative problems in the Senate Code, Awbrey said.
The University Council will discuss four amendments to the Senate Code 3:30 p.m. today in 108 Blake.
Kansas Asphalt Paving Conference Kansas Union, all day,
University Council, 108 Blake, 3:30 p.m.
browk Ingrer, 108 Blake, 3:30 p.m.
p Robinson Joggers Club. East door
Jabwah Jungmasters, 4:30. East door
Robinson Gymnastics, 4:30.
Broadcast. "The Tempest." Record- of the Marlow Society and Professional Players. KANU, 91.5 FM, 7 p.m.
Sigma Xi Lecture. "Atmospheric
Signa From Space, Verner E.
Evvml, director of satellite
Engineering Center, University of
Wisconsin, Dycor Audrey, 7:30 p.m.
SUA Seminar. "Get Off the Hill." John Wright, professor of human development and family life, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m.
**Foreign Students.** Sign up now for CIUClasses around the U.S. 226 Strong Hall
SUA Feature. Lillian Gish in person
in Kansas Union Ballroom, 8
p.m.
Experimental Theatre, "The Hostage" 8:20 p.m.
Faculty Forum. John McNown, professor of civil engineering will speak on mobilisation in Africa. West-minster Center, noon. Call V 3-19438 for reservation
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KANSAN Comment
Haynsworth lacks judicial caliber
By MONROE DODD Kansan Staff Writer
Amid constant pressure from the White House and threats from Republican congressmen to begin impeachment proceedings against the perennially controversial Justice William O. Douglas, debate on the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. moves this week to the floor of the Senate.
The case is a strange one, for the issues are not clear-cut and senators who normally would be expected to toe the administration line are popping up on the side of the opposition. Haynsworth, who has proven as chief judge of the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that he is not too eager for greatness, does nothing to dispel the clouds of doubt and confusion that surround him.
Since August, when President Nixon announced from his balmy California retreat that the South Carolinian was his choice to fill Abe Fortas' old chair, opposition has mounted from various sides.
Civil rights groups leery of Haynsworth's southern-fried strict constructionist leanings call him a "laundered segregationist." The AFL-CIO fear of his anti-labor rulings stems especially from the Deering Milliken labor dispute, in which Haynsworth favored the corporation served by a vending company in which he owned stock. And numerous senators, recalling the Fortas scandal, came out against Haynsworth on the conflict-of-interest taint introduced both by the Deering Milliken case and the Brunswick Corp. rulings. (Haynsworth bought stock in the latter after he participated in a decision involving the company but before the court's opinion was written, until which time the final deposition was tentative.)
Haynsworth's confirmation, once seeming a perfunctory matter, is now questionable, with an Associated Press poll showing 35 senators in favor and 37 opposed.
Senate GOP whip Robert Griffin, who led the fight against Fortas, says he cannot in clear conscience vote for Haynsworth, while minority leader Hugh Scott refuses to head the proHaynsworth forces.
Mississippi Senator James O. Eastland, chairman of the judiciary committee that approved the nomination by a 10-7 vote, says, "We very definitely have the votes for confirmation." However, Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield maintains the outcome will be a toss-up.
Meanwhile, the public has heard very little from the nominee, because he refuses to hold press conferences or go before television cameras to speak. Haynsworth claims the reason is that he stammers, but Americans could hardly be so cruel as to deny him a fair hearing over a slight physical defect.
Sensing possible defeat, the Republican establishment has reopened the case against Justice Douglas with the implication that impeachment proceedings against the famous liberal will begin should Haynsworth be denied a seat on the court.
And, according to Newsweek, Chief Justice Warren Burger has told senators that if Haynsworth's nomination is not confirmed, they should inspect his own background.
Yet above the bitterness evinced by both sides there is an issue that is not demonstrable by votes or recorded opinions. After all, the President has the right to nominate anyone to the Supreme Court who is technically qualified, regardless of his political philosophy, and no legal conflict of interest on the part of Haynsworth has been proven.
The problem concerns whether Haynsworth is of Supreme Court caliber. A man who held two corporate offices until the Judicial Conference decided that was improper for federal Judges, doesn't seem to be of such caliber. A man who owned one-seventh interest in a company which did a large business with a corporation having a case before his court—from which he refused to disqualify himself—doesn't seem to be of such caliber. A man who, before the final opinion was written in a case involving a conglomerate, bought stock in that conglomerate, doesn't seem to be of such caliber.
On the last, the Brunswick case, Haynsworth told the judiciary committee, "I didn't check the cases that had been heard in court and were not disposed of. I think I should have . . . and of course I'm very sorry I didn't."
It seems that Judge Haynsworth is continually remiss in examining his own actions, out of carelessness or some other reason. He does the right thing, but apparently only after someone else has told him to do so.
That kind of inconsistency short of legal wrong is acceptable perhaps in lawyers and county and district judges. But the Supreme Court, highest in the land and the final appeal on any case, must demand more from its members. John Marshall, Louis D. Brandeis, Earl Warren and others, while differing in philosophy, were of the stuff from which Supreme Court justices are made.
Vacillating, self-interested Clement Haynsworth isn't.
I dunno. What about all that graft and corruption?
What about the millions wasted on cost overruns, obsolete weapons, noncompetitive contract awards and unsupervised spending?
WHAT ABOUT ALL THAT!
NATIONAL SECURITY
Quick! Where do I sign?
WHAT ABOUT ALL THAT!
NATIONAL SECURITY
Quick! Where do I sign?
Readers' write
To the editor:
Having become increasingly bored with the editorial flatus that the Kansan feels constrained to release among us each week, I read the editorial "Nixon's peace is no peace at all" with a somewhat jaundiced eye.
The keynote of the editorial was stated as "what moral right does America have to assume responsibility whenever evil crops up in this big bad world?" And then as if the Lord God Himself had tapped the editor on the shoulder and handed it to her, we are treated to a comparison of mass murder by Viet Cong in Hue with American interventions in Latin America—a fatuous analogy at best.
I find it fascinating that a progressive undaunted paper finds it appropriate to justify its editorial position by quoting Benjamin Harrison—in 1888 yet. But with a resounding plea for neo-isolationism the editorial closes with the picture of an "eagle with talons eager to draw blood wherever Communism pops up."
My friends, we do not live in the 19th Century, nor can we. Isolationism, for a country as powerful as the United States, is not only impossible, it is morally irresponsible. We do have problems at home, but at the same time we will have very little room for social improvement here if, as Eugene V. Rostow succinctly put it a few days ago, "... we have to become a garrison state, isolated in a world of hostility or chaos."
Perhaps the United States' so-called "imperialistic posture" is not the ultimate answer to world problems, but I prefer it to the foreign policy of moral hedonism which you apparently advocate.
L. Lewis Wall
Shawne Mission sophomore
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H
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
I CAN'T
EVEN CATCH
A FLY FOR
SUPPER!
I'LL STARVE!
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
I CAN'T EVEN CATCH A FLY FOR SUPPER! I'LL STARVE!
Pow!
HOW HUMILIATING!
HOW
HUMILIATING!
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Daily Kansan.
KANSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Creeping weirdoism
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
You may never have met anyone both as charming and also as annoying as Pookie Adams. You may never
You may never again.
Pookie is fighting an uphill battle against weirdos, and the girl knows she's bound to lose because she's outnumbered. Because the weirdos are everywhere.
Pookie is given to us by Liza Minnelli in "The Sterile Cuckoo," who will easily win an Academy Award nomination and maybe even an oscar for her performance. Liza couldn't possibly have given a more refreshing performance; she couldn't have given the part much more depth.
She is helped with the script by leading man Wendell Burton, but the movie still belongs to Liza.
Pookie has many obsessions, all stemming from a miserable childhood with a very lonely father. She has an obsession with death; she has an obsession against weirdos; and she has an obsession with a young man.
The young man might have turned out to need Pookie's constant attention and constant intensity to cure her of her fetishes. But Pookie knows that there is no one anywhere who will be able to give her the satisfaction she needs. Pookie is a tragic figure.
But probably better than the depiction of Pookie's tragic nature is the depiction of her comic facade, which for the first half of the movie keeps the audience roaring. It is shortly after the It-Happened-One-Nightish bedroom scene (Pookie jumps into the bed nude, dons her glasses and tells her boy, "Hit it, Valentino!") that Pookie begins to realize the elusiveness of this love, and then she struggles violently to keep it
Pookie's character has baffled reviewers. One critic representing a minority opinion, hated Pookie. Most reviewers thought that Pookie was simply unlovable with all her quirks.
The truth is, folks, there are, just as Pookie understood, too many weirdos. Weirdos are people who can't devote every single second to experiencing themselves honestly, to ignoring societal pressures and to fighting desperately the distorted fraternalism which kills people.
Liza presents Pookie as the complex character she is, and she simultaneously wets appetites for more of her talents.
Though she has proven that she can handle a dramatic role, she should use her wonderful voice in a musical soon. She has a lot in reserve.
But even if Liza never gave us another performance, which will not be the case with another film in the offing, she has given us Pookie and, consequently, given us the drive to fight creeping weirdism.
BOOKS
IDANRE AND OTHER POEMS, by Wole Soyinka (Hill & Wang, $1.75)—A collection of poetry by one of the best-known writers of Africa, a man who also has had two plays produced off Broadway. Soyinka is a Nigerian, former director of the drama school at Ibadon University in his country, and he is now in jail in Nigeria for allegedly supporting the Biafran movement.
Nov. 13
1969 KANSAN 5
GREAT TELEVISION PLAYS, edited by William I. Laufman (Dell, 75 cents)—A collection that has some historic importance, bringing together some of the plays from television's golden age. The memorable titles are "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson, "The Big Deal" by Paddy Chayefsky, "Requium for a Heavyweight" by Rod Serling, "Twelve Angry Men" by Reginald Rose, "The Final War of Olly Winter" by Ronald Ribman, and "Lee at Gettysburg" by Alvin Sapinsley. Such a book could serve as a text in dramatic writing for television.
Similar to "Summertree" in that it classifies as an anti-establishment, anti-war play, "The Hostage" by Brendan Behan opens tonight and runs through Nov. 22.
By GENELLE RICHARDS Kansan Staff Writer
Presented on the stage of the Experimental Theatre, "The Hostage" is a "different sort—a bawdy comedy with lots of fun, songs and dances," said director Roy Sorrels, assistant instructor of speech and drama.
Hostage: bawdy comedy with message
The playwright first involves the audience and then sneaks up on them with a serious message. Thus it can be called a comedy with tragic relief, said Sorrels.
The story concerns a young English soldier being kept hostage in the house. He is caught in the middle of political beliefs and prejudices.
"I think it has something very important to say to us now and it is interesting that it opens the day before the moratorium begins," he said.
"This is similar to Vietnam where the men are caught in the problems made for them by other people, the older generation, Sorrels said.
spotlight— Don't miss Miss Gish
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
Miss Gish appears at 8 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. She will lecture and show films of an era of movie-making which gave birth to most of what we call visual media today.
Anyone interested in America's only original art — the cinema, anyone interested in American History, anyone interested in people. EVERYONE should see and meet Lillian Gish, America's first movie star.
Richard D. MacCann, professor of Radio-TV-Film, said Miss Gish not only starred in D.W. Griffith's earliest films, but she also "helped with costumes, stories, title-writing and once even directed a picture for him."
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The play begins on an unusual note with Teresa played by Shannon Hackett, Winnetka, Ill. sophomore, cleaning the stage , which is the brothel, preparing for the play to begin.
Wood slabs nailed together to form various angular shapes create an unusual backdrop representing the walls of the house.
Originally "Rosencrantz and Guilderstern Are Dead" was scheduled for presentation but rights could not be obtained because of the upcoming film production of the play.
"I'm glad now that I decided to do this play," said Sorrels.
One of the actors in the play comes from England as an exchange student for a year. Arriving in July, this is the first time in the United States for Tim Caley, graduate student in American history.
"My priorities are social rather than academic at the present time, which is reprehensible but enjoyable." Caley said.
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Seniors vs. Sooners:
More than game to some
By STEVE SHRIVER
Kansan Sports Writer
Oklahoma leads in the series with Kansas, 39-21-6, and this Saturday the Sooners are expected to improve on that record. But football games aren't played on paper and KU should, in spite of their 1-7 record (or maybe because of it), carry a psychological edge into this year's contest in Norman.
The Jayhawks will be looking for revenge because of several factors: 1) The Sooners spoiled what would have been KU's perfect record through the regular season last year by coming from behind in the last quarter to win, 27-23. 2) This year's seniors have never beaten an Oklahoma team in three meetings including the freshman tilt in 1966. 3) In 1967, oranges thrown onto the playing field by OU fans in "the snakepit" (asOU's Owen Field is called
by other conference teams) caused several official timeout in the fourth quarter. Subsequently, Oklahoma launched a drive in the waning minutes and came from behind to score a 14-10 victory.
It has always been a fierce ri-
Hicks has his own personal reasons for wanting to beat Oklahoma. Hicks will be playing opposite one of his best friends in high school. All-American center Ken Mendenhall, According to Hicks the two play much harder against one another to prove to each other that they didn't make a mistake by choosing the wrong school.
KANSAN Spants
Hicks is from Nowata, Okla,
and played alongside and against
many of the Sooner stars throughout high school. He and Steve Owens, the Sooner's All-American tailback are personal friends. He has played opposite Mendenhall for seven years.
"Mendenhall and I are always kidding each other about how bad we're gonna' win." Hicks said. "He tells me how I made such a bad mistake by going to KU. I remind him he made the
(Continued to page 7)
Playoffs narrow
Only three days remain in the Intramural playoffs to determine the Hill champions. Six games will be played today and six Friday. The games for the Hill championships will be Monday, Nov.17.
Wednesday's Results:
Fraternity A League
Fraternity A League
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 15, Delta Upsilon, 13
Phi Delta Theta 18, Phi Gamma
Delta 2
valry between the two teams and this year's game promises to live up to that reputation. Several KU players have expressed their intense desire to make up for the frustration the Sooners have given the 'Hawks in the past several years.
Independent A League KU Laws 42, Battenfeld 0 College Kids 26, Grace Pearson 15
All-Big Eight linebacker Emery
Tiger tussle telecast
KU's Nov. 22 football game with Missouri at Lawrence has been selected by the American Broadcasting Company for its regional "wild card" telecast, Wade Stinson, KU athletic director, announced Wednesday.
The 78th staging of the ancient Jayhawk-Tiger rivalry will be one of four regional telecasts that afternoon as the opening half of a video doubleheader. The UCLA-Southern California game will be telecast on a national basis as the second半球.
Stinson said the Kansas-Missouri game will kick off at 12:20 p.m. in order to fit into the format of the doubleheader. This is a change from the original 1:30 p.m. starting time.
As a result of the earlier kick-off time, Stinson said that stadium gates will open at 11 a.m. Stinson also encouraged fans to arrive early, not only for the new kick-off time but also to help ease the traffic problem that would result from a sellout crowd.
The KU-MU game was sold out at 51,500 six weeks ago.
6 KANSAN Nov.13 1969
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Grudge battle brewing
2
Old buddies Emery Hicks of Kansas and Steve Owens of Oklahoma get together during last year's KU-OU game in Lawrence. This scene should be re-created several times this Saturday as the Jayhawks meet the Sooners in Norman.
(Continued from page 6)
Continued from page 9)
boo-boo of his life when he decided to play for OU. We're real close friends, but all that goes by the boards when we get on the field."
"I consider Owens a close friend, too," he said. "He's a tremendous football player and a real nice guy. He wouldn't hurt a fly, except on the field."
Bill Bell has handled KU's
Nov. 13
1969 KANSAN 7
kicking chores for three years and was in on the melee at Norman two years ago. Bell also has a personal grudge he wants to settle this Saturday.
"Those oranges really upset us. We were ahead and we were beating them. The officials had to call time to clear the field of all the debris and that gave OU the extra time they needed to score and beat us. I'd like nothing more than to beat them in 'the pit' and then after the game throw an orange into the stands." Bell said.
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"The fans at Oklahoma are always rough on a team, but that orange throwing incident was really bad. I'd like to show them up in this game. I want it real bad." Dahl said.
"OU will probably underrate us. I don't care what their coaches say. Basler has looked real good in practice this week and if we're clicking we'll beat them. We don't have much to lose now; we're a ghost team," he said, echoing a statement made earlier by Hicks.
Offensive tackle Grant Dahl is another who feels strongly about the OU clash. Dahl says he would feel especially good about "revenging that loss to them down there (Norman)."
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George McGowan missed the 1967 game with OU but he feels intent on revenging last year's loss to the Sooners. McGowan has alternated between split end and safety throughout the season but will start the OU game at safety.
"We have to stop Owens to have much of a chance. I feel confident we can stop their passing game," McGowan said.
"I've been waiting for this game all season. They beat us last year and tied us for the conference championship. I won't have any trouble getting up for this game, and I don't think any of the other guys will either. This is the most important game of the year for me and I think we'll be ready for 'em," he said.
This game should be one of the most fiercely contested in the history of the series considering the factors motivating Kansas. Oklahoma is a highly-regarded foe and a victory over them would shine a bright light on a dismal season.
As Bell put it, "OU is in the same position we were in before we played New Mexico. No one expected New Mexico to beat us, least of all us (the players). But they played us a good game and they did beat us. I think we'll beat Oklahoma.
Perhaps it was the wet weather, but Kansas' football team didn't have a very good practice Wednesday.
Weather dampens 'Hawks
"This late in the season you can't expect guys to be too thrilled at a practice," said coach Pepper Rodgers. "Especially in our situation. I suppose this type of weather causes it."
Kansas, which has lost six straight games, is preparing to play Oklahoma Saturday in Norman, Okla.
Center Dale Evans remains a doubtful participant due to a bruised knee.
"Things just don't look too bright," said Rodgers.
Asked about the Jayhawks' reversal from last year's 9-1 Orange Bowl team, Rodgers said, "I'd just as soon go 9-1 one year and then go 1-9 as to go 5-5 and 5-5. Mediocrity isn't what I want. I'd rather be real good or real bad."
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Moral standards topic of seminar
To answer some of the questions that college women may have concerning moral standards the Associated Women Students (AWS) will present a Fall Seminar Sexuality Conference, December 6th and 7th in the Kansas Union. Meetings will be held
from 1 to 5 in the afternoon.
Peggy Robertson, chairman of the AWS committee in charge of the conference, said that the program was created to provide information and professional views on birth control and abortion.
shown Saturday. A discussion and a question and answer period will follow the film.
A film on birth control will be
A panel of doctors, lawyers and ministers will lead the discussion and will be available for private consultation.
Sunday the theme of the conference will be Sexual Standards
and Behavior." Packets containing articles on birth control and a bibliography for later reference will be distributed.
Miss Robertson said the most important aspect of the conference was that it would offer the girls the opportunity for personal consultation.
Machines set for business
All cigarette machines on campus are now in operation, Kevin A. Remick, Kansas Union concessions manager, said Wednesday.
Remick said there were machines in all residence halls and five machines in academic buildings on campus. Two of the machines are in Strong Hall because that building is frequented by most of the KU population, he said.
ROTC selects finalists
Three finalists were selected Wednesday from 24 candidates for 1969 Military Ball Queen.
Finalists selected by a judging committee composed of representatives from Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC were: Judy Bottenfield, Pittsburgh sophomore representing Alpha Gamma Delta; Kathy Newcomer, Omaha junior representing Kappa Kappa Gamma; and Rebecca Wieland, Garden City sophomore representing Pi Beta Phi.
8 KANSAN
If cigarette sales during the next few weeks indicate more machines are needed, more will be bought, he said.
Nov.13 1969
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544 W. 23rd VI 2-2266
"Free Computer Programming"
1
BILL HILL
Let the computer do the work to analyze your insurance needs.
- How much insurance do you need?
- What kind of insurance should you have?
- What company has the best program for you?
- What does personalized service mean for you?
WE HANDLE:
LIFE INSURANCE
COLLECTION PROGRAMS
HEALTH INSURANCE
DISABILITY INCOME
MATERIALS
TAX SHELTERED PROGRAMS
GROUP INSURANCE
Buzzi and Associates 2323 Ridge Court VI 3-7771
"The Best Dressed Look on Campus or Anywhere!"
POLICY
Kris
Exclusive Fashions for Young Adorables
the VILLAGE SET
Jill
922 Massachusetts
Where the Drinkers can drink...
Where the Dancers can dance . . .
Where stags don't leave stag . . .
DRAUGHT HOUSE
Coming Soon 804 W.24th directly behind Lum's
Search for oneness pervades Baha'i
University students, those curious products of a modern age, often regard products of the distant past as irrelevant to the hustle and bustle of a fast-paced, energetic today. Religion, as a product of that distant past, is often shoved into the background of student activity. At least one religion, however, is a comparatively new creation.
Bahai', named after its founder Bahai'u'lillah, originated in Iran during the 1850's. In celebration of Baha'u'lillah's birth date, Nov. 10 through Nov. 16 has been
named Proclamation Week in Topeka. Members meet every 19 days, which is one month according to the Baha'i calendar, for prayers and informal worship.
"Baha'i is a very personal religion," explained Sandy Veach, Florissant, Mo., senior and president of the KU Baha'i Club, "we don't belive in conversion as such."
individual simply signs a card, or declaration, and he is a member of Baha'a," she said.
"Interested persons do independent study and decide when they are prepared to recognize Baha'u'llah's teachings. Then the
tivities, Baha'u'llah was later released and spent his life in exile spreading word of his prophetic mission.
The Baha'i faith, which claims 21 believers in Lawrence, was founded by Baha'u'llah, the son of a cabinet minister and a member of the Persian aristocracy. Imprisoned for his religious ac-
The Baha'i faith revolves around three basic principles—the oneness of God, the oneness of religion and the oneness of mankind.
Among Baha'u'llah's teachings is a belief in the oneness of the human race and the aim of permanent, universal peace. Baha'is advocate harmony between religion and science, reasoning that religion without science is superstition and science without religion becomes a monster.
Campus Interviews
The following companies will hold interviews on campus next week.
School of Engineering,
111 Marvin Hall
Monday
Monday
CPC International LCS, in chemical,
electrical or mechanical engineering,
chemistry; summer work available for
juniors in chemistry only.
Kansas Power & Light Co., B.S. or M
engineering; summer work applied
engineering; summer work applied
Marley Co. B.S. in chemical, industrial, civil or mechanical engineering, combination civil engineering and business administration.
A. E. Staley Manufacturing Co.
B.S. in chemical, industrial, mechanical or civil engineering, math, chemistry; summer work available.
Washington State Highway Command B.S. or M.S. in civil engineering
American Oil Co., B.S. or M.S. in
American Oil Co., B.S. or M.S. or
u.s.D. in chemical manufacturing.
Wednesday
Cook Paint & Varnish, B.S. in Cooking engineering; B.S. or M.S. in chemistry
Mason-Hanger, B.S. in chemical civil, electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering, chemistry, math; summer work available.
Worthington Corp., B.S. in architectural, chemical, civil, electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering engineering physics.
U. S. Patent Office, B.S. or M.S. in aerospace, chemical, electrical, industrial engineering, chemistry, physics; M.S. in engineering mechanics.
Thursday Automatic Electric Co., B.S. in industrial engineering; B.S. or M.S. in electrical engineering.
DuPont Co., B.S. or M.S. in chemie
chanical engineering, chemi-
Nov. 13
1969 KANSAN 9
summer work available for juniors and seniors.
Kansas City Power & Light B.S. in
electrical or mechanical engineering
Oklahoma Natural Gas Co., B.S. in chemical, civil, electrical, industrial mechanical or petroleum engineering, engineering physics.
Wilcox Electric Co., B.S. or M.S. in engineering; summer work available.
Winnebago Industries, (interests not available).
(same as Thursday)
Union Electrical in electrical or mechanical engineering.
U. S. Department of Commerce, B.S. in mechanical engineering, engineering physics; B.S. in M.S. in technical, or mechanical engineering, geology, mechanics; M.S. in engineering mechanics;
U. S. Naval Fleet Missile Systems, B.S. or M.S. in electrical engineering, physics; B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. in math School of Education, 112 Bailey Hall
Tuesday
Turner U.S.D. 202, Kansas City,
Kan
School of Journalism, 105 Flint Hall Tuesday
Allstate Insurance Co., B.S. or M.S. in public relations, magazine or photojournalism; also interested in interns.
Harte-Hanks Newspapers, B.S. or M.S. in news-editorial or advertising.
Carlson to talk at KU
Former U.S. Senator Frank Carlson will speak Nov. 20 at the meeting of the Lawrence branch of the American Association of University Women (AUW).
Carlson's speech, "Our American Foreign Policy," will follow the 6:30 p.m. dinner of the AAUW in the Kansas Union Kansas Room and will be open to the public.
CONTOURA™
for Beautiful Happenings
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Diamonds and Contoura tell the world you're in love. Contoura crafted for your finger as the ultimate in comfort. These bridal sets are available 14-karat white or yellow gold. Select the most beautiful diamond rings in the world. By Feature Ring
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BRIMAN'S
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743 Mass. Ph.VI 3-4366 Illustrations Enlarged Convenient Budget Terms
LILLIAN
GISH
The Movies, Mr. Griffith, and Me
Pierre Auguste
The new
Oread Book Shop
in the Kansas Union Building
requests the pleasure of your company
at an autograph party and coffee for screen star
Miss Lillian Gish
Friday, November 14, 1969
Please bring your friends
10. 30 a.m. to 12 noon
OREAD BOOK SHOP
Chalmers to respond to demands of BSU
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Wednesday night some of the demands made by the Black Student Union (BSU)) present "very real and legitimate needs."
"Some of their requests contain goals and programs which are appropriate and within the university structure," Chalmers said.
He said he hoped to present a written response to the BSU demands by Friday.
The list of demands was presented to Chalmers by representatives of the BSU during a meeting with the Chancellor Oct. 31. The demands called for the creation of the administrative positions of dean of black students and dean of back student affairs, the establishment of an Afro-American Institute of Research and Community Deveopment and the construction of Malcom X Hall to house the Institute and a pay parking lot near the hall.
10 KANSAN Nov. 13 1969
Authentic Mexican Food
- Tacos * Enchiladas * Tamales
* Chili * Burritos * Tostadas
Prepared from scratch in Old Mexico Style by
Sex. Jesse Del Campo and his family
Pin Ball Air-conditioning
Pool Table Cigarette Machine
La Tropicana Club
11 a.m. - 12 p.m. 434 Locust, M. Lawrence Mon. Sat
The demands are under consideration by Phillip Gary, assistant to the Chancellor in urban affairs, dean of the different schools, personnel in related nonacademic areas and representatives from the Student Senate.
Chalmers said Friday's statement will not be the final word but part of a "properly continuing dialogue with the black students."
Hey Christian ...do your thing.
BACK TO GOD TRACT TEAM
2850 Kalamazoo Ave., S.E.
Grand Rapids, Mich. 49508
Help spread the Word. Send samples of cartoon Gospel tracts that really turn on the "Now Generation."
Bachelors IV BRINGS YOU JET'S DAY
Bachelors IV
BRINGS YOU
JET'S DAY
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS vs. NEW YORK JETS
FREE DRAW...
TO ANYONE WEARING GREEN, SATURDAY IS 1:00 - 6:00...
AT...
THURS.
PITCHERS
Bachelor's IV
BAR & CAFE
2500 W. 6th
KANSAS CITY GUILD vs. NEW YORK JETS
FREE DRAW...
TO ANYONE WEARING
GREEN, SATURDAY IS
1:00 - 6:00...
THURS.
FITCHERS
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
Last year's ties – 3½ inches
This year's model – 5 inches
at the
The 821 Regimental Shop
Ober's
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Catalog should be served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier, inputs for mag. or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM, Am. Will match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Edition.
Campus Med House, 411 W. 14th St.
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. ff
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white—everything in t act—good mechanical shap in front or seat. Call Frank I. 2-4014 or write 21 I. E. 9th, Nike, nausea, Kansas. 11-14
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear ear. Aqua/white $859.00, contact Mrs. Keeen $859.00, U-4-3683, after 5:30 5499. 11-17
1965 Tempest伸 C 2 door hardtop.
V8, 4 bbl., stick, heavy duty
pension, radio, heater, whitewalls,
tinted glass, full instrumentation.
Clean, one owner. $1295. Call Steve.
Room 337. VI 2-1200. 11-13
1967 Chevelle SS 396, 4-speed, 2 dr.
hardtop, vinyl, top, on warranty $1650.
Call 842-8852. 11-14
Complete equipment set for a dark room enlarger. Dursh M 600. Contact Majid Samaam any time after 5:30 International House. Oread. 11-14
For Sale. Five tickets to the OU-KU game, at a reduced price of $5.00 (they cost us $6.10). Contact Steve at VI 2-8732. 11-14
4 OU or. KU football tickets, together or vs. place. Call 842-5639. 11-13
Get started in photography. Must sell
Mamiya 500L T1 F2, 200mm F4.5; 2x
Flash and various accessories.
$140.00 call 842-5962, Mike 11-17
Superb 1957 Cadillac Fleetwood now available at only $375. Many power models. Must see to appreciate VI 3-176 evenings or inspect at 1810 Indiana. 11-17
Leaving the U.S.—1960 Plymouth Valiant—Standard—Very good tires—heater—Eng. and transmission good. Also, masterworks works stereo (RCA) Garrard turntable. Both must sell this month. VI 2-7447 after 5. 11-20
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale.
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road,
843-4836. 12-2
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
ERN'S CYCLE SALES
Foreign Car Service
and
Machine Shop Work
716 N. 2nd VI 3-5815
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
EAGLE
8th ST. SHOE REPAIR
105 E. 8th
Closed Sat. at Noon
7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Your Saturday night blasts will be a bright success with candles and strobe candles found only at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 11-18
1967 VW Karmann-Ghia conv. New tires, battery, paint, FM-AM radio.
Best Offers. Randy Leffingwell. 842-4325.
11-18
Four KU-OU tickets, call Jack, VI 2-
1745.
1967 Riverside 125 ce. Excellent condition. Cheap, fun transportation. Boulder racing model with extra parts. 843-8185 at 3 p.m. and weekends. 11-20
NOTICE
Guitar: Martin D-28, like new with hard case. Call 843-7531 at 5:00, 6:30, 9:00.
515 Michigan St. St. B-Que If you want some honest-to-gut gourmet Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone VI 2-5510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair prob- lab, and you can install it by rep- station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynakit, and Marantz. Call 843-1484.
Loans to junior, senior and grad. students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Mass. VI 3-8074. tf
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition Campus Mae House, 411 W 14th St.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Laptid, VI 3-4032. tf
GARDENLAND, INC.
914 West 23rd
VI 2-1596
Aquariums & Fish
If you can't go to Khandam to shop,
come to the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open 8:30-4:30 daily.
12:30-4:30 Sunday. 11-13
Rosalea's Hotel needs you. Do you
come? Come find out, call (316)
896-9121 for reservations. Within-
per, Kansas. 70758 for entertainment
schedules. 11-18
Looking for that unique Christmas gift for the person "who has every occasion to exude" by refinished found only at the Hodges Podge is the answer. 15 W. 9th. 11-18
The food is terrible but the entertainment is great at Alice's Restaurant. 11-20
Rummage Sale -1231, Ohio. 9a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday. Selling radios, camera, books, records, girls clothes and shoes. Will sell cheap. 11-17
FOR RENT
L. G. Balfour Co.
Exclusive Representative
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6168.
of
A fish in a tank.
- Badges
Guards
- Favors
Guards
- Recognitions
- Lavaliers
Paddles
- Mugs
- Doll
- Mugs
GARDENLAND, INC.
- Lavenders
- Gifts
- Stationery
- Sportswear
Rings - Crested - Letters
Al Lauter
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens and mudaders to $680 per utilities. Hint: carpeted utilities. TI 3-6153 or VI 3-5730. If
645 Mnes.
LNB Bldg. #306
VI 3-1571
Also
pop corn
ice cream
home made
fudge
Topsy's
- Plaques
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35
a month. Available now, call VI $3.
972-820-2641
on the Mall
CANDIED APPLES
Penny
$ \mathcal{C}_{\frac {5}{4}}^{\mathrm {总}} $
LOFT'S
Foster
Open till 10:00 p.m.
For:
806 MASS.
VI 3-1171
- **PORTRAITS**
- **APPLICATION PICTURES**
- **PASSPORT PICTURES**
- **PHOTOFINISHING**
For Rent: 1 bedroom unfurnished apartment. 2 blocks from campus. $110 per month plus utilities. Call 842-3750. 11-13
Need one student to take over my lease and live with three other men at Gatehouse. $58.75 per month—available immediately—no deposit required. Lease runs through May. VI 3-7881, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. 12-3
Lost: KU Big 8 swimming Champion
Ring, In or near "Hawk" and 14th St.
Reward, Call Ray, 842-6982. 11-17
LOST
Have moved into an apartment. Must sell woman's Naismith contract. Will take any reasonable offer. Call VI 2-1188. 11-14
First floor furnished apartment for males or married couple. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone VI 3-5767. 11-20
LOST-Man's Black framed glasses-
somewhere between Summerfield and
Strome to UDK office or con-
troll Ralph McColm Hall, Rn.
843-6600. 11-17
Lost: brown checkbook under name of Ronnie Warman Jr., and an Over-
wright. They were found contact Ronnie Warman, 842-
9100, room 619, reward. 11-17
Lost: Ladies' Hamilton Watch, gold
day afternoon, on campus. Reward:
11-17
Tan suede belt from ladies' jacket at Steppenwolf concert, reward offered.
Call VI 2-8332 after 5 p.m. 11-18
HELP WANTED
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part person; only person only. Burgee Chef, 814 Iowa.
Male - evening and weekend help wanted. No experience needed. Apply at Harold's "66" Service. 1401 West 5th Street. 11-13
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared! tune-ups
66
tune-ups starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
AUTO
GLASS
INSTALLATION
Table Tops
AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey --- VI 3-4416
Audio Sale
Buy at Factory Cost plus 10%
You pay shipping
No better discount
anywhere
Call
842-2047 Eve. 4-10 p.m.
A. R. Dynaco Dealer
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in Dynamic at least one year. Report graduate preferred. Phone VI 3-6424. 11-21
Wish to employ noon hour lunch room playground supervisor for elementary school, 11:30-12:30, phone VI 3-4866 or VI 3-3263 for appointment. Consider man or woman, consider anyone. 11-18
Try One Today 814 Iowa
Part time help during school; full time in summer. Must have experience in packing and moving of houseware. Call 843-0380 for appointment. 11-18
Male student. Kitchen helper from 2
person at Virginia Inn West 6. 10-18
person at Virginia Inn West 6.
3 men, $62 per week, 3 evenings and
1 supply 9 p.m. Thurs.
Summerfield
11-14
Part time student employment. Can work full school term. Flexible hours. Drivers license required. For appointment call VI 2-899 between 4 and 6.
TYPING
Immediate openings for Work-study qualified students at the Computation Center. See Dave Harrington after 1 p.m. weekdays. 11-17
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist and/or editor. Glish-see Education. Electric office-size typewriter. 843-2873. 11-24
TYPING: Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misc. typing. Have vacy pica type. Efficient and fast service. Phone VAC 9554, Mrs. Wright. 12-5
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call IV 3-3281. Mrs. Ruckman
Theses, papers typed in English, German, transliterated Russian by experienced, literate typist. IBM Electric. Mrs. Harwell, 842-5298. tf
WANTED
Wanted: Typist who is full-time student and qualifies for work study program. Phone 864-3819 or 843-3718, 11-13
CASH—for your old weight-lifting outfit that's been gathering dust under the bed for so long. Call 843-8251 in the A.M. (Keep trying). 11-13
Wanted: To buy 1 set of Mag Wheels for a 1988 Chevy Nova. Cali VI 2-6600 and leave a message for Jose. Room 753. 11-13
Wanted: Rock bands. Apply at Draught Room Tues. - Fri, between 4 and 5- directly behind Lum's. 11-13
Wanted—part-time male help and female help for bartenders and waiters. Apply between 4 and 5 Tues. - Fri, at 804 W. 24th, directly behind Lum's office.
Wanted: A place to dump a half ton of garbage from Alice's Restaurant.
Buddha Playing Guitar
Need 8 tickets to KU-MU game. Call Jim, VI 2-3855. 11-20
PERSONAL
The heads of all nations meet at Alice's Restaurant! 11-20
Tony Croman—Who are you? Call VI 2-7445. 11-17
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
Ralph Dobyns. Where are you? Call Tony Croman. 842-7771 or 843-9585.
11-14
Happy birthday, Becky. Don't get too smashed tonight. From 6th floor Hash, your "sorority" sisters, and especially your roommate. 11-14
FOOD
Life insurance is bought not because someone will die but because someone must live. David L. Robinson, Guarantee Mutual Life Co. VI 2-300
ENTERTAINMENT
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kaua'i, 913-648-1773, tf
Pilots fly at half in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparative information chart. Phone 842-1128 109
Hungry? Chill supper by Kappa Phi
First Nov. 6:11 from 4:30-7:00 p.m. at
Fairleigh Dickinson College for
followship Hall 843-5489 or 842-9298
tickets. 11-17
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
BUY, SELL, TRADE good used appliances and furniture. Also antiques. Guaranteed and free delivery. Haas Answers. 839 Pennsy vania. 842-0576
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss.
PICK UP
STATION
2346 lowe
VI 3-9868
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
SNOOPY
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact: Larry Rosenberger
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
Fee hike probable in 1970, officials say
(Continued from nage 1)
(Continued from page 1)
Regents for KU be trimmed to $41,531,504, a reduction of five per cent.
"The budget is pretty generally trimmed severely by the Budget Director," Nichols said. "Bibb's recommendations to Docking will not necessarily determine what Docking recommends to the Kansas legislature."
Nichols called the budget cuts "completely unrealistic." The budget cuts eliminate all new faculty and staff positions. Proposed salary increases were cut from eight per cent to four per
cent. Capital improvements were cut by 60 per cent.
"I am sure the Governor's budget presented to the legislature in January will recognize our needs. Kansas has always provided good support for higher education," Nichols said.
"But this year state agencies are requesting funding increases greater than the increase in state revenue. The Kansas legislature will be reluctant to increase taxes," Nichols said. "This will affect the budgets of all state agencies."
Fees at state universities are
determined by the Board of Regents. The Kansas Legislature cannot directly regulate fees.
"In effect, the legislature can tell us that we won't have the necessary funds unless we increase fees. This is an indirect way of increasing fees," Nichols said.
The fee increase will probably be considered by the Board of Regents before the first of the year because Docking will need to know before he submits the budget to the legislature." Nichols said.
The Board of Regents will hold
budget hearings November 19. The monthly meeting of the Regents will be November 20.
Chancellor Chalmers feels the fee increase will have a particularly strong impact on the small number of students now dependent upon the University for financial aid.
"The increase will bring some students not now in need of assistance into situations where they will need assistance also" Chalmers said.
"Another group that will be affected will be the graduate stu-
College deferments defended
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Nixon administration defended draft deferments for college students Wednesday despite Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's charge that they let wealthier youths "avoid the shooting for four years" while hoping the Vietnam war would end.
"I think it's very appropriate for that boy to finish his education, then go into the service and contribute a little something extra." John G. Veneman, undersecretary of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), told Kennedy in a subcommittee hearing.
But Kennedy, D-Mass., impatiently puffing a thin cigar, said neither money nor brains—the tools for entering college—should favor one youth over another in a government policy which sometimes means life or death. About 30 per cent of U.S. servicemen killed in Vietnam have been draftees.
Kennedy, conducting hearings on alleged draft inequities before his Senate subcommittee on administrative practice and procedure, said Nixon should abolish Student deferments by executive order. He said students frequently parlay a student deferment into an occupational deferment and
dodge military service altogether.
"The basic requirements of our society require a reservoir of college trained people," Veneman said. He urged quick Senate passage of Nixon's draft lottery bill, under which draftees would be picked by random choice, with the selection limited almost entirely to 19-year-olds.
Drawings of Union to begin
Architects were given the go ahead to begin work on working drawings for the proposed Satellite Union at Wednesday night's meeting of the Union Operating Board.
The board also approved a resolution calling for a feasibility study on cooperative food and sundries ventures at KU and a study of traffic conditions near the proposed Satellite Union site.
greatest impediment to full student approval of the Satellite Union is the uncertainty of the amount of fee raises that might occur as a result of state legislative action and improvement of KU health facilities.
A fee increase of $6.50 per student per semester is presently considered essential to fund the Satellite Union.
Board members voting for the resolution, which originated in the Student Senate, believed the
dents, particularly graduate assistants and teaching assistants. If fees are increased but salaries remain the same, the net result would be a decrease in their income," Chalmers said.
Need Hospitalization?
C. S. MAYER
LEE SELLS
with
Buzzi and Associates
can handle your
needs in hospitalization
and life insurance.
Call
Buzzi and Associates
at 842-7771 or
842-8162.
Students finalize moratorium plans
Final preparations for the November war moratorium, scheduled to begin Friday, were made Wednesday night by the KU Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam.
Meeting in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room, the group was told that protestors would march in Topeka regardless of weather conditions.
Tom Ashton, Lawrence graduate student and steering committee member said, "We will definitely go if it rains, so people can't say we would just come out on a nice day."
Ashton emphasized the need for an orderly and peaceful demonstration because of expected media coverage.
12 KANSAN Nov. 13
1969
"We want to show them that we aren't just a bunch of rabble rousers" he said.
The Topeka Police Department is expected to take only routine precautionary measures during the parade, Ashton said.
Protestors will begin the Topeka march at 2 p.m. Saturday at 2nd Street and Van Buren Avenue. They will march down Van Buren to the south steps of the State House where a rally will be held.
Thirty-nine people will leave by chartered bus tonight for Washington, D.C., where they will take part in the national anti-war demonstrations on Saturday.
Louis Wolfe, program director for the Lawrence Peace Center, said that at least 150 persons will leave by car and six may attempt hitchhiking to Washington.
Dragon
ATTENTION:
La librairie de la bibliothèque Watson vient de recevoir un choix de plus de 200 livre en langue française
Venez nous voir
1:30 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.
closed Saturday
UN 4-3239
Turkey Time is here! Register for your free Turkey at Sandy's
KILT DANCER
That's right-every time you purchase an order of food at Sandy's-you can register for a big 14 lb. turkey. Students! Think of all the joy you'll cause walking in the door back home with a 14 lb. turkey under your arm. (Attention hippies-maybe then you won't have to shave off your beard and sideburns for mommy and daddy—bribe them with a turkey.)
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th
M-1
Make Sure You Wear A KU Hat to
OKLAHOMA OR BUST!
OKLAHOMA OR BUST!
WILLIAM
ONESON
Red and Blue
Oklahoma.
The Town Shop
839 Mass. VI 3-5755
Available At
The University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr. V1 3-4633
Nunemaker college to boost CWC
By KENNETH CUMMINS
Kansan, Staff, Writer
The College-within-the-College (CWC) program, now in its fourth year at the University of Kansas, may receive a boost in its development with the proposed creation of Nunemaker College next year.
Delbert Shankel, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said Nunemaker College will replace Corbin College, one of the five existing colleges which make up the CWC program. The other four colleges are North, Centennial, Pearson and Oliver College.
The creation of the college was made possible
through a $350,000 gift from Irene Nunemaker of New York City, a 1922 KU graduate of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The gift, announced last spring by former Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, will fund construction of a building to provide classrooms, a library, a lounge, faculty and administrative offices and an apartment for visiting professors.
Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor of operations, said the building would be located on the slope of the hill behind Lewis Hall and between Jayhawk Towers.
"The floor plan has already been approved by the Board of Regents," Lawton said. They now are
working on a set of plans to submit to the contractors for bids."
Construction will begin the early part of 1970 with completion scheduled before the fall semester.
Jerry Lewis, director of Centennial College, said the new facilities would provide a place where students and faculty could get together in a warm informal atmosphere.
Lewis said the building would meet the need for bigger and better facilities, a major need of the CWC program.
The CWC program was initiated on the KU (Continued on page 28)
EVERGREEN PINE
Photo by Ron Bishop
Goodbye Indian summer
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fall crept out as winter barreled in Thursday bringing the first snow fall of the frigid season accompanied by appropriate temperatures which dipped into the 20s.
Apollo 12 systems all 'go'
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, Nov. 14, 1969
BULLETIN
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) — Apollo 12 was launched today at 10:22 a.m. CST on man's second moon landing mission.
A thick fast-moving squall had threatened the launch until the final moments, but Apollo 12 blasted off on time and the astronauts reported all systems were "go."
CAPE KENNEDY—With the countdown back on schedule, technicians fueled Apollo 12's rocket early today for the launch of three Navy pilots on an ambitious expedition to explore a moon desert called the Ocean of Storms.
Everything was rolling smoothly toward an on-time 11:22 a.m. EST blastoff for Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr., Richard F. Gordon and Alan L. Bean in the moonship Yankee Clipper.
Forecasters said rainy weather that hit the Cape Thursday might continue through liftoff time, but a spokesman said "This is not going to be a constraint to launch as presently viewed." All other aspects of the preparations for the 10-day, million-mile round trip were reported "go."
The ticklish rocket fueling operation began in the early morning hours with the 363-foot rocket glowing in the glare of powerful floodlights. When fully fueled with 1 million gallons of liquid oxygen, liquid hydrogen and kerosene, the Saturn 5 weighs more than 3,000 tons—as much as a Navy destroyer.
Object Is Scientific
The object of man's second trip to a landing on earth's nearest celestial neighbor—255,617 miles away today—was to start returning scientific dividends from America's $25 billion moon flight
(Continued to page 20)
Candles light D.C. walk
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Vietnam protesters bearing candles and the names of dead soldiers filed quietly from Arlington Cemetery past the White House to the foot of the U.S. Capitol Thursday to initiate a 40-hour "March Against Death."
The marchers, numbering in the thousands, passed single file and hand-in-hand along the route.
There were no reports of trouble during the initial stages of the three-day antiwar showing in security-edgy Washington.
Participants in the procession opposing President Nixon's war policy even halted for red lights at street corners as they headed for the historic Pennsylvania Avenue fences.
They were led by the 23-year-
old widow of a Navy lieutenant killed in Vietnam and they marched to the mournful cadence of seven drummers.
At 9:30 p.m., a light cold rain began to fall. But still the marchers came, stepping off on the four-mile hike at an estimated rate of 1,200 an hour.
A spokesman for the sponsoring organization, the New Mobiliza
(Continued to page 20)
KANSAS STUDENTS PEACE
Photo by Fred Chan
Kansas represented in Washington demonstration
Preparing to leave for Washington, D.C., Stuart Boyce, Overland Park freshman, painted a peace sign which Kansas students took to the Washington phase of the November war moratorium.
---
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Javits expresses dissent
WASHINGTON—Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., said today Clement F. Haynsworth, Jr.'s views on civil rights were so out of date and insensitive to the rights of blacks he could not support his Supreme Court nomination.
With formal debate on the controversial nomination under way at last, Javits said he had reviewed every segregation opinion—majority, concurring or dissent—Haynsworth wrote since he went on the federal circuit bench in 1957.
79 per cent back Nixon
NEW YORK—Public support for President Nixon's Vietnam policies reached a new high after his Nov. 3 speech, a poll taken by Sindlinger & Company a marketing and opinion research firm, showed Thursday.
Almost 8 out of 10 or 79.2 per cent of those surveyed supported the President, Sindlinger said. The previous high of 72 per cent was recorded last June just after his troop withdrawal announcement and was followed by a drop to 61.5 per cent in September.
---
MONOLEE
Photo by T. L. Simmons
Not all who try succeed; one of many who came
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. volunteered a pint of his blood in Joseph R. Pearson hall Thursday, but became one of the many that day whose blood was not taken. Although the 444 pints collected over the three day drive were short of the Red Cross quota of 600 pints, results were better than they had been in years.
Summer jobs taken early
Mrs. Mynena Leith, editor and publisher of the Summer Employment Directory of the United States who recently addressed the Associated Collegiate Press convention, has written an article designed to aid students who want a summer job.
In the article, Mrs. Leith warned students to look for a job early. She said December is a good month to start the search, and anyone who doesn't have a job lined up by June 1 should just forget it.
Mrs. Leith said there are 80,000 summer positions available in the
2 KANSAN Nov.14 1969
United States and an additional 20,000 in Europe. Students who want a summer job should first consider the type of employment they want, and then decide whether they want work to make money or experience in the field.
The next decision, Mrs. Leith said, is deciding whether to stay at home or to travel. Summer employment can be found in business and industry, national parks, resorts, amusement parks, restaurants and many other areas all over the world.
Mrs. Leith suggested when one applies for a summer job, the student should be "business-like" and always include references.
Landlord talks of problems
The Student Senate Off-Campus Housing Committee met Tuesday to discuss problems that Lawrence landlords have with tenants. Mrs. Nathan Lynch, 1216 Louisiana St., a landlord, explained to the committee landlords as well as tenants have valid complaints.
Commenting about substandard housing is not fit to live in. However, some tenants can render anything uninhabitable. I think students should be aware these houses represent a sizeable investment. A lot of hard feelings on the part of tenants are nothing more than the result of a landlord's efforts to maintain his property. I'm tired of being a janitor. I don't want dirty people."
Mrs. Lynch also complained about theft of furnishings. "You can't leave anything loose or it is
Collection of rent is also a major problem. "Some tenants are well aware of the obligations of the landlord to the tenant, but don't seem to realize landords also have bills to pay," Mrs. Lynch said. "If I can't collect the rent, I can't pay my bills."
stolen," she said.
Mrs. Lynch also said that many tenants don't comply with laws and signed contracts. Kansas law requires tenants to give landlords a 30-day notice if they are going to move. This allows sufficient time for the landlord to find other tenants.
"Students often move out without giving any advance notice, sometimes without even paying the last month's rent," Mrs. Lynch said. "One tenant of mine last year moved out and didn't let me know until five days later."
Signed contracts are legally
binding, but aren't respected by some tenants. "A contract is a two-sided agreement," she said. "If I fulfill my half of the agreement, then I expect my tenant to fulfill his half."
The Off-Campus Housing Committee discussed Mrs. Lynch's complaints and agreed communication between landlords and tenants must be improved. The committee asked Mrs. Lynch to help them set up a code stating what tenants and landlords should expect from each other.
The committee also assigned specialized problems for study to committee members such as foreign student housing, discrimination, publicity, structural hazards and legal problems.
University Council passes amendments
Halina Pawl, Topeka senior and committee vice-chairman, said anyone having housing problems can contact the committee for assistance.
The University Council passed a series of proposed amendments to the Senate Code Thursday which would remove the Chancellor from the chairmanship of several University bodies. All the amendments will be sent to the University Senate for final action.
The amendments stemmed from a request by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, that he be relieved from chairing the University Senate, Faculty Senate, and University Council. Chalmers said he would rather be an ex-officio of each group so he could freely express his views on matters and avoid awkward situations resulting from conflicts of interest on controversial issues.
One amendment provided that the presiding officer of the University Council be chosen from council members, and that he also be chairman of the University Senate. The presiding officer of the Faculty Council would then serve as chairman of the Faculty Senate.
After the meeting, Mrs. Lynch commented on the committee, "I think they're very constructive," she said. "With a little cooperation from landlords, I think we can reach an understanding."
Another proposal said the dean of student affairs, dean of men and dean of women become non-voting participants in the Student Senate, rather than voting members as is now the case.
Rick Von Ende, Abilene gradu-
JAY JANE'S
MEMBERSHIP TEA
Student Union
2:00-3:00 p.m. Sunday
Nov. 16
University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
November 13 - 22
by Brenden Behan
presents
The Hostage
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
ate student, presented the amendment and said William Balfour, dean of student affairs, Donald Alderson, dean of men, and Emily Taylor, dean of women, all had favored the amendment.
Murphy Hall
For Tickets Call: UN 4-3982
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Campus briefs
Architect to speak today
Noel McKinnell, principal architect of the Boston City Hall, will speak at 8 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room.
The lecture will be about the Boston City Hall and his other works. It is sponsored by the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
Symphony concert Sunday
Works by Strauss, Dvorak, Prokofiev and Beethoven will be presented at the fall concert of the University Symphony Orchestra at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. George Lawner will conduct the group.
Piano recital Monday
The School of Fine Arts Faculty Recital Series will feature Steven Smith, instructor of piano, at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall. There will be no admission charge.
LHS will not observe M-day
Lawrence High School will not hold a school observance of the moratorium. Anyone who misses classes to attend some kind of program either at KU or someplace in Lawrence will be punished according to the regular policy of cuts.
Max Rife, one of the school-within-the-school directors, said they were planning instead an assembly for Dec. 2. This assembly will be a presentation by two people from the KU staff of the pro's and con's of the Vietnam war.
Rife said they wanted to get the speakers for this moratorium, but were unable to do so.
Two attend national convention
James W. Murray, teaching associate in journalism and the adviser of the University Daily Kansan, and Ken Peterson, Enterprise senior and treasurer of the KU chapter of Sigma Delta Chi (SDX), national journalism fraternity, will return this weekend from a national SDX convention in San Diego, Calif.
UNICEF cards go on sale
UNICEF cards, notebooks and calendars went on sale today in various stores throughout the community today. The proceeds from the sales will go to the United Nations Children's Fund.
YWCA adviser to speak
Eula Redenbaugh, regional YWCA adviser, will visit the KU-Y Monday. Miss Redenbaugh will meet with groups and individuals to discuss the possibility of organizing activities concerning racism. Anyone wishing to meet with her should contact the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union.
Nov.14 KANSAN 3
1969
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Education in Africa reviewed
Middle Africa, McNown said consists of the countries south of the Sahara Desert with the exception of those still dominated by other countries. There are 31 universities within the 5 million square miles to serve 200 million people.
In middle Africa, one of every 4,000 persons is enrolled in a university, John McNown, professor of civil engineerirng, told 45 University faculty and staff members at the Faculty Forum Thursday.
In outlining the system and problems of higher education in middle Africa, McNown, who has spent much time in Africa, said one of the main problems was extremely high standards. In the Congo, for example, one of every 100 students completes secondary level.
Another problem with the higher education program is the lack of technicians, McNown said. At least 80 per cent of the people depend on farming, and in the future education should be directed to help improve productivity.
"Schools are turning out chiefs but there are no companion workers to fill in the roles along the line," he said.
Schools in middle Africa include traditional colonial institutions, traditional institutions with a technical orientation and schools established by missionaries, he said. Recently, universities of free states were founded with the hope that these would be more strongly linked to indigenous problems of the country, he said.
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KANSAN Comment
10
I am very proud of you.
photos by Lew Ketcham
Together...
There is a world full of people reaching out for each other. But the grasping hands meet too rarely.
"Let us look at each other without mistrust, meet each other without fear, talk with each other without surrendering principle," said Pope John.
Then we truly can become brothers.
Then we can walk together.
Joanna K. Wiebe
Hand Holding Dove Symbol
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
N154.8268.D4
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment offered included travel to and from the national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
JUNIOR SCHOOL
MIDDLE SCHOOL
KWSAN REVIEWS
'Hostage' performances excellent
By GENELLE RICHARDS Kansan Staff Writer
One tends to want to classify "The Hostage" as either a comedy or a tragedy, but it can't be done, because it is both.
That is one thing along with the style and script that makes the play unusual. The fact that the two are mixed at times tends to hinder and disrupt the play's totality.
The Hostage is a play of today "showing that modern drama tries to become different and shy away from the classic theater.
Again the same old comments are made that war is bad followed by "That's the way it is." Many of the plays today tell us how bad war is and we already know this.
The acting for the most part was very good. The principal roles of Pat played by John Young, Meg played by Barbara Berman, Leslie played by Richard Gillilan, and Monsewer played by Michael Rapport were all excellent.
They all presented characters which were polished complete with accents, movements and gestures to convince those watching that they were these people.
The other actors played stereotyped roles and therefore weren't able to display much of the individual. But Meg played by Patricia McGill and Mr. Mulleady played by Tim Caley displayed a talent for their character role.
The constant interruption of the minor characters, in mass instead of individually, hindered the total effects of the play because it wasn't convincing. They enter on cue, say their lines and then depart—not adding much to the play.
The use of songs in the play at times helped but there were several times when the scene was ruined by an immediate switch into song.
For instance, when the soldier realizes that he is being used as a hostage and what his fate may be, he breaks into a song which is not depressing but happy.
But there are times when the music is good. The beginning of
Middle Ages art exhibition wins acclaim
By RUTH K. ZISER
Kansan Reviewer
"Huiziga in Lawrence, or Hitting the Top of the List Deep in the Heart of Kansas" was the headline of a review of the current exhibition at The KU Museum of Art in Sunday's "New York Times." This show, "The Waning Middle Ages," organized by J.L. Schrader, brings together one-hundred thirty-eight objects of Franco-Burgundian art from 1350 to 1500 from museums across the United States. It certainly offers a unique opportunity to the University of Kansas.
This exhibition, the most ambitious ever undertaken by the museum, commemorates the 50th anniversary of the publication of Johann Huizinga's book, "The Waning of the Middle Ages." Huizinga's study of medieval culture expounds the thesis that the
(Continued to page 6)
Nov.14 1969 KANSAN 5
A LEGEND "Johnny Cash "
IN HIS OWN TIME!
THE MAN
HIS WORLD
HIS MUSIC!
COMING
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065
the play is terrific-with everyone on stage singing and dancing, and at other times, the songs for the characters are good.
A great addition to the play comes from the set and costumes. The set constructed of wood slabs is magnificent and the costumes help the characters to be more convincing in their roles.
The script was different for there were times when the feeling was tragic or comic and then interrupted with song and dance
which was the opposite of the mood. This device can be good but many audiences aren't prepared to accept such a technique.
So for those who think that perhaps they didn't like "The Hostage" perhaps they should look again at the play itself, where the fault may lie, and not with the acting and directing which was good.
"The Hostage" runs through Nov. 22 in the Experimental Theatre.
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"A fantastic film in which all of life becomes a week-end—a cataclysmic, seismic traffic jam. The film must be seen for its power, ambition, humor, and scenes of really astonishing beauty. One of the most important films Godard has ever made. There's nothing like it at all."
—Renata Adler, New York Times
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KWSAN REVIEWS FILMS: A veritable feast
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
Some jiving and some straight talking, some anguish and some laughs, a little loving, and a little indecision, fear, music, dancing, death silence
They're all on the menu at "Alice's Restaurant."
Arlo Guthrie, who created "Alice's Restaurant" first in a folk song, has succeeded brilliantly in turning that popular legend, with his own life story woven in, into a movie that makes you want to understand life's complications more while enjoying life's treats more.
The technical side of the movie could have been better. It could have been cut advantageously in several places. Some of the characters could have been explored more.
But with all of its could-have-beens, "Alice's Restaurant" remains a glowing and moving story.
Alice and Ray (played by Pat Quinn and James Crawford) create a new type of church-going crowd, a crowd which is deeply religious in its own right but not above the confusion which exists among traditional pew fillers. Life is their celebration, and some of the revelations are soul-filling—others soul-drenching.
No church, no red mini-bus, no restaurant, no matter how liberated they may be, can always be filled with joy and beauty. At one point—after the death of a boy they both loved, Alice and Ray are sitting in the empty restaurant. On the door hangs a sign saying "Closed because of a lot of death." Something is wrong, and both Ray and Alice know it. And Ray says, "Maybe we haven't been so beautiful."
Realizing that human nature isn't always beautiful (a realization a lot of freaks haven't yet made), Arlo tells in his movie about life as it is, and he tells us a great deal about how one should go about living with such a society as would inflict army physicals on human beings, not to mention other unbeauties.
But don't think for a minute that Arlo doesn't love, and love intensely, "mother rapers, father stabbers, father rapers," the whole lot of us on Bench W or any other bench. He loves people, not facades.
The question for us, the audience—the congregation, is how does one become a lover of people? Arlo seems to be saying with every lengthy hair on his head, with every glance, with every note, that you can't learn love from Freud or even from D. H. Lawrence, but from experience, from human relationships such as occur at Alice and Ray's.
Arlo Guthrie has given us a cinematic ballad to use as we will. He forces nothing. He lets us learn. Amen.
Art exhibit acclaimed
(Continued from page 5)
(Continued from page 5) 14th and 15th centuries in France and the Netherlands are the last strain of the Middle Ages rather than the prelude to the Renaissance, that is "rather decadent than primitive."
The purpose of the exhibition is not only to illustrate Huizinga's thesis, but also to re-examine it. Objects have been selected to provoke thought which might shed new light on this fascinating epoch. Thus, the microscopic realism which epitomizes to Huizinga the Late Medieval is perfectly exemplified by the minute carving of a rosary bead, scarcely
6 KANSAN
Nov.14 1969
two inches in diameter, which depicts in great detail the Crucifixion and Resurrection. This "prayer nut" is a technical masterpiece of wood carving comparable in its minute detail to Jan van Eyck's paintings and fundamentally in opposition to the harmonious simplification of the Renaissance. On the other hand, however, the reunited Angel Roundel, with its tendency towards idealism and simplified drapery which reveals the forms of the body beneath, seems closer in spirit to Lucca della Robbia's "Singing Angels" than the choir of Jan van Eyck's "Ghent Altar-piece."
The "Waning Middle Ages" is especially rich in secular objects d'art.
BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS
IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person
Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m.
Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only
Advance Tickets on Sale at
Kief's Records, Red Dog Office, All Jenkins Stores
in K.C.
Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
She spoke in the Student Union Ballroom in accompaniment to three magnificent reels of clips from silent films. The program centered around the work of D.W. Griffith, Miss Gish's mentor, friend and America's greatest motion picture pioneer, but pieces were also shown from the movies
Her family nicknamed her "The Iron Horse" because of her inexhaustible drive and dedication to her art, but, despite her legendary toughness, Lillian Gish looked as fragile and beautiful last night as she did in "Way Down East" almost fifty years ago.
Tansy to present poetry readings
By RICHARD GEARY Kansan Reviewer
The weekly poetry reading at the Tansy Bookstore, above the Coach House, at 7 p.m. Sunday.
John Moritz, Lee Chapman and Ken Irving will read their poetry and everyone else may read too.
Movie queen's art is her passion
was probably one of the greatest periods of concentrated creativity and experimentation in the history of the world, and even the participants rarely knew what a bombshell they had in their hands. Half a century later, few people yet realize the importance of these early films.
We can thank Miss Gish for the love, the dedication, the vision to recognize the art form, of which she was an important part, and share it with the rest of the world.
...
With every sentence, Miss Gish announced her love for these old movies, and her desire for everyone to love them. "Film is the only art form developed in this country and in this century," she told the audience, and, although she is not quite right, one can feel the enthusiasm for the medium which prompted the statement and realize she is not all wrong either.
The actress's off-screen commentary was as fascinating as what was projected—a marvelous collection of behind-the-scene anecdotes; her friendship with Mary Pickford; the shooting of the rescue on the ice in "Way Down East" (A scene which drew a round of applause); filming a baby's death scene at three in the morning so that the infant would definitely be asleep; Griffith's staging of the battles in "Birth of a Nation" with a mere 300 people.
CATGIF
7:00 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 14
at the
Alpha Chi Omega
Sorority House
— Refreshments —
Campus Crusade
for Christ
The silent period in America
of Chaplin, Keaton, Fairbanks, Valentino and other great silent stars and directors.
Formula 8.
Above is shown another entry in our campus beautification project. More of those swingin' looks which we're famous for and loaded with. New things are coming in every day. Stop in today and help us with our project.
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St
...
VL3-5755
Also-rans meet tomorrow
By JAY THOMAS
By JAY THOMAS Kansan Sports Editor
As everyone who has been listening to Spiro Agnew knows, tomorrow is Moratorium Day in the United States. As anyone who has watched KU football this fail can tell you, there should have been a moratorium set on this entire football season.
Not that things are bad or anything, but when a football coach starts talking about next year (like Pepper Rodgers has been doing) with two games left on this fall's schedule, well. . .
Of course, next to starting the season off against Wisconsin and Pittsburg, Oklahoma has not had a great deal to laugh about either this fall. Sure, Steve Owens has had a typically great year, breaking records, scoring touchdowns
also sit this one out.
All three are key players for the Big Red, particularly Pearce, a survivor of the Terry McMillan (44-10, Missouri) and Lynn Dickey (59-21, Kansas State) aerial bombardments that have soured the bowl scouts on the Sooners.
Nonetheless, with or without Pearce, OU's secondary will, on past form, be vulnerable and Kansas could exploit a defense that has given up more yards on the ground, in the air (except for Missouri), and altogether than any other Big Eight team. On top of this, teams are scoring at the rate of 29 points a game on the Sooners.
Still Oklahoma beats you with their offense and that's spelled with a big O. The biggest O is
ently tied with Army immortal Glenn Davis.
Needless to say, conference coaches will not be saddened by the graduation of the durable (averaging 34 carries a contest this year) OU tailback.
Super-soph Jack Mildren has not quite lived up to his preseason billing (who could?) but has directed the Sooner attack to 30.3 points a game and 404.1 yards per game in total offense.
umes, however; the simplest way of putting it is as Pepper Rodgers did: "To be honest, we're not very good."
But Rodgers is an optimist who sees something good in everything. Wednesday, speaking of the redeeming (?) aspects of the season, he joked, "I'd rather go 9-1 and then 1 and 9 than go 5-5 for two straight years." With any kind of luck, Pepper should get his wish.
But luck has been noticeably absent around Lawrence this fall, so maybe, just maybe. . .
Other familiar names include
Track Club needs $400
The Kansas Track Club, an independent organization, not affiliated with KU, has begun a campaign to raise $400 to compete in the National Federation cross-country meet at Penn State, Nov. 24.
The club is an AAU-sponsored organization under the guidance of coach Bill Easton.
50
If interested in making a contribution, please send your donations to the Kansas Track Club, care of the Douglas County State Bank.
8k
Ken Mendenhall
Steve Zabel
Two all-Big Eight candidates, Zabel and Mendenhall along with all-league tailback Steve Owens have anchored the Sooner offensive unit this season.
and vying for the Davis Cup or Academy Award or whatever they give for getting your name on the sports page the most times in a leading role.
Still 60,000 dads, moms and other family and friends of the teams will pack Owen Field in Norman Saturday to see the defending Big Eight co-champions compare last fall's press clippings.
What else they will probably see are two injury-wracked teams who have both, at times, played some fine football. Still, just fine football does not take a team very far in the Big Eight this year and Oklahoma and Kansas have the records to prove it.
OU (2-2 in conference play, 4-3 overall) goes into the game with both wingbacks, Roy Bell and Geoff Nordgren, doubtful participants due to injuries. Starting defensive halfback Joe Pearce suffered a bruised shoulder last week against Missouri and may
Nov.14 KANSAN 7
1969
Owens, who has practically run right off the record book pages and is a legitimate All-American, not if heisman Troonv candidate
In fact, with Oklahoma not going anywhere, Saturday (and the rest of the OU season) may be devoted to winning Owens the Heisman and pushing him well over the two NCAA career marks within his reach. With even a sub-par day (which means less than three touchdowns and 141 yards rushing) Owens should topple Mercury Morris' three-year rushing record of 3,388 yards (he's 54 shy) and the touchdownmark of 51, at which he is pres-
BLACK LUNG
FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI) Kentucky plans dust quality testing in coal mines in an effort health and mine officials hope will lead to control of black lung and other respiratory diseases.
Conducting the program will be the State Department of Health and the Department of Mines and Minerals. Kentucky is the first state to initiate extensive research on black lung.
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KANSAN Sports
tight end Steve Zabel, whose receptions the last two years have helped beat Kansas, All-Big Eight center turned tackle Ken Mendenhall, and fullback Mike Harper. The injured Bell leads the Big Eight in average gain per rush (€1.1) and is the Sooner's most dangerous breakaway threat.
Oklahoma starts 10 sophomores and has suffered from the same inexperience which has plagued Kansas.
Of course, more than inexperience has taken KU to the Big Eight cellar. A complete explanation would require several vol-
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Big Eight Open looms as indicator
BANGLADESH
Kirk Gardner
Kirk Gardner, Atchison junior, is perhaps the top individual performer on this year's gymnastics team. Gardner has scored a 9.45, an all-time KU best, on the still rings and is defending Big Eight Open champion in that event.
8 KANSAN
Nov.14 1969
CLOSE UP FISHERMAN JACKET
Put yourself in this picture. This great wool jacket from Woolrich is pile lined and will see you through all this beautiful, crisp fall weather in the best of good looks.
The Town Shop 839 Mass. VI 3-5755
The University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr.
By STEVE SHRIVER
Kansan Sports Writer
Coach Bob Lockwood thinks this year's gymnastics team has the potential to go all the way in conference competition with 10 lettermen returning from last year's squad that won 8 of 10 meets and placed third in the Big Eight meet. He feels the first meet of the year, the Big Eight Open this Saturday in Robinson Gym. "will be a good indication of just how well, we will do this year."
Lockwood lists this meet as one of the most important of the year for the team. Although no team scores are taken, competition is expected to be stiff with all conference teams involved. Only individual scores will be taken, but the results will give Lockwood and the gymnasts a good look at what to expect in later conference competition.
Last year at the Big Eight Conference meet in Ames, Iowa, the team finished third behind Iowa State and Oklahoma. The Cyclones finished the season rated as third best team in the nation.
The loss of Stan Clyne, Wichita junior and top performer as a sophomore, hurt the Hawks chances in that meet. Clyne suffered a compound fracture of his right wrist warming up, and had to undergo surgery for the correction. The injury was expected to ruin his career but he has been
working out with weights during the off season and is building up his strength. He had hoped to compete second semester but the bones have been slow in healing and he will almost certainly be lost for the season.
Lockwood has high hopes for Lawrence freshman Marc Joseph to help take up the slack from the loss of Clyne and last year's senior captain Pete Firson. Competing in the all-around category, Joseph was a top performer for Lawrence High.
"If Joseph comes around, I believe we'll have a definite shot at the Big Eight title," Lockwood said. "We have four good performers in every event and only one senior. This is a young team that needs experience, but it should be KU's best ever by conference time.
"Right now, this is one of the best teams I've had in my seven years at KU, as far as desire and ability are concerned. We've been working hard on conditioning and we've got a good attitude. The thing about it is, we're going to improve as the season progresses. I can't put a limit on the potential this team has." Lockwood said.
Defending Big Eight champion, Iowa State, is listed by Lockwood and most other conference coaches, as the team to beat. The Cyclones were third in the nation last year behind Iowa and USC and this year return more letter-
men than either of those teams. "They have a good chance to earn top national honors," Lockwood said.
"The Big Eight is so well balanced, we might decide the national champion in our own conference meet," added the KU conch. He lists Colorado and Oklahoma as darkhorses contenders.
Besides Joseph, several other good prospects may help the team depending on how well they progress through the regular season.
The strongest event for this year's team is the high bar where Roger Hemphill, Lawrence junior, and Gerald Carley, Wichita junior, return. Hemphill's personal best is 9.20 and Carley's is 9.10. Carley was ninth in the national meet last year.
Kirk Gardner returns on the still rings and is the defending Big Eight Open champion. The Atchison junior has scored KU's all-time best mark on the rings with a 9.45 in 1968.
On the sidehorse is veteran Rich Schubert, Lawrence sophomore, who last year scored a personal best of 9.10. All-around competitor John Brouillette is expected to take up where he left off yast year when he scored a 50.10. That score put him second on KU's all-time list behind Pierson who scored a 51.90 in 1968.
Krinkle Patent
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Editors 71-37-3,C-S 69-35-3
Best mark carries editors
With only two weeks of collegiate action remaining on the schedule, the editors have made their move and now maintain their greatest advantage of the season over the Chancellor and the Athletic Director—two games
Racking up their best percentage of the contest last week, a 10-3-1 mark, the combination of
Thomas and Childs have slipped two up on Chalmers and Stinson, who we might add were sterling in their moment of defeat recordin a 9-4-1 mark, their best in recent weeks.
Purdue at Ohio State, Nebraska at Aggieville and the fly-boys from Air Force at Stanford head a slate of contests that will cause
Female gymnasts start second year
trouble for forecasters. It is a tough business, this predicting football games, and with a seasonal average like the editors have amassed the end can arrive none too soon.
By STEVE SHRIVER Kansan Sports Writer
Kansas at Oklahoma Chalmers-Stinson—even
Miss Stinson has been lauded for her improvement over last year and her good attitude. She competes on the uneven parallels and in the vaulting event.
Freshmen figure prominently in challenging the upperclassmen for the top spots on the squad. Barby Murrow, Topeka freshman, was a standout prep gymnast and is expected to be one of the best all-around competitors in the state.
Depth is another aspect of this year's team which has Mrs. Catlett smiling. Behind Miss Murrow in the all-around competition will be top prospects Janet Helfrich, Wichita freshman, and Janice Baker, Lake Quivera freshman.
Nov. 14
1969 KANSAN 9
KU's women's gymnastics team is entering its second year of competition and according to Mrs. Gale Catlett, coach and advisor, "the girls should have a good team, one of the best in the state."
Sophomores Sue Tagg, Sioux City, Iowa, and Debby Stinson of Lawrence are expected to be top competitors for this year. With Miss Murrow and Miss Tagg on the balance beam, KU boasts two of the best in the state.
The team is composed of mostly sophomores and freshmen, and squad size has increased from eight last year to 16 this season. Four girls return from last year's team.
The differences between the women's and the men's gymnastics events are slight. They both involve coordination of fluid movements but, whereas the men rely more on strength, the women use more balance and finesse in their routines.
There are four events in which the women compete around the country: the uneven parallel bars, vaulting, floor exercise, balance beam, and sometimes the tumbling and trampoline events are added.
This weekend the team will travel to Kansas City for a clinic, sponsored by women's Olympic coach Dick Mulvihill and Olympic finalist Linda Metheny.
"The girls don't compete but they do get a chance to work out and get expert advice for improving their routines," Mrs. Catlett said. "We have two workshops such as this in preseason before our first meet on Feb. 7."
Mary Lou Kraft, Overland Park sophomore, competes in the floor exercise and was also optimistic about this year's team.
When asked what it was that excited her about gymnastics, Miss Stinson replied, "I think it's a thrill to control my body in the air on the apparatus. It gives me an ego boost to know that I can do things with my body that most others can't do."
Replying to a question asking about the team's outlook for the year, Miss Stinson said, "I think we'll bomb everybody. The team this year is much stronger than last year's."
"Gymnastics is a beautiful sport," Miss Kraft said. "I had no experience in high school and my first contact with it was in class last year.
"It takes a lot of time and a lot of hard work to master even one trick. But it feels great after you've done it. I get a lot of satisfaction out of throwing a good routine. It's hard to describe but it really gives you a tremendous feeling of achievement," Miss Kraft said.
The KU women's gymnastics team is a relatively new sport on the campus scene, and it is a beautiful sport. It could be a beautiful sport for men, too—just by watching.
Thomas-Childs-Oklahoma by 10
TC Comment—the Sooners have
lost three games this year—a rarity
for OU teams. KU will meet Steve
company in Oklahoma's
Snakepit and an upset is more
hard to see.
Missouri at Iowa State Chalmers-Stinson~Missouri} by 21
TC Comment--Dan Devine's Tigers
are needed for the Big Eight championship.
Oklahoma State at Colorado
Chicago at Colorado, by 6
Thomas-Childs—Colorado by
TC Comment—Colorado's secondary
ship to contain the Cowboy-
ship's passing attempt.
Nebraska at Kansas State
Chalmers-Stinson-Kansas State by 7
Chalmers-Stinson-Kansas State by 7
TC Comment—Kansas State was humilized last week by Oklahoma and be up for the Cornhuskets and NU inference and smelling the title. Dicky's arm should give the Wildcats the win in the Big Eight Game of the Week.
Purdue at Ohio State Chalmers-Stinson—Ohio State
Thomas-Childs—Ohio State by 14
TC Comment—the Buckeyes meet their only tough opponent of the year this season and Purdue quarterback Mike Phipps will have to have a great day for the Bollermakers to have a chance.
Arkansas at SMU Chalmers-Stinson-Arkansas by 21
Chalmers-Stinson--Arkansas by 21
Tennessee by 19.
TC Comment--The Razorbacks are
defended and will stay that way
until they meet Texas on Dec. 6.
Air Force at Stanford
Air Force at Stanford by 9
Chairman Stanford by 8
Thomas Armstrong by 5
TC Comment--Both teams have an outstanding passing attack and great scoring ability, with top teams in Purdue and South Cal and lost by narrow margins both times. The home advantage should be the narrow margin this week.
at Princeton
Chambers-Sale in Princeton by 6
Thomas-Clarke in Princeton
TC. Comment—The Ivy should win the battle for the Ivy League title
Miami (Fla.) at Alabama
Chicago (Ill.) at 2
Thomas-Chilei (Bryn) at 10
Thomas-Chilei (Bryn) at 10
TC Comment—Neither team is particularly strong, but 'Bama's passing game is getting stronger each week should be at its best against Miami.
IM play-offs
Thursday's Results Fraternity B League
Fraternity B League
Beta Theta Pi. No. 2 14, Phi Kappa
Sigma 0
Beta Theta Pi No. 1 N 6, Theta Chi 0
Beta Theta P1 22, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.0
6 Phi Kappa Psi 12, Phi Delta Theta
Independent B League
Tempipl Hayjacks 14, Bang Gang 6
Grendel's Mother 7, NEGB Sports
Awards
TODAY'S GAMES
Fraternity A League
Phi Kappa Pi vs. Beta Theta Pi
Beta Theta Pi No. 1 vs. Beta Theta Pi No. 2
Independent A League KU Laws vs. College Kids
dependent B Loader
Templin Hayjacks vs. Grendel's
Mother
KU Laws vs. College Kids
Independent B League
Turkey Time is here! Register for your free Turkey at Sandy's
Auburn at Georgia
Chalmers-Stinson—Auburn by 2
Thomas Mills, Georgia by "7"
That's right—every time you purchase an order of food at Sandy's—you can register for a big 14 lb. turkey. Students! Think of all the joy you'll cause walking in the door back home with a 14 lb. turkey under your arm. (Attention hippies—maybe then you won't have to shave off your beard and sideburns for mommy and daddy —bribe them with a turkey.)
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th
T
TC Comment~The Bulldogs have been in a slump of late and should kill Auburn's bowl hopes with a strong late season finish.
North Caro, State at Fla. State
Chalmers-Stinson, Florida St. by
34
50
80
110
140
TC Comment—Renninoles want a
Gator dawl beet on in their way.
Gator dawl beet on in their way.
Illinois at Wisconsin
Chaimee-Stinson Wisconsin by 6
Thomas-Graham-Illegal 10-29
TC Comment—Surprise! 30 fighting Illini haven't scored 30 points all season and last week were crushed by Mbala. We have confidence we have in Wisconsin.
Michigan at Iowa
Thomas-Childs—Michigan by 4
TC Comment-Michigan warms up
for its Big Ten with Ohio State next
week, erratic Iowa could pull
the upset.
South Dakota at Montana
Chairmen-Silhoun-South Dakota by
21
Thomas-Childs--Montana by 21
TC Comment--Undefended Montana
shows once again why they are No.
1—in Montana.
Minnesota at Michigan State
Chalmers-Silson-Michigan State by
6-38.
Thomas-Childs - Minnesota by 10
Meets—Both teams are slow enough to beat them.
The shadow of a fruit jar. Minnesota's should open enough Gopher holes.
Harriers compete at SIU
The five-mile championship run will be hosted by Southern Illinois University, and will draw many of the top cross-country teams from the midwest.
After winning their second straight Big Eight championship at Manhattan last week, Kansas' cross-country team will compete tomorrow in the Central Collegiate Conference meet at Carbondale, Ill.
Kansas track coach, Bob Timmons, filed a nine-man entry as follows: Glenn Cunningham and Roger Kathol, seniors; Jay Mason and Dennis Petterson, juniors; Rich Elliott and Doug Smith, sophomores, and Dave Anderson, Jon Callen and Jeff Wray, freshmen.
The Jayhawks finished in consecutive order from ninth through 13th, at the Big Eight meet, to win with a total low of 55 points. Nebraska was second with 72.
Tucia- mia. Bernuella. Che bumam raa.
BALLI DI SFESSANIA
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THE LAKESIDE STUDIO
time: 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M. November 17
place: South Lounge Kansas Union
DENVER, COLORADO - OHIO STATE - AKRON UNIV. -- TC
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C. Oldfather,
By CHRIS SEITZ Kansan Staff Writer
In terms of governing structure, KU is as advanced as any in the country in the opinion of Charles H. Oldfather, associate dean of the School of Law.
Oldfather, chairman of the KU Senate Executive Committee and active in other campus affairs, said Wednesday that KU moved swiftly in liberalizing its rules for student participation once there was consensus for a change among students.
OLDFATHER SAID he believed that students should have almost complete say in areas which affect them. In matters affecting the entire University, he said that his position had always been that students should have a voice, not as a privilege but as a matter of right.
Although the changes in overall governing structure at KU should solve many of the same problems which are now causing difficulties at other universities, Oldfather said, this does not take
The 1969-70 school term is the first year in which the reforms in KU government which were passed last spring are in force. These reforms, Oldfather said, primarily have had the effect of reorganizing the legitimacy of student control in areas where it had previously been present only on an informal basis.
Esq.
HARRY HEYDEN
TOM HENDERSON
care of problems which students have with the educational process at KU.
To handle this aspect, increased student participation in the governing policies of the individual schools at KU is being introduced.
He said that there are already students who are helping to determine curricula, apportion credit, and make other decisions affecting students in the School of Law and other schools on campus.
According to the Student Code, every school must have at least one student on its committee. This program should bear fruit by the end of this year. Oldfather said.
THE RECENT Senate decision on the position of ROTC on campus was an intelligent solution to the problems involved, Oldfather said. Concerning recent requests
(Continued to page 13)
Photos by
Mike Frederick
ALEXANDER HAWKINS
I
(Continued from page 12)
(Continued from page 12)
by the Black Student Union for recognition of a black homecoming queen at KU, Oldfather had this to say:
"It is quite apparent to me that universities have to assume leadership by establishing an example in correcting the imbalance that exists in society and in the university as a part of society."
In affairs beyond student government, Oldfather is also in favor of popular participation.
"I certainly think that participation by all affected groups is part of our tradition in this country," he said.
HE ADDED that some things must be done by representation for the simple reason that large groups do not make the best decision-making bodies.
Concerning current student tactics across the nation, Oldfather said that he regretted the use of "non-negotiable demands." By making demands specific, student leaders leave no room for maneuvering, he said. He believes that students should try to "move fluidly through situations," keeping their goals more general.
But Oldfather is against the use of violence to achieve student ends.
"I find that radicalizing as the means of achieving goals is very troublesome. I am a great believer in peaceful protest, the right of assembly and demonstrations," he said.
OLDFATHER participated in some events for the Oct. 15 war moratorium and called it the symbolic expression of a "silent minority," in contrast to the "silent majority" to which President Nixon is said to appeal.
"I think that the general disapproval of people who participated in the moratorium is deplorable." Oldfather said.
Peace vigil commences MU activities
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)—Supporters of the Vietnam War moratorium at the University of Missouri began a 48-hour "peace vigil" Thursday night at the university's MacAlister Park.
A memorial service to coincide with the "March Against Death" in Washington was led by two local rainters.
A spokesman for a university anti-war group said about 150 moratorium supporters from Missouri are expected to be in Washington for the weekend ceremonies. He said about 100 of them traveled to Washington for the beginning of the march while about 50 remained in Columbia until after Thursday's memorial services.
Lost ID's replaced
An average of five students apply to the KU Registrar's Office every day for KU ID replacements.
Nov. 14
1969 KANSAN 13
Contending that the moratorium was a meaningful experience, Oldfather said, "It was a beautiful expression of the nation's obvious concern."
ASKED ABOUT President Nixon's Vietnam policy speech last week, Oldfather said that he appreciated Nixon's position because he could not say, as President, that the United States should not be in Vietnam, but Oldfather said that he did not approve of a plan that would not remove even half of the U.S. troops from Vietnam.
Asked about his own position, Oldfather said, "I'm not moderate in the ends I seek. I'm moderate in the means I advocate to accomplish them."
To the moon
To the moon
and back
OMEGA
CO-AXIAL
CHRONO
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Ω
OMEGA
OMEGA
Marks Jewelers
Del Eisele, certified gemologist
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
AGS
AGS
Approximately one hundred persons will celebrate the 500th birthday anniversary of Guru Manak, the founder of the Sikh religion, at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the United Campus Christian Fellowship Center, 1204 Oread St.
100 to honor religious rite
The celebration in Lawrence will emulate as closely as possible the celebrations which will be occurring simultaneously in India, where the religion was founded, said Surjit Chhatwal, one of the organizers of Sunday's program. Prayers, discussions of the life of Guru Manak and the philosophy of the Silk religion and a traditional vegetarian meal are planned.
Chhatwal, a New Delhi, India, graduate student, said it is customary in the Sikh religion for all those who have gathered for a meeting to have a meal together. "When people eat together, quite a bit of the animosity they hold is driven off," he said.
Chhatwal said the sikh religion was founded in an attempt to unite the Moslems and the Hindus. A conflict had arisen between the Moslems and the Hindus after the Moslem invasion of northern India, and the Moslems were forceably converting people to their faith. At the same
time, the caste system had crept into the Hindu faith and people of different social classes were no longer allowed to sit, pray or eat together, Chhatwal said. Guru Manak and two companions, a Moslem and a Hindu, founded the Sikh religion in an effort to bring together the different factions. Chhatwal said the Sikh religion began as a social movement and did not become a formal religion until 100-150 years later.
Philippines to pull out
MANILA—The Philippines told its Vietnam allies today it will soon withdraw its 1,500 troops from the war zone, fulfilling a campaign promise of newly re-elected President Ferdinand E. Marcos.
It will be the first complete pullout by any Allied contingent from Vietnam. Government sources said the Philippine non-combatant force would be home by Christmas.
MARIA CHAPMAN
Latinas
... makes the shoes
to walk with any pants. They look great . . . and they feel the same way. Choose from several styles in rustic leathers or black patents.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
23rd and Alabama
kroger
Open Daily
9 to 9
Sundays 9 to 6
FAMILY CENTER
Everyday Deep-Cut DISCOUNT PRICES
Scott Facial Tissue
White & Assorted
First Purchase 22c
Each Additional Purchase 29c
Miracle Whip Salad Dressing
First Purchase 39c
Each Additional Purchase 56c
Duncan Hines Cake Mixes
13 Varieties
First Purchase 3/89c
Each Additional Purchase 41c
Morton Dinners
Chicken, Beef, Salisbury, Turkey, & Meat Loaf
First Purchase 3/$1.00
Each Additional Purchase 43c
Pillsbury Biscuits
Sweet & Buttermilk
First Purchase 3/19c
Each Additional Purchase 9c
Swiftning Shortening
First Purchase 49c
Each Additional Purchase 65c
Coca-Cola
Ctn. of 8 - 16 oz. Bottles
59c
Country Oven Potato Chips
11 oz. Pkg.
39c
Fresh Fryers
Gov't. Inspected
Whole
29c lb.
Misses Pajama Set
100% Acetate Pastel Colors
Sizes 32-38
$2.97 Value
2 / $3.00
Men's Pullovers
Mock Turtleneck
100% Textured Acrylic S-M-L
Reg. $3.97
$3.00
Portable Clothes Dryer
Dries 2 lbs.
Reg. $29.95
$15.88
Plastic Laundry Basket
99c
Novelty Metal Waste Baskets
• Laugh-in
• Sock it to me
• Flower Power
88c
Wig Care Fashion Kit
$1.33
Plastic Clothing Protectors — Ideal for closet and traveling
Suit Bags
24" x 42"
Holds several suits
Reg. 59c Now 47c
Dress or Coat Bag
24" x 54"
Holds two coats or several dresses
Reg. 77c Now 59c
Sweater Bags
Set of two Full Zipper
12" x 14" x 3"
Reg. 77c Now 59c
STUDENT COUPON
Misses
Nylon Shells $1.00 with coupon
Assorted Colors S-M-L Our Reg. $1.27
STUDENT COUPON
Misses
Seamless Stretch 66c with coupon
Panty Hose S-M-L Our Reg. 88c
STUDENT COUPON
Zerex
Windshield De-Icer 66c limit 2 with coupon
STUDENT COUPON
3-Pc. Set
Melmac
Mixing Bowls
Reg. $2.47
$1.66 with coupon
STUDENT COUPON
Colgate
Tooth Paste 5 oz. size
47c with coupon
STUDENT COUPON
Johnson
Baby Powder 14 oz. size
77c with coupon
Moving about poses the greatest problem
Campus life not hard for blind students
P
Blind students enjoy KU
Blind since birth, Susan Haller, Wichita, freshman, leaves Oliver Hall on her way to class. She is one of a number of blind students and instructors at KU.
By GENELLE RICHARDS
Imagine what it would be like to attend class on the Hill and only be able to see partially or not at all.
This confronts several persons on the KU campus including Susan Haller, Wichita freshman; Gerald Hansen, teaching assistant in business administration; and Dominick Palazzotto, Middle Village, N.Y., graduate student.
"I think basically my problems are the same as anyone else," said Miss Haller. "The buildings are laid out so as not to be much trouble to get to."
Resident writer here
Herbert Gold will be writer in residence at the University of Kansas Tuesday through Nov. 24.
Kansas Tuesday through Nov. 24.
Gold will conduct a class in fiction writing and confer with students about their writing. A public reading of his works will be given at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Gold has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, Harvard University, University of California at Berkeley and Cornell University.
His awards include the 1957 Award of American Institute of Arts and Letters and the 1959 Longview Award.
Gold's published books are "Birth of a Hero," 1951; "The Prospect Before Us," 1954; "The Man Who Was Not With It." 1956; "The Optimist," 1958; "Therefor, Be Bold," 1961; "Salt," 1963 and "Fathers," 1967.
AUTO INSURANCE
NEW YORK—Insurance costs only 1.4 cents of the total 11 cents per mile needed to operate an automobile, says the Insurance Information Institute. I.I.I notes that the car owner pays more for parking and tolls than he does for auto insurance.
Miss Haller, who has been without sight since birth, finds the response of people to her blindness better at KU than anywhere else. This response, according to Miss Haller, is much better than at other schools she has visited.
"The people here are more willing to accept you for what you are inside and not just on the outside," said Miss Haller. "People here are more receptive."
"I don't know if it's the maturity here or not, but in high school I felt like an outsider."
Nov.14 1969 KANSAN 15
Has varied interests
Miss Haller classifies her interests in human relations, the arts and social sciences but has not yet chosen a major field.
She is also interested in drama and music and feels that if she wasn't blind perhaps she would go into these fields.
Miss Haller, who takes 13 hours of class and works on a dorm committee in Oliver Hall, must make the usual adjustments common to most freshmen.
Some of her books for classes are on tapes but she also hires readers. These persons are hired "to be my eyes. They read and if something needs to be written, they write it for me," she said.
"The KU-V has been really great and so has the Oliver College staff." Miss Haller said.
Gerald Hansen, who came to KU in August, noticed that there was no organized volunteer reading services for the blind at KU.
Causes mobility problems Hansen, who has been near blind for three years, finds his blindness causes some difficulty especially in mobility.
Causes mobility problems
Going from light to dark he finds his vision is zero but still believes mobility the most difficult problem.
"Lack of mobility dampens your sense of independence. It makes you dependent on others for many day-to-day activities, which I don't mind, but it becomes tedious," said Hansen.
Hansen believes he is assisted by the fact that he could see previous to his blindness.
"I am comforted by the fact that I have travelled over much of the west coast and was exposed to much of the scenic beauty," said Hansen.
Hansen, who has taught full time for the past two years, finds that his near blindness has improved his lecturing.
"I learn my material better and don't rely on notes as much as other professors," he said. "Some professors may say four words, then talk, look down at their notes again and then talk again in this manner continuously."
Although he is classified as legally blind he is able to maneuver and read, sometimes assisted by a magnifying glass.
Eyes not appreciated
Many times it is said that persons don't really appreciate their eyes until they aren't able to see. This is not the case with Hansen who says that he has been "most sensitive for a long time.
"I don't think I would have done things differently except perhaps to have read some more things," he said.
Dominick Palazzotto, Middle Village, N.Y. graduate student, is on the KU campus for the second year.
Palazzotto, who has been blind for five years, finds that people who are aware of it tend to categorize him and give him special consideration and help even though he may not ask for it.
He finds that any problems that develop are "nothing I can't handle or overcome."
Being legally blind results in his being considered blind by society, business and social groups.
He finds that he must tell people about his background before he can "be just a person."
Must prove something
Must prove something
Palazzotto attended the University of Colorado before coming to KU. Comparing the response of the people at the two universities, he finds that people here "want you to prove something to them.
"They want you to prove that you can handle yourself. You must prove this academically and physically before they accept you."
Palazzotto received his master's degree while blind and is now working on a Ph.D. Before going blind he had received a bachelor's degree in art and was preparing to continue for a master's degree. He says that if was not blind he would still be in art.
This shows the plight of three blind or near blind persons on the KU campus. Perhaps there are more and people don't realize it. If the services and organizations at KU were more extensive, people here would know more about blind students and instructors.
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Rubbing gravestones is subject of class
By MARY JO THUM
Kansan Staff Writer
Beermaking, old-time fiddling, death, sunsets—the University of Kansas enrollment timetable lists few courses on any of these subjects.
the Kansas Free University, however, offers courses dealing with these and many other equally offbeat topics, including gravestone rubbing and anarchism.
People with a passion for gravestone rubbing have formed a Free University class to share their experiences in this field and learn more about it.
Mary M. Hatcher, organizer of the class, explained gravestone rubbing as the process of fastening a piece of paper to a carved gravestone and rubbing the paper with a crayon or bootblack to reproduce the stone's carving on it.
more than any source of consolation to the bereaved. One stone she found informed passers-by that the dead person had "died of a sudden attack of apoplexy."
Reproducing the carving in this way reveals the writings, decorations and dates on the stone. Mrs. Hatcher, who became interested in gravestone rubbing this summer in New England, said the stones in that part of the country often bore epitaphs which served as stern warnings to the living
While gravestones dating from the 1700's may be found in New England, Mrs. Hatcher said, the oldest stones in this area date from around 1857. The art of stone carving was largely lost as people moved west, she said.
The eight members of the gravestone rubbing class have been planning field trips to area cemetery but bad weather has prevented any trips so far.
One class member has branched out and is applying the rubbing technique to manhole covers. Another student made a montage of several gravestone rubbings she had done in the past.
The class meets at 7:30 Mondays at 941 Louisiana St. Apartment No. 302.
Would-be anarchists have a place in the Free University. The anarchist theory class has been meeting and discussing the writings of several European anarchists for five weeks.
Michael R. Payne, Wichita freshman and one of the organizers of the class, said the purpose of the course was to correct the ideas most people had of anarchists.
"Anarchists are not necessarily people with bombs under their coats." Payne said. "They are people who believe that governments have generally caused more harm than good and that every person should be free to determine his own life."
The anarchist theory class meets at 7:30 Tuesdays at 1340 Tennessee St. Payne said the class is suffering from a lack of participants.
Faculty Forum lets staff members explore outside their departments
By JULIE THATCHER
Kansan Staff Writer
Once a week University of Kansas staff and faculty members leave the confines of their departments for an informal luncheon known as Faculty Forum.
Sponsored by the University Christian Movement and administered by a faculty advisory board, the group discusses matters of University policy, projects of various departments and issues of common interest, said Tom Moore, adviser of the KU-Y.
"The Faculty Forum gives staff members the chance to come together and meet people outside the department. So often social
KANSAN
and professional life is built around department colleagues. This department cohesion is a real negation of University ideals." Moore said.
Although Faculty Forum has existed for many years, it came under new leadership last January when Raphael Sanchez became director of the United Campus Christian Fellowship center.
"After looking at the campus I asked if there was any group for informally discussing research, contemporary issues and University life. I learned that a program of this type sponsored by the KU-Y had been discontinued," Sanchez said.
Sanchez and Moore sent questionnaires to 2200 faculty and staff members to see if there was any interest in reactivating the group.
"Much to my surprise," Sanchez said, "the group decided to meet once a week." The average attendance is now 40 to 50 people.
The meal begins at noon and speakers are scheduled for 12:30 p.m. Presentations usually lasts 30 to 45 minutes and is followed by a question and answer period. The group usually dismisses at 1:30 p.m.
An eight-member faculty planning committee polled the faculty to determine what topics were of interest, Sanchez said. From these requests they scheduled the programs on a semester basis.
Topics which may be considered later this year include faculty power, black studies, validity of grading, feasibility of comprehensive examinations and future plans for KU.
Less University-oriented subjects concern North Ireland, drug abuse, hunger in the United States and environmental pollution.
Faculty Forum has followed a similar format since the 1950's. In those days the program was a major function of the KU-Y, Tom Moore said. Average attendance was 20 people a week and they met for lunch in the Kansas Union old English Room. A faculty committee arranged the programs.
16 KANSAN Nov.14 1969
Howard T. Walker, director of statewide academic extension, said programs at that time were broad and informative.
"There was no ax to grind or political campaign to foster. The purpose for meeting was communication," he said.
Speakers during the 1950's included Alvin McCoy, former Pulitzer prize winner who was Kansas correspondent for the Kansas City Star, Vice-Chancellor Keith R. Lawton, who discussed the planned building program of the University; Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, then serving as dean of the Kansas University Medical Center, an American University Field staff representative, the head of the Kansas Turnpike Authority and professors writing books or making studies.
The group continued under KU-Y sponsorship until the mid 1960's.
"When increasingly restricted finances forced the Y to reduce the number of people working under its jurisdiction, it was necessary to also reduce the number of programs," Moore said.
"Policies of the Y are made by a student cabinet," he asid, "so it was fairly understandable when they wanted to stop work with the faculty group."
In 1965-66 the Faculty Club instituted a related program for faculty members only. Once a week a speaker would give a 20 minute presentation during lunch. A question period followed.
Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry and former president of the Faculty Club, said KU was the main topic of speakers.
"Faculty itself doesn't know what goes on in various departments and academic circles. We wanted the speakers to show what was going on at KU today," he said.
The venture lasted 10 weeks before poor attendance forced the Faculty Club to drop the program.
Since January the group has been meeting on a weekly basis at the UCCF center. Programs have varied greatly and included topics such as development in Eastern Europe, suicide among
college students, the October war moratorium and the Arab/Israeli conflict. In addition, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. held an informal question and answer session at the first fall meeting. The program seems to be gaining momentum, Sanchez said, and attendance is up from last year.
"The Faculty Forum is a very useful activity in the University," Sanchez said. "I'm very pleased it has developed and that we have been able to serve the faculty in this way."
DANGER
ATTENTION:
La librairie de la bibliothèque Watson vient de recevoir un choix de plus de 200 livre en langue française
Venez nous voir
1:30 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.
closed Saturday
UN 4-3239
An Invitation from:
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St. (adjacent to campus)
To investigate the new, unique incentive rental plan now in effect.
This incentive rental plan offers numerous price ranges for married couples, graduate students or undergraduates. The plan is designed to provide a two-bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartment at prices competitive with one-bedroom or two-bedroom apartments, yet offer much more in space and quality, convenient location and services.
Visit the office at 1603 W. 15th, or call 843-4993 to get complete information. Inspection is welcomed.
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Moratorium, ROTC, left-wingers
Regents express opinions
By SHERRY ROY
Kansan Staff Writer
Vietnam moratoriums, credit in ROTC classes, the injunction restricting campus demonstrations, left-wing student political groups and the sale of beer on campus—these are some of the current topics of debate among
B. C. H.
Paul R. Wunsch
University of Kansas students. In separate interviews, members of the Kansas Board of Regents commented on each of these issues.
Moratorium
Referring to the Oct. 15 war moratorium, Henry A. Bubb, who is serving his eighth year as a regent, said he has "felt all along that good students are being led down a blind alley by misguided Communists and other well-intentioned students who have exploited the peace issue." He emphasized that he was in favor of peace in Vietnam and was not criticizing students for participating in the moratorium, but thought that students were "being used by a Communist front."
"It will take a little while to get out," he said. "We cannot pull out immediately without losing half our troops. We must get out honorably."
BUBB SAID THE United States should never have gotten into the Vietnam war, and the sooner we withdraw, the better he would like it.
Bubb said the moratorium was hampering President Nixon in his efforts to end the war.
"The students are playing into the hands of the Viet Cong," he said. "The leaders (of the moratorium) are bent upon destroying democracy."
AS AN ALTERNATIVE to the moratorium, Bubb suggested that students support the President. He proposed that students "take a Saturday and pray for peace."
He said faculty members were all wrong in cancelling classes Oct.15. He said faculty members should have followed the example of Washburn University and gone to class and discussed the issue with students.
"if they (the instructors) had anything to contribute to peace, they should have gone to class and discussed it," he said.
C. N. Cushing, who has served as a regent for four years, described the moratorium as newsworthy. He said it left an impression in the minds of both those for and against the war.
CUSHING SAID IT was all right for students to show concern, be aware and give thought, but he doubted that boycottng classes would effect any change. Referring to the plan to expand the moratorium by one day each month, he said it was acceptable for students to stage moratoriums as long as they didn't interfere with getting an education to the point that the administration can no longer provide an education for those enrolled.
Cushing said the majority of students at KU were here to get
an education, and it would be unfortunate if a majority of students were to give up pursuit of an education in favor of moratoriums.
Nov.14 1969 KANSAN 17
"EACH UNIVERSITY must meet the problems of a moratorium on its own." Cushing said, "and the question of whether faculty members should be allowed to cancel classes in observance of a moratorium should be left up to the discretion of the individual institutions."
Jess Stewart, who has served on the Board of Regents since January of this year, said instructors have a right to reschedule classes, and students are free to attend or not to attend. He said he regards the moratorium as a constructive protest against the "unjustifiable and morally wrong" war in Vietnam.
James J. Basham, who has been a regent since January 1968, expressed a different opinion. He said he could not see much usefulness in the moratorium.
"Everyone is aware of the diversity of opinions on the Vietnam issue," he said. "It is not necessarily a case of the young being against the war and the old being for the war."
Commenting on the Oct. 15 boycott of classes, he said he could not support absence from class.
A. W. H.
Sir Michael Mackinnon
Henry A. Bubb
Paul R. Wunsch, who was appointed to the Kansas Board of Regents Oct. 31 by Gov. Robert
C. N. Cushina
Docking, said he doubts the effectiveness of moratoriums to protest the war in Vietnam. Commenting on the Student Mobilization Committee's plan to expand the moratorium by one day each month, he said he considered it a poor plan.
"People have the right to do as they please," he said, "but I think they are going too far."
Wunsch said students who boycotted classes and instructors who cancelled classes in observance of the moratorium should be required to make up the day missed.
ROTC Credit
ROTC classes for credit have the endorsement of the Board of Regents. T. J. Griffith, chairman of the Board of Regents, said he is in favor of offering ROTC classes for credit because it is good for a young man to take the course. It builds character.
Regent Bubb, who is currently serving as chairman of the board of Capitol Federal Savings in Topeka, said he was "100 per cent for ROTC." Bubb said college educated officers who have graduated from an ROTC program prevented the United States Army from becoming a professional army.
be voluntary.
"A professional army leads to dictatorship," he said.
DWIGHT D. KLINGER, who has served on the Board of Regents for seven years, said that in the past he thought ROTC should be mandatory for the first two years of college, but that now he believed it should
"Since it is voluntary," he said, I cannot see why people should be critical of the program."
Wunsch, a Kingman attorney, said that so long as ROTC courses are included in the University curriculum, the classes should be offered for credit. He said the administration of the University, not the Board of Regents, should determine whether or not to offer ROTC classes for credit.
CONCERNING THE injunction restricting campus demonstrations which was issued last spring after the protest which disrupted the Chancellor's ROTC
review, Stewart said he believes it was issued as a preventive measure to be used at the discretion of the chancellor. He said that he is under the impression that Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. does not want to threaten the student body with the injunction.
Cushing, president of the Downs National Bank, said if the court felt the injunction was indicated, the Board of Regents was willing to accept their judgment.
Lawrence D. Morgan, who is serving his eleventh year as a regent, said he does not feel the
(Continued to page 18
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Regents express opinions
(Continued from page 17) present situation at KU is serious enough to merit the use of the injunction.
Basham agreed, "The possibility of an acute situation at KU exists, but I do not feel KU is
S. D. BURKE
James J. Basham
threatened by serious disruption."
Political groups
Most members of the Board of Regents were skeptical of left-wing student political groups such as Students for Democratic Society (SDS), but did not feel such groups were influential enough on the KU campus to constitute a threat. Klinger, who is active in ranching and farming in Ashland, said last year the presence of the SDS on campus worried him, but this year he is the most optimistic he has been in years. He said he thinks the rebellious students will settle down, figure out we have had these problems and will work them out. He added there is no lack of communication between the Board of Regents and the administration.
Bubb, who received a degree in business from KU in 1928, said he is not opposed to leftist groups, but the "SDS has been proven to be a Communist front."
"Left or right, if not organized to overthrow the government, student political groups have a right to be present on the campus," he said.
BUBB ADDED THAT he is
opposed to groups that "pass out literature and make speeches condemning capitalism, which is what has made the United States great."
18 KANSAN Nov.14 1969
Bubb said the Board of Regents is trying to build better schools in Kansas, but to do this they need funds.
"We cannot allow people who are for the overthrow of the government to play a prominent role on the campus. If we do, we jeopardize the income," Bubb said.
Stewart, who graduated from KU in 1949 with a degree in business, said the SDS, by their own admission, is tied to the Communist party. As such, he feels they have no place on the American campuses or the American scene. Referring to members of left-wing student political groups, Stewart said:
"Possibly they mean well, but possibly they are misguided."
He added that until they overstep their bounds, they should be free to operate and express their views within the university community.
CUSHING, WHO received a degree from KU in 1945, said the left-wing student political groups at KU are less violent than on many campuses. The question of whether leftist groups constitute
MAJOR
DEGREE
Jess Stewart
Morgan, who graduated from Kansas State University in 1932 with a degree in animal science, said:
a threat depends on whether the majority of the students choose to follow' the left-wing leaders, he said:
"If students do not let out-spoken leaders of groups swing them—if the leaders of such
"A certain combination of letters of the alphabet does not constitute a threat. It makes no difference if it is SDS, ABC or XYZ."
A. C. MIDDLEY
Arthur H. Cromb
groups are not allowed to speak for the good, average Kansas student—there is nothing to fear."
Beer on campus
The members of the Board of Regents have varying opinions concerning the sale of beer on campus. T. J. Griffith, who graduated from Kansas State University in 1926 with a degree in business, said he has always been liberal and considers himself one of the liberal members of the Board of Regents, but he is opposed to the sale of beer on campus.
He said, "It does not mix with the students who come to the university to study."
Griffith said he would be in favor of the sale of beer on campus if it were restricted to university parties at night and on weekends. He added the parties would have to be well organized, patrolled and chaperoned.
Morgan, who is vice-president of the First National Bank in Goodland, said that he is opposed to the sale of beer on campus, except for special functions. He said that the beer issue brings up the question of the type of goods which should be sold in the Kansas Union. He said it must be decided whether the Kansas Union should be allowed to sell only those items which are academic in nature or
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STEWART SAID HE opposed the sale of beer on campus because it is not conducive to the environment of higher education.
Basham, a Fort Scott physician, said he would prefer to leave the decision up to the administration of the individual institutions. He said he would be opposed to a tavern operating daily in the Kansas Union, but that he would not oppose the sale of beer during weekends or at official functions or dances.
Cushing said, "It is difficult to plan and program for an institution such as KU so as to satisfy all the diverse demands."
Commenting on the sale of beer on campus, Bubb said he was not for regulating the morals of anyone over 18 years old. He said he would be in favor of the sale of beer on campus, and speculated that the Board of Regents would approve the proposal.
The members of the Board of Regents agreed that the biggest problem they face is that of obtaining sufficient funds to operate the six state institutions of higher education in Kansas.
He cited the proposed satellite union as an example of a problem the Board of Regents faces in trying to appropriate funds
WHEN ASKED TO comment on such issues as the sale of beer on campus and left-wing student political groups, Wunsch said:
"I do not think it is a good idea for members of the Board of Regents to express opinions individually."
Bubb said that there are too many institutions of higher education for the population in Kansas. He added that KU has a better endowment association than the other schools.
Arthur H. Cromb of Kansas City, who has served on the Board of Regents since 1963, declined to comment on any of the issues.
"I refuse to discuss these issues outside the realm of my home," he said.
He said, "The satellite union was a long time on the planning board, and the administration was pushing for approval. The Board of Regents gave its approval, and now the issue is stalled in the student senate. Apparently the students are not in favor of it. The more people who are involved in the decision making, the more difficult it becomes."
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Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Catalog are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier. Inputs for mag, or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM. Aux. Will match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of strap, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive,"New Analysis of Western Civilization" "4th Ed.
Campus Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th
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1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. tf
1952 Cadillac ambulance—white, everything! 1 t a t c—good mechanical shank. 4 front seat. Call FF. 301 or front seat. write 211 FF. Institute, Kansas. 11-14
Complete equipment set for a dark room enlarger. Dursh M 600. Contact Majid Samaan any time after midnight. International House. 1204 Oread. 11-14
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear end. Aqua/air to $895.00, contact Mrs. Karen 8-5:40, U 4-5:43, after 5:30, 5:469, 11-17
186 Chevellie SS 396, 4-speed, 2 dr.
Carrier 400i top, on warranty, 11-14
Call 842-8852
For Sale. Five tickets to the OU-KU-
game, at a reduced price of $5.00
(they cost us $6.10). Contact Steve at
V12-8732. 11-14
Superb 1957 Cadillac Fleetwood now available at only $375. Many power options. Must see to appreciate Call 33 evenings or inspect at Indiana. 11-17
Get started in photography. Must sell
Mamiya 500TL F2, 200mm F4.5; 2x
Kodak Ektar 16mm f/2.8, Finish
case and various accessories,
$140.00, call 842-5962. Mike. 11-17
Large and small scale equipment for sale. Amplifiers, PA horns, etc. Contact Doug Pierce, 1209 Tennessee, 843-7836. If not there, leave message.
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale.
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road,
843-4836. 12-2
Leaving the U.S.-1960 Plymouth Valiant-Standard-Very good tires—heater-Eng, and transmission good. (Alkali Aluminum workseries stereo RCA) Garrard turntable. Both must sell this month. VI 2-7472 after 5. 11-20
Your Saturday night blasts will be a bright success with candles and strobe candles found only at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 11-18
1967 VW Karmann-Gibia conv, New tires, battery, paint, FM-AM radio. Best Bests Randy Leffingwell 842-4325. 11-18
Four KU-OU tickets, call Jack. VI 2-
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1967 Riverside 125 cc. Excellent condition. Cheap, fun transportation. 843 racing model with parts. 843-8165 after five months. and on weekends. 11-20
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NOTICE
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que. if you want some honest-to-good Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair probation station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynakit, and Marantz. Call 843-1484.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid, VI 3-4032. tf
Rosalela's Hotel needs you. Do you need it? Come find out, call (316) 497-2850 or reservations. Write pek, Kansas, 67058 for entertainment schedules. 11-18
Loans to junior, senior and grad stu-
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Rummage Sale -1231 Radios, 9a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday. Selling radios, camera, books, records, girls clothes and shoes. Will sell cheap. 11-17
The food is terrible but the entertainment is great at Alice's Restaurant. 11-20
FOR RENT
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6188.
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens to $165 plus utilities. Hird Construction Company IV 3-6153 or VI 3-5730
Two sleeping rooms at 1140 Miss. $35
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Have moved into an apartment. Must sell woman's Naimith contract. Will take any reasonable offer. Call VI 2-1188. 11-14
Need one student to take over my lease and live with three other men at Gatehouse. $85.75 per month—available immediately—no deposit required Lease runs through May. V1 3-781.9, a.m.to. 12:3.
First floor furnished apartment for males or married couple. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone VI 3-5767. 11-20
LOST
Lost: KU Bi 8 swimming Champion Ring. In or near "Hawk" and 14th St. Reward, Call Ray, 842-6982. 11-17
LOST-Man's Black framed glasses—somewhere between Summerfield and field to UDK office or contact Ralph McCollum Hall, 843-860-3600. 11-17
Lost: Ladies' Hamilton Watch, gold ease. Black cord band. Lost on Thursday afternight. att. on campus. Reward. 11-17
Tan suede belt from ladies' jacket at
Call VI 2-832 after 5 p.m. 11-18
Lost: brown checkbook under name
Jane; in Owen's and an Ower-
land park address; 9423 Fremont
If found contact Ronnie Warman, 842-
9100, room 619, reward. 11-17
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part time. Apply in person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. tf
HELP WANTED
Experienced secretary, who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in lawrence at least one year. Responding to graduate preferred. Phone VI 3-6424. 11-21
Wish to employ noon hour lunch room playground supervisor for elementary school, 11:30-12:30, phone VI 3-4868 or VI 3-3263 for appointment. Consider man or woman, consider anyone. 11-18
Part time help during school; funtime in summer. Must have experience in packing and moving of houseware. Call 843-080 for equipment. 11-18
3 men, $62 per week, 3 evenings and
applicant apply 9 p.m. Thurs.
Summerfield
11-14
Male student Kitchen helper from 2 p.m.-9 p.m. 6 days a week. Apply in person at Virginia Inn West 6 11-18
Part time student employment. Can work full school term. Flexible hours. Drivers license required. For appointment call VI 2-289 between 4 and 6.
TARR'S LAUNDRY
Daily 8-5 p.m.
Saturday 8-1 p.m.
"We Do Your Laundry
For You."
1903½ W. Jacksonville
TARR'S LAUNDRY
immediate openings for Work-study qualified students at the Computation Center. See Dave Harrington after 1 p.m. weekdays. 11-17
TYPING
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and or edited by experienced typist (twin) William H. M. Glish-Speech Education Electric office-size typewriter 843-2873. 11-24
TYPING: Experienced typist will type
themes, thesis, misel. typing. Have
effective typist skills with pica type.
Have fast service. Phone VIA:
9554, Ms. Wright. 12-5
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. Work VI 3-3281 Mrs. Raukeman
WANTED
Theses, papers typed in English, German, transliterated Russian by experienced, literate typist. IBM Electronic. Mrs. Harwell, 842-5298. tt
Wanted: A place to dump a half ton of garbage from Alice's Restaurant. 11-20
Need 8 tickets to KU-MU game. Call Jim, VI 2-38551. 11-20
Ralph Dobyns. Where are you? Call Tony Croman. 842-7771 or 843-9585. 11-14
Pilots fly at half in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparison information chart. Phone 842-124
11:10
PERSONAL
Tony Croman—Who are you? Call VI 2-7445. 11-17
Life insurance is bought not because someone will die but because someone must live. David L. Robinson, Guarantee Mutual Life Co., VI 2-3004
The heads of all nations meet at Alice's Restaurant! 11-20
Happy birthday, Becky. Don't get too smashed tonight. From 6th floor Hash, your "sorority" sisters, and especially your roommate. 11-14
ENTERTAINMENT
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment need call New Sound Projections, Box 82434 Prairie Village, Kan., 913-648-1777.
Tony's Service
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
GOODYEAR TIRES
Page Fina Service
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
V
Raney Drug Stores
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
Metal Sculpture Supplies
Tires and Batteries
A Bankmark Store
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
Topsy's
on the Mall
pop corn
candy apples
ice cream
home made
fudge
LOFT'S
Candies
open till 10:00 p.m.
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.
Hungry? Chill supper by Kappa Phi Club Nov. 16. 1c from 4:30-7:00 p.m.at Halladay Chapel Memorial Church Fellowship Hall 843-5489 or 842-9298 tickets. 11-17
For You!
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today 814 Iowa
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Work
Audio Sale
Buy at Factory Cost plus 10%
You pay shipping
No better discount anywhere
Call
842-2047 Eve. 4-10 p.m.
A.R. Dynaco Dealer
BUY, SELL, TRADE good used appliances and furniture. Also antiques. All guaranteed and free delivery. B39发票编号 viana. 842-0576. PFifornia
Kansan
COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
FREE Delivery over $5.00
VI 3-8200
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
926 Mass.
Classifieds
Minnie Pearls
For the best in:
● Dry Cleaning
● Alterations
● Reweaving
New York Cleaners
FOOD
VI 3-0501
DOWNTOWN PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
K
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Table Tops
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 3-9868
TOM PETRON
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss.
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let
Malls Shopping Center
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations
VI 3-1211
Always Pleasurable Dining
The Sirloin
Sizzling steaks and fresh seafoods await you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest . . . preparing the selections as you like them with all the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
Open Daily—Except Monday 4:30 p.m. VI 3-1431
$1 \frac{1}{2}$ Mi. North of the Kaw River Bridge
Nunemaker college to boost CWC
(Continued from page 1)
campus three years ago with the creation of Centennial College as the pilot program for the division of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences into five smaller colleges. The four remaining colleges were organized in 1967. Initiation of the program was assisted by a three-year, $288,000 grant from the Carnegie Corporation in New York.
In 1966, 456 entering freshmen were selected at random for the pilot program. The group contained an equal number of men and women. The men were placed on three floors of Ellsworth Hall
and the women on three floors of Oliver Hall.
The only controls used in the selection process were that the students chosen were enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and that no high school had a disproportionate representation.
Adviser blocks containing 10 Ellsworth men and 10 Oliver women were formed. Those 20 persons shared the same adviser and enrollment time. The same persons also were placed in the same English 1 section. All other introductory courses were sectioned on the basis of residence.
Another 456 entering freshmen were selected to be used as a control group in the experiment.
In a statement released by Centennial College administrators concerning the pilot year, the control group was reported having a 10 per cent dropout rate compared to Centennial's 4 per cent. The control group recorded a 1.15 grade point average compared to Centennial's 1.26.
A statement by George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, published in a pamphlet describing the CWC program reads: "The general aim of the College-
Lunar face exploration planned
(Continued from page 1) investment.
"This is the opener of the next generation," Conrad said in a preflight interview. "The name of the game in Apollo 12 is lunar surface exploration."
Conrad, 39-year-old mission commander and veteran of two Gemini spaceflights, and space rookie Bean, 37, are scheduled to land on the southeastern edge of the moon's Ocean of Storms early Wednesday morning. Gordon, 40-year-old veteran of one Gemini
D.C. peace rally begins
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
tion Committee to End the War in Vietnam, said the peaceful and orderly start should "convince any who were still in doubt of our complete sincerity" in promising that the demonstrations would be non-violent.
The vanguard of the protesters passed the flood-lighted White House guards and a heavy detachment of regular city police in silence and without incident.
It took leaders of the procession approximately two and a half hours to complete the walk from the Arlington Cemetery gates to the Capitol.
With the television cameras recording the event, they dropped their placards one-by-one into one of 12 makeshift wooden coffins resting on a dias.
The candle-lit protest will climax Saturday in a mass antiwar march.
20 KANSAN Nov.14 1969
flight, will remain in lunar orbit.
The relatively smooth, but crater-pocked terrain Conrad and Bean will explore is 954 miles west of the Tranquility Base established by Apollo 11's pioneering moonfliers, Neil A. Armstrong, and Edwin E. Aldrin, four months ago.
Conrad and Bean will spend 32 hours on the moon—10 hours longer than Apollo 11's stay—and they will conduct two $3\frac{1}{2}$-hour moonwalks up to a half mile from the landing craft Intrepid. If they have time they will inspect and return some parts from the robot Surveyor 3 spacecraft that landed there $2\frac{1}{2}$ years ago.
Start Exploitation
Start Exploitation "Apollo 11 demonstrated that we could land and return successfully from the moon," Apollo Program Director Rocco A. Petrone said Thursday.
Official Bulletin
Today
Professional Advisory Committee Professional Welfare, Kansas Union, All Day
KU Judo Club. Robinson Gymnasium. 7 p.m.
Popular Film, "International House"
7 and 9 p.m.
Experimental Theatre. "The Hostage." 8:20 p.m.
Saturday
**Peace Corps. Monthly examination.**
**Registration necessary. Information
Varsity Football. Oklahoma at Norman 1,30,p.m.
India Club. Flim. "Padosan." Dyche Auditorium. 2:30 p.m.
Popular Film "International House"
of Music and Gus." Kansas Union,
7 and 9 p.
Experimental Theatre. "The Hostage." 8:20 p.m.
Sundav
KU Cricket Club Practice. East of Robinson Gynnasium, 11 a.m.
John Sunflower Room. 2 p.m.
Carillon Recital. Albert Gerken. 3-30
"With Apollo 12 we now start the exploitation of the system we have developed, in the name of science and knowledge."
But he emphasized "this is still risky business. And Petrone said Apollo 12's flight plan is the most demanding yet written for American spacemen.
Jay James. Membership Tea. Kansas
Union Sunflower Room. 3,167
within-the-College program is to obtain for freshmen and sophomores in a large public university the advantages of the small academic community and, at the same time, to preserve for students access to the extraordinary richness of the resources of the multiversity."
**Hindu Society.** The celebration of the 50th anniversary of Nanak, originally scheduled for Nov. 16, has been postponed. The date for a function will be announced at a later time.
Conrad, Gordon and Bean, all Navy commanders, retired early launch eve after President Nixon wished them Godspeed in a telephone call from the White House.
Conrad and Bean also visited their wives and children who were on hand to watch the shot. The Gordon family remained home in Houston.
Flashes of lightning from a passing cold front lit the sky during the night, but ground crewmen were not slowed in their awesome task of priming the world's mightiest space machine for flight.
The workers already had accomplished the job that Bean thought "couldn't be done" when they replaced a leaky hydrogen tank in the command ship. By 10 p.m., they had recouped the time lost in the repair process and Apollo 12 was back on its original timetable.
Lewis said the program had also been successful in introducing new curricula opportunities and in bringing senior faculty members in contact with freshman and sophomore students in a small group situation. Lewis called the small class situation active as compared to the passiveness of the large lecture group.
Each college office contains representatives from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences office and the offices of the dean of men, dean of women and the registrar.
"He has the opportunity to be in a class with persons he lives with instead of students dragged from a cross section of the University," he said.
All the colleges offer courses which deal with contemporary problems and situations, national and local in scope.
"We found that their curricula was so strict that we could not help them very much," a Pearson College spokesman said.
"We have simplified most of the administrative process," Lewis said. "The student now comes to one office for most of his needs."
North College is offering a course in non-violence this semester. Pearson College has a program in which the three beginning English courses deal with classical, rather than contemporary literature. Corbin College offers required courses taught entirely in Spanish.
"The heart of the campus is the classroom," he said. "The freshman and sophomore years are very critical. This is when the students learn what education is about, and we hope they don't get the idea that higher education is a large lecture."
The pamphlet listed the objectives of the CWC program as (1) more intimate administrative-faculty- student contact (2) educational, experimentation and innovation and (3) the encouragement of out-of-class contact.
Silent Vigil for Peace in Vietnam
Everyone Welcome
Sunday 12:00-12:30
South Park
Every Sunday
Sponsored by
Lawrence Peace Center, 107 W. 7th
(and)
Woman's International League
for Peace and Freedom
Chairman: VI 3-4098
Lewis estimated the enrollment in each of the colleges at 1,000 students. The need for direct communication has become greater today, he said, and this has been one area where the CWC program has proven to be ahead of its times.
One of the largest problems facing the CWC program, Lewis said, was the need for funds to bring more senior faculty into the small seminars.
Pearson College, during its first year in existence, attempted to include engineering students in the CWC program. Ordinarily, engineering students enroll in the School of Engineering during their freshman year and are excluded from the program. The 30 students were kept in the same adviser block for one year.
Lewis said there was evidence of intelligent interaction outside of class which didn't exist before initiation of the CWC program.
Jerry Lewis said that these objectives, to a large degree, had been accomplished during the last three years. The several administrative offices at the freshmen level have been decentralized, he said, and the personnel made available to the students.
Students are assigned to the different colleges according to the location of their living group. Fraternities are assigned on the basis of geographical location and the scholastical standing of the house. Each house is ranked in one of five different groups of achievement. Fraternities from each of the different groups are assigned to each college. Sororities are not included in the colleges because women cannot pledge until their sophomore year. Students not living in organized living groups are assigned at random.
Lewis said a CWC student was a member of a group of 1,000 students instead of 9,000.
"If the University continues to grow, however, we may have to create additional colleges," Lewis said.
PRIUMPH
Triumphs...
We've Got Them
We've got the largest selection of Triumphs in the midwest, but we would gladly part with them. Come out and take a look at our selection of Spitfires and GT-6+'s. You'll agree that somewhere there's a Triumph for you.
COMPETITION
SPORTS
CARS
$ _{1/2} $ Mi. E. of Bridge on Hgwy. 10
NSAD STOENTS
WANT PEACE
Photo by John Brown
Kansas representatives at the Washington moratorium displayed banner
Students jam D.C., ask for end of war
By VICKI PHILLIPS Kansan Staff Writer
WASHINGTON—Two-hundred and fifty thousand Americans, including approximately 100 KU students, marched in Washington, D.C. Saturday to ask the nation's leaders to end the war in Vietnam.
Events that dominated the weekend demonstrations included the March Against Death, a continuous 40-hour single-file procession from Arlington National Cemetery to the Capitol building and a massive march past the White House to the Washington Monument.
Beginning 6 p.m. Thursday, each of the 46,000 protesters in the March Against Death deposited the name of a U.S. serviceman killed in Vietnam into coffins on the west side of the Capitol.
Billed as the biggest Capitol demonstration in history, the mass march Saturday, which began at the Capitol building and traveled along Constitution Avenue to the Washington Monument, united protesters from across the nation.
Efforts made by the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (New Mobe) to keep the Washington demonstrations nonviolent included the recruitment of 2,000 marshals.
A confrontation Friday night at DuPont Circle between
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.46
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, Nov. 17, 1969
Inside...
More moratoriums
Page 6
KU—Sooner or later
Sports, page 8
Chalmers on the BSU
Page 12
Mental health clinic
Page 3
All about impudent snobs
Editorials, page 4
Accompanied by his wife and 24 government officials, Sato's special Japan Air Lines plane took off for Washington at 10:04 a.m. The prime minister will hold three days of talks with President Nixon concerning return of Okinawa to Japanese control.
Apollo 12 running A-OK
Showdown vote to come
UDK News Roundup
WASHINGTON—The Senate reaches a showdown vote on the nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth to the Supreme Court this week and votes to install a lottery system in the draft.
By United Press International Talks may last 5 years
Okinawa's fate topic
TOKYO—Prime Minister Eisaku Sato left for Washington today, the efforts of student radicals to forcibly halt his trip frustrated by 15,000 policemen ringing Tokyo International Airport.
HELSINKI—After nearly two and a half years of preparation, the United States and the Soviet Union got together for the first time today to discuss how to curb the nuclear arms race.
The historic discussions, called by both sides the most important negotiations they have ever undertaken, could last as long as five years, accoring to diplomats here.
They begin at 5:30 a.m. EST
J. P. Kennedy weakened
HYANNIS PORT, Mass.—Joseph P. Kennedy, ailing patriarch of one of the most politically influential families in the nation's history, was in weakened condition today after suffering a heart attack. Family members gathered at his home.
Kennedy was stricken Saturday.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The night owl Apollo 12 astronauts neared the grasp of moon's gravity early Monday on a course so true they probably will not have to correct it before going into lunar orbit.
After a final checkout of their moon landing vehicle, Charles "Pete" Conrad, 39, Alan L. Bean, 37, and Richard F. Gordon, 40, were due for eight hours of sleep starting at 6:22 a.m. CST Monday. just one half hour before their spacecraft fell into the influence of lunar gravity.
Flight director Gerald D. Griffin said Apollo 12 was precisely
on course and scheduled to land on the moon Wednesday morning. So true was its path, he said, that a third mid-course correction originally scheduled for 11:47 p.m. CST Sunday was cancelled.
He added it "appears that a fourth possible maneuver is not going to be performed." That course adjustment, if necessary, had been set for late Monday, just five hours before the astronauts rocket themselves into moon orbit.
Griffin said the astronauts were running a little over predicted use of fuel for Apollo's steering rockets, but it should cause no problems.
The astronauts' time table was virtually empty Sunday and Monday morning so they would be rested for their busy time at the moon.
On awakening, the astronauts reported they had rested well with Conrad and Bean sleeping for eight hours and Gordon for nine.
It was the last "coasting" day for the astronauts before they whip into lunar orbit to begin preparations for their dangerous moon exploration mission.
Mission planners purposely (Continued to page 12)
00:14
UPI Telephoto
Only the Saturn V's brilliant tail flame was visible through a driving rain at launch
Student Senate attendance down
Long meetings cause problems
Attendance at Student Senate meetings is low this semester.
Dave Awbrey, Student Senate president, said the problem of attendance is due to long meetings. He said at each meeting it was necessary to elect replacements for Senate members who had dropped out.
The Nov. 5 meeting, for example, lasted four and one-half hours. Twenty-three committee reports were heard, two resolutions were passed, seven vacancies were filled. Three roll calls were necessary. Two of the roll calls were to determine if a quorum was present.
Awbrey said there was too much to do at the meetings, but beginning with the next meeting, the agenda will be shortened and meetings will be scheduled every two weeks.
There have been five Student Senate meetings-four regular meetings and one emergency session. The regular meetings were Sept. 17, Oct. 8, Oct. 22, and Nov. 5. The special session was Oct. 1.
Faculty requests medical center funds
Physician manpower is scarce in the Kansas City area. The University of Kansas School of Medicine faculty has approved a new approach to solve the shortage problem.
Dr. George A. Wolf Jr., dean and provost, said the faculty has requested the details to be worked out and funds allocated for the following provisions:
- A new department at the medical center is to be set up to train young physicians in the family practice of medicine.
- Hospitals throughout the state are to develop and improve internship and residency programs.
- Size of the entering class is to be increased.
- They must make commitments which will lead to the construction of a new multi-disciplinary science education building and new teaching hospital, required by the increased size of the entering class.
Two weeks ago, Dr. Wolf announced medical faculty approval of a flexible curriculum which would allow medical students to complete the doctor of medicine degree in three rather than four years.
Physicians wishing to go into general practice would complete a residency program for postgraduate training sponsored by the department of family practice.
Both medical students and residents would receive some training at the KU Medical Center and some in Kansas communities outside metropolitan Kansas City.
Listed below are the Student Senate members and the dates they were absent from meetings or were absent when quorum calls were made.
Alderson, Donald: Oct. 22; Nov. 5 (roll call and first quorum call). Allen, Linda K.: Oct. 1. Anderson, Andy: Oct. 22. Averill, Richard. Oct. 22. Ashley, Adam. Awbrey, David: None. Bailey, R. L.: None. Balfour, William: None.
Bangs, Frank S. Jr.; Sept. 17; Nov.
5. Barrows, Richard D.: Oct. 22 quorum call; Baucm, Karen: Oct. 22
quorum call; Baucm, Sharon: Oct. 22
quorum call; Bidale, Mark: Oct. 22
quorum call; Biles, Brian: Oct. 8;
Oct. 22; Nov. 5.
Blanha, David; Oct. 22 quorum call;
Nov. 5 Blee, Barbara; Oct. 22
Bocell, Suzy; Nov. 5 Bond, Gary;
Nov. 5 (second and third roll calls);
Nov. 6 (second and third roll light);
Darryl; Oct. 22 quorum call; Nov. 5
(second and third roll calls).
Cassidy, Craig; Oct. 8; Nov. 5 (see
Tom); Oct. 22; Nov. 5, Collins;
Collene; Nov. 5 (second and third roll
and second and third roll calls), Coslett,
None, Demerritt, Robert W.; Oct. 22
Ebert; Bill; Nov. 5 (second and third
rolls)
Edwards, Mark; Oct. 22 quorum call.
Embry, Dennis; None. Engler, Carol.
Nov. 5. Fankhauser; Marty; Oct. 22
Nov. 5 (second and third roll calls)
Oct. 23 (third roll calls)
Oct. 22 quorum call. Gale, Kenneth
Oct. 8. Gardner, Ted. Oct. 22
George, Mary; None. George,
George; None. George,
Goldgert, Harry L.; Sept 17. Oct 22
quorum call; Nov. 5. Gortenburg,
Gary; Nov 5. Hall, Marilyn. Oct 8.
Gary; Nov 5. Hall, Marilyn. Oct 8.
Harr, Shaaron: None, Hewitt,
Joseph: Nov. 5, Hildrew, Marsha,
Joseph: Nov. 5, Hildrew, Marsha,
Huettig, Shelton: None, Irwin,
Nov. 5 (second and third roll calls).
Jackson, Max, Oct. 8, Oct. 22; Nov.
5, December 1; Nov. 5, Dec. 1; Nov.
5, third roll call; Jorgensen,
Keith; Oct. 22, Kelly, Suzanne
Jeff; Oct. 22, Mike; Jeff; Oct.
2, McGovern, Mary; Nov.
5 (second and third roll calls), Miller,
Miller; Nov. 5, Miller, David R
Oct. 8, Oct. 22
Morgan, Chris. Oct. 8; Nov. 5 (second and third roll calls). Myers, David: Oct. 22; Nov. 5. Nash, Barbara: Sept. 17; Oct. 8; Dec. 22.
Official Bulletin
Physical Therapy Conference. Kansas Union, All Day.
Today
John Wilson Print Sale. South Lobby.
Kansas Union 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
wilson Prm Print Sales South Loboy,
by Karen a am-4 p m
Table of Tennis, 6th ed.
Tennis Club. 173 Robinson
Gymnasium. 6:45-9:45 p.m.
Physics Collegium. Dr Harold L Yarger, K.U. "Some Two Body Final
Experiments."
K.U. Judo Club. Robinson Gymnasi-
mium. 7 p.m.
Young Soc. Club. "War and International Youth Radicalism." Nelson Blackstock, editor, "Young Socialist Magazine." Kansas Union. 7:39 p.m.
pianist. Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 am.
Hospital. Theatre. The Hostage,
8:20 in.
Tomorrow
Physical Therapy Conference. Kansas Union, All Day.
sas Union, All Day.
College Faculty Meeting. Kansas
University, A.D. 2014.
Union Forum Room, 4:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Juggers Club, East Door.
Tennis Club. 173 Robinson
Gymnasium, 6:45-9:15 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club. East Door.
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom, 7 p.m.
Experimental Theatre. "The Hosanna
Ballroom," 10 a.m.
Special Film. "Little Caesar" Kansas Union Ballroom, 9 p.m.
5. Newcomer, Kathy: None. Oel-shlager, Rod: Sept. 17. Nov. 5. Oldham, Chuck: Nov. 5 (second and third roll calls): O'Neal. Steve: Nov.
Gymnasium 6:30 - 9:35 p.m.
Special Film Public Enemy.
Permanent Theatre. "The Host
stage. 8:20 p.m."
Opperman, Bill; Nov. 5. Pearl
Halina: None. Perrine, Lesley: Sept.
17. Oct. 8. Oct. 22. Nov. 5. Polle-
second and third roll calls). Secon-
d and third roll calls). John
Jr.: Oct. 8. Retonde. Mark: No.
Ringstrom, Richard D.: Oct. 22.
Taylor, Emily; None. Thomas, Greg; Sept. 17; Oct. 22 quorum call; Nov. 5 (second and third roll calls); Donald Oct. 4 (second and third roll calls). On Ende, Richard L.; Oct. 22. Wallen, Edward; Nov. 5. Weiss, Philip Jr.: None.
Sindelar, Dave: Oct. 22 quorum call:
Nov. 5 (second and third roll calls):
Smoot, Brad: Oct. 22, Stoddard, Bob
Oct. 8, Oct. 22. Nov. 5 (second and
third roll calls): Suggs, Jon C. None.
Sulks, Brian: None. Sutherland,
David; Nov. 5.
Wheeler, Diane; Oct. 8; Oct. 22; Nov.
5. Wiley, Kenneth; Oct. 8; Oct. 22
Williams, Tim; None. Zilm, Frank;
None. Loveeland, Chuck; None.
THE
DRAUGHT
HOUSE
PRESENTS
DRAUGHT NITE
every Wednesday night
ALL THE DRAFT BEER
YOU CAN OR DARE
DRINK.
Live Entertainment
Salvay, Steven: Oct. 22 quorum call. Satterlee, Terry: Oct. 22 quorum call. Schierel, Carol: None, Scott. Omaha call. (second and third call calls). Shearer, Mike. None. Shorb, Nancy: Nov. 5 (second and third call calls).
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804 W. 24th—directly behind Lum's
The DRAUGHT HOUSE DRAUGHT NITE
Students encouraged to seek advice
Mental Health Clinic offers aid
By MARCIA MITCHELL Kansan Staff Writer
The buff brick building, slightly concealed behind Watkins Memorial Hospital, contains a haven of help for emotionally distressed students.
The Mental Health Clinic, directed by S. O. Schroeder, psychiatrist, is a source of guidance for such problems as conflicts in living groups, academic problems or social problems. To relieve these tensions, the clinic set up a program designed to encourage students to seek advice.
Put into effect about 10 years ago, the program includes four visits paid through the student health fees at enrollment, Schroeder said.
"A student usually decides if he needs us after two or three visits," said Schroeder. "If further consultation is required, the student and the attending member of our staff decide upon a fee, ranging from $2 to $10, that will be meaningful to the student."
Visits are 50 minutes long and scheduled to begin and end with University classes. The clinic has seen 200 to 250 students since June and expects to see 800 by
T. A. MORRIS
Dr. S. O. Schroeder
the end of the spring semester,
compared with 700 in '68-69.
"The number of troubled students, however, always varies within just half a per cent of 4 per cent of the student population each year," said Schroeder.
The year in school seems to
have little correlation with the number of disturbed students, although certain problems appear in each class, Schroeder said. Seniors are anxious about graduating and obtaining jobs, he said, and graduate students feel the stress of being perpetual students. Less than a dozen students a year come to the clinic who have experienced bad drug trips, he said.
Some male students are plagued by the draft situation but often come to the clinic with another problem. Schroeder said. The real problem is eventually revealed and the student receives help for it, he said.
"We do not offer direct advice to individual problems, however," said Schroeder. "This is not the most effective way to alleviate the situation because it does not allow the students to express their opinions or pick their own solution."
Students are offered the choice of withdrawal from school if extremely upset, Schroeder said. If patients become violent or must be hospitalized, the staff decides upon withdrawal, said Schroeder.
The clinic staff includes two clinical psychologists and two psychiatric social workers. The office is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and appointments are scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily.
A resident psychiatrist commutes from Topeka's Menninger School of Psychiatry. This is possible through KU's affiliation with the school for psychiatrists who plan to work with college-age students, Schroeder said.
Schroeder said he thought no students had come in for consultation as a joke.
"Students more than ever realize what advantages are being offered to them and they come in with serious problems," Schroeder said. "If they're coming in as pranks, the students are doing a good job of putting us on."
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
PRESENTS
DRAUGHT NITE
every Wednesday night
ALL THE DRAFT BEER
YOU CAN OR DARE
DRINK.
Live Entertainment
Color me lavender
in just 6 seconds with Chartpak color tints.
Lavender, yellow, or any of our 72 vivid colors . . . Chartpak's Low Tak Acetate Color Tints go down fast! Just position and press, no burning required. Get these pressure-sensitive short cuts in your choice of 72 colors; 56 match standard printing inks, 11 match Chartpak's transparent tapes, and 5 special colors come in white, black, and grays. Choose from either matte or gloss.
Stop by today or call for full particulars.
Carter's Stationery
1025 Mass. VI 3-6133
Scholarship criteria set
The Interfraternity Council (IFC) Scholarship Committee has set up guidelines for the distribution of scholarship money allocated by the IFC Representatives Council.
Dave Andersen, Wichita junior and IFC vice-president explained the guidelines will provide for a minimum of $150 and a maximum of $600 per scholarship per semester. Candidates must have an overall GPA of 1.2 and must maintain a 1.5 while holding the scholarship.
Queen crowned
Rebecca Wieland, Garden City sophomore, was crowned the 1969 Military Ball queen Saturday.
Miss Wieland is a transfer student from Lindenwood College in Missouri, and represented Pi Beta Phi sorority.
Her attendants are Kathy Newcomer, Omaha, Neb., junior majoring in secondary education, history and government, and Judy Bottenfield, Pittsburgh sophomore majoring in special education. Miss Newcomer represented Kappa Kappa Gamma and Miss Bottenfield represented Alpha Gamma Delta.
Scholarship recipients must be an active member of one of KU's 29 fraternities, Andersen explained. The scholarships will be awarded on the basis of scholarship achievement and financial need as established by the committee.
Nov.17 1969 KANSAN 3
Applications may be picked up in the IFC office, Kansas Union Room 112B for the scholarships in the spring semester.
TOO MUCH BOOZE
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI)—The Iowa Liquor Commission has $11 million worth of liquor in its warehouses and stores, enough to last into the 22nd century.
"The inventories that they have far exceed anything you would expect," Gov. Robert Ray said. He asked the commission to get rid of the surplus.
The governor, whose tastes run more to ginger ale anyway, suggested the commission try to sell some of the less popular brands back to the manufacturers. Otherwise, he said, he would consider a price reduction to help clear the warehouses.
BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS
IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person
Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m.
Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only
Advance Tickets on Sale at
Kief's Records, Red Dog Office, All Jenkins Stores
in K.C.
Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
An Invitation from:
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St.
(adjacent to campus)
To investigate the new, unique incentive rental plan now in effect
This incentive rental plan offers numerous price ranges for married couples, graduate students or undergraduates. The plan is designed to provide a two-bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartment at prices competitive with one-bedroom or two-bedroom apartments, yet offer much more in space and quality, convenient location and services.
Visit the office at 1603 W. 15th, or call 843-4993 to get complete information. Inspection is welcomed.
University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
presents
The Hostage
by Brenden Behan
November 13 - 22
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall
For Tickets Call: UN 4-3982
KANSAN Comment
Computers don't lie
Dr. Benjamin Spock and leaders of the moratorium, better known as the "intellectual eunuchs" and "an effete corps of impudent snobs" are just about ready to call President Nixon's hand. Nixon's reduction in the draft calls for November and December as well as his "secret timetable" is fooling no one, least of all his youthful opponents.
Nixon's hand is quick, but not quicker than the computers—computers don't run for reelection. And the computers show that he has been drafting young Americans faster than Lyndon Johnson did last year. The reduction in draft calls for this month and next are no great strides for the draftable young man, because the government has inducted so many into the armed forces since Nixon and his life insurance policy were sworn in, that there are more than enough to continue the "international abortion."
The unpublicized fact is that draft calls have shot up over 70 per cent since last year and Nixon's recent announcement of the secret withdrawal timetable of U.S. troops from Vietnam. In October of 1968, for instance, the call was 13,800, as against 29,000 this October.
In the five-month June-October period, the 1968 total was 79,300 compared with 135,700 in 1969. In 10 months this year, Nixon is going to draft almost as many men (290,400) as Johnson did last year for a twelve-month period (296,000), says the Armed Forces Journal.
Who does Nixon think he's fooling this time
in thinking he can make the American public, especially students, swallow this deception?
The administration has grossly underestimated the idealism that animates many students. The anti-war movement is not a self-interest movement for most of the moratorium leaders are immune to the draft.
The Armed Forces Journal, in analyzing casualties last month said: "The harsh fact is that U.S. military forces in Vietnam have suffered approximately 30 per cent more combat deaths in the first six months of the Nixon administration than in the last six months of the Johnson administration."
Under the Nixon regime, combat deaths have jumped from 4,894 to 6,358, and wounded rose from 31,557 to 45,363. Even now with our leader's plan for peace, the wounded have averaged around 1,500 a week or 75,000 annually for the last three years.
My fellow Americans, we are the victims of Pentagon propaganda that militarily the war is going our way. It is not, nor does it seem likely it will ever be going our way.
Why must we perpetuate this farce? Everyone admits American involvement in Vietnam was a mistake. Do two wrongs make a right?
If the "Great Silent Majority" want to watch the death toll rise, it's one thing, but thank God for "Vocal Minority."
Judith K. Diebolt
Off the wire
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON—Mrs. Jacqueline G. Gutwilli, chairman of the Citizens Advisory Council on the Status of Women, talking to newsmen after meeting with President Nixon:
"A black male has a better opportunity than a white woman in many respects. From everything we hear, women are discriminated against more than blacks. . .
"Our aim is simply to help women in the
- * *
United States. They have been the real silent majority."
WASHINGTON—Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wis., who plans to introduce a bill today to ban supersonic flights overland unless the noise will not harm or annoy people below:
"We simply cannot allow supersonic airliners to assault the peace and quiet of millions of Americans just so a few jet setters can get where they're going a few hours faster."
Sorel's News Service
Edward Jarel
3. 1969, King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved
Sock It to 'Em, Mao Baby
TOKYO—The top pop tune in Communist China is a new anti-Russian song called "Smash a New Czar." A correspondent for the Japanese Kyodo news agency reports that the song is played
every day on radio stations around the country. Chinese ideologists often accuse the Russians of reverting to the repressive days of the Czar.
thou shalt
not kill
Photo by Tom Jones
Readers' write
To the Editor:
No one sympathizes more than I with the financial plight of Assistant Instructors, revealed by your two recent articles. Indeed, I am strongly in favor of a $200 increase in base salary for next year. Nonetheless, I am appalled by the kinds of arguments presented in your articles.
First of all, Mr. Wallace, an Assistant Instructor in English, is hardly "a typical example of a married graduate student" chiefly because he has been here for six years and is still not finished with his degree. The very longest he should have been allowed to remain here as an Assistant Instructor is five years, two years at most for his M.A. and no more than three more years to complete his doctorate. To continue to carry him on the roles of Assistant Instructors for this long a period—already six years and presumably seven—is to deprive other competent graduate students, who might complete degrees more rapidly, the opportunity of an assistantship. Mr. Wallace, while not being encouraged to leave, should have been deprived of an Assistant Instructorship long ago. By staying, Mr. Wallace has made his own financial problems and thus has no legitimate bitch concerning his paltry salary.
Another point that rattles me is the inequitable comparison of Assistant Instructors' and Assistant Professors' salaries and work loads. There is no legitimate comparison at all. The Assistant Professor who makes $10,000 per year (your figure) usually has earned the doctorate, the degree to which most Assistant Instructors aspire. The Assistant Professor is a full-time faculty member who has made a career commitment to teach at this University. The Assistant Instructor has not come to Kansas to earn his living at teaching. He has come to earn a degree. The University is, in a sense, subsidizing his education by giving him an Assistant Instructorship. His commitment is not to his teaching—we don't expect it to be—but rather to himself and his earning of a degree. If he takes six or seven years to earn that degree, it is really his own fault. But when that degree is earned, he enters the legitimate job market, secures a full-time faculty position, and draws a legitimate salary, frequently at a scale higher than Assistant Professors at Kansas.
Perhaps it's a sign of approaching old age (I'm over thirty though under forty), but the situation of people in training (i.e. people working toward a Ph.D.) expecting the same kind of salary considerations as regular faculty seems to me incredibly short-sighted.
Robert R. Findlay Associate Professor and Graduate Advisor, Theatre and Drama
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 except holidays and examination periods, subscriber only. Registered at Lawyers for Lawmen Kom. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior notice. Available by telephone or in person; necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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Lillian Gish signs books for admirers
She walked into Oread Book-store Friday with all of the poise and grace one would expect of her. Dressed in blue, she walked up the steps to a table from which coffee and cookies were being served and asked if she was late.
Then she took her place in a big dark chair. With a table in front of her and pen in hand, the autograph party began.
The purpose of the party was to promote her new book, "Lillian Gish, the Movies, Mr. Griffith, and Me."
A long line that continued to remain long formed in front of her during the hour she signed books.
In an extremely friendly fashion she would ask for whom the book was to be signed. Then she would write, "To , with every fond wish-Lillian Gish."
One girl evidently asked her a question concerning movies, and the reply was heard: "In every country but ours they take film seriously. Here we toss it off as dirty entertainment."
Many comments could be heard from admirers standing in the line concerning the talk she had given and the films she had shown the night before. Many
Nov. 17
1969 KANSAN 5
THE DRAU GHT HOUSE
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
PRESENTS
DRAUGHT NITE
every Wednesday night
ALL THE DRAGT BEER
YOU CAN OR DARE
DRINK.
Live Entertainment
to catch a plane for her next stop—Omaha.
woman had grown up and had been famous.
A
She was Lillian Gish. Her profession—film star.
After the party ended she and her manager left for Kansas City
now you can SEE anything you want at...
ALICE'S RESTAURANT"
starring ARLO GUTHRIE
COLOR by Delure. United Artists.
NOW! 7:15 - 9:25
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:30
Granada
THEATRE---Telephone VI3-5784
now you can SEE
anything you want
at ...
ALICE'S
RESTAURANT"
starring ARLO GUTHRIE
COLOR by Dexter United Artists
NOW! 7:15 - 9:25
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:30
Many talked about giving the
Granada
THEATRE • Telephone M3-5788
A LEGEND IN HIS OWN TIME!
The UNITED RELEASE ORGANIZATION presents THE ANTHOR and EYELITE BARRON production of
"Johnny Cash "
THE MAN
HIS WORLD
HIS MUSIC!
COLOR by Movielab Released by Continental
WEDNESDAY!!
Varsity
THEATRE ··· Telephone V1-3-1065
A LEGEND IN HIS OWN TIME!
THE WALTER BLACK ORGANIZATION presents THE ANTHILYN AND EYELIN BARRON production of "Johnny Cash"
THE MAN HIS WORLD HIS MUSIC!
were remembering not only the night before, but also years before.
THE WALTER REASE ORGANIZATION presents
THE ARTHUR and EYELYN BARRION production of
"Johnny Cash"
THE MAN
HIS WORLD
HIS MUSIC!
COLOR by Movielab Released by Continental
WEDNESDAY!!
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
book to someone who knew and liked this woman very much. Some of these people had grown up in the years in which this
COLOR by MoviesLab Released by Continental
WEDNESDAY!!
Varsity
THEATRE ... HiPhone VI3-1065
FLY INTO
20 YEARS
OF ALASKAN
WILDERNESS!
COLOR by DeLUXE G
Varsity
TREATURE ... Telephone VI3-1065
THIS IS MY
ALASKA
ENDS
TUESDAY
COMING SOON . . . A MUST SEE FILM
20th Century Fox presents
A Walk with Love and Death
COLOR by DE LUXE M
A John Huston - Carter De Haven Production
A TIMELESS THE Hillcrest 2
LOVE STORY
Al Winder wants you.
LAKEWOOD, MICHIGAN
If you're an engineering major, Al Winder wants you.
Because he's got something to say.
About a company. And a city. About challenges. And decisions.
The company is: the Power & Light Company. The city: Kansas City. A city in the midst of its first real growing pains. A city with many challenges.
For you, the challenge could be an 848,000 kilowatt power station now in the building stage; 345,000-volt transmission lines in a constantly
growing network; or solving environmental problems such as air pollution or beautification of facilities. All this, and more, to satisfy the human and social needs of the city...and a demand for electric service that will almost double in the next 10 years.
Decisions to meet these challenges can be yours. (But first you must decide to see Al Winder.)
If you do, you'll see he only cares about one thing: whether you're big enough to help a company help build a city.
KCPL
Kansas City Power & Light Company Needs Engineers.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Electrical, mechanical, civil engineers—interviews November 20th. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sign up now to see Al Winder (pronouner WINE-der) at Placement Office.
They marched in Lawrence...
PATRIOTS FOR PEACE NOW
Photos by Halina Pawl
Rally draws 500
Special to the Kansan
TOPEKA—An estimated 500 persons, singing, chanting and carrying placards, marched Saturday to the Kansas capitol to protest the Vietnam war.
The marchers started at 2 p.m. from Second and Van Buren Street and walked seven blocks to the south steps of the Statehouse.
THE MARCH WAS orderly except for an incident involving militants who carried Viet Cong and black flags and chanted "Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh, NFL is going to win." The militants dispersed at the Statehouse after their chants were drowned out by the singing of the National Anthem.
At the Statehouse, the marchers heard several speeches and sang songs. Tom Ashton, Lawrence law student, spoke for the Student Mobilization Committee.
He said the silent majority was being aroused by the Committee and the greatest danger today was the people who were not committed either for or against the
war. Ashton called for immediate withdrawal from Vietnam to "end this politician's war here and in Vietnam."
SAN FRANCISCO
Photo by John Brown
HARRY SHAFFER, professor of economics, explained his protest of the war in economic terms.
He said the government was spending $1,000 a second or $30 billion a year and the money was being used to destroy rather than build.
"Build a better America at home and leave that unfortunate land," Shaffer said. "A cruel hoax is being planted upon the people of America that the prestige of America is at stake."
"Billions of dollars have been poured into Vietnam,' he said, "that could have been used to improve the slums and the underdeveloped rural areas of our own country."
I J. STONEBACK, a member of the National Farmers Organization from Topeka, called the war immoral and said an end to the war would stop runaway inflation in America.
Mrs. Wes Santee, a Lawrence housewife, pleaded with the marchers to write their congressmen and ask them to vote for a halt to the war and bring the troops home.
Nearly 100 persons gathered in the KU X-Zone parking lot at noon for a caravan to Topeka. Most of the marchers were from KU and 25 came from Baker University in Baldwin. The marchers arrived in Topeka by car at 1 p.m.
Five persons chose to walk to Topeka. The walkers left Lawrence at 6 a.m. and arrived at the Statehouse at 2 p.m.
United Press International reported a Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent was on hand to snap pictures of the marchers. Several persons in the antiwar group retaliated by snapping pictures of the KBI agent, the wire service said.
Bruce Molholt, assistant professor of microbiology, called the long walk a demonstration of the group's sincerity in its protest of the war. He said the walk was a local effort comparable to a drive to Washington, D.C.
THE ENTIRE MARCH was peaceful but there was one battle waged by cameras.
...in Topeka...
DEATHS
ASME H
PEACE LV 12/27 NAM
[ ]
Police arrest KU students
Special to the Kansan
WASHINGTON- Two University of Kansas photojournalism students were arrested here late Friday night while taking pictures of the Vietnam moratorium march near DuPont circle.
Tom Jones, Hampton Va., junior, and Ray DiTirro, Prairie Village junior, spent over an hour in a Washington jail on disorderly conduct charges before being released on $10 bail.
THE PHOTOGRAPHERS SAID they were "merely taking pictures and not participating" at the time of the arrest.
Jones said trouble began Friday night around 8 p.m. when a militant group of nearly 5,000 began matching toward the South Vietnamese embassy building.
"About 500 policemen formed a line in front of the embassy and then began using tear gas and clubs to break up the march," Jones said. "Everyone then returned to DuPont Circle and the policemen used tear gas and clubs to break the group up.
"He grabbed me by the seat of the pants and told me I was under arrest," Jones said. "I told him I was a member of the press and I was leaving but he just shoved me in to the naddy wagon."
JONES SAID HIS arrest occurred shortly after the return to the circle. He said a policeman walked up to him, pushed him down a side street.
DlTirro said a policeman grabbed him by the arm and said, "let's go."
After arriving at the jail, DiTirro said the policemen told them if they had $10 they would be released.
DITIIRRO SAID they then called the National Mobilization Committee who sent lawyers over and borrowed the money from some friends.
"The mobilization committee had everything unbelievably organized, including legal aid." said DiTirro.
DtTirro said he and Jones were harrassed by policemen while in their cell.
"One policeman walked by and said to another 'what did you do, empty the trash cans on Pennsylvania Avenue.'"
AT THE TIME of his arrest, Jones' camera was confiscated and he was unable to get it back before he left.
"A policeman told me I could come back and get it next week, but I don't know when I'll be able to get it back," Jones said.
...and in
Photo by T. L. Simmons
Protesters at the state capitol building
1984
March officials confer with Washington police
KU protest calmer
Moratorium activities on the KU campus Nov. 14 and 15 were less pronounced than the Oct. 15 observance.
Speeches and teach-ins were presented by several KU professors and moratorium supporters, but the attendance figures were lower for this month's observance.
Decreased participation on the campus level was partially due to the focus of national attention on the Washington march. A similar march in Topeka attracted many moratorium supporters from KU.
ON THE KU campus, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. defended his support of the October and November war moratoriums as a constitutional privilege of all American citizens.
Speaking briefly before nearly 350 students in Hoch Auditorium, Chalmers said it had been suggested that the failure of the administration to prevent participation in the moratorium bordered upon the crime of high treason.
After reading the Constitutional interpretation of treason, Chalmers said that none of the activities of thousands of KU students on Oct. 15 were in conflict with any laws, policies or procedures.
"TO THE BEST of my knowledge, none of the activities proposed this week are in conflict with laws, policies or procedures," he said.
At an open class attended by about 50 students, Howard Kahane, associate professor of philosophy, said that atrocities committed by the United States on South Vietnamese civilians were comparable to those committed by the German Nazis on the Jews.
In New Haworth, John Wright, associate professor of human development, criticized the policy of the Nixon administration. Wright said that the president had "dipped into the silent majority and come up with a "couple of cupfuls of people" but that anti-war factions had also dipped in this well with the same result.
Photo by John Brown
und in Washington
SEVERAL PROFESSORS spoke at an open microphone in the rotunda of Strong Hall. One of these, Donald Marquis, acting assistant professor of philosophy, reviewed President Nixon's speech on Vietnam.
"Agnew's and Nixon's idea of a speech is to appeal to the 'gut sentiment' of loyal Americans," he said. "Our case, in contrast to theirs, appeals to those who have the slightest bit of rationality. We must tell them that these consequences simply don't exist, or, where they do, they are insignificant."
In another speech in the rotunda, Lawrence Velvet, associate professor of law, said that the term "traitor" could be applied more deservingly to those who criticized the exercise of a permanent American right, such as freedom of the press, than to those who were criticizing only a temporary element in America, such as the Vietnam war.
WHILE MOST OF those who supported the moratorium did so by attending speeches and wearing black armbands, some showed their support in other ways.
The meal of rice, green beans, bean sprouts and tea was symbolic of Vietnamese meals.
IN KANSAS CITY, 92 moratorium supporters, ranging in age from 14 through the early thirties, stood waiting in 28 degree weather Thursday night for two buses to transport them to Washington.
Two moratorium supporters, Carol Chittenden, a member of the Student Mobilization Committee, and Jim Baldoni, Old Saybrook, Conn. junior, prepared a rice lunch at the UCCF Center to help finance mortorium activities.
A mother boarded the bus with her 14-year-old daughter. Another parent boarded the bus carrying an infant.
The majority were silent.
SPECIAL PERMIT PARKING ONLY
DANGER PEDESTRIAN EVE BORDERALK ONLY
CARS IN
PUBLIC ALLEVEMENTS ONLY
Washington police block entrance to a federal building
Students jam Washington
(Continued from page 1)
members of the Weatherman faction of the Students for a Democratic Society and police and a disruption in downtown Washington Saturday afternoon that resulted in broken store windows were the only two events that marred the calmness of the three-day protest.
Buses carrying KU students and Kansas City residents arrived in Washington late Friday night and unloaded near Arlington Cemetery. KU students began marching in the March Against Death about 2 a.m. Saturday.
Marsals directed the silent marchers, who carried candles, the $4\frac{1}{2}$ mile route. Troops and riot-equipped policemen guarded federal buildings along the route. Demonstrators were asked to yell the name of the serviceman on their card in front of the White House—loud enough for "those" inside to hear.
AT THE CAPITOL, shuttle buses and sympathetic Washington residents in cars awaited demonstrators who had marched for 2½ hours in the bone-chilling cold.
Reception centers to temporarily house the demonstrators were established throughout the Washington area by the New Mobe. Kansas participants were driven to the New York Presbyterian Church in downtown Washington.
Hot coffee and donuts awaited marchers at the reception center. Leaders of New Mobe made sleeping arrangements and provided transportation from the center for the marchers.
HOUSING FOR demonstrators was abundant. American University lodged almost 200 protesters, while high schools and churches also opened their doors to sleepy marchers.
Banner and sign-laden people began
gathering about 8:30 a.m. Saturday in the Washington Mall for the massive march which was to start at 11 a.m.
Police lines circled federal buildings on Pennsylvania Avenue but many smiled and spoke to the anti-war demonstrators. The parade paused momentarily in front of the Justice Department building, while marchers chanted, "Hell no, we won't so."
MARCHERS REMAINED peaceful during the parade and throughout the afternoon at the rally at the Washington Monument.
The rally began shortly after noon Saturday. Many huddled in sleeping bags or blankets at the edge of the crowd. Some formed circles and built fires from placard handles and literature.
Speakers at the rally included comedian Dick Gregory, Sen. George S. McGovern, D-S.D., Sen. Charles Goddell, D-N.Y., and Mrs. Martin Luther King Jr.
GREGORY'S MAIN target was Vice-
President Spiro T. Agnew.
McGovern told the crowd, "We meet to declare peace and to put an end to the war not at some time in the future, but now."
In his address, Goddell said, "We are not here to break a president. We are here to break a war and begin a peace."
MRS. KING SAID, "We have been told we cannot afford the humiliation of withdrawal. I feel that even less can we afford the humiliation of pursuing war for ignoble ends."
Although speakers and entertainers were still going strong, thousands began to drift away from the area about 2:30 p.m.—many seeking respite from the cold. Saturday evening, demonstrators ran into a massive traffic jam that clogged downtown Washington.
25 21
Oklahoma's Glenn King (21) demonstrates one of the reasons why Kansas is 1 and 8 for the '69 grid season. Here, King latches onto the 16th interception thrown by a KU passer this year. Ron Jessie (23) is the intended receiver of this Phil Basler pass while Monty Johnson (25) is the other Sooner defender.
The season in a nutshell
Owens paves way to Sooner romp
NORMAN — Oklahoma's All-America tailback Steve Owens put on a one-man show Saturday by bucking his way to 201 yards rushing and three touchdowns and turned an ordinary Dad's Day at Norman into an exciting Heisman Trophy Day. Owen's performance pacedOU to a 31-15 drubbing of KU and, coupled with Purdue quarterback Mike Phipps's disaster against Ohio State (five interceptions in a 42-
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Writer
Pro Football Scoreboard
Detroit 20, St. Louis 0
Los Angeles 23, Philadelphia 17
Cleveland 24, Pittsburgh 10
Dallas 41, Washington 28
14 loss), all but wrapped up the coveted Heisman Trophy for Owens.
(Continued to page 10)
8 KANSAN Nov.17 1969
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
PRESENTS
DRAUGHT NITE
every Wednesday night
ALL THE DRAFT BEER
YOU CAN OR DARE
DRINK.
Live Entertainment
NEW!
by the Byrds
"EASY RIDER"
reg. $4.98
$299
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
7
BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS
IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person
Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m.
Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only
Advance Tickets on Sale at
Kief's Records, Red Dog Office, All Jenkins Stores
in K.C.
Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
American Football League Kansas City 34, New York 16 Houston 20, San Diego 16 Buffalo 21, San Diego 16 Buffalo 28, Miami 13
Boston 25, Cincinnati 14
National Football League
Minnesota 23, New York 24
New Orleans 25, New York 24
San Francisco 20, Baltimore 17
THE MAGIC CIRCLE
Adonai
Elohim
Tetragrammaton
For more details on Magic
Circles, Love Potion, charms,
Spell, Curse, and even the
Witches' sabbat,
take an Adventure in
Demonology, Vincent Price's
two record called
WITHRAFT-MAGIC
On Capitol
Anyone who communicates with spints must be enclosed in the magic circle under penalty of death! The form is not invariable, but it must be a large circle drawn upon the ground with the Magic Wand and marked with chalk, charcoal or salt. It should also include the Words ALPHA, ON, BEG, ACGA, and OMEGA, plus the six pointed and five pointed star.
Capitol
International Club Discussion Series
"Crisis in North Ireland"
speakers:
Thomas Davey, graduate student from Northern Ireland
Professor Donald McCoy Professor of American History
Thursday, November 20
4:00 p.m.
Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room
Pants Suits
What a delightful way to improve upon the campus fall scenery. We've collected the sharpest looks from Pendleton and Ladybug and we present them for your prompt inspection.
Stop in today . . .
$50.00, $65.00 and $90.00
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
Mistakes, injuries again plague KU
By JOE CHILDS Assistant Sports Editor
On Oct. 25, sophomore Phil Basler started his first game at quarterback against Iowa State. He was replacing Jim Ettinger who had been injured the week before against Nebraska. When the lanky lefthander assumed the starting role against the Cyclones KU was 1-4 and had just lost two close contests to K-State and the Cornhuskers. Optimism in Lawrence was sparse. Maybe Basler could give the Jayhawks what they needed.
Last Saturday, after the 31-15 loss to Oklahoma, a dejected Bassat sat beside his locker and said for probably the umplest millionth time. "We are a better team than we show."
"It's been that way all year," he went on. "We're inconsistent. We can't seem to put everything together at once. We did it one time today, on that drive for the first touchdown. We didn't do anything different. We just did everything right. But after that we got a couple of bad breaks and—I dunno—things just went wrong."
The bad breaks the young quarterback spoke of were injuries to three key KU defensive players. And with three starting members from the defensive unit out, how does a team stop a powerful offensive machine likeOU?
The answer is simple . . . You don't stop them and coach Pepper Rodgers knows it as well as anyone. With his shoes off, Pepper leaned back and summed up the game: "It wasn't a bad effort by a beat-up football team. The score at the half (15-14, KU) looked good to us, but in the
second half we had three players out from a 42-man squad. That was the key."
"They were down," Pepper continued. "We didn't have enough depth to compete with them. We lost Hicks, Bailey and Cooper on that drive."
Breaks go wrong way
But those are the breaks, and in a season a team can expect their share of bad ones. In this light, KU's 1969 season isn't so hard to bear. It is reassuring to think that Pepper and his crew have suffered enough bad breaks this season for at least two and maybe three years. But bad breaks and all it would have been nice to upset the Sooners and add a pinch of respectability to eight weeks of mishap.
Nov. 17
1969 KANSAN 9
But just as you can't blame LBJ alone for the war in Vietnam you can't blame OU's win only on bad breaks. "We just started making mistakes," reflected Emery Hicks, middle linebacker and an Oklahoma native. "They were as tired as we were, but we'd make a mistake or blow an assignment on third-and-four or when it was crucial."
Comparing this year's Sooner team to the squad that last season shared the conference title
(Continued to page 10)
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"What else can you say about him?"
7
The whole story
The Sooner's human battering ram, Steve Owens, hurtles the Kansas line in one of his 44 carries Saturday. En route to a possible Heisman Trophy winning performance, Owens pounded for 201 yards rushing and set two new national records for career touchdowns and rushing.
Errors again tell story
(Continued from page 9)
(Continued from page 9)
with KU, Hicks said: "They are nowhere the club they were last year. But anybody who tries to pick the Big Eight is out of his mind. This is a great conference to play in. Every week you face someone who is good at something."
This week the somebody or maybe the something was All-America tailback Steve Owens who staged one of the best performances of his brilliant college career. In 44 carries, Owens rushed 201 yards—hardly what one could call a bad break or a
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mistake, but one of the reasons Basler has found it difficult to win football games in the Big Eight.
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Owens, Sooners romp
(Continued from page 8)
Owens added two more NCAA records to his credentials Saturday. Although Owens still has two games to play, the 201 yards on 44 carries increased his three-year rushing total to 3,535 yards and shattered the 3,388 yard record held by Mercury Morris of West Texas State. Owen's three touchdowns brought his career total to 54 and enabled him to break the 23-year old record of Army great Glenn Davis, who scored 51 times while playing on the Army teams of 1944-45-46.
KU held Owens to 56 yards in the first half and the Jayhawks strolled into the dressing room with a 15-14 half time advantage, but the 213-pounder rambled for 145 yards in the second half to surpass the 100-yard mark for the 18th straight game.
With 3:29 left in the first quarter Owens capped a 62-yard drive by leaping over left tackle for two yards and the first score of the game. With a first and ten at the KU 18, Owens set up the score by cracking off left tackle, breaking a tackle, and racing 16 yards down to the KU two.
After recovering a John Riggins fumble at the KU 26-yard line, OU wasted no time in driving for another score in 9 plays. Owens raced over from the two and the point after touchdown gave OU a commanding 14-0 lead with 13:58 still remaining in the second quarter.
KU's defense, with linebacker Emery Hicks and Gary Davenport doing most of the damage, held Owens and theOU offensive machine under control for the remainder of the half and KU's offense, aided by Steve Conley's two punt returns, was able to put together two sustained drives to take a surprising 15-14 lead.
Conley set up the first score by returning a punt 19 yards to the KU 41. KU kept the ball on the ground and scored when quarterback Phil Basler sneaked over from the one. The 'Hawks elected to go for two points and Basler
10 KANSAN Nov.17 1969
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pinpointed split end John Mosier in the endzone for the conversion to cut the OU lead to six points.
The Jayhawks struck quickly for the go-ahead touchdown. Following the kickoff, OU punted to Conley at the KU 43 and the 197 pound sophomore raced 48 yards down the right sideline where Roy Bell hauled him down at the OU 9 yard line. Ron Jessie tried left tackle for two yards on the first play and then Basler rolled left, failed to find blocking or a receiver, reversed his field and scamped the remaining 7 yards to paydirt.
KU's success was short lived as Owens and company marched 76 yards down to the KU two with the ensuing kickoff. With a third-and-two situation the Sooners once again called on Owens but Hicks dropped the OU senior for a one yard loss. Bruce Derr kicked a 20 yard field goal to put OU on top for good.
The third quarter remained scoreless but on the first play of the fourth stanza Owens took a pitchout from Jack Mildren and swept seven yards around left end for his third score as OU increased its lead to 24-15.
Emery Hicks summed up KU's frustrating afternoon when he said, "Every week you face someone who is great at something. This week it was Owens. What else can you say about him? He's the Heisman Trophy winner. The best."
University of Kansas Young People's Theatre
presents
The Snow Queen
by Suria Magito and Rudolf Weil
on
November 22 at 10:00 a.m.
University Theatre Murphy Hall
For tickets call: UN 4-3982
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1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6. tt
1963 Chevy Impala, 283 engine, new tires, muffler and rear end. Aqua/white, $85.00, contact Mrs. Marion, UN 4-3633, after 5:30, 84-5469, 11-17
Superb 1957 Cadillac Fleetwood now available at only $35. Many power options. Must see to appreciate the 33 evenings or inspect at 1810 Indiana.
Large and small scale equipment for sale. Amplifiers, PA horns, etc. Contact Doug Pierce, 1209 Tennessee, 843-7836. If not there, leave message.
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale.
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843-4836. 12-2
Leaving the U.S.—1900 Plymouth
Valiant—Standard—Very good tires—heater—Eng. and transmission good.
Altoa Altoa masterworks (RCA)
Garrard turntable $40.00.
Both must sell this month. VI 2-7472
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1967 VW Karmann-Glia conv. New tires, battery, paint, FM-AM radio. Best Offers. Randy Leffingwell. 842-4325. 11-18
Your Saturday night blasts will be a bright success with candles and strobe candles found only at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 11-18
Guitar: Martin D-28, like new with hard case. Call 843-7537 after 5:00 11-20
1967 Riverside 125 cc. Excellent condition. Cheap, fun transportation.
843-mile racing model with cochars.
843-8155 after 5 p.m. and weekends. 11-20
Must sell immediately—a white 1965
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11-21
Set of 2 Snowtires, tubeless 7.35 x 14
Set of 2 Snowtires, tubeless 1,000 x 7.35
$25; Call 842-2244.
11-19
Big Rumage Sale. Community Building, 11th & Mass. Fri, Nov 21st, 10th, 40th Sat., Nov 22nd, Noon. More than 25 families contributing. 11-21
Fritz Company has special bargains on inspected used winter and highway tires. Also New "83" Series Town Tires. Front end alignment and brakework by experienced mechanic. Fritz Co. 745 N.H. VI 3-4321. 11-21
Ampex Micro 85 solid state Cassette stereo and recorder, walnut cased, completely outfitted, $14½; walnut/bore bore tape perfect condition, less than year old, must sell $150 or best offer. Call Kris at VI 2-4965. 11-21
Must sell Minolta SR-1 35 mm. camera in excellent condition. Have 1-1.8 lbs. make Your best offer for $159. Call CVI 2-5609 after 5:00 p.m. 11-21
Six tickets to KU-MU game. Call Mike, VI 2-5677 11-19
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Portable TV 12 in. BW with UHF and earpiece! Great for dorma viewing.
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Tape recordor~model ~S232A Sears
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1960 English Hillman for sale. Ideal for school car. $135. See at McConnell Lumber Co. VI 3-3877 844 E. 13th St. 11-21
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Loans to junior, senior and grad, stu-
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Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 47th Edition. Campus Mall House, 11 W. 14th St.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptad, VI 3-4032. tf
Rosalea's Hotel needs you. Do you need 11? Come find out, call (316) 470-8921 for reservations. Writer per. Kansas, 67085 for entertainment schedules. 11-18
Looking for that unique Christmas gift for the person "who has every day a special occasion," found only at the Hodge Podge is the answer: 15 W. 9th. 11-18
Rummage Sale -1231 Ohio, 9a.5m.
p.m. Saturday, Selling radius, camera,
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The food is terrible but the entertainment is great at Alice's Restaurant.
Going to Wichita or Eldorado, Kansas,
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LOST
Lost: KU Big 8 swimming Champion Ring. In or near "Hawk" and 14th St. Reward, Call Ray, 842-6982. 11-17
LOST-Man's Black framed glasses—somewhere between Summerfield and Strong. Bring to UDK office or McCollim Hall, Rm 513, 843-6600. Rm 11-17
Lost: brown checkbook under name of Ronnie Warman Jr., and an Over-
Born: 1924, 428 Hardy found, contact Ronnie Warman 11-17
9100, room 619, reward. 11-17
Lost: Ladies' Hamilton Watch, gold
day att. on campus. Reward: 11-17
Tan suede belt from ladies' jacket at
Call Vi 2-8332 after 5 p.m. 11-18
Lost—small, short-haired female dog
mixed breed. About 2 years old.
Bad teeth, answers to name "Sugar."
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HELP WANTED
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part person; person only Burgee Chef, 814 Town
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in Lawrence at least one year. Referred to graduate preferred. Phone VI 3-6424. 11-21
Wish to employ noon hour lunch room playground supervisor for elementary school, 11:30-12:30, phone VI 3-4686 or VI 3-3263 for appointment. Consider man or woman, consider anyone. 11-18
Part time help during school; full
time in summer. Must have experience
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Male student Kitchen helper from 2
many places including person at Virginia Inn West 6 11-18
Immediate openings for Work-study qualified students at the Computation Center. See Dave Harrington after 1 p.m. weekdays. 11-17
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Accurate typing of dissertations-themes—mise, papers. Pica-Smith Corona Electric. Call Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. 11-20
WANTED
Wanted: A place to dump a half ton of garbage from Alice's Restaurant. 11-20
Need 8 tickets to KU-MU game. Call Jim, VI 2-3855. 11-20
Wanted: 3 tickets for KU-MU game.
Name your name. VI 2-1229 13-19
PERSONAL
Pilots飞 at half in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparative information chart. Phone 842-1124. 11-19
Life insurance is bought not because someone will die but because someone must live. David L. Robinson, Guarantee Mutual Life Co. VI 2-3004.
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The heads of all nations meet at Alice's Restaurant! 11-20
Nancy—May your 17th birthday be the happiest ever! Soon there will be "A Time For Us" to celebrate. Yours in Love, Ken. 11-17
ENTERTAINMENT
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8234, Prairie Village, Kana, 913-648-1777. tf
FOOD
Hungry! chm supper by Napa Emi Club Nov. 16 from 4:30-7:00 p.m. at Mediated Method Hall for lowstay Hall 843-5489 or 842-9298 for tickets. 11-17
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Apollo 12 A-OK
(Continued from page 1) gave the space pilots a topsy-turvy work schedule on their outward journey to get them in shape for their work on the lunar surface.
Conrad and Bean land the lunar module Intrepid on the moon's arid Ocean of Storms at 12:53 a.m. CST Wednesday, while Gordon keeps the command ship Yankee Clipper in moon orbit.
The moon explorers, during their 32-hour stay on the lunar surface, will be doing most of their work in what normally would be nighttime in their time zones on earth. Their sleep periods fall during earth daylight periods.
The astronauts flashed dramatic color television shots back to earth Saturday showing the way they performed the key course-changing maneuver. It was the first time a major engine firing had been televised live from a manned spaceflight.
During the maneuver Conrad, spacecraft commander, mounted the camera so it showed the instrument panel while he and his companions rocketed away from their "free return" route.
This route, which all former astronauts have taken to the moon, enables the astronauts to loop around the moon and return to earth, even if their spaceship's rocket engine does not work.
Apollo 12 left this course because the pilots are shooting for a pinpoint landing on the moon's Ocean of Storms. Now they are dependent upon their rocket engines working again if they are to get home.
The 8.8 second engine burn went off perfectly. Engineers are confident the rocket will work again to put Apollo 12 into lunar
12 KANSAN Nov. 17
1969
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orbit, and later to head the spaceship back toward earth.
Conrad and his fellow astronauts slept most of Saturday, after putting in a 22-hour work day on the first day of their 10-day mission. They awakened at 2:17 p.m. CST after about 12 hours sleep and seemed well rested and in good spirits. At 3:39 p.m. CST they passed the half-way mile to the moon.
*Dwight Boring
Ground control ushered in the crew's second day in space by relaying the latest football scores and reading the pilots selected news items, particularly those dealing with the flight.
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Their mission has gone like clockwork since the first harrowing minutes of the launch when their spacecraft lost its electrical power supply while climbing through a rainstorm.
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Paine said launch technicians made the proper decision in proceeding with the launch despite storm clouds over Cape Kennedy.
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Black university denied
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Friday that the University hoped to meet the legitimate needs of the black students, but it would not establish a separate university for black people.
Chalmers made the statement after a meeting with representatives of the Black Student Union (BSU). During the meeting the Chancellor gave his response to a list of demands presented to him during a meeting with the BSU Oct. 31.
His reply, a five page letter addressed to Darryl Bright, Maywood, ill. senior and president of the BSU, is now being studied by the BSU executive committee. Bright refused to comment on the letter.
Chalmers said he "could not legally accept proposals that would create a separate hierarchical organization for black students within the University."
The list of demands called for the creation and funding of the offices of dean of black students and dean of black student affairs, the establishment of an Afro-American Institute of Research and Community development and the construction of Malcolm X Hall to house the Institute.
He proposed the addition of staff and faculty members such as assistant deans, whose jobs would be to concern themselves with the problems of black students. These jobs would be within
KU's present administrative and faculty organizations, he added.
Another KU effort to meet the needs of black students, Chalmers said, might include the expansion of the black studies program. The program, this semester, is composed of 10 courses. The expansion of the program would be in line with the demand for the creation of the Afro-American Institute.
Concerning the demand for the construction of Malcom X Hall, Chalmers repeated his contention that this request would have to be fitted into the University's overall need for space. He said he believed that $100 million would be needed for construction within the next 10 years just to keep up with increasing enrollment and added needs for teaching and research facilities.
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FLAIRS
Designer Bells
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PARKSIDE
Photo by Mike Frederick
A pain to rake but fun to play in
Each season brings tasks that must be done. The fall chore of gathering leaves makes itself known by huge crimson mounds. Ann Lowen, Hutchinson sophomore, takes advantage of the sudden spell of warm weather this week to soak in the beauty of the campus.
Ideas conflicting
Topekans view march
TOPEKA—Watching Saturday's march to the state house Topekans expressed several ideas as to the purpose of those participating. The marchers, in turn, gave just as many reasons for doing so.
Sipping a cup of coffee while he watched the marchers go by, one man said the march was "disgusting . . . these people are giving aid and comfort to the enemy and this shows dissatisfaction to the American way of life—that of giving our support to our elected officials once we choose them."
"Maybe I'm just part of the 'older generation' but I prefer to see clean cut kids than these hippies and radicals dressed like they are," said a service station attendant who watched the group leave the parade site.
One KU marcher, dressed in a suit and tie, wore an American flag sewed to the black band on his arm.
"This is to show that to be in the moratorium means to be patriotic," he said, "it's a response to the people who say it's unpatriotic."
A Topeka farmer followed the entire march and observed the rally because "I have never seen anything like this and wondered what it was all about."
I'm embarrassed," he said, "when people this age are doing something like this on a Saturday afternoon . . . I could take
half of them right now and find jobs for them."
"Just from those alone," he said, gesturing to the crowd sitting around the State House steps, $10,000 can be earned in one afternoon."
An assistant language instructor, who had let her students decide whether or not to come to class Friday, gave her reason for coming to Toneka.
"I think it's important to get off the Hill if we want to show people what we're doing," she said.
A woman standing on her porch said she thought the march was ridiculous. "As other people are over dying for them and all they want to do is protest it," she said.
A young car wash attendant stood apart from his buddies in a silent stance, his hand raised in the peace sign as the marchers passed him.
"I'm one hundred per cent in favor of this march, I'm only sorry it isn't bigger," he said. "I've had several friends who were killed in Vietnam."
A serviceman from Forbes Air Force base, dressed in civilian clothes and walking discreetly on the sidewalk next to the march, said he could not participate because he would be court-martialed for doing so.
(Continued to page 12)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 47 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, Nov.18, 1969
'Intrepid' prepared for moon landing
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—Apollo 12's astronauts looped the moon with unerring precision today, checked out the lander Intrepid and said "we're ready to go" for a pinpoint touchdown on the Ocean of Storms
Alan L. Bean and Charles "Pete" Conrad planned to unlatch the landing craft from the nose of the command ship Yankee Clipper late tonight and land on the moon at 2:35 a.m. Wednesday. Richard F. Gordon will remain in orbit.
"The Yankee Clipper with the
Intrepid in tow has arrived on time," spacecraft commander Conrad radioed at 10:07 p.m. as the Apollo 12 emerged from the back side of the moon.
Conrad, Gordon and Bean swept over the area where Conrad and Bean are scheduled to make America's second lunar landing early Wednesday.
They saw river-like rilles and bright impact craters below them and beamed back clear television pictures of the scene.
"I guess like all other troops
who have just arrived, we're plastered to the windows looking," Conrad said. "To a Navy crew, it doesn't look like a very good place to pull liberty, though." All three crewmen are Navy commanders.
Conrad reported that at first the moon appeared to have a "light gray concrete" color, but that as the spacecraft moved across the face of the moon tints of brown began to appear.
"It's a beauty," said Bean, look-
(Continued to page 12)
Haynsworth gets boost
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. to the Supreme Court received a boost Monday when it was endorsed by Sens. Winston M. Prouty, R-Vt., and William B. Soong, D-Va.
The announcements raised to 40 the number of senators publicly or privately supporting the controversial South Carolina appeals court jurist.
At the same time, Sen. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., announced on the Senate floor he would vote against confirmation.
Metcalf's decision, provided privately earlier, did not affect the latest United Press International poll which now indicates 46 senators are opposed with 14 others
The timing of a vote on the nomination became even more uncertain when Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield postponed until Tuesday an attempt to work out an agreement. Mansfield said he would try to schedule the balloting for Thursday.
still undecided or unwilling to reveal their decisions.
"While some of his actions might be classified as mistakes or unintentional indiscretions, I do not believe they rise to a level which should cause one to doubt his basic integrity.
Spong, in a floor speech, said, "I believe Judge Haynsworth is an honest man. In my view the questions concerning his ethics have not been substantiated.
"I believe Judge Haynsworth
possesses the qualifications to serve with distinction as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Accordingly. I shall vote for his confirmation."
Prouty said he was convinced that Haynsworth was qualified to serve on the high court. Opposition to Haynsworth was "more on political grounds than ethical grounds and more emotional than reasoned," he said.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va... charged that the judge's liberal opponents are ignoring the desires of the electorate.
Nixon's nomination of Haynsworth is "reflecting the opinion of the people who elected him at the
(Continued to page 12)
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Goldwater backs Agnew
WICHITA—Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., Monday night accused "some" of the news media of polarizing the nation.
He said he did not believe vice-president Spiro Agnew went far enough in his criticism of television networks. The networks "better start policing themselves," said the 1964 GOP presidential nominee, who said "probably I received more abuse than anyone in America."
TOPEKA—State Penal Director Robert N. Woodson and Kansas State Penitentiary Warden Sherman Crouse appealed for restoration of funds Monday for the 1971 budget request for the Lansing facility which has been plagued by violence since early summer.
The initial $8,646,411 request was chopped to $3,767,255 by budget director James W. Bibb. After a series of hearings such as the one Woodson and Crouse appeared before Monday, Gov. Robert B. Docking will recommend a fiscal 1971 budget to the legislature.
SALT talks begin
Prison request cut
HELSINKI—American and Soviet arms negotiators met in secret session today to work out procedures and an agenda for talks to try to freeze and possibly even reduce their nuclear armories.
The first working session of the strategic arms limitation talks (SALT) opened in the American Embassy with the Soviet delegation headed by Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir S. Semenov.
Lawrence marchers missing
Four marches from Lawrence and KU are officially listed as missing after the moratorium march in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. Louis Wolfe, program director for the Lawrence Peace Center, said 60 persons from Lawrence left by bus for the march. The busses returned with only 56 persons.
"Ive got no idea where the other four are," Wolfe said. "They could be in jail, but I doubt it. I hope these people decided not to come back on the bus and just didn't tell anyone."
Wolfe stayed in Washington through Sunday to look for the missing marchers. Working with the New Mobilization Committee, he helped stranded marchers find transportation.
Gun control passes House
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The House virtually guaranteed Monday prompt exemption of shotgun and some rifle ammunition from registration requirements of last year's gun control law.
Ammunition for pistols would remain subject to the restriction, under which the government now requires dealers to record name, address, age, and other information about persons buying ammunition.
Technically there were further formalities ahead. But practically, the issue was settled when the House, on a 313-36 roll call vote agreed to a house-Senate conference on the Senate-passed language.
Acts on complaints
The Senate had added the exemption to an unrelated tax bill previously passed by the House. It acted in response to complaints by hunters and other sportsmen that they and the thousands of hardware merchants and other small dealers from whom they buy ammunition were being unduly burdened by paper work without any offsetting benefit to the war against crime.
Sports-minded House members had planned a motion to instruct the House conferes to accept the Senate provision. They abandoned that plan after being assured the conferees already had made up their minds to do just that.
Ways and Means Committee Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Dark., who heads the House conference group, not only had said publicly, in advance, that his conferences liked the Senate amendment; he also indicated they wouldn't waste any time accepting it. He promised the House to have the package wrapped up and ready for final approval by midnight Tuesday.
That would clear the way for final enactment of the repealer, with another routine Senate endorsement and signature of the President, within a matter of days.
Piecement destruction The House action came over the vigorous protest of Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., chairman of the judiciary committee, who saw it as the first step toward "piecemeal destruction" of the 1968 Gun Control Act.
The law was intended to curb sale of guns, and ammunition to criminals, minors, and mental defectives.
Interview to be Nov. 15
The measure exempts all shotgun and high-power rifle ammunition from the record-keeping provisions of the law, but does not exempt pistol ammunition or 22-caliber rimfire ammunition. The latter comprises the great majority of all ammunition sales.
Representatives from the Upjohn Co., a national pharmaceutical house, will be in 206 Strong Hall on Nov. 25 to interview seniors interested in employment.
2 KANSAN
Nov.18 1969
"Of the estimated 750,000 marchers, only a few hundred were stranded in Washington in desperate need of transportation," Wolfe said. "I think this is rather remarkable considering the amount of confusion there was among the hundreds of thousands trying to leave Washington Saturday night."
schedule were nearly empty. It took some fast talking to keep more busses from leaving." Wolfe said.
Wolfe said much of the confusion was caused by federal authorities that wouldn't allow the busses inside the city itself. The KU busses, originally scheduled to load at Hains Point, loaded at the Pentagon parking lot and left three hours later than expected.
"The few busses which left on
"One of our busses picked up seven people at Breezewewod, Pa., who had missed their bus to Antioch, Ohio." Wolfe said. "We took them as far as Columbus, Ohio."
?
2
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Campus briefs
Committee to evaluate moratoriums
Rebounding from last week's two-day moratorium activities in Washington, D.C., and Topeka, the KU Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam will meet in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room at 7:30 tonight.
The committee will discuss plans for future war moratoriums and how they should be conducted.
Several members of the mobilization steering committee have said the New Mobilization Committee's idea of holding monthly moratoriums, increasing by one day, is impractical.
At the meeting, several participants in the Washington and Topeka marches will give evaluations of the demonstrations.
The 12-man SUA board had estimated revenue and expense to balance prior to the 1969 Homecoming Concert, featuring the Turtles and Steppenwolf.
SUA assess concert bills
Katherine Giele, activities director of the Kansas Union, said, "Our estimate is that we broke even, but we won't know until our monthly bills come out on Dec. 1."
The next SUA concert will be Dec. 2, when Blood, Sweat and Tears come to the KU campus. Appearing with the popular contemporary rock band will be the Tony Kosenck Group.
David Jeans, Independence,
Mo., senior and Bob McCulloh,
Mission senior, took fifth among
120 teams entered in the tourn-
ment. McCulloh also tied for first
place in individual speaking, and
Jeans placed tenth in that event.
Two KU debaters teamed to take fifth place at the University of Houston Invitational Debate Tournament in Houston last weekend.
Debaters place
The exhibit features several selected books on Napoleon and a bust of him from the Art Museum. The exhibit is located in the exhibit area outside the document department in the east area of the basement, and will be on display until the end of the year.
An exhibit on Napoleon I commemorating the bi-centenennial of his birthday is now on display in Watson Library.
Napoleon honored
DuPont gives lab
Phi Delta Kappa meets
The DuPont Co. has given KU a trailer-mounted pilot plant, valued at $250,000, for extracting and purifying helium from natural gas.
Located at KU's Low Temperature Laboratory, west of Iowa St., the plant will be used primarily by George W. Swift, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, and Fred Kurata, director of the Low Temperature Laboratory and professor of chemical engineering.
Nov. 18
1969 KANSAN 3
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"We've had a good sale so far, but there are still a lot of tickets left," Miss Giele said.
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Phi Delta Kappa, professional fraternity for men in education, will meet at 630 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Kansas Room.
At 8 p.m. in the Forum Room, the Fredrick Wiseman film "High School" will be shown. The film will be free to members. A fifty cents admission will be charged to non-members.
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Ticket Prices:
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KANSAN Comment
Kansas "hospitality"-which lasted the rest of the night, when the subject of blacks came up.
For whites only
To the editor:
Supposedly this University strives to give each of its students the opportunity to enrich and develop their intellectual abilities and talents. Recently, a University-sponsored tour made by the University Symphony Orchestra traveled to Clay Center, Kansas, to give a performance. It is customary for the orchestra members to stay at the homes of "humans" (persons who volunteer to house and feed the students overnight.) Unfortunately there are three black members in the orchestra and certain citizens of Clay Center do not tolerate blackness.
In the case of Marquita Cross, she was assigned to the household of a Mr. Buford Clark. Marquita sensed the Clarks' coldness toward her but tried to dismiss it by being friendly. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Clark invited to show her and her roommate, also a KU student, the town of Clay Center. After seeing parts of Clay Center, Mr. Clark decided it would be a treat to see what happens to a "Negro" in Clay Center. He started to drive to a place where a black man had been "hung" and cut into "five pieces." With this frightening invitation, Marquita demanded to be taken back to Clark's home. She was returned to the Clarks' home, where she was greeted, as before, by Mrs. Clark's iceberg shoulder and constant crying. After a brief discussion with Mr. Clark on Clay Center's black population, none, and on his views that "segregation will be here for a while," Marquita telephoned me in Kansas City to return her to Lawrence. When Alton Webb and I arrived at the Clarks' home, we started toward the front door, but we were ushered to the back door. As we left with Marquita, happiness was seen in the faces of the Clarks; especially Mrs. Clark, who stopped crying and laughed. It was reported later by Marquita's roommate, who stayed behind, that Clark's terminology of blacks was "nigger" and that Mrs. Clark started crying,
The two black men of the orchestra suffered a similar fate. When their "human" arrived, she declared that there must have been a mistake and refused to take them to her home. So they had to search for a person who would house them.
Is "our" University endorsing such a fate to black students? This question will remain unanswered until the University publicly announces what will be done about this incident and its policies to prevent this from occurring in any future University-sponsored activities.
If this is not done, I consider this University, the state of Kansas, the U.S.A., and anyone, including myself, who support this University in any manner, a representative of "racism against blacks." Therefore, unless the University appropriately responds, I think it essential for me and any others who despise racism to immediately revolutionize this University, and ideally, Kansas and the U.S.A., to respect the black man as a true man.
Cartrell Cross Many, La., junior
$$
**X X X**
$$
To the editor:
The School of Fine Arts deeply regrets certain unfortunate incidents which caused embarrassment to several of our talented students during the recent tour of the University Symphony Orchestra. The University arranged for housing to be provided in private homes. Specific lodging assignments were made locally by a committee of the community.
Naturally, we shall not return to that community nor tour musical groups to any other city in the future without assurance of equal treatment for all our student musicians.
Thomas Gorton Dean, School of Fine Arts
More light on campus
To the editor:
Whenever I happen to have occasion to traverse the KU campus during the evening, I usually drive. Nevertheless, for the most elemental protection of pedestrian traffic during the evening hours of darkness, the installation of some kind of mercury vapor (or similar system) of adequate lighting along at least the principal vehicular routes on campus is an immediate necessity.
As it is, even a motorist driving the legal speed is hard-pressed to see those on foot wearing dark-colored garb soon enough to make evasive maneuvers—especially when facing into oncoming vehicles' lights. Prompt attention to
this archaic and dangerous situation might avert needless tragedy.
C. G. Bryan Lawrence alumnus
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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Public telephone in Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and termination periods.
Mall subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60444. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offer or promotion may not apply to origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
CHICAGO 8
CONSPIRACY
ASYLUM
THE MICHIGAN JOURNAL
'Welcome. Do take a program, else you can't tell the patients from the doctors.'
Social rulings
To the editor:
There is now a bill pending hearing before the Student Senate that vitally concerns all organized living groups on this campus. It is the bill concerning social regulations submitted by Dennis Embry of the Rights and Privileges committee.
This bill is ambiguous and invalid for two reasons: First of all, there is too much room left for the interpretation of what a "social affair" actually is, and the term is never defined in the present content of the bill. Secondly, the representation for Student Senate was academically founded, and we seriously doubt the fair representation of all types of living groups concerned, not only in Student Senate, but also on the Rights and Privileges committee.
"Social affairs" is never actually defined in the bill, as we said above. Therefore, it could be interpreted by some to result in the disbanding of a voluntary living group by action of the Student Senate, which would be in direct violation of that group's right to exist. Secondly, since living in any of the organized living groups is on a purely voluntary basis, any individual could withdraw himself from that group if the situation was intolerable. If such a student went to the Student Senate's proposed judiciary group and the case was decided against the living group, it would effectively mean tyranny on the part of that individual, which would further violate that group's rights to govern itself, rather than the majority rule policy of a democracy.
The way the bill is worded, any group could also break away from the Student Senate, which could drastically undermine the already dubious effectiveness of the Student Senate.
After talking to Embry, we think perhaps the basic ideas behind the bill are somewhat logical, but the way it is set up now, it could have drastic consequences for any organized living group on campus, including scholarship halls, residence halls, fraternities and sororities. In our opinion, the bill should be examined closely when it comes up for hearing, and if it gets past that stage, defeated on the Senate floor.
Susan Schroeter
Shawnee Mission junior
Clancey Maloney
Shawnee Mission junior
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
MOON FOR THE NIGHT AND SUN FOR THE DAY,
JOY IS NOT CONSTANT AND SORROWS DON'T STAY.
THE SUN & THE BIRDS & THE CLOUDS HAVE THE SKY.
ASK THEM ABOUT IT AND THEY DON'T KNOW WHY
WHILE I HAVE THE FLOWERS, THE GRASS, & THE TREES
I'LL LET EVERY HOUR
GO BY AS I PLEASE.
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
SKY,
SokaloFF
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Daily Kansan.
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS; Among Godard's best
By RICHARD GEARY
Kansan Reviewer
Jean-Luc Godard's "Weekend" is a brilliant and shocking film experience. It should hit both those who are familiar with his work and those who are not with equal impact, because the director's vision is forceful, clear and, most important, unified.
Of course, the little idiosyncrasies which madden audiences are there; the helter-skelter continuity, the pieces of reading matter flashed on the screen, the literary allusions, the long speeches to the camera. But this time everything comes together; the snatches of poetry and music, usually floating about Godard's movies to no purpose, are linked meaningfully to what we see. This is more of a polemic than anything he has ever made before.
The story follows a shallow, stupid bourgeois couple, who leave on a weekend trip to get money from the man's parents. The journey becomes a bloody, surrealistic nightmare, for the audience as well as the couple, as a selfish corrupt society nonchallantly destroys itself and finally is devoured by cannibalistic young guerrillas.
Godard uses cars as symbols of bourgeois arrogance and decadence. People fight and kill and die over them, and in almost every scene, twisted, wrecked vehicles burn or simply lie on their backs like slaughtered animals. A girl screams over the loss of her sports car while her lover lies dead inside it; a woman climbs out of a flaming pile-up and cries because her "Hermes pocketbook" is still inside; the couple take clothes from the corpses without a second thought; All very transparent, of course, but all the more horrifying because it is.
Occasionally, the films political preaching becomes irritating, especially when a pair of truck drivers talk revolutionary doctrine right to our faces. Much subtler is the lyrical scene of a pianist playing and lecturing on Mozart, as the workers go about their chores—the fusion of classical culture and common labor.
About the middle of the picture, a young man in French Revolutionary garb (played by Jean-Pierre Leaud) reads from a text that man fled the order of nature to build civilization because he wanted to be miserable. Godard destroys "civilization" in an act of purification; what emerges from the ashes is a band of savage butchers, living off of what came before them—a violent end and barbarous beginning.
In the end, the society woman, her husband dead, has joined the guerrillas. She is given a plate of meat and asks what it is. "A little leftover pork and some British tourists," is the reply.
Godard is one of the world's most prolific film-makers; he has had his failures—miserable failures—but his successes enlarge the art. "Weekend" is surely one of his greatest works. In it, the director's vision becomes everyone's vision of hell.
Lots of people are doing blues these days. But much of it is weak imitation of the old Black Masters.
By JOE BILL NAAS Kansan Reviewer
RECORDS; Nick's uncommon understatement
Nick Gravenites writes all its own material and fortunately it doesn't sound like everybody elses. "My Labors" is his first solo album; he used to sing lead and write all the material for the Electric Flag.
His lyrics contain the uncommon virtue of understatement. In "Moon Tune," Gravenites sings, "I just felt like the customer getting stuck with the bill again." And he says, "Man was born to
Best sellers
(Compiled by Publishers' Weekly)
Fiction
THE GODFATHER—Mario Puzo
THE LOVE MACHINE-Jacqueline Susann
THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN
Michael Chrlehten
PRETENDERS--Gwen Davis
PORTNOY X'S COMPLAINT--Philip Roth
NAKED CAME THE STRANGER— Penelope Ashe
THE HOUSE ON THE STRAND—
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THE SEVEN MINUTES—Irving Wallace
A PLACE IN THE COUNTRY
Sarah Gaham
THE PROMISE—Chaim Potok
THE PETER PRINCIPLE—Laurence I. Peter and Raymond Hull
THE KINGDOM AND THE POWER
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THE MAKING OF THE PRESIDENT 1968—Theodore H. White
M. LIFE WITH JACQUELINE
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THE MOST PROBABLE WORLD, by Stuart Chase (Pelican, $1.45)—More than most contemporary commentators Stuart Chase has been an enjoyable and provocative figure, writing in a style that makes him accessible not only to the scholars but to the masses. In "The Most Probable World" Chase looks at the trends and forces of our time and gives us a picture of what we are heading into the 21st Century. His fears are not as grim as those of some; we have war and weapons and overpopulation but we also have the capacities to master these problems. Here is the kind of book that ought to find its way to the Western Civilization reading list.
BUT DADDY!, by Tom Buck (Dell, 75 cents); JOHNNY TREMAIN, by Esther Forbes (Dell, 75 cents); HOMER'S ILIAD AND VERGIL'S AENEID, translated by David Silhanek (Dell, 75 cents)—Three of special interest for younger readers. The first is about life in a family of 11 kids and what the father, especially, goes through during the day. "Johnny Tremain" is an already famous novel about a boy in the American Revolution. The third is new translations of the Greek and Roman epic stories, these in prose form.
BOOKS
COLLISION COURSE, edited by Edward Parone (Vintage Dramas, $1.65)—An anthology of short plays, several of which were presented in a single program off-Broadway a year ago. "Short" is the word too--plays of just a few pages. The authors are mainly young people who have been associated with the experimental theater in America.
The first ascent with a balloon inflated with coal gas was in 1821.
Nov. 18 1969 KANSAN 5
A LEGEND IN HIS OWN TIME!
THE WALTER PEASE ORGANIZATION presents
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Similarly, Gravenites' music is beautiful because of its simplicity. The songs aren't overpoweringly exciting or emotional, but it's likely that the listener will find himself humming the tunes later.
Gravenites has a smooth robust voice which brings out the mood of his lyrics. Mike Bloomfield is featured on guitar and breaks out several beautiful solos.
*****
On side one of "Blues Full Circle," Tim Williams applies the modern amplified blues approach to some of the really bad songs of the 1950's. He doesn't add anything new to the old songs. Maybe Little Richard's "Rip It Up" and Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel" should be left to the past.
But Tim Williams is a good musician. And he proves this by working with much better material on side two. He uses an acoustic guitar to accompany his singing of old blues numbers like "Mojo Hand," "Alabama Woman Blues" and "Corrina."
At times Williams sounds very much like the late John Hurt, and at other times like Lightnin' Hopkins. He has obviously studied their styles very closely. But that is one reason the album is disappointing. Who wants to hear Tim Williams doing Lightnin' Hopkins when he could be listening to
Lightnin' Hopkins doing Lightnin' Hopkins
*****
At least that's the impression they give on this album, which is their first and possibly their last.
"The Raven" doesn't fly very high. Maybe it's because of the dead weight of five musicians who can't play or sell worth a damn.
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TONIGHT
BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS
IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person
Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m.
Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only
Advance Tickets on Sale at
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Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
Tickets available at door
The Dick Wright Orchestra
(formerly the George Francis Band)
Jazz Rock
The Sounds of the
Tijauana Brass
The Dick Wright Orchestra is perfect for fraternity or sorority Christmas formals or any occasion.
BLOOD,SWEAT&TEARS IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m. Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only Advance Tickets on Sale at Kief's Records, Red Dog Office, All Jenkins Stores in K.C.
Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
The Dick Wright Orchestra (formerly the George Francis Band)
The Dick Wright Orchestra
(formerly the George Francis Band)
Jazz Rock
The Sounds of the
Tijauana Brass
Orchestra
Call VI 3-7658
Lions battle Tigers in Orange Bowl match
By United Press International
Penn State, undefended in its last 27 games, was selected Monday to defend its Orange Bowl championship against Big Eight powerhouse Missouri.
The Tigers, 8-1, will be seeking to avenge the Nittany Lions' 15-14 victory over Big Eight conference champion Kansas last Jan. 1.
Orange Bowl general manager Ernie Seller earlier called Penn State "every bowls' ton choice."
Missouri assumed the posture of a giant-killer earlier this season with a 40-17 victory over Rose Bowl-bound Michigan.
The winner of the Kansas State - Colorado football game Saturday will be invited to meet Alabama in the Liberty Bowl Dec. 13, a spokesman from K-State announced Monday night.
The spokesman said Bill McElroy of the Liberty Bowl contacted Kensas State coach Vince Gibson Monday night.
Kansas State, loser of three straight in the rugged Big Eight Conference, is now 5-4 for the year. Colorado is 6-3 for the season and 4-2 in the conference. The Sun Bowl, third oldest of the post season football classics, announced Monday the University of Georgia will meet the University of Nebraska Dec. 20.
A Sun Carnival spokesman announced Monday morning Georgia =would make its second appearance at the bowl. Nebraska was selected later in the day and immediately accepted.
Nebraska will make its first appearance in the Sun Bowl and will be the first team from the Big Eight to attend the bowl.
Harriers tune up for NCAA meet
Kansas won the Central Collegeate cross country championships Saturday at Southern Illinois University, outscoring their nearest competitor by 27 points. The Jayhawks won their first Central Collegeiate meet ever in taking another giant step toward the NCAA national championship meet, Nov. 25, in New York City.
Mike Ryan of Air Force won first place over the five mile course with a time of 23:58. Ryan is the defending NCAA champion.
In field of 16 teams and 112 runners, Jay Mason was the first KU harrier to cross the finish line with a 24:34 clocking, good enough to earn him fourth place.
Bunched behind Mason were four more KU runners. Dave Anderson was 10th (24:50), John Callen 12th (24:56), Doug Smith 13th (24:57) and Rich Elliott 21st (25:14).
Bringing up the rear for KU but still ahead of most other runners in the field, were Dennis Patterson with a 26:19 and 50th place, and Glenn Cunningham Jr. with a 26:48 and 64th place.
Coach Bob Timmons was pleased with his team's results and praised them for their continued improvement through the season.
Mason was satisfied with his performance but said he felt there was room for improvement with all the scores.
"We're going to meet a lot tougher competition in the nationals, especially from Villa-nova," Masonsaid. "But this win was a big one for us; it's a good stepping stone for the NCAA."
6 KANSAN
Nov.18 1969
ERN'S CYCLE SALES Foreign Car Service and Machine Shop Work
The Huskers are 7-2 with Saturday's game against Oklahoma its last game of the season.
716 N. 2nd VI 1-5815
The University of Notre Dame added some luster to the New Year's Day bowl picture Monday when it broke with 45 years of tradition and accepted an invitation to the Cotton Bowl against Texas or Arkansas.
Notre Dame could go to the bowl of its choice but narrowed the selection to the Cotton Bowl or the Orange Bowl. Since the winner of the Dec. 6th Texas-Arkansas game is bound to be rated No. 2 in the nation, the Irish, who are 7-1-1 and face Air Force Saturday, decided to meet the highest-ranked team available. Top ranked Ohio State is prohibited by the Big Ten from consecutive bowl appearances.
The Sugar Bowl selected Mississippi, which upset Tennessee last Saturday, to face the loser of the Arkansas-Texas game. The team left out in the cold was LSU, which had hoped to get a Cotton Bowl bid. Although the Tigers still could take a bid from a minor bowl, coach Charlie McClendon indicated Monday that his team will stay home over the holidays.
The Rose Bowl will have the Pacific Eight champion—UCLA or USC—against the runnerup in the Big Ten—Michigan or Purdue Michigan can clinch the runnerup spot by upsetting Ohio State but will still tie Purdue for second even if the Wolverines suffer the expected loss to the Buckeyes Michigan thus will presumably get the bid since it beat Purdue
during the regular season and Purdue played in the 1967 Rose Bowl. UCLA*meets USC Saturday with the winner gaining the other bid.
Tennessee, knocked out of one of the top four bowls by its loss to Mississippi last Saturday, and Florida will go to the Gator Bowl on Dec. 27th.
The Astro-Bluebonnet bowl at Houston on Dec. 31 will have Houston vs. Auburn.
NEW!
by
3 DOG NIGHT
"LIVE"
reg. $4.98
$299
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
Go where the Action is...
in Glov-Ett
"Chukka"BOOTS
Gordon's SHOE CENTER
815 Mass. Lawrence, Kansas VI 3-7628
BURGER HUT GRAND OPENING
Wednesday & Thursday
• TELEVISION SET DRAWING
Enter as often as you like
Drawing will be Thursday night
• SPECIAL ON ALL SANDWICHES
Buy one—get second at half price
• A CLOWN FOR THE KIDS
11:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m.
Wednesday and Thursday
Free candy and gas balloons
Burger Hut is locally owned and managed 1/2 block west of 23rd and Naismith
Betas sweep hill titles
Winning football championships have become a tradition at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house.
Monday the Beta A's defeated the KU Law team, 14-6, to win their 11th A League Hill Championship in the last 13 years. The Beta No. 1 team won their 7th B League Hill title in the last 10 years by downing the Templin Hayjacks, 8-0.
On the first play of the A League game, Beta's Dave Swift intercepted a Law pass to set up the Beta's first touchdown. The Beta's scored on the next play on a pass from George Jackson to Steve Ridgway.
The extra point try failed as a pass was knocked down in the end zone.
In the next several minutes, both teams were plagued with pass interceptions that halted scoring drives on both sides.
A pass interference call on the KU Laws helped give the Betas better field position deep in Law territory to set up their next scoring drive.
The touchdown came on a pass from Jackson to George Chase to make the score 12-0. Dave Swift scored the extra points on a pass from Jackson.
The KU Laws threatened again toward the end of the first half, but the Beta's stubborn defense held and they took over on downs.
The KU Laws' only score came in the fourth quarter when Joe Jeter hit Steve Pickard in the end zone with a pass. The extra point failed making the final score 14-6 in favor of the Betas.
Defense was the name of the game in the B League game as neither the Betas nor Templin scored in the first half.
Both teams threatened several
Nov. 18 KANSAN 7
1969
times, but were not able to punch across a score.
The Beta's touchdown came in the second half when Larry Aldrich tossed a pass to Bob Gardner. Claude Aldrich collected the extra points on another pass from Aldrich to make the score 8-0.
Templin threatened late in the game but a key interception halted their drive.
Last year the Beta "A" team also defeated the KU Laws, 27-6, to take the championship and the Beta No.1 team beat the College Kids, 15-0, to capture the B League crown.
Canton, Ohio, is considered the birthplace of professional football. The National Football League was organized in this city in 1920.
NEW!
by the Byrds
"EASY RIDER"
reg. $4.98
$299
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
7
$299
JE 781
"I know the way home with my eyes closed."
Then you know the way too well.
Then you know the way too well. Because driving an old familiar route can make your drowsy, even if you've had plenty of sleep. If that happens on your way home for Thanksgiving, pull over, take a break and take two NoDoz* . It'll help you drive home with your eyes open. NoDoz. No car should be without it.
©1969 Bristol-Myers Co.
N60072
N60072
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
Belt yourself in Tapestry
at The 821 Regimental Shop
Faculty will debate credits
The question of giving academic credits for military science courses will be debated again. This time at the faculty meeting of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at 4:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the college, said discussion at the faculty meeting would center
on whether academic credits toward graduation requirements should be allowed for military science courses.
Shankel said a motion would be introduced calling for discontinuation of academic credits for military science courses which have not been integrated into the regular University curriculum by
1971.
The question of academic credit was not permitted by the University Senate during its session on ROTC. The Senate decided that the matter should be left up to the individual schools and colleges to decide.
Student basketball season tickets will go on sale Wednesday morning at Allen Field House, with the 7,500 tickets reserved on a first-come first-served basis.
Season tickets go on sale
The tickets, good for all 11 regular-season home games, cost $4 for students and $9 for spouses.
To get a student season ticket,
a student should take his KU-ID
and current registration certificate to the east entrance of Allen Field House. Sales end Friday at 4:30, or whenever the 7,500 tickets are gone.
The Opera Comique, Paris, burned May 25, 1887, killing 200 persons.
KU administrators meet in Kansas City
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and other KU administrators were in Kansas City Monday for a meeting of the University Development Committee.
FAILURES DECLINE
NEW YORK—The rate of business failures fell a sharp 22 percent in 1968, according to the Insurance Information Institute. The number of failures hit 9,636, the lowest point since 1953. The average liability per failure was $97,-654, down from the 1967 average of $102,332.
8 KANSAN Nov. 18 1969
Others from KU who attended the meeting were Richard Wintermote, director of the KU Alumni Association and Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University.
Yesterday's session was for preliminary discussion of developments the committee (principally an alumni group) will be asked to become involved with, said James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor.
Chalmers has a break from travel and talks Tuesday, Gunn said, but Wednesday he has budget hearings in Topeka. Thursday he has a Board of Regents meeting and Friday he will address a luncheon in connection with a meeting of the Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters.
Friends give gift
Barbara Lancaster, wife of professor of aerospace studies Raymond Lancaster, received a gift from some of her "long haired friends" Friday in celebration of the November moratorium.
Fellow members of her Topics and Problems of the Generation Gap class presented her a necklace of white and blue daisies with red centers. They also gave her a crocheted handbag of red, white and blue.
According to members of the Young Socialist Alliance, Blackstock will appear Thursday evening, Nov. 20. Neither time nor place have been re-set.
Nelson Blackstock, editor of the Young Socialist Magazine, and invited speaker at last night's SUA Minority Opinions Forum, was reportedly delayed in San Francisco, Calif., and unable to speak.
Speaker delayed
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
STUDY BREAK SPECIAL
SMALL PIZZA (Sausage, Pepperoni, Beef)
PLUS DRINK (Beer or soft)
$1.25
10 to 12 P.M
SHAKEY'S
544 W.23rd VI 2-2266
NEW!
"LIVE"
by 3 DOG NIGHT
reg. $4.98
$299
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Malls Shopping Ctr.
The image shows a group of five individuals standing in front of a mirror. They are facing each other, and there is a blurred figure in the foreground, likely another person, who is out of focus. The setting appears to be an office or a room with a large window or glass wall. There are no visible texts or identifiers within the image.
BELL
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company An Equal Opportunity Employer PERSONNEL RECORD
NAME Bruce Wilson AGE 24 POSITION Accounting Office Supervisor
RESPONSIBILITY Supervises data processing staff handling $10 million
in customer billing.
Southwestern Bell...where college graduates start in decision-making jobs.
Reactions vary everywhere
Moratorium called anticlimactic
Reactions to the November war moratorium Friday and Saturday varied, but many people, when asked their opinions were not aware that a moratorium was being observed.
Grumbacher
Artist
Supplies &
Materials
Custom
Picture
Framing
Decoupage
Supplies
Gifts
Davis Paints
918 Massachusetts
VL2 35M
Norman Yetman, associate professor of sociology and American studies, said this was due to a lack of communication between the moratorium steering committee and the rest of the community.
Reactions were also seen in the activities that took place. A group of 125 to 150 people marched down Massachusetts Street Friday afternoon. Later about 70 people signed a letter to President Nixon. Mrs. Jon Bowman, one of the organizers of the march, said the letter read:
lies of war dead. The reading of names of the war dead does no good."
don't think that's the point in question," said specialist fourth class Robert P. Lee, Kansas City, Mo., and 1967 KU graduate. "The question is how do we get out of the war in Vietnam, not whether it's good or bad."
William Conboy, professor of speech and drama, said that the moratoriums this month and last were anticlimactic.
"Nixon has his own plan for ending the war," said Bob Lynch, Boston freshman, "and I don't think outside pressure will change his mind."
"So far as I can tell," Conby said, "the people's attitudes have changed. There seems to be an increase in optimism, in hope."
Sherry Love, Topeka junior, said that she did not see much significance to the march on Washington.
"Democracy and freedom only exist with peace and hope for the future. War makes the future unsafe by distorting normal patterns of life. War kills and sours the constructive believing that young people are the best defense for democracy. If the young die or become cynical, a nation cannot keep its ideals. We ask our fellow citizens to join us. We ask you to hear us. Please stop the war."
"To me," she said, "the groups of people supporting the moratorium by speaking up in their own towns are the real supporters of the movement."
Lawrence Velvet, associate professor of law and moderator of the rally, said people are afraid the protests, speeches and demonstrations are not having an affect on the public.
"A portion of the people who don't support the moratorium don't have anything to lose in the war anyway," said private first class William R. Langron, of Belton, Mo., a junior at Central Missouri State College at Warensburg. "What we are gaining in this war, if anything at all, is far outweighed by our losses of both dead and injured, and our loss of pride in our country."
Prior to the march down Massachusetts Street, Irving J. Stoneback, former head of the Douglas County chapter of the National Farmers' Organization, began a speech by quoting from the Bible.
Second lieutenant Rodney G. Miller, former KU student from Independence, Mo., said, "The expression of opinions should not go to the point of breaking laws or invading the privacy of fami-
"In the new testament in the book of Matthew it is written, 'Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons of God,' " Stoneback said.
"Mr. Nixon says you are not having an effect, but you are," Stoneback said to students. "You know it, and Mr. Nixon knows it. Keep it up. You are right."
Nov.18 1969 KANSAN 9
Other speakers at the rally were Doug Hensley, Wichita senior and John C. Wright, professor of human development.
At the same time, reservists meeting at the Army Reserve Training Center, 2100 Iowa, expressed varied opinions this weekend about the November moratorium.
At the 8 a.m. Saturday opening formation, the troops were informed by their commanding officers that protesters had threatened to picket the reserve building. They were instructed to remain quiet and ignore any demonstration. However, no protesters appeared and the training schedule was carried out as planned.
"War is inherently bad, but I
Topsy's
on the Mall
pop corn
candy apples
ice cream
home made
fudge
LOFT'S
CAKES
open till 10:00 p.m.
NEW!
by the Byrds
"EASY RIDER"
reg. $4.98
$299
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
Mallis Shopping Ctr.
FILMS
November 18:
Gangster Series. Double
Bill. James Cagney and
Jean Harlow in
William A. Wellman's
PUBLIC ENEMY
7:00 p.m.
Edward G. Robinson in
Merryn LeRoy's
LITTLE CAESAR
9:00 p.m. Ballroom
75c each, $1.00 for both
November 19:
Classical Film Series
Katherine Hepburn in
George Stevens's
ALICE ADAMS
7 & 9 Dyche, 75c
November 20:
Special Film Series
William Holden and
Gloria Swanson in
Billy Wilder's
SUNSET
BOULEVARD
8:00 Dyche, 75c
November 21, 22
Popular Film Series
CASINO ROYALE
with Woody Allen, Peter
Sellers, Ursula Andress,
David Niven, Joanna Petet,
Orson Welles, Daliah
Lavi, Deborah Kerr, William
Holden, Charles
Boyer, Jean - Paul Bel-
mondo, George Raft and
John Huston.
7 & 9:30 Dyche. 50c
Turkey Time is here! Register for your free Turkey at Sandy's
KILT DANCE
That's right—every time you purchase an order of food at Sandy's—you can register for a big 14 lb. turkey. Students! Think of all the joy you'll cause walking in the door back home with a 14 lb. turkey under your arm. (Attention hippies—maybe then you won't have to shave off your beard and sideburns for mommy and daddy —bribe them with a turkey.)
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th
Sandy's
TOPS
TOPS
Games for Weekend 11/22-23
TOPS
Wardrobe
Care
Centers
TOPS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
1517 W. 6th—1526 W. 23rd
In By 9 – Out By 5
Same Day Service
"PIGSKIN PICKS CONTEST"
Winner of this week's contest will receive $10 worth of dry cleaning service. 2nd & 3rd place winners $5 worth of dry cleaning services.
Circle Your Choice as Winner
Oklahoma State Kansas State Nebraska Air Force S.M.U. Iowa Purdue Tulane Ohio State Mich.State Oregon State Penn State Dartmouth Rice U.C.L.A. California Tennessee Wyoming Wisconsin Harvard
at Iowa State
at Colorado
at Oklahoma
at Notre Dame
at Baylor
at Illinois
at Indiana
at L.S.U.
at Michigan
at Northwestern
at Oregon
at Pittsburgh
at Princeton
at T.C.U.
at Southern Cal
at Stanford
at Kentucky
at Houston
at Minnesota
at Yale
Pick these scores:
Missouri___ at Kansas___
Oakland___ at K.C. Chiefs___
Name
Address
CONTEST RULES
To enter: Clip this slate out of the paper or pick up a free entry blank at either TOPS store—1517 West 6th —1526 West 23rd, mark or write out choices and send then to TOPS Pigskin Picks.
1. Print name and address plainly on entry.
2. Mail entries to TOPS Pigskin Picks, 1517 West 6th, or bring in personally at either location. No entries accepted postmarked or delivered after Noon Friday.
3. Winners will be posted in both TOPS stores Monday, and will appear in next week's contest in the paper.
4. Only one entry per person each week.
5. Winners will be judged on most correct guesses and on closest scores of KU and K.C. Chiefs games. In case of ties, earliest postmark decides.
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS
1—Dale Miller
2—Melvin Bollinger
3—T. Henry
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT is DRAUGHT NIGHT
All the beer you can or dare drink. For the Edification, Recreation and Inebriation of the entire KU student body.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 8-12
Admission:
Guys-$100
Girls-50c
Beer: FREE
Open: Wed.- Fri. - Sat.
8-12
804 W.24th (directly behind Lums)
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
local newspaper are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier Inputs for mag, or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM, Arm. Will match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6 tf
BOOTS—look at. PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6.
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Edition, Campus Mnist House, 411 W. 14th St.
tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road.
843-4836. 12-2
Leaving the U.S.-1960 Plymouth
Vallant--Standard-Very good tires--
heater-Eng, and transmission good.
$8000 Also. Masterworks stereo
(RC) Mobil turntable 2-7472
Both must sell this month. VI 2-7472
after 5. 11-20
Your Saturday night blasts will be a bright success with candles and strobe candles found only at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 11-18
1967 VW Karnann-Ghia conv. New tires, battery, paint, FM-AM radio. Best Offers. Randy Leffingwell. 842-4325. 11-18
1967 Riverside 125 cc. Excellent condition. Cheap, fun transportation.
843 racing model with extra parts. 843-8163 for 3 p.m. each weekends. 11-20
Guitar: Martin D-28, like new with hard case. Call 843-7537 after 11-20
Must sell immediately—a white 1965
V.W. with radio and sunroof. $680 or
best offer. VI 2-1188 or VI 2-8444.
11-21
Fritz Company has special bargains on inspected used winter and high-way tires. Also New "83" Series Town & Country tires sale priced. Expert from end segment and breakout stores for end segment and mechanical. Fritz Co. 745 N.H. VI 3-43211 11-21
Set of 2 Snowtires, tubeless 7.35 x 14
25 tires over 1,000 to 1,000
$25 Call 842-2244 11-19
GOODYEAR TIRES
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment
& Balancing
Compleated Mechanical Service
Brake Kits 98c
Carburetor service
Motor Tune-up with
Sun Equipment.
Page Fina Service
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Big Rummage Sale. Community Building. 11th & Mass. Fri, Nov. 21st, 10:00 to 50:00, Sat, Nov. 22nd, Noon More than 25 families contributing. 11-21
Ampex Micro 85 solid state Cassette stereo and recorder, walnut cased, completely outfitted, $14.9" walnut beige speakers, tapes included. Cost includes a mandolin and additional year old, must sell $150 or best offer Call Kris at V i 2-4965. 11-21
Must sell Minolta SR-1 35 mm. camera in excellent condition. Have 1.1/8 f-55 lenses. Make your best offer. Save up to $59 new. Call Vi 1 2-5689 after shopping. 11-21
Six tickets to, KU-MU game. Call Mike, VI 2-5677. 11-19
1964 Cultlass—Oldsmobile —2 dr.-V8.
new tires—new shocks—good condition—original friend. Call VI 2-3146.
ask for Bob. 11-19
Tape recorder—model 5232A Scars Silverstone. New cost $100—Sell for $50. New condition. 843-7872. 11-21
Portable TV 12 in. BW with UHF and earpiece! Great for dorm viewing.
Don't disturb your roommate. $50.
Phone 842-3179. 11-21
1960 English Hillman for sale. Ideal for school car. $135. See at McConnell Lumber Co. VI 3-3877 844 E. 13th St. 11-21
Have moved into an apartment. Must save money on rent. Will take best offer.
New- unusual—ancient Chinese stone rubbings—Mexican Bark Paintings—many other unusual items can be purified by a museum history Gift Shop. 8:30-4:30. 12-2
Kustom 100 Watt amp., trem,
and reverb, almost brand new, was
$425, yours for $285. Steve Dexter.
843-7404. 12-2
"The Fountains." Why not save that expensive rent money and buy your own building equity in your own home. By hedging against inflation, by taking allowable tax benefits, for an actual Estate Agency, VI2-5570 or VI2-4262.
1964 Skylark convertible, red, white power top, automatic, new heater, recent valve job, brand new Polish Great car! $250. VI3-12 1-2 after 3.
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you live in Chicago. Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat! We are at I 2-5150. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tt
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair problem, and provides a station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynakit, and Maranzit. Call 843-1844. tt
Loans to junior, senior and grad. stud.
university financial Finance. 725 Mm
S I-8074.
THE
SANDWICH SHOP
in the WALL
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill.
DELICATESEN &
Going to Wichita or Eldorado, Kansas, Tuesday, Nov. 26. Will give rides for $4.00. Call Carl Ferguson, Templin Hall (Room 603) V1-21200. 11-21
GRADUATE STUDENTS LOCATING TEACHING JOBS: Revolutionary app- candidate candidates. Candidates to schools Inexpensive Deadline December 1, 1969 public intercept. Box 31 Harvard, Sq. P.O. Cambridge Massachusetts. qs2138.
Rallye—Lost in the dark, Registration 6:30 p.m., Mall's Shopping Center, Nov. 22, information, 842-4725.
FOR RENT
Looking for for that unique Christmas gift for the person "who has everywhere rewritten truth found only at the Hodge Podge answer, 15 W. 9th. 11-18
Rosalela's Hotel needs you. Do you need 17? Come find out, call (316) Kansas, or reservations. Write Harper, Kansas, or 8705 for entertainments schedules. 11-18
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6185.
The food is terrible but the entertainment is great at Alice's Restaurant 1-20
Married Couples - 2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kiltechs to $165 plus utilities. Hird Construction Company VI 3-6136 or VI 3-5730
Need one student to take over my math class at Gatehouse. $8.75 per month- available immediately—no deposit required. VI 3-7881, m. to 12 p.m. 12-3
First floor furnished apartment for males or married couple. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone V1 3-5767. 11-20
Unique 4 bedroom apt. for 3-4 students $45-50 each. Utility. pd. Furnished nicely. Two pvt. entrances. 1005 Kentucky or 842-9249. 11-21
Large deluxe room for upper classman. Wall to wall carpet-private entrance, very quiet—2 blocks west of campus-choice area-IV 3-7827. 11-19
LOST
Tan suede belt from ladies' jacket at Steppenwolf concert, reward offered.
Call VI 2-8332 after 5 p.m. 11-18
Lost—small, short-haired female dog
mixed breed. About 2 years old.
Bad teeth, answers to name "Sugar."
VI 2-0036
11-21
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part person, only person only. Burger Chef, 844 Iowa.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid, VI 3-4032, tf
For the best in:
● Dry Cleaning
● Alterations
- Reweaving
New York Cleaners
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive. "New Approach of Western Civilization." 4th Edition. Campus Mad House. 411. 14th St.
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Men's & Ladies' 2 piece Suites $1.29
B
Mon., Tues. & Wed.
with dry clean order
- Plain Dresses __ $1.29
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
- Shirts Laundered
4 for $1
ROYAL MASTER CLEANERS 842 Mass.
7:30 - 6:00 Mon. - Sat.
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Tacos Tonight?
DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
COIN OP. PICK UP
LAUNDRY STATION
19th and La. 2346 Iowa
19th and Miss. VI 3-9868
- Portraits
- Lawrence, Kansas 66044
- Applications
- 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
- Passports
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared! tune-ups
"Please call for appointment"
TOMORROW
Bob Blank. Owner
HIXON STUDIO
721 Mass.
VI 3-0330
GARDENLAND, INC.
914 West 23rd
V1 2-1596
Aquarium for Fish
Aquariums & Fish
GARDENLAND, INC.
TARR'S LAUNDRY
Daily 8-5 p.m.
Saturday 8-1 p.m.
"We Do Your Laundry
For You."
1903 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Massachusetts
TYPING
Part time help during school; full time in summer. Must have expertise in packing and moving of household goods. Call 843-0380 for information. 11-18
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in Lawrence at least one year. Reading graduate preferred VI 3-6424. 11-21
Established professional 7-piece
instruments, trumpet, and trombone player. Be
willing to travel weekends and summers.
Union wages. Call 842-751-11-21
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Silence elapses
(Continued from page 1)
at one of the craters flashing under Anolo I2.
The astronauts sailed around the moon at a 15 degree angle to
Clement endorsed
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) polls last November," Byrd said. And Nixon was elected, he said, because he "appeared to be less liberal than the nominee of my own party," Hubert H. Humphrey.
With the support of Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., chairman of the Senate Ethics Committee, Byrd said, Senate liberals of both parties opposed Haynsworth not on grounds of ethics but because of "his judicial philosophy and the fact that he is a white southern Conservative."
"The so-called liberal establishment controls most of the news media of this country," he said, "and cannot reconcile itself to the results of last year's presidential election."
Byrd who ranks third in the Senate Democratic leadership, told his colleagues they would dishonor the Senate if they reject Haynsworth, chief judge of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, on the basis of "unproved and unprovable charges."
Topekans comments
(Continued from page 1)
He was in favor of the march "as long as it accomplished something."
A middle-aged Lawrence couple, whose son will enter the service soon, said they took an active role both in the Topeka march and Friday's peace march by Lawrence residents.
"We've been against the war even before it became popular to be against it," they said.
An old man leaned on a rake in front of his house and watched the marchers pass en route to the parade site with a puzzled look on his face.
"If they want to do it, let them," he said, "it's their privilege."
Although the majority of the approximately 400 marchers were from KU, representatives from Ottawa University, Baker University, Washburn University and Wichita State University also participated.
"We've come here for the same purpose as everyone else—to show our protest of the war," said a professor in charge of the Baker University group.
12 KANSAN Nov. 18 1969
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the lunar equator in an orbit ranging 72 to 194 miles above the surface—almost precisely the desired altitudes.
They fired the jolting blast of their main command ship engine at 9:47 p.m. to drop into lunar orbit, but ground controllers had to wait until the craft came from behind the moon to find out whether it was successful—a tense vigil that lasted 32 minutes.
Ending a quarter-million mile trip from earth, the astronauts flashed behind the moon and out of contact with earth at 9:34 p.m.
At one point the astronauts noted and showed on television, the "ebony black" of space over a splotchy brown and green moon horizon.
A
THE HANGING OF
JOHN BROWN
Photo by Fred Chan
John Brown at his best
This book is only one of the articles on display in Spencer Library. The John Brown exhibit features his Beecher's Bible rifle, letters he wrote to his family and other personal items. The exhibit runs till the end of the semester.
IFC cries freedom; Senate is firm
KU's 29 national fraternities have issued a "Declaration of Independence."
A bill submitted to the Student Senate by Dennis Embry, Great Bend junior and student senator, sparked the Interfraternity Council to take a stand on the issue.
Title III of the bill reads:
"Any agency or organization within the university that attempts to usurp an individual, organized living group's right to determine its own social affairs or to coerce a living group for the same end, except in the case of a duly authorized judicial body by the university which is charged with the specific responsibility of maintaining state and federal laws and general university regulations on the campus of the University of Kansas, shall be in violation of this legislation and shall be brought before the proper judicial authority of the University of Kansas."
To counter-attack Embry's bill, the IFC Executive Council drew up a Statement of Policy of the Fraternities of the University of Kansas.
The statement reads in part:
"In concurrence with the constitution of the National Interfraternity Conference and the constitutions of our national organizations, we recognize the right of the Chancellor and the Board of Regents to address our fraternities on all matters that effect our relationship with the University.
"We recognize the membership of our chapters and the Councils of Representatives and Presidents of the Interfraternity Council as the only authorized bodies to establish general policy and laws over our fraternities.
like body outside our system to establish statutes or address themselves to the internal affairs of the fraternity system at the University of Kansas."
"We do not recognize the powers of the Student Senate or any
"We had the choice of either acting or being acted upon with this particular bill now, or further legislation later, so the IFC decided to act first." said M. Mark Retonde, Mo. senior and President of IFC.
Similar statements of policy have been written by the Women's Panhellenic Association, the Associated University Resident Halls and the All-Scholarship Hall Council, said Retonde.
GERMAN BEER EXPORTS
The Brewer's Association said exports this year are up by 7 per cent. Two-thirds of the exported beer was in bottles and cans, the other third in keys.
BONN (UPI)—West Germany remains the world's leading exporter of beer, with shipments abroad during the first six months of 1969 totalling 17.1 million gallons.
End nearing for Kennedy after attack
- * *
BULLETIN
* *
Joseph P. Kennedy, 84, father of a U.S. President and two senators, died at 10:45 a.m. today after suffering a heart attack Saturday.
HYANISPORT, Mass. (UPI)
—His wife Rose, and Sen, Edward M. Kennedy, the only surviving son, cancelled public appearances elsewhere in the state to be near the ailing eldest Kennedy.
The senior Kennedy was ambassador to Great Britain from 1937 to 1941.
MEXICAN OIL LOANS
Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, widow of President John F. Kennedy, flew in from Greece. R. Sargent Shriver, U.S. ambassador to France, and his wife Eunice Kennedy Shriver also gathered with other members of the family at the Kennedy compound on Nantucket Sound.
MEXICO CITY (UPI)—Eleven per cent of the total 1969 budget of Petroleo Mexicanos, the government oil monopoly, is being provided by domestic and foreign medium and short-term loans. The amount is $149,280,000 (m), the agency reports.
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International Club Discussion Series
"Crisis in Northern Ireland"
speakers:
Thomas Davey,
graduate student from Northern Ireland
Professor Donald McCoy,
Professor of American History
Thursday, November 20
4:00 p.m. Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room
Apollo 12 hits bullseye
Illustration courtesy of Ryan Aeronautical Company
In this illustration which will take place later today, Surveyor 3, resting in the Ocean of Storms crater on the moon since April 19, 1967, is approached by Apollo 12 astronauts Charles Conrad and Alan Bean. In the background is the lunar module Intrepid, which landed the astronauts safely on the moon at 1:55 a.m.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, Nov. 19, 1969
80th Year, No.48
BSU president calls Chancellor's reply to blacks' demands vague, unspecific
Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., senior and president of the Black Student Union (BSU), said Tuesday Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. was vague and unspecific in his reply to the BSU demands.
in his reply to the BSU demands.
"He didn't make any commitments," Bright said. When the BSU executive committee read it, we thought it was shallow."
Chalmers made the reply in a five page letter addressed to
Bright. The Chancellor presented the letter to the BSU executive committee during a meeting Friday with members of the committee.
The list of demands presented to the Chancellor Oct. 31 called for, among other things, the creation and funding of the positions of dean of black students and dean of black student affairs, establishment of an Afro-American Institute of Research and Community Development and construction of Malcolm X Hall to house the Institute.
Chalmers said after the Friday meeting he "could not legally accept proposals that would create a separate hierarchical organization for black students within the University."
He stated in his letter to Bright (Continued on page 16)
BY AL ROSSITER JR.
UPI Space Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The Apollo 12 astronauts made an astonishing bullseye landing on the Ocean of Storms today, planted Old Glory and set up a scientific laboratory that immediately began sending the moon's secrets back to earth.
Charles H. "Pete" Conrad and Alan L. Bean, exultant and whistling as they worked, became the third and fourth Americans to stride the dusty surface of the moon after a pinpoint descent less than two city blocks from target.
They had difficulty removing the hot, radioactive plutonium that fuels the generator powering the mission's five major experiments. Millions of viewers were disappointed when the color television camera conked out and halted lunar transmission.
The third member of the crew, Richard F. Gordon, whirled above in lunar orbit and spotted the Intrepid lander on the rim of the crater in which a Surveyor 5 robot spacecraft set down two years ago.
The spirits of the two surface explorers were high. The 39-year-old Conrad, America's shortest spaceman, had a wisecrack as he made the last long step down the ladder from Intrepid.
"That may have been a small one step for Neil Armstrong but it's a long one for me."
The two new moonmen reentered their landing capsule, closing the hatch at 9:29 a.m., after setting a record for time walking the lunar landscape. Bean spent two hours and 58 minutes on the surface and Conrad three hours and 39 minutes. The Apollo 11 astronauts' longest excursion was two and one-half hours.
This was the beginning of real scientific exploration of the moon and it kept them hustling lugging out the seismometer and other delicate equipment it was hoped will function for more than a year. And at 8:22 a.m., operating on nuclear power, it began beaming data back to scientists on earth.
The entire science station would have been without power had they been unable to get the eight pound slug of plutonium 238 out of a special graphicice and beryllium cask on the Intrepid's side. They struggled to remove it with a special tool and Conrad warned Bean:
"Don't touch that! If you touch that, that's all she wrote."
They finally slipped the plutonium out and inserted it in the nuclear generator.
"I whistle while I work," Bean said, whistling a few notes to prove it.
At 6:42 a.m. Conrad and Bean planted the Stars and Stripes on the lunar surface, but the camera problems prevented Americans from watching the moment.
"I hope everybody down there is as proud of it as we are to put it up." Conrad said, burying the staff into the soft lunar dust.
"We're proud of what you're doing," Houston control radioed back.
(Continued to page 16)
'Then we moved on past the dream'
(Editor's note: Richard Louv, Wichita junior, gives his impression of last weekend's moratorium activities in Washington, D.C.)
By RICHARD LOUV
Kansan Correspondent
Kansas correspondent "Generally speaking, all the great events have been distorted, most of the important causes concealed, some of the principle characters never appear, and all who figure are so misunderstood and misrepresented, that the result is a complete mystification."
The Midwest slid by. The sameness from town to town was the same. Only the trees changed—now tall and straight, now twisted and short. Birds scattered in front of the bus but soon collected again in formation. The snow raced the wind and the scene was like Christmas with the gift uncertain on the eve of the event.
—Disraeli
Now and then we passed a hunter. And before and after the hunters would always be the towns, dropped like bathroom graffiti on the earth. All the signs were the same—S and H Green Stamps. Howard
Johnson's, A&P, Midas Mufler, Sears, Hillcrest, Milhaven, McDonald's. Like graffiti the names become trite, overused, thought out without thought.
Someone was reading aloud quotes from Spiro Agnew. We were laughing when the bus was stranded in the middle of Ohio with the wind blowing snow all around us. The low hills were lonely and haunting. A student asked, "What can we do here?" He looked out at the barren land, "There's nothing here to overthrow."
THE BUS WAS fixed and it moved on through the land. After a few hours it finally pulled in at a truck stop and Wolfe stood up at the front. "Friends, we'll have 25 minutes to fill the bus and unload the passengers." They headed for the restrooms as the bus was refueled.
As the students, most of them with long hair, lined into the restrooms, the truck drivers came pouring out. They watched the boys. The drivers were winking at each other. One made an effeminate gesture, but there was fear in his
We traveled from the cold land into the colder land. The cities kept repeating themselves. They all looked like Sioux City, Wichita, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Zanesville, Eudora, East Overshoe. Are we out of Kansas City yet? How far to Oz? How far to Camelot? How far to Pepperland?
Bob, who sat next to me, looked out at the houses that were all the same.
"WHAT WILL THEY do with all these houses in fifty years? Urban renewal is going to be a wish of the past," he said.
eyes—fear that was in all their eyes, fear that made me afraid.
Another Howard Johnson's moved up the road toward the bus.
We picked up a new driver there, having given the old one an ovation. He tipped his hat to us, and the new driver got on looking grouchy.
Bob was describing himself,
"With tears in his eyes, the
idealistic protestor waves a
fond goodby to the multicolored mystic motel, secure
with the knowledge that more
Apollo 12 headed for the Ocean of Storms. The bus approached Maryland. A student said excitedly, pointing out the window, "There it is! Behind those trees. I found America! Driver, turn off that dirt road, the one with the sign that says no trespassing!" The driver just smiled and then we saw the lights of the Capital.
What once might have been Camelot was now Oz; something strange and hard to penetrate, sometimes shimmering and cold like an emerald.
--get hurt the marshals will be circulating with first aid and eye drops for gassings. There was some violence today, so it's starting already . . ."
We entered that magic city, passed on the way by a troop carrier.
Howard Johnson's lay on the road ahead."
People swarmed around us in the camp. They were dressed in many costumes; army coats and trench coats, cossack caps and cowboy hats. Their arms were bound in black and their breath made small white clouds.
Wolfe was speaking. "We're passing out American Civil Liberties Union cards that tell you what to do if you're arrested. If you're clubbed, don't hit back. We want them to know that we came in peace for peace. Listen to the student marshals. If you
THE SIGNAL CAME and we collected what gear we needed. A box of the names of Kansans killed in Vietnam was pulled from behind my seat by Wolfe, who asked above the noise if anyone wanted a special name to carry* in the March Against Death. I asked for Dave Stone's card. At first Wolfe could not find the name.
"Was Dave killed in action?" Wolfe asked.
"How else would he be killed?" he laughed, looking around at the others standing in the aisle. Wolfe looked up and stared at him for several seconds, then again began to look through the box until he found the name.
A student moved beside us.
"Here it is." He looked at me.
"Was he your friend?"
"I met him once. He was a friend's best friend. He went to KU."
"Hold on to him tight." Wolfe handed me the card and I moved with the rest down the aisle and into the cold.
PEOPLE WENT everywhere. The camp was set up on the banks of the Potoniae, with car-
(Continued to page 2)
'Then we moved on past the dream'
(Continued from page 1)
nival tents lining the shore. Across the water was the Lincoln Memorial, shining under spotlights. The Washington Monument stood like a bright white rocket pointing to some other frontier. And around us the trees were shaking in the wind with dark shapes running between them from tent to tent.
1
Someone stopped behind me. I'm not sure who it was, because he moved on quickly. But with a voice that sounded like an old man's he said two words, "Valley Forge." Then he was gone and the wind blew his phrase away.
Police move to meet students at Dupont Circle
Some of the marshals had been standing in the cold acting as student police for the entire March Against Death, which had started seven hours earlier and would end in three hours. They directed the people through the tents to pick up name cards and join the march.
Photo by Ray DiTirro
I CARRIED Dave Stone across the bridge and toward the capital. I carried him in Oz toward the White House, but the Wizard was warm in Florida, and no one except the hundreds of military guards were listening as we walked in front of the White House and yelled out each name that we carried. Some of the voices that called the names were hoarse and shaking with the cold. Some of the voices broke. Then we moved on past the dream—the great white glowing building with the names bouncing off and echoing. No lights were on inside.
It was 1 am, when we started across the bridge over the Potomac. The wind was like ice water spray that cut you into another slice each time a gust came off the river. The temperature was in the 20s. A bell tower at the end of the bridge was tolling. We passed it showily in single file as it rang for each of the dead.
Finally we approached the Capitol Building. Many of the marchers had broken the single file and were huddled together under blankets, walking slowly.
I carried Dave Stone down the long street. My candle kept going out.
At a street corner a roar arose and thirty troop carriers thundered by with ghostly faces staring out over the tail gates. Broken eggs were everywhere, thrown at the daylight marchers.
WE REACHED THE Capitol Building and laid the names in a long row of wooden coffins. A middle-aged woman in front of me held her's close to her breast for a moment. Her eyes were closed. And then she dropped it and walked off quickly. I put Dave's name in a coffin and whispered, "Dave Stone, may he rest in Peace." And the bell at the bridge was still ringing.
Grey dawn turned to bright morning and at last we saw the sun. It warmed us a little and we walked toward the Capital, three of us now separated from the rest of the Kansans.
The long park was drowned in people as the morning moved on. Near 11 a.m. Eugene McCarthy spoke in the park. He said half a million people were better witness than 52,000 telegrams sent by the "silent majority." He said to carry on. The marchers carried on, forming into the parade that strung itself through the city.
The New York Avenue Presbyterian Church was a very cold place. The draft blew in from opening doors across the rows of tired marchers who were not allowed to lie down. Perhaps the church officials feared an orgy. Out of the 23 hours the Kansas delegation was in Washington all but three or four were spent outside in the cold.
McCarthy did not march. He left in a car.
THE MARCHERS HELD to
together like a fine fabric of many
colors. But woven into that fabr-
ic were strands of soft sadness.
or madness, and if the right strand was pulled, the cloth would fall apart. Hundreds of well organized Student Mobe marshals held it together, arms linked on each side of the parade.
Nov.19
1969
2 KANSAN
At one point it turned, deflected by a half-circle of buses pulled up to keep the march away from the White House. The parade moved down through the rows of police, some of them smiling, some of them dressed like spacemen, some of them with that same fear in their eyes that the truckdrivers had shown.
Then the parade flowed into the long park below the Washington Monument. The people sat for an hour waiting for the show. Peter and Mary (Paul could not be found) sang their songs, and then came William Sloane Coffin, Dr. Spock, Dick Gregory, Rip Torn, Dave Dellinger, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Coretta King, and others. Timothy Leary was enthroned in the bleachers beside the stage.
GREGORY TALKED OF the great moral force that could move the earth into heaven. Arlo Guthrie grinned and tilted back his cowboy hat, "I don't have much to say. It's already been said. I don't even think anybody had to show up. I mean, when they put the machine guns on the Capitol Building, well, the point was made."
And George McGovern spoke above the catcalls of the Weathermen. (Dylan: "You don't need a weatherman to tell which way the wind blows.)
A girl in front of me began to cry with the cold. A boy helped her to her feet and she began to cough and others had their eyes clinched tight, their arms wrapped around their knees. They seemed dead, like Indian mummies. But the mass would suddenly come alive, sounding like a thousand football games.
ON CUE THEY became grain in the wind, waving hands in Peace. All together, yet all apart—an image arose of a half million different thoughts rising up in a single cloud. The cloud rose above Washington and out of it came the heartbeat thunder of "Peace Now, Peace Now, Peace Now, Peace Now." And the single passion above the sea of hands waving all together was somehow as frightening as warnings of war. The cloud rained down a warning, a warning of passion gone mad. Perhaps.
I wandered into the city. They were strange, these thoughts. The cloud had moved into my mind and a fog blew all around. The cold and the crowd moving up the street pushed me into a hotel lobby, where the marchers huddled in the warmth. A girl asked me where a television was. "I have to find one to see what's going on."
Out of the lobby. Into the street again. Thirty-hours without sleep for most of these people. Some had slept less. Many more hours to go. Found my way to a movie theater in the cloud. Paid the money to the
Police prepared to meet members of the Weathermen, a militant faction of Students for a Democratic Society, at DuPont Circle Friday night. This confrontation was one of only two violent events marring an otherwise peaceful three-day protest in Washington, D.C. Weathermen also broke windows and disrupted business in downtown Washington Saturday afternoon.
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man and sank down under celluloid. Images. Two movies I don't remember. Dreams. "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie." Don't remember the name of the other movie. Remember nothing of either show. Wake up suddenly, shaking with cold. Then finally out of the darkness and again on the street.
I SAT AT a counter waiting for the phone in a drugstore. The bus for Kansas was leaving at 8 p.m. and I didn't know the departure point. Call the church. The fog hangs on.
A black woman, about forty,
once pretty, sat next to me. "Can
you help me? The cabs won't
come because of all the people."
stop a cab. None would stop.
Finally I ran to a streetlight where the cars were lined up and walked down that line, knocking on the windows of three or four taxis. The drivers stared straight ahead. They wouldn't look at me. Again, that fear. Running back to the woman I said, "I'm sorry. No one will stop."
The cloud was gone. The fog was lifting, I made my call and we went out to the street corner and tried to wave down a cab. They wouldn't stop. "If you need a place to stay tonight," she was saying, shaking, "You can sleep at my place. It's in the worst part of town, but you can sleep upstairs in my boyfriend's apartment cause he stays with me."
Her face was a mask with features of dry crying. She was holding her stomach. "I have this pain in my gut. I've been carrying this television all day. I want to get the television home. I want to get home."
"I'll go inside and call my girlfriend who lives near here. It's within walking distance, but she doesn't have a car. Will you carry my TV there? Please." We went to the girlfriend's and the woman thanked me. I ran back to an intersection.
"TM LEAVING AT eight. But thanks." For an hour we tried to
(Continued to page 13)
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Campus briefs
FBI agent to speak
Jack H. Porter, an agent for the FBI, will speak to members of the Accounting Society at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Pine Room. The tonic of his speech will be "The Accountant and the FBI."
Porter will discuss duties of accountants working for the FBI and will present actual cases of fraud discovered by FBI accountants.
Spanish dancers to perform
The KU Concert Course will present Maria Alba and her company of Spanish dancers at 8:20 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23, in University Theatre, Students may get free reserved seats by presenting their KU I.D.'s at the ticket office.
Recital series features quartet
The School of Fine Arts presents the University String Quartet at 8 p.m. Nov. 24 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Appearing as part of the faculty recital series, the quartet consists of Howard Boyajian, violin; Karel Blaas, viola; Paul Todd, violin; Raymond Stuhl, cello. They are assisted by John Boulton, flute; and Jane Abbott, piano. Admission to the performance is free.
Novelist to read
Herbert Gold, novelist, reads his works at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Gold is presented by the English department.
Professor Karl Bosi from the University of Munich will lecture on "Caste, Orders and Classes in Medieval Europe" at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Museum of Art Lecture Room, Spooner Hall.
Medieval society to be discussed
The lecture is in conjunction with the Museum of Art exhibition "The Waning Middle Ages."
Senior recital tonight
The School of Fine Arts presents Michael Latimer, Springfield, Mo. senior, on trumpet in a recital at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Admission to the recital is free.
Pizza rush party to be tonight
Sigma Delta Chi, a national journalism fraternity, will hold a rush meeting for current and prospective members at 6 p.m. tonight at the Pizza Hut on Iowa St. All interested persons are invited and those having questions may contact Bob Butler, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., senior.
Nov.19 KANSAN 3
1969
Beer motion made tonight
The Student Senate will hear a motion tonight to direct the Union Operating Board to start immediate sale of beer in the Kansas Union.
Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and president of the student body, said the Board had already applied for a beer sales license and started plans for beer sales in the Union.
Kansas Attorney General Kent Frizzel last year ruled beer was not an alcoholic beverage, paving the way for beer sale and consumption on state property.
The meeting will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Investigation slated
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Justice Department announced Tuesday it is investigating to determine if some members of the Nobilization Committee to End the Vietnam War violated federal antiriot statutes here last weekend.
"Any time you have persons you suspect come across state lines to engage in violence you then have a duty to investigate to see if they violated the anti-riot laws," said Deputy Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst.
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KANSAN Comment
A letter to Agnew
Dear Mr. Agnew:
With a copy pencil stuck over one ear and a notebook clutched in my hand, I began my reporting career. I was pretty raw, that chill September night when I set out on my first assignment. And I took it all pretty seriously.
The family gently poked fun at my hardboiled "just the facts" attitude. But I only smiled and continued to listen raptly to my journalism instructor who attempted to pound into our brains the difference between news stories and editorials.
The sheets of yellow paper on which I typed my news stories were returned to me with scribbled sarcastic comments in the margins: "Sez who?" "Name your sources." "That's only what you think. What's the facts?" And a lot more comments too volatile to print here.
We learned about "interpretive news stories." These weren't articles which merely paraded our own points of view. These were just like ordinary, objective news stories—only much longer, requiring exhausting legwork, and much more time spent in rewriting to make the meanings clear.
We were taught such cardinal rules as: "A reporter never writes editorials on a topic about which he is attempting also to write straight news stories." "A Kansan reporter never becomes involved in student politics, does not run for office and does not become active in political groups if he is writing about these same groups." "Dig. Look at all sides of each question." "What the reporter thinks doesn't count: his job is to reflect others' opinions, tie them together, make them coherent."
Our journalism instructors at the William Allen White School of Journalism stress ethics and responsibility. Fair representation for all
sides. I can remember during last semester's elections, for instance, when I spent several tedious hours measuring the Kansan column inches given to each political party to assure each group the same amount of space in the newspaper.
That is how they train journalists at the KU William Allen White School of Journalism. Not just newspaper journalists, but also those enrolled in radio, magazine and television sequences.
We don't always live up to those high standards we have been given. I can recall many times, when working in the "real" world for a "real" newspaper, being ordered to write a news story a certain way to please an advertiser, or a good friend of the publisher, or the editor's political bias. I am ashamed to say I have written several unfair news stories over the past few years.
And my fellow journalists in television, radio magazines—and all the other media—make mistakes too.
But I'm inside the news business, even if I still am kind of raw, and I know that the majority of newsmen and women attempt to be fair and accurate in their presentation of the news. When we are not, it is our own responsibility to make changes.
For the minute any kind of outside pressure is put on journalists—a threat, a hint of censorship, a demand to present of one particular viewpoint—the newsman's entire perspective goes a little bit cockeyed.
A newsman can only write and broadcast freely when he is read and listened to freely. Without any demands or restraints other than those within himself.
Joanna K. Wiebe
Newspaper distortion
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
One of the major functions of a newspaper always should be to alert readers not to believe everything they read in a newspaper.
The distortion of war reporting has been less in this decade than perhaps ever before, but the distortion is still pronounced and has a propagandistic effect.
By now, everyone has surely realized that anyone killed by US troops in Vietnam is listed as a Communist, when probably the better share would call themselves Vietnamese Nationalists. American headlines have announced the number of "enemy" soldiers killed with little hesitation, never pondering over the question, "Whose enemy?"
The latest copy of Chicago Journalism Review has printed a list of euphemisms invented by the US Army information bureau and picked up unquestionably by America's sheepish newspapers. Here are a few:
Viet Cong tax collectors are Viet Cong Extortionists. South Vietnamese tax collectors are of course called tax collectors as fits their public service position.
The Nation Liberation Front is the Viet Cong. South Vietnam is The Republic of Vietnam, while The Democratic Republic of Vietnam (its official name) is North Vietnam.
A mercenary is a Civilian Irregular Defense Group volunteer.(as long as he's on the South's side).
With the continued help of America's press, Nixon should have little trouble rallying the misled "forces of virtue" against the "Peking-Moscow forces of evil."
Hamburger Hill is officially Hill 937.
A Viet Cong deserter is a rallier or returnee.
And US troop withdrawal is redeployment
But when human life is involved, black and white reasoning is a far greater sin than dissent. Isn't it?
Readers' write
To the editor:
In the study of mass communications, David Manning White's "gatekeeper" theory is a topic of considerable concern. White's study has to do with the function of individual journalists in the communications network and their responsibility to present clear, factual and reliable information to the reader or listener.
Assuming that the news media do have the responsibility to the public of presenting complete and factual information, the Kansan has blundered. A story appearing in the November 11, Kansan reported the results of an AURH survey that indicates 561 out of 625 respondents are in favor of building a satellite student union in the Daisy Hill area. The story also stated that 499 out of 625 questionaires indicated the respondents are willing to pay $6.50 to have a union in the Daisy Hill-Oliver-Naismith area.
What the Kansan failed to report might give the survey more validity than it deserves. The Kansan did not say that 5,000 questionaires were intended to be circulated, less than 4,000 actually were distributed, three dormitories did not participate in the survey and that only 24 hours were given to reply to the questionaires.
Therefore, the results reported by the Kansan may very well be misleading, and several questions ought to be asked about both the survey and the Kansan's reporting effort. Most likely the 12 percent of dormitory residents who voluntarily responded in only 24 hours are not a representative sample of all residence hall students. This group is probably far more intense about the satellite union issue than the average dorm resident.
Hopefully little emphasis will be put on this survey if an item is used in analysis is what the Kansan reported. If there is more information, the Kansan has shirked one of its responsibilities as a member of the free press in not presenting the total picture. If what was reported is all that is known, then either the survey should have not been published or an attempt to show strengths and weaknesses of the survey should have been made.
A second deficiency of this story was the lack of important background information. Where is the site proposed by Frank Zilm? Where is the originally planned site?
If the Kansan wants to attain recognition as a reliable daily newspaper, the first thing it should do is accept the responsibility that goes with this position. It should then strive to maintain a high level of responsibility to its readers.
Don Hunter
Abilene graduate student
Pam Bond
Tulaa, Okla., graduate studen
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TREASURE
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
WINTER IS UPON US...
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright. 1969.
University Daily Kansan.
KWSAN REVIEWS
BOOKS: Skimming surfaces
By MIKE SHEARER Arts & Reviews Editor
COLLEGE RUINED OUR DAUGHTER, by Wesley Shrader
(Harper & Row, $1.95).
Wesley Shrader, in spite of all of his sincerity, has committed a tragic blunder in this collection of letters to parents about the problems of college students.
Annoying as the book's form is (supposedly based on the assumption everyone likes reading other people's mail), Shrader's premises are even more annoying. He ends up turning his book into the college counterpart of one of those crumby how-to-bewell-adjusted phamphlets distributed so religiously by high school counselors.
The book is designed to explain away part of the generation gap, and it does just the opposite.
For instance, one correspondence is with a Mrs. Van Brock concerning her son Mel who turns out to be "like that," i.e. gay. At one letter's conclusion, Shrader says, "I know he will always be to you 'my little boy.' But he is twenty-two years old—nearly twenty three."
Precisely!
The whole idea of a correspondence between a minister and a parent about the sex life of anyone 21 going on 22 is a bit ludicrous. We have about as much to learn from such correspondences as we have to learn from Ann Landers. But poor Shrader manages to impregnate a wide range of students with a wide range of problems (some very real) and then carry on correspondences with parents who should leave these problems to the be-problemed. There comes that age.
Orgies, group pressures, dirty words . . . they are all dealt with, and those of us at college age become the caged animal being observed by minister and parent from a rather dubious viewpoint. Shrader and his parents/correspondents become barnacles on the lives of some people whose struggles are outside their grasp.
All of this brings Shrader to the level of pandering to the senseless worries and hallucinations of older persons about college people.
Writing to the Erickson's, about their militant son Larry, Shrader says, "You can see now why I have kept on insisting that your son is no hippie. The latter have 'copped out.' Hippies sneer at society's blunders ... They laugh, live, and copulate in the midst of filth and the fog of various narcotics. But, Mr. and Mrs. Erickson, that is not your son."
Garbage. Shrader is full of all of the clichés and all of the paranoia that encircles this generation.
But instead of looking for whatever lies behind this generation, he is hopelessly concerned with trying to make us look like goldfish swallowers.
We're many things, some as bad as Shrader thinks, but goldfish swallowers we're not.
Anderson's 'Snow Queen designed for 'small' audience
Hans Christian Anderson's "The Snow Queen" opened today in the Young People's Series.
Today's performance was for Douglas County school children. Shows Thursday and Friday at 1 p.m. will be for Lawrence school children. The 10 a.m. show Saturday will be for the general public.
The plot of the tile centers around Kay and Gerda. Kay lives with Gerda and her grandmother, but is seen by the Snow Queen from the north country
Nov.19 KANSAN 5
1969
NOW SECOND
GREAT WEEK
Paramount Pictures Presents
An Alan J. Pokula Production
The Sterile Cuckoo
Eve. 7:15 and 9:15
Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:15
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who kisses him and freezes his heart. The Queen then takes him back to her frozen palace.
Brave Gerda sets out on a long and arduous journey to find Kay and bring him home. She encounters several people who, under the Snow Queen's instructions, try to stop her.
BY SHERRY ROY AND GENELLE RICHARDS Kansan Staff Writers
LIFE MAGAZINE
STOLEN KISSES' IS EASILY TRUFFAUT'S BEST, AND FURTHER EVIDENCE THAT HE MAY BE THE FINEST COMIC ARTIST NOW WORKING IN THE MOVIES. The world, when we see it through his eyes, is transformed into a garden of delights."
Students and professors of industrial design at the University of Kansas are protesting the pollution of our environment this week in the south lobby of the Kansas Union.
Artists tackle pollution
Their demonstration is in the form of an exhibit.
They are protesting visual irritations, sound pollution, air pollution and water pollution.
The purpose of the exhibit, which is divided into two rooms, is to awaken people to the various kinds of environmental pollution and offers examples of remedial industrial designs which take into consideration the aesthetic, ethical and human factors.
Peter North, assistant professor of industrial design and one of the coordinators of the exhibit, said, "Contemporary man's technological achievements have in some respects already destroyed our environment."
One room of the exhibit is designed to illustrate North's point. Aluminum foil, beer cans, plastic ice cream containers and plastic bread wrappers serve as examples of the non-destructible garbage that is polluting our environment. Daily the average American throws away $5\frac{1}{2}$ pounds of garbage, much of which is aluminum and plastic and will not decompose, said Les Schnick, Denver, Colo., senior.
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"We dispose more than 50 million beer cans a day. Why do we have this for our children to build their homes on?" asked North. "We should create a better environment and not destroy our present environment."
Schnick, one of the coordinators of the exhibit, said it had originally been suggested that the entire room be filled with garbage for the exhibit.
Other examples of environmental pollution are the harsh sound of a doorbell-ringing and tape recordings of television commercials which suggest sound pollution. North said the exhibit proposes to demonstrate the adverse influence of advertisements on society. People are more aware of this kind of pollution, he said.
7 THE HILLCREST
WELCOME SHOPPING CENTER - BIRD AND GREEK
Slides depict the results of air and water pollution.
The exhibit confronts people with industrial design as a responsible profession. Schnick said industrial designers have a responsibility to society and future generations to design functional, ethical and visually pleasing products. The second room of the exhibit is intended to acquaint people with good design.
In the second room, two chairs, cited as examples of good design and illustrating the principle "form follows function," are contrasted with a lamp borrowed from the Union.
There is a display of toys designed for a hypothetical intelligent four-handed child. These toys eliminate restrictions and offer infinite possibilities, Schnick said.
The exhibit also includes a display of innovative ideas in medical instruments. Schnick said the students talked to doctors and nurses in the surgical wards of local hospitals to find out the kinds of new equipment needed in the field.
"Dammitall.
Why is everything we're good at illegal?"
Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid
Eve. 7:15 and 9:15
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A LEGEND IN HIS OWN TIME!
THE WINNER BEACH ORGANIZATION presents
THE ARTIST AND EVELYN BARRON production of
"Johnny Cash"
THE MAN
HIS WORLD
HIS MUSIC!
BOR DYLAN
A LEGEND IN HIS OWN TIME!
THE MILKER BEACH ORGANIZATION presents
THE AUTHOR and EVELYN BARRON production of
"Johnny Cash",
THE MAN
HIS WORLD
HIS MUSIC!
Featuring
BOB DYLAN
JONE CARTER MOTHER MATYELLE
THE CATTER FAMILY CARL PERKINS
THE TENNESSEE THREE
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Eve. 7:15-9:10
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1643
FEET HIGH AND RISING
CISCO CLIFTON BUSTED
AFTER YOU HAVE THANKSGIVING DINNER WITH ALICE AND RAY TONIGHT, ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS:
Is Alice's Restaurant a ballad to the new idealism? A lament for the human frailties that make this idealism all the more precious, because it is precarious? Or a youth's eye-view—at once jaundiced and amused—of a lot of establishment lunacies?
Giles Fowler K.C. Star
where the heads of all nations meet
ALICE'S RESTAURANT"
starring ARLO GUTHRIE COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists
NOW! 7:15 - 9:25
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
Granada
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Granada
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University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
presents
The Hostage
by Brenden Behan
November 13 - 22
Experimental Theatre 8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall
For Tickets Call: UN 4-3982
Phog reminisces about years gone by
By MARY ARNOLD
Kansan Staff Writer
Eighty-four years is a long time, but for Dr. Forrest "Phog" Allen those years have been filled with many memorable moments. Allen retired in 1956 after 18 years as director of athletics and 39 years as basketball coach at KU.
Tuesday Allen celebrated his eighty-fourth birthday at his home in Lawrence. Cards, gifts, calls and visits from old friends and former pupils and athletes brought back memories to the former coach.
Dr. Allen recalled the 1952 Olympic games in Helsinki where he was coach for the United States basketball team. That was the year KU won the NCAA championship and placed seven players on the Olympic team. At the Games the American team defeated the Russian team twice to win the gold medal.
Allen said it was ironical that this week the Russians and Americans are meeting again in
(1)
Phog Allen
Helsinki, even though this time its for strategic arms limitations talks and not a basketball game.
Allen is not able to walk unaided and has been bedridden for the past several months. Even though his condition does not permit him to attend KU athletic events, he still listens to the games and keeps track of what is going on at KU.
Probably the greatest moment of his life was in 1957 in Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy's office.
"Chancellor Murphy called me into his office and told me they were going to name the field house after me. I was so overcome," said Allen, with tears coming to his eyes, "I didn't think I deserved to have it named after me. I thought it should have been named for some scholar or scientist, but the Chancellor said 'You're the one that coaches basketball.'"
Along with coaching basketball, Allen spent one year as football coach in 1920. His team had a 5-2-1 record.
"At least it wasn't as bad a
year as Pepper Rodgers is having," he said. He smiled and then added that he had a lot of respect for Coach Rodgers being able to take the losses so well and not make albis for losing.
Dr. Allen, or Phog as he was nicknamed because he sounded like a foghorn when he umpired baseball games, has written three books on basketball. All three have become texts for coaches around the world.
When Allen first thought of coaching basketball, Dr. James A. Naismith, inventor of the game, told him, "you don't coach basketball, Forrest. You just play it."
Dr. Allen's teams won 24 conference basketball championships and in 1952 won the NCAA crown.
Coach Allen disproved that statement by coaching some of the greatest coaches and athletes in this country.
Among his many awards, Dr Allen cherishes most the Citation for Distinguished Service awarded to him by KU and the Alumni Association, because it is seldom presented to a coach or person associated with athletics, he said.
Even though Dr. Allen can no longer lead an active life, he is not discouraged or disheartened at life
Kennedy's mourn
Funeral to be Thursday
"The only thing that would make him blue," said Mrs. Allen, "is to take him out of Lawrence. Because Lawrence and KU mean a lot to him."
a controversial figure because of his outspoken belief that the United States should stay out of World War II. His views possibly cost him the 1944 vicepresidential nomination.
by United Press International Joseph P. Kennedy, the Massachusetts financier who was a millionaire at 30 and instilled in his children a fierce competitiveness which propelled them to some of the highest offices in the land, died Tuesday in Hyannis Port, Mass.
Kennedy, later to become President, was born May 29, 1917. Two more boys and five girls followed.
Kennedy later became ambassador to Great Britain. He was there during the early bombing of London in 1940 and became
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The Kennedy family was at his bedside when death came at 12:05 p.m. to the 81-year-old multimillionaire father of a President and two U.S. Senators. The Ambassador had suffered the latest in a series of heart attacks Saturday.
Private funeral services will be held Thursday. Cardinal Richard Cushing of Boston, longtime friend and religious adviser, will celebrate the mass at nearby St. Francis Xavier Church.
Honorary pall bearers for the service will be the six eldest male Kennedy grandchildren. Burial will be in the family plot in Holyhood Cemetery in Brookline, Mass.
A family spokesman said Tuesday Mrs. Rose Kennedy had asked that in lieu of flowers, donations be sent to the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial, 1816 Jefferson Place NW, Washington, D.C.
Graduated from Harvard University in 1912, he made himself a millionaire by shrewd investments and job-hopping through several financial firms.
The heart attack originally had been described as a "minor setback" for Kennedy, who had been confined to a bed or wheelchair since suffering a stroke Dec. 19, 1961 in Palm Beach, Fla.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., spent Monday night in a vigil at his father's bedside. Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis flew in from Greece and Ethel Kennedy arrived from the Washington area. R. Sargent Shriver, U.S. ambassador to France, and his wife Eunice Kennedy Shriver, flew in from Paris. Two other daughters, Jean Kennedy Smith and Patricia Kennedy Lawford, had been with their father during the weekend.
Joseph Kennedy was born in East Boston Sept. 6, 1888, son of Patrick Joseph Kennedy, a saloon keeper and state representative, and Mary Hickey, whose family was "a notch or two" above the Kennedys in the Irish social structure.
The Kennedys made their home in the Boston suburb of Brookline. Their first child, Joseph Jr., was born in July 1915. John F
In October 1914, Kennedy married Rose Elizabeth Fitzgerald.
6 KANSAN Nov.19 1969
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Results not known for nearly six weeks
Faculty delays vote on ROTC credit
The Faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will once again vote on the credit status of ROTC courses.
The faculty at a meeting Tuesday chose to vote by mail ballots on a motion to drop credit from military science courses not integrated into academic departments of the College by September, 1971.
The wording of the motion states ROTC courses not integrated by then "shall not apply toward graduation in the College."
The motion came from a report of the faculty's Educational Policies Committee, which tacked the motion to the end of a list of
changes and additions in College courses.
Robert Hersh, professor of biochemistry and a member of the committee spoke against the motion, saying he did not think many of the ROTC courses would be absorbed by the College departments. He said he thought students should have the opportunity to take ROTC courses at KU.
Harold Orel, professor of English, spoke in favor of the motion. He listed several examples of the ROTC department's separation from the University in terms of faculty selection, course content, and student contracts, all of which Orel said were determined by the Defense Department.
Frosh class officers to seek vote in senate
The freshman class has begun its projects.
Freshman will be members of the Student Senate this year. They will have all the rights of
Politicians criticized
other Senate members except the right to vote.
Donald Marquis, assistant professor of philosophy, criticized politicians Friday for the present situation in Vietnam.
People today, he said consider politics in the wrong way. He said they considered more the stature that a political figure had built around himself.
Marquis, speaking at the open microphone in Strong Hall rotunda during the November war moratorium, said because of politicians, moral considerations really had no bearing on the Vietnam conflict. He said although Nixon had spoken against Vietnamese having to die, he was still the greatest supporter of the war among the politicians.
Nov.19 1969 KANSAN 7
Members will be the freshman class officers. Steve Hix, president; Tom Perry, vice-president; Betsy Adams, secretary; and Melissa Wayne, treasurer.
Hix said the class officers will try to obtain the right to vote this year which will require an amendment to the Senate's constitution.
In addition, there will be a Freshman Senate which will be composed of two representatives from each on-campus living group housing freshmen. Size will have no bearing on the number of representatives. Off-campus residents will have representatives to the Freshman Senate. Election procedures for off-campus representatives have not been decided.
The Senate will be a communications liaison between class officers and members.
Class dues, which are $3, may be paid from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union Alumni Room until the freshman party which is scheduled for the week before finals in January. Dues may also be paid at the door at the party.
Class cards should be received in the mail during the first week in December, Hix added.
Let's Get It Straight
WHO SAYS SO?
QUESTION: Why should I believe in a God I can't see, just because some preacher tells me I should? What virtue is there in a faith like that?
**ANSWER:** Children believe in that fashion. "My father says so" is proof enough for them up to a certain age. Then they discover that Mom and Dad are not infallible, and they begin to ask questions. Though this is hard on parents, children *must* learn to think for themselves.
To believe merely on someone else's say-so is not the basis of Christian faith, nor is that what gives it merit in God's eyes. The Bible says that God has chosen to save through "preaching" those who are willing to believe. If and when any preacher proclaims the truth about God, then God's own Holy Spirit speaks through him to those who have open hearts and minds.
If you will listen in that way to a man who faithfully preaches the Bible, God will speak through him to your heart. The first thing His Holy Spirit will do is to convict you of being a sinner. Remember, it is no longer the preacher you are listening to, but the voice of God in your soul.
The second thing the Holy Spirit will show you is that you must accept Christ's death as the basis for your salvation, that you must rely on His atonement for your sins. You are free to disbelieve any of man's remedies for sin, but when the Holy Spirit brings the truth home to your heart, you reject it at the cost of your own soul.
On the other hand if you believe in Christ as your Saviour, for time and for eternity, you are not being a credulous fool, but are exercising faith in the witness of God's Holy Spirit to your own heart. Then, and only then, is faith a virtue.
For free booklet, "GOD BECOMES MAN," write to Box 327, RIDGEFIELD, N.J. 07657, DEPT. DK
Orel said faculty opposition to ROTC was nationwide, naming several universities which have either partially or completely eliminated ROTC programs. He called the motion a compromise between those supporting ROTC in its present form and those advocating elimination of ROTC from KU.
William Albrecht, professor of English, said many ROTC courses deserved to be in academic departments, but the departments would not have the personnel to teach the courses properly.
Albrecht proposed an amendment allowing military instructors to teach military courses such as navigation and military history which would be integrated into College departments. The amendment was defeated.
Carl Lande, associate professor of political science, proposed a substitute motion calling for the evaluation of ROTC courses and instructors using the procedure employed for all College courses not within a specific department, such as religion courses. The motion was also defeated.
The original motion as originally stated in the Education Policies Committee report will now be voted on by mail ballots to all
College faculty members. Results of the vote will not be determined for nearly six weeks,said George Waggoner, dean of the College.
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'Ole Miss upsets into Sugar Bowl
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)—Ole Miss' giant killing Rebels will carry their football war to the Southwest Conference in the Sugar Bowl New Year's Day, facing the loser of the Dec. 6 Texas Arkansas contest.
The winner of the Texas-Arkansas matchup at Fayetteville, Ark., will win the Southwest conference and take on Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl. Both teams are currently unbeaten in eight games this season.
The Rebels, 6-3 so far this season, got their 13th consecutive bowl bid on the strength of their stunning 38-0 shellacking of third-ranked and previously unbeaten Tennessee last week. The Rebs also bowled over favored Georgia and Louisiana State University to grab the Sugar bid.
Mississippi, led by junior quarterback Archie Manning, lost to Kentucky, Alabama and Houston. They have only to face Mississippi State complete their regular season and should wind up with a 7-3 final record.
"The team is delighted," Mississippi Coach Johnny Vaught said in a conference call after learning of the bowl bid. "We are thankful and happy to have the opportunity to play either of them (Texas or Arkansas). They are two of the finest teams in America, without a doubt."
The Bowl Lineup
By United Press International Nov. 27
SILVER BOWL, Sterling, Kan.
-Hutchinson Kan. Junior College (8-1) vs. Nassau N.Y. Community College (8-0).
Nov. 29
MINERAL WATER BOWL,
Excelsior Springs, Mo.-Participants unnamed.
AMOS ALONZO STAGG BOWL, Springfield, Ohio-Wittenburg (8:9) vs. William Jewell (Mo.).
Dec. 6
PASADENA BOWL, Pasadena,
Calif.-San Diego St. (8-0) vs.
unnamed opponent.
WOOL BOWL, Roswell, N.M.
—Iowa Central Community College vs. Fort Dodge Junior College.
Dec. 13
LIBERTY BOWL, Memphis,
Tenn — Alabama (6-3) vs. Colorado (6-3) or Kansas State (5-4).
GRANTLAND RICE BOWL,
Baton Rouge, La. — Louisiana Tech (7-1) vs. unnamed opponent.
PECAN BOWL, Arlington,
Tex.-Participants unnamed.
CAMELLIA BOWL, Sacramento, Calif.-North Dakota St. (9-0) vs. unnamed opponent
BOARDWALK BOWL, Atlantic City, N.J.-Delaware (7-2) vs. North Carolina Central (7-1).
NAIA CHAMPION BOWL-site and teams to be determined in Nov. 29 playoff.
Dec. 20
SUN BOWL, El Paso, Tex.— Georgia (5-3-1) vs. Nebraska (7-2).
Dec. 25
8 KANSAN Nov.19 1969
North-South All-Star Classic,
Miami.
Dec 28
TANGERINE BOWL, Orlando,
Fla.—Toledo (9-0) vs. Davidson
(7-2).
Dec. 27
GATOR BOWL, Jacksonville,
Fla.—Tennessee (7-1) vs. Florida
(7-1-1).
East-West Shrine All-Star Game, San Francisco
Blue-Grey All-Star Game,
Montgomery, Ala.
Dec. 30
Dec. 31
ASTRO - BLUEBONNET BOWL, Houston-Auburn (7-2) vs. Houston (6-2).
PEACH BOWL, Atlanta — South Sarolina (6-3) vs. We:t Virginia (8-1).
Jan.1
ROSE BOWL, Pasadena, Calif.
- Michigan (7-2) or Purdue
(7-2) vs. UCLA (8-0-1) or Southern California (8-0-1).
COTTON BOWL, Dallas — Notre Dame (7-1-1) vs. Texas (8-0) or Arkansas (8-0).
SUGAR BOWL, New Orleans —Mississippi (6-3) vs. Arkansas (8-0) or Texas (8-0).
ORANGE BOWL, Miami — Penn State (8-0) vs. Missouri (8-1).
Jan. 3
LIONS AMERICAN All-Star Game, Tampa, Fla.
HULA BOWL All-Star Game,
Honolulu.
Jan. 10
SENIOR BOWL All-Star Game, Mobile, Ala.
Prisons to improve
TOPEKA (UPI)—State Penal Director Robert N. Woodson said Tuesday he feels confident there is going to be "marked improvement" at the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing.
Woodson and his assistants,
John C. Hazelet and Wayne D.
Doolverton, met nearly two hours in
Topeka with Warden Sherman
Crouse, Deputy Warden Roy
Earls and Prison Business Manager Alan Fouts.
--promise to be one of the best in the nation again this year.
DANCE
TO THE
RISING SUNS
SOUL
Cyclones shine in Big 8 Open
Brent Simmons took top honors in the all-around with a score of 52.85 and also won the outstanding performance trophy.
Iowa State gymnasts dominated the Big Eight Open held in Robinson Gymnasium Saturday taking first place in five of seven events.
The Cyclones took home 12 of a possible 18 plaques given for firsts, second and third places in each event, exhibiting their talent and depth.
KU's Kirk Gardner received KU's only first place with a score of 9.5 on the still rings. Gardner eclipsed his own school record of 9.45 which he set in 1968.
The Jayhawks placed only three other men in the finals besides Gardner and two were in the high bar event. Gerald Carley and Roger Hemphill finished third and fifth, respectively, in the finals. Carley had an 8.75 score and Hemphill had a score
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Ken Snow of Kansas State was the only other non-Cyclone to win an event as he took the floor exercise with a score of 9.15. He managed to tie Simmons in the long horse (vaulting) competition with a 9.31 score. Scoring a 51.35, Snow was second in the all-around behind Simmons.
of 8.68. John Brouillette faltered in the finals for the parallel bars scoring a 7.85, after qualifying in the morning preliminaries with an 8.5 score.
With a good score on the long horse (9.05), and the still rings (both 8.5), KU's John Brouillette finished with a 49.35 score and finished fourth in the all-around competition.
Iowa State was the preseason favorite in league competition and its showing Saturday solidified its hold on that position. The Cyclones were third in the national meet last year and
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Big Eight Stats
TEAM STANDINGS
Conference Games
Conference W 1 Pct. Pts. Opp.
Missouri 5 1 0.1 .833 197 120
febraska 5 1 0.1 .833 88 54
lorado 4 2 0 .863 18 111
oklahoma 3 2 0 .600 141 162
kansas 3 2 0 .600 141 162
Kia. State 3 2 0 .900 140 105
owa State 1 5 0.1 .607 81 162
tansas 0 6 0.0 .160 113 167
All Games
Missouri Y 1 8 T 89 Pts. Opp.
Nebraska 7 2 0 778 293 160
Colorado 7 2 0 778 165 99
Oklahoma 5 3 0 652 243 218
K-State 5 3 0 650 243 178
Oklahoma 4 4 0 505 135 172
Iowa State 3 6 0 333 152 196
Kansas 6 8 0 111 159 221
LEADING RUSHERS
Player, School Att. Net Play Avg. Game Avg.
Steve Owen, OU 281 1191 4.5 148.9
Joe Moore, MU 257 1148 4.8 127.6
Bob Anderson, CU 201 900 4.5 100.0
John Higgins, KU 150 572 3.8 63.6
Rob Bell, OU 75 486 3.8 65.0
Joe Resnick, KU 114 492 4.3 64.7
Mack Herron, KS 119 485 4.1 53.7
Bub Deerwater, OSU 102 416 4.1 52.0
Wil Wheeler, IOU 101 416 4.5 50.4
Jock Johnson, IS 96 427 4.4 47.4
Jock Kinney, NJ 142 419 4.0 46.6
Matt Montgomery, KS 75 375 5.1 41.7
Ron McHill, MU 81 306 5.8 34.2
JACK Milden, MU 97 260 2.7 32.5
Most Yards Game 248 by Steve Owens, OU, vs. Iowa State (11/7), Longest Run for TD: 78 by Jack Mildren, OU, vs. Pittsburgh (6/27)
TANDEM OFFENSE
| Player, School | Rush | Receive | Total | Game |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Steven Owen, OU | 239-1491 | 5-25 | 863-1144 | Avg.7 |
| Joe Moore, MU | 237-1148 | 6-39 | 243-1187 | 131.9 |
| Mack Herron, KS | 119-485 | 40-481 | 159-966 | 107.3 |
| Bob Anderson, CU | 201-300 | 47-19 | 205-919 | 102.1 |
| Jeff Kinney, NU | 141-492 | 38-19 | 186-749 | 83.2 |
| Ron Jesse, KU | 114-492 | 14-257 | 128-749 | 83.2 |
| Roy Bell, OU | 75-448 | 12-167 | 87-615 | 76.9 |
| Joy Nelson, KU | 155-572 | 12-167 | 87-615 | 66.1 |
| Mel Gray, MU | 1-1 | 23-590 | 24-589 | 85.6 |
| Mike Montgomery, KS | 73-375 | 24-184 | 97-559 | 62.1 |
| Bub Deerwater, OS | 102-418 | 24-184 | 109-459 | 57.4 |
| Mike DeVries, NU | 72-424 | 12-255 | 109-459 | 57.4 |
| Ward Walsh, CU | 101-454 | 5-38 | 106-492 | 54.7 |
| Larry Frost, NU | 35-130 | 23-360 | 58-490 | 54.4 |
| Oliver Davis, NU | 5-50 | 23-360 | 46-491 | 54.4 |
| Dan Schneiss, NU | 54-290 | 16-170 | 70-460 | 51.1 |
(Tandem Offense is a combination of rushing offense and pass re-
(Tandem Offense is a combination of rushing offense and pass reeling.)
LEADING PASSERS
Player, School Comp. Att. Pct. Had Int. Gain Game. Avg. TT
Dinkley, KS 168 121 .540 18 2037 226.5 11
Tory McMahon, MU 82 209 .440 13 1067 184.1 14
Bob Cutburth, OS 82 219 .374 13 1185 184.1 14
Jerry Tagge, NU 97 173 .561 7 1229 136.6 4
Kidd Mrenel, OU 60 131 .458 9 1055 131.1 6
Oliver Isle, US 67 167 .458 7 670 85.9 5
Van Brownson, NU 47 88 .534 5 620 68.9 2
Parendt, CU 47 75 .453 4 560 62.6 1
Jim Ettinger, KU 39 93 .419 8 834 59.3 4
Phil Basler, MU 39 90 .418 8 533 59.2 4
Phil Schwartz Game: 304 25.49 by Dale Bender
Most Yards Game: 394 (25-49-3) by Lynn Dickey, KS, vs. Missouri $ _{1/4} $
(1) Longest Pass for TD: 79 by Paul Arendt to Monte Huber, CU. vs.
Missouri (10/25).
--we could get involved is if everyone beats everyone else. We'd need help."
Nov.19 1969 KANSAN 9
Coaches pick Buffs as favorite
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI)
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -- An influx of talented newcomers held the spotlight Sunday when Big Eight basketball coaches convened to discuss prospects for the upcoming season
Such performers as Colorado's Jim Creighton and Ron Shell, Nebraska's Chuck Jura and Al Nissen, Iowa State's Gene Mack, Missouri's Henry Smith and Bob Allen, Kansas' Bud Stallworth and Aubrey Nash and Kansas State's Bob Zender and David Hall rated most of the attention.
Coaches, however, pointed out their reluctance to rely on sophomore and junior college transfers for winning seasons.
The exception is Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa State and Missouri. Newcomers breaking into their lineups will be ousting returning starters.
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While the coaches, unanimously with the exception of Walseth, picked Colorado as the likely repeat winner, they felt Nebraska, Iowa State or Missouri also would contenders.
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"Nebraska has a great shot at all of it," Missouri coach Norm Steward assessed. "The only way
"It's going to be a well-balanced race," said Iowa State's Glen Anderson. "Probably more than it's ever been. But, on paper, you'd have to go with Colorado."
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804 West 24th (directly behind Lums)
Present location "modernized cave"
KUOK in need of better facility
Fairview
Photo by Julie Howard
KUOK operates in poor conditions
Students broadcast radio station KUOK from the basement of Hoch Auditorium in the midst of poor, insufficient conditions. These conditions include: inadequate ventilation, no parking improper acoustics and lighting.
By JULIE THATCHER
Kansan Staff Writer
More than 80 people depend on an area described as a "modernized cave" to produce KUOK campus radio broadcasts.
An area without toilet facilities, without parking, without adequate ventilation and without proper acoustics and lighting, the station is located in the basement of Hoch Auditorium. A single entrance from the rear driveway provides accessibility to the area.
"It is not good working space," said Bruce A. Linton, professor of journalism. "It's good storage space but not a good people space."
For over a year students, faculty and administrators have realized there is need for improvement.
"The problem was discussed nearly a year ago after the Nichols Fire at K-State." Linton said. "The administration has been concerned about the space, especially because of its safety features. Students endure bare wooden patched floors a slanting exit ramp, threadbare carpeting, make shift partitions, exposed pipes, hazy lighting, brick abut-
ments, the absence of toilet facilities and an occasional rat.
"Sure it's homey down here, but we'd rather be in a nicer place. We really have a dedicated staff to come down here and make the best of it," said Mark Cooper, Prairie Village sophomore and KUOK program director.
A big problem is parking. Willian Kissel, Overland Park senior and station manager, said it was critical. "We are allowed four permits, valid between 6 and 10 p.m., for our entire staff. We start work at 6 p.m. so we have to park early and often receive tickets within ten minutes of 6 p.m. We can't park out back during the day because it's a loading zone so in daylight we have absolutely no space available," Kissel said.
Lack of ventilation is another problem. Although there are large circular objects located on the ceiling which supposedly bring in air, Cooper said they do not.
The single outside exit is sometimes left open so fresh air can enter the studio. Traffic and security doesn't approve of this, Kissel said, and insists we keep the door locked.
keys, however, and someone could pound on that door all night and we'd never hear him inside," Kissel said.
Lack of toilet facilities also plagues KUOK disk jockeys. Cooper said the nearest bathroom was next to the stage in Hoch.
"We have to go upstairs and unlock two doors to get to it. When we're broadcasting it's impossible to leave the studio that long. We usually step out the back door," Cooper said.
"They don't issue us enough
"The area is acoustically bad and far from sound proof. Ideally a studio should have filled walls and carpeted floors to prevent extraneous sounds," he said.
Although Arthur Ramey, state fire marshall, said one exit was acceptable in a classroom area with less than 50 students, the KUOK location presents a potential hazard. Cooper said there were no windows or alternate exits and the single door was at the end of a short hallway.
"In the broadcast booth," he said, "students would be oblivious to an emergency situation in the hallway. There could be a real tragedy."
Linton sympathized, "I can understand their frustration. The students work hard on the air and put in long hours. Surely the situation is a problem for them. Everyone wants to get out of the area. There is a general feeling that Hoch basement is not a proper home for the station.
"Of course I'm confident the administration is well aware of the problem and it is not being ignored because they don't care. I'm sure they haven't forgotten."
Students are not as optimistic. Kissel said he saw everyone he could see about finding a new home for the station.
"They told me the problem would be presented at a meeting and that's the last we heard about
(Continued to page 13)
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Nov. 19 1969 KANSAN 11
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Every Thursday, 7 p.m.
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WEIGHT WATCHERS
Some talking some listening and
a program that works.
WEIGHT WATCHERS
Some talking some listening and
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Meet the speakers at www.watchers.org
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Cincinnati, Ohio
speakers:
International Club Discussion Series
"Crisis in Northern Ireland"
Thomas Davey graduate student from Northern Ireland
Professor Donald McCoy Professor of American History
Thursday, November 20
4:00 p.m. Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room
Protesters make journey on bus floor
Kansans go to Washington moratorium
By IRENE ECONOMOUS Kansan Staff Writer
WASHINGTON — The Kansas contingent to the Washington moratorium represented a cross-section of Kansas vocations. The oddly assorted group of nearly 100 people included housewives, businessmen and high school students.
Five luckless protesters had to make the 1,000 mile journey on the floor of the Kansas City bus. The bus company announced they would have to pay $25 extra for the privilege. They initially paid $35. Fellow protesters contributed the $125.
Members of the bus also contributed $35 for one unwitting girl who arrived without the bus fare.
Two other protesters who could not get on either of the two buses had no funds to drive to Washington. Another impromptu fundraising campaign netted $40.
The pilgrimage to the capital began at 10:30 p.m. Thursday.
At 8:30 p.m. Friday the bus arrived in Washington, D.C.
At Arlington National Cemetery five national guardsmen greeted the bus and told the driver he could not park there.
"There's 20,000 people out there marching while you sit here trying to find out where to go," said a young black who also met the protesters at the cemetery.
The marchers plodded five blocks to the starting point for the March Against Death where plastic pavilions had been set up.
"I wouldn't go out there if I were you. All you're going to get is a rap on the head," he told them.
Many marchers huddled together in groups. The pungent aroma of marijuna began to permeate the tent. Other protesters fortified themselves by draughts from hidden flasks.
Law students give free legal counseling
The purpose of the Law Students Civil Rights Research Council (LSCRRC) is to provide free the legal services law students can give to anyone who needs them.
"We can't actually give legal advice," said KU's LSCRC vicechairman George J. Pierron, Olathe law student. "That would be practicing law without a license, but we will do research on legal questions and give our findings to the person who needs them."
The LSCRRC was organized at KU in 1968. The organization is nation-wide with its main offices in San Francisco and New York.
Pierron said the council was composed of students except for the directors who are law graduates. It was given some support from organizations such as the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations.
Although students of any year in the law school may join, the 15 to 20 members of KU's chapter are mainly second year law students.
Current projects include researching civil rights problems for Fred Six, head of the Douglas County Legal Aid Society, and research for Oswald P. Backus, professor of Russian his-
During his N.F.L. career, Baltimore Colt Johnny Unitas has passed for 33,160 yards, a league record.
12 KANSAN Nov.19 1969
At Shakey's...
where it all happens!
this march. The crowd was so huge they were boxed out.
The buses for Kansas City were finally able to leave the Pentagon at 11:30 p.m. Saturday and begin the long, arduous journey home
STUDY BREAK SPECIAL
boarded shuttle buses waiting to take them to the New York Presbyterian Church.
At the church many protesters were already sleeping in the mud-caked floor strewn with cigarette butts while hundreds of people stepped over them unconcernedly.
RIBBON CUTTING
tory, who is appealing Larry Green's case. Green, Topeka, was sentenced last summer to from one to five years imprisonment in the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory for malicious destruction of University property last spring.
DALLAS, Tex. (UPI)—Texas highway officials have found a new way to "cut ribbons" opening segments of completed highway projects.
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New Mobe officials told the Kansas City marchers they should not stay there. Buses took them to the American University instead.
LSCRRC member Robert A. Laing, Wichita law student, is working on the formation of a model landlord-tenant code in the area of student housing.
$1.25
10 to 12 P.M.
He said the students could choose to research the problems which interested them most.
SHAKEY'S
When a 10-mile section of Interstate Highway 635, the Lyndon B. Johnson Freeway, was opened, the state highway commissioner burned through the ribbon with a laser beam.
"The LSCRRC provides some of the best experience for first law students or any law student not involved in a clinical program," said Pierron. "It's a chance to do research on real problems."
The next morning the protesters gathered on the Mall by the Capitol building and formed together by states for the mass march. Some of the Kansas people never got to participate in
Pierron said the council was also planning to research the aspects of alleged police harrassment in Tooeka parks.
One man stood silently by his car parked along the route on which he had put a sign.
As the march began, the protesters were constantly watched by police and national guardsmen.
The LSCRRC also has a summer internship program in which law students work with civil rights programs such as the welfare department.
544 W. 23rd VI 2-2266
As the marchers reached the White House, each turned and shouted the name on the sign he was carrying of a dead serviceman.
The sign said his son had died in Vietnam for "freedom loving people like you" and he did not want his son's name carried in the protest.
After the Kansas City marchers deposited their placards in coffins by the Capitol building, they
University of Kansas Young People's Theatre
presents
The Snow Queen
by Suria Magito and Rudolf Weil
on
November 22 at 10:00 a.m.
University Theatre Murphy Hall
For tickets call: UN 4-3982
ANY MALE
ENROLLED AS A FULL-TIME STUDENT MAY PARTICIPATE IN OPEN RUSH AND PLEDGE ANY 1 OF 29 NATIONAL FRATERNITIES
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PARTICIPATE IN MEN'S OPEN RUSH REGISTER
AT ANY OF THE FOLLOWING:
THE DEAN OF MEN'S OFFICE — 228 STRONG INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL OFFICE 112B KANSAS UNION ANY CWC OFFICE
'Then we moved on past the dream'
(Continued from page 2)
Banshees were loose in the Emerald City. Sirens screamed from all directions, and students were running up the street from the direction of the Justice Department. "What's happening?"
I touched the arm of a girl.
"Too much," she said, "Too much."
I found a ride. A Volkswagen bus with two boys and two girls from Florida stopped, and they took me to Haynes Point where the buses were waiting.
On the way we passed by the area blocked off by the police. There were thousands of them, dressed in those strange riot helmets and high boots. Tear gas rolled out from inside an open area. Spotlights lit it all, and two ambulances passed us, joining four others along the street. From behind the buildings came screams. The group at the Justice Department was 5,000 strong, protesting the conviction of Bobby Seale, a black defendant at the Chicago conspiracy trial sentenced to four years for contempt of court.
A GROUP OF students came running from a dark alley. They held their mouths and noses, stumbling and lurching. A bleeding boy fell, and a girl helped him up. He shook off her hand. The bus moved on, and I didn't see what was behind them in the alley.
The gas entered the bus. It was just enough to make us gasp and cough and one of the girls was crying. We were ordered on by the police, past the piles of broken glass, through the sounds of black anger and bank alarms. Now and then you could see the conflict in the spaces between the buildings; marchers being knocked down, clubs falling, gas-masked police dodging thrown bottles. It was a play in which all were actors. A play in which it was hard to hate or like anyone. But who threw the ignorant armies against each other? Who wrote the play?
Near eight we got to Hayne's Point where hundreds of buses
KU station facilities old
(Continued from page 11)
(Continued from page 11) it. That was the first week of school," Kissel added.
Frank Baker, KUOK adviser,
agreed, "We're stuck down there
until there's room somewhere
else. Nothing is being done.
It just stays the same year after
year."
Francis H. Heller, dean of faculties, said there is no better location available.
"The space assessment committee reviewed the plight of KUOK but at the present time only very marginal places are available. There would be no improvement as far as fire or safety is concerned." Heller said.
The KUOK staff has its own engineer who has made many improvements, Cooper said. He has built shelves, installed flooring and repaired equipment.
When asked if improvements would be made in the area if a new location could not be found, Heller said the committee would face that question when the situation arose.
Without a place to go and without money for improvements, the "continual chess game of space" goes on. Students involved with KUOK can only joke about the rats, hide in the bushes out back and receive parking tickets at 5.55 p.m.
"We try to do the best we can with what we have—or don't have." Cooper said. "I think we do a very good job."
Nov.19 1969 KANSAN 13
were parked in circles. They were off in the distance, and a policeman wouldn't let us drive into the bus area. "Keep going, you've caused enough trouble."
THEY LET ME out up the street and I ran back, waited for the cop to turn, then ran past him. "Hey, where you going?" He raised his club and began to chase me, but a car entered the road and he returned to guard it. I ran toward the buses.
Hundreds of the marchers could not find their buses. I could not find mine. They wandered blindly, having lost their way. The police on cycles roared through, shining their spotlights on the students. They had the radios and communication to help the students leave Washington. But instead they hindered that exit, almost as if they wanted us to stay to complete the play. It was coitus without climax. Chicago was climax.
Gas crept across the Potomac in huge clouds and covered some of us. For a half hour I sat under a tree and tried to get it out of my body while dark shapes ran by. A Student Mobe first-aid marshal ran up and gave me eyedrops and a cloth to cover my nose and mouth. He ran on to the next person.
Finally near ten the Kansans found each other and our bus. At midnight we left the Emerald City.
Some had gone because they wanted to find a cause. But all had gone, I think, because they no longer believed the television myth. For once, they had gone to see for themselves—to bring reality home.
On the bus going west I looked around at the faces. The sun was up, and one by one, they were waking. Some had gone to Washington to say they had gone. Some had gone because they believed strongly in the cause.
Somehow life and reality have moved to the television screen, leaving behind a last will and testament, to be fought over by the living dead, who retire during prime time to their darkened living rooms and gather around the lighted box. The box that has made the myth of the mass culture into a reality . . . turning all America into a hamburger stand with no exit.
The bus returned the way it had come, back through Pennsylvania and West Virginia, through Appalachia, back through Ohio and Indiana, back through all the cities that looked alike; the computerized replicas of Middletown; back through areas of remaining wilderness, and then back through time it seemed.
A STUDENT WHOSE beard spiraled out like fire played an
old American song from another time when revolution was honorable, when he might have marched with the drum and the flag. Then he played "When Johnny Comes Marching Home." One at a time the people began to join in the song, sadly, softly. A girl across the aisle stared off into another world, her eyes blank and somehow emptier than the entire Emerald City now was. Behind me someone began another song, "All we are saying," she sang, "is give Peace a chance."
An Invitation from: JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St.
(adjacent to campus)
To investigate the new, unique incentive rental plan now in effect.
This incentive rental plan offers numerous price ranges for married couples, graduate students or undergraduates. The plan is designed to provide a two-bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartment at prices competitive with one-bedroom or two-bedroom apartments, yet offer much more in space and quality, convenient location and services.
Visit the office at 1603 W. 15th, or call 843-4993 to get complete information. Inspection is welcomed.
BURGER HUT GRAND OPENING Wednesday & Thursday
J
TELEVISION SET DRAWING Enter as often as you like Drawing will be Thursday night
SPECIAL ON ALL SANDWICHES Buy one-get second Free
A CLOWN FOR THE KIDS 11:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday Free candy and gas balloons
Burger Hut is locally owned and managed 1/2 block west of 23rd and Naismith
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Photo by Burt Lancaster
Secretary bids farewell to tom-tom
Reva M. Anderson, secretary in the dean of men's office, dubs the ceremonial tom-tom as if saying good-by to the traveling trophy. The tom-tom will be presented to the winner of Saturday's KU-MU game and will remain with the victor until 1970 clash once again decides its place of residence.
Trophy up for grabs
Tom-tom to winner of KU-MU contest
A ceremonial tom-tom, traditional trophy which travels with the winner of the annual KU-MU football game, may be in its last week at the University of Kansas.
The tom-tom's residence in the dean of men's office, 206 Strong Hall, will be in jeopardy this week-end when KU hosts the Orange Bowl bound Missouri Tigers. The traveling trophy returned to KU in 1967 after a 10-year stay at MU.
A list of KU victories is recorded on one side of the tom-tom and MU's victories are listed on the other side. The Tiger decorates the canvas on one end of the tom-tom; the Jayhawk is painted
Court sentences campus rioters
on the opposite end.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Twenty persons were convicted Tuesday of kidnapping and holding members of a state college faculty and administration at knife point during a campus disruption instigated by black militants.
In a landmark trial in the history of campus violence, Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler, who heard the two month trial without a jury, declared:
"The campus is not a privileged sanctuary or refuge where disruptive and violent acts go ununished.
"We dare not and will not sanction force and violence and other illegal acts as a redress of grievances."
The defense contended during the trial that the events leading up to the takeover were a spontaneous outgrowth of black students' frustrations in their attempts to get action on grievances.
The exchange of the tom-tom involves representatives from each university's chapter of Omicron Delta Kappa, an honorary organization for senior men. Sachem Circle, KU's chapter of the national organization, handles the exchange ceremonies.
Don Sloan, Topeka senior and president of Sachem Circle, said a ceremony would take place in the dean of men's office after the game regardless of the outcome. The ceremony will be announced and its tradition explained during the game Saturday.
The students were accused of conspiracy to seize two buildings at San Fernando State Valley College Nov. 4, 1968, and kidnap and falsely imprison more than 30 administrators, faculty members and office workers.
14 KANSAN Nov.19 1969
Sloan said the age of the tomtom was unknown but that it probably dated back into the early 1940's and possibly farther. At Missouri the tomtom is given during the game to representatives of the Big Eight who present it to the winner.
Senate firm with IFC
The Interfraternity Council (IFC) statement of policy regarding jurisdiction is in direct opposition to the Senate Code, David S. Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and Student Senate president said Monday.
The statement, released Monday by Mark Retonde, Kansas City, Mo., senior and IFC president, says the IFC will answer to the Chancellor and the Board of Regents only on all matters dealing with University relationships
"We do not recognize the powers of the Student Senate or any like body outside our system to establish statutes or address themselves to the internal affairs of the fraternity system at the University of Kansas," the statement reads.
Retonde said similar policy statements have also been written by the Women's Panhellenic Association, the Associated University Resident Halls and the All-Scholarship Hall Council.
In answering the IFC's statement, Awbrey referred to Article III. Sec. 4 of the Senate Code regarding student senate powers. The senate is empowered to make all rules and regulations affecting all University students including student organizations and activities and student housing.
"The way I see it, the Senate has the power to do anything with them it pleases," Awbrey said, "since the IFC, Panhellenic and the residence halls are both student housing groups and student organizations."
"Instead of attacking the senate, the representatives of these organizations should find how to best work with us instead of
fighting us," he said, "this is why they have representatives in the senate."
The issue centers around a bill submitted to the Student Senate by Dennis Embry, Great Bend junior and student senator. It reinforces any campus organization's right to determine its own affairs except under the power of
any university body authorized with the responsibility of maintaining state and federal laws and general university regulations at KU.
Awbrey said the bill is presently being revised by the Senate Rights and Privileges committee and is not on the agenda for the next student senate meeting.
Students plan symbol
A human peace symbol will urge an end to war at Saturday's KU-MU game.
This plan to promote peace was formulated at Tuesday night's KU Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam meeting in the Kansas Union.
Participants will sit on the hill below the campanile, forming a peace symbol during the entire game. Anyone wanting to be a part of this should meet on the hill at 11:30 a.m. Saturday and bring a white sheet or pillowcase so that the symbol will show up, Tom Ashton, Lawrence graduate student and mobilization steering committee member said.
Although plans are still tentative, Ashton announced that a December war moratorium will be observed. Members of the steering committee emphasized that this moratorium will be conducted differently than the past two in that no large scale demonstrations or teach-ins will be held.
An extension of the Mobilization Committee in the form of a
"speaker pool" and information center has also begun. David C. Owens, assistant instructor of English, explained that the body will gather as much information about the Vietnam war and the mobilization committee as possible and prepare it to present before living groups and interested persons.
"We must make people aware of the war facts and not just remind them once a month with a moratorium." Owens said.
The meeting adjourned for members to discuss their reactions to the Washington march and its impact.
"It was fantastically huge," Wolfe said, "the estimates of how many were there were moderate. The Student Mobilization Committee saw exactly what it was hoping for."
Others were pessimistic in regard to the hope of changing the administration's policy concerning the war.
"We aren't denting anyone," Dave Ranney, Wichita junior and steering committee member said.
Stables' Express Travels Again
Stables' Express
Yes, The Stables is saving you a walk by running buses to the game Saturday. We will open at 10 a.m. so come on out and eat and get tuned up for the game. The buses will leave at 11:50 (game starts at 12:20) and will take you right to the stadium. After the game the buses will return to The Stables—so you can celebrate the KU victory over Mizzou.
THE STABLES
THE WORLD
SUA presents
Blood Sweat & Tears
in Concert at Hoch December 2
7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
Ticket Prices:
$3.00, $3.50, & $4.00
On sale at Kief's, The Sound,
and Richardson Music Co.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kansas are offered
all night. All are color to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier, Inputs for mag. or crystal phono, tape, AM, FM, Aux. Will match any speaker «stem. Aux.» Call VI 2-3618 after 6 tf
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcrafted with a variety of strap, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Edition,
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6.
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road.
843-4836. 12-2
Leaving the U.S.-1960 Plymouth
Vallant-Standard-Very good tires-
heater-Eng. and transmission good.
Altoa Altoa waterworks stereo
(RCA) Garrard Fontana.
Both must sell this month VI 2-7472
after 5. 11-20
1967 Riverside 125 cc. Excellent condition. Cheap, fun transportation. Amazing racing mode with parts. 843-8165 at 5 p.m. on weekends. 11-20
Guitar: Martin D-28, like new with hard case Call 843-7537 like new 11-20
Must sell immediately—a white 1965
V.W. with radio and sunroof, $680 or
best offer VI 2-1188 or VI 2-8444.
11-21
Fritz Company has special bargains on inspected used winter and highway tires. Also New "83" Series Town & Country tire sale priced. Expert for performance and bred by experienced mechanic. Fritz Co. 745 N.H. VI 3-4321. 11-21
Set of 2 Snowtires, tubeless 7.35 x 14.
Set of 3 Snowtires, tubeless 1,000 x 14.
$25, Call 842-2244
$50, Call 842-2244
Big Rummage Sale. Community Building, 11th & Mass. Fr., Nov. 21st, 11th. More than 50, Sat., 22nd, 11th. Noon. More than 25 families contributing. 11-21
Ampex Micro 85 solid state Cassette stereo and recorder, walnut cased, completely outfitted, $14.3" walnut/ beige speakers, tapes included. Cost includes travel to New York or year old, must sell $150 or best offer. Call Kris at VI 2-4965. 11-21
Six tickets to KU-MU game. Call Mike, VI 2-5677. 11-19
Must sell Minolta SR-1 35 mm. camera in excellent condition. Has 1.1-8 f-55 lens. Make your best offer, sold at $389 new. Call V.I. 2-568-9411. 11-21
Tape recorder--model $523A Sears
Tape recorder--model $523B Sears
$50. New condition. 843-7872. 11-21
1964 Cutlass-Oldsmobile -2 dr.-V8
new tires -nitro shocks -good condition-
original call. Call VI 2-3146,
ask for Bob.
11-19
Portable TV 12 in. BW with UHF and earpiece! Great for dorm viewing.
Don't disturb your roommate. $50.
Phone 842-3179. 11-21
Hove moved into an apartment. Must
have arrived. Will take offer.
Call VI 2-1188. 11-21
1960 English Hillman for sale. Ideal for school car. $135. See at McConnell Lumber Co. VI 3-3877. 844 E. 13th St. 11-21
New—unusual—ancilent Chinese stone rubbings—Mexican Bark Paintings—many other unusual items can be purified Gift Shop. 8:30-4:30. 12-2
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
THE HTE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
DELICATESSEN &
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill.
If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT
EAGLE
8th ST. SHOE REPAIR
105 E. 8th
Closed Sat. at Noon
7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Kustom 100 Watt guitar amp., trem,
and reverb, almost brand new, was
$425, yours for $285. Steve Dexter.
843-7404. 12-2
"The Fountains." Why not save that expensive rent money and buy your own building equity in your own home, by hedging against inflation, by taking allowable tax deductions. For additions to your own estate or Estate Agency, VI2-1540 or VI2-1426
1964 Skylark convertible, red, white power top, automatic, new heater, recent valve job, brand new leather, Great car! $230, VIJ-15- 12- 2 after 3.
Sale on all goods, cereals, Jusies Baby Food, Coke, pastries, jellies, lots of items, apples, Call, for we will have to close as I have to go to the hospital. R. D Sweeney, Sweeten the Market, west on Hgw 40,
Nikorex F/Nikor 1-4 lens. Weston
Nikorex F/Mikor Four M/T 4
Matsusai Ford M4-7462 12-2
Matsusai Ford M4-7462 12-2
Stereo record player, radio and T.V.
console in excellent working condition.
$150.00. For appointment call
V12-1232. 12-2
New condition, Gibson electric guitar
cash-barring, cash-barring
CALL VI 2-0292 after 8
In size 9, dresses, good skirts, and
dresses for sale. Good quality.
842-636-6977 11-21
Webec Portable Stereo, G.E.T. vclock-radio (one unit), 1962 Corvair 4-speed, guitar, Smith-Corona typewriter, after 5 p.m., call 842-3396.
scalepoint Siamese kittens, purebred,
box-trained. Call VI 1-6266. afted.
12-3
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, if you want some honest-goodness. Ban Ribs, Chicken, Brisket or Ribs, Chicken, Brisket are our specialties II 2-8510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair problem. In addition, it is available in station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynakit, and Marantz. Call 843-1484. tf
Loans to junior, senior and grad, stu-
perfecient Finance, 725 Mass M.
3-8074.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive. "New Edition of Western Civilization 41st Edition, Campus House, 411 W. 14th Ft.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapid, VI 3-4032. tf
The food is terrible but the entertainment is great at Alice's Restaurant 11-20
Going to Wichita or Eldorado, Kansas, Tuesday, Nov. 26. Will give rides for $4.00. Call Carl Ferguson, Templin Hall (Room 603) V 1-2100. 11-21
GRADUATE STUDENTS LOCATING TEACHING JOBS: Revolutionary app-icipants, Candidates to schools. Inexpensive Deadline December 1, 1969 Applications write: Intercept, Box Candidates write: P.O., Cambridge Massachusetts 02138.
Rallye—Lost in the dark, Registra-
tion Nov. 22, informacion 442-4725
Unusual stock from Southeast Asia
items cannot be found anywhere else
in Lawrence, Museum of Natural Hiss-
tle, 4:30 Sunday to 4:30
12:30 to 4:30 Sunday.
Repossessed component system with AM-FM tuner built-in. $150.00 takes up space downtown. Open Mon, and Thurs. nites (special 33 record only $1.00). 12-2
Help! Desperately need ride to N.Y. for T.G. Getting hooked in Spring. Must make arrangements. Call Mike 842-5152. 11-21
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Be Prepared! tune-ups
tune-ups
testing service
Tony's 66 Service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
66
Buy your kid sclater's present from the Museum of Natural History at Sunny Hill Shopping Centre. Mineralizers, such as minerals. Really great for "Show and Show." 8:36-40 daily. 12:30-40 day. 12:30-
Exclusive Representative
FOR RENT
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchen with master bedroom to $165 plus utilities. Hire Construction Company I 3-6153 or I 3-5700.
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6168.
Need one student to take over my lease and live with three other men at Gatehouse. $58.75 per month—available immediately—no deposit required. Lease runs through May. V1 3-7881. 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. 12-3
First floor furnished apartment for males or married couple Borders campus and near downtown. Phone VI 3-5767. 11-20
Large deluxe room for upper classman. Wall to wall carpet-private entrance, very quiet—2 blocks west of campus-choole area-UI 3-7827.11-19
LOST
Furnished apartment, walking distance from KU for 2 or 3 students.
Green Hopsacking purse. Homecome-
ball. Call IV-12-1500. Lawn Calls. Bail VI-12-1500. 11-19
Lost—mixed, short-haired female dog—mixed breed. About 2 years old. Bad teeth, answers to name "Sugar." Call VI 2-0036. 11-21
THE CONCORD SHOP
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part
person; person only Burger
Chef, 814 Town.
L. G. Balfour Co.
Guides Mags
Recognitions Roddle
Established professional 7-piece Rhythm and Blues Band needs vocalist, trumpet, trombone and organ player. Be willing to travel weekends and summers. Union wages. Call 842-7744. 11-21
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in Lawrence at least one year. Reason: graduate preferred. VI 3-6424. 11-21
Music teachers needed for two boys.
One for trumpet, one for electric guitar.
Prefer someone to come to home. Phone VI 2-4088, evenings.
- Stretcher Frames
- Oils and Acrylics Bankmark Services
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Badges
- Favors
- Decoupage Materials
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
Rings - Crested - Letters
- Sportswear
- Gifts
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
McConnell Lumber
- Lovellers
- Stationer
- Gifts
- Places
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
摄影
- Portraits
645 Mass.
- Guards
- Mugs
LNB Bldg. #30t
Paddles
- Plaques
Across from the Red Dog
Bob Blank, Owner
- Guards
721 Mass.
- Stationer
- Passports
McConnell Lumis
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
HIXON STUDIO
Recognitions Puddles
- Lavaliers
- Stationer
VI 3-0330
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers etc.
Hurry to Henry's
Full and part-time work at newly developed Ros-A-Beef. Please call VI2-9087, between 12:00 & 2:00, and 6:00 & 8:00 p.m.
11-21
6th & Mo. VI 13-2139
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist or lecturer. glish-Speech Education Electric office-size typewriter. 843-2873. 11-24
TYPING: Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misel, typing. Have electro, with tape, with pica type. Have fast service. Phone V2-15354, Mrs.Wright.
TYPING
Accurate typing of dissertations-themes—mise, papers. Pica-Smith Corona Electric. Call Mrs. Troxl, VI 2-1440. 11-20
Theses, papers typed in English, German, transliterated Russian by experienced, literate typist. IBM Electronic. Mrs. Harwell, 842-5298. tf
Accurate typing of theses, dissertations, manuscripts, misc. papers. Call Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440, 2409 Ridge Court. 12-25
Need 8 tickets to KU-MU game. Call Jim, VI 2-3855. 11-20
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work IV 3-3281. Mrs.Rauckman.
WANTED
Wanted: 3 tickets for KU-MU game
Name your price. VI 2-1299
11-19
Wanted: A place to dump a half ton of garbage from Alice's Restaurant,
The heads of all nations meet at Alice's Restaurant! 11-20
PERSONAL
Pilots fly at half in one of Lawrence's four flying clubs. Free comparative information phone. Phone 842-1124, 11-10
Honey--hope your birthday is the happy one. Ya ouch tubi tibi.
Bug. 11-21
Rally Hawks! After the Mizzou game.
The Zoo. 11-21
ENTERTAINMENT
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kauai, 913-648-1777, tt
UNICEF
Cards and Calendars at KU Bookstore
Audio Sale
Buy at Factory Cost plus 10%
You pay shipping
No better discount anywhere
Call
842-2047 Eve. 4-10 p.m.
A. R. Dynaco Dealer
Entertainment, Looking for a good jazz-rock band for those Christmas formats! It's the Dick Wing Orchestra for you. Call 843-7058. 12-2
American Mercury is rising. 842-5247.
Airplane, Cres be still Sandnash.
Beatles, Stones, Joplin, Cream Orig-
inals. 12-3
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
TUTOR
BUY, SELL, TRADE good used appliances and furniture. Also antiques. Stores with hardwood and free pulvinar Haas Uses Appliances 839 Virginia. 842-0576 tt
Need Geography 6 tutor. Instructor is Knight. Please call us 2-3522. 11-19
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The Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining
Sizzling steaks and fresh seafoods await you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest . . . preparing the selections as you like them with all the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
Open Daily—Except Monday 4:30 p.m. VI 3-1431
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PLANNING A TRIP??
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TRAVEL SERVICE
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VI 3-1211
Apollo12hits bullseye
(Continued from page 1)
The men became excited over small mounds sticking up out of the ground.
"It looks like a small volcano," Conrad said. "It's about four feet high and five feet across. There's a couple of them out here."
As they plodded the moon's light gravity—one-sixth that of earth—their bulky white space- suits became coated with the dust they kicked up with every step. "Hey, you're dirty." Conrad
"Hey, you're dirty." Conrad told Bean.
"You're just as dirty," Bean replied. "I can't believe it."
The $78,833 color camera had troubles in the final weeks before launch. Black interference turned up on screens during tests and
The space agency said the television imaging tube had burned out.
the camera was modified until it appeared the problem was indicated.
Technicians devised procedures to get more light through the lens to the tube and the space agency said "later today, time permitting, mission control will pass along these instructions to the crew."
A spokesman for the Westinghouse Corp., builder of the camera, said these steps might result in a "vague image" that would probably be in black and white instead of color. He said there was a 50-50 chance of getting some kind of fuzzy picture.
The problem was caused when the astronauts pointed the camera directly into the sun.
Bean became so frustrated with its malfunction that he slammed it on top a couple of times with a hammer but to no avail. The loss of the color pictures was a setback to geologists as well as a disappointment to the astronauts' families and those watching.
After they got the experiment package operating, the astronauts set out to explore their surroundings.
"We're looking down at this crater now and it looks rather old." Bean radioed to earth.
Conrad picked up one rock he
described as "more the gabbro type," a larger grained rock.
"Look at that. We've got to have that piece of glass," he said a minute later. And he asked Bean to "come on, hold my hand" while he bent down to pick it up.
"It looks like a piece of glass.
Looks green to me," he said.
"Pete and Al, we're picking up your heavy footprints going by the seismometer," ground control told the two astronauts who were clowning like tourists, taking pictures and exclaiming about everything they saw.
Near the end of their moonwalk the astronauts' heavy breathing could be heard.
"We're not going to have any
trouble sleeping tonight," Bean said.
Conrad stepped onto the surface at 6:45 a.m. EST and called out:
"Oh, you'll never believe it. Look what I see sitting on the side of the crater."
"The old Surveyor?" asked Bean.
"The old Surveyor. Yes sir. Ha-ha, doesn't that look neat. It couldn't be any further than 600 feet from here. How about that."
A major goal of Conrad and Bean's second spacewalk is a visit to the Surveyor 3. Both men were delighted they had landed within 600 feet of it—easy walking distance.
Haynsworth vote to come Friday
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate decided Tuesday to vote at 1 p.m. Friday on the controversial Supreme Court nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr.
The decision came after Republicans relented in their demand for delay and agreed to a showdown Friday on President Nixon's choice to succeed Associate Justice Abe Fortas.
Democratic leader Mike Mansfield got unanimous consent from a nearly empty chamber to conclude the three-month controversy after a day of back-stage maneuvering.
Sen. Roman Hruska, R-Neb., had insisted that the vote be delayed until Monday to give Haynsworth's supporters additional time to speak in his behalf. There was no immediate explanation why Hruska then backed down and agreed with Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott on a Friday vote.
Hruska told newsmen there was no intention of using a delay to try to gain more votes for confirmation. "I will not indulge in any numbers game with you, but we have the votes to confirm," he said.
Sen. Ralph Tyler Smith, R-Ill., who took the seat of the late Senate GOP leader Everett M. Dirksen, switched positions Tuesday and announced he would vote for Haynsworth. This gave Nixon's nominee 41 proclaimed supporters and 46 opponents in a UPI talley, with 13 senators undeclared.
Smith, who originally said he would vote against Haynsworth because of doubts arising from conflict-of-interest charges, said a review of the record indicated "they do not constitute a valid reason for opposing the nomination."
BSU president calls Chancellor's reply to blacks' demands vague, unspecific
(Continued from page 1) that the dean of black students would not only be equal to the chancellor, but would have powers superior to his, including some authority denied the chancellor.
Bright called the proposed administrative positions necessary.
"We don't see it as two separate universities," he said. "We have to have someone in the administration somewhere who addresses the needs of black students."
Bright said he had hoped the BSU could start interviewing persons to fill these two positions sometime next semester, possibly by February.
16 KANSAN Nov.19 1969
The BSU, he said, was already handling a tutoring program and obtaining scholarships for black students, tasks which should be carried out by the administration.
Bright said it was difficult to say whether or not this demand would be met.
"First we got to get him to be more specific," he said. "There is some hangup about how these positions fit into the structure of the University."
He said he doubted if the Chancellor would flatly refuse any of the demands but they might have to be modified. He added, however, that the BSU
would continue to press the demands as essential to black students.
Asked about the status of the Afro-American Institute Bright referred to Chalmers statement in the letter that this demand and the BSU's position was not clearly understood.
Bright said he doubted that Malcolm X Hall would even be considered until four or five years from now because of the Chancellor's statement concerning the tremendous need for space during the next ten years.
Chalmers suggested the BSU bring it's demand for a black disciplinary board to try all black students before the Student Senate Executive Committee.
Turkey Time is here! Register for your free Turkey at Sandy's
KILT DANCE
That's right—every time you purchase an order of food.at Sandy's—you can register for a big 14 lb. turkey. Students! Think of all the joy you'll cause walking in the door back home with a 14 lb. turkey under your arm. (Attention hippies—maybe then you won't have to shave off your beard and sideburns for mommy and daddy —bribe them with a turkey.)
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th
Both Haynsworth's backers and foes predicted the outcome would be extremely close.
Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., Haynsworth's chief sponsor, told the Senate that "if the Senate were to vote this very minute, perhaps a majority would not vote to coform." He said he hoped to convert some senators during debate.
Hollings accused Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., who led the Haynsworth opposition, of arguing his case on television before senators had a chance to study both sides of the controversy. Because of the "onrush of the news media," he said, "the debate was over before it began."
Hollings said senators who accused Haynsworth of unethical judicial conduct were masking their real reasons, which he said were philosophical and political.
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Merchants of Good Appearance
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 49
Thursday, Nov. 20, 1969
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Cyclamate may be sold
WASHINGTON-An official report has recommended the government drop its proposed ban on the sale of food and soft drinks containing cyclamate, and substitute instead a printed warning on the labels of products containing the artificial sweetener.
The recommendation came from a scientific panel appointed last Thursday by Welfare Secretary Robert H. Finch. Finch specifically asked the panel to find some way to make cyclamated products available to weight watchers and diabetics.
Sweden grants asylum
STOCKHOLM—Sweden said today it had granted asylum to 18 more American soldiers and draft dodgers who were protesting the Vietnam War.
The Swedish Immigration Board said the Americans had been granted permission to stay in Sweden indefinitely but will not be considered political refugees.
The board said it had under consideration the cases of 15 other Americans who were asking asylum.
Cuts may be drastic
TOPEKA—Cuts in the requested eight to 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries at Kansas colleges and universities would be "a drastic step backward," according to Kansas University Chancellor Dr. E. Laurence Chalmers.
The chancellor said it would be drastic "since the reduced rate does not even meet the annual cost of living increases and is well below both past and estimated future salary increases in higher education."
Chalmers objected to the recommended cuts by state budget director James W. Bibb at the budget hearings held here Wednesday.
Fulbright sees long war
WASHINGTON—The Nixon administration's Vietnam peace plans amount to nothing more than "a prescription for a very prolonged war," according to Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ark.
Intrepid blasts off
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—Apollo 12 astronauts Charles "Pete" Conrad and Alan L. Bean blasted off from the moon at 8:26 a.m. today on the first leg of their quarter million mile trip back to earth.
"Away we go," said Conrad
"Looking good."
"What a nice ride," Conrad said two minutes after liftoff.
Intrepid rose vertically for the first 10 seconds and then pitched over and gained momentum. At that point, Intrepid was 272 feet high.
The Yankee Clipper was 92 miles ahead in a 69-mile high orbit at the moon blastoff.
"Nice ride." reported Bean.
The astronauts handled the vital launch as if the operation were just a routine space maneuver.
They even found time to discuss the scene below.
"Oh, look at that rille down there," Conrad said.
"Wow," said Conrad after spotting the rille.
Yankee Clipper was more than 290 miles ahead when Intrepid achieved orbit at 9:33 a.m. EST.
Mission control reported that Intrepid's takeoff engine burned a few seconds too long, but controllers reported the resulting orbital error was "trimmed out very nicely."
The crucial takeoff firing was necessary to get the two explorers home. If the engine had failed—and they had not been able to find and fix the trouble—Conrad and Bean would have been doomed to die on the moon.
Earth control reported that Intrepid's orbit was almost perfect,
ranging from 10 miles to 54 miles above the moon.
The Yankee Clipper was making its 30th swing around the moon at the time, following a path ranging from 67 to 71 miles high.
At 8:33 a.m. Intrepid safely entered an orbit taking them one and a half times around the moon before scheduled docking in early afternoon with Richard F. Gordon in the command ship Yankee Clipper for the journey home.
Conrad and Bean immediately began preparations for the delicate maneuvers that will lineup their orbit for rendezvous with Yankee Clipper. They were in high spirits after traipsing like "giraffes" in their second moon-walk. At one time Conrad fell but was unhurt and Bean pulled
(Continued to page 20)
Chalmers battles for budget funds
Photo by Halina Pawl
New Student Senate members sworn in
David S. Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, read the oath of office to new Student Senate representatives at Wednesday night's Senate meeting. Replacements were chosen by the Senate to fill the positions of elected representatives who were unable to complete their terms.
By VICKI PHILLIPS
Kansan Staff Writer
TOPEKA—Representatives of Kansas state colleges and universities Wednesday requested restoration of $2.6 million in salary funds recommended to be cut from their fiscal 1971 budgets.
State Budget Director James Bibb heard the appeals made before the Governor's Budget Hearing in Topeka. The representatives requested 8 to 10 per cent faculty salary increases for institutions under the jurisdiction of the State Board of Regents.
Salary increases were among $9.7 million which Bibb has recommended be cut from the $182 million total operating budgets requested by the six schools and the two state institutions for the handicapped and the deaf.
I think I want to tell you the story of my life. It's a story about a woman who was born in 1920 and grew up in a small town in Sweden. She was a very intelligent and hardworking woman, and she worked as a teacher at a school for girls. She was also a musician and a painter. She loved music and painting, and she was very passionate about them. She was also a very kind and caring person. She was always looking out for her friends and helping them with their problems. She was a very wise and thoughtful woman. And she was always ready to help others. She was a very strong and resilient woman. And she was always willing to help others.
The institutions are asking for $91 million from the state's revenue fund. Requests for salary increases for the three state colleges and universities total $4,909.041.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. supported the requests for faculty salary increases in a statement opening the hearing.
"If this recommendation were to prevail, it would be a drastic step backward for higher education in Kansas since the reduced
Instead of the eight per cent representatives are asking for, Bibb recommended four per cent increases at all the schols at a total cost of $2,272,419.
Objecting to cuts in new faculty positions at all schools, Chalmers said faculty resources were being stretched too thin. He also asked for restoration of funds cut for clerical help and other nonteaching personnel at the schools.
rate does not even meet the annual cost of living increases and is well below both past and estimated future salary increases in higher education," Chalmers said.
Restoration of $203,768, the full amount requested to provide matching funds for federal loans to students, was also requested by the Chancellor.
"Student loans have been the (Continued to page 20).
The Student Senate Wednesday night heard a resolution urging the Union Operating Board to start beer sales in the Kansas Union "at the earliest possible date."
Senate's resolution urges beer in Union
Frank Zilm, St. Louis senior and vice-president of the student body, said the Board had already studied possibilities for license application and locations for beer sales in the Union.
The resolution was sent to the Union Operating Board and will be voted on at the next Senate meeting Dec. 3.
Zilm reported the Board had also approved the go-ahead for preparation of working drawings of the proposed Satellite Union and a study of traffic problems around a proposed sight northwest of Allen Field House.
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student and chairman of the
George said the phone will be installed in early December. He explained that Senate members will answer the phone to listen to student problems and answer questions concerning the Senate's functions.
George also announced that kiosks bearing information concerning the Senate will be set up at various locations around campus.
Student Senate Executive Committee, announced the installation of an information phone in the Student Senate office.
The Senate defeated an amendment to the Senate Code presented by Kathy Newcomer, Omaha junior, calling for candidates for student body president and vice-president to run separately rather than on the same ticket.
UNITY
Every deed and every relationship is surrounded by an atmosphere of silence. Friendship needs no words-it is solitude delivered from the anguish of loneliness.
Before Thee in humility, with Thee in faith, in Thee in peace.
Dag Hammarskjold
Dag Hammarskjold
2 KANSAN Nov. 20
1969
SUNDAY, JULY 17, 2004
In the last game I have finally noticed a pronounced effort by the students at KU to sing our Alma Mater. Let us keep this spirit up, and this Saturday sing the Alma Mater louder than it has been sung before.
Let us give the team all the support we can muster in an effort to beat Mizzou. So let's show our rivals across the border the spirit we have for our team.
Cut this out and take it to the game or turn to page 63 in your football program and sing loudly for our last 1969 football effort. GO HAWKS!
Ace Johnson THE STABLES
The University of Kansas Alma Mater
Far above the golden valley Glorious to view Stands our noble alma mater Towering toward the blue Lift the chorus ever onward Crimson and the blue Hail to thee our Alma Mater Hail to old KU
KU
Campus briefs
Math men to meet Thursday
Nachman Aronszajn, professor of mathematics, will speak at a mathematics colloquium at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in 119 Strong Hall. Refreshments will be served at 3:15 p.m. The public is invited to attend.
Chalmers, broadcasters to meet
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers will address members of the Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters at noon, Friday, in the Ramada Inn.
In addition to Chalmers' luncheon address, the management seminar will feature panel discussions and sessions with question and answers. Included in the program are station managers from four Kansas radio stations, as well as four Kansas State Legislators.
Advertising clubs to merge
Two advertising organizations will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union to consider a possible merger.
Lee F. Young, acting dean of the School of Journalism will be the guest of honor at the combined meeting of Alpha Delta Sigma (ADS) and Gamma Alpha Chi. ADS will have formal pledging ceremonies and also install an honorary professional member to the chapter.
Organ company releases disc
A long-playing record, "James Moeser at the University of Kansas," was recently released by the Reuter Organ Company, Lawrence.
Moeser, professor of organ, was recorded playing the inaugural recital, Feb. 5 on the new organ in Swarthout Recital Hall. The record was made by Century Records of Los Angeles.
Moeser's recorded recital includes works by Buxtehude, D'Aquin, Bach, Messiaen, Alain and Dupre.
The record is available at local music stores and from the Reuter Organ Company.
English Center needs tutors
Volunteers for tutoring students at the Intensive English Center are needed. The tutoring program is sponsored by People-to-People.
Dave Hann, Kansas City senior and chairman of P-to-P, said about 20 tutors were needed.
Interested students should inquire at the P-to-P office, Kansas Union.
KU represented at conference
Two students and Mrs. Donna Shavlik, an assistant dean of women, will attend the Southwest Regional Conference of the National Student Volunteer Program at the University of Tulsa Friday and Saturday.
Becky Morrell, Prospect Heights, Ill., junior, and Pat Saffell, Wichita senior, will attend the meeting as student representatives of the Community Service Clearing House.
Director attends symposium
Breck Marion, assistant director of the Bureau of Visual Instruction, attended the fourth annual Mountain-Plains Media Leadership Symposium held at a ranch near Loveland, Colo., last week.
Sixty-five visual and media specialists from eight states attended the symposium.
New York dean lectures
John P. Eberhard, dean of the School of Architecture and Environmental Design of the University of New York at Buffalo will lecture at KU Dec. 11. The lecture will be at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Architect will lecture Jan. 8
Walter A. Netch, architect of the Skidmore, Owings and Merrill Co., Chicago, will lecture at 8 p.m., Jan. 8, 1970 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is sponsored by the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
Med School named beneficiary
The University of Kansas School of Medicine has received a bequest of nearly $12,000 from the estate of Mrs. Bertha Martha Conner of Lyons.
The School of Medicine will determine the use of the money which is being held by the Endowment Association as the Bertha Martha Conner Fund for Medical Technology.
Mrs. Conner named the School of Medicine as residual beneficiary of her estate and designed these funds be used for the benefit of KU's medical technology program.
Biology students go to meet
Jerry W. Shay, Dallas graduate student, presented two papers at a recent meeting of the Society for Cell Biology at Detroit.
The first paper's co-authors were from the University of Texas. It dealt with the fine structure of lizard spermatozoa as seen through an electronic microscope. The second, written by a scientist at Johns Hopkins University, concerned the structure of the developing heart.
Paul R. Burton, professor of physiology and cell biology, wins
R. Kirkland, Woodhull, Ill., graduate student and Richard Briggs, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, graduate student, also represented KU at the meeting.
Nov.20
1969 KANSAN 3
An exhibit entitled "The Working Hypothesis" will open Friday in the University of Kansas Museum of Art. The display was described as an "annotated exhibition of work in progress by members of the KU drawing and painting department" by Bret Waller, director of the museum.
Exhibit theme to be progression
fields of interest. A printing plate and etching will be shown in its most recent stage and four earlier stages. The exhibit will also include a study for a mural made from colored paper cut in geometric shapes.
The exhibit will feature the work of 13 instructors. Participating instructors have contributed sketches, studies for paintings and objects related to their
Waller said he thinks the exhibit will be enlightening for many students.
"Many people do not realize the preliminary steps an artist goes through," he said. "They assume the artist draws a sketch, then a
Libraries will remain open during most of the holidays
KU libraries will remain open during the Thanksgiving holidays with the exception of Thursday, Nov. 27.
Watson Library will be open Nov. 25, 26 and 28 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Nov. 29 from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Watson will not be open Sunday, Nov. 30.
The Law Library will be open Nov. 25 from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.,
Nov. 26 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Nov.
29 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Nov.
30 from 2 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The Law Library will not be open
Friday, Nov. 28.
The Earth Sciences Library, Engineering and Architecture Library and Music Library will be open Nov. 25, 26 and 28 from 8
The Science Library will be open Nov. 25 from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., Nov. 26, 28 and 29 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Nov. 30 from 2 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Panel to discuss N. Ireland crisis
"Crisis in Northern Ireland will be discussed at the International Club panel discussion at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room.
Speakers are Donald R. McCoy, professor of history and Steve Davey, Ireland graduate student.
Another International Club activity last Saturday was thought a success by all who attended an intercollege dance at the Ranch Mart Auditorium in Kansas City.
a. m. to 5 p.m. These libraries will not be open Nov. 29 and 30.
Today
Official Bulletin
Children's Theatre. "Snow Queen."
University Theatre, 1 p.m.
Special Film; "Sunset Boulevard."
Dyche Auditorium, 8 p.m.
p.m.
Experimental Theatre: "The Hostage," 8:20 p.m.
Children's Theatre: 'Snow Queen'
University Theatre, 1 p.m.
Opening and reception: "The Working Hypothesis. Museum of Art, 272 N. Chelsea St."
Biology Science lecture: "Immune Response & Antibody Molecules." Dr. Herman Eisen, Washington University from KUUC) 203 Bailey 3:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East Door.
Robinson Gymnasis. 4:30 p.m.
The Mathematics Library will be open Nov. 25 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Nov. 26 and 28 from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. The Mathematics Library will not be open Nov. 29 and 30.
Dyche Auditorium, 7 and 9:30 p.m.
Hudu Club: Robinson Gymnastics
International Film: "Shameless Old Lady," (French). Auditorium, 1037 West 59th Street, New York, NY 10024.
Experimental Theatre: "The Hostage." 8:20 p.m.
Foreign students: Pamphlets and applications are available for 1969 Christmas International Houses, 226 Strong.
Spencer Research Library will be open Nov. 25, 26 and 28 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Spencer will not be open Nov. 29 and 30.
Home of the
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Clendening Medical Library at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City will be open Nov. 25 from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., Nov. 26 and 28 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Nov. 29 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Nov. 30 from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
larger sketch and finally a finished painting," he said.
There will be an informal opening of the exhibit from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. Friday. The exhibit, which will be shown in the Changing Exhibitions Gallery of the museum, will run through December.
Lloyd Buzzi
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KANSAN Comment
From the sidelines
To the editor:
I am the junior varsity basketball coach at Paseo High School, Kansas City, Mo. This is somewhat a unique situation because I am a white teacher in a 95 percent black school. I have been in this position for the last three years. With these few credentials in mind, I am going to voice my opinion of what I interpreted at your 1969 Homecoming.
After coming to a conclusion that the black students and the school administration had worked something out concerning the queen situation, it was very upsetting to me that the black students involved in the Homecoming ceremonies couldn't show enough school spirit and respect to stand for the National Anthem and the school song.
I was very disappointed to see that politics and the school's racial problems dominated the afternoon of sports. It is a shame that the followers of Kansas football can't attend a game and watch football.
John W. Paris, Coach, Paseo High School Kansas City, Mo.
* *
To the editor:
Perhaps the Great Silent Majority should maintain its silence if it has nothing more functional to offer than the same dogmatic racism we have been hearing for years. It is quite obvious, Mr. Yost, that your concept of what you call "the real student community" is as outdated as your idea that a black homecoming queen is a humiliating occurrence.
The "real student community," like the nation itself, is not made up only of a tight white majority who become vocal only when their white superiority (their concept of "white and only white is beautiful") is threatened. The constituency of the Committee of the Whole contains those minorities who deserve representation just as much as the Great Silent Majority. If they have to agitate to gain that representation then it is time that we examine our Great System to discover why it is that minorities are not automatically represented.
Why do they have to agitate to gain what is constitutionally theirs? Perhaps, Mr. Yost, as a member of the Great White Silent Majority, you ought to examine that big word "integrity" that you throw around so loosely.
Pat Stiles Kansas City junior
✩ ✩ ✩
To the editor:
After sitting through last week's game, I felt compelled to write about our unbelievable
yell leaders. For years the KU students have cringed slightly but have reluctantly gone along with spelling KANSAS (a cheer that would insult the ingenuity of even high school students); but it has apparently not been enough for our yell leaders.
They have found it necessary to subject us to even more of those "get-a-load-of-them" looks from our opponents. "We've got the fever we're hot" must have come out of a junior high cheerleader handbook; and with the fatalistic dancing of our yell leaders, it leaves the fans looking on in complete astonishment.
Most fans have taken a "you've got to be kidding" attitude and tried hard to ignore the antics on the sidelines. But the yell leaders were not yet satisfied. Last week they must have decided to set a record for the most humiliating, juvenile cheer of all times even topping the previous week's "fumble-bumble." I truly believe even elementary school students would feel perfectly stupid doing a cheer in such language as "womp 'em up side of the head." It was obvious that the pom pon girls were embarrassed, but seeing no alternative, tried to do their best. Once was too much for the fans but simply not enough for the mad man on the mike. Over and over he blurted the words and danced up a storm. I think we as KU students have now been subjected to all we can take. And I only hope that if our great yell leader does not agree that one of the thousands of irate fans find the courage to take the microphone and "womp him up side of the head!"
Vickie Agler Lawrence
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646. Business Office—UN 4-4358
Publicized at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Postmaster's copy is also posted in class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 68044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered by the University of Kansas are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams
Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks
Advertising Manager Jack Hurley
National Advertising Manager Rod Osborne
Classified Advertising Manager Larry Reagan O'Neill
Promotion Manager Reason O'Neill
Circulation Manager Todd Smith
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor Joanna K. Wiele
Campus Editor Roe H. Bullard
New Media Editor Ruth J. Cox
Makeup Editor Ken Peterson
Sports Editor Jay Thomas
Wilson Editor Martha Sheedorf
Arts and Review Editor Mike Sheedorf
Women's Page Editor Linda Loyd
Prize Wafer Editor Mike Riekle
Assistant News Editor Donna Shrader, Stuart Sheedorf
Assistant Sports Editor Joe Childs
Assistant Editorial Editor Judith K. Dielbelt
Assistant Campus Editor Rick Erikel
Assistant Games Editor Mike Fredeskens
Assistant Women's Page Editor Viki Hysten
Member Associated Collegiate Press
M-day march "no solution"
To the editor:
In regard to Saturday's Moratorium march in Topeka, I am almost inclined to agree with Agnew's statement, "If the moratorium had any use whatever it served as an emotional purgative for those who feel the need to cleanse themselves of their lack of ability to offer a constructive solution to the problem."
The parade route was down some obscure streets where no more than a small group of Topeka residents could view it. Then there were three "peace-loving" speakers telling these 800 or so "peace-loving" listeners that they were for peace. I wonder if there is another more successful waste of time? I happened to overhear an elderly man and woman passing by and musing at the congregation. "Probably just another of them demonstrations," they decided. Aren't these the people that should be reached and not those who are already firmly against Vietnam?
The finale of the fiasco, however, had to be the singing of "The Star-Spangled Banner." I wonder how many of those people who were attempting to show their patriotism stopped to think that that very song is a war song, written during the Spanish-American War, another of our imperialistic conquests. Consider the words these "peace-lovers" were singing, "and the rockets red glare, the bombs bursting in air . . . land of the free, home of the brave." Is this the concept those anti-Vietnam people are trying to express?
If we are actually serious about putting an end to the war in Vietnam, let's stop kidding ourselves with useless activities and really do something constructive, so men like Agnew will stop making statements about the "impudent snobs." For example, the boycott of classes worked well for one day in October, but interest obviously waned seriously this month. How committed to peace are those 1,500 who marched last month—are they committed enough to do a little self-sacrificing?
Also, what about taking Moratorium activities off campus and into the cities, where the main core of the "silent majority" resides? Perhaps these people won't be silent when they are made to realize the injustice of this war.
Thirdly, if people are actually concerned with militarism, let's start at our own school and with a basic problem at hand. Instead of those 1,500 "peace-lovers" marching on this campus, why don't they all work to get ROTC off this campus?
Kathy Nelson Lincoln, Neb. sophomore
Off the wire
United Press International
READING, England—Nearly 5,000 students at Reading University will decide next Tuesday on a proposal to boost the Student Union funds by watching a strip show. another of them demonstrations," they decided. Aren't these Jackson, 23, said he reckons on a profit of $480 in behalf of the publication of a handbook and the student's newspaper.
- * *
WASHINGTON—Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew, speaking out against antiwar groups' demands for an immediate U.S. pullout from Vietnam:
"We are not going to undergo a defeat simply because of the exhortations of these people to completely move away from it, to run, to bug out from this war."
GRIFF AND THE UNICORN
by DAVE SOKOLOFF
SKREEE EEE
WHY DOESN'T HE COLLECT STAMPS OR SOMETHING?
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Daily Kansan.
'Easy Rider': about rednecks or freedom?
By BOB BUTLER
Kenon Bresnan
Kansan Reviewer
"Easy Rider" is easily one of the year's best films. That's why I get upset every time some spacehead wanders up to me and says, "Man, that movie really tells it like it is. Those crummy red-necks."
"I suppose it is very in right now to reverse youth, and perhaps that's why "Easy Rider" has been made something different than what its creators intended. It's a shame because here, for once, is a film which is honest—a film which admits it hasn't all the answers. "Easy Rider" really does "tell it like it is," but the conclusions it draws will probably turn off as many freaks as Wallace supporters.
For those of you who haven't heard, "Easy Rider," starring Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper, was directed by Hopper and won the award for the best film by a new director at Cannes this year. It's the story of two hippies (i.e., men with hair more than five inches long) who make a bundle selling dope, throw away their watches, hop on their motorcycles and take off from LA. to New Orleans where they hope to have some good times at the Mardi Gras. The good times never materialize, and our heroes (antiheroes?) are in the end cut down by shotgun-toting Louisiana rednecks.
The photography, story line, music and acting (especially from Jack Nicholson as an alcoholic lawyer the two pick up) are beautiful. But that isn't what I want to talk about here.
When I put the word "anti-heroes" in parentheses above, I wasn't being smug. Wyatt and Billy are antiheroes. They make their money by selling hard dope (a few lives ruined because of it, no doubt) and they can be as contemptuous as necessary when confronting philosophies differing from their own.
Moreover, their lives are still entrenched in the mainstream of America, something which they
Radio talk on Israel
Zamir Bavel, associate professor of computer sciences, will be a guest on radio KLWN's "Conversation" show at 8:30 a.m. Friday. Bavel will discuss his experiences while on a recent trip to Israel, and compare them with those of a trip made several years ago. The program will be carried by both the AM and FM broadcasting facilities of the station.
can never dig their way out of.
In one meaningful gesture, Hopper jumps to open the car door for a wealthy dope baron. Suddenly he is the underground equivalent of a corporate yesman for this Rolls-Royce driving wimp in yellow sunglasses. In another scene the duo wheel a
seen the movie, this revelation may make the memories of that scene more painful than ever—for those of you who are yet to see the film, don't laugh off the dialogue as some script writer's idea of Southern prejudice. This is for real.
Nov. 20
1969 KANSAN 5
Why this hatred? The film's
flat-tired cycle up to a ranch house and ask to use the garage to repair it. In one shot we see the ranch owner shoeing a horse while in the garage Fonda and Hopper tinker with the cycle's wheel. Who, the movie asks us, is the more independent? This dirt farmer with his horse and forge or these two punks with their $3,000 toys, fresh off the assembly line? Which can really afford to have contempt for the Establishment?
KWSAN REVIEWS
The point is made again when the duo are invited to eat lunch with the rancher and his large family. Fonda, in the middle of the dinner smalltalk, slowly looks around and tells the rancher, with all sincerity, "You know, you've got a real nice place here. I really mean it. You should be proud. You do your own thing in your own time." There's something in Fonda's eyes, a disquieting thought that he himself might never have anything to be proud of, a thought that in the love of his wife and family the rancher has found fundamental happiness which will always elude Easy Riders.
The point could be made in a dozen instances in the movie (the greatest of which is the episode in the hippie commune, direct analogy to that with the rancher and family) but they are all summed up in the last minutes of the film. Camped out for one last night, Hopper, stoned as usual, remarks that they really had a fine time in New Orleans. "No," Fonda replies, "We blew it. We really, really blew it."
The villains of the film, of course, are those upight Americans who find Godliness in crewcuts and a Communist behind every beard. If the film paints a poor picture of this segment of America, perhaps it's because it's too real. Director Hopper, in filming a confrontation scene between the travelers and a handful of local vigilantes in a truckstop cafe, used no script. He recruited his cast members from the Texas town in which they were filming, and told them to say whatever they liked about the long-haired actors. For those of you who have
most probing comment is made by George, the alcoholic lawyer, a kind of comic Christ-figure who doesn't hate anybody but is crucified because he understands the problems all too well.
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"You know," George tells his long-haired companions, "these folks are afraid of you. Not of you yourself, but what you represent to them. Freedom. It's pretty hard to be free when you're bought and sold in the marketplace every day. But don't you ever tell them they're not free, 'cause then they're going to start killing and malming to prove that they are free!"
The words are prophetic (I
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think I see the hand of co-screenwriter Terry Southern in them). Indeed the entire film is prophetic of the kind of America we can expect if a little openmindedness doesn't prevail.
"Easy Rider" is a timely film, dealing with questions we'd better start answering. See it if you care about America, what it is, and what it could be.
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'Just a typical high school romance'
KU life gains yardage in Mrs. Rodgers' eyes
15y MARCIA MITCHELL
Kansan Staff Writer
Theirs was the typical high school romance. She was a bouncy cheerleader and he was the dashing football quarterback. Only this romance "scored" with the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Pepper Rodgers.
After a brief acquaintance in grade school, Pepper and Mrs. Rodgers began "going together" their senior year at Brown High School in Atlanta. Two years of Georgia Tech. University football for Pepper marked a victory at the 1951 Orange Bowl and the winning of Mrs. Rodgers' hand the following summer.
Upon graduation and other coaching positions at various universities, Pepper and family became Jayhawks three years ago. The family now consists of Ricky, age 16, Terri, 15, Kyle, 12 and Kelly. 6.
The Rodgers moved to Kansas from California and naturally arrived during a typical white winter. Two of the boys had never seen snow.
"I'll never forget seeing them play in the snow after we got off the plane," said Mrs. Rodgers.
The mother of three sports-minded boys and wife of the KU head football coach, Mrs. Rodgers has one constant subject on her mind—football. Ricky plays for Lawrence High School while Kyle supports a little league team called the "Hill Billies." Kelly is too young for organized football but manages a few punts in the house.
Mrs. Rodgers is not particularly superstitious about games, but being a woman, she wears a good luck charm on her bracelet, just in case. She also discovered last season that if she wore a navy blue suit given to her on her birthday in January, 1968, the team would always win.
"The only times I didn't wear my suit was to the Oklahoma
game because it was in the cleaners and to the Orange Bowl," said Mrs. Rodgers.
But the native Georgian always manages to be dressed in blue, especially at the Nebraska games.
War tank criticized by Accounting Office
The GAO said the Army invested huge sums of money in mass production of the Sheridan at a time when "no acceptable ammunition was available" and field tests raised a serious doubt whether the combustible cartridge would ever work.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The General Accounting Office (GAO) charged Wednesday the Army had wasted money, endangered lives and impaired the combat effectiveness of U.S. forces in Vietnam through mismanagement of a major weapons procurement program.
The Sheridan is a tank-like weapons carrier intended to fire a missile called the Shillelagh. It is also equipped with a 152mm gun turret designed to use a radically new type of ammunition with a completely combustible cartridge case.
"Those people wear so much red, the stadium looks like a barn," she said.
In an official report to Congress, the government's audit agency criticized top Army officials for their handling of the so-called Sheridan Weapons System, on which $1.3 billion had been spent or obligated during the past 10 years.
The Army acknowledged that the GAO report was factually correct, but said it gave a "distorted picture" because it failed to point out that the Sheridan was rushed into production when
ORGANIZED WHITTLERS
ORGANIZED WHITTLERS
DETROIT (UPI) — Like to whittle your time awav?
So do members of the National Woodcarvers Association. The 1,300 members exchange projects, patterns and supplies, reports the Encyclopedia of Associations, published by Gale Research Co., Detroit.
officials feared the enemy might have tanks that would completely outclass existing U.S. weapons.
"Decisions made by the Army were arrived at using the best information available at that time," the Army said. "The view there was an urgent requirement to counter the threat of a superior enemy tank was the basis for many of the Army decisions."
"The restrictions placed on this ammunition seriously limit its potential effectiveness for use in combat, and failure by the weapon crew to fully comply with these restrictions could represent a serious safety hazard," the GAO report said.
Some of the weapons were finally sent to Vietnam this year, but the Army has found it necessary to place severe restrictions on their use because the 152mm ammunition is still hazardous under certain conditions such as high heat and humidity, which are commonplace in Vietnam.
Commenting that "Pepper" doesn't lean toward superstition much either, Mrs. Rodgers said he does have a favorite tie he wears to games.
GAO contended the Army knew as early as 1966 the Sheridan was in deep trouble and said it should have reevaluated the whole program "with a view toward decreasing or terminating production."
6 KANSAN
Nov. 20
1969
Instead, the Army proceeded to invest another $250 million in special turrets for the existing M60 tanks, to adapt them for use with the still-functioning Sheridan weapons.
Kickoff is earlier
The kickoff time of the Kansas-
Missouri football game has been
changed from 1:30 p.m. to 12:20
p.m. Saturday.
Some people are also known to eat various special foods for good luck. But Mrs. Rodgers said she doesn't have much trouble catering to her husband's whims because he eats all of his evening meals at the training table.
The earlier kickoff time is a result of the American Broadcasting Company choosing the game for its regional "wild card" telecast. The stadium gates will open at 11:00 a.m.
Outside of her home life, Mrs. Rodgers is a volunteer at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital, entertainer and keeper of a scrapbook.
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"I always cut out the good articles, but right now I'm three years behind," laughed Mrs. Rodgers.
As for entertaining, the Rodgers' house is filled with people after every game "because we feel it's better to stay at home and celebrate than go out somewhere." The coaches, assistant coaches and wives are often served chili, one of Pepper's favorites, while everyone "hashes and rehashes" the game.
Well-known company at the Rodgers' house include most of the coaches and wives in the Big 8 with whom the Rodders are good friends. Mrs. Rodgers is also active in a sewing club, formed by the KU coaches' wives.
Contact with the football team for Mrs. Rodgers occurs most during recruiting season when prospectives come to the house. However, some of the players are
Photo by Dennis McFall
Mrs. "Pepper" Rodgers and her son Kelly
often seen at 520 Pioneer Road.
"Emery Hicks is Kelly's idol because he often plays pool with him," said Mrs. Rodgers. "And one funny thing that happened this summer was that Dave Aikins worked for the company that painted our house and ended up doing it."
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Speaker cites cause of radicalism
"Youth radicalization" is a struggle growing out of the nature of the capitalist system," Nelson Blackstock, national organizational secretary of the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA), said yesterday. He spoke to the KU branch of YSA Wednesday in room 305 of the Kansas Union. His subject was "International Youth Radicalization."
The increased size and awareness of the student population was responsible for the current wave of youth radicalism, said Blackstock. Other factors he listed included the breakdown of the "anti-communist myth" and of values enforced by the ruling class.
workers and students in the United States.
Blackstock said socialism was the logical successor to a capitalist society. He said Stalin's communism was only socialism and was therefore rejected by
"We are now witnessing the
JOHN WILSON
Nelson Blackstock
death throws of the New Left," said Blackstock, adding that Students for a Democratic Society had been the organized voice of the New Left.
Blackstock said workers would be forced into a struggle because of weaknesses of the capitalist system. A process of revolution would change the capitalism to socialism, he said. He said he hoped violence would not be necessary for change, but he thought the ruling class would probably initiate violence to try to avoid losing power.
"Imperialists depend on the ability to wage wars to maintain existence," said Blackstock. He said the three most important events leading to youth radicalism was the war in Vietnam, the Cuban revolution and the Negro struggle in the United States.
Military ball queen is named
Rebecca Wieland, Garden City sophomore, was crowned the 1969-70 Military Ball Queen of the Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC at the annual Military Ball Saturday night.
Attending Miss Wieland were
Judy Bottenfield, Pittsburg sophomore and Kathy Newcomer, Omaha, Neb., junior.
Miss Wieland was nominated by Alpha Gamma Delta sorority and Miss Newcomer by Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.
100
Tony Croman says:
If you are half the man you think you are, you might want to talk to me about your financial future.
Control of activities sought
Buzzi and Associates 2323 Ridge Court 742-7771
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) council met at 7:30 p.m. in the Ellsworth Hall cafeteria.
Topics under discussion were a committee for intrahall recreation, methods of informing incoming freshmen and foreign students of the residence hall system and its policies and a letter to Chancellor E. Laurence
Chalmers concerning the right of the residence halls to control their own activities.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
The letter, which was signed by the hall presidents and Keith Jorgensen, AURH president, said that the residence halls should be allowed to control their own activities rather than the Student Senate controlling them.
White House spokesman defends Agnew's Des Moines statement
Klein said government has no control over the news media, especially broadcast facilities, other than through the Federal
Nov. 20
1969 KANSAN 7
"Mr. Agnew gave no implied threats that I've read," Klein said. "Free press extends to everyone. If there is intimidation, then the industry isn't as strong as I think it is. We have no desire to inhibit you in the presentation of news. We have only asked for objectivity."
NEW YORK (UPI)—Herbert G. Klein, White House director of communications, said Wednesday the Nixon administration has no intention of intimidating radio and television news commentators. He made the statement at a jammed news conference at the Plaza Hotel.
He defended Vice-President Spiro Agnew's speech last week in Des Moines, Iowa, and said Agnew had "called only for self-examination and had opposed censorship" of television news. Asked if the administration felt that television and radio are protected by the same First Amendment privileges that cover newspapers, Klein said he did not want to get into a technical discussion.
Communications Commission and he pointed out that the present FCC board is composed of more Democrats than Republicans.
Committee considers increasing benefits
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Ways and Means Committee is considering an increase in social security benefits of as much as 20 per cent—double the boost requested by President Nixon, Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ak., said Wednesday.
Mills, the committee chairman, told newsmen Nixon's plan for a 10 per cent increase in all benefits effective March 1 had been "torpedoed." He noted the cost of living had risen by more than 8 per cent since benefits were last raised effective February, 1968.
Of several alternative plans under consideration by his committee, none calls for a benefits increase of less than 15 per cent, he said. One envisions a 15 per cent boost next Jan. 1 followed by a further 5 per cent increase July 1; another would provide two such increases of 10 per cent each.
Help spread the message of the March on Washington
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Announcement:
to Apartment Renters
1603 West 15th St. (adjacent to campus)
You can find a wide variety of rental prices by contacting:
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There is a price for two, three and/or four occupants. YOU CHOOSE THE PLAN TO FIT YOUR REQUIREMENTS.
Visit the office at above address or call 843-4993 for further details. Rental prices are established on an incentive basis, and are competitive with quality one-bedroom as well as two-bedroom apartments.
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9
Senate votes still undeclared
Haynsworth Senate vote is Friday
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Supreme Court nominee Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. picked up three more Senate supporters Wednesday but Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., announced he would oppose confirmation.
Williams' decision, based on Haynsworth's off-bench financial activities, was expected to carry considerable weight with undecided senators. It was offset by pledges of support from Sens J. Caleb Boggs, R-Del.; Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and George Aiken of Vermont, who commands respect as dean of Senate Republicans.
With the 12 noon Friday showdown vote less than 24 hours away, there were only nine senators still undeclared on President Nixon's nomination of the Greenville, S.C., federal appeals court judge to succeed former Justice Abe Fortas.
According to a UPI tally, 47
Professors will attend tax meeting
Professors from the University of Kansas are attending a tax conference today in Wichita. The conference was initiated 19 years ago by the KU School of Business.
The purpose of the conference is to keep practitioners aware of new tax laws and court decisions," said Keith Weltmer, professor of business administration in charge of arrangements for the University. "It's really two days of school on a highly technical level. For this reason, few students attend."
The conference is co-sponsored by the KU School of Business, the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants, the Kansas Bar Association and the KU Extension. Nearly 300 persons, mostly from the Midwest, will attend.
KU professors Robert R. Sterling, George J. Stabus, Howard F. Stettler and Frank K. Reilly will moderate discussion groups at the conference. Clifford D. Clark, dean of the School of Business, will be toastmaster at the evening banquet. J. Eldon Fields, professor of political science, will speak at tonight's banquet.
8 KANSAN
Nov.20 1969
senators opposed confirmation and 44 supported it. Those undeclared included five Democrats and four Republicans.
Barring switches from the committed lists, Haynsworth's opponents needed only four of the uncommitted to block the nomination.
Aiken said he saw no reason in Haynsworth's case to make an exception to his policy of opposing a presidential appointment, "since I hold that the president himself is responsible for the work of his appointees."
Sen. Alan J. Dixon, D-Bellville, ill., criticized Sen. Ralph
Round Table shows ideas
"Marketing in the Seventies" was the theme of the 15th annual Ideas Today program Tuesday sponsored by the Kansas City Advertising Round Table.
More than 70 KU students, majoring in advertising or enrolled in advertising courses, attended the session in downtown Kansas City, Mo.
Speakers included advertising production men from New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Hollywood. Presentations were given on current advertising campaigns, product research, psychological aspects of broad images and changes in television production. The winning commercials from the American TV Film Festival were also shown.
Other schools represented included the University of Missouri at Columbia, the University of Missouri at Kansas City, Central Missouri State College, the Kansas City Art Institute and Kansas State University.
Nixon, Sato near Okinawa accord
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Prime Minister Eisaku Sato of Japan conferred with President Nixon for nearly two hours Wednesday and reported they were "about to reach a settlement" of conditions under which Okinawa would be returned to Japanese control.
The White House indicated the Okinawa question was about settled, when it said a second session Thursday would concentrate on economic and trade matters. Nixon, it said, regarded the Kansas Society of Certified
Smith, R-III., for changing his mind and announcing that he will vote for confirmation of Haynsworth.
Dixon is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for the Senate seat held by Smith.
Dixon said of Smith, "After walking down the long dark hallway of the Nixon administration, he suddenly became a supporter of Haynsworth."
Dixon was referring to Smith's
original statement that he would oppose Haynsworth.
"For his position on the Haynsworth confirmation, it is enough to demand a new face in the U.S. Senate," Dixon said.
Dixon spoke at the opening of his Belleville campaign headquarters. He said he has the support of "from 60 to 70 county chairmen . . . and widespread assurances of support from the leaders of Cook County."
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This Saturday will be the last run for the Stables' Express this year. The Stables will open at 10 a.m. so come out on out and eat and get tuned up for the game. Two buses will leave at 11:50 (game starts at 12:20) and will take you right to the stadium. After the game the buses will return to The Stables—so you can celebrate the KU victory over Mizzou.
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The Ewing St. Times
Lawrencians to fast over Thanksgiving
Some Lawrentians will be fasting on Thanksgiving in connection with a nationwide "fast for peace" called by Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam.
The fast will begin at noon the day before Thanksgiving and last for 36 hours, John Weismiller, the local organizer of the fast, said Wednesday. At noon Thanksgiving Day the observers of the fast will gather at Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana, he said, "to be together and get to know each other as human beings."
Weismiller said he hoped KU students who would be unable to go home for Thanksgiving dinner would join in foregoing Thanksgiving dinner altogether as a gesture for peace.
Some participants in the fast. Weismiller said, may continue to observe the fast individually on a weekly basis after Thanksgiving.
Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam, the national sponsor of the fast, was founded three or four years ago, Weismiller said, and includes Catholic, Protestant and Jewish religious groups. Among the groups represented: Catholic Peace Fellowship, A Quaker Action Group, Episcopal Peace Fellowship, American Friends Service Peace Education Division, Fellowship of Reconciliation, Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy and the National Liturgical Conference.
VINEYARD CAPITAL
ST. HELENA, Calif. (UPI)—This community is considered the vineyard capital of California with 14 wineries within the city limits and 26 more within a radius of six miles.
Nov.20
1969 KANSAN 9
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at the lowest price," he said, "and through the informal atmosphere of the coffee house, students feel more involved with the entertainers."
Coffee house signs 'Times'
The coffee house offers a Bohemian atmosphere featuring folk and country and western singers, and serves coffee, cider and free popcorn. Coffee houses are popular on many campuses, Meier added.
Tickets for the coffee house are on sale in the SUA office. Cover charge is one dollar and dress is casual.
Talks are deadlocked
The "Ewing St. Times" will be featured at the second Student Union Activities (SUA)-sponsored coffee house, "Middle Earth," at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the remodeled Kansas Union cafeteria.
The "Times," a folk group from
ERN'S CYCLE SALES Foreign Cor Service and Machine Shop Work
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"All our plans depend on how many people come to the next one and show support of the coffee house concept," Meier said.
MOSCOW (UPI)—The month-old border negotiations between Communist China and the Soviet Union have become deadlocked because of Chinese "intransigence," Communist sources said Wednesday.
Coconut Grove, Fla., has recently signed a contract with Capitol Records and has performed on several campuses, said Fred Meier, St. Louis senior and SUA Board vice-president.
Tom Colemen, Wichita sophomore and Jim Colyer, Hays sophomore, ("Buck and Johnny") will also sing folk music, accompanied by guitar.
Vasily V. Kuznetsov, first deputy foreign minister, has been unable to report any meaningful progress since the talks began in Peking Oct. 20, the sources said.
Meier said the success of the first "Middle Earth" in October had encouraged the board to plan four more coffee house performances during the spring semester, including one show devoted to local talent.
"SUA is trying to provide the best entertainment for students
1967
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Docking comments on M-day activites
M. MICHAEL BROWN
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House approves ammunition bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Wednesday approved without debate a compromise bill that exempts shotgun and high power rifle ammunition from regulation under the 1968 Gun Control Act.
The measure was sent to the Senate on a 334-47 vote for certain final congressional approval.
The Senate amendment, while removing shotgun and high power rifle ammunition from registration requirements of the Gun Control Act, leaves all handgun ammunition and 22-caliber ammunition still covered by the law.
12 KANSAN Nov. 20
1969
Photo by Ewing Gallowa
Many have moved...
Many have moved but the Paulists Stay On...
The Paulists arrived on the West Side of New York City in 1858. In 1895 they moved into San Francisco's Chinatown and into the fringes of Chicago's Loop in 1904. They're still there.
Times change. Neighborhoods change. Sometimes they go up. Sometimes they go down—but through it all the Paulist stays. As long as there are people to be served the Paulist will be there.
The Paulist may be in the same old place but he constantly does new things. That's one of the characteristics of the Paulist order; using their own individual talents in new ways to meet the needs of a fast-changing world in the colleges . . . in communications . . . in the ghetto.
If you have given some thought to becoming a Priest, write for an illustrated brochure and a copy of our recent Renewal Chapter Guidelines. Write here.
Vocation Director
Vocation Director Paulist Fathers
Vocation Director
Paulist
Fathers
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TOPEKA—Governor Robert B. Docking said Wednesday he was glad the Nov. 15 moratorium observance in Topeka was peaceful.
Without giving a blanket support of the moratorium, Docking said moratoriums without advocating specifics, indicate Americans desire for peace.
"I am not sure the supporters of the moratorium showed any constructive way to end the war," Docking said.
The Governor said most of the mail he has received is highly critical of the anti-war protests. He said these people felt the demonstrations showed a divided America which was hurting the Paris peace talks and prolonging the war.
"The President wants to end the war; he wants peace," Docking said. "I am not sure whether the moratorium activities will have any effect on President Nixon's present Vietnam policy. Nixon has said the demonstrations would not affect his course and frankly, when the President says something, I assume he means what he says," Docking said.
Concerning President Nixon's Nov. 3 speech on Vietnam, Docking said although the President did not offer new or unique ideas for ending the war in Vietnam, he did renew his commitment to withdraw troops as soon as possible.
In regard to the recent controversy at KU over the crowning of a black homecoming queen. Docking said he had no object-
"The President deserves support and cooperation of all Americans in his pursuit of peace." Docking said.
tions to the course of action that was taken.
"I have great confidence in the Board of Regents and the Chancellor and I do not feel the legislature nor the governor has the right to interfere with university operations. This was my basic
disagreement with Sen. Shultz because he thought the legislature should take a part in university administration. I feel we have experts like Cancellor Chalmers for this and I will back him as I backed Clarke Wescoe." Docking said.
Senate committee warned of war's cost to taxpayers
WASHINGTON (UPI) — An economist who helped stabilize war torn European economies during World War II warned Congress Wednesday that "complete novices" in the U.S. government are letting the Vietnamese economy slide toward collapse at the expense of American taxpayers.
"In ultimate analysis, every diversion of foreign exchange from Vietnam means dollar for dollar, penny for penny, million for million, an added burden on the American taxpayer," Gabriel T. Kerekes told the Senate permanent investigating subcommittee.
He said Vietnam's flourishing black market—which now pays 240 piasters per dollar, more than double the official rate—
was feeding on the fears of impending defeat, spurred by the "contemplated reduction of the U.S. commitment."
Kerekes urged a series of monetary reforms, including a multiple exchange rate to make the black market less lucrative, but he and Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., agreed the South Vietnamese government would have to cooperate and was not willing.
"The Vietnamese pay less and less for the burdens of the war, and we have to make up the difference," Ribicoff told newsmen after the hearing.
Kerekes explained that residents of any war-torn country decide their money would be safer if converted to a "hard"
currency like dollars, and banked overseas. Hence they are willing to pay more for dollars than the official exchange rate. The demand creates a currency black market.
The dollars spent in the country, rather than staying there for needed foreign exchange, are bought through black market and illegally sent to banks in Switzerland and the United States.
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KU
HAWK TALK
To the Kansas football team:
Many of you, as college players, will hear your last hurrah this Saturday afternoon. In several ways this will be a tragedy as great as the season itself because Saturday's game, against one of the nation's strongest teams, offers little hope for redemption. At least, that is what most persons are saying.
On the surface there appears to be much rationale behind this line of reasoning. Missouri, aside from being 8 and 1, is going to the Orange Bowl and anyone close to the scene knows exactly how good a team must be to earn that trip. They have definitely played well, with one exception (Colorado), and are deserving of the record and the honors of which they currently boast.
Kansas, on the other hand, is going nowhere this New Year's Day. But again, anyone close to the scene knows how good a team you are and have been. You too have played well, with one exception (New Mexico, who last week surprised Wyoming), yet are undeserving of the record and the misfortune which have befallen you.
Those who have labeled you a poor team certainly have not seen you play this year. Poor teams do not lose 26-22, 21-17, 28-25, and 17-14 to top flight Big Eight opposition. Poor teams do not lead at the half 16-3, 17-10 and 15-14 on the road in other games.
After the last two home contests, members of this staff asked players of Oklahoma State and Colorado how Kansas compared with the other teams they had faced. Oklahoma State players commented that no one (including Arkansas, Houston, and Missouri) had played them tougher than Kansas. "All they have to do," said Cowboy fullback Bub Deerinwater, "is get "together out there and not make mistakes. Hell, this team is as good as Missouri and I'm telling you that for a fact."
Colorado players agreed, saying that Kansas was much harder to defeat than Missouri (who lost to them 31-24). CU led and dominated Missouri throughout but barely edged Kansas in the waning stages of the final period.
Injuries, bad breaks and mistakes have taken their toll and have, by and large, been responsible for this unbelievable year.
But Saturday, you can make believers out of Missouri and give one final effort that no one, not even the Tigers, figures you capable of. That, and not what has come before, is what we will remember you by.
Best of luck,
THE KANSAN SPORTS STAFF
2. www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML/Mathematica.html
Jay Thomas
Joe Childs
Steve Shriver
Mary Arnold
Bruce Carnahan
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)— Last year's Orange Bowl Classic began two days after Christmas when Kansas coach Pepper Rodgers and Penn State coach Joe Paterno gathered in the basement of the Bal Harbour Hotel on Miami Beach, Fla.
Verbal combatants line up
As they pulled up chairs at the head table and the television cameras began whirring, Rodgers said, "As soon as we get off TV, let me know so I can get my drink."
"Gee, they don't drink in Kansas?" mused Paterno.
"We live in a Baptist state," retorted Rodgers.
And that's pretty much the way those two hold press conferences. Both Pepper and Joe are ultra-relaxed guys. And both see the funny side of football.
To recall a racetrack favoritism,
Devine ain't got a chance.
It's going to be different at this year's Orange Bowl. Paterno is returning with an undefeated Penn State team. But, instead of Rodgers, Missouri's Dan Devine will face the camera and reporters' questions.
This has nothing to do with Missouri's chances of winning the football game, but, as every coach knowns, the pre-game publicity a team gets is almost as important as winning.
Bowl teams get mammoth amounts of publicity in December and just before the games. Coaches have a captive audience on sports pages and television.
None performed better than Rodgers and Paterno before the last Orange Bowl game. They traded quips at will and kept the columnists in stitches—not to mention good copy.
When the subject was brought up the other day, Rodgers said, "Joe's got an advantage in Miami with that northern accent. It's just like when I go to New York. Everytime I open my mouth, I get laughs."
Is Rodgers going to give fellow
Big Eight coach Dan Devine any gems before the Orange Bowl?
"Naw," said Pepper. "I'm saving all my lines for banquet speeches after the season. I've got to be funny this year."
Kansas, after a 9-1 season last year, has won only one of nine games this season. The Jayhawks play Missouri Saturday.
Devine isn't going to wow the Miami press. He can be witty, but he seldom is in front of a large audience. He's more at ease in a one-on-one situation. He's more droll than clever.
Warned about Paterno's comedic ability, Devine said, "I guess I'd better start practicing."
A Kansas City television sportscaster said, "Here's one. How about, 'We want to be a ferocious tiger, not a paper tiger.'"
Devine said, "That's pretty good," took out his notebook and wrote it down.
You'll no doubt hear that one again.
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The first annual News Side-Ad Side football game will be played this Friday, 3:30 p.m. at Robinson Field No.1. The winners will receive a keg of foamy courtesy the Ad side.
14 KANSAN Nov.20 1969
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It's getting to be that time again
Frosh-Varsity battle set for Saturday night
One of the most promising freshman basketball squads at Kansas in several years will test the Jayhawk varsity Saturday night (Nov. 22) in Allen Field House as coach Ted Owens puts his charges on public display for the first time this season.
The annual Varsity-Freshman matchup tips off at 7:30 p.m. as the second half of a big sports doubleheader in Lawrence. Earlier in the day KU's football team closes its season against Orange Bowl bound Missouri at Memorial Stadium.
Working with his least experienced squad in six years as head coach of the Jayhawks, Owens harbors deep concern as to how well the varsity will perform against the frosh.
"For the first time in several years the freshmen have a real good chance to win," Owens concedes.
"In our practice scrimmages the freshmen have been whipping the varsity on the back-boards."
Adding to Owens' woes is the questionable status of sophomore guard Aubrey Nash, who has been handicapped the past month with a sprained ankle that has been slow to mend.
Owens said he would not know until later in the week whether Nash would participate in the Varsity-Freshman game.
Going into the final four days of practice ahead of this test, Owens had settled on only three definite starters, and he was not certain where two of them would play.
Bud Stallworth, 6-5 sophomore from Hartselle, Ala., appears sure
Nov.20 1969 KANSAN 15
of a starting assignment at one forward and juniors Dave Robisch (6-9) and Pierre Russell (6-3) will join him somewhere.
Reason for the uncertainty is Owens' debate with himself as to whether to start a "big" team or a "little" team.
If he goes with the smaller unit, he'll have Stallworth and Russell at forwards, Robisch at the pivot and Captain Chester Lawrence and sophomore Bob Kivisto at guards.
If he decides to go with the bigger lineup to better cope with the frosh on the backboards, it will be Stallworth and Robisch at forwards, 6-10 junior Roger Brown at the pivot and Russell at guard along with either Lawrence or Kivisto.
Freshman coach Gale Catlett will start four players ranging from 6-6 to 6-11 along with 5-11 Mark Williams of Denver. The frosh starters will be 6-11 Randy Canfield of Wichita, 6-7 Leonard Gray of Kansas City, 6-6 Mike Bossard of Washington, D.C., and 6-6 Jerry House of Fayetteville, Ark.
THE ROOTS OF AMERICAN SONGS 1970
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Missouri's reasons why
Tigers approach Big Eight bests
KANSAS CITY (UPI) — Missouri's Orange Bowl-bound Tigers are the third-best offensive team in the history of the Big Eight Conference.
Missouri, 8-1 with its traditional game with Kansas remaining, is averaging 427.7 yards per game, both running and passing. That figure ranks third behind Oklahoma's national champions of 1956 and last year's Kansas team.
Oklahoma averaged 481.7 yards per game in '56 and Kansas had 442 yards per outing in 1968.
The Tigers, accumulating yardage on Terry McMillan's passing and Joe Moore's running, rank second in rushing and third pass
sing in the explosive Big Eight.
What makes Missouri so potent, however, is its combination of offense and defense. While the Tigers are leading the league in scoring 293 points for a 32.6 average, they are the No. 1 team in rushing defense 108.7 yards per game and rank second in scoring defense 17.8 points per game.
Other team statistical leaders remain the same.
Nebraska's Sun Bowl team dominates the defensive side of the ledger. The Cornhuskers are first in passing defense 119.1 yards, total defense 250.5 and scoring defense 11.0.
Harriers go Monday
Kansas' cross-country team, winner of the Big Eight and Central Collegiate meets the past two weeks, will shoot for the NCAA championship in New York Monday.
The squad will be led by Jay Mason, a junior from Hobbs, N.M., who was the top Jayhawk finisher at both the Big Eight and Central Collegiate meets. Mason was ninth in the Big Eight, covering the four-mile course in
Coach Bob Timmons will take a seven-man squad to New York, leaving immediately following Saturday's Kansas-Missouri football game.
16 KANSAN Nov. 20
1969
An additional mile will be tacked on Monday since the NCAA championship is run at six miles.
19:53. In the five-mile CCC meet at Carbondale, III., last weekend he was fourth in 24:34.
Rounding out the Kansas squad will be Glenn Cunningham, Leon senior; Dennis Petterson, Wichita junior; Rich Eliott, Hillside, Ill., sophomore; Doug Smith, Sioux City, Iowa; junior; Dave Anderson, Kansas City freshman, and Jon Callen, Wichita freshman.
Here's the way those six finished at Carbondale: Anderson, 10th in 24:50; Callen 13th in 24:56; Smith, 14th in 24:57; Elliott, 21st in 25:14; Petterson, 50th in 26:19, and Cunningham, 64th in 26:48.
BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS
IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEAT and TEARS—in person
Municipal Auditorium, K.C., Mo., 8 p.m.
Tues., Nov. 18, 1969—One Night Only
Advance Tickets on Sale at
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Get Your Tickets Now—While They Last.
BLOOD,SWEAT&TEARS IN PERSON
BLOOD, SWEET & TEARS
IN PERSON
Kansas coach Pepper Rodgers said Wednesday there is a chance center Dale Evans may be able to play Saturday against Missouri.
Pepper, Devine size up opposition
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (UPI) — Orville Moody, a virtual nobody on the professional golf tour only a year ago, reached the apex of his career Tuesday night when he was named Golfer of the Year by the Professional Golfers Association of America.
Evans, a senior who's started every game since his sophomore year, suffered a knee injury two weeks ago. He started last week against Oklahoma in order to preserve his streak, but quickly retired to the sidelines.
Moody named top swinger
The Jayhawks worked out for about an hour in sweat suits.
Moody, a native of Chickasha, Okla., won two of pro golf's biggest events this year—the U.S. Open and the World Series of Golf—and has earned $78,323.7 on the tour, in addition to the $50,000 he earned for winning the World Series. Last year, his first full season on the circuit, the 35-year-old Moody won just $12,950
Paul Hahn, world famous trick shot artist, received the Horton Smith Award for outstanding contributions to the game.
Demos win out
American political parties have found yet another means of deciiding political controversy — the gridiron
In a game that almost went scoreless, the Collegiate Young Democrats (CYD) defeated the Collegiate Young Republicans 6-0 in a Sunday afternoon game of touch football.
"We decided this would be a good way to release natural hostilities so we can work together on matters more vital to our common interests," said Mike Dickeson, Atchison senior and CYD president.
Rodgers said Missouri is a better team than it was a year ago, "mainly because Terry McMillan and Mel Gray are better, plus they have all those returnees back. The main difference in this game is that we have only five guys starting who started a year ago."
★★★
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri skipped through a 1 1/2 hour practice Wednesday, while coach Dan Devine tried to find why his sixth-ranked Tigers might lose to Kansas.
"Pepper Rodgers is in a position that every coach would like to find himself in," said Devine.
Rodgers, whose team is 1-8, might have reason to dispute that, but Devine reasons that Kansas has "everything to gain, nothing to lose" in Saturday's mismatch.
"In my opinion, Kansas has better personnel on defense than Colorado or Michigan had," said Devine. "I just hope we can play
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as well as we did against Iowa State.
Devine also said reserve tailback James Harrison, out with a leg injury most of the season, would not make the trip to Lawrence. He said a decision on whether defensive end Mike Bennett could play would be withheld until Friday. Bennett has been practicing all week, but had been out with a foot injury.
REDWOODS ONCE COMMON
Doug Powell
[Picture of]
FRESNO, Calif. (UPI)—Fossils indicate the two types of giant redwood trees—coast redwoods and giant sequioas—once were widespread over the Northern Hemisphere but today are found only in scattered areas in Northern and Central California.
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Random selection starts in early Jan.
Senate ok's lottery system of induction
By JOHN HALL
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate approved and forwarded to President Nixon Wednesday a major revision in the Selective Service system under which drafttees would be inducted through a lottery system.
The House-passed bill, a must item on the administration's legislative demands, was rushed through on a voice vote after very brief debate.
Chairman John C. Stennis, D-Miss., of the Senate Armed Services subcommittee, said the bill
would permit random selection of draftees early next year, possibly by Jan. 1. At present, the oldest eligible men are drafted first.
But Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird told newsmen present plans were to put the random selection system into effect early
Clan patriarch laid to rest
HYANNISPORT, Mass. (UPI)— The body of former Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy rested Wednesday in a simple metal casket placed near his "favorite view" of Nantucket Sound.
Funeral services and burial will be held Thursday for the 81-year-old patriarch of one of the nation's most politically powerful but ill-fated families. Kennedy, father of a President and two U. S. Senators among his nine children, died Tuesday of a heart attack.
Members of the glamorous family, led by his widow, Rose, and last surviving son, Edward, now head of the "clan," attended a simple mid-morning Mass Wednesday in the sun room, where Kennedy's body was placed.
The dull brown casket was placed near a window overlooking the sound where he used to sail with his family. A spokesman said the spot offered the senior Kennedy's "favorite view" of the waters.
The Rev. John J Cavanaugh, C.S.C., former president of Notre Dame University and a longtime family friend, said the Mass in the sun room of the large white Kennedy home.
Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston will celebrate the funeral Mass Thursday at St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Church, a short distance from the Kennedy compound. The main alter of the church is dedicated to Navy Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., the family's oldest son, who died in World War II.
in January, even before the next draft calls were made.
Attendance will be by invitation. Burial will be in Hollyhood Cemetery, Brookline. The elder Kennedys lived in Brookline when they first were married.
The six eldest male grandchildren of Kennedy, former ambassador to Great Britain during 1837-41, will serve as honorary pall bearers.
A large number of telegrams were received from "ordinary people and members of Congress," a family spokesman said.
"This can be done," he said,
"because the draft quotas for November and December have already been met."
One of the first telegrams, he added, was from former President and Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson. "It was a very nice and gracious telegram to Mrs. Kennedy," he said.
Laird told the Senate Armed Services Committee, during draft hearings, that for the first year the names of all eligible men, regardless of age, would be placed in the lottery
"But within a year." Laird said, "the administration plans to limit the lottery draft to 19-year olds, thus exposing a man to the draft for only one year instead of the six-year stretch from 19 to 26."
At the White House, Press Secretary Ronald L. Zeigler said, "The President was highly gratified that draft reform legislation
Peace talks to resume
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) British sources said Wednesday the Big Four talks on Middle East peace may be resumed within the next week. The talks had been suspended since July 1.
A U.S. spokesman said he had no knowledge that a date for resumption of the talks had been set.
had been passed by the Senate."
The bill was sent to the floor only after key Democrats buckled in their demands for a complete overhall of the draft before acting on the lottery system.
Stennis repeated assurance Wednesday but added, "we cannot make any guarantee, of course, at this time," that a draft reform bill would pass next year.
13
Ric Marshall
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Campus Interviews
The following interviews will be held on campus next week, and the week following Thanksgiving vacation.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 206 Strong
Uplipno Co., interested in employees for the sales department.
School of Education, 112 Bailey
Dec. 4
Kansas City Public Schools.
North Kansas City, Mo., Public Schools.
City of Dallas, B.S. in architectural, chemical or electrical engineering; mat or M.S. in civil engineer- urban planning; B.S. or Ph.D. in chemistry
Kansas City Public Schools.
U.S.D. 512, Shawne Mission
School of Engineering, 111 Marvin
Dec. 2.
Aluminum Co. of America, B.S. or M.A. in industrial or mechanical engineering.
Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. in aerospace, chemical or civil (structures) engineering, chemistry (inorganic, analytical or physical), math (applied) or physics; B.S. or M.S. in electrical or mechanical engineering; M.S. or Ph.D. in engineering mechanics; B.S. in engineering physics.
American Can Co., B.S. in math, combined civil engineering and business administration; B.S. or M.S. in chemical, electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering, chemistry. In the White Sons' Co., B.S. in civil engineering
18 KANSAN Nov.20 1969
Dec. 4
General Foods Corp, B.S. or M.S in chemical, civil, electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering; chemistry; M.S in engineering mechanics
Kansas Gas & Electric Co., B.S. in electrical industrial or mechanical engineering
Stauffer Chemical Co., B.S. in chemical engineering, chemistry Universal Oil Products, B.S. or M.S. in aerospace, chemical or civil engineering
School of Journalism, 105 Flint
Paper No. 2
General
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National Security Agency test will be given to all employees for the test must be filled out by tomorrow; available in 206 Strong; math and engineering majors are exempt
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Contact lenses were designed to be a convenience. And they are up to a point. They're convenient enough to wear, once you get used to them, but until recently, you had to use two or more different lens solutions to properly prepare and maintain contacts. You needed two or three different bottles, lens cases, and you went through more than enough daily rituals to make even the most steadfast individuals consider dropping out.
But now caring for your contacts can be as convenient as wearing them. Now there's Lensine, from the makers of Murine. Lensine is the one lens solution designed for complete contact lens care . . . preparing, cleansing, and soaking.
Just a drop or two of Lensine before you insert your lens prepares it for your eye. Lenses makes your contacts, which are made of modern plastics, compatible with your eye. How? Lensine is an "isotonic" solution. That means it's made to blend with the eye's natural fluids. So a simple drop or two
coats the lens, forming a sort of comfort zone around it.
Cleaning your contacts with Lensine fights bacteria and foreign deposits that build up during the course of the day. And for overnight soaking, Lensine provides a handy contact canister on
the bottom of every bottle. Soaking your contacts in Lensine between wearing periods assures you of proper iens hygiene.
Improper storage between wearings permits the growth of bacteria on your lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and, in some cases, it can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine Lensine is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.
Let your contacts be the convenience they were designed to be. The name of the game is Lensine. Lensine, made by the Murine Company, Inc.
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Are you cut out for contact sports?
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in theinvitation card are credited to all students without regard tocolor, creed, or national origin.
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier. Inputs for mag, or crystal phono, tape, AM. FM, Arm. Wll match any speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-3618 after 6. tf
FOR SALE
BOOTS—look at PRIMARILY LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcraft with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. 812 Mass. 12-11
Western Civ Notes—Now on sale!
Revised, comprehensive "New Analysis of Western Civilization" *4th*
Edition, Campus Mid House, 411 W. 14th
St.
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio. Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6.
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road,
843-4836. 12-2
Leaving the U.S.—1860 Plymouth Vallant—Standard–Very good tires—heater-Eng. and transmission good. Adele and Amelia works store (RCA) Garrard — 980 Both must sell this month VI 2-7472 after 5. 11-20
1967 Riverside 125 cc. Excellent condition.
Cheap, fun transportation.
1960 Allstate racing model with ex-
terior. 842-8165 after 5 p.m.
on weekdays 11-20 on
weekends.
Guitar: Martin D-28, like new with hard case. Call 843-7537 after 5:00. 11-20
Must sell immediately—a white 1965
V.W. with radio and sunroof, $680 or
best offer, VI 2-1188 or VI 2-8444.
11-21
Fritz Company has special bargains on inspected used winter and highway tires. Also New "83" Series Town truck with sale price expert front and all-road brakes by experienced mechanic. Fritz Co. 745 N.H. VI 3-4211. 11-21
Big Rummage Sale. Community Building, 11th & Mass. Fri, Nov. 21st, to Sat, Nov. 22nd, Noon. More than 25 families contributing. 11-21
Ampex Micro 85 solid state Cassette stereo and recorder, walnut cased, completely outfitted. 14½" walnut/ weige tape cassette. Cost $200,000 perfect condition, less year old, must sell . . . $150 or best offer. Call Kris at V1 2-4965. 11-21
Must sell Minolta SR-1 35 mm. camera in excellent condition. Has 1:1.8 f-55 lens. Make your best offer. Price $199 new. Call VI 2-5869 at 5:00 p.m. 11-21
Tape recorder--model 5232A Sears
Tape recorder--model 6104A $50. New condition. 843-7872. 11-21
Portable TV 12 in. BW with UHF and earpiece! Great for dorm viewing.
Don't disturb your roommate. $50.
Phone 842-3179. 11-21
1960 English Hillman for sale. Ideal for school car. $135. See at McConnell Lumber Co. VI 3-3877. 844 E. 13th St. 11-21
Have moved into an apartment. Must
have a car. Will take offer.
Call VI 2-1188. 11-21
New—unusual—ancient Chinese stone rubbings—Mexican Bark Paintings—many other unusual items can be natural History, Gift Shop. 8:30-4:30. 12-2
Kustom 100 Watt guitar amp., trem,
and reverb, almost brand new, was
$425, yours for $285. Steve Dexter.
843-7404. 12-2
"The Fountains." Why not save that expensive rent money and buy your own home, building equity in your own home, by hedging against inflation. By taking advantage of deductible information informs Bay Real Estate Agency, VI 2-5570 or VI 2-4262.
1964 Skylark convertible, red, white power top, automatic, new heater, recent valve job, brand new heater. Great car! $1250. VI-3-18 after 3.
Stereo record player, radio and T.V.
console in excellent working condition.
$150.00. For appointment call
V1 2-1232. 12-2
Sale on all goods, cereals, Jussies Baby Food, Coke, pastries, jellies, lots of items, apples. Call, for we will have to close as I have to go to the hospital. R. D. Sweeney, Sweeney's Market, west on Hgw 40.
New condition. Gibson electric guitar
cash-bank card. CVI 7-2092 after 11-21
Webcorder Portable Stereo, G.E.T.V. clock-radio (one unit), 1962 Corvair 4-speed, guitar, Smith-Corona typewriter, after 5 p.m., call 842-3396.
In size 9, dresses, wool skirts, and
sweaters for sale. Good quality. 11-21
842-636-697
Nikorex F / Nikor 1-4 lens. Weston
Mags Ford F/M4 Four/M 7 Mags Ford
Ford F483-7462 12-2
Sealpoint Slamese kittens, purebred,
box-trained. Call VI2-6626 after 6
p.m. 12-3
Norelco Tape Recorder Cassette,
special offer. Reg. 2.65 Cassette only
and not included in the store.
Stoneback's. Open Mon., and Thurs.
evenings. Offer expres Nov. 4, 12-3
España classic guitar- Excellent con-
tribution
Schardein, Phone 843-8605 11-24
Schardein, Phone 843-8605
1967 Chevelle Supa. Sport. Vinyl top.
If not sold, $1575. Call 842-8825. 11-24
Returning to Italy. Must sell '68
Lancia Fulvia Rallye (imported Ital-
land Race car) 18,000. Mpg. 24.5kph.
mph. 30 mpg. V1-26,500. 11-24
5:30.
Tacos Tonight?
CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
Two tickets to Missouri Game,
Faculty section, VI 2-2921.
11-24
1966 Corvette Low mileage—good
2007 Toyota Low mileage—good
843-7708 6-9 p.m. 12-3
1969 Chevellie -SS396 ~ 350 cup, Hugger Orange, 842-9138 Call after 5: 10_2.3
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-godGear-B-B-Que this is the place to get some, Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf
Topsy's
on the Mall
pop corn
candy apples
ice cream
home made
fudge
LOFT'S
LENDER
open till 10:00 p.m.
716 N. 2nd VI3-5815
Machine Shop Work
ERN'S CYCLE SALES
Foreign Car Service
Metal Sculpture Supplies
Tires and Batteries
A Bankmark Store
East End of 9th St.
VI 3-0956
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
GRADUATE STUDENTS LOCATING TEACHING JOBS: Revolutionary app-icipants. Candidates to schools. Inexpensive Deadline December 1, 1969. Intercept, Box 317, Harvard, S.F. P.O. Box Massachusetts 02138. 12-15
FOR RENT
Rally—Lost in the dark, Registration 6:30 p.m., Mall's Shopping Center, Nov. 22, information, 842-7425.
Going to Wichita or Eldorado, Kansas, Tuesday. Nov. 26. Will give rides for $4.00. Call Carl Ferguson, Templin Hall (Room 603) V1-21200. 11-21
Unusual stock from Southeast Asia.
for that "special" gift. These items cannot be found anywhere else in Lawrence Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. 8:30 to 4:30 daily.
12:30 to 4:30 Sunday. 12-5
Repossessed component system with AM-FM tuner built-in. $150.00 takes down town. Open Mon., and Thurs. nites (special 33 record only $1.00). 12-2
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Laptad, VI 3-4032. tf
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised. Comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
The food is terrible but the entertainment is great at Alice's Restaurant. 11-20
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair prob- station in the factory repair station in the Mid-Way Dynaklit and Marantz. Call 843-1484.
COIN OP. PICK UP
LAUNDRY STATION
19th and La.
2346 Iowa
9th and Miss. VI 3-9868
宝宝爱唱歌
Married Couples - 2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens with washers, $150 to $165 plus utilities. Inventory Company II 3-6153 or III 3-5730.
Buy your kid sister's present from the
Colorful marine specimens, shells,
minerals. Really great for 'Show and
it' 8-30 or 3-10 daily. 12:30-4:30 Sun-
day.
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W, 6th
VI 3-4011
Need one student to take over my
class for the day and need more
at Gatehouse. $8.75 per month,
available immediately—no deposit re-
quirement.
VI 3-7881, m. to 12 p.m. 12-3
Help! Desperately need ride to N.Y.
for T.G. Getting hooked in Spring.
Must make arrangements. Call Mike
842-5152. 11-21
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6168.
Loans to junior, senior and grad. students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Mass. VI J 3-8074. tf
First floor furnished apartment for males or married couple. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone VI 3-5767. 11-20
ENJOY TAKING TESTS?
You will after you learn our "Proven Method." Send today for free details to; Better Speech, Dept. B-1, 4926 No. Monticello, Chicago, III.
926 Mass.
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
or the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
L. G. Balfour Co.
LOST
- Badges
- Favors
VI 3-0501
- Guards
of
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
Exclusive Representative
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers Stationery
mugs
Sublease. 2-bedroom. 2 bath Gatehouse apartment. Available Immediately. Approximately $50 a month. Call VI 2-3441 anytime. 11-24
- Recognitions - Publishes
- Loyalties - Stationer
- Sportswear
Furnished 3-room apt. pvt. bath and entrance, off st. parking. Utilities only—Married couple. Available. Dec 11 VI 3-4349. 1005 Mississippi 11-24
Lost—small, short-haired female dog
mixed breed. About 2 years old.
Bad teeth, answers to name "Sugar."
VI 2-0036.
11-21
- Launders
- Stationery
- Gifts
- Plaques
Unique 4 bedroom apt. for 3-4 students $45-50 each. Util. pdt. Furnished nicely. Two pvt. entrances. 1005 Kentucky or 842-9249 11-21
HELP WANTED
Small, furnished, one bedroom house.
$90.00 per month. Call 842-3577.
Furnished apartment, walking distance from KU for 2 or 3 students
Rings - Created - Letters
Waterman pen, gold, 4 color. Bailey Hall, Monday evening. Reward. Call VI 2-2921. 11-24
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
Across from the Red Dog
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
TYPING
12-3
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part time. Apply in person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. tf
Full and part-time work at newly developed Ros-A-Beef. Please call VI 2-9087, between 12:00 & 2:00, and 6:00 & 8:00 p.m. 11-21
Experienced secretary, who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in Lawrence at least one year. Requires graduate preferred. Phone VI 3-6424. 11-21
Established professional 7-piece Rhythm and Blues Band needs vocalist, trumpet, trombone and organ player. Be willing to travel weekends and summers. Union wages. Call 842-7744. 11-21
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work VI 3-3281. Mrs. Ruckman
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist or graduate student. glish-Speech Education. Electric office-size typewriter. 843-2873. 11-24
Music teachers needed for two boys.
One for trumpet, one for electric guitar.
Prefer someone to come to home. Phone VI 2-4088, evenings.
TYPING: Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misc. typing. Have phone number. Efficient and fast service. Phone VI 3-9545, Ms. Wright. 12-5
UNICEF
Cards and Calendars at KU Bookstore
Grumbacher
Artist
Supplies &
Materials
Custom Picture Framing
Decoupage Supplies Gifts
Davis Paints
918 Massachusetts
VI 3-6141
HAROLD'S
"66"
SERVICE
and U-HAUL
PHILLIPS
66
Wheel mounting & bol
Motor tune-ups
Cors winterized
"For all your cars needs"
1401 West 6th St.
Phone 843-3557
Theses, papers typed in English, German, transliterated Russian by experienced, literate typist. IBM Electronic Mrs. Harwell, 842-5298. tf
Accurate typing of dissertations-themes - misc. papers, Pica-Smith Corona Electric. Call Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. 11-20
Accurate typing of theses, dissertations, manuscripts, misel papers. Call Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440, 2409 Ridge Court. 12-25
WANTED
Need 8 tickets to KU-MU game. Call Jim, VI 2-3855. 11-20
Wanted: A place to dump a half ton of garbage from Alice's Restaurant,
PERSONAL
Rally Hawks! After the Mizzou game.
The Zoo. 11-21
The heads of all nations meet at Alice's Restaurant! 11-20
Dishwasher for fraternity house. Call VI 3-8411. 11-24
Honey—hope your birthday is the
moment. Bug. Ya echub labiulo.
Love. Bug. 11-21
ENTERTAINMENT
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8243, Prairie Village, Kauai, 913-648-1777, tf
Entertainment, Looking for a good jazz-rock band for those Christmas formal's! It's the Dick Wright Orchestra for you. Call 843-7658. 12-2
American Mercury is rising, 842-5247
Airplane, Cros be inside Sandnash.
Beatles, Stones, Joplin, Cream Origi-
inals. 12-3
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
We Care About
BUY, SELL, TRADE good used appliances and furniture. Also antiques. All guaranteed and free delivery. Appliances. 839 Virginia, 842-0576. **If**
What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
Folk Guitar
Alvarex
Gibson
Fender
Guild
GUITAR
LESSONS,
RENTALS &
REPAIR
-
15%
off with
this Ad
on any
set of
Guitar Strings
until Dec. 20
18 E. 9th
VI 2-0021
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken,
Hamburgers,
etc.
Hurry to Henry's
h & Mo. VI 3-2135
X
Intrepid headshome
(Continued from page 1)
him to his feet. The astronauts also inadvertently left behind a bag containing still color film snapped in lunar orbit.
After the linkup with Gordon, who had been cruising in lonely orbit during the 32 hours his buddies had spent below.
Yankee Clipper was to circle the moon for another day taking pictures of future landing sites, including one for Appollo 13 scheduled for next March.
America's Apollo 12 moon explorers collected a treasure trove of lunar rock and soil samples early Thursday and examined a $21 \%$ -year-old Surveyor spacecraft they found "cooked brown" in the lunar sun.
Moving across the moon's surface like loping "giraffes," Charles "Pete" Conrad and Alan L. Bean ranged more than a half mile from their landing ship Intrepid, following a runabout route to the Survevor.
En route, they picked up nearly 100 pounds of soil and rock samples, which scientists hope may hold part of the key to creation itself, since the moon's surface is untouched by an erosive atmosphere.
Conrad and Bean rested near the Surveyor and took pictures of it on the second of two moonwalks they made. Bean said the Surveyor, launched i n 1967, bounced twice on landing and the imprints of its tripod landing gear were still visible in the lunar surface.
"The engine is still green," Conrad radioed. "We've got a nice brown surveyor here, Houston. The glass is still on the top. Not a bit of it is fractured."
Surveyor was painted white when it was launched, but Conrad said "it's changed color. The sun's cooked it brown." he said.
Scientists are anxious to get parts from the Surveyor to determine how it survived its stay on the moon. It landed on the lunar surface in April, 1967, and flashed back to earth 6,315 television pictures before going dead.
The spacecraft landed about 150 feet down the sloping walls of a crater, and there was some concern whether the astronauts could reach it.
"They, this is so much easier working around than one-G in our practice, it's unbelievable," Conrad radioed as they worked with a long pair of cable cutters to remove parts of the Surveyor for return to earth.
"Don't worry about it, Houston," Conrad told ground controllers when they showed some concern about the astronauts' ability to climb out of the pit. Conrad said the underfooting was fairly firm and there was "no problem."
"OK," Bean radioed, "one shiny tube coming up. It has sort of weathered a little bit in 31 months, hasn't it."
In addition to the tubing, the astronauts took off part of an electrical cable and worked to get Surveyor's TV camera off.
The visit to the Surveyor came during the second moon-walk. In the first excursion onto the lunar surface the astronauts set up a nuclear-powered scientific base that immediately began relaying information back to earth.
For their second moonwalk Wednesday, Conrad and Bean gathered rocks from the fresh-looking craters near Intrepid.
Conrad said he could feel the extra heat from the sun that was higher in the sky. He paused during the excursion to turn up the cooling element in his space suit.
The astronauts had not been
scheduled to make the second moonwalk until 11:40 p.m. Wednesday, but they were anxious to start and got permission from ground control to move up the mission.
Conrad, the spaceflight commander, stepped out on the moon for the second time at 10:01 p.m. CST, one hour and 39 minutes ahead of schedule, and Bean followed him 10 minutes later at 10:11 p.m.
But viewers on earth lost a chance to share the men's moon adventure when they could not fix a balky color TV camera.
During their first moonwalk early Wednesday morning the astronauts set up a nuclear-powered scientific base that immediately began relaying information back to earth. During the day, however, ground control found that one of the experiments was not working properly, and instructed the astronauts to inspect it during their second excursion.
Before the mission, Bean referred to the sample gathering mission as a "rock dance"-a routine involving careful photography and bagging of the samples.
"I'm picking up a rock that has crystal in it," he reported. "One of them is shining very bright and very green like ginger ale."
At another point,贝 said he spotted one rock that "looks almost like a granite." He said it had fairly large crystals, some reddish in color.
Conrad picked up a "grapefruit-sized" rock and rolled it along the lunar landscape like a bowling ball so it could be measured on the seismometer.
"Now it's rolling—roll, roll, roll," Conrad said. "Now it's stopped."
Budget pleas heard
(Continued from page 1)
mainstay financially for many undergraduates in recent years. For us not to receive as much federal money as possible because the state will not provide the matching 11 per cent is to close the door to many deserving prospective students," Chalmers said.
In making specific requests for KU, Chalmers asked legislators for provisions which would enable KU to hire 110 new faculty members in September 1970 in order to meet increased enrollment needs. Chalmers said KU experienced the largest student increase in the University's history last fall, with an enrollment increase of 1200 students. Seventy-five per cent of this increase was due to returning undergraduate students, Chalmers said.
Chalmers also asked for an additional $75,000 to increase the number of books in the KU library. He said the book fund has remained consistent for the last three years, while student enrollment has increased by 4,000.
Under capital improvement, Chalmers requested funds for animal facilities at KU which would comply with federal regulations for laboratory animals. Chalmers also requested that Flint Hall, Fowler Hall and the Strong Hall auditorium be remodeled. He emphasized the need to remodel any useable space in order to meet the pressing need for classrooms.
The construction of sidewalks in residence hall areas and a $10,000 increase in the present $175,000 improvement and repair fund was also requested by the Chancellor.
20 KANSAN Nov. 20
1969
Validity challenge may be dismissed
TOPEKA (UPI)—The state attorney general filed a brief in Shawnee County District Court Wednesday asking for dismissal of the case challenging the validity of the 1969 highway construction and motor fuel tax law.
The brief, written by Asst. Atty. Gen. Richard H. Seaton, states that because of Judge William Randolph Carpenter's rulings Nov. 14, there is no longer a "justifiable controversy" or disagreement between the parties.
Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell originally brought the suit Aug. 28 seeking a court ruling to uphold his written opinion that the law's formula for determining highway construction priorities is invalid. The highway commission was named defendant, but in answering Frizzell's petition it attacked the entire law.
The judge ruled the state highway commission had no authority to challenge the constitutionality of the entire law. He also denied motions of the City of Wichita and Sedgwick County to intervene.
The law was enacted by the Republican-dominated legislature over Democratic Gov. Robert Docking's veto. It increased the gasoline tax two cents a gallon and the diesel fuels tax one cent
GOODYEAR TIRES
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a gallon. It also specifically outlined road construction in nine areas.
Docking controls the highway commission which brought the counterclaim challenging the entire law.
Seaton said the commission doesn't have authority to challenge the entire law, and both the attorney general and the commission agree the formula is invalid. Therefore, he said, there is no longer any disagreement.
Page Fina Service
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
Photo by Fred Chan
View from the top
This photo taken from the top of Fraser Hall gives a bird's eye view of KU students walking across campus.
U.S., Soviets score social first at talks
HELSINKI (UPI)—The United States and the Soviet Union held a joint reception Wednesday for their delegations to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), the first gathering of its kind ever given by the two nations.
The head of the Soviet delegation, Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir S. Semenov, offered a toast on the success of the Apollo 12 moon landing to the head
WIVES' PROPERTY
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—California's constitution, drawn up here in 1849, was the first state constitution to include a provision for the separate property of married women.
of the U.S. delegation, Gerard C. Smith, director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. Then the two men shook hands.
Minnie Pearl's
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
FREE Delivery over $5.00
VI 3-8200
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
Turkey Time is here! Register for your free Turkey at Sandy's
C
That's right-every time you purchase an order of food at Sandy's-you can register for a big 14 lb. turkey. Students! Think of all the joy you'll cause walking in the door back home with a 14 lb. turkey under your arm. (Attention hippies-maybe then you won't have to shave off your beard and sideburns for mommy and daddy-bribe them with a turkey.)
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th
MELANIA TAYLOR
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, Nov. 21, 1969
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
80th Year, No. 50
VENEZUELA DE TAUCO
MISS ENVIEZA DEL SALIDO
DE LA PISCINA
DORADA GARCIA
- Photo by Mike Rieke
Best Dressed Coed
Norma Decker, Tecumseh freshman representing Watkins Hall, was named KU's Best Dressed Coed Thursday night in competition sponsored by the AWS Fashion Board. See story page 3.
Trio to leave moon orbit, aim for home
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—Apollo 12's explorers made their final sweeps around the moon today before blasting out of lunar orbit and heading home with their treasure of moon rocks and pieces of an old robot spacecraft.
The three Navy commanders, Charles "Pete" Conrad, Alan L. Bean, and Richard F. Gordon, wound up the moon exploration phase of the mission Thursday. But they spent an extra day in lunar orbit to scout and photograph landing sites for the men who will follow them.
A blast on the main engine of the Yankee Clipper command ship will jar the astronauts out of moon orbit at 2:43 p.m. CST today and start them toward a splashdown in the Pacific Monday afternoon.
Conrad and Bean, who made the moon landing, blasted off from the lunar surface in the landing vehicle Intrepid Thursday morning and rejoined Gordon, who had kept the command ship in lunar orbit for 40 lonely hours. Safely aboard the Yankee Clipper the astronauts jettisoned the lunar lander and sent it crashing down on the lunar surface.
The impact of the crash set up vibrations on the moon for 30 minutes—much to the surprise of scientists who were reading signals from a seismometer set up on the lunar surface by the astronauts.
Geologist Garly Latham said the sustained vibrations had "un-questionably profound" implications, but that scientists were not prepared to say what they were as yet.
Ground control lost radio contact with the astronauts for about an hour Thursday night, and first believed the Apollo 12 crew had gone to sleep with the spacecraft (Continued on page 79)
(Continued to page 20)
Haynsworth's opponents need three votes to block
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Opponents of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth's nomination to the Supreme Court were within three votes Thursday night of blocking his confirmation.
Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., added his name to the 47 senators previously listed in a UPI poll as planning to vote against confirmation.
Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew could cast the deciding ballot for Haynsworth in today's voting if opponents pick up only two more votes.
Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., who will be up for re-election in 1972, was known to have received mail hinting at possible opposition in the Republican primary if he did not vote for confirmation. Pearson has announced in favor of Haynsworth.
Sen, Len Jordan, R-Idaho, said his mail was "legion" on the Haynsworth nomination. He blamed Attorney General John N. Mitchell for the avalanche of pro-Haynsworth mail.
KU fees increase voted by Regents
The Kansas Board of Regents voted unanimously today to increase tuition at the state's six universities and colleges.
Beginning with the fall term of 1970, resident tuition at all institutions will be increased $120 per school year. Non-resident tuition will be increased $250.
The Regents reacted to a suggestion by a legislative committee that the fees be increased. The Legislative Budget Committee of the Kansas Legislative Council
had noted that tuition at the institutions had fallen below the 25 per cent of operating cost which has been regarded as a standard minimum in Kansas.
Max Bickford, executive officer of the board said three years ago the legislative council adopted a policy stating that 25 per cent of educational costs should come from student fees. He said the fees produced now by Kansas colleges and universities fall far below that percentage.
"Three years ago when the fees were last increased, Kansas fees were in the middle of fees required by other schools in the Big Eight. Since that time, most of the other states have increased their rates and presently KU is near the bottom." Bickford said.
The money will go into the general operating budget which is the source of all funds required to run the University, including teachers' salaries, books, etc.
Bickford said no financial crisis (Continued to page 20)
Lodge resigns from talks
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and his chief deputy resigned from the Paris peace talks Thursday after citing the Communist delegation's refusal to negotiate seriously.
President Nixon accepted the resignations effective Dec. 8, but did not name a successor to Lodge or his deputy, Lawrence E. Walsh. The resignations leave the U.S. delegation in Paris with second-rate status. The State Department took steps, however, to head off speculation Nixon may leave
A State Department spokesman said the administration still hopes the Vietnam War can be ended by negotiations. He added, "Lodge's resignation should in no way be interpreted as any down-grading of the talks or abandonment of hope for the negotiations."
the delegation with this status until Hanoi indicates a willingness to negotiate seriously.
White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler also said, "The President continues to hope that
peace can be achieved through successful negotiations."
However, the fact the White House had known for weeks that Lodge wanted to quit and was either unable or unwilling to name a successor Thursday was an indication to some observers the White House intended to downgrade the negotiations.
Ziegler also said, "the lack of progress in Paris is a direct result of the refusal of the other side to enter into serious negotiations. As the President pointed
(Continued to page 20)
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
OSLO—The Norwegian Labor party said Thursday it will propose that Norway recognize North Vietnam when parliament begins its foreign relations debate Monday.
Recognition proposed
Deputy Chairman Guttorm Hansen said recognition of the Hanoi government was a part of the Labor party's election program in September.
Apollo 13 plans 'go'
SPACE CENTER, Houston—The two moonwalks by Apollo 13 astronauts next March may last longer than the planned 3.5 to 4 hours each because Charles "Pete" Conrad and Alan L. Bean were so at home on the lunar surface.
James A. Lovell, Fred W. Haise and Thomas K. Mattingly are scheduled to blast off toward the moon March 12.
UCLA students charged
LOS ANGELES—Twenty-nine UCLA students were charged with conspiracy and false imprisonment Thursday after an administrator was held prisoner in his campus office for two hours.
Thirty-two students were arrested Wednesday night and booked on suspicion of kidnapping.
Urges aid, involvement, bold change
Forum stresses black needs
TARR'S LAUNDRY
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By JULIE THATCHER Kansan Staff Writer
Individual action is the only answer to black student needs, Philip M. Gary, assistant to the Chancellor on urban affairs, told the Faculty Forum Thursday.
"As faculty members when things dear to you come up," said Gary, "do you not cling tenaciously to your individualism and 'academic freedom?' Why then, when we talk about black students and social injustice do we suddenly make reference to an intangible kaleidoscopic object like 'the University of Kansas?'
"The University is made up of each and every one of you," he told the Faculty. "The University will do as much, or as little, to meet the needs of black students as each of you will do. I don't think you should hide behind the guise of the University of Kansas."
In the past, Gary said, black college graduates had few avenues open to them. The alternatives, he said, were teaching in secondary schools, working in the post office or taking showcase jobs with wealthy white companies.
"Between 1950 and 1960 the District of Columbia post offices had more employees with bachelor and masters degrees than any other agency in Washington," he
said. "They were also the only agency that had a very high percentage of black employees."
Gary said there was a new movement today. Black students are no longer satisfied to accept obvious disparities, he said.
"These are the youth who will call upon America and its universities to make the American dream a reality or forever expose it as the nightmare it has become to many blacks," he said. "Today's black student is ready to become the master of his own destiny."
"Universities cannot continue to program white people to social and economic success while ignoring black people or attempting to press black people into an unacceptable white mold," he said.
Gary noted universities had remained aloof for many years, acting as a center for the study of man but rarely extending itself to improve the human condition. Now universities must instigate bold, revolutionary changes, he said.
He suggested open admission policies, massive financial aid, development of black study programs and financing for the Black Student Union program. Universities are obligated to develop departments of urban affairs and studies to deal with the plight of the cities, he said.
"What the universities must
Investigation sought in Vietnamese massacre
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Two members of Congress called for investigations Thursday into an alleged massacre of Vietnamese civilians by American troops.
Rep. William E. Minshall, R-Ohio, said published accounts of the slaying which purportedly took place in March of 1968 indicated the facts had been covered up.
The University of Kansas is not doing enough to meet black student needs, Gary said.
Sen. Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., said the investigation should look into reports the United States and South Vietnam jointly operate a program called "Phoenix" under which "supposed" Viet Cong leaders are assassinated.
Minshall said the government's handling of the alleged massacre "smacks of the same kind of secrecy that surrounded the Green Beret case."
do," he said, "is to become centers for the development of man, not just machines; to educate not just train; to teach the art of living not just existing."
American troops leave the war too soon.
Goodell asked the matter be investigated by the Senate Armed Services Committee. In a letter to committee Chairman John Stennis, D-Miss., Goodell said President Nixon had expressed concern about a "bloodbath" if
"It's not easy to become involved," he said, "but if you want to better the situation, talk to the people you want to help. Don't
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something new!
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Freshman named as best dressed
Norma Decker, Teecum seh freshman, smiled when she was named the 1969 Best Dressed Coed Thursday in the Kansas
Japanese discuss student movement
Three Japanese students will give their views on the Japanese student movement at 8 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Room C.
The talk is sponsored by the Japanese Student Association.
Takashi Yohana, sophomore,
M. Ooba, junior, and S. Mori,
exchange student, will discuss
the movement in Japan and its
relevance to future Japanese-
U.S. relationships and the role of
Japan in Southeast Asia.
A discussion of the topic will follow the presentations.
Official Bulletin
Today
Children's Theatre. "Snow Queen."
University Theatre, J.P.
Opening and reception: "The Working Hypothesis, Museum of Art,
Biology Science lecture: "Immune Response & Antibody Molecules." Dr. Herman Elsen, Washington University. http://www.kumc.org/ 203 Bailey. 3:30 pru.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Royale-
Devine Auditorium, 7 and 9:30
K.U. Jubl Club; Robinson Gymna-
rue
International Film: "Shameless Old Lady," (French) Houdt Auditorium,
Experimental Theatre; "The Hostage" 8:20 p.m.
Foreign students: Pamphlets and Christmas In International Houses and the Christmas Adventure in World Michigan. Lansing, Michigan, 226 Strong Hall.
Saturday
Football, Missouri, Memorial Stadium 12:30 p.m.
Children's Theatre: "Snow Queen."
University Theatre, 1 p.m.
Dyne Auditorium, 7 & 8: 30 p.m.
Experimental Theatre; "The Hos-
Experimental Theatre: "The Hostage" 8:20 p.m.
Hindu Society: 50th anniversary of Shrir Nianak, 1204 Owr. 4:30
Tennis Club: 173 Robinson
Gymnasium. 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerkin, 3 p.m.
Concert Choir: University Theatre, 3:30 p.m.
Concert Course: Maria Alba Spani-
dance Co., University Theatre,
8.20
Cricket Club: Practice. East of Robinson Gymnasium, 11 a.m.
Nov. 21 KANSAN 3
1969
Union Ballroom. Suzy Pearson, Prairie Village junior, and Sandy Strauss, St. Louis freshman were the runners up.
The AWS Fashion Board, in connection with Glamour Magazine, presented the fashion contest. Norma, who designed and made her own fashions, will now go to the national contest sponsored by Glamour. The winner of the national contest will pose for the magazine's cover.
Nine finalists entered the contest. The other contestants were: Shelle Hook, Mason City, Iowa, sophomore; Pam Pyles, Wichita freshman; Carol Reber, Wichita sophomore; Beck Rounds, Wichita sophomore; and Jo Townsend, Tulsa freshman.
Each girl modeled campus fashions, sportswear and formal dress. Color schemes varied in conjunction with the theme of the show, "Kaleidoscope of Fashion."
Accompanying the show and providing entertainment while the judges made their decision was pianist Rick Shaffer, Hutchinson senior.
Flu won't hasten students' holiday
Every year before Thanksgiving and Christmas vacations the rumor begins to fly: classes are going to be called off early because the number of influenza cases at KU are reaching epidemic proportions. This year is no exception, but Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, reports the rumor is completely unfounded.
Schweegler said Thursday the number of flu cases reported at Watkins Hospital has not noticeably increased recently, and there was no chance of classes being called off early for this reason.
MULTI-LINGUAL
WILLEMSTAD, Curacao (UPI)—Most of the inhabitants of the Dutch-owned islands of Aruba and Curacao, just off the Venezuela coast in the Caribbean, speak at least two or three languages.
In addition to Dutch, they usually speak English, Spanish and papiamento, a melange of Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, and some Indian words.
Talk about hot... We've got it
We've got hot food if you want it. Try our Bar-B-Q Beef, Pastromi, Corned Beef or Rueben sandwiches. They should be hot enough for anybody.
Don't forget, we've got our famous HERO and many other sandwiches if you don't want something hot. Check all our extras too, and ask us about our "RED HOT" delivery.
Camera lost to D.C. police at war rally
THE
Jayhawk Food Mart
HOLE
HOLE IN THE WALL
A Kansan photographer, who had his camera confiscated by Washington, D.C., police Friday, still has not recovered it.
Jones said the camera worth $400 was taken from him as he entered a paddy wagon, and had not received a receipt for it. All his other possessions were taken from him when he was booked for disorderly conduct. His possessions were later returned to him.
"I talked with the properties division of the Washington police Thursday, Jones said, and they said the camera had not been returned to them."
Tom Jones, Hampton Beach, Va., junior, was arrested in a violent confrontation between police and a militant group called the Weathermen, during the November moratorium. Jones had full press identification at the time of his arrest.
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KANSAN Comment
Asking for trouble
By STEVE SHRIVER Kansan Staff Writer
The November phase of the moratorium may not have been as vocal, especially on the local level, as the anti-war protests in October. It may not have seemed as vocal to the "silent majority," for several reasons;
1) The moratorium had to compete for news coverage with the launch and flight of Apollo 12.
2) Many of the most dedicated dissenters were in Washington for demonstrations.
3) President Nixon's Nov. 3 speech may have united some October demonstrators behind us.
4) The November phase may not have been as newsworthy an event to journalists as the initial October protests.
5) The pro-Nixon demonstrations in the previous week and on Veteran's Day may have united still more potential anti-war marchers behind the President.
For those reasons, and maybe several more implicit ones, the November phase of the antiwar moratorium did not seem as strong or as moving as the October phase. The demonstrations, although they may have been as large as and as seriously concerned as the initial demonstrations in October, did not become, seemingly, as apparent to the "great silent majority."
Part of the reason can be attributed to the fact that the October moratorium was so successful. Any demonstration would have had a hard time following the scale of those protests.
Newspapers did not devote as much time and space to the November marches because of two reasons. The launch and flight of Apollo 12, an event of tremendous national significance, has been splashed over front pages for the past several days.
Although the moratorium is of national significance, especially the march on Washington, newspapermen felt it did not deserve the great amount of attention it received in October. The reasons are simple. The moratorium is not a
new idea, neither are anti-war demonstrations, and moreover, peaceful protests receive less news coverage than do violent ones.
The Lawrence and KU phase of the moratorium suffered on the local level because many of the anti-war demonstrators had traveled to Washington or Topeka to demonstrate. KU's efforts against the war were more along the lines of open class discussions and sit-ins, all conducted very peacefully.
The push for united support of Nixon's plan for Vietnamization reached a peak on Veteran's Day when thousands turned out to voice their approval of the government's stand.
These pro-Nixon demonstrations coupled with Nixon's Nov. 3 speech analyzing the war and "possible acceptable solutions," may have persuaded some potential anti-war protesters out of the streets on Nov.14 and 15.
Nevertheless, hundreds of thousands of unhappy Americans did turn out to voice their disapproval of the Vietnam war, with the focal point in Washington. More than 300,000 expressed their opinions in the nation's capitol and only one violent incident to speak of, marred an otherwise peaceful day.
But a large percentage of the demonstrators are young, many are students and they are characteristically impatient. They want results and they want results in the near future, if not now.
If Nixon does not acknowledge this minority, if he does not give some attention to their self-respected opinions, he will have more trouble on his hands, not only abroad, but here at home.
If Nixon does not make some major move to end this war, that same minority will grow larger. If Nixon's plans are set back, if he delays Vietnamization, that same minority may grow into a majority.
America is growing impatient and after seven years of frustrating, seemingly endless war, it is no wonder they are losing confidence and pride in their country.
ARCHAIC ABORTION LAWS
FED. DISTRICT COURT DECISION
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
TM 8 All rights reserved 1909
Publisher of Hall 22nd Street
'If they try to put me out of business it'll be the biggest fight of the 17th century!'
Readers' write
As a proponent of Black Pride I would like to register my embarassment by the events that took place in Memorial Stadium on the 8th of November.
To the editor:
First, the black queen came riding in a Cadillac and I think that she should have walked, ridden a horse or been in an old car.
Second, she should not have been elected because she is cute. I think it is contradictory to say black is beautiful and then choose a queen on the same value judgment we reject. What is beauty after all? If we know what we mean by SOUL we should have chosen maybe a Miss Black Personality. Not farce about something we all know is only skin deep. So what did we do but imitate what we tried to reject. I think we ought to think real deep when we search for blackness.
S. C. Rutherford 1101 Indiana
* * *
To the editor:
The undersigned do recognize the Student Senate, however, we wish to register concern about affairs relating to the Residence Halls.
A number of matters have recently come up before the Student Senate which pertain directly to the organized living groups and since the Student Senate is representative of Students, not residents, we propose to continue to govern affairs which pertain primarily to our living units.
This governance is done in conjunction with 1.) the individual contracting to live in residence halls, 2.) individual residence halls, 3.) the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH), 4.) the Student Personnel and Housing Administration, as well as 5.) regional and national organizations, which offer valuable assistance.
During the past eight years AURH and the halls have been sensitive to, and have implemented changes which have been beneficial to the residents, and we feel that we can continue to do so. In contrast to the structure of the Student Senate we currently have mechanisms both in hall and inter-hall established to respond to resident's concerns.
Rather than duplicate these efforts and programs we suggest that the Student Senate address itself to matters other than those unique to the residence halls.
We recognize that this statement calls into question the powers of the Student Senate defined by the Senate Code. This should not, however, be construed as an attack upon the Student Senate, but rather, as an attempt to facilitate the defining processes which are contingent upon the execution of a new governing program.
Sincerely yours.
John P. Wulf
Oliver President
Kristi Authier
Lewis Coordinator
Pam Bailey
G.S.P. Spokesman
M. Earl Forman
Naismith President
Michael L. Bradley
McCollum President
Pam Bailly Corbin President John J. Wilpers Ellsworth President Marilyn Darling Acting Hashinger President James L. Foley J.R.P. President David Gore Templin President
Keith A. Jorgensen, AURH President
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646
Business Office—UN 4-358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except
on Sundays and holidays. Subscription rates; $6 a semester,
a year. Second class payment. All goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without
accessibility to those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Reserves.
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor Alan T. Jones
Editorial Editor Joanna K. Wible
Custumer Editor Joe Elliard
News Editor Ruth Redemacher
Makeup Editor Ken Peterson
Sports Editor Jay Thomas
Wire Editor Martha Manglesdorf
Arts and Review Editor Mike Shearor
Women's Page Editor Linda Loyd
Photo and Graphics Editor Mike Rieke
Assistant News Editor Donna Shrader, Steve Haynes
Assistant Sports Editor Joe Childs
Assistant Editorial Editor Judith K. Diebold
Assistant Campus Editor Rick Englert
Assistant Photo and Graphics Editor Mike Freeseick
Assistant Women's Page Editor Viki Hysten
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser .. Mel Adams
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Greek leaders react to MU plans
By HOWARD PANKRATZ Kansan Staff Writer
On Dec. 12, the University of Missouri will decide whether or not that university's Greek system will be allowed to go "off campus." According to Elizabeth Barnett, the editor of MU's Maneater and a member of MU's Kappa Alpha Theta chapter, it is doubtful whether MU's traditionally conservative administration will permit such a step.
She said under the proposed system the houses would have no hours and liquor would be allowed in them, the members of each house assuming the responsibility for any drinking done by those under 18 years of age. She said most of the houses had been in touch with their national chapters and had received permission
to go off campus. However, she said a few of the chapters had not heard from their national headquarters yet.
"Under the system we would be allowed to have homecoming decorations and to enter queen candidates for such things as homecoming. Also, freshmen would be allowed to have keys on the same arrangement that our upperclassmen now have," she said. "Under the present system, upper classmen are allowed to have keys if their parents grant them permission.
Mark Retonde, president of the KU Interfraternity Council, said he had received minutes of the meetings at MU and was aware of what was going on. "However, their attitude is quite a bit different from ours," he said.
US may delay testing
HELSINKI (UPI) — In an unexpected announcement, U.S. spokesmen at the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) with Russia said Thursday night that Washington is considering the possibility of a moratorium on testing multiple warhead missiles.
There was surprise in official circles that the U.S. State Department had chosen this time to reconfirm that America was considering a moratorium proposal.
It had been agreed that neither side should make public any details concerning the talks.
The spokesmen said, however, that no moratorium proposal had yet been made to the Soviet Union as the Helsinki preparatory talks had begun Nov. 17.
It has always been assumed that this was one of the ideas with which the United States had gone into the preliminary talks in Helsinki.
Bombs hit U.S. firms
No injuries were reported from any of the predawn bombings.
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)—Terrorists bombed at least 15 U.S. firms in downtown Buenos Aires Thursday. Police said this was an obvious leftist attempt to take public attention from America's Apollo 12 space spectacular.
The explosions knocked down plaster, shattered windows and ruined furniture and records. Several bombs exploded harmlessly in the street.
This was the worst terrorist bombing wave against U.S. firms in Argentina since last June when terrorists firebombed 14 supermarkets owned by the Rockefeller business interests.
Nov.21 KANSAN 5
1969
NOW SECOND
GREAT WEEK
NOW SECOND
GREAT WEEK
Paramount Pictures Presents
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The Sterile Cuckoo
Eve. 7:15 and 9:15
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The two sides met secretly for the second time Thursday on ways to freeze the nuclear arms race.
They agreed to meet again Monday. The four-day interval is designed to give both sides time to report back to their governments and receive fresh instructions.
Priest joins hijackers
VIENNA (UPI) — Two young Poles brandishing a toy pistol and a fake bomb hijacked a Polish airliner to Vienna Thursday, and asked for political asylum in Austria. There were 22 persons aboard.
One of the passengers, a Catholic priest, also asked for asylum on the spur of the moment.
A stewardess, Elsbieta Zurkowska, 24, received minor injuries when her arm was twised by one of the hijackers.
The two Polish youths, Wieslaw Szymankiewicz and Wieslaw Sosakowiecz, both 20, were arrested at Vienna's Schwechat Airport.
An interior ministry spokesman said that while the two hijackers were being interrogated, the unidentified priest had come up and had also asked to be allowed to remain in the West.
The spokesman said the priest apparently had nothing to do with the hijacking.
Asked if this meant the Greeks at MU were anti-administration and those at KU were pro-administration, Retonde said, "Yes, I'd say that." Retonde laughed and said he would rather not comment on whether he envisioned such action at KU by Greeks.
'STOLEN KISSES' IS EASILY TRUFFAUT'S BEST, AND FURTHER EVIDENCE THAT HE MAY BE THE FINEST COMIC ARTIST NOW WORKING IN THE MOVIES. The world, when we see it through his eyes, is transformed into a garden of delights."
LIFE MAGAZINE
Barbara Blee, president of the KU Panhellenic Council said she was also aware of what was going on at MU but said as far as she knew nothing but casual talk about MU's actions had ever taken place here. She said no member of the Panhellenic Council had ever brought up in meeting anything concerning similar action at KU.
Jay Strayer, assistant to the dean of men, and IFC adviser, noted recently the IFC had sent to the Chancellor a statement expressing the hope they could maintain a relationship with the administration similar to that under Chancellors Murphy and Wescoe. He said under the present setup, the council handled all matters related to the houses as living groups but problems having to do with individual members of the houses were left to the University.
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"I think the students at MU would be making a serious mistake if they decided to move off campus," Strayer said. "As far as the situation here, I've heard nothing that would indicate similar intentions on the part of KU Greeks.
"Everything between the administration and the houses hasn't been a bed of roses, but we have tried to handle our differences confidentially with a minimum
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of outside publicity," he said. "The houses have been able to police themselves, through the IFC very well. But again, with regard to the MU situation, I've heard nothing which would indicate a similar intention on the part of KU's houses," he said.
What's a Gypsy Moth?
AFTER YOU HAVE THANKSGIVING DINNER WITH ALICE AND RAY TONIGHT, ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS:
Is Alice's Restaurant a ballad to the new idealism? A lament for the human frailties that make this idealism all the more precious, because it is precarious? Or a youth's eye-view—at once jaundiced and amused—of a lot of establishment lunacies? Giles Fowler
Giles Powler K.C. Star
where the heads of all nations meet
ALICE'S RESTAURANT"
starring ARLO GUTHRIE COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists
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WELL AIN'T THIS A KICK IN THE...
STEVE BROOKS
NOW IN THEIR 8th AND FINAL WEEK
BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID
Hillcrest
Shows 7:15 - 9:20
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:15
ENDS TUES
University of Kansas Young People's Theatre
presents
The Snow Queen
by Suria Magito and Rudolf Weil
on
November 22 at 10:00 a.m.
University Theatre Murphy Hall
For tickets call: UN 4-3982
Hapless Jays meet bowl bound Tigers
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Writer
Yet, hope still remains for the hapless Hawk squad that Rodgers has been forced to patch up and reorganize before every game this year. An astonishing upset over Missouri this Saturday could savage the disasterous season and would bring back fond memories of the exciting Saturdays of last season.
This year's Jayhawk football team has stumbled its way through a miserable 1-8 season. It has been a season marred by injuries, interceptions, fumbles and other such blunders not accustomed to a Pepper Rodgers squad, let alone a team that shared the Big Eight title with Oklahoma only a year ago.
Statistically the Jayhawks stand about as much chance against the Tigers as they would against the Kansas City Chiefs. The Orange Bowl-bound Tigers, who are ranked seventh nationally and are tied with Nebraska for the conference's top spot, lead the Big Eight in total offense (427.7 yards a game) and are averaging a league high of 32.6 points a game. And as if that isn't enough, they also rank first in conference rushing defense and have held their opponents to an average of only 17.8 points a game.
It looks as if the KU offense will have considerable trouble running against the tough Missouri line and it is doubtful if the Hawks, who passed for only 130 yards last week against a vulnerable Oklahoma secondary, will fare much better this week in passing against an outstanding MU secondary.
But Rodgers and Missouri's head coach Dan Devine will be the first to admit that their team's statistics and records will fall by the wayside when the two squads renew the hard fought MU-KU rivalry this Saturday before a predicted 51,000 fans in Memorial Stadium. The 78th game between the two clubs will be regionally televised by ABC as NCAA wild-card game. Missouri (8-1) owns a 36-32-9 advantage in the series. Game time is 12:20.
Masterminding the accelerated MU offense, which ranks third on the all-time Big Eight list behind Oklahoma's 1956 national champions and KU's Orange Bowl squad of last year, is senior quarterback Terry McMillan. McMillan was
6 KANSAN Nov.21 1969
the Most Valuable Player in the Tiger's 35-10 victory over Alabama in the Gator Bowl last year. He also passed for 233 yards against the Jayhawks in a losing cause last year. This year the 6-1, 182 pounder ranks second in Big Eight passing having completed 92 of 209 tosses for 1660 yards and 14 touchdowns for an
McMillan's favorite receivers have been split ends Mel Gray and John Henley and tight end Tom Shryock. Gray, who has turned a 9.3 clocking in the 100-yard dash, has snatched 24 aerials for 590 yards while Henley and Shryock have latched onto 18 and 14 passes respectively
KANSAN Sports
Joe Moore, another MU record breaker, and MU's Mr. Everything Jon Staggers are two of the Big Eight's prize halfbacks. Moore has rushed 237 times for 1148 yards and an average of 4.8 yards a carry. His rushing yardage is a Missouri season record and the 196 pound junior appears to be headed towards a classic MU
average of 203.9 yards a game.
All are MU season bests, wiping
Paul Christman's long-enduring
marks from the record books.
career. Staggers has rushed for only 243 yards but he leads the conference in punt returns with 249 yards in 31 returns. He is also the top kickoff returner with 484 yards in only 16 returns. He returned a kickoff in the K-State game for 99 yards and a crucial touchdown.
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
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Fullback Ron McBride has been the Tiger's horse on short yardage situations and has added a powerful punch up the middle by charging for 317 yards on 81 carries. Even though McBride possesses good running ability,
(Continued to page 7)
SKI IN THE SKY
on Pikes Peak
STAY IN THE ALPINE COUNTRY
Hey Christian ...do your thing.
BACK TO GOD TRACT TEAM
2850 Kalamazoo Ave., S.E.
Grand Rapids, Mich. 49508
Help spread the Word. Send samples of cartoon Gospel tracts that really turn on the "Now Generation."
Name
Address
City
State Zip
School
CASCADE and GREEN MT. FALLS only 12 mi.to Ski Slope 13 mi W. of Colo. Spgs.on U.S. 24
EVERY WEEK END
Reasonable rates:
Ski-$3.50 per day
Sleep-2 nights for price of 1
(special rates for groups)
Write Triangle Chamber of Commerce
Box 371, Green Mt. Falls, Colo. 80819
Topsy's
on the Mall
pop corn
candy apples
ice cream
home made
fudge
LOFT'S
Desserts
open till 10:00 p.m.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
ZIG ~ ZAG
CONCERT
Qualite nature Superieure
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COUNTRY JOE
AND THE FISH
SATURDAY
NOV. 29
10A-11A
DANNY COX
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$3-4.5
TICKETS AVAILABLE
ALL JEMKINS STORES, MAGIC CIRCUS,
TODAY SHOP, MEMORIAL HALL, ALSO
DISCOUNT RECORDS (IN COLUMBIA)
AND SANDLEWood (IN LAWRENCE)
The University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633
PORTRAIT OF A MAN IN TUXEDO
The formal wear season will soon be upon us. Let us take good care of all your rental and accessory needs. We feature "After Six" formals in our rental stock. Stop in when your need arises.
1987
Get the "BIRD" for buying a new or used Toyota
Now you can get two birds with one stone! Competition Sports Cars is making a special offer for Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday ONLY. If you buy a new or used car we'll give you a 10 lb. roasting turkey.
Come out today and talk turkey. Check our selection of new and used cars. After all, not everybody can get the "bird" for buying a car.
COMPETITION SPORTS CARS
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COLUMBUS
Nip Weisenfels
1957
Sam Adams
Since Dan Devine came to Missouri as head coach the trademark of MU football has been defense. This year's high-scoring offense has overshadowed the usually heralded defense. Even with the awesome offensive attack that MU displays one can't discount the Tigers defense which boasts several candidates for all-Big Eight selections.
Devine has used him primarily as a blocker to spring Moore loose for long runs and as protection for McMillan on passing plays.
Rocky Wallace, a pre-season All-American candidate, was figured to be the hulk of the MU defense. An early season injury, however, forced Wallace out of play this year. The absence of the all-Big Eight tackle has not hurt the Tiger's as much as anticipated though, because the MU front wall has allowed opponents only 108 yards a game on the
(Continued from page 6)
Nov. 21
1969 KANSAN 7
ground. Anchoring the defense is linebacker Nip Weisenfels. Wiesenfells was chosen Sports Illustrated's lineman of the week for his outstanding play against Oklahoma. Other defensive mainstays are Steve Lundholm, linebacker, and guard, San Adams. Mike Bennett, defensive end, is slowed by an injury, but may see action against the Jayhawks Saturday. It is probable that the 215 pound junior may achieve all-Big Eight honors this season.
PEACENOW
The defensive secondary is last in the league statistics, but most coaches agree that this is because nobody has been able to run successfully against the Tigers. The secondary is headed by cornerback Butch Davis and safety
Dennis Poppe. Poppe has intercepted six passes and Davis has latched onto three others.
Help spread the message of the March on Washington
KU's offensive lineup remains intact for the MU encounter but once again Rodgers has been forced to revamp his defensive alignments. KU's leading defender, linebacker Emery Hicks, will be unable to play in Saturday's game because of a knee injury received against Oklahoma last weekend. Rodgers has replaced the all-Big Eight senior with sophomore fullback Chuck Schmidt, who has never played linebacker for the Hawks until this week. Thus, three sophomores, Schmidt, Kenny Page, and Steve Roach will start at the linebacker slots for Rodgers. Another soph, Dick Hertel, has replaced Mark Geraghty at the corner-back position.
PEACENOW
Call VI 3-6425 if you can help sell these PEACE stickers
PEACENOW
All proceeds for PEACE
An Invitation from:
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
1603 West 15th St. (adjacent to campus)
To investigate the new, unique incentive rental plan now in effect.
This incentive rental plan offers numerous price ranges for married couples, graduate students or undergraduates. The plan is designed to provide a two-bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartment at prices competitive with one-bedroom or two-bedroom apartments, yet offer much more in space and quality, convenient location and services.
Visit the office at 1603 W.15th, or call 843-4993 to get complete information. Inspection is welcomed.
KANSAS
31
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Editors, 82-40-3; Chalmers-Stinson 79-43-3
Eds vs. Stinson in grid finale
It all started the Friday before the Texas Tech game—the prediction war between the Chancellor and the Kansan sports editors. The weekly picks appeared the Friday before each KU matchup and were more often than not the only edge the Jayhawks received from any paper. Midway through the season the Chancellor enlisted the aid of Wade Stinson, athletic director, and together they represented the timid type of forecaster never picking an upset (KU over OU and CU?)—well almost never, while the editors chose their heroes with wreckless abandon and often times came up with a winner.
Together the pair of Chalmers and Stinson closed the gap that the editors had established and went to establish a gap of their foes. Bouncing back in the final weeks of the collegiate campaign the editors blew by their foes and to date stand at 82-40-3 compared to the chancellor and Stinson mark of 79-43-3.
Seasonal percentages give the editors a slight edge .672-.648. One game remains on slate and the editors have to be the team closest to the winning circle.
Stinson is soloing this week as Chancellor Chalmers is out of town and if Wade can put it together he just might win for himself and his partner a crystal ball, a copy of Jeane Dixon's latest or whatever the Great Cahuna gives to those who always manage to finish first.
Missouri at Kansas Chalmers-Stinson—Kansas, even Thomas-Childs—Kansas by 10
Kansas State at Colorado Chalmers-Stinson — Colorado, even
even Thomas-Childs—Colorado by 7
Nebraska at Oklahoma Chalmers-Stinson—Nebraska by 3
Thomas-Childs—Nebraska by 6
Oklahoma State at Iowa State
Chalmers-Stinson Oklahoma
Thomas-Childs—Oklahoma State by 7
Utah at Brigham Young Chalmers-Stinson—Utah by 14 Thomas-Childs—Utah by 7
Wyoming at Houston Chalmers-Stinson — Houston by 16
Thomas-Childs -Houston by 10
Ohio State of Michigan
Ohio State at Michigan Chalmers-Stinson—Ohio State by 14
Thomas-Childs—Ohio State by 21
Wisconsin at Minnesota Chalmers-Stinson—Minnesota by 3
Thomas-Childs—Minnesota by 17 Michigan State at Northwestern Chalmers-Stinson — Michigan, even
Thomas-Childs—Northwestern by 7
Air Force at Notre Dame Chalmers-Stinson — Notre Dame by 7
Thomas-Childs—Notre Dame by 10.
UCLA at Southern Cal Chalmers-Stinson—UCLA, even Thomas-Childs—USC by 6
West Virginia at Syracuse Chalmers-Stinson—West Virginia by 2
Thomas-Childs — West Virginia
bv 10
Chiefs set for Raiders
(UPI) — Those smoke signals above the home of the Kansas City Chiefs aren't distress warnings, they're war clouds heralding the arrival of the Oakland Raiders for Sunday's American Football League battle between the two giants of the West.
The Chiefs, leaders in the Western Division with a 9-1 mark, host the Raiders (8-1-1) in the first of two regular season games between the two Super Bowl hopefuls.
Kansas City, bidding for a club record eight straight victory, is a $ \frac{1}{2} $ point favorite to stop the AFL's most powerful offensive outfit. The Chiefs are unbeaten at Municipal Stadium over their
Nov.21
1969
8 KANSAN
last 10 games. The last team to beat the Chiefs at home was the New York Jets, 20-9 in the 1968 opener.
The defending world champion Jets, already assured of a berth in the AFL's playoffs to determine the league's Super Bowl representative, are also at home Sunday. The Jets (7-3) play a return match with Cincinnati, the only club which shows a victory over Kansas City.
In other games Buffalo is at Boston, Denver at San Diego, and Houston at Miami.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Tony's 66 Service
THE FROG
SUA presents
in Concert at Hoch
Blood Sweat & Tears
December 2
7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
$3.00, $3.50, & $4.00
Rice at TCU
On sale at Kief's, The Sound,
and Richardson Music Co.
**Rice at TCU**
Chalmers-Stinson—Rice, even
Thomas-Childs—TCU by 12
**Harvard at Yale**
Chalmers-Stinson—Yale, even
Thomas-Childs—Yale by 7
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1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633
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Women place high in Rifle team meet
The KU Women's Rifle Team placed second and took the top two individual honors in the women's division in the 11th Annual Oklahoma State University Invitational Smallbore Rifle Match last weekend at Stillwater. Results were announced Thursday. KU's Men's team placed 14th in the men's division.
KU's Carol Waltz, Orange,
Tex., junior fired a 990 out of
1200 possible points and Mary
Arnold, Holton junior shot a
988 to take the first two women's
places.
Kansas State's women's team took first place with a score of 3710 of a possible 4800 points. The KU team fired a 3682 for second place. Third place went to Oklahoma State.
Other KU women shooters and their scores were Tana Monroe, Columbia, Mo., junior, 910 and Barbara Westervelt, Parsons junior, 794.
The men's division was won by the University of Houston
Big Eight attendance reaches all-time high
With five more games to go, Big Eight Conference football attendance for this year stands at a record level. To date (34 games), the league's total attendance for home games is 1,475,651. This is an average of 43,402, almost 1,000 a game over last year's record average of 42,484.
FIRST STUDIO
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—In 1908 the first motion picture studio in Southern California was set up here by William Selig for the production of "The Count of Monte Cristo."
Nov. 21
1969 KANSAN 9
THE PAWNSHOP COFFEE HOUSE
is more fun than . . .
a turkey shoot Plato's Republic
a rocking chair marathon
What to do at the Pawnshop... listen to Beth Scallett bring your friends
What not to do at the Pawnshop . .
study
whittle
ice skate
Open every week- end so far. Fri.-Sat. 15 E.8th St.
Cover $1 (easily cheaper than a hard backed copy of Spiro Agnew's Memoirs)
with a score of 4387 out of a possible 4800 points.
The KU men shot a 4130 for 14th place. Kansas shooters and their scores were Rick Daly, St. Louis senior, 1017; Linn Covey, Ft. Leavenworth freshman, 1037; Mike Jenkins, Salina sophomore, 1011; and Ben Zavala, Kansas City junior, 1011.
As one of the major National Rifle Association registered matches in the southwest, this year's competition drew 25 men's teams and four women's teams from 18 colleges and universities in Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota and Colorado.
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Looks like like fun doesn't it? We offer all the colors and sizes in Echo Scarfs to help you accessorize in any way you feel. Today at the ...
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9TH YEAR OF A GREAT CHRISTMAS TRADITION
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Draught House caters to students
"It was the type of campus we were looking for in a college-oriented town," said John Turner, a former Ohio University student and manager of the new establishment, explaining why the seventh national Draught House had been built in Lawrence.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller yesterday defended military juntas in Latin America, contending they were becoming forces for social change and were, in many cases, the only alternative to "anarchy and chaos."
Rockefeller, who headed a task force to Latin America for President Nixon, ran into sharp criticism for his views in a hearing before the Senate foreign relations subcommittee on Latin America.
UNICEF
One reason Lawrence was chosen, Turner said, was the campus was "not spread out all over like Ohio State or like Payton University where most of the students commute."
Chairman Frank Church, D-Idaho, said he had heard "similar arguments made in behalf of the military dictatorships in Europe, the Fascist dictatorships" before World War II.
The original draught house began five years ago in Davenport, Iowa, when several college students decided they were tired of the fact that in order to go most places, one had to have a date, Turner said.
He told Rockefeller if the United States would stop propping up dictatorships with military aid it might reverse the serious decline in sympathy toward the United States which was so manifest in Rockefeller's Latin American trip last summer. His trip resulted in serious violence.
The Draught House is run "for and by college students," Turner said. "I hire students only, and
Rockefeller, although agreeing with Church that it was important to achieve free elections throughout the hemisphere, said cutting off military aid to Latin American dictatorships was not the answer.
Rocky says juntas can aid change
"Today, the bright leadership in the military is coming from the working class . . . from poor families who have a deep and abiding concern for the people," Rockefeller said.
Also featured at halftime will be Norman Weinberg, Prairie Village freshman, as drum soloist for Neal Hefti's "Cute" and a special message from the band to the Orange Bowl-bound University of Missouri team.
soon the Draught House will be run entirely by students."
He warned the subcommittee that "a government that is not strong can just be nibbled away," citing Uruguay as an example of a democratic government "going through utter chaos."
12 KANSAN Nov. 21 1969
UNICEF Cards and Calendars at KU Bookstore
The New Yorker said the situation "most dangerous to Western Hemisphere security would be to find ourselves faced with a mainland Castro-equipped and supported by the Communist world."
The march was written by John Podzdro, professor of music theory, and was arranged by Jim Barnes, Hobart, Okla., junior.
Adding to its already-large repertoire of KU fight songs, the University of Kansas Marching Band will introduce "Rip City" during halftime at Saturday's KU-MU football game.
KU band to introduce new halftime routine
Other clubs in the Draught House chain are located in Toledo, Athens, Akron and Columbus, Ohio; Denver; and the original club is in Davenport, Iowa. Turner said they would soon expand to other college towns.
"The Draught House will be open every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday night," he said, "and live entertainment is always provided."
Turner said since the Drunget House was a chain of clubs they would be able to get big name bands.
GARDENLAND, INC.
914 West 23rd
VI 2-1596
Aquariums & Fish
niques, the Byrds, the American Breed, the New Colony Six and the Classics IV.
Audio Sale
Turner said bands which had toured the Draught Houses last year included Jay and the Tech-
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Student rights forum topic
Kent Frizzell, Kanss attorney general, and six of his assistant attorney generalals talked with students and professors Thursday night about the University's legal relationship to the state.
They talked at a forum which represented the first of a series of five to be held this year. The forum was at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room. Those assistants with Frizzell were Lance Burr, Edward Collister, Richard Foth, Richard Seaton, Ernest Ballweg and Richard Havse.
Frizzell opened the forum by saying he did not think those in
POLITICAL FORMER BLANKET CENTER FOR LIGHT SCIENCE AND COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
Kent Frizzell
the state legislature understood what was going on on campus, and they misinterpret what they hear by word of mouth.
"We'll bring legislators here if you folks show the desire," said Frizzell.
Frizzell said he wanted to talk about the University's legal relationship to the state including the legal rights of students, administrators and teachers. It concerned the meaning of the First and Fourteenth Amendmentsto each of these groups.
His office served in an advisory capacity with former Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe last year in the hearings after the ROTC demonstration, Frizzell said. It also aided in the formulation of the guidelines set up by the Board of Regents for future student demonstrations.
"We didn't pose as experts on
Nov. 21
1969 KANSAN 13
the reasons of campus unrest, said Frizzell, "but we were there to inform everyone of his civil rights. We showed students that 'law and order' protects their rights as much as anyone else's."
Frizzell's assistants, Ballweg and Burr lightened the beginning of the forum by breaking out a guitar an singing.
This was to "demonstrate the dissent within the office," they said.
They sang an original song about "what this country needs is another movie star." They included such suggestions as "put politics back where it belongs—on the amusement page." They advised, "Senator Shultz you better get back in the chase 'cause Shirley Temple is in that race."
The Student Senate and the Board of Regents were among more significant issues discussed as the serious questioning began.
Foth said under the Kansas law, the Board of Regents were charged with running the University, but the Student Senate can handle certain things.
By sanctioning the Senate Code, the Board of Regents allows the Senate to make some laws, Frizzell said. Every Rule the Senate made would have to be examined to determine the instances the Senate had actually exceeded its authority, he said.
Frizzell said later he applauded those who marched in the moratorium. He could approve of protest and dissent, he said as long as it was within the rights granted by the First Amendment, but arson and violence could not be carried on under this right.
Those who protest by true civil disobedience means, he said, were willing to break the law, but not to breach the peace.
Of the seven attorney generals at the forum, five said they thought the voting age should be lowered to 18.
"There are two reasons for this," said one. "One is the boys are fighting in Vietnam and the
Indians on Alcatraz to set up study center
other is kids are more educated today."
On the war in Vietnam, Frizzell said he agrees with Nixon's policies, but this did not mean Frizzell was right or wrong, he said.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — The Indians invaded Alcatraz today for the second time within two weeks. This time they said they were there to stay.
Frizzell said the war was a mistake to begin with, but we were there now and American boys were dying there. He believed Nixon was trying to get out.
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Agnew discredits papers
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI)—Vice President Spiro T. Agnew renewed his criticism of news media Thursday night, centering this time on newspapers and "the growing monopolization of the voices of public opinion on which we all depend."
"Many, many strong independent voices have been stilled in this country in recent years," Agnew told the Montgomery Chamber of Commerce in a speech following up last week's attack on the handling of news and opinion by the broadcasting networks. "Lacking the vigor of competition, some of those that have survived have, let us face it, grown fat and irresponsible."
He said, "I am against censorship in all forms" and "I do not seek to intimidate the press, the networks or anyone else from speaking out."
Agnew specifically discussed two large Eastern newspapers, the Washington Post and the New York Times, in speaking about the concentration of editorial power.
The Post is Washington's largest newspaper. He noted that "it also owns one of the capital's four television stations, an all-news radio station there and Newsweek Magazine—"all grinding out the same editorial line." He said he was not recommending breaking up the Post's holdings but "merely pointing out that the public should be aware that these four powerful voices harken to the same master."
Faculty aid city's search
Edwin O. Stene, professor of political science, is chairman of the screening committee for selection of a new Lawrence city manager. The committee also includes Francis Heller, dean of faculties.
The committee was appointed late in October to assist the Lawrence City Commission in selecting a successor for Ray Wells, who resigned to become city manager of Muskegon, Mich. The screening committee will submit names of five applicants for final selection by the City Commission.
"We have received about 25 applications," Stene said. "Application is restricted to persons invited by the committee to apply."
Stene said he expects interviews to begin in early December. Five names will be submitted to the City Commission in mid-December.
Dennis Kallsen, assistant city manager, is acting city manager pending selection of Wells' successor.
Nov. 21
1969 KANSAN 15
Agnew said the Times "did not carry a word" when 300 congressmen and 59 senators recently signed a letter supporting President Nixon's Vietnam policy. And he said that on Tuesday it had reported only on page 11 a statement by the Pope endorsing the way Nixon was trying to end the war.
"How is that for news judgments?" he asked.
Agnew summed up this way his views on the broadcast and newspaper handling of news and opinion:
"And a high wall of separation should be raised between what is news and what is commentary."
The White House said it was not given an advance copy of the speech. Asked if President Nixon had read the speech, Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said, "No."
"I have not and do not condemn this generation of young Americans," he said.
Agnew also had strong criticism for dissenting youth.
"They contain in their numbers many gifted, idealistic and courageous young men and women.
"But they also list in their numbers an arrogant few who march under the flags and portraits of dictators, who intimidate and harass university professors, who use gutter obscenities to shout down speakers with
whom they disagree, who openly profess their belief in the efficacy of violence in a democratic society."
The vice president also chided his predecessor, Hubert H. Humphrey for his reply to Agnew's speech of last week. Humphrey accused the Nixon Administration of a "calculated attack" on the right of dissent and on the media.
"Yet, it is widely known that Mr. Humphrey himself believes deeply that unfair coverage of the Democratic convention in Chicago, by the same media, contributed to his defeat in November. Now his wounds are apparently healed and he casts his lot with those who were questioning his own political course a year ago."
Agnew also indicated the debate between the administration and the news media is not going to stop. He said he has been charged with attempting to stifle dissent. "Nonsense," he said. "The expression of my views has produced enough rugged dissent in the last week to wear out a whole covey of commentators and columnists."
He added, "When they (the media) go beyond fair comment and criticism they will be called upon to defend their statements and their positions just as we must defend ours.
"And when their criticism becomes excessive or unjust, we shall invite them down from their ivory towers to enjoy the rough and tumble of the public debate."
A Thanksgiving Concert
COUNTRY JOE & THE FISH
plus
DANNY COX
Sat., Nov. 29 at 8:00 P.M.
Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kans.
Tickets: $3, $4. $5. Available At: Jenkins Music, Magic Circus, Today Shop, Sandalwood, Memorial Hall, Discount Records, (Columbia).
>
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Troubled teens seek aid from 'concerned' senior
1935
Lifeline
Brian Bauerle, Harlan, Iowa, senior, sits at the end of a telephone line trying to talk a teenager out of committing suicide.
By CAROLYN BOWERS
Kansan Staff Writer
A boy is just beginning a bad "trip" after dropping acid. Everyone is out to get him.
A high school girl and her friends have begun sniffing glue "for kicks." Where do they go from there?
Kids with problems like these are being helped by Brian Baurele, Harlan, Iowa, senior, who has incorporated counseling with a human relations class project for semester credit.
Baurele works with Kansas City youth through an agency that advises teens about their problems or refers them to specialized agencies or private physicians.
His interest in counseling teens began last summer in Chicago while participating in a communication group of 50 radicals and 50 suburbanites.
"I was considered a radical because of my longish hair," he said.
While Baurele was with this group, a Chicago hospital psychiatrist asked him to assist in working with young drug addicts, runaways and threatened suicides.
Bareleen said he could "relate" to these teens because he had been around drugs and people with emotional problems.
After the summer, Baurele transferred his interest to the Kansas City organization where suicides, parents, anyone with a
16 KANSAN Nov.21 1969
problem call a switchboard operator. Presently he is busy in Lawrence trying to interest local organizations to support a similar group.
He began his counseling in Kansas City by taking calls on the switchboard and eventually accumulated enought cases of his own, so that he now works mainly with them.
"I actually do nothing," Baurele said, "I merely try to let them know that I know what they're talking about."
He stressed that the cases he works with are not "everyday occurrences.
Drugs, including marijuana, speed and acid are as prevalent in high schools as on college campuses, he said. There is no "drug culture" within high schools as there are in colleges, Baurele said.
"High school students are at the mercy of peddlers who might sell them permanently harmful drugs.
"Older people ignore the drug problem," he added. "Kids can't go to their parents, teachers or ministers with their drug problems. They need to be given the straight facts."
Baurele's experience with drug addicts has enabled him to help those under the influence of drugs.
"When someone is on a bummer of a trip, he needs a person who knows what's going on and knows how to handle the problem," he said.
"Most parents yell and want to take the kid to a hospital right away," he said. "This is the worst
thing you can do—you must communicate with them."
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He described the technique of first discussions with the youngster.
"You must get his mind off his bad trip," Baurele said. "We look at beautiful things, we laugh, I tell him not to worry."
Barele also acts as a liaison for young people who have problems with their parents.
He described the case of a high school girl who couldn't communicate with her parents and asked Baurele for help.
"When I came to the house the girl was crying, so I put my arms around her. This really shocked her parents. We just talked and as views came out, parents and daughter found that the differences between them were really slight."
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Although he helps some college students, Baurele works primarily with high school students.
"Kids are so aware of social problems," he said, "you can't put anything over on them and they question all that's happening."
"I try to present them with an alternate meaning of life that parents may already have, but instead of handing down this philosophy, parents hand down money."
Our new sport coats will have you in great shape. Tailored in rich fabrics and colors in the new shaped look. Very correct. See them today at...
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Our college is right in the middle of the action in College Town U.S.A...Columbia, Missouri. You can even arrange a course of study that includes work at Missouri University and Stephens College. That's three schools in one.
If you're ready for a new outlook . . . call Bill Brown, Director of Admissions collect today . . . 800-325-2594 For Non-Residents of Missouri . . . 314-449-0531 For Missouri Residents...all night calls to 314-442-1903 or write
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Service group is student-operated
KU-Y serves University, community
M. E. A.
By MARY QUINN
Kansan Staff Writer
The KU-Y is a service organization helping the community and providing interesting activities for students and faculty.
Composed of 11 major committees, the "Y" is operated by the cabinet of project chairmen and officers, the 24-member advisory board and two salaried staff members, a program secretary and a coordinator.
The KU-Y is one of few organizations of its kind in the country operated by the students. With a dues-paying membership of 240 volunteer workers and many others not on the membership roll, the group has 400 persons to keep the organization self-sufficient.
Tom Moore
Tom Moore, KU-Y coordinator, said the organization provided helpful and interesting channels for student, community and University interaction. The official purpose of the group states it is an open community of students, with other interested and concerned people, of all races, nationalities and faiths, who try to understand the meaning of their lives in relation to the entire world through free expression of their convictions and doubts in words and actions through various programs to provide meaningful and beneficial activities for the University and community.
Many of the programs involving student volunteers are helpful to community projects such as the Children's Hour which involves work in the Headstart program. Jill Wiechman, Wichita junior, is chairman of this program.
The School of Education has taken over the majority of involvement in the School Resources Volunteers. Vicki Harmon, Hutchinson sophomore, heads this group. The work requires volunteers to help in elementary and junior high schools.
Class open in Ecology
A course in human ecology will be offered next semester in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said Leland McCleary of the KU Extension. The bureau is working with James L. Koevering, associate professor of biology and botany, to develop audio tape materials for use in the class.
Final decisions have not been made concerning course content, and requirements for enrollment, McCleary said. The purpose of the course will be to give students an understanding of the relationships among living things, the earth's water, air and soil supplies, and problems arising from mismanagement of these resources, McCleary said.
Preliminary work is also being done by a student ecology action group, formed as a class in the Free University, to establish a curriculum in environmental studies at KU, such as those being developed at schools throughout the country.
KU-MU rivalry shafts hospitality
TOPEKA (UPI)—Kansas Gov. Robert B. Docking will host Missouri Gov. Warren E. Hearnes at the annual University of Kansas-University of Missouri football game Saturday in Lawrence.
In a statement released today, Docking noted the rivalry between the two schools and said, "Although Governor Hearnes and I are close personal friends, the true Kansas hospitality will not begin until after the game."
They walk unescorted children home, help in the classroom and perform unexpected duties which would take the teacher away from the classroom. About 100 participants helped the schools last year and by the 1970 term KU-Y hopes the project will be conducted through the School of Education.
Nov. 21 1969 KANSAN 17
Caring for children through companionship and planned activities is the purpose of the Youth Friendship group, known as the big brother-big sister program, and the Special Activities Committee. Children in the friendship program are those from large families or problem children who need extra attention. Parental permission is required before the children are befriended by KU-Y members. Films, picnics, walks and buying sodas are part of the caring program.
"The students never get involved in family activities," Moore said, "unless they are specifically invited by the parents."
LeAnn Stuewe, Lawrence senior, is chairman of Youth Friendship program and Sandie Eyman.
Wichita sophomore, heads the Special Activities committee.
This group has devoted its efforts to helping fourth through sixth grade children by sponsoring bowling, skating and field trips. Hillcrest Bowl and Lawrence Skating Rink donate their facilities for these activities.
Leslie Saunders, Hugoton senior, is chairman of Operation Tutor Match. Qualified student tutors volunteer and fees are charged for their services. This is one way the KU-Y makes money.
To help student-faculty interaction, the Faculty Fireside project was revived two years ago. Mike Blakely, Topeka junior and chairman of the group, said that it promoted understanding of current issues and problems because the students and faculty involve themselves in informal situations which encourage better communication. However, he said, more students are needed to fill the program.
The Financial Resources Committee headed by Phyllis Farrar, Wichita junior, sponsors money-making projects such as the Mum Sale for Parents' Day and a concession stand at football games.
The International Gift Fair is
a profit-making project to help the Y he financially independent
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RED DOG INN—8:00
COMING—FABULOUS FLIPPERS—FRIDAY, DEC. 5th
Under the direction of Garnet Herring, Westover, Comm. junior and Randy Bradford, Guyana senior, articles for Christmas sales have been brought to the Kansas Union from many parts of the world including: Africa, Northern Europe, India, Southeast Asia, the Carribean, Latin America, China and Japan.
The American Indian and his culture are also represented. The items reflect the customs of the native areas. On sale December 3, 4 and 5, most of the items cost under $5.00 enabling students to afford them as Christmas gifts.
The Model OAS and UN is a dual committee co-sponsored with the political science department. The University gives KUY $900 a year for this committee through the political science department. Marilyn McAmis, a graduate student from Kingsport, Tenn., is the secretary general and Jon Heggan, professor of political science is the adviser.
The official calendar of the Greek Orthodox Church includes 25 holy days.
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They attend model UN meetings and the money received is used to help finance delegations and support their work.
The biggest money maker sponsored by the "Y" is the Rock Chalk Revue, this year produced by Kathy Colton, Topeka junior.
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Plaza, 1800 Mass.
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She said her goal was to get more of the students involved in the Revue this year. The performances are scheduled for Feb. 27 and 28.
Membership meetings, posters and participation in the Activities Carnival are the responsibility of Doug Everly, Salina junior, as head of the Publicity committee. The coalition of YMCA and YWCA has dual office holders. The presidents are Walter Mooney, third year law student from Wichita, and Betsy Menke, Webster Groves, Mo. senior.
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Graduate students write review winter issue features 3 articles
Graduate students in KU's French Department write, edit and publish Chimeres, one of the few graduate student reviews in French in the United States.
The review, published biannually, is distributed nationally to French departments of major universities in the United States and to prominent scholars in France.
The winter 1969 issue of Chimeres is 86 pages and contains three articles on French Literature, two short stories and two articles written in English specifically for the Modern Language Association convention in Denver on Dec. 27 to 30.
One article by John Erickson, associate professor of French, justifies graduate reviews in terms of purpose and value.
The second article, written by Lloyd Free, editor-in-chief of Chimeres, set guidelines for establishing graduate review.
The review also contains a 15-page bibliography of professional reviews and magazines which
IRS reveals new form
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Internal Revenue Service Thursday made public its new form 1040, the cheery red, white and blue package of paper that 77 million Americans will get to know before April 15.
The new income tax form includes one to seven pages depending upon the complexity of the individual's tax return.
The IRS said it "has been designed so, regardless of financial circumstances, it can be used by taxpayers in any bracket."
The computer card form 1040A, used last year by 18 million taxpayers, has been discontinued. The card was usually used by low and moderate income individuals and the IRS said "rising income levels" made it obsolete.
But IRS said the new one-page basic form is as simple and easy to use as the old card. A taxpayer who uses just the first page must take the standard deduction and cannot itemize his expenses.
18 KANSAN Nov.21 1969
publish articles on French literature.
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Free will lead a seminar entitled "The Anatomy of a Graduate Review of French Literature" at the convention on Dec. 30.
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The review is financed by contributions from the Alliance Francaise of Kansas City, the KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and Les Comediens de l'apervier, a group of students in the French Department who perform French plays.
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Del Eisele, certified gemologist
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
Chimeres editors are Michel Coclet, Claire Dehon and Roseann Runte.
The subscribers of Chimeres also contribute either $5 or $10 each per year toward the publication costs.
AGS
Kenneth White, associate professor of French, is University
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adviser and J. Theodore Johnson, chairman of the French Department, is assistant adviser.
Contributors of articles are Isabelle Armitage, William H. Cannon, Claire Dehon, Michel Colet, Erickson, Free, Hans R. Runte, Lucie Bryant and Roseann Runte.
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The Town Shop
839 Mass. VI 3-5755
The University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the school brochure are served to all students without regard in color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive,"New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus Mad House, 411 W 140 St.
30 watt Pilot stereo Amplifier. Inputs for mag, or evr stollen tape, tape, AM, system. $40. Call VI 2-36184 speaker system. $40. Call VI 2-36184 BOOTS—look at. P R I M A L L Y LEATHER'S collection of Americana boots from Frye. Benchcraft with a variety of straps, studs, and buckles to express your individuality. Mass. 12-11
1967 VW. Lt. Blue, Radio, Excellent body and mechanical condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-6318 after 6.
Tapes, tapes, recording tapes for sale.
All sizes and kinds. Used once. Professionally erased. 221 Concord Road,
843-4836. 12-2
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843-4836. 12-2
Must sell immediately—a white 1965
W. with radio and sunroof. $20 or
best offer. VI 2-1188 or VI 2-844-
19 Fritz Company has special bargains
on inspected used winter and high-
quality windoil. No cost for best
& Country tires sale prized. Expert
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experienced mechanic. Fritz Co.
745 N. Washington St. $150 or
Big Rummange Sale. Community Buildin-
g, 11th & Mass. Fri. Nov. 21st,
8:00 to 5:00. Sat., Nov. 22nd, 7:00 to
8:00. More than 25 families contouring
to the front. Ampex Micro 85 solid state Cassette
stereo and recorder, walnut cased,
completely outfitted, 14½" walnut/
beige speakers, tapes included. Cost
$50. Perfect condition. Less year old, must sell $150 or best
offer. Call Kris at VI 2-4965. 11-21
Must sell Minolta SR-1 35 mm, cam-
parettes, $20 per piece, -55 lens. Make your best offer, sold
for $159 new. Call VI 2-5693 after 5:00
p.m. 11-21
Tape recorder-model 5232A Sears
$50. New condition. 843-7872. 11-21
Portable TV 12 in. BW with UHF and earpiece! Great for dorm viewing.
Don't distur your roommate. $50.
$50. New condition. 843-7872. 11-21
1960 English Hillman for sale. Ideal for school car. $135. See at McConnell
number Co. VI 3-3871. 844 E. 13th St.
and reverb, almost guitar ambience,
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$285. Steve Dewey
843-7404 12-2s-alpine Slamse > kittens, purebred,
b-trained. Call VI 2-6826 after 6
10am
New- unusual—ancient Chinese stone paintings in Mexican Bark Painings; many of them purchased at the Museum of Natural History. Gift Shop. 8:30:40. 12:2
Stereo record player, radio and T.V.
console in excellent working condition. $150.00. For appointment call VI 2-1232. 12-2
"The Fountains." Why not save that expensive rent money and buy your own townhouse? Save money--By building equity in your own home. By hedging against inflation, By talking allowable tax deductions. For additional information, call Bav Real Estate Agency, VI 2-5700 or VI 2-9242.
Sale on all goods, cereals, Jussies Baby Food, Coke, pastries, jellies, lots of items, apples. Call, for we will have to close as I have to go to the hospital. R. D. Sweeney, Sweeney's Market, west on Hgw 40.
1964 Skvlark convertible, red, white power top, automatic, new heater, recent valve job, brand new PolyDac Great car! $1250. VI3-12 after 3.
Dark brown human hair fall. Like new. Reasonably priced. Call 842-7549 after 5:30 p.m. Weekdays. All day on weekend. 12-4
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CASA De TACOS
1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
Nikorax F Nikor 1-4 lens, Weston
Honda F Four M 14 T 14 in-
nion Ford B43 7462
Have moved into an apartment. Must
sell woman's contract Will take best
offer. Call VI 2-1188 11-21
New condition, Gibson electric guitar
cash—bank call VI 2-0929 after 5 11-21
In size 9 dresses, wool skirts, and
sweaters for sale. Good quality, call
842-6267 11-21
Noreleo Tape, Recoredr, Cassette,
special offer. Reg. 2.65 Cassette only
$1.65 with this adv. as Coupon. Ray
Stoneback's, Open Mon. and Thurs.
evenings. Offer expires Nov. 24. 12-3
Espana classic guitar - Excellent con-
trol. Phone 843-8505. Schardein,
Phone 843-8505. 11-24
1967 Chevell Super; Sport, Vinyl top,
42,000 miles. Will be traded on Saturday
if not sold. $1575; Call 842-8582. 11-24
Returning to Italy. Must sell '68
Lancia Fulvia Rallye (imported Itali-
an Race car) 18,000. Parts included.
30 mpg. VI-2 45-840. 11-24
5,30
Two tickets to Missouri Game-
Faculty section 11-24
VT 2-2921
1966 Corvette. Low mileage—good condition. 327-300 hp. 4 speed. 12-3
1969 Cheville-SS396–350 HP, Humped Orange. 842-9183. Call after 50.
Webec Portable Stereo, G.E.T. V-cock-radio (one unit), 1962 Corvair 4-speed, guitar, Smith-Corona typewriter, after 5 p.m., call 842-3936.
Fritz Company has special bargains on inspected used winter and high-wire tires. Also New "83" Series Town & Country tires sale price Expert.ort for these tires by experienced mechanic. Fritz Co. 745 N. HI. VI-3421. 12-2 1967 Cougar. Maroon -vinyl top-air -power steering -new polyglass tires, custom owner.机 Call 843-7474 between 9 a.m.-4 p.m. call for Paula. 180 Stereo component system. Two Fisher speakers. Fisher amplifier. Duai turn-table. Pickering cartridge. $630 new $855. Dave Brushwood. 842-12-4
NOTICE
Loans to junior, senior and grad. stu-
muecificnclinic. Finance. 725 Mass.
V1-804-734
Must sell girls housing contract for
Naslithm Hill 12-4793 JVI TIT 2-4793
12-4
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-good Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. Our skate school our specialty. Open 11 a.m. VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday if your kid's sister's present from the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Colorful marine specimens, shells, minerals. Really great for "Show amateurs." 8:30-4:30 daily. 12:30-4:30 Sunday. 12-3
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! Revised, Comprehensive. "New Classes of Western Civilization" 4th Edition. Campus Mad. House 111 W 14th St. L.
Minnie Pearls
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Landi, VI 3-4022, ff
COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKIE
Call in or Carry Out
FREE Delivery over $5.00
VI 3-8200
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
Rallye—Lost in the dark, Registra-
tor, Nov. 22, information 842-4725,
843-9019
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan
W
SANDWICH SHOP
GRADUATE STUDENTS LOCATING
BROOKLYN REvolutionary ap-
proach. Director of the school.
candidates. Candidates to schools. In-
expensives. Deadline December 1, 1968.
Harvard University Central, Box
317. Harvard Sq. P.O. Box
317. Massachusetts Sq. 12178.
12-15
THE
ATE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
Going to Wichita or Eldorado, Kansas, Tuesday. Nov. 26 Will give rides in Hall (Room 603) VI 2-1200 11-21 R possesses d component system with AM-FM tuner built-in. $150.00 takes downtown. Onen Mon and Tues (special 33 record only $1.00). 12-2 Help! Dependently need ride to N.Y. Getting hooked in Spring Must make arrangements. Call #824-$152. 11-21
Need one student to take over my desk for a class on Monday mornings at Gatehouse. $85 75 per month available immediately—no deposit required. VI 3-7881, m. to 12 p.m. 12-3
FOR RENT
choice for that 'special' gift. Their
items cannot be found anywhere else in Lawrences Museum of Natural History.
12:30 to 4:30 Sunday
12:30 to 4:30 Sunday
Haynes Microelectronics is the answer to your Hi-Fi component repair problems. We are the only factory repair station in the Mid-West, AR, Dynakit, TF, TITOR, and tfTutor, need help in EE-40, ME-28 and Math 146, Phone VL3-3712.
Unique 4 bedroom apt. for 3-4 students $45-50 each. Util pvt. Furnished nicely. Two pvt. entrances. 1005 Kentucky or 842-9249. 11-21
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III.
Guitar Instruction. First lesson free.
Call Jim - VI2-1453 and take your
lesson. Bounce lessons are
$3 per hour lesson, and the
quency depending on how hard you
practice. Go at your own rate. No
pushing, encouragement and
instructions. Clicking, clicking,
folk, some blues; G tuning;
acider and jam sessions. Try it 12-
Brand new two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Fully carpeted with drapes and electric kitchen. One to four boys for $165 plus utilities. Call VI 3-6168.
Married Couples—2 bedroom apartment, fully carpeted, electric kitchens to $165 plus utilities, Bird Construction Company VI 3-6135 or VI 3-5730.
Sublease. 2-bedroom. 2 bath Gatehouse apartment. Available Immediately. Approximately $50 a month. Call VI 1-23441 anytime. 11-24
Furnished 3-room apt. pvt. bath and
entrance, off st. parking. Utilities
included, only-Married to
coach. Available Dex. 1
VI 3-4349, 1005 Mississippi 11-24
Small, furnished, one bedroom house $90.00 per month. Call 842-3577.
Custom
Picture
Framing
Supplies Materials
12-3
Decompage Supplies Gifts
Small studio apt. for men—nice kitchen and nicely furn. 2 blocks from Union available immediately Call VI3-8534. 12-4
Grumbacher
Room for rent with kitchen privi-
ledge. Call VIZ 12-2-12
1240 Ishao. After 5:30 12-2-
Furnished apartment, walking dis-
sistance. 1 room, 3 student
V1-37890 or V1-32851.
Artist
Davis Paints
918 Massachusetts
VI 3-6141
PHILLIIPS
66
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and U+HAUL
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"For all your cars needs"
For all your cars needs
Motor tune-ups
Cars winterized
Wheel mounting & bal.
1401 West 6th St.
Phone 843-3557
Home needs a family. Owner on leave Jan. 25-Aug. 8, 1970. Furnished or semi-furnished. Eight rooms including 3 bedrooms, study, re-room, 23-baths. 2 car garage. Hillcrest area VI2-0013. 12-4
LOST
Lost—small, short-haired female dog
mixed breed. About 2 years old.
Bad teeth, answers to name "Sugar."
Call VI 2-0031
11-21
Waterman pen, gold. 4 color. Ballet
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Lost black ID photo holder. Weekend of Nov. 15. Reward Call VI-3-6556
HELP WANTED
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part time. Apply in person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. tf
Experienced secretary who can sell needed now. Should plan on being in dynamic at least one year. Reading Dynamic graduate preferred. V1 3-6424. 11-21
Music teachers needed for two boys.
One for trumpet, one for electric guitar.
Prefer someone to come home.
Phone VI 72-4088, evenings
11-21
Full and part-time work at newly developed Ros-A-Beef. Please call VI2-9087, between 12:00 & 2:00, and 6:00 & 8:00 p.m.
11-21
Established professional 7-plate
establishment and needs vocalist,
trumpet, trombone and player.
Be willing to travel weekends
summers. Union wages. Call
842-7744.
Bass Player for established rock band,
Steve. V12-0021. V12-8253. 12-2
Steve. V12-0021. V12-8253. 12-2
TYPING
Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist Kate Dudley. Glish-Speech Education. Electric office-size typewriter. 843-2873. 11-24
TYPING: Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, misel, typing. Have experienced typer with w3c type Efficiency fast service. Phone 12-5954, Ms. Wright.
Accurate typing of theses, dissertations, manuscripts, misel papers. Call Mrs. Troxel, VI2-1440, 2409 Ridge Court. 12-25
Theses, papers typed in English, German, transliterated Russian by experienced, literate typist. IBM Electronic Mrs. Harwell, 842-5298. tf
ERN'S CYCLE SALES
Foreign Car Service
and
Machine Shift Work
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716 N. 2nd VI3-5815
- Portraits
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"Please call for appointment"
Photographer
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Artist's Canvasses
- Decoupage Materials
ENJOY TAKING TESTS?
BURCER CHEF
- Oils and Acrylics Bankmark Services
WANTED
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electronic writer/prent prompt accurate work. Call VI.3-3281. Mrs. Raikmank
SERVICES OFFERED
- Stretcher Frames
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814 Iowa
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
Is last year's party dress still in style,
but the hem way too long—and why
keep rolling up those skirts when I can fix them for you. Will do mend-
ing and alterations, irrigating,
and baby sitting. Mrs. Sindi
Coast. 842-2571.
McConnell Lumber
You will offer you learn our "Proven Method." Send today for free details to: Better Speech, Dept. B-1, 4926 No. Monticello, Chicago, Ill.
PERSONAL
ENTERTAINMENT
Home of the "Big Shef"
Need one more passenger-flying to Miami—leaving Tuesday 12, 25, returning Sunday—possible excursion to Bahamas. $75 round trip VI 3-9057
Dishwasher for fraternity house. Cat VI 3-8411. 11-24
Rally Hawks! After the Mizzou game
The Zoo. 11-21
Honey—hope your birthday is the happiest ever. Ya ochin lubu tuyi!
Love, Bug. 11-21
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
American Mercury is rising. 842-6247
Airplane. Cros be still. Sandnash.
Beatles, Stones, Joplin, Cream Origi-
inals. 12-3
Whittle your ears to the sound of the times. For your entertainment needs call New Sound Projections, Box 8234, Prairie Village, Kan., 913-648-1773, tf
BUY, SELL, TRADE good used appliances and furniture. Also antiques. All guaranteed and free delivery. 839 Pennsylvania 842-0576.
Entertainment, Looking for a good jazz-rock band for those Christmas formal? It's the Dick Wight Orchestra for you. Call 843-7658 12-2
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
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Open Daily—Except Monday 4:30 p.m. VI 3-1431
1½ I. North of the Kow River Bridge
+
Apollo crew heading home
(Continued from page 1)
antenna in the wrong position.
After repeated calls, Conrad came up on the radio and said that he and his colleagues had cut off the "com" in the spacecraft while they cleaned up some of the lunar dirt that Conrad and Bean tracked aboard. Mission control bid the astronauts goodnight at 6:30 p.m.-two hours after they were scheduled to retire—and promised not to disturb them for the remainder of their sleep period.
Conrad and Bean set new moon firsts—walking one and one-half miles on its cratered surface and retrieving parts of
Regents hike fees
(Continued from page 1) dictated the increase
Bickford also said the above figures are final as far as he knows.
"Whether or not corresponding increases in state scholarships will also be included in the resolution is a matter the legislature will have to answer." Bickford said.
Raymond Nichols, vice-chancellor of finance, said the fee increase would apply to KU graduate students, but law students and graduate students teaching at KU would not pay the same increases but would have their fees increased proportionally.
20 KANSAN Nov. 21 1969
the now-dead Surveyor 3 that had been on the moon since 1967.
They made no startling discoveries on the face of the moon and hadn't been expected to. But many of the things they did find have already whetted the appetites of scientists.
The astronauts reported finding some rocks that looked like granite—in contrast to the more
Cyclamate ban eased
WASHINGTON (UPI) The government announced Thursday a relaxation of the control on cyclamates in foods but said soft drinks containing the artificial sweetener still would be banned effective Jan.1.
Robert H. Finch, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, said use of cyclamates would be restricted "essentially" to use in foods and as a sugar substitute produced as concentrates in tablet or liquid form.
Weather
Clear to partly cloudy and warmer today with southwestly winds 10 to 15 mph. Increasing cloudiness and warmer tonight and Saturday. Highs today in the 60s. Lows tonight mid to upper 30s. Precipitation probabilities—near zero per cent today 5 per cent tonight 10 per cent Saturday.
prevalent lava rocks—and others that were "ginger ale-bottle green" in color. They also saw strange little mounds resembling tiny volcanos.
The two explorers also reported seeing glass-lined pits, and collecting chunks of solidified lavas that apparently blanket most of the moon's "seas," or plains.
Conrad and Bean left behind a nuclear-powered science station, Old Glory, and a plaque on their discarded landing stage saying they had been there. They also left on the moon by mistake a pack of color film.
As Intrepid slowly edged toward the command ship, Conrad got a good close look at Yankee Clipper and he exclaimed about the condition of an umbilical cover on its exterior.
"It looks like it's burned," he said. "You think it was hit by lightning or something?"
The spacecraft lost power momentarily during launch from Cape Kennedy in a rain storm and one theory was that the craft was hit by lightning. Project officials believed it was more likely a burst of static electricity that jolted the spacecraft.
The bullseye landing made by the Intrepid has cleared the way
for Apollo 13 astronauts James E. Lovell and Fred W. Haise to shoot for a more inaccessible, but more scientifically interesting site next March.
Their landing area is expected to be a stretch of terrain known as the Fra Mauro formation, which is made up of rock debris gouged from the depths of the moon's crust by a giant meteoroid.
Like the Apollo 12 crew, Lovell and Haise will set up a nuclear powered scientific base—the second in a string of three that scientists want to establish on the moon next year.
Lodge and deputy resign as peace talk delegates
(Continued from page 1)
out in his address to the nation
on Nov. 3, if the negotiations
were to move off dead center we
would get a more rapid settlement
of the conflict."
Lodge's official reason for resigning was "because personal matters at home require by attention." But the 67-year-old ambassador also said in his letter of resignation, "it is sad that the other head has flatly refused to reciprocate in any kind of meaningful way."
Walsh's reason for resigning was: "In view of the matter in which these meetings are being conducted by the other side, no purpose would be served by my
continuing to hold this office."
Both views apparently reflected the opinion of the Nixon administration as stated in the President's Nov. 3 speech to the nation on Vietnam. "No progress whatever has been made except agreement on the shape of the bargaining table," Nixon said in the speech.
"It has become clear that the obstacle in negotiating the end of the war is not the President of the United States. And it is not the South Vietnamese government. The obstacle is the other side's absolute refusal to show the least willingness to join us in seeking a just peace."
Before replacing Ambassador W. Averell Harriman in Paris last January, Lodge had been ambassador to South Vietnam twice, ambassador to the United Nations, Nixon's running mate in his unsuccessful bid for the presidency in 1960, and a U.S. senator from Massachusetts.
Ziegler said he had "no idea" when replacements would be named for Lodge and Walsh, a former federal judge.
Philip C. Habib, a veteran Foreign Service officer who has been the senior adviser in Paris since the talks began, will serve as acting head of the American delegation.
our cobbler spends many a beautifully creative night making
TEMPOS
McCall's
Village Gallery
SHOE COLLECTION
McCall's
Put Yourself in Shoe
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 51
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, Nov. 24, 1969
AUGUSTA
Photo by Mike Frederick
Anquish, emotion of the day
KU pom pon girl Mary Ish, Rockford, Ill., junior grimaced as another Tiger play netted six points for the Orange Bowl-bound Missourians. Grimaces were frequent among Jayhawk fans Saturday when MU trounced KU 68-21 in the season's last conference game.
Yankee Clipper nears S. Pacific splashdown
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The Apollo 12 astronauts rode their Yankee Clipper Sunday night toward splash-down and radioced to earthlings below that they felt so calm on the moon they slept a dreamless sleep.
"I was having a ball," Charles "Pete" Conrad said in a televised news conference on the last leg of the voyage that should bring them back to earth at 2:58 p.m. today in the South Pacific near Pago Pago.
The weather in the landing area was clearing after winds up to 35 miles an hour during the final pickup rehearsal.
Conrad and his buddies, Alan L. Bean and Richard F. Gordon, were in high spirits as they fielded 13 questions from newsmen at the NASA mission control center.
At one point during the 37-minute telecast, a bright red notebook with the pages hanging loose floated in front of the camera, and Conrad snatched it back.
Conrad and Bean agreed that neither of them had any dreams as they slept. But Conrad said he slept only about four hours because his suit was about an inch too short. Bean said the noise of pump motors in the Intrepid lander kept waking him up.
Gordon was asked how it felt to be alone in moon orbit for about 40 hours while the other two astronauts were exploring below.
"I thought about this beforehand," Gordon said, "what it would really be like to be completely alone on the back of the moon, out of contact with any human being. But, surprisingly enough, the activities were such that I was too busy to dwell on that during my waking hours, and I was so tired at night that I could hardly wait to go to bed."
Yankee Clipper passed the midway point home Sunday afternoon and picked up speed swiftly under the pull of earth's gravity.
One of the first questions was whether they would want to undergo launch again in similar weather conditions which led to a flash of electricity shooting up the rocket and capsule as they took off from Cape Kennedy.
"Id go again," said Conrad.
"We made it this time, why can't we do it again?" Bean said.
Another newsman asked if the astronauts did not feel a scientist expert in geology should go to the moon.
"Certainly," Conrad said. "I'll tell you one thing, however, it took every bit of knowledge I had getting that baby Intrepid down."
Conrad and Bean were asked how they felt when they first emerged onto the moon's surface—whether they were on an "oxygen high."
"I was very happy but I wasn't on an (Continued to page 8)
UDK News Roundup By United Press International
Treaty may be ratified
MOSCOW—The presidium of the Supreme Soviet is expected Monday to ratify the treaty banning the spread of nuclear weapons in a move interpreted here as an expression by the Soviets of their willingness to call off the arms race.
If the presidium gives its expected approval, the final step for Moscow, it is considered probable that President Nixon would sign the treaty, completing U.S. action on the measure. The U.S. Senate already has ratified the treaty.
War opposition mounts
LONDON—Leftwing Labor party members of parliament mustered forces today for a campaign aimed at pressuring the government to renounce the U.S. presence in Vietnam.
War may flare in Congo
KINSHASA—A Brazzaville radio station Sunday announced a state of general alert throughout Congo Brazzaville and said the country has closed its frontiers with Congo Kinshasa.
The radio announcement came a few hours after President Joseph Mobutu of Congo Kinshasa said his country could invade Congo Brazzaville in no more than two hours.
---
Agnew blasts protests
NEW YORK (UPI) — Vice President Spiro T. Agnew declared Sunday that demonstrations, even when nonviolent, "cannot be condoned" if they interfered with the rights of others.
Agnew made the statement in a guest editorial, written at the invitation of Life magazine, to explain his reasons for speaking out in recent weeks against war protesters and the news media.
The vice president said he was not acting to accommodate the White House but because "like the great silent majority, I had had enough.
"I had endured the didactic inadequacies of the garrulous in silence, hoping for the best but witnessing the worst for many months. And because I·am an elected official, I felt I owed it to those I serve to speak the truth." Agnew said in the editorial.
Agnew warned, "Frightening forces have been set in motion as the public has become conditioned to precipitate action rather than quiet discussion.
"The announced decision of the more extreme antiwar groups to continue and to intensify their disruptive activities proves this," he said.
Agnew called the Vietnam
moratorium "not only negative in content but brutally counterproductive" because it encouraged the North Vietnamese and undermined the President's policies.
"The game of 'ridicule the vice presidency,' played so enthusiastically over the years, is wearing thin on the people of our country," he said. "They know that vice presidents are people not cartoon characters."
The vice president said the response of the country to his views "has been both extensive and gratifying," and that it affirmed the importance of his office.
Agnew criticized
KU party leaders air views
By SUZANNE ATKINS Kansas Staff Writer
"Spiro Agnew is a household word now!" said Young Democrat president Mike Dickeson, Atchison senior," and I believe him when he threatens the press."
The Agnew tirades against print and broadcast news media are part of a "preconceived plan to polarize the nation" on dissent, Dickeson continued, and Agnew is just the "catalyst."
Comparing Vice-President Agnew to former "red scare" Senator Joseph McCarthy, Dickeson
said Agnew, too, knows "if you give a blue-collar worker something he thinks he should fear, he will fear it."
"Agnew is the political arm of the Nixon administration," Dickeson said. "Usually vice-presidents are given domestic duties. This time Nixon is doing them himself."
Concern over the presentation of the news "is a problem that has always existed with the free press," Dickeson said. He recalled President Nixon's words to a press Nixon thought had been unfair
to him during his unsuccessful campaign for the Presidency in 1960 and maintained that both Nixon and Agnew are deeply concerned with press coverage.
Dickeson said he firmly believed that if Agnew had his way there would be a "tough sedition law against news media in the form of federal censorship" and he said he expects such a law to be an issue in the future.
"The man is not too astute," Dickeson said. "If the news media print what he says, I think they have been pretty fair with him."
(Continued to page 8)
Sororities choose1970 spring rush
Sorority rush will be a spring event this year, Barbara Blee, Bonner Springs senior and president of Panhellenic Council, said Friday.
Open house will be during registration on Jan. 30, 31 and Feb. 1, she said. Invitational rush parties will be later in the spring, she added, probably in March or April.
The new academic schedule adopted by the University made the change necessary, she said.
"Panhellenic has tried to be flexible enough so when the University changes, we can adapt to those changes," she said. "That's what we're trying to do here."
"Under the new schedule classes will begin Aug. 31; if we had continued the fall rush sorority members would need to be here Aug. 10 or 14. We didn't think it was fair to the girls in sororities or the rushees, because of jobs, trips and other summer activities."
Miss Blee said the Panhellenic rush orientation for freshmen women would begin after Thanksgiving, and registration for rush would be after Christmas. She said all girls would be eligible to participate in open houses because there would be no requirements.
Union hours for vacation scheduled
Vacation hours will be observed by the Kansas Union during the Thanksgiving holidays, Warner Ferguson, Union business manager said Friday.
The revised schedule will go into effect Nov. 26 and last through Nov. 30, he said.
The building will be open Nov.
26 from 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Nov.
27 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Nov.
28 from 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Nov.
29 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; and Nov.
29 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Not all food department areas will observe the same hours, Ferguson added.
The cafeteria will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. for breakfast, coffee bar, lunch and dinner on Nov. 26, 28, 29 and 30. Thanksgiving Day it will be open for lunch only from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The Hawk's nest will close Tuesday at 5 p.m. and re-open Dec. 1 at 8 a.m. The Prairie Room, bookstore and all administrative offices also will be closed the entire period.
The Trail Room will be open whenever the building is.
The Jaybowl will be open Nov.
26 from 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.;
Nov. 28 from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.;
Nov. 29 from 1 to 10 p.m. and
Nov. 30 from 1 to 10 p.m. Nov.
27 it will be closed.
2 KANSAN Nov. 24
1969
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NOV 29
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ALL JENKINS STORES, MAGIC CIRCUS,
TODAY SHOP, MEMORIAL HALL, ALSO
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AND SANDOLEWOOD (IN LAWRENCE)
Lawton assesses campus lighting
The lighting on Jayhawk Boulevard and in other areas of the campus is a matter of priorities, said Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor in charge of campus operations.
Lawton said, "In general, we are at a satisfactory level of lighting. To change the present situation, we would have to buy new cables and poles. Whether this would solve the situation is rather questionable."
The problem is some dimly lit areas where people say they are afraid to walk. Lawton said that attention was being focused on the areas which had no light at all.
"Considerable sums of money have gone into lighting systems and right now we are trying to get lights installed where there are none now," he said.
Applications are available
Five to seven years ago, an analysis of the lighting situation was made. It was decided that a new type of lighting head would
Applications for Scholarship Hall residence scholarship's are available for Spring semester at the Dean of Men's office. Any interested male student may apply, said Frank H. Shavlik, assistant to the dean of men. The deadline is December 8.
Shavlik said scholarships will be awarded by a committee of Scholarship Hall students and staff on the basis of academic achievement and financial need. A 1.5 GPA must be maintained once a scholarship is awarded.
Tree a KU tradition
The Christmas tree which is placed in Strong Hall every year was first placed in the rotunda in 1921. The tree was first used to help raise money for the aid of needy foreign students. The tree tradition signified the start of the sale of Christmas candles.
TIME The longest word in the language?
By letter count, the longest word may be pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, a rare lung disease. You won't find it in Webster's New World Dictionary, College Edition. But you will find more useful information about words than in any other desk dictionary.
Take the word time. In addition to its derivation and an illustration showing U.S. time zones, you'll find 48 clear definitions of the different meanings of time and .27 idiomatic uses, such as time of one's life. In sum, everything you want to know about time.
This dictionary is approved and used by more than 1000 colleges and universities. Isn't it time you owned one? Only $6.50 for 1760 pages; $7.50 thumb-Indexed.
be put on the lights along Jayhawk Boulevard.
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A request for money for this purpose was presented to the legislature, and in 1965, the money was appropriated and the light heads were installed.
This was one example that Lawton cited of the procedure of getting money appropriated for lighting.
At the present time, Lawton said, money has been appropriated and a contract let for a new system of mercury vapor lights to supplement those already in existence along Naismith Drive.
The Building and Grounds Department is going to install lights along the paths and around the tennis courts behind Robinson Gymnastium for those who live in Oliver and Naismith Halls. Lawton said.
He said the city and University have cooperated in placing some lighting to help pedestrians. Lights have been doubled on Mississippi Street behind the Union and some have been added on the streets between the campus and Corbin Hall.
Lawton said, "We are at a recommendable level of lighting on the streets at this time. To bathe the campus in lighting would be very impracticable."
He said that much of the problem was a question of aesthetics
"When we installed the lights in the grove behind the Union and Strong Hall, we had one man call and really raise cain," Lawton said. "He said he liked to walk through the grove at night and get away from everything. But he said with the lights, that was almost impossible."
Staying Here Over Thanksgiving?
For the many students who are unable to return home during Thanksgiving vacation, Henrys will be open to satisfy the students' holiday hunger. If you can't enjoy the turkey at home, stop by and fill up at Henrys! We're open all day.
Henrys
6th & Mo.
Dear Scott,
I am only 4 years old but I want to give you 34+ to reserve me a 1983 Jayhawker yearbook. I want to look back at my college days when I get older.
Thanks Bobby Connors
PS. Mommy says she might raise my allowance.I need $6.66.
Funds cut appealed
A request to keep $75,000 in the KU libraries budget for 1971-72 was made Wednesday by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. The funds had been cut from the library budget by state officials. At budget hearings in Topeka, the Chancellor made several requests for funds to be reinstated.
Although enrollment at KU has increased by 4,000 in the past three years,the library fund has remained the same,Chalmers said.
Members of the board hearing the requests were Gov. Robert Docking; Calvin Strowig, Speaker of the House, R-Abilene; Tom
Hallsto close
University residence halls will close at 9 am. Wednesday, Nov.
26 for Thansgiving vacation. They will open at noon Sunday, Nov.
30. Scholarship halls will observe the same opening and closing times.
The last meal served in the residence halls will be dinner Tuesday, Nov. 25. Breakfast Monday, Dec. 1 will be the first meal served after vacation.
Microbiology talk set
Frank E. Young, of the microbiology department of Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation, La Jolla, Calif., will speak on "Biochemical Genetics of Virus Adsorption in Bacillus Subtilis" at 4 p.m. today in 610 New Haworth Hall.
Jose Ferrer won the Actor of the Year award in 1950 for his performance in "Cyrano de Bergerac."
Nov. 24 KANSAN 3
1969
Van Sickle, Chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee. R-Ft. Scott; James W. Bibb, budget director; and members of the budget director's staff.
Ad man plans for speakers
Jeff Nauser, director of television broadcast production for Barickman and Selders, Inc., was initiated Thursday into Alpha Delta Sigma, men's advertising fraternity.
Nauser plans to set up a speakers bureau for the advertising fraternity and Gamma Alpha Chi, the women's advertising counterpart.
When he can't be present, Nauser will have other professionals from related fields come to KU and answer questions of the GAX and ADS members, he said.
Lee F. Young, acting dean of the School of Journalism, was the guest of honor and as an ADS member, initiated Nauser.
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KANSAN Comment
When the founders of the Black Panther Party composed their platform, they included a list of ten demands of America. One of these demands was for the release of all black prisoners in the United States. They claimed the courts are unjust to black men. The American judicial system, they said, is nothing but a farce.
Justice in Chicago?
In Chicago, Judge Julius Hoffman has done his best to make them appear right. His handling of the trial of the "Chicago Eight" will provide ammunition for many new attacks on the "corrupt system."
Fortunately, this case is not typical of American justice. But many people aren't going to believe that. The whole affair brings back memories of the Dr. Spock trial and even Sacco and Vanzetti. These were cases in which politics seemed to influence the courts more than evidence. If they point out a flaw in the judicial system perhaps it is that the system tolerates judges who can't control their courts without acting as tyrants.
And it will be hard for anyone to argue that the Panthers' demand is absurd, while party chairman Bobby Seale is serving a four-year prison sentence for contempt of court. How long will it take the courts to recover from the damage they suffered when Hoffman had Seale bound and gagged in the courtroom?
The whole trial of the eight men has been questionable. Indicted on the vague charge of conspiracy to incite a riot at the Democratic National Convention, the defendants feel they have been singled out because they are symbols of a movement. They think they are being punished in retaliation for the embarrassment suffered by the establishment in Chicago that August.
Speaking on the conciliation of the American Colonies, Edmund Burke once said, "It looks to me narrow and pedantic to apply the ordinary ideas of criminal justice to this great public contest. I do not know the method of drawing up an indictment against a whole people."
Is the trial of the "Chicago Eight" an indictment against a whole people? Who is really on trial—Seale, Rubin, Hoffman and friends or the whole mass of anti-war demonstrators? If this trial was conceived to cripple the protest movement, it is doomed to failure.
This is the stuff on which such movements thrive, from which rebellions grow. The court is making a mockery of the system it wanted to protect.
Judge Hoffman evidently learned very little from the events of the Democratic Convention. Provocation was the tactic of the demonstrators there and it was used again in his courtroom. The objective in both cases was to trigger an irrational reaction by the establishment,
For the defendants, this trial has been an opportunity to discredit the system they oppose so bitterly. By bringing in Viet Cong flags and a birthday cake which they tried to present to Seale, the defendants were obviously trying to make a mockery of the court. But they could not have succeeded without the aid of Judge Hoffman.
Seale must have appeared to be a madman, shouting "Facist Pig" and Facist Dog" over and over. But Judge Hoffman quickly stole that role for himself by having Seale gagged, shackled and chained to his chair.
But Seale continued the provocation as well as he could under the circumstances. Judge Hoffman then charged Seale with contempt of court, which might have been the correct procedure much earlier. But Hoffman, once again proving that he could be more unreasonable than any of them, sentenced Seale for sixteen counts of contempt—a total of four years in prison.
The results of this trial will probably not stand up under appeal. If the affair has proved anything at all it is that there should have been no trial in the first place. The court set out to punish the revolutionaries, but instead it has damaged the image of American justice.
Joe Naas
Sorel's News Service
Stanford Ackel 07
© 1968 King Features Syndicate Inc. Worldwide Copyright
I am, therefore I think I think
WASHINGTON—Spiro Agnew or Spiro Agnew: "I'm still fighting the idea of being a rather ill-equipped, fumbling, obtuse kind of person . . . it seems fashionable to make out Agnew to be some kind of goof . . . I've got an I.Q. of about 135 when it was last tested. I think that's pretty fair."
Readers' write
To the editor:
I am somewhat disturbed by and disappointed in a letter recently printed in the UDK from Professor Robert R. Findlay concerning the stipends paid assistant instructors here.
"The assistant instructor." Professor Findlay points out, "has not come to Kansas to earn his living at teaching. He has come to earn a degree." Quite right. However, the Assistant Instructor must, by some means, earn a living (i.e., and income sufficient to maintain him throughout the entire year) while he is earning a degree. I say "by some means" because very few A.I.'s seem able to support themselves on the $2,400 per annum beginning salary (less taxes, of course) the University now pays. In many cases the result is that the A.I., already burdened with what is in fact two-thirds of a normal teaching load, must further sacrifice study time, and particularly any opportunity to attend summer classes, in order to take a second job. An increase of $200 in the base salary paid A.I.'s would certainly alleviate the problem slightly; an increase of $600 would perhaps solve it. However, until that golden sequel, the assistant instructor who spends six years here working on his doctorate surely doesn't merit the kind of criticism Professor Findlay chooses to heap on Mr. Wallace.
Professor Findlay notes that "the University is, in a sense, subsidizing his (the A.I.'s) education by giving him an Assistant Instructorship." The phrase "in a sense" seems to me particularly apt since it suggests, ever so faintly, what Professor Findlay surely must know perfectly well: the University finds it quite good business to staff a large number of courses with A.I.'s (who after all can be hired for much less money than can Ph.D.'s). We educate freshmen and sophomores as cheaply as possible in order to be able to educate upperclassmen and graduates at all. Within certain limits the arrangement is genuinely beneficial to the entire academic community. Once those limits have been passed teaching graduate students are harmed in the ways I've already noted. What about the people they teach?
Professor Findlay's letter is suggestive on this point. "His (the A.I.'s) commitment is not to his teaching—we don't expect it to be—but rather to himself and his earning of a degree." If I were an undergraduate the prospect of being instructed by a man not committed to his teaching would scarcely delight me. (I doubt that there's much of that sort of teaching being done by Assistant Instructors here at KU—yet.) And indeed what can a chairman interviewing applicants for an assistant professorship suppose about a man who has spent five years, let us say, teaching introductory courses without any commitment to his teaching while earning his doctorate and who now wants, as Professor Findlay puts it, to make "a career commitment to teach" at some university? A commitment to the teaching? No, one must suppose, a commitment to the career.
Roger M. Laub
Assistant Instructor,
Department of English
* * *
To the editor:
I would like to apologize for the disgusting and inhumane treatment Marquita Cross and the black students received when the University Symphony Orchestra traveled to Clay Center, Kansas. It is unfortunate that all the citizens of Clay Center are blamed for the ignorance and prejudice of a few people.
Kari Elliott
Karl Elliot Clay Center, Kansas, sophomore
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Newsroom—UN 4-3646
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Here they go again . . .
Terry McMillan hands off to halfback Jon Staggers, just one of many outstanding Missouri running backs. The Tigers ran over and around KU for 344 yards rushing and 651 yards total offense.
Varsity premier run-gun offense against freshman
Ted Owen's varsity, triggered by the running of sophomore Bud Stallworth and the scoring of all-Big Eight forward Dave Robisch, premiered its fast-breaking offense Saturday night as they rolled over the freshmen, 83-48, in the annual varsity-freshmen game before 5,000 fans in Allen Field House.
The frosh jumped to an early 4-1 lead and gave the varsity all they could handle through the opening eight minutes of the first half. The depth of the hard-running varsity played an important role as they built a 37-27 half time lead and went on to wear down the highly touted freshman squad in the final 20 minutes.
Robisch paced the varsity scoring with 25 points, most of them coming on baseline jumpers and follow shots. Stallworth, who connected on only two of 12 field goals in the first half, canned 12 in the second period and finished with a total of 18. Pierre Russell added 17 points to the well-balanced varsity attack.
Randy Canfield, 6-10 freshman center, pulled down a game high of 20 rebounds and led the freshmen scoring with 14 points. Cana-
Nov.24
1969 KANSAN 5
ZIG -- ZAG
CONCERT
Qualite Supérieure
COUNTRY JOE
AND THE FISH
SATURDAY
NOV 29
DANNY COX
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field, held scoreless in the first half, turned in an outstanding second half performance by scoring 14 points and hauling in eight rebounds. Leanord Gray followed Canfield with 12 points.
The varsity's half-court pressure defense forced the inexperienced frosh into numerous turnovers and paved the way for the second half surge which buried the freshman squad.
VARISITY (83) — Russell 7-3-2, Stallone 7-4-1,
Lawrence 4-1-1, Kliviste 2-0-2, Brown 3-0-0,
Brown 3-0-0, Boslevac 1-0-1, Mask 0-0-
0-0, Mathews 0-0-0,
Totals: 34-15
MU massacre ends long year
**FRESHMEN** (48) - Gray 5-2, Bos-2
Williams 3-1, Surmail 0-1, Beckman
Wilkins 4-3-2, Surmail 0-1, Beckman
0-0; Older 0-0; Sannard 0-0;
Ricketts 0-0; Totals: 20-8-17
By STEVE SHRIVER Kansan Sports Writer
Set It Yourself... with Chartpak Transfer Lettering
Missouri demonstrated to 50,500 fans and a regional television audience its devastating offensive machine by smothering Kansas, 69-21. It was the most points ever scored by a Missouri team and the most ever given up by a Kansas team in modern history.
The Tigers ran and passed for 651 yards through an injury-riddled Jayhawk defense. It was a wild offensive show as KU managed its largest total output of the season, 434 yards against the Mizzou defense.
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KU fumbled on its first two possessions and the Tigers capitalized on the second turnover to score. They gave a good indication of things to come rushing to a 21-0 first quarter lead and a 28-7 halftime advantage.
Senior quarterback Terry McMilan pinpointed open receivers
Carter's Stationery
1025 Mass. VI 3-6133
almost at will, completing 13 of 24 for 295 yards and four TD's. He was not intercepted. McMillan surpassed Paul Christman's school record for most touchdown passes in one game. Christman threw three TD passes for MU in 1940 and McMillan had tied the record three times this season.
When McMillan and Gray weren't teaming up through the airways, it was devastating full-back Joe Moore who crushed the 'Hawks. Moore ran over KU for 164 yards on 23 carries and scored a touchdown on a 53-yard romp.
Principal target for McMillan was speedster Mel Gray who caught three passes for 115 yards and two touchdowns. Gray, a 9.3 hundred yard dash man during track season, scored another TD on a 19-yard flankerback reverse.
With the victory Mizzou finished the season with a 9-1 record and a share of the Big Eight
championship with Nebraska. The Cornhuskers beat Oklahoma Sat-
(Continued to page 6)
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Long day for defense
(Continued from page 5)
(Continued from page 5)
urday, 44-14, and tied MU with a 6-1 league mark. The Tigers had beaten Nebraska, 17-14, early in the season and lost only to Colorado, 31-24.
Missouri will meet Penn State, undefeated in their last 28 games and last year's 15-14 victor over Kansas, in the Orange Bowl, and officials of the New Year's Day classic are delighted to have two of the most powerful teams in the nation competing.
A bright spot in the game for KU was the play of sophomore quarterback Phil Basler. Facing the traditionally tough MU defense, Basler passed for 213 yards and two touchdowns. He was dropped behind the line for losses totaling 61 yards and managed to complete six of 20 passes
Basler rushed for 77 yards, mostly on the quarterback sweep, and netted 16 yards despite being dropped behind the line 13 times. He also scored KU's first touchdown on a one-yard plunge.
Kansas hit on its longest scoring play of the season in the fourth quarter when Basler hit Ron Jessie on a 79-yard bomb. But it was too late in the game (it was 56-14 at the time) and too late in the season (KU ended up 1-9 for the year).
The versatile Jon Staggers combined for 151 yards on rushes, passes, punt returns and kickoff returns and scored three touchdowns. He caught two of McMillan's TD passes.
KU rushed for 221 yards on the strength of Jessie's 111 yards and John Riggins 90 yards. Jessie attempted 17 rushes and Riggins 20.
Tight end Larry Brown caught three Basler passes for 88 yards and one touchdown leading all KU receivers.
Kansas came into the game minus its leading tackler and team captain linebacker Emery Hicks. He was injured in the Oklahoma game and did not even suit up.
Sophomore linebacker Kenny Page lead KU defensive statistics with 16 tackles, five unassisted and blocked a pass. But the Kansas defense, which has been hit hard all season long by injuries, could not keep up with McMillan and company.
Records fell like rain in the onslaught with McMillan topping the Big Eight record for most TD passes in one season, as he finished with 18.
6 KANSAN Nov. 24
1969
One of the most exciting moments in the game came when several KU fans circled the track carrying three large banners reading "Kansas will be back." The partisan crowd gave them a standing ovation.
Right behind the first sign bearers followed two MU fans carrying another sign. It read "MU—Orange Bowl," KU—Toilet Bowl." The MU fans were bombarded with oranges and debris and ended up losing the sign and a fight with an irate KU fan.
After the game Pepper Rodgers was asked about the season and next year. He replied, "Gosh, it is disappointing to go 9-1 and then go 1-9, but here we are and this is next year. We will be back and next year we will be good, I
I-M gridders meet today
The first annual intramural All-Star football game will be played at 4:15 today in Memorial Stadium. The top stars from the intramural league meet to decide the All-Star championship. Twenty players from each side were picked for the East-West clash by the intramural committee.
Beheading was introduced into England from Normandy by William the Conqueror.
can promise you that."
GO GREEK!
Swimmers show promise in meet
Then he was asked if he was glad the season was over and he answered, "Are you kidding—sure I'm glad it is over."
KU's swimming team held an intrasquad meet Friday night in preparation for the Big Eight Relays at Ames, Iowa December 12 and 13.
Dick Reamon, head swimming coach, said that the meet was very beneficial and the swimmers turned in good times. He said the times were better than he expected.
"The swimmers had worked hard, but were beginning to get stale. They needed the competition to give them confidence and boost moral." Reamon said.
Kansas goes after a third straight Big Eight swimming title with 14 returning lettermen and a majority of the point-producers from last year's championship team.
Even though the squad has considerable experience, Reamon considers this a young group. The team includes 17 freshmen, nine sophomores, six juniors and four seniors.
Results of the intrasquad meet are:
200 yd. medley relay—1, Steve Trombold, Bo Darrah, Steve Ulmer and Hal Kennedy, 1:43.2.
200 yd. freestyle—1, Tom Ellis,
1:51. 1:20. Steve Rice, 3. Mikk
Boyle, 4, Roland Sabates, 5, Mare
Wagoner, 6, Bruce Bove
50 yd. freestyle—1, Bob Hines,
22.0, 2, Kim Bolton, 3, Steve
George, 4, Rick Heidinger, 5,
Paul Green, 6, Chris Holmer.
100 yd. individual medley—1, Bob Wright, 57.6, 2. Trombold, 3. Ulmer, 4. Scott Skultet, 5. Greg Tharp, 6. Brad Thompkins.
100 yd. butterfly—1, Mike Tackett,
56.1. 2, Wright. 3, Ulmer. 4,
Tharp. 5, Holzer. 6, Wagner.
100 yd. freestyle—1, Hines, 47.9.
2. Bolton, 3. Ellis, 4. Sabates, 5.
Boyle, 6. Green.
400 yd. freestyle—1, Wagoner,
4:02.4. 2, Ellis. 3, Rice. 4, Bove.
5, Bob Mauer. 6, Steve Ingham.
100 yd. backstroke—1, Trombold, 56.7. 2, Skulttey, 3, Kennedy. 4, Tharp. 5, George. 6, Allen Dorsett.
100 yd. breaststroke—1, Wright,
1:02. 2, Darrah. 3, Dana Staats.
4, Green. 5, Jim Keith. 6, Vince Zubowicz.
200 yd. freestyle relay—1, Holmer, Heidinger, Sabates, Hines, 1:30.0.
One meter diving—1, Rav Powers, 228 points. 2, Bob Bishop.
3, Charles Wilson. 4, Jeff Sanders.
Three meter diving—1, Sanders. 203.65 points. 2. Bishop. 3. Wilson.
A
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Fritz Company has special bargains on inspected used winter and high-wire tires. Also New "83" Series Town cars from all manufacturers. Expert front end alignment. brakes by experienced mechanic. Fritz Co 745 N. HI. V-3412. 12-2
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Sublease. 2-bedroom, 2 bath Gatehouse apartment Available Immediately Approximately $50 a month. Call VI1-2-3441 anytime. 11-24
ENTERTAINMENT
Whittle your ears to the sound of the church or for your entertainment needs call New Orleans Prairie Village, Kan. 913-648-1777, if Entertainment, Looking for a good Christmas format? You can call the Dick Wright Christmas tra for you. You call 843-7658 12-2
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
BUY, SELL, TRADE good used appliances and furniture. Also antiques used for food and delivery Haas Used appliances. 839 Pennsy vania. 842-0576
SERVICES OFFERED
last year's party dress still in style,
but the hem way too long—and why
keep rolling up those skirts when I
can fix them for you; you will do mend-
ing, cut it and alterations, iron-
ing and baby sitting. Mrs.
Coast. 842-3571. 12-4
HELP WANTED
GARDENLAND, INC.
Dishwasher for fraternity house. Call VI 3-8411. 11-24
Male Nite Help Wanted: full or part time. Apply in person only. Burger Chef, 814 Iowa. If Bass Player for established rock band
WANTED
914 West 23rd
V1 2-1596
Aquariums & Fish
Bass Player for established rock band
Shot that played on the guitar
V12-0021 V12-8235 197
V12-0021 V12-8235 197
American Mercury is rising, 842-8247
Airplane, Crosbe is still, Sandnash,
Beatles, Stones, Joplin, Cream Orig-
inals. 12-3
Tacos Tonight?
Themes, theses, dissertations, typed and or edited by experienced typist English-Speech Education EHS in English-Speech Education EHS size-type design. 843-2873. 11-24 TYPING Experienced typist will type theses, thesis, misel typing. Have expertise in fast service. Phone VI-9554, Mrs.Wright. 12-5
CASA De TACOS 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880
TYPING
TARR'S LAUNDRY
Daily 8-5 p.m.
Saturday 8-1 p.m.
"We Do Your Laundry
For You."
1903 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Massachusetts
- Portraits
PORTRAITS
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work Call V3-1 3281 Mr. Rauckman.
806 MASS.
VI 3-1171
- Passports
- Applications
HIXON STUDIO
摄影
"Please call for appointment"
Bob Blank, Owner
Accurate typing of theses, dissertations, manuscripts, misel papers. Call Mrs. Troxel, VI 2-1440, 2409 Ridge Court. 12-25
Aquarium
For:
$ \oint_{C} s \mathrm{d}s $
VI 3-0330
Theses, papers typed in English, German, transliterated Russian by experienced, literate typist. IBM Electronic Mrs. Harwell, 842-5298. If
721 Mass.
GOODYEAR TIRES
Passenger Tires 25% Off
All Major Oil Brands
Wheel Alignment &
Balancing
Complete Brake Service
Brake Adjustment 98c
Carburetor Service
Motor Tune-up with
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PASSPORT PICTURES
APPLICATION PICTURES
BAEFORT PICTURES
Page Fina Service
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E.8th
PHOTOFINISHING
New York Cleaners
Exclusive Representative
the best in:
● Dry Cleaning
● Alterations
● Renewil
- Stretcher Frames
- Badges
For the best in:
- Oils and Acrytics Bankmark Services
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Favors
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Reweavina
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
THE CONCORD SHOP
Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters
- Decoupage Materials
- Guards
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
- Stationery
- Mugs
- Daddle
- Loyalists
- Stationers
- Gifts
- Plagues
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #30G
Across from the Red Dog
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
- Lavaliers Stationery
- Recognitions Paddles
- Sportswear
Henrys
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mc. VI13-2139
Decoupage Supplies Cities
Custom
Picture
Framing
Artist Supplies Materials
Gifts
Davis Paints 918 Massachusetts VI 3-6141
Grumbacher
BURGER CHEF
Home of the "Big Shef"
Try One Today 814 Iowa
1
Folk Guitars
Alvaarez
Gibson
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Guild
GUITAR
LESSONS,
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RICHARDSON MUSIC CO.
15% off
this Ad
on any
set of
Guitar Strings
until Dec 30
18 E. 9th
V1 2-0021
the Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining
Sizzling steaks and fresh seafoods await you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest . . . preparing the selections as you like them with all the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
Open Daily—Except Monday 4:30 p.m. VI 3-1431
1½ Mi. North of the Kaw River Bridge
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP OIP
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
COIN OP. PICK UP
LAUNDRY STATION
19th and La. 2346 Iowa
9th and Miss. VI 3-9868
Yankee Clipper heads for splashdown
(Continued from page 1)
oxygen high," Conrad said. "It was much easier than we had practiced. I was just having a ball."
"Once the first 10 minutes are over and you sort of realize that you now know you can hold your balance, that you are not going to fall, then you can get down to operational things." Bean said.
"Pete and I spent about two years getting ready for this mission and thinking about what our chances were of getting to the moon and getting back home."
Bean said it depended then and would always depend on the team of trained people on earth and the "hardware that works." He said the success of the flight was a "fantastic tribute" to the people
of the North American Rockwell Corp., who built the Yankee Clipper, and of the Gruman Corp., builders of the Intrepid landing craft.
"You look like a bunch of bats hanging from the ceiling."
When the color TV picture first came on the screen it was upside down and mission control said:
"That's what flying this thing will do for you!" Conrad said. "That fourth guy in here holding the camera can't speak English so we can't tell him to turn it around."
The television transmission ended with the astronauts turning the camera on a plaque which read:
"Yankee Clipper sailed with Intrepid to the Ocean of Storms, Moon, Nov. 14, 1969."
Campus political leaders air views
(Continued from page 1)
College Republican president John Ruth, Wichita junior, charged Agnew is "seeking support for the Nixon administration from people upset with unrest. In a lot of ways," he said, "he seems to be trying to take some pressure off the administration."
Ruth said he did not believe the news media are trying "drastically" to slant the news, and many of the Nixon-Agnew administration's concerns about media unfairness are "blown up out of proportion. I think most people laugh them off," Ruth said.
Dickeson approved of the Senate's rejection of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth's nomination to the Supreme Court. He said he feared Haynsworth "would have fought for reversal of many liberal laws," including those pertaining to electronic "bugging," search warrants, informing an arrested person of his Constitutional rights and the right of every man to counsel.
Ruth said he believed Haynsworth would have been of benefit
"I don't care what kind of ethical reasons were involved" in the rejection, Dickeson said, maintaining that Haynsworth's political views were sufficient to make him unfit to sit on the Supreme Court.
Evolution is topic
Charles E. Oxnard, from the anatomy department of the University of Chicago, will speak on "Functional Adaptation in Primate Evolution. A Morphometric Study" at 4 p.m. today in Dyche Auditorium.
8 KANSAN
Nov.24 1969
to the Court although, he said,
the conflict of interest charges
against the judge might have
worked against him.
"The Supreme Court has to be above reproach." Ruth said, "and with the amount of smear against Haynesworth, it would have been difficult for the Court to function."
Ruth said he believed the Supreme Court needed more conservatives for balance, but he wouldn't want the Court to "turn so conservative that it stifled chances for changing the laws."
Despite earlier political actions, "when a person reaches the Supreme Court, he rises to the occasion," Ruth said.
Official Bulletin
Today
Table Tennis Club; 173 Robinson
Gymnasium 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Systematics-Ecology Lecture:
"Functional Adaptation in Primate Evolution." Dr. Charles E. Oxnard,
of Chicago, Dyche Auditorium,
6 p.
Physics Colloquium: "Spin-Spin Interaction of Pr$^i$ Pairs in Trigonal Crystals." Lawrence Pfortmiller. 124 Malott, 4 p.m.
K. U. Judo Club: Robinson Gymnasium, 7 p.m.
Faculty Recital: University String Quartet. Swarthout Recital, Hall 8, BRUCE
Lecture, film (in English): "Alex-
ander Von Humbolt." Friedrich
Strusch, German Consult. Forum
Room, Kansas Union. 8 p.m.
Tuesday
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson
Gymnasium: 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East door Robinson Gymnasium: 4:30 p.m.
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
*Thanksgiving Brecess* begs: 5:30
p.m.
Broadcastast: "Richard III." Recorded in multi-players, KANAN 8:51, FLEM 7.98,
Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Hodeo Club: Room 2a.
2yrs old.
Christian Science Organization Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
**IEE students:** if requested to have
**IEE representative,**
please sign up now
**foreign students:** Pamphlets and a magazine devoted to Christmas International Houses and the Christmas Adventure in World War II. E. Lansing, Mich. 226强 Hall.
A Thanksgiving Concert
COUNTRY JOE & THE FISH
plus
DANNY COX
Sat., Nov. 29 at 8:00 P.M.
Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kans.
Tickets: $3, $4, $5. Available At: Jenkins Music, Magic Circus, Today
Shop. Sandalwood, Memorial Hall, Discount Records (Columbia).
Conrad said his most apprehensive moment came when it was time to launch Intrepid off the moon, but he said that overall he was a lot calmer than he had expected.
As Yankee Clipper neared home, Conrad's wife, Jane, and two of his sons, Andy, 10, and Chris, 8, went soaring in an engineless glider from a small airfield near Houston.
Communicating to the ground via a little walkie-talkie he carried with him, Andy said he believed he would rather be a glider pilot than an astronaut.
MADRID, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 1924 - A shoe from the Worthington Company is displayed in a gallery setting. The shoe features a brogue design with perforated detailing and a cap toe. It was part of an exhibition at the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C., where it was showcased as part of the "Shoes That Shook" exhibition.
THE CAP TOE
Our Honey Tan Dress Shoe That Has A Great Look With Any Outfit.
MISTER
GUY
920 MASSACHUSETTS
GIANT
Griff's
BURGER BARS
A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM
SPECIAL
Juicy, Thick, Giant Hamburger Golden Brown French Fries Thick Creamy Shake
Special Good thru November 25
Griff's
BURGER BARS
A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM
1618 W.23rd
69c
"THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE
RAINBOW COLORS"
CITY SCHOOL
V13-9108